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Re: Some minor notes on manual chapter 4 "Shell Builtin Commands"
From: |
Kerin Millar |
Subject: |
Re: Some minor notes on manual chapter 4 "Shell Builtin Commands" |
Date: |
Mon, 9 Oct 2023 06:57:23 +0100 |
On Mon, 9 Oct 2023 01:16:41 +0200
Martin Schulte <gnu@schrader-schulte.de> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I took a closer look on the online manual chapter 4 "Shell Builtin Commands"
> and found some inconsistencies:
>
> - true and false seem to be missing (in 4.1 Bourne Shell Builtins).
>
> The following has been tested with bash 5.2.15:
>
> - 3.7.5 Exit Status says: "All builtins return an exit status of 2 to
> indicate incorrect usage, generally invalid options or missing arguments."
> but cd with two or more non-optional arguments returns an exit status of 1.
>
> - The same is true if exit is called with two or more argument where the
> first is numeric. This exit doesn't terminate bash.
>
> - When exit is invoked with a non-numeric first argument it terminates bash.
> That seems to be inconsistent with the behaviour described before, while the
> exit status of the shell is 2 and consistent in some way.
Just to add that, while POSIX does not specify the behaviour of the exit
builtin where its operand "is not an unsigned decimal integer or is greater
than 255", it does forbid all special built-in utilities (including exit) from
causing an interactive shell to exit on account of an error. So, for an
interactive instance of bash to raise a "numeric argument required" error then
proceed to exit seems contrary to the specification.
Taking dash as a counter-example, its behaviour fulfils the requirements laid
out by 2.8.1 Consequences of Shell Errors for both interactive and
non-interactive instances.
$ exec dash
$ exit foo
dash: 1: exit: Illegal number: foo
$ echo $?
2
$ printf %s\\n 'exit foo' 'echo done' | dash
dash: 1: exit: Illegal number: foo
$ echo $?
2
--
Kerin Millar