| 1 | # builtin-trap.test.sh
|
| 2 |
|
| 3 | #### trap accepts/ignores --
|
| 4 | trap -- 'echo hi' EXIT
|
| 5 | echo done
|
| 6 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 7 | done
|
| 8 | hi
|
| 9 | ## END
|
| 10 |
|
| 11 | #### trap 'echo hi' KILL (regression test, caught by smoosh suite)
|
| 12 | trap 'echo hi' 9
|
| 13 | echo status=$?
|
| 14 | trap 'echo hi' KILL
|
| 15 | echo status=$?
|
| 16 | trap 'echo hi' STOP
|
| 17 | echo status=$?
|
| 18 | trap 'echo hi' TERM
|
| 19 | echo status=$?
|
| 20 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 21 | status=0
|
| 22 | status=0
|
| 23 | status=0
|
| 24 | status=0
|
| 25 | ## END
|
| 26 | ## OK osh STDOUT:
|
| 27 | status=1
|
| 28 | status=1
|
| 29 | status=1
|
| 30 | status=0
|
| 31 | ## END
|
| 32 |
|
| 33 | #### Register invalid trap
|
| 34 | trap 'foo' SIGINVALID
|
| 35 | ## status: 1
|
| 36 |
|
| 37 | #### Remove invalid trap
|
| 38 | trap - SIGINVALID
|
| 39 | ## status: 1
|
| 40 |
|
| 41 | #### SIGINT and INT are aliases
|
| 42 | trap - SIGINT
|
| 43 | echo $?
|
| 44 | trap - INT
|
| 45 | echo $?
|
| 46 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 47 | 0
|
| 48 | 0
|
| 49 | ## END
|
| 50 | ## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 51 | 1
|
| 52 | 0
|
| 53 | ## END
|
| 54 |
|
| 55 | #### Invalid trap invocation
|
| 56 | trap 'foo'
|
| 57 | echo status=$?
|
| 58 | ## stdout: status=2
|
| 59 | ## OK dash stdout: status=1
|
| 60 | ## BUG mksh stdout: status=0
|
| 61 |
|
| 62 | #### exit 1 when trap code string is invalid
|
| 63 | # All shells spew warnings to stderr, but don't actually exit! Bad!
|
| 64 | trap 'echo <' EXIT
|
| 65 | echo status=$?
|
| 66 | ## stdout: status=1
|
| 67 | ## BUG mksh status: 1
|
| 68 | ## BUG mksh stdout: status=0
|
| 69 | ## BUG dash/bash status: 0
|
| 70 | ## BUG dash/bash stdout: status=0
|
| 71 |
|
| 72 | #### trap EXIT calling exit
|
| 73 | cleanup() {
|
| 74 | echo "cleanup [$@]"
|
| 75 | exit 42
|
| 76 | }
|
| 77 | trap 'cleanup x y z' EXIT
|
| 78 | ## stdout: cleanup [x y z]
|
| 79 | ## status: 42
|
| 80 |
|
| 81 | #### trap EXIT return status ignored
|
| 82 | cleanup() {
|
| 83 | echo "cleanup [$@]"
|
| 84 | return 42
|
| 85 | }
|
| 86 | trap 'cleanup x y z' EXIT
|
| 87 | ## stdout: cleanup [x y z]
|
| 88 | ## status: 0
|
| 89 |
|
| 90 | #### trap EXIT with PARSE error
|
| 91 | trap 'echo FAILED' EXIT
|
| 92 | for
|
| 93 | ## stdout: FAILED
|
| 94 | ## status: 2
|
| 95 | ## OK mksh status: 1
|
| 96 |
|
| 97 | #### trap EXIT with PARSE error and explicit exit
|
| 98 | trap 'echo FAILED; exit 0' EXIT
|
| 99 | for
|
| 100 | ## stdout: FAILED
|
| 101 | ## status: 0
|
| 102 |
|
| 103 | #### trap EXIT with explicit exit
|
| 104 | trap 'echo IN TRAP; echo $stdout' EXIT
|
| 105 | stdout=FOO
|
| 106 | exit 42
|
| 107 |
|
| 108 | ## status: 42
|
| 109 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 110 | IN TRAP
|
| 111 | FOO
|
| 112 | ## END
|
| 113 |
|
| 114 | #### trap EXIT with command sub / subshell / pipeline
|
| 115 | trap 'echo EXIT TRAP' EXIT
|
| 116 |
|
| 117 | echo $(echo command sub)
|
| 118 |
|
| 119 | ( echo subshell )
|
| 120 |
|
| 121 | echo pipeline | cat
|
| 122 |
|
| 123 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 124 | command sub
|
| 125 | subshell
|
| 126 | pipeline
|
| 127 | EXIT TRAP
|
| 128 | ## END
|
| 129 |
|
| 130 | #### trap ERR
|
| 131 | err() {
|
| 132 | echo "err [$@] $?"
|
| 133 | }
|
| 134 | trap 'err x y' ERR
|
| 135 |
|
| 136 | echo A
|
| 137 |
|
| 138 | false
|
| 139 | echo B
|
| 140 |
|
| 141 | ( exit 42 )
|
| 142 | echo C
|
| 143 |
|
| 144 | trap - ERR # disable trap
|
| 145 |
|
| 146 | false
|
| 147 | echo D
|
| 148 |
|
| 149 | trap 'echo after errexit $?' ERR
|
| 150 |
|
| 151 | set -o errexit
|
| 152 |
|
| 153 | ( exit 99 )
|
| 154 | echo E
|
| 155 |
|
| 156 | ## status: 99
|
| 157 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 158 | A
|
| 159 | err [x y] 1
|
| 160 | B
|
| 161 | err [x y] 42
|
| 162 | C
|
| 163 | D
|
| 164 | after errexit 99
|
| 165 | ## END
|
| 166 | ## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 167 | A
|
| 168 | B
|
| 169 | C
|
| 170 | D
|
| 171 | ## END
|
| 172 |
|
| 173 | #### trap ERR and pipelines (lastpipe and PIPESTATUS difference)
|
| 174 | case $SH in dash) exit ;; esac
|
| 175 |
|
| 176 | err() {
|
| 177 | echo "err [$@] status=$? [${PIPESTATUS[@]}]"
|
| 178 | }
|
| 179 | trap 'err' ERR
|
| 180 |
|
| 181 | echo A
|
| 182 |
|
| 183 | false
|
| 184 |
|
| 185 | # succeeds
|
| 186 | echo B | grep B
|
| 187 |
|
| 188 | # fails
|
| 189 | echo C | grep zzz
|
| 190 |
|
| 191 | echo D | grep zzz | cat
|
| 192 |
|
| 193 | set -o pipefail
|
| 194 | echo E | grep zzz | cat
|
| 195 |
|
| 196 | trap - ERR # disable trap
|
| 197 |
|
| 198 | echo F | grep zz
|
| 199 | echo ok
|
| 200 |
|
| 201 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 202 | A
|
| 203 | err [] status=1 [1]
|
| 204 | B
|
| 205 | err [] status=1 [0 1]
|
| 206 | err [] status=1 [0 1 0]
|
| 207 | ok
|
| 208 | ## END
|
| 209 |
|
| 210 | # lastpipe semantics mean we get another call!
|
| 211 | # also we don't set PIPESTATUS unless we get a pipeline
|
| 212 |
|
| 213 | ## OK osh STDOUT:
|
| 214 | A
|
| 215 | err [] status=1 []
|
| 216 | B
|
| 217 | err [] status=1 [0 0]
|
| 218 | err [] status=1 [0 1]
|
| 219 | err [] status=1 [0 1 0]
|
| 220 | ok
|
| 221 | ## END
|
| 222 |
|
| 223 | ## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 224 | ## END
|
| 225 |
|
| 226 | #### error in trap ERR (recursive)
|
| 227 | case $SH in dash) exit ;; esac
|
| 228 |
|
| 229 | err() {
|
| 230 | echo err status $?
|
| 231 | ( exit 2 )
|
| 232 | }
|
| 233 | trap 'err' ERR
|
| 234 |
|
| 235 | echo A
|
| 236 | false
|
| 237 | echo B
|
| 238 |
|
| 239 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 240 | A
|
| 241 | err status 1
|
| 242 | B
|
| 243 | ## END
|
| 244 | ## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 245 | ## END
|
| 246 |
|
| 247 | #### trap 0 is equivalent to EXIT
|
| 248 | # not sure why this is, but POSIX wants it.
|
| 249 | trap 'echo EXIT' 0
|
| 250 | echo status=$?
|
| 251 | trap - EXIT
|
| 252 | echo status=$?
|
| 253 | ## status: 0
|
| 254 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 255 | status=0
|
| 256 | status=0
|
| 257 | ## END
|
| 258 |
|
| 259 | #### trap 1 is equivalent to SIGHUP; HUP is equivalent to SIGHUP
|
| 260 | trap 'echo HUP' SIGHUP
|
| 261 | echo status=$?
|
| 262 | trap 'echo HUP' HUP
|
| 263 | echo status=$?
|
| 264 | trap 'echo HUP' 1
|
| 265 | echo status=$?
|
| 266 | trap - HUP
|
| 267 | echo status=$?
|
| 268 | ## status: 0
|
| 269 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 270 | status=0
|
| 271 | status=0
|
| 272 | status=0
|
| 273 | status=0
|
| 274 | ## END
|
| 275 | ## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 276 | status=1
|
| 277 | status=0
|
| 278 | status=0
|
| 279 | status=0
|
| 280 | ## END
|
| 281 |
|
| 282 | #### eval in the exit trap (regression for issue #293)
|
| 283 | trap 'eval "echo hi"' 0
|
| 284 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 285 | hi
|
| 286 | ## END
|
| 287 |
|
| 288 |
|
| 289 | #### exit codes for traps are isolated
|
| 290 |
|
| 291 | trap 'echo USR1 trap status=$?; ( exit 42 )' USR1
|
| 292 |
|
| 293 | echo before=$?
|
| 294 |
|
| 295 | # Equivalent to 'kill -USR1 $$' except OSH doesn't have "kill" yet.
|
| 296 | # /bin/kill doesn't exist on Debian unless 'procps' is installed.
|
| 297 | sh -c "kill -USR1 $$"
|
| 298 | echo after=$?
|
| 299 |
|
| 300 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 301 | before=0
|
| 302 | USR1 trap status=0
|
| 303 | after=0
|
| 304 | ## END
|
| 305 |
|
| 306 | #### traps are cleared in subshell (started with &)
|
| 307 |
|
| 308 | # Test with SIGURG because the default handler is SIG_IGN
|
| 309 | #
|
| 310 | # If we use SIGUSR1, I think the shell reverts to killing the process
|
| 311 |
|
| 312 | # https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal.7.html
|
| 313 |
|
| 314 | trap 'echo SIGURG' URG
|
| 315 |
|
| 316 | kill -URG $$
|
| 317 |
|
| 318 | # Hm trap doesn't happen here
|
| 319 | { echo begin child; sleep 0.1; echo end child; } &
|
| 320 | kill -URG $!
|
| 321 | wait
|
| 322 | echo "wait status $?"
|
| 323 |
|
| 324 | # In the CI, mksh sometimes gives:
|
| 325 | #
|
| 326 | # USR1
|
| 327 | # begin child
|
| 328 | # done
|
| 329 | #
|
| 330 | # leaving off 'end child'. This seems like a BUG to me?
|
| 331 |
|
| 332 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 333 | SIGURG
|
| 334 | begin child
|
| 335 | end child
|
| 336 | wait status 0
|
| 337 | ## END
|