| 1 |
## oils_failures_allowed: 2
|
| 2 |
## compare_shells: dash bash mksh zsh ash
|
| 3 |
|
| 4 |
|
| 5 |
# echo, read, mapfile
|
| 6 |
# TODO mapfile options: -c, -C, -u, etc.
|
| 7 |
|
| 8 |
|
| 9 |
echo -
|
| 10 |
echo --
|
| 11 |
echo ---
|
| 12 |
## stdout-json: "-\n--\n---\n"
|
| 13 |
## BUG zsh stdout-json: "\n--\n---\n"
|
| 14 |
|
| 15 |
|
| 16 |
echo \\
|
| 17 |
echo '\'
|
| 18 |
echo '\\'
|
| 19 |
echo "\\"
|
| 20 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 21 |
\
|
| 22 |
\
|
| 23 |
\\
|
| 24 |
\
|
| 25 |
## BUG dash/mksh/zsh STDOUT:
|
| 26 |
\
|
| 27 |
\
|
| 28 |
\
|
| 29 |
\
|
| 30 |
## END
|
| 31 |
|
| 32 |
|
| 33 |
echo -e \\
|
| 34 |
echo -e '\'
|
| 35 |
echo -e '\\'
|
| 36 |
echo -e "\\"
|
| 37 |
echo
|
| 38 |
|
| 39 |
# backslash at end of line
|
| 40 |
echo -e '\
|
| 41 |
line2'
|
| 42 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 43 |
\
|
| 44 |
\
|
| 45 |
\
|
| 46 |
\
|
| 47 |
|
| 48 |
\
|
| 49 |
line2
|
| 50 |
## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 51 |
-e \
|
| 52 |
-e \
|
| 53 |
-e \
|
| 54 |
-e \
|
| 55 |
|
| 56 |
-e \
|
| 57 |
line2
|
| 58 |
## END
|
| 59 |
|
| 60 |
|
| 61 |
echo (42)
|
| 62 |
## status: 2
|
| 63 |
## OK mksh/zsh status: 1
|
| 64 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 65 |
## END
|
| 66 |
|
| 67 |
|
| 68 |
var x = 43
|
| 69 |
echo (x)
|
| 70 |
## status: 2
|
| 71 |
## OK mksh/zsh status: 1
|
| 72 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 73 |
## END
|
| 74 |
|
| 75 |
|
| 76 |
echo -en 'abc\ndef\n'
|
| 77 |
## stdout-json: "abc\ndef\n"
|
| 78 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: "-en abc\ndef\n\n"
|
| 79 |
|
| 80 |
|
| 81 |
# bash differs from the other three shells, but its behavior is possibly more
|
| 82 |
# sensible, if you're going to ignore the error. It doesn't make sense for
|
| 83 |
# the 'e' to mean 2 different things simultaneously: flag and literal to be
|
| 84 |
# printed.
|
| 85 |
echo -ez 'abc\n'
|
| 86 |
## stdout-json: "-ez abc\\n\n"
|
| 87 |
## OK dash/mksh/zsh stdout-json: "-ez abc\n\n"
|
| 88 |
|
| 89 |
|
| 90 |
flags='-e'
|
| 91 |
case $SH in dash) flags='' ;; esac
|
| 92 |
|
| 93 |
echo $flags 'foo
|
| 94 |
bar'
|
| 95 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 96 |
foo
|
| 97 |
bar
|
| 98 |
## END
|
| 99 |
|
| 100 |
|
| 101 |
flags='-e'
|
| 102 |
case $SH in dash) flags='' ;; esac
|
| 103 |
|
| 104 |
echo $flags 'foo\
|
| 105 |
bar'
|
| 106 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 107 |
foo\
|
| 108 |
bar
|
| 109 |
## END
|
| 110 |
|
| 111 |
|
| 112 |
# https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bashref.html#Bourne-Shell-Builtins
|
| 113 |
# not sure why \c is like NUL?
|
| 114 |
# zsh doesn't allow \E for some reason.
|
| 115 |
echo -e '\a\b\d\e\f'
|
| 116 |
## stdout-json: "\u0007\u0008\\d\u001b\u000c\n"
|
| 117 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: "-e \u0007\u0008\\d\\e\u000c\n"
|
| 118 |
|
| 119 |
|
| 120 |
echo -e '\n\r\t\v'
|
| 121 |
## stdout-json: "\n\r\t\u000b\n"
|
| 122 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: "-e \n\r\t\u000b\n"
|
| 123 |
|
| 124 |
|
| 125 |
echo -e 'ab\0cd'
|
| 126 |
## stdout-json: "ab\u0000cd\n"
|
| 127 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: "-e ab\u0000cd\n"
|
| 128 |
|
| 129 |
|
| 130 |
flags='-e'
|
| 131 |
case $SH in dash) flags='' ;; esac
|
| 132 |
|
| 133 |
echo $flags xy 'ab\cde' 'zzz'
|
| 134 |
## stdout-json: "xy ab"
|
| 135 |
## N-I mksh stdout-json: "xy abde zzz"
|
| 136 |
|
| 137 |
|
| 138 |
echo -e 'abcd\x65f'
|
| 139 |
## stdout-json: "abcdef\n"
|
| 140 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: "-e abcd\\x65f\n"
|
| 141 |
|
| 142 |
|
| 143 |
flags='-e'
|
| 144 |
case $SH in dash) flags='' ;; esac
|
| 145 |
|
| 146 |
echo $flags 'abcd\044e'
|
| 147 |
## stdout-json: "abcd$e\n"
|
| 148 |
|
| 149 |
|
| 150 |
flags='-e'
|
| 151 |
case $SH in dash) flags='' ;; esac
|
| 152 |
|
| 153 |
echo $flags 'abcd\u0065f'
|
| 154 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 155 |
abcdef
|
| 156 |
## END
|
| 157 |
## N-I dash/ash stdout-json: "abcd\\u0065f\n"
|
| 158 |
|
| 159 |
|
| 160 |
flags='-e'
|
| 161 |
case $SH in dash) flags='' ;; esac
|
| 162 |
|
| 163 |
echo $flags 'abcd\U00000065f'
|
| 164 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 165 |
abcdef
|
| 166 |
## END
|
| 167 |
## N-I dash/ash stdout-json: "abcd\\U00000065f\n"
|
| 168 |
|
| 169 |
|
| 170 |
echo -en '\03777' | od -A n -t x1 | sed 's/ \+/ /g'
|
| 171 |
## stdout-json: " ff 37\n"
|
| 172 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: " 2d 65 6e 20 ff 37 0a\n"
|
| 173 |
|
| 174 |
|
| 175 |
# It is 256 % 256 which gets interpreted as a NUL byte.
|
| 176 |
echo -en '\04000' | od -A n -t x1 | sed 's/ \+/ /g'
|
| 177 |
## stdout-json: " 00 30\n"
|
| 178 |
## BUG ash stdout-json: " 20 30 30\n"
|
| 179 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: " 2d 65 6e 20 00 30 0a\n"
|
| 180 |
|
| 181 |
|
| 182 |
flags='-en'
|
| 183 |
case $SH in dash) flags='-n' ;; esac
|
| 184 |
|
| 185 |
echo $flags '\0777' | od -A n -t x1 | sed 's/ \+/ /g'
|
| 186 |
## stdout-json: " ff\n"
|
| 187 |
## BUG mksh stdout-json: " c3 bf\n"
|
| 188 |
## BUG ash stdout-json: " 3f 37\n"
|
| 189 |
|
| 190 |
|
| 191 |
echo -en 'abcd\x6' | od -A n -c | sed 's/ \+/ /g'
|
| 192 |
## stdout-json: " a b c d 006\n"
|
| 193 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: " - e n a b c d \\ x 6 \\n\n"
|
| 194 |
|
| 195 |
|
| 196 |
# I consider mksh and zsh a bug because \x is not an escape
|
| 197 |
echo -e '\x' '\xg' | od -A n -c | sed 's/ \+/ /g'
|
| 198 |
## stdout-json: " \\ x \\ x g \\n\n"
|
| 199 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: " - e \\ x \\ x g \\n\n"
|
| 200 |
## BUG mksh/zsh stdout-json: " \\0 \\0 g \\n\n"
|
| 201 |
|
| 202 |
|
| 203 |
flags='-en'
|
| 204 |
case $SH in dash) flags='-n' ;; esac
|
| 205 |
|
| 206 |
echo $flags 'abcd\04' | od -A n -c | sed 's/ \+/ /g'
|
| 207 |
## stdout-json: " a b c d 004\n"
|
| 208 |
|
| 209 |
|
| 210 |
echo -en 'abcd\u006' | od -A n -c | sed 's/ \+/ /g'
|
| 211 |
## stdout-json: " a b c d 006\n"
|
| 212 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: " - e n a b c d \\ u 0 0 6 \\n\n"
|
| 213 |
## BUG ash stdout-json: " a b c d \\ u 0 0 6\n"
|
| 214 |
|
| 215 |
|
| 216 |
flags='-en'
|
| 217 |
case $SH in dash) flags='-n' ;; esac
|
| 218 |
|
| 219 |
echo $flags '\u6' | od -A n -c | sed 's/ \+/ /g'
|
| 220 |
## stdout-json: " 006\n"
|
| 221 |
## N-I dash/ash stdout-json: " \\ u 6\n"
|
| 222 |
|
| 223 |
|
| 224 |
# \0 is special, but \1 isn't in bash
|
| 225 |
# \1 is special in dash! geez
|
| 226 |
flags='-en'
|
| 227 |
case $SH in dash) flags='-n' ;; esac
|
| 228 |
|
| 229 |
echo $flags '\0' '\1' '\8' | od -A n -c | sed 's/ \+/ /g'
|
| 230 |
## stdout-json: " \\0 \\ 1 \\ 8\n"
|
| 231 |
## BUG dash/ash stdout-json: " \\0 001 \\ 8\n"
|
| 232 |
|
| 233 |
|
| 234 |
# NOTE: there are TABS below
|
| 235 |
read x <<EOF
|
| 236 |
A B C D E
|
| 237 |
FG
|
| 238 |
EOF
|
| 239 |
echo "[$x]"
|
| 240 |
## stdout: [A B C D E]
|
| 241 |
## status: 0
|
| 242 |
|
| 243 |
|
| 244 |
echo -n '' > $TMP/empty.txt
|
| 245 |
read x < $TMP/empty.txt
|
| 246 |
argv.py "status=$?" "$x"
|
| 247 |
|
| 248 |
# No variable name, behaves the same
|
| 249 |
read < $TMP/empty.txt
|
| 250 |
argv.py "status=$?" "$REPLY"
|
| 251 |
|
| 252 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 253 |
['status=1', '']
|
| 254 |
['status=1', '']
|
| 255 |
## END
|
| 256 |
## OK dash STDOUT:
|
| 257 |
['status=1', '']
|
| 258 |
['status=2', '']
|
| 259 |
## END
|
| 260 |
## status: 0
|
| 261 |
|
| 262 |
|
| 263 |
read -n 1 </dev/null
|
| 264 |
echo $?
|
| 265 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 266 |
1
|
| 267 |
## END
|
| 268 |
## OK dash stdout: 2
|
| 269 |
|
| 270 |
|
| 271 |
echo | read
|
| 272 |
echo status=$?
|
| 273 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 274 |
status=0
|
| 275 |
## END
|
| 276 |
## BUG dash STDOUT:
|
| 277 |
status=2
|
| 278 |
## END
|
| 279 |
|
| 280 |
|
| 281 |
# This is odd because the variable is populated successfully. OSH/Oil might
|
| 282 |
# need a separate put reading feature that doesn't use IFS.
|
| 283 |
echo -n ZZZ | { read x; echo $?; echo $x; }
|
| 284 |
## stdout-json: "1\nZZZ\n"
|
| 285 |
## status: 0
|
| 286 |
|
| 287 |
|
| 288 |
# NOTE: there are TABS below
|
| 289 |
read x y z <<EOF
|
| 290 |
A B C D E
|
| 291 |
FG
|
| 292 |
EOF
|
| 293 |
echo "[$x/$y/$z]"
|
| 294 |
## stdout: [A/B/C D E]
|
| 295 |
## status: 0
|
| 296 |
|
| 297 |
|
| 298 |
set -o errexit
|
| 299 |
set -o nounset # hm this doesn't change it
|
| 300 |
read x y z <<EOF
|
| 301 |
A B
|
| 302 |
EOF
|
| 303 |
echo /$x/$y/$z/
|
| 304 |
## stdout: /A/B//
|
| 305 |
## status: 0
|
| 306 |
|
| 307 |
|
| 308 |
echo 12345 > $TMP/readn.txt
|
| 309 |
read -n 4 x < $TMP/readn.txt
|
| 310 |
read -n 2 < $TMP/readn.txt # Do it again with no variable
|
| 311 |
argv.py $x $REPLY
|
| 312 |
## stdout: ['1234', '12']
|
| 313 |
## N-I dash/zsh stdout: []
|
| 314 |
|
| 315 |
|
| 316 |
echo XYZ > "$TMP/readn.txt"
|
| 317 |
IFS= TMOUT= read -n 1 char < "$TMP/readn.txt"
|
| 318 |
argv.py "$char"
|
| 319 |
## stdout: ['X']
|
| 320 |
## N-I dash/zsh stdout: ['']
|
| 321 |
|
| 322 |
|
| 323 |
read -n not_a_number
|
| 324 |
echo status=$?
|
| 325 |
## stdout: status=2
|
| 326 |
## OK bash stdout: status=1
|
| 327 |
## N-I zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 328 |
|
| 329 |
|
| 330 |
case $SH in (dash|ash|zsh) exit ;; esac
|
| 331 |
|
| 332 |
echo abcxyz | { read -n 3; echo reply=$REPLY; }
|
| 333 |
## status: 0
|
| 334 |
## stdout: reply=abc
|
| 335 |
## N-I dash/ash/zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 336 |
|
| 337 |
# zsh appears to hang with -k
|
| 338 |
## N-I zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 339 |
|
| 340 |
|
| 341 |
echo 123 > $TMP/readreply.txt
|
| 342 |
read < $TMP/readreply.txt
|
| 343 |
echo $REPLY
|
| 344 |
## stdout: 123
|
| 345 |
## N-I dash stdout:
|
| 346 |
|
| 347 |
|
| 348 |
# dash, ash and zsh do not implement read -N
|
| 349 |
# mksh treats -N exactly the same as -n
|
| 350 |
case $SH in (dash|ash|zsh) exit ;; esac
|
| 351 |
|
| 352 |
# bash docs: https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Bash-Builtins.html
|
| 353 |
|
| 354 |
echo 'a b c' > $TMP/readn.txt
|
| 355 |
|
| 356 |
echo 'read -n'
|
| 357 |
read -n 5 A B C < $TMP/readn.txt; echo "'$A' '$B' '$C'"
|
| 358 |
read -n 4 A B C < $TMP/readn.txt; echo "'$A' '$B' '$C'"
|
| 359 |
echo
|
| 360 |
|
| 361 |
echo 'read -N'
|
| 362 |
read -N 5 A B C < $TMP/readn.txt; echo "'$A' '$B' '$C'"
|
| 363 |
read -N 4 A B C < $TMP/readn.txt; echo "'$A' '$B' '$C'"
|
| 364 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 365 |
read -n
|
| 366 |
'a' 'b' 'c'
|
| 367 |
'a' 'b' ''
|
| 368 |
|
| 369 |
read -N
|
| 370 |
'a b c' '' ''
|
| 371 |
'a b ' '' ''
|
| 372 |
## END
|
| 373 |
## N-I dash/ash/zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 374 |
## BUG mksh STDOUT:
|
| 375 |
read -n
|
| 376 |
'a' 'b' 'c'
|
| 377 |
'a' 'b' ''
|
| 378 |
|
| 379 |
read -N
|
| 380 |
'a' 'b' 'c'
|
| 381 |
'a' 'b' ''
|
| 382 |
## END
|
| 383 |
|
| 384 |
|
| 385 |
case $SH in (dash|ash|zsh) exit ;; esac
|
| 386 |
|
| 387 |
echo $'a\nb\nc' > $TMP/read-lines.txt
|
| 388 |
|
| 389 |
read -N 3 out < $TMP/read-lines.txt
|
| 390 |
echo "$out"
|
| 391 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 392 |
a
|
| 393 |
b
|
| 394 |
## END
|
| 395 |
## N-I dash/ash/zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 396 |
|
| 397 |
|
| 398 |
|
| 399 |
echo 'a b' > $TMP/read-few.txt
|
| 400 |
|
| 401 |
c='some value'
|
| 402 |
read a b c < $TMP/read-few.txt
|
| 403 |
echo "'$a' '$b' '$c'"
|
| 404 |
|
| 405 |
case $SH in (dash) exit ;; esac # dash does not implement -n
|
| 406 |
|
| 407 |
c='some value'
|
| 408 |
read -n 3 a b c < $TMP/read-few.txt
|
| 409 |
echo "'$a' '$b' '$c'"
|
| 410 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 411 |
'a' 'b' ''
|
| 412 |
'a' 'b' ''
|
| 413 |
## END
|
| 414 |
## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 415 |
'a' 'b' ''
|
| 416 |
## END
|
| 417 |
## BUG zsh STDOUT:
|
| 418 |
'a' 'b' ''
|
| 419 |
'b' '' ''
|
| 420 |
## END
|
| 421 |
|
| 422 |
|
| 423 |
echo 'one\ two' > $TMP/readr.txt
|
| 424 |
read escaped < $TMP/readr.txt
|
| 425 |
read -r raw < $TMP/readr.txt
|
| 426 |
argv.py "$escaped" "$raw"
|
| 427 |
## stdout: ['one two', 'one\\ two']
|
| 428 |
|
| 429 |
|
| 430 |
echo 'one\ two\x65three' > $TMP/readr.txt
|
| 431 |
read escaped < $TMP/readr.txt
|
| 432 |
read -r raw < $TMP/readr.txt
|
| 433 |
argv.py "$escaped" "$raw"
|
| 434 |
# mksh respects the hex escapes here, but other shells don't!
|
| 435 |
## stdout: ['one twox65three', 'one\\ two\\x65three']
|
| 436 |
## BUG mksh/zsh stdout: ['one twoethree', 'one\\ twoethree']
|
| 437 |
|
| 438 |
|
| 439 |
# NOTE: osh failing because of file descriptor issue. stdin has to be closed!
|
| 440 |
tmp=$TMP/$(basename $SH)-readr.txt
|
| 441 |
echo -e 'one\\\ntwo\n' > $tmp
|
| 442 |
read escaped < $tmp
|
| 443 |
read -r raw < $tmp
|
| 444 |
argv.py "$escaped" "$raw"
|
| 445 |
## stdout: ['onetwo', 'one\\']
|
| 446 |
## N-I dash stdout: ['-e onetwo', '-e one\\']
|
| 447 |
|
| 448 |
|
| 449 |
read x y << 'EOF'
|
| 450 |
one-\
|
| 451 |
two three-\
|
| 452 |
four five-\
|
| 453 |
six
|
| 454 |
EOF
|
| 455 |
argv.py "$x" "$y" "$z"
|
| 456 |
## stdout: ['one-two', 'three-four five-six', '']
|
| 457 |
|
| 458 |
|
| 459 |
echo '\nline' > $TMP/readr.txt
|
| 460 |
read escaped < $TMP/readr.txt
|
| 461 |
read -r raw < $TMP/readr.txt
|
| 462 |
argv.py "$escaped" "$raw"
|
| 463 |
# dash/mksh/zsh are bugs because at least the raw mode should let you read a
|
| 464 |
# literal \n.
|
| 465 |
## stdout: ['nline', '\\nline']
|
| 466 |
## BUG dash/mksh/zsh stdout: ['', '']
|
| 467 |
|
| 468 |
|
| 469 |
case $SH in (dash|zsh) exit ;; esac
|
| 470 |
|
| 471 |
# It's hard to really test this because it requires a terminal. We hit a
|
| 472 |
# different code path when reading through a pipe. There can be bugs there
|
| 473 |
# too!
|
| 474 |
|
| 475 |
echo foo | { read -s; echo $REPLY; }
|
| 476 |
echo bar | { read -n 2 -s; echo $REPLY; }
|
| 477 |
|
| 478 |
# Hm no exit 1 here? Weird
|
| 479 |
echo b | { read -n 2 -s; echo $?; echo $REPLY; }
|
| 480 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 481 |
foo
|
| 482 |
ba
|
| 483 |
0
|
| 484 |
b
|
| 485 |
## END
|
| 486 |
## N-I dash/zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 487 |
|
| 488 |
|
| 489 |
# The leading spaces are stripped if they appear in IFS.
|
| 490 |
IFS=$(echo -e '\n')
|
| 491 |
read var <<EOF
|
| 492 |
a b c
|
| 493 |
d e f
|
| 494 |
EOF
|
| 495 |
echo "[$var]"
|
| 496 |
## stdout: [ a b c]
|
| 497 |
## N-I dash stdout: [a b c]
|
| 498 |
|
| 499 |
|
| 500 |
# The leading spaces are stripped if they appear in IFS.
|
| 501 |
# IFS chars are escaped with :.
|
| 502 |
tmp=$TMP/$(basename $SH)-read-ifs.txt
|
| 503 |
IFS=:
|
| 504 |
cat >$tmp <<'EOF'
|
| 505 |
\\a :b\: c:d\
|
| 506 |
e
|
| 507 |
EOF
|
| 508 |
read a b c d < $tmp
|
| 509 |
# Use printf because echo in dash/mksh interprets escapes, while it doesn't in
|
| 510 |
# bash.
|
| 511 |
printf "%s\n" "[$a|$b|$c|$d]"
|
| 512 |
## stdout: [ \a |b: c|d e|]
|
| 513 |
|
| 514 |
|
| 515 |
IFS=''
|
| 516 |
read x y <<EOF
|
| 517 |
a b c d
|
| 518 |
EOF
|
| 519 |
echo "[$x|$y]"
|
| 520 |
## stdout: [ a b c d|]
|
| 521 |
|
| 522 |
|
| 523 |
# bash doesn't respect these, but other shells do. Gah! I think bash
|
| 524 |
# behavior makes more sense. It only escapes IFS.
|
| 525 |
echo '\a \b \c \d \e \f \g \h \x65 \145 \i' > $TMP/read-c.txt
|
| 526 |
read line < $TMP/read-c.txt
|
| 527 |
echo $line
|
| 528 |
## stdout-json: "a b c d e f g h x65 145 i\n"
|
| 529 |
## BUG ash stdout-json: "abcdefghx65 145 i\n"
|
| 530 |
## BUG dash/zsh stdout-json: "\u0007 \u0008\n"
|
| 531 |
## BUG mksh stdout-json: "\u0007 \u0008 d \u001b \u000c g h e 145 i\n"
|
| 532 |
|
| 533 |
|
| 534 |
f() {
|
| 535 |
read head << EOF
|
| 536 |
ref: refs/heads/dev/andy
|
| 537 |
EOF
|
| 538 |
}
|
| 539 |
f
|
| 540 |
echo $head
|
| 541 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 542 |
ref: refs/heads/dev/andy
|
| 543 |
## END
|
| 544 |
|
| 545 |
|
| 546 |
|
| 547 |
# read -a is used in bash-completion
|
| 548 |
# none of these shells implement it
|
| 549 |
case $SH in
|
| 550 |
*mksh|*dash|*zsh|*/ash)
|
| 551 |
exit 2;
|
| 552 |
;;
|
| 553 |
esac
|
| 554 |
|
| 555 |
read -a myarray <<'EOF'
|
| 556 |
a b c\ d
|
| 557 |
EOF
|
| 558 |
argv.py "${myarray[@]}"
|
| 559 |
|
| 560 |
# arguments are ignored here
|
| 561 |
read -r -a array2 extra arguments <<'EOF'
|
| 562 |
a b c\ d
|
| 563 |
EOF
|
| 564 |
argv.py "${array2[@]}"
|
| 565 |
argv.py "${extra[@]}"
|
| 566 |
argv.py "${arguments[@]}"
|
| 567 |
## status: 0
|
| 568 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 569 |
['a', 'b', 'c d']
|
| 570 |
['a', 'b', 'c\\', 'd']
|
| 571 |
[]
|
| 572 |
[]
|
| 573 |
## END
|
| 574 |
## N-I dash/mksh/zsh/ash status: 2
|
| 575 |
## N-I dash/mksh/zsh/ash stdout-json: ""
|
| 576 |
|
| 577 |
|
| 578 |
printf a,b,c:d,e,f:g,h,i | {
|
| 579 |
IFS=,
|
| 580 |
read -d : v1
|
| 581 |
echo "v1=$v1"
|
| 582 |
read -d : v1 v2
|
| 583 |
echo "v1=$v1 v2=$v2"
|
| 584 |
read -d : v1 v2 v3
|
| 585 |
echo "v1=$v1 v2=$v2 v3=$v3"
|
| 586 |
}
|
| 587 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 588 |
v1=a,b,c
|
| 589 |
v1=d v2=e,f
|
| 590 |
v1=g v2=h v3=i
|
| 591 |
## END
|
| 592 |
## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 593 |
v1=
|
| 594 |
v1= v2=
|
| 595 |
v1= v2= v3=
|
| 596 |
## END
|
| 597 |
|
| 598 |
|
| 599 |
printf 'a,b,c\0d,e,f\0g,h,i' | {
|
| 600 |
IFS=,
|
| 601 |
read -d '' v1
|
| 602 |
echo "v1=$v1"
|
| 603 |
read -d '' v1 v2
|
| 604 |
echo "v1=$v1 v2=$v2"
|
| 605 |
read -d '' v1 v2 v3
|
| 606 |
echo "v1=$v1 v2=$v2 v3=$v3"
|
| 607 |
}
|
| 608 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 609 |
v1=a,b,c
|
| 610 |
v1=d v2=e,f
|
| 611 |
v1=g v2=h v3=i
|
| 612 |
## END
|
| 613 |
## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 614 |
v1=
|
| 615 |
v1= v2=
|
| 616 |
v1= v2= v3=
|
| 617 |
## END
|
| 618 |
|
| 619 |
|
| 620 |
read -rd '' var <<EOF
|
| 621 |
foo
|
| 622 |
bar
|
| 623 |
EOF
|
| 624 |
echo "$var"
|
| 625 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 626 |
foo
|
| 627 |
bar
|
| 628 |
## END
|
| 629 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: "\n"
|
| 630 |
|
| 631 |
|
| 632 |
{ read -d : part
|
| 633 |
echo $part $?
|
| 634 |
read -d : part
|
| 635 |
echo $part $?
|
| 636 |
} <<EOF
|
| 637 |
foo:bar
|
| 638 |
EOF
|
| 639 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 640 |
foo 0
|
| 641 |
bar 1
|
| 642 |
## END
|
| 643 |
## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 644 |
2
|
| 645 |
2
|
| 646 |
## END
|
| 647 |
|
| 648 |
|
| 649 |
case $SH in (dash|zsh|mksh) exit ;; esac
|
| 650 |
|
| 651 |
# is there input available?
|
| 652 |
read -t 0 < /dev/null
|
| 653 |
echo $?
|
| 654 |
|
| 655 |
# floating point
|
| 656 |
read -t 0.0 < /dev/null
|
| 657 |
echo $?
|
| 658 |
|
| 659 |
# floating point
|
| 660 |
echo foo | { read -t 0; echo reply=$REPLY; }
|
| 661 |
echo $?
|
| 662 |
|
| 663 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 664 |
0
|
| 665 |
0
|
| 666 |
reply=
|
| 667 |
0
|
| 668 |
## END
|
| 669 |
## N-I dash/zsh/mksh stdout-json: ""
|
| 670 |
|
| 671 |
|
| 672 |
case $SH in (dash) exit ;; esac
|
| 673 |
|
| 674 |
read -t 0.5 < /dev/null
|
| 675 |
echo $?
|
| 676 |
|
| 677 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 678 |
1
|
| 679 |
## END
|
| 680 |
## BUG zsh/mksh STDOUT:
|
| 681 |
1
|
| 682 |
## END
|
| 683 |
## N-I dash stdout-json: ""
|
| 684 |
|
| 685 |
|
| 686 |
# bash appears to just take the absolute value?
|
| 687 |
|
| 688 |
read -t -0.5 < /dev/null
|
| 689 |
echo $?
|
| 690 |
|
| 691 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 692 |
2
|
| 693 |
## END
|
| 694 |
## BUG bash STDOUT:
|
| 695 |
1
|
| 696 |
## END
|
| 697 |
## BUG zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 698 |
## BUG zsh status: 1
|
| 699 |
|
| 700 |
|
| 701 |
case $SH in (dash|mksh) exit ;; esac
|
| 702 |
|
| 703 |
# file descriptor
|
| 704 |
read -u 3 3<<EOF
|
| 705 |
hi
|
| 706 |
EOF
|
| 707 |
echo reply=$REPLY
|
| 708 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 709 |
reply=hi
|
| 710 |
## END
|
| 711 |
## N-I dash/mksh stdout-json: ""
|
| 712 |
|
| 713 |
|
| 714 |
read -u -3
|
| 715 |
echo status=$?
|
| 716 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 717 |
status=2
|
| 718 |
## END
|
| 719 |
## OK bash/zsh STDOUT:
|
| 720 |
status=1
|
| 721 |
## END
|
| 722 |
|
| 723 |
|
| 724 |
case $SH in (dash|zsh|ash) exit ;; esac
|
| 725 |
|
| 726 |
echo foobar | { read -n 5 -d b; echo $REPLY; }
|
| 727 |
echo foobar | { read -N 5 -d b; echo $REPLY; }
|
| 728 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 729 |
foo
|
| 730 |
fooba
|
| 731 |
## END
|
| 732 |
## OK mksh STDOUT:
|
| 733 |
fooba
|
| 734 |
fooba
|
| 735 |
## END
|
| 736 |
## N-I dash/zsh/ash stdout-json: ""
|
| 737 |
|
| 738 |
|
| 739 |
|
| 740 |
# hm DISABLED if we're not going to the terminal
|
| 741 |
# so we're only testing that it accepts the flag here
|
| 742 |
|
| 743 |
case $SH in (dash|mksh|zsh) exit ;; esac
|
| 744 |
|
| 745 |
echo hi | { read -p 'P'; echo $REPLY; }
|
| 746 |
echo hi | { read -p 'P' -n 1; echo $REPLY; }
|
| 747 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 748 |
hi
|
| 749 |
h
|
| 750 |
## END
|
| 751 |
## stderr-json: ""
|
| 752 |
## N-I dash/mksh/zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 753 |
|
| 754 |
|
| 755 |
read -n -1
|
| 756 |
echo status=$?
|
| 757 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 758 |
status=2
|
| 759 |
## END
|
| 760 |
## OK bash stdout: status=1
|
| 761 |
## BUG mksh stdout-json: ""
|
| 762 |
# zsh gives a fatal error? seems inconsistent
|
| 763 |
## BUG zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 764 |
## BUG zsh status: 1
|
| 765 |
|
| 766 |
|
| 767 |
echo hi | { read -rn1 var; echo var=$var; }
|
| 768 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 769 |
var=h
|
| 770 |
## END
|
| 771 |
## N-I dash/zsh STDOUT:
|
| 772 |
var=
|
| 773 |
## END
|
| 774 |
|
| 775 |
|
| 776 |
|
| 777 |
|
| 778 |
case $SH in (dash|zsh|mksh) exit ;; esac # NOT IMPLEMENTED
|
| 779 |
|
| 780 |
mkdir -p read0
|
| 781 |
cd read0
|
| 782 |
rm -f *
|
| 783 |
|
| 784 |
touch a\\b\\c\\d # -r is necessary!
|
| 785 |
|
| 786 |
find . -type f -a -print0 | { read -r -d ''; echo "[$REPLY]"; }
|
| 787 |
|
| 788 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 789 |
[./a\b\c\d]
|
| 790 |
## END
|
| 791 |
## N-I dash/zsh/mksh STDOUT:
|
| 792 |
## END
|
| 793 |
|
| 794 |
|
| 795 |
|
| 796 |
|
| 797 |
# This tickles an infinite loop bug in our version of mksh! TODO: upgrade the
|
| 798 |
# version and enable this
|
| 799 |
case $SH in (mksh) return ;; esac
|
| 800 |
|
| 801 |
cd $TMP
|
| 802 |
mkdir -p dir
|
| 803 |
read x < ./dir
|
| 804 |
echo status=$?
|
| 805 |
|
| 806 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 807 |
status=1
|
| 808 |
## END
|
| 809 |
# OK mksh stdout: status=2
|
| 810 |
## OK mksh stdout-json: ""
|
| 811 |
|
| 812 |
|
| 813 |
|
| 814 |
case $SH in (dash|ash) return ;; esac # not implemented
|
| 815 |
|
| 816 |
# same hanging bug
|
| 817 |
case $SH in (mksh) return ;; esac
|
| 818 |
|
| 819 |
mkdir -p dir
|
| 820 |
read -n 3 x < ./dir
|
| 821 |
echo status=$?
|
| 822 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 823 |
status=1
|
| 824 |
## END
|
| 825 |
## OK mksh stdout-json: ""
|
| 826 |
## N-I dash/ash stdout-json: ""
|
| 827 |
|
| 828 |
|
| 829 |
case $SH in (dash|ash|mksh|zsh) return ;; esac # not implemented
|
| 830 |
|
| 831 |
mkdir -p dir
|
| 832 |
mapfile $x < ./dir
|
| 833 |
echo status=$?
|
| 834 |
|
| 835 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 836 |
status=1
|
| 837 |
## END
|
| 838 |
## BUG bash STDOUT:
|
| 839 |
status=0
|
| 840 |
## END
|
| 841 |
## N-I dash/ash/mksh/zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 842 |
|
| 843 |
|
| 844 |
mkdir -p dir
|
| 845 |
|
| 846 |
echo foo > ./dir
|
| 847 |
echo status=$?
|
| 848 |
printf foo > ./dir
|
| 849 |
echo status=$?
|
| 850 |
|
| 851 |
## STDOUT:
|
| 852 |
status=1
|
| 853 |
status=1
|
| 854 |
## END
|
| 855 |
## OK dash STDOUT:
|
| 856 |
status=2
|
| 857 |
status=2
|
| 858 |
## END
|
| 859 |
|