KSH-93 is the most recent version of the KornShell Language described
in "The KornShell Command and Programming Language," by Morris
Bolsky and David Korn of AT&T Bell Laboratories. The KornShell is
a shell programming language, which is upward compatible with "sh"
(the Bourne Shell), and is intended to conform to the IEEE P1003.2/ISO
9945.2 Shell and Utilities standard. KSH-93 provides an enhanced
programming environment in addition to the major command-entry
features of the BSD shell "csh". With KSH-93, medium-sized programming
tasks can be performed at shell-level without a significant loss
in performance. In addition, "sh" scripts can be run on KSH-93
without modification.
Distfile mirrored by aja@ (thanks!); import requested by and ok rpe@.
packet filtering, NAT, queueing, BGP, OSPF, RIP, IPsec, DHCP, DVMRP,
SNMP, relayd, sshd, inetd, ftp-proxy, resolv.conf and NTP. It presents
the user with a vaguely cisco-like interface with all configuration in
one easy to read text list.
some improvements from, and OK, sthen@
Thompson shell. Sh6(1) is an unenhanced port of the shell, and
glob6(1) is a port of its global command. Together, sh6 and glob6
provide a user interface which is backward compatible with that
provided by the Sixth Edition Thompson shell and global command,
but without the obvious enhancements found in osh.
The original Thompson shell was principally written by Ken Thompson
of Bell Labs.
ok landry@
update thru a pkgpath.
If ever we decide to build it again, remember to bump and tweak the
pkgpath.
consensus for no build from naddy/jasper.
should make theo future updates happy.