Fix test(1) semantics

Evan Gates says:

After writing my own test[0] I checked and sbase already has test. I'm
including a patch to remove test from the TODO. I also noticed that
sbase's test handles a few specific cases incorrectly (documentation
at [1]).

test ! = foo
When there are 3 arguments and the second is a valid binary primary
test should perform that binary test. Only if the second argument is
not a valid binary primary and the first is ! should test negate the
two argument test. I've attached a patch that should fix this.

test ! ! !
test ! ! ! !
When there are 3 arguments and the second is not a valid primary and
the first is !, test should return the negation of the remaining two
argument test. In this case sbase's test works correctly for ! and ! !
but fails afterwards as it's not recursive. I don't yet have a patch
for this but I'm working on one.

Then again both of these areas may be places in which worse is better.
[0] 11329f3834/test.c?at=master
[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/test.html
This commit is contained in:
sin 2014-10-16 10:10:00 +01:00
parent 4608d91c6d
commit 8311023781
2 changed files with 12 additions and 8 deletions

2
TODO
View File

@ -2,8 +2,6 @@ diff [-ru] file1 file2
id [-ruGgn] username
test [expression...]
tr:
support for character classes [:alnum:]

18
test.c
View File

@ -7,6 +7,12 @@
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include "util.h"
static char *optexts[] = {
"-eq", "-ge", "-gt",
"-le", "-lt", "-ne",
"=", "!="
};
static bool unary(const char *, const char *);
static bool binary(const char *, const char *, const char *);
@ -23,6 +29,7 @@ int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
bool ret = false, not = false;
int i = LEN(optexts);
argv0 = argv[0];
@ -32,7 +39,11 @@ main(int argc, char *argv[])
usage();
argc--;
}
if(argc > 1 && !strcmp(argv[1], "!")) {
if(argc == 4)
for(i = 0; i < LEN(optexts); i++)
if(strcmp(argv[2], optexts[i]) == 0)
break;
if(argc > 1 && !strcmp(argv[1], "!") && i == LEN(optexts)) {
not = true;
argv++;
argc--;
@ -118,11 +129,6 @@ binary(const char *arg1, const char *op, const char *arg2)
int i;
long narg1, narg2;
enum operator { EQ, GE, GT, LE, LT, NE, STREQ, STRNE } oper;
char *optexts[] = {
"-eq", "-ge", "-gt",
"-le", "-lt", "-ne",
"=", "!="
};
for (i = 0; i < LEN(optexts); i++) {
if (strcmp(op, optexts[i]) != 0)