| 1 | # |
| 2 | # Corner cases in var sub. Maybe rename this file. |
| 3 | |
| 4 | #### Bad var sub |
| 5 | echo ${a&} |
| 6 | ## stdout-json: "" |
| 7 | ## status: 2 |
| 8 | ## OK bash/mksh status: 1 |
| 9 | |
| 10 | #### Braced block inside ${} |
| 11 | # NOTE: This bug was in bash 4.3 but fixed in bash 4.4. |
| 12 | echo ${foo:-$({ which ls; })} |
| 13 | ## stdout: /bin/ls |
| 14 | |
| 15 | #### Nested ${} |
| 16 | bar=ZZ |
| 17 | echo ${foo:-${bar}} |
| 18 | ## stdout: ZZ |
| 19 | |
| 20 | #### Filename redirect with "$@" |
| 21 | # bash - ambiguous redirect -- yeah I want this error |
| 22 | # - But I want it at PARSE time? So is there a special DollarAtPart? |
| 23 | # MultipleArgsPart? |
| 24 | # mksh - tries to create '_tmp/var-sub1 _tmp/var-sub2' |
| 25 | # dash - tries to create '_tmp/var-sub1 _tmp/var-sub2' |
| 26 | fun() { |
| 27 | echo hi > "$@" |
| 28 | } |
| 29 | fun _tmp/var-sub1 _tmp/var-sub2 |
| 30 | ## status: 1 |
| 31 | ## OK dash status: 2 |
| 32 | |
| 33 | #### Filename redirect with split word |
| 34 | # bash - runtime error, ambiguous redirect |
| 35 | # mksh and dash - they will NOT apply word splitting after redirect, and write |
| 36 | # to '_tmp/1 2' |
| 37 | # Stricter behavior seems fine. |
| 38 | foo='_tmp/1 2' |
| 39 | rm '_tmp/1 2' |
| 40 | echo hi > $foo |
| 41 | test -f '_tmp/1 2' && cat '_tmp/1 2' |
| 42 | ## status: 0 |
| 43 | ## stdout: hi |
| 44 | ## OK bash status: 1 |
| 45 | ## OK bash stdout-json: "" |
| 46 | |
| 47 | #### Descriptor redirect to bad "$@" |
| 48 | # All of them give errors: |
| 49 | # dash - bad fd number, parse error? |
| 50 | # bash - ambiguous redirect |
| 51 | # mksh - illegal file descriptor name |
| 52 | set -- '2 3' 'c d' |
| 53 | echo hi 1>& "$@" |
| 54 | ## status: 1 |
| 55 | ## OK dash status: 2 |
| 56 | |
| 57 | #### Here doc with bad "$@" delimiter |
| 58 | # bash - syntax error |
| 59 | # dash - syntax error: end of file unexpected |
| 60 | # mksh - runtime error: here document unclosed |
| 61 | # |
| 62 | # What I want is syntax error: bad delimiter! |
| 63 | # |
| 64 | # This means that "$@" should be part of the parse tree then? Anything that |
| 65 | # involves more than one token. |
| 66 | fun() { |
| 67 | cat << "$@" |
| 68 | hi |
| 69 | 1 2 |
| 70 | } |
| 71 | fun 1 2 |
| 72 | ## status: 2 |
| 73 | ## stdout-json: "" |
| 74 | ## OK mksh status: 1 |