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Standard output tests as being on a terminal within a command substitution #1079
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In case anyone wonders about a use case affected by this bug: it is entirely conceivable to have a utility shell function that colourises or otherwise pretty-prints its output if standard output is on a terminal, and otherwise produces plain text so it can be used with command substitutions, log files and the like. |
McDutchie
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Standard output (FD 1) tested as being on a terminal within a command substitution, which makes no sense as the command substitution is supposed to be catching standard output. ksh -c 'v=$(echo begincomsub [ -t 1 ] && echo oops echo endcomsub) echo "$v"' This should not output "oops". This is one of the many bugs with ksh93 virtual (non-forked) subshells. On the abandoned Vashist/Rader ksh2020 branch, this bug was fixed by changing quite a lot of code, which introduced and/or exposed another bug: att#1079 att@8e1e405e att#1088 That issue was unresolved when the ksh2020 branch was abandoned. The safer and more conservative fix is simply forcing the subshell to fork if we're in a non-forked command substitution and testing '-t 1'. It is hard to imagine a situation where this would cause a noticable performance hit. Note that this fix does not affect ksh93-specific "shared" non-subshell ${ command substitutions; } which are executed in the main shell environment, so that variables survive, etcetera. 'test -t 1' continues to wrongly return true there, but command substitutions of that form cannot be forked because that would defeat their purpose. src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/test.c: - Fix 'test -t 1', '[ -t 1 ]' and '[[ -t 1 ]]' by forking the current subshell if it is a virtual/non-forked subshell (shp->subshell), and a command substitution (shp->comsub), but NOT a "shared" ${ command substitution; } (!shp->subshare). src/cmd/ksh93/tests/bracket.sh: - Add two regression tests for this issue, which were adapted from the Vashist/Rader ksh2020 branch. NEWS, src/cmd/ksh93/include/version.h: - Update. (cherry picked from commit b8ef05e457ead65b83417699b8dd8632f855e2fa)
McDutchie
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to ksh93/ksh
that referenced
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Jun 11, 2020
Standard output (FD 1) tested as being on a terminal within a command substitution, which makes no sense as the command substitution is supposed to be catching standard output. ksh -c 'v=$(echo begincomsub [ -t 1 ] && echo oops echo endcomsub) echo "$v"' This should not output "oops". This is one of the many bugs with ksh93 virtual (non-forked) subshells. On the abandoned Vashist/Rader ksh2020 branch, this bug was fixed by changing quite a lot of code, which introduced and/or exposed another bug: att#1079 att@8e1e405e att#1088 That issue was unresolved when the ksh2020 branch was abandoned. The safer and more conservative fix is simply forcing the subshell to fork if we're in a non-forked command substitution and testing '-t 1'. It is hard to imagine a situation where this would cause a noticable performance hit. Note that this fix does not affect ksh93-specific "shared" non-subshell ${ command substitutions; } which are executed in the main shell environment, so that variables survive, etcetera. 'test -t 1' continues to wrongly return true there, but command substitutions of that form cannot be forked because that would defeat their purpose. src/cmd/ksh93/bltins/test.c: - Fix 'test -t 1', '[ -t 1 ]' and '[[ -t 1 ]]' by forking the current subshell if it is a virtual/non-forked subshell (shp->subshell), and a command substitution (shp->comsub), but NOT a "shared" ${ command substitution; } (!shp->subshare). src/cmd/ksh93/tests/bracket.sh: - Add two regression tests for this issue, which were adapted from the Vashist/Rader ksh2020 branch. NEWS, src/cmd/ksh93/include/version.h: - Update. (cherry picked from commit b8ef05e457ead65b83417699b8dd8632f855e2fa)
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Description of problem:
Standard output (FD 1) tests as being on a terminal within a command substitution, which makes no sense as the command substitution is supposed to be catching standard output.
Ksh version:
Version A 2017.0.0-devel-2130-gd67bda0
Version AJM 93u+ 2012-08-01
How reproducible:
Actual results:
Expected results:
Additional info:
As usual, forcing the subshell to fork using something like
ulimit -t unlimited
makes it work as expected:So this looks like another issue associated with non-forking subshells (ref.: #480).
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