The Android Open Source Project | dd7bc33 | 2009-03-03 19:32:55 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | # $NetBSD: TOUR,v 1.8 1996/10/16 14:24:56 christos Exp $ |
| 2 | # @(#)TOUR 8.1 (Berkeley) 5/31/93 |
| 3 | |
| 4 | NOTE -- This is the original TOUR paper distributed with ash and |
| 5 | does not represent the current state of the shell. It is provided anyway |
| 6 | since it provides helpful information for how the shell is structured, |
| 7 | but be warned that things have changed -- the current shell is |
| 8 | still under development. |
| 9 | |
| 10 | ================================================================ |
| 11 | |
| 12 | A Tour through Ash |
| 13 | |
| 14 | Copyright 1989 by Kenneth Almquist. |
| 15 | |
| 16 | |
| 17 | DIRECTORIES: The subdirectory bltin contains commands which can |
| 18 | be compiled stand-alone. The rest of the source is in the main |
| 19 | ash directory. |
| 20 | |
| 21 | SOURCE CODE GENERATORS: Files whose names begin with "mk" are |
| 22 | programs that generate source code. A complete list of these |
| 23 | programs is: |
| 24 | |
| 25 | program intput files generates |
| 26 | ------- ------------ --------- |
| 27 | mkbuiltins builtins builtins.h builtins.c |
| 28 | mkinit *.c init.c |
| 29 | mknodes nodetypes nodes.h nodes.c |
| 30 | mksignames - signames.h signames.c |
| 31 | mksyntax - syntax.h syntax.c |
| 32 | mktokens - token.h |
| 33 | bltin/mkexpr unary_op binary_op operators.h operators.c |
| 34 | |
| 35 | There are undoubtedly too many of these. Mkinit searches all the |
| 36 | C source files for entries looking like: |
| 37 | |
| 38 | INIT { |
| 39 | x = 1; /* executed during initialization */ |
| 40 | } |
| 41 | |
| 42 | RESET { |
| 43 | x = 2; /* executed when the shell does a longjmp |
| 44 | back to the main command loop */ |
| 45 | } |
| 46 | |
| 47 | SHELLPROC { |
| 48 | x = 3; /* executed when the shell runs a shell procedure */ |
| 49 | } |
| 50 | |
| 51 | It pulls this code out into routines which are when particular |
| 52 | events occur. The intent is to improve modularity by isolating |
| 53 | the information about which modules need to be explicitly |
| 54 | initialized/reset within the modules themselves. |
| 55 | |
| 56 | Mkinit recognizes several constructs for placing declarations in |
| 57 | the init.c file. |
| 58 | INCLUDE "file.h" |
| 59 | includes a file. The storage class MKINIT makes a declaration |
| 60 | available in the init.c file, for example: |
| 61 | MKINIT int funcnest; /* depth of function calls */ |
| 62 | MKINIT alone on a line introduces a structure or union declara- |
| 63 | tion: |
| 64 | MKINIT |
| 65 | struct redirtab { |
| 66 | short renamed[10]; |
| 67 | }; |
| 68 | Preprocessor #define statements are copied to init.c without any |
| 69 | special action to request this. |
| 70 | |
| 71 | INDENTATION: The ash source is indented in multiples of six |
| 72 | spaces. The only study that I have heard of on the subject con- |
| 73 | cluded that the optimal amount to indent is in the range of four |
| 74 | to six spaces. I use six spaces since it is not too big a jump |
| 75 | from the widely used eight spaces. If you really hate six space |
| 76 | indentation, use the adjind (source included) program to change |
| 77 | it to something else. |
| 78 | |
| 79 | EXCEPTIONS: Code for dealing with exceptions appears in |
| 80 | exceptions.c. The C language doesn't include exception handling, |
| 81 | so I implement it using setjmp and longjmp. The global variable |
| 82 | exception contains the type of exception. EXERROR is raised by |
| 83 | calling error. EXINT is an interrupt. EXSHELLPROC is an excep- |
| 84 | tion which is raised when a shell procedure is invoked. The pur- |
| 85 | pose of EXSHELLPROC is to perform the cleanup actions associated |
| 86 | with other exceptions. After these cleanup actions, the shell |
| 87 | can interpret a shell procedure itself without exec'ing a new |
| 88 | copy of the shell. |
| 89 | |
| 90 | INTERRUPTS: In an interactive shell, an interrupt will cause an |
| 91 | EXINT exception to return to the main command loop. (Exception: |
| 92 | EXINT is not raised if the user traps interrupts using the trap |
| 93 | command.) The INTOFF and INTON macros (defined in exception.h) |
| 94 | provide uninterruptable critical sections. Between the execution |
| 95 | of INTOFF and the execution of INTON, interrupt signals will be |
| 96 | held for later delivery. INTOFF and INTON can be nested. |
| 97 | |
| 98 | MEMALLOC.C: Memalloc.c defines versions of malloc and realloc |
| 99 | which call error when there is no memory left. It also defines a |
| 100 | stack oriented memory allocation scheme. Allocating off a stack |
| 101 | is probably more efficient than allocation using malloc, but the |
| 102 | big advantage is that when an exception occurs all we have to do |
| 103 | to free up the memory in use at the time of the exception is to |
| 104 | restore the stack pointer. The stack is implemented using a |
| 105 | linked list of blocks. |
| 106 | |
| 107 | STPUTC: If the stack were contiguous, it would be easy to store |
| 108 | strings on the stack without knowing in advance how long the |
| 109 | string was going to be: |
| 110 | p = stackptr; |
| 111 | *p++ = c; /* repeated as many times as needed */ |
| 112 | stackptr = p; |
| 113 | The folloing three macros (defined in memalloc.h) perform these |
| 114 | operations, but grow the stack if you run off the end: |
| 115 | STARTSTACKSTR(p); |
| 116 | STPUTC(c, p); /* repeated as many times as needed */ |
| 117 | grabstackstr(p); |
| 118 | |
| 119 | We now start a top-down look at the code: |
| 120 | |
| 121 | MAIN.C: The main routine performs some initialization, executes |
| 122 | the user's profile if necessary, and calls cmdloop. Cmdloop is |
| 123 | repeatedly parses and executes commands. |
| 124 | |
| 125 | OPTIONS.C: This file contains the option processing code. It is |
| 126 | called from main to parse the shell arguments when the shell is |
| 127 | invoked, and it also contains the set builtin. The -i and -j op- |
| 128 | tions (the latter turns on job control) require changes in signal |
| 129 | handling. The routines setjobctl (in jobs.c) and setinteractive |
| 130 | (in trap.c) are called to handle changes to these options. |
| 131 | |
| 132 | PARSING: The parser code is all in parser.c. A recursive des- |
| 133 | cent parser is used. Syntax tables (generated by mksyntax) are |
| 134 | used to classify characters during lexical analysis. There are |
| 135 | three tables: one for normal use, one for use when inside single |
| 136 | quotes, and one for use when inside double quotes. The tables |
| 137 | are machine dependent because they are indexed by character vari- |
| 138 | ables and the range of a char varies from machine to machine. |
| 139 | |
| 140 | PARSE OUTPUT: The output of the parser consists of a tree of |
| 141 | nodes. The various types of nodes are defined in the file node- |
| 142 | types. |
| 143 | |
| 144 | Nodes of type NARG are used to represent both words and the con- |
| 145 | tents of here documents. An early version of ash kept the con- |
| 146 | tents of here documents in temporary files, but keeping here do- |
| 147 | cuments in memory typically results in significantly better per- |
| 148 | formance. It would have been nice to make it an option to use |
| 149 | temporary files for here documents, for the benefit of small |
| 150 | machines, but the code to keep track of when to delete the tem- |
| 151 | porary files was complex and I never fixed all the bugs in it. |
| 152 | (AT&T has been maintaining the Bourne shell for more than ten |
| 153 | years, and to the best of my knowledge they still haven't gotten |
| 154 | it to handle temporary files correctly in obscure cases.) |
| 155 | |
| 156 | The text field of a NARG structure points to the text of the |
| 157 | word. The text consists of ordinary characters and a number of |
| 158 | special codes defined in parser.h. The special codes are: |
| 159 | |
| 160 | CTLVAR Variable substitution |
| 161 | CTLENDVAR End of variable substitution |
| 162 | CTLBACKQ Command substitution |
| 163 | CTLBACKQ|CTLQUOTE Command substitution inside double quotes |
| 164 | CTLESC Escape next character |
| 165 | |
| 166 | A variable substitution contains the following elements: |
| 167 | |
| 168 | CTLVAR type name '=' [ alternative-text CTLENDVAR ] |
| 169 | |
| 170 | The type field is a single character specifying the type of sub- |
| 171 | stitution. The possible types are: |
| 172 | |
| 173 | VSNORMAL $var |
| 174 | VSMINUS ${var-text} |
| 175 | VSMINUS|VSNUL ${var:-text} |
| 176 | VSPLUS ${var+text} |
| 177 | VSPLUS|VSNUL ${var:+text} |
| 178 | VSQUESTION ${var?text} |
| 179 | VSQUESTION|VSNUL ${var:?text} |
| 180 | VSASSIGN ${var=text} |
| 181 | VSASSIGN|VSNUL ${var=text} |
| 182 | |
| 183 | In addition, the type field will have the VSQUOTE flag set if the |
| 184 | variable is enclosed in double quotes. The name of the variable |
| 185 | comes next, terminated by an equals sign. If the type is not |
| 186 | VSNORMAL, then the text field in the substitution follows, ter- |
| 187 | minated by a CTLENDVAR byte. |
| 188 | |
| 189 | Commands in back quotes are parsed and stored in a linked list. |
| 190 | The locations of these commands in the string are indicated by |
| 191 | CTLBACKQ and CTLBACKQ+CTLQUOTE characters, depending upon whether |
| 192 | the back quotes were enclosed in double quotes. |
| 193 | |
| 194 | The character CTLESC escapes the next character, so that in case |
| 195 | any of the CTL characters mentioned above appear in the input, |
| 196 | they can be passed through transparently. CTLESC is also used to |
| 197 | escape '*', '?', '[', and '!' characters which were quoted by the |
| 198 | user and thus should not be used for file name generation. |
| 199 | |
| 200 | CTLESC characters have proved to be particularly tricky to get |
| 201 | right. In the case of here documents which are not subject to |
| 202 | variable and command substitution, the parser doesn't insert any |
| 203 | CTLESC characters to begin with (so the contents of the text |
| 204 | field can be written without any processing). Other here docu- |
| 205 | ments, and words which are not subject to splitting and file name |
| 206 | generation, have the CTLESC characters removed during the vari- |
| 207 | able and command substitution phase. Words which are subject |
| 208 | splitting and file name generation have the CTLESC characters re- |
| 209 | moved as part of the file name phase. |
| 210 | |
| 211 | EXECUTION: Command execution is handled by the following files: |
| 212 | eval.c The top level routines. |
| 213 | redir.c Code to handle redirection of input and output. |
| 214 | jobs.c Code to handle forking, waiting, and job control. |
| 215 | exec.c Code to to path searches and the actual exec sys call. |
| 216 | expand.c Code to evaluate arguments. |
| 217 | var.c Maintains the variable symbol table. Called from expand.c. |
| 218 | |
| 219 | EVAL.C: Evaltree recursively executes a parse tree. The exit |
| 220 | status is returned in the global variable exitstatus. The alter- |
| 221 | native entry evalbackcmd is called to evaluate commands in back |
| 222 | quotes. It saves the result in memory if the command is a buil- |
| 223 | tin; otherwise it forks off a child to execute the command and |
| 224 | connects the standard output of the child to a pipe. |
| 225 | |
| 226 | JOBS.C: To create a process, you call makejob to return a job |
| 227 | structure, and then call forkshell (passing the job structure as |
| 228 | an argument) to create the process. Waitforjob waits for a job |
| 229 | to complete. These routines take care of process groups if job |
| 230 | control is defined. |
| 231 | |
| 232 | REDIR.C: Ash allows file descriptors to be redirected and then |
| 233 | restored without forking off a child process. This is accom- |
| 234 | plished by duplicating the original file descriptors. The redir- |
| 235 | tab structure records where the file descriptors have be dupli- |
| 236 | cated to. |
| 237 | |
| 238 | EXEC.C: The routine find_command locates a command, and enters |
| 239 | the command in the hash table if it is not already there. The |
| 240 | third argument specifies whether it is to print an error message |
| 241 | if the command is not found. (When a pipeline is set up, |
| 242 | find_command is called for all the commands in the pipeline be- |
| 243 | fore any forking is done, so to get the commands into the hash |
| 244 | table of the parent process. But to make command hashing as |
| 245 | transparent as possible, we silently ignore errors at that point |
| 246 | and only print error messages if the command cannot be found |
| 247 | later.) |
| 248 | |
| 249 | The routine shellexec is the interface to the exec system call. |
| 250 | |
| 251 | EXPAND.C: Arguments are processed in three passes. The first |
| 252 | (performed by the routine argstr) performs variable and command |
| 253 | substitution. The second (ifsbreakup) performs word splitting |
| 254 | and the third (expandmeta) performs file name generation. If the |
| 255 | "/u" directory is simulated, then when "/u/username" is replaced |
| 256 | by the user's home directory, the flag "didudir" is set. This |
| 257 | tells the cd command that it should print out the directory name, |
| 258 | just as it would if the "/u" directory were implemented using |
| 259 | symbolic links. |
| 260 | |
| 261 | VAR.C: Variables are stored in a hash table. Probably we should |
| 262 | switch to extensible hashing. The variable name is stored in the |
| 263 | same string as the value (using the format "name=value") so that |
| 264 | no string copying is needed to create the environment of a com- |
| 265 | mand. Variables which the shell references internally are preal- |
| 266 | located so that the shell can reference the values of these vari- |
| 267 | ables without doing a lookup. |
| 268 | |
| 269 | When a program is run, the code in eval.c sticks any environment |
| 270 | variables which precede the command (as in "PATH=xxx command") in |
| 271 | the variable table as the simplest way to strip duplicates, and |
| 272 | then calls "environment" to get the value of the environment. |
| 273 | There are two consequences of this. First, if an assignment to |
| 274 | PATH precedes the command, the value of PATH before the assign- |
| 275 | ment must be remembered and passed to shellexec. Second, if the |
| 276 | program turns out to be a shell procedure, the strings from the |
| 277 | environment variables which preceded the command must be pulled |
| 278 | out of the table and replaced with strings obtained from malloc, |
| 279 | since the former will automatically be freed when the stack (see |
| 280 | the entry on memalloc.c) is emptied. |
| 281 | |
| 282 | BUILTIN COMMANDS: The procedures for handling these are scat- |
| 283 | tered throughout the code, depending on which location appears |
| 284 | most appropriate. They can be recognized because their names al- |
| 285 | ways end in "cmd". The mapping from names to procedures is |
| 286 | specified in the file builtins, which is processed by the mkbuil- |
| 287 | tins command. |
| 288 | |
| 289 | A builtin command is invoked with argc and argv set up like a |
| 290 | normal program. A builtin command is allowed to overwrite its |
| 291 | arguments. Builtin routines can call nextopt to do option pars- |
| 292 | ing. This is kind of like getopt, but you don't pass argc and |
| 293 | argv to it. Builtin routines can also call error. This routine |
| 294 | normally terminates the shell (or returns to the main command |
| 295 | loop if the shell is interactive), but when called from a builtin |
| 296 | command it causes the builtin command to terminate with an exit |
| 297 | status of 2. |
| 298 | |
| 299 | The directory bltins contains commands which can be compiled in- |
| 300 | dependently but can also be built into the shell for efficiency |
| 301 | reasons. The makefile in this directory compiles these programs |
| 302 | in the normal fashion (so that they can be run regardless of |
| 303 | whether the invoker is ash), but also creates a library named |
| 304 | bltinlib.a which can be linked with ash. The header file bltin.h |
| 305 | takes care of most of the differences between the ash and the |
| 306 | stand-alone environment. The user should call the main routine |
| 307 | "main", and #define main to be the name of the routine to use |
| 308 | when the program is linked into ash. This #define should appear |
| 309 | before bltin.h is included; bltin.h will #undef main if the pro- |
| 310 | gram is to be compiled stand-alone. |
| 311 | |
| 312 | CD.C: This file defines the cd and pwd builtins. The pwd com- |
| 313 | mand runs /bin/pwd the first time it is invoked (unless the user |
| 314 | has already done a cd to an absolute pathname), but then |
| 315 | remembers the current directory and updates it when the cd com- |
| 316 | mand is run, so subsequent pwd commands run very fast. The main |
| 317 | complication in the cd command is in the docd command, which |
| 318 | resolves symbolic links into actual names and informs the user |
| 319 | where the user ended up if he crossed a symbolic link. |
| 320 | |
| 321 | SIGNALS: Trap.c implements the trap command. The routine set- |
| 322 | signal figures out what action should be taken when a signal is |
| 323 | received and invokes the signal system call to set the signal ac- |
| 324 | tion appropriately. When a signal that a user has set a trap for |
| 325 | is caught, the routine "onsig" sets a flag. The routine dotrap |
| 326 | is called at appropriate points to actually handle the signal. |
| 327 | When an interrupt is caught and no trap has been set for that |
| 328 | signal, the routine "onint" in error.c is called. |
| 329 | |
| 330 | OUTPUT: Ash uses it's own output routines. There are three out- |
| 331 | put structures allocated. "Output" represents the standard out- |
| 332 | put, "errout" the standard error, and "memout" contains output |
| 333 | which is to be stored in memory. This last is used when a buil- |
| 334 | tin command appears in backquotes, to allow its output to be col- |
| 335 | lected without doing any I/O through the UNIX operating system. |
| 336 | The variables out1 and out2 normally point to output and errout, |
| 337 | respectively, but they are set to point to memout when appropri- |
| 338 | ate inside backquotes. |
| 339 | |
| 340 | INPUT: The basic input routine is pgetc, which reads from the |
| 341 | current input file. There is a stack of input files; the current |
| 342 | input file is the top file on this stack. The code allows the |
| 343 | input to come from a string rather than a file. (This is for the |
| 344 | -c option and the "." and eval builtin commands.) The global |
| 345 | variable plinno is saved and restored when files are pushed and |
| 346 | popped from the stack. The parser routines store the number of |
| 347 | the current line in this variable. |
| 348 | |
| 349 | DEBUGGING: If DEBUG is defined in shell.h, then the shell will |
| 350 | write debugging information to the file $HOME/trace. Most of |
| 351 | this is done using the TRACE macro, which takes a set of printf |
| 352 | arguments inside two sets of parenthesis. Example: |
| 353 | "TRACE(("n=%d0, n))". The double parenthesis are necessary be- |
| 354 | cause the preprocessor can't handle functions with a variable |
| 355 | number of arguments. Defining DEBUG also causes the shell to |
| 356 | generate a core dump if it is sent a quit signal. The tracing |
| 357 | code is in show.c. |