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Re: testsuite -C dir


From: Paolo Bonzini
Subject: Re: testsuite -C dir
Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2008 15:19:15 +0100
User-agent: Thunderbird 2.0.0.9 (Macintosh/20071031)

Eric Blake wrote:
According to Paolo Bonzini on 1/28/2008 11:10 PM:
|
|> I inadvertently stripped the leading
|> ./, so atlocal wasn't being sourced if the current directory was not in
|> the path in absolute form.
|
| I didn't know source used the path.  Actually I thought the contrary...

. has always used PATH; but in older shells, it also implicitly tacked .
onto its path search.  Since this was a security hole for trojan files,
POSIX forbids implicit `.'.  Thus, the only safe way to source a file in
the current directory is with anchored notation, since you can't rely on
`.' being in the user's PATH.

Uhm, I have:

  bonzinip$ echo echo foo > bar
  bonzinip$ . bar
  foo

And . is not in the PATH:

  bonzinip$ chmod +x bar
  bonzinip$ bar
  -bash: bar: command not found

Then I try within scripts and behavior is the same:

  bonzinip$ echo . bar > baz
  bonzinip$ chmod +x baz
  bonzinip$ sh --version
  GNU bash, version 2.05b.0(1)-release (powerpc-apple-darwin8.0)
  bonzinip$ ./baz
  foo
  bonzinip$ POSIXLY_CORRECT=1 sh baz
  foo

Even with bash 3.2:

  bonzinip$ /sw/bin/bash --version
  GNU bash, version 3.2.9(1)-release (powerpc-apple-darwin8.10.0)
  Copyright (C) 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  bonzinip$ /sw/bin/bash baz
  foo
  bonzinip$ POSIXLY_CORRECT=1 /sw/bin/bash baz
  foo

/me is confused...

Paolo




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