As pointed out in a mail to dev expr was segfaulting when multiple
math operations were specified on the command line: eg. 'expr 3 \*
2 + 1'. This happens because the tonum(), introduced in e50d533,
assumed that v->str was always non null. parse() guarantees this
for user input but this is not the case when doop() is called with
the result of a previous calculation. However in that case we know
that v->num is already valid so we can simply return.
POSIX specifies that if the pattern contains a subexpression then
the first matched subexpression should be returned if it exists.
This fixes things like the following:
./expr 00003 : '\(.*\)'
Before: 3
After: 00003
Comparison operations (>, <, =, etc.) and matching operations must
operate originally provided string not one that has gone back and
forth through string formatting. This caused operations such as
the following to give incorrect results:
./expr 00003 : '.*'
Before: 1
After: 5
This commit fixes that issue.
Get rid of the !!()-constructs and use ret where available (or introduce it).
In some cases, there would be an "abort" on the first fshut-error, but we want
to close all files and report all warnings and then quit, not just the warning
for the first file.
This has been a known issue for a long time. Example:
printf "word" > /dev/full
wouldn't report there's not enough space on the device.
This is due to the fact that every libc has internal buffers
for stdout which store fragments of written data until they reach
a certain size or on some callback to flush them all at once to the
kernel.
You can force the libc to flush them with fflush(). In case flushing
fails, you can check the return value of fflush() and report an error.
However, previously, sbase didn't have such checks and without fflush(),
the libc silently flushes the buffers on exit without checking the errors.
No offense, but there's no way for the libc to report errors in the exit-
condition.
GNU coreutils solve this by having onexit-callbacks to handle the flushing
and report issues, but they have obvious deficiencies.
After long discussions on IRC, we came to the conclusion that checking the
return value of every io-function would be a bit too much, and having a
general-purpose fclose-wrapper would be the best way to go.
It turned out that fclose() alone is not enough to detect errors. The right
way to do it is to fflush() + check ferror on the fp and then to a fclose().
This is what fshut does and that's how it's done before each return.
The return value is obviously affected, reporting an error in case a flush
or close failed, but also when reading failed for some reason, the error-
state is caught.
the !!( ... + ...) construction is used to call all functions inside the
brackets and not "terminating" on the first.
We want errors to be reported, but there's no reason to stop flushing buffers
when one other file buffer has issues.
Obviously, functionales come before the flush and ret-logic comes after to
prevent early exits as well without reporting warnings if there are any.
One more advantage of fshut() is that it is even able to report errors
on obscure NFS-setups which the other coreutils are unable to detect,
because they only check the return-value of fflush() and fclose(),
not ferror() as well.
No bugs found, but I changed intmax_t to long long to make it more
predictable and removed some of the kitchen-sinking.
Don't return structs themselves, as this is not very elegant.
Do it like functions like stat(), which take a pointer to a
struct to fill.
- handle divide by zero.
- use eregcomp().
- use emalloc().
- use snprintf() for safety and add a buffer size argument to valstr() just
to be sure.
- code-style fixes.