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|
# 1-Feb-86 09:37:35-MST,30567;000000000001
# Return-Path: <unix-sources-request@BRL.ARPA>
# Received: from BRL-TGR.ARPA by SIMTEL20.ARPA with TCP; Sat 1 Feb 86 09:36:16-MST
# Received: from usenet by TGR.BRL.ARPA id a002623; 1 Feb 86 9:33 EST
# From: chris <chris@globetek.uucp>
# Newsgroups: net.sources
# Subject: Improved Bcsh (Bourne Shell Cshell-Emulator)
# Message-ID: <219@globetek.UUCP>
# Date: 30 Jan 86 17:34:26 GMT
# To: unix-sources@BRL-TGR.ARPA
#
# This is a new, improved version of my Bourne shell cshell-emulator.
# The code has been cleaned up quite a bit, and a couple of new features
# added (now supports 'noclobber' and 'iclobber' variables). A bug with
# 'eval' that caused "illegal I/O" error messages on vanilla V7 shells has
# also been fixed.
# I have posted the program in its entirety because a context diff of the
# old and new versions was longer than the new version...
# --Chris
# Bcsh -- A Simple Cshell-Like Command Pre-Processor For The Bourne Shell
#
# "Copyright (c) Chris Robertson, December 1985"
#
# This software may be used for any purpose provided the original
# copyright notice and this notice are affixed thereto. No warranties of
# any kind whatsoever are provided with this software, and it is hereby
# understood that the author is not liable for any damagages arising
# from the use of this software.
#
# Features Which the Cshell Does Not Have:
# ----------------------------------------
#
# + command history persists across bcsh sessions
# + global last-command editing via 'g^string1^string2^' syntax
# + edit any command via $EDITOR or $VISUAL editors
# + history file name, .bcshrc file name, alias file name, and number
# of commands saved on termination can be set by environment variables
# + prompt may evaluate commands, such as `pwd`, `date`, etc.
# + the whole text of interactive 'for' and 'while' loops and 'if'
# statements goes into the history list and may be re-run or edited
# + multiple copies of commands and requests to see command history
# are not added to the history list
# + the history mechanism actually stores all commands entered in a
# current session, not just $history of them. This means that you
# can increase $history on the fly and at once have a larger history.
#
#
# Synonyms:
# ---------
#
# logout, exit, bye write out history file and exit
# h, history show current history list
#
#
# Aliases:
# --------
#
# alias NAME CMND create an alias called NAME to run CMND
# unalias NAME remove the alias NAME
#
# There are no 'current-session only' aliases -- all alias and unalias
# commands are permanent, and stored in the $aliasfile.
#
# If an alias contains positional variables -- $1, $2, $*, etc. -- any
# arguments following the alias name are considered to be values for
# those variables, and the alias is turned into a command of the form
# 'set - arguments;alias'. Otherwise, a simple substitution is performed
# for the alias and the rest of the command preserved. The cshell
# convention of using '\!:n' in an alias to get bits of the current
# command is mercifully abandoned.
#
# Quotes are not necessary around the commands comprising an alias;
# in fact, any enclosing quotes are stripped when the alias is added
# to the file.
#
# A couple of typical aliases might be:
#
# goto cd $1;pwd
# l ls -F
#
# Note that aliasing something to "commands;logout" will not work -- if
# you want something to happen routinely on logout put it in the file
# specified by $logoutfile, default = $HOME/.blogout.
#
#
# Command Substitutions:
# ----------------------
#
# !! substitute last command from history list
# !!:N substitute Nth element of last command from
# history list -- 0 = command name, 1 = 1st arg
# !!:$ substitute last element of last command from
# history list
# !!:* substitute all arguments to last command
# from history list
# !NUMBER substitute command NUMBER from the history list
# !NUMBER:N as above, but substitute Nth element, where
# 0 = command name, 1 = 1st arg, etc.
# !NUMBER:$ as above, but substitute last element
# !NUMBER:* as above, but substitute all arguments
# !-NUMBER substitute the command NUMBER lines from the
# end of the history list; 1 = last command
# !-NUMBER:N as above, but substitute Nth element, where
# 0 = command name, 1 = 1st arg, etc.
# !-NUMBER:$ as above, but substitute last element
# !-NUMBER:* as above, but substitute all arguments
# !?STRING substitute most-recent command from history list
# containing STRING -- STRING must be enclosed in
# braces if followed by any other characters
# !?STRING:N as above, but substitute Nth element, where
# 0 = command name, 1 = 1st arg, etc.
# !?STRING:$ as above, but substitute last element
# !?STRING:* as above, but substitute all arguments
#
#
# Command Editing:
# ----------------
#
# CMND~e edit CMND using $EDITOR, where CMND may be found
# using a history substitution
# CMND~v edit CMND using $VISUAL, where CMND may be found
# using a history substitution
# " ^string1^string2^ substitute string2 for string1 in last command"
# command and run it
# " g^string1^string2^ globally substitute string2 for string1 in "
# last command and run it
# !NUMBER:s/string1/string2/
# substitute string2 for string1 in
# command NUMBER and run it
# !NUMBER:gs/string1/string2/
# globally substitute string2 for string1 in
# command NUMBER and run it
# !?STRING:s/string1/string2/
# substitute string2 for string1 in last command
# containing STRING and run it
# !?STRING:gs/string1/string2/
# globally substitute string2 for string1 in last
# command containing STRING and run it
#
# Any command which ends in the string ":p" is treated as a normal
# command until all substitutions have been completed. The trailing
# ":p" is then stripped, and the command is simply echoed and added to
# the history list instead of being executed.
#
# None of the other colon extensions of the cshell are supported.
#
#
# Shell Environment Variables:
# ----------------------------
#
# EDITOR editor used by ~e command, default = "ed"
# VISUAL editor used by ~v command, default = "vi"
# MAIL your system mailbox
# PAGER paging program used by history command, default = "more"
# PS1 primary prompt
# PS2 secondary prompt
# history number of commands in history list, default = 22
# histfile file history list is saved in, default = $HOME/.bhistory
# savehist number of commands remembered from last bcsh session
# aliasfile file of aliased commands, default = $HOME/.baliases
# logoutfile file of commands to be executed before termination
# inc_cmdno yes/no -- keep track of command numbers or not
# noclobber if set, existing files are not overwritten by '>'
# iclobber if both noclobber and iclobber are set, the user is
# prompted for confirmation before existing files are
# overwritten by '>'
#
# Note: if you are setting either noclobber or iclobber mid-session,
# set them to 'yes'
#
#
# Regular Shell Variables:
# ------------------------
#
# Shell variables may be set via Bourne or cshell syntax, e.g., both
# "set foo=bar" and "foo=bar" set a variable called "foo" with the value
# "bar". However, all variables are automatically set as environment
# variables, so there is no need to export them. Conversely, there
# are NO local variables. Sorry, folks.
#
# A cshell-style "setenv" command is turned into a regular "set" command.
#
#
# The Prompt:
# ----------
#
# You may, if you wish, have a command executed in your prompt. If
# the variable PS1 contains a dollar sign or a backquote, it is
# evaluated and the result used as the prompt, provided the evaluation
# did not produce a "not found" error message. The two special cases
# of PS1 consisting solely of "$" or "$ " are handled correctly. For
# example, to have the prompt contain the current directory followed
# by a space, enter:
#
# PS1=\'echo "`pwd` "\'
#
# You need the backslashed single quotes to prevent the command being
# evaluated by the variable-setting mechanism and the shell before it
# is assigned to PS1.
#
# To include the command number in your prompt, enter the command:
#
# PS1=\'echo "$cmdno "\'
#
#
# Shell Control-Flow Syntax:
# --------------------------
#
# 'While', 'for', 'case', and 'if' commands entered in Bourne shell
# syntax are executed as normal.
#
# A valiant attempt is made to convert 'foreach' loops into 'for' loops,
# cshell-syntax 'while' loops into Bourne shell syntax, and 'switch'
# statements into 'case' statements. I cannot guarantee to always get it
# right. If you forget the 'do' in a 'while' or 'for' loop, or finish
# them with 'end' instead of 'done', this will be corrected.
#
# Note that cshell-to-Bourne control flow conversions do not take place
# if control is nested -- e.g., a 'foreach' inside a 'while' will fail.
#
# The simple-case cshell "if (condition) command" is turned into Bourne
# syntax. Other 'if' statements are left alone apart from making the
# 'then' a separate statement, because constructing a valid interactive
# cshell 'if' statement is essentially an exercise in frustration anyway.
# The cshell and Bourne shell have sufficiently different ideas about
# conditions that if is probably best to resign yourself to learning
# the Bourne shell conventions.
#
# Note that since most of the testing built-ins of the cshell are
# not available in the Bourne shell, a complex condition in a 'while'
# loop or an 'if' statement will probably fail.
#
#
# Bugs, Caveats, etc.:
# --------------------
#
# This is not a super-speedy program. Be patient, especially on startup.
#
# To the best of my knowledge this program should work on ANY Bourne
# shell -- note that if your shell does not understand 'echo -n' you
# will have to re-set the values of '$n' and '$c'.
#
# This program may run out of stack space on a 16-bit machine where
# /bin/sh is not split-space.
#
# Mail checking is done every 10 commands if $MAIL is set in your
# environment. For anything fancier, you will have to hack the code.
#
# Because commands are stuffed in a file before sh is invoked on them,
# error messages from failed commands are ugly.
#
# Failed history substitutions either give nothing at all, or a
# "not found" style of error message.
#
# A command history is kept whether you want it or not. This may be
# perceived as a bug or a feature, depending on which side of bed you
# got out on.
#
# If you want a real backslash in a command, you will have to type two
# of them because the shell swallows the first backslash in the initial
# command pickup. This means that to include a non-history '!' in a
# command you need '\\!' -- a real wart, especially for net mail,
# but unavoidable.
#
# Commands containing an '@' will break all sorts of things.
#
# Very complex history substitutions may fail.
#
# File names containing numbers may break numeric history sustitutions.
#
# Commands containing bizzare sequences of characters may conflict
# with internal kludges.
#
# Aliasing something to "commands;logout" will not work -- if you
# want something to happen routinely on logout, put it in the file
# specified by $logoutfile, default = $HOME/.blogout.
#
# Please send all bug reports to ihnp4!utzoo!globetek!chris.
# Flames will be posted to net.general with 'Reply-to' set to your
# ' path... :-) '
#
#
#
# ************* VERY IMPORTANT NOTICE *************
#
# If your shell supports # comments, then REPLACE all the colon 'comments'
# with # comments. If it does not, then REMOVE all the 'comment' lines from the
# working copy of the file, as it will run MUCH faster -- the shell evaluates
# lines starting with a colon but does not actually execute them, so you will
# save the read-and-evaluate time by removing them.
case "`echo -n foo`" in
-n*)
n=
c="\c"
;;
foo)
n=-n
c=
;;
*)
echo "Your 'echo' command is broken."
exit 1
;;
esac
history=${history-22}
savehist=${savehist-22}
histfile=${histfile-$HOME/.bhistory}
logoutfile=${logoutfile-$HOME/.blogout}
EDITOR=${EDITOR-ed}
VISUAL=${VISUAL-vi}
PAGER=${PAGER-more}
aliasfile=${aliasfile-$HOME/.baliases}
# the alias file may contain 1 blank line, so a test -s will not work
case "`cat $aliasfile 2> /dev/null`" in
"")
doalias=no
;;
*)
doalias=yes
;;
esac
if test -s "${sourcefile-$HOME/.bcshrc}"
then
. ${sourcefile-$HOME/.bcshrc}
fi
if test -s "$histfile"
then
cmdno="`set - \`wc -l $histfile\`;echo $1`"
cmdno="`expr \"$cmdno\" + 1`"
lastcmd="`sed -n '$p' $histfile`"
copy=false
ohist=$histfile
while test ! -w "$histfile"
do
echo "Cannot write to history file '$histfile'."
echo $n "Please enter a new history filename: $c"
read histfile
copy=true
done
if $copy
then
cp $ohist $histfile
fi
else
cat /dev/null > $histfile
cmdno=1
lastcmd=
fi
# keep track of command number as the default
inc_cmdno=${inc_cmdo-yes}
# default prompts -- PS1 and PS2 may be SET but EMPTY, so '${PS1-% }' syntax
# is not used here
case "$PS1" in
"")
PS1="% "
;;
esac
case "$PS2" in
"")
PS2="> "
;;
esac
export histfile savehist history aliasfile EDITOR VISUAL PAGER cmdno PS1 PS2
case "$MAIL" in
"")
;;
*)
if [ -f $MAIL ]; then
mailsize=`set - \`wc -c $MAIL\`;echo $1`
else
mailsize=0
fi
;;
esac
trap ':' 2
trap exit 3
trap "tail -n $savehist $histfile>/tmp/hist$$;uniq /tmp/hist$$ > $histfile;\
rm -f /tmp/*$$;exit 0" 15
getcmd=yes
mailcheck=
exclaim=
echoit=
mailprompt=
while :
do
run=yes
case "$mailprompt" in
"")
;;
*)
echo "$mailprompt"
;;
esac
case "$getcmd" in
yes)
: guess if the prompt should be evaluated or not
case "$PS1" in
\$|\$\ )
echo $n "$PS1$c"
;;
*\`*|*\$*)
tmp="`(eval $PS1) 2>&1`"
case "$tmp" in
*not\ found)
echo $n "$PS1$c"
;;
*)
echo $n "$tmp$c"
;;
esac
;;
*)
echo $n "$PS1$c"
;;
esac
read cmd || cmd="exit"
;;
*) ;;
esac
case "$MAIL" in
"")
;;
*)
: check for mail every 10 commands
case "$mailcheck" in
1111111111)
mailcheck=
if [ -f $MAIL ]; then
newsize="`set - \`wc -c $MAIL\`;echo $1`"
else
newsize=0
fi
if test "$newsize" -gt "$mailsize"; then
mailprompt="You have new mail"
else
mailprompt=
fi
mailsize=$newsize
;;
*)
mailcheck=1$mailcheck
;;
esac
;;
esac
hist=no
case "$cmd" in
"")
continue
;;
sh)
sh
run=no
;;
!!)
cmd=$lastcmd
echoit=yes
getcmd=no
continue
;;
*:p)
cmd="`expr \"$cmd\" : '\(.*\):p'` +~+p"
getcmd=no
continue
;;
foreach[\ \ ]*)
while test "$line" != "end"; do
echo $n "$PS2$c"
read line
cmd="${cmd};$line"
done
echo "$cmd" > /tmp/bcsh$$
ed - /tmp/bcsh$$ << ++++
s/end/done/
s/foreach[ ]\(.*\)(/for \1 in /
s/)//
s/;/;do /
w
++++
;;
for[\ \ ]*|while[\ \ ]*)
# try to catch the most common cshell-to-Bourne-shell
# mistakes
echo $n "$PS2$c"
read line
case "$line" in
*do)
line="do :"
;;
*do*)
;;
*)
line="do $line"
;;
esac
cmd="${cmd};$line"
while test "$line" != "done" && test "$line" != "end"
do
echo $n "$PS2$c"
read line
case "$line" in
end)
line=done
;;
esac
cmd="${cmd};$line"
done
echo "$cmd" > /tmp/bcsh$$
;;
if[\ \ ]*)
while test "$line" != "fi" && test "$line" != "endif"
do
echo $n "$PS2$c"
read line
case "$line" in
*[a-z]*then)
line="`expr \"$line\" : '\(.*\)then'`;then"
;;
endif)
line=fi
;;
esac
cmd="${cmd};$line"
done
echo "$cmd" > /tmp/bcsh$$
case "`grep then /tmp/bcsh$$`" in
"")
# fix 'if foo bar' cases
ed - /tmp/bcsh$$ << ++++
s/)/);then/
s/.*/;fi/
w
++++
;;
esac
;;
case[\ \ ]*)
while test "$line" != "esac"
do
echo $n "$PS2$c"
read line
cmd="${cmd}@$line"
done
cmd="`echo \"$cmd\" | tr '@' ' '`"
echo "$cmd" > /tmp/bcsh$$
;;
switch[\ \ ]*)
while test "$line" != "endsw"
do
echo $n "$PS2$c"
read line
cmd="${cmd}@$line"
done
echo "$cmd" > /tmp/bcsh$$
ed - /tmp/bcsh$$ << '++++'
1,$s/@/\
/g
g/switch.*(/s//case "/
s/)/" in/
1,$s/case[ ]\(.*\):$/;;\
\1)/
2d
1,$s/endsw/;;\
esac/
g/breaksw/s///
1,$s/default.*/;;\
*)/
w
++++
cmd="`cat /tmp/bcsh$$`"
;;
*!*)
hist=yes
;;
esac
case "$hist" in
yes)
# deal with genuine exclamation marks, go back and parse again
case "$cmd" in
*\>![\ \ ]*|*\\!*)
cmd="`echo \"$cmd\" | sed -e 's@\\!@REALEXCLAMATIONMARK@g'`"
exclaim=yes
getcmd=no
continue
;;
esac
# break command into elements, parse each one
tmp=
for i in $cmd
do
# find element with !, peel off stuff up to !
case "$i" in
!)
# most likely a typo for !!, so fix it
front=
$i=!!
;;
!!*)
front=
i="`expr \"$i\" : '.*\(!!.*\)'`"
;;
*!!*)
front="`expr \"$i\" : '\(.*\)!!.*'`"
i="`expr \"$i\" : '.*\(!!.*\)'`"
;;
!*)
front=
i="`expr \"$i\" : '.*!\(.*\)'`"
;;
*)
tmp="$tmp$i "
continue
;;
esac
case "$i" in
!!*)
# want last command
rest="`expr \"$i\" : '!!\(.*\)'`"
i=$lastcmd
;;
-*)
# we want to search back through the history list
case "$i" in
-)
rest="`expr \"$i\" : '-\(.*\)'`"
i=$lastcmd
;;
-[0-9]*)
wanted="`expr \"$i\" : '-\([0-9][0-9]*\).*'`"
rest="`expr \"$i\" : '-[0-9][0-9]*\(.*\)'`"
i="`tail -n $wanted $histfile | sed -e "1q"`"
;;
esac
;;
[0-9]*)
# find which number command is wanted
wanted="`expr \"$i\" : '\([0-9][0-9]*\).*'`"
rest="`expr \"$i\" : '[0-9][0-9]*\(.*\)'`"
i="`grep -n . $histfile | grep \"^$wanted\"`"
i="`expr \"$i\" : \"${wanted}.\(.*\)\"`"
;;
\?*)
# find which 'command-contains' match is wanted
case "$i" in
\?{*}*)
wanted="`expr \"$i\" : '?{\(.*\)}.*'`"
rest="`expr \"$i\" : '?.*}\(.*\)'`"
;;
\?*:*)
wanted="`expr \"$i\" : '?\(.*\):.*'`"
rest="`expr \"$i\" : '?.*\(:.*\)'`"
;;
\?*)
wanted="`expr \"$i\" : '?\(.*\)'`"
rest=
;;
esac
i="`grep \"$wanted\" $histfile | sed -n '$p'`"
;;
*)
# find which 'start-of-command' match is wanted
case "$i" in
{*}*)
wanted="`expr \"$i\" : '{\(.*\)}.*'`"
rest="`expr \"$i\" : '.*}\(.*\)'`"
;;
*:*)
wanted="`expr \"$i\" : '\(.*\):.*'`"
rest="`expr \"$i\" : '.*\(:.*\)'`"
;;
*)
wanted="$i"
rest=
;;
esac
i="`grep \"^$wanted\" $histfile | sed -n '$p'`"
;;
esac
# see if we actually found anything to substitute
case "$i" in
"")
badsub="Event not found"
break
;;
*)
badsub=no
;;
esac
case "$rest" in
"")
tmp="$front$tmp$i "
continue
;;
:[0-9]*)
# find which element of $i is wanted
number="`expr \"$rest\" : ':\([0-9][0-9]*\).*'`"
rest="`expr \"$rest\" : ':[0-9][0-9]*\(.*\)'`"
# count through $i till we get to the
# right element
counter=0
for element in $i
do
case "$counter" in
$number)
break
;;
*)
counter="`expr \"$counter\" + 1`"
# counter=$[ $counter + 1 ]
;;
esac
done
case "$counter" in
$number)
badsub=no
;;
*)
badsub="Bad command element"
break
;;
esac
tmp="$tmp$front$element$rest "
continue
;;
:\$*)
# spin through $i till we hit the last element
rest="`expr \"$rest\" : ':\$\(.*\)'`"
for element in $i
do
:
done
tmp="$tmp$front$element$rest "
continue
;;
:\**)
# we want all elements except the command itself
rest="`expr \"$rest\" : ':\*\(.*\)'`"
save=$i
set - $i
shift
case "$*" in
"")
badsub="No arguments to command '$save'"
break
;;
*)
badsub=no
;;
esac
tmp="$tmp$front$*$rest "
continue
;;
:s*|:gs*)
# we are doing a substitution
# put / on end if needed
case "$rest" in
:s/*/*/*|:gs/*/*/*)
;;
:s/*/*|:gs/*/*)
rest="${rest}/"
;;
esac
# find what substitution is wanted
first="`expr \"$rest\" : ':*s\/\(.*\)\/.*\/.*'`"
second="`expr \"$i\" : ':*s/.*/\(.*\)/.*'`"
# see if it is a global substitution
case "$rest" in
:gs*)
global=g
;;
:s*)
global=
;;
esac
rest="`expr \"$rest\" : '.*/.*/.*/\(.*\)'`"
i="`echo \"$i\" | sed -e \"s@$first@$second@$global\"`"
# see if subsitution worked
case "$i" in
"")
badsub="Substiution failed"
break
;;
*)
badsub=no
;;
esac
tmp="$tmp$front$i$rest "
continue
;;
*)
tmp="$tmp$front$i$rest "
;;
esac
done
case "$badsub" in
no)
;;
*)
echo "$badsub"
badsub=no
continue
;;
esac
cmd="$tmp"
echoit=yes
getcmd=no
continue
;;
*)
run=yes
;;
esac
case "$cmd" in
*\^*\^*\^*)
# see if the substitution is global
case "$cmd" in
g*)
global=g
;;
*)
global=
;;
esac
# put a '^' on the end if necessary
case "$cmd" in
*\^)
;;
*)
cmd="${cmd}^"
;;
esac
# find what substitution is wanted
first="`expr \"$cmd\" : '*\^\(.*\)\^.*\^.*'`"
second="`expr \"$cmd\" : '*\^.*\^\(.*\)\^.*'`"
rest="`expr \"$cmd\" : '*\^.*\^.*\^\(.*\)'`"
cmd="`echo \"$lastcmd\" | sed -e \"s@$first@$second@$global\"`$rest"
# see if the substitution worked
case "$cmd" in
"")
echo "Substitution failed"
continue
;;
esac
echoit=yes
getcmd=no
continue
;;
*~e)
echo "$cmd" | sed -e "s@~e@@" > /tmp/bcsh$$
$EDITOR /tmp/bcsh$$
cmd="`cat /tmp/bcsh$$`"
getcmd=no
continue
;;
*~v)
echo "$cmd" | sed -e "s@~v@@" > /tmp/bcsh$$
echo "$lastcmd" > /tmp/bcsh$$
$VISUAL /tmp/bcsh$$
cmd="`cat /tmp/bcsh$$`"
getcmd=no
continue
;;
exec[\ \ ]*)
tail -n $savehist $histfile>/tmp/hist$$
uniq /tmp/hist$$ > $histfile
rm -f /tmp/*$$
echo $cmd > /tmp/cmd$$
. /tmp/cmd$$
;;
login[\ \ ]*|newgrp[\ \ ]*)
tail -n $savehist $histfile>/tmp/hist$$
uniq /tmp/hist$$ > $histfile
rm -f /tmp/*$$
echo $cmd > /tmp/cmd$$
. /tmp/cmd$$
;;
logout|exit|bye)
if test -s "$logoutfile"
then
# sh $logoutfile
$SHELL $logoutfile
fi
tail -n $savehist $histfile > /tmp/hist$$
uniq /tmp/hist$$ > $histfile
rm -f /tmp/*$$
exit 0
;;
h|history)
grep -n . $histfile | tail -n $history | sed -e 's@:@ @' | $PAGER
continue
;;
h[\ \ ]\|*|h[\ \ ]\>*|h\|*|h\>*)
cmd="`echo \"$cmd\" | sed -e \"s@h@grep -n . $histfile | tail -n $history | sed -e 's@:@ @'@\"`"
getcmd=no
continue
;;
history[\ \ ]*\|*|history[\ \ ]*\>*)
cmd="`echo \"$cmd\" | sed -e \"s@history@grep -n . $histfile | tail -n $history | sed -e 's@:@ @'@\"`"
getcmd=no
continue
;;
source[\ \ ]*)
set - $cmd
shift
echo . $* > /tmp/cmd$$
. /tmp/cmd$$
run=no
;;
wait)
wait
run=no
;;
.[\ \ ]*)
echo $cmd > /tmp/cmd$$
. /tmp/cmd$$
run=no
;;
cd|cd[\ \ ]*)
# check if it will work first, or else this shell will terminate
# if the cd dies. If you have a built-in test, you might want
# to replace the try-it-and-see below with a couple of tests,
# but it is probably just as fast like this.
echo $cmd > /tmp/cmd$$
if ($SHELL /tmp/cmd$$) ; then
. /tmp/cmd$$
fi
run=no
;;
awk[\ \ ]*|dd[\ \ ]*|cc[\ \ ]*|make[\ \ ]*)
# these are the only commands I can think of whose syntax
# includes an equals sign. Add others as you find them.
echo "$cmd" > /tmp/bcsh$$
;;
setenv*|*=*)
# handle setting shell variables, turning cshell syntax to Bourne
# syntax -- note all variables must be exported or they will not
# be usable in other commands
echo "$cmd" > /tmp/cmd$$
ed - /tmp/cmd$$ << ++++
g/^setenv[ ]/s/[ ]/@/
g/^setenv@/s/[ ]/=/
g/^setenv@/s///
g/^set/s///
.t.
\$s/=.*//
s/^/export /
w
++++
. /tmp/cmd$$
rm -f /tmp/cmd$$
run=no
;;
unset[\ \ ]*|umask[\ \ ]*|export[\ \ ]*|set[\ \ ]*)
# handle commands which twiddle current environment
$cmd
run=no
;;
alias|alias[\ \ ])
if [ -f $aliasfile ]; then
$PAGER $aliasfile
fi
lastcmd=$cmd
run=no
continue
;;
alias[\ \ ]*)
case "$cmd" in
alias[\ \ ]\|*|alias[\ \ ]\>*)
cmd="`echo \"$cmd\" | sed -e \"s@alias@cat $aliasfile@\"`"
getcmd=no
continue
;;
alias[\ \ ]*[\ \ ]*)
;;
*)
echo "Syntax: alias name command"
cmd=
continue
;;
esac
set - $cmd
shift
cmd="$*"
# make sure there is always 1 blank line in file so
# unaliasing will always work -- ed normally refuses
# to write an empty file
echo "" >> $aliasfile
cat << ++++ >> $aliasfile
$cmd
++++
# ed - $aliasfile << '++++'
# g/alias[ ]/s///
# g/^['"]\(.*\)['"]$/s//\1/
# g/^/s//alias /
# w
#++++
sort -u -o $aliasfile $aliasfile
doalias=yes
cmd="alias $cmd"
run=no
;;
unalias[\ \ ]*)
set - $cmd
case "$#" in
2)
cmd=$2
;;
*)
echo "Syntax: unalias alias_name"
continue
;;
esac
ed - $aliasfile << ++++
/^$cmd[ ]/d
w
++++
case "`set - \`wc -l $aliasfile\`;echo $1`" in
1)
# just removed last alias
doalias=no
;;
esac
run=no
;;
*)
case "$doalias" in
yes)
set - $cmd
tmp="`grep \"^$1 \" $aliasfile`"
case "$tmp" in
$1[\ \ ]*)
shift
cmd=$*
set - $tmp
shift
tmp=$*
case "$tmp" in
*\$*)
# uses positional variables
cmd="set - $cmd ; $tmp"
getcmd=no
continue
;;
*)
cmd="$tmp $cmd"
getcmd=no
continue
;;
esac
;;
*)
echo "$cmd" > /tmp/bcsh$$
;;
esac
;;
no)
echo "$cmd" > /tmp/bcsh$$
;;
esac
;;
esac
case "$cmd" in
*+~+p)
cmd="`expr \"$cmd\" : '\(.*\)+~+p'`"
echoit=yes
run=no
;;
esac
case "$cmd" in
"")
continue
;;
*)
case "$exclaim" in
yes)
cmd="`echo \"$cmd\" | sed -e 's@REALEXCLAMATIONMARK@!@g'`"
echo "$cmd" > /tmp/bcsh$$
;;
esac
case "$echoit" in
yes)
echo $cmd
;;
esac
case "$run" in
yes)
case "${noclobber+yes}" in
yes)
case "$cmd" in
*\>![\ \ ]*)
ed - /tmp/bcsh$$ << ++++
g/>!/s//>/
w
++++
;;
*\>\>*)
;;
*\>*)
outfile="`expr \"$cmd\" : '.*>\(.*\)'`"
case "$outfile" in
\&*)
;;
*)
set - $outfile
outfile="$1"
if test -s "$outfile"
then
case "${iclobber+yes}" in
yes)
echo $n "Overwrite ${outfile}? $c"
read answer
case "$answer" in
y*)
;;
*)
echo ':' > /tmp/bcsh$$
;;
esac
;;
*)
echo "${outfile}: file exists"
echo ':' > /tmp/bcsh$$
;;
esac
fi
;;
esac
;;
esac
;;
*)
case "$cmd" in
*\>![\ \ ]*)
ed - /tmp/bcsh$$ << ++++
g/>!/s//>/g
w
++++
;;
esac
;;
esac
(trap 'exit 1' 2 3; $BASH /tmp/bcsh$$)
;;
esac
case "$cmd" in
$lastcmd)
;;
*)
case "$exclaim" in
yes)
cmd="`echo \"$cmd\" | sed -e 's@!@\\\\!@g'`"
;;
esac
cat << ++++ >> $histfile
$cmd
++++
lastcmd=$cmd
case "$inc_cmdno" in
yes)
cmdno="`expr \"$cmdno\" + 1`"
# cmdno=$[$cmdno + 1]
;;
esac
;;
esac
;;
esac
# The next commented-out line sets the prompt to include the command
# number -- you should only un-comment this if it is the ONLY thing
# you ever want as your prompt, because it will override attempts
# to set PS1 from the command level. If you want the command number
# in your prompt without sacrificing the ability to change the prompt
# later, replace the default setting for PS1 before the beginning of
# the main loop with the following: PS1='echo -n "${cmdno}% "'
# Doing it this way is, however, slower than the simple version below.
PS1="${cmdno}% "
getcmd=yes
echoit=no
exclaim=no
done
exit 0
# Christine Robertson {linus, ihnp4, decvax}!utzoo!globetek!chris
|