119 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
78eeb081d9 hru.1, true.1: formatting 2025-10-26 20:24:21 -06:00
4512590ffc hru.1: added ST:VI "human rights" quote 2025-10-26 20:19:02 -06:00
25da591f9e docs/true.1: wisdom 2025-10-26 20:18:56 -06:00
8cde453f7b fop.1: fop it 2025-10-26 20:18:36 -06:00
c8c308134c false.1: mu 2025-10-26 20:18:27 -06:00
9d8d9d6e47 dj.1: spin that track 2025-10-26 20:17:58 -06:00
be6bd5386d docs: POSIX → \*(Px 2025-10-26 20:10:24 -06:00
3b44ddeedd scrut(1): remove erroneous utility from tree 2025-10-26 17:07:52 -06:00
ac0f9e4019 README: add CONTRIBUTING mention 2025-04-03 16:46:50 -06:00
247e469f82 CONTRIBUTING, STYLE: merge into CONTRIBUTING 2025-04-03 16:45:22 -06:00
8eece4cf84 Makefile: removes deprecated variable 2025-03-28 19:38:51 -06:00
0e9127d417 tests: removed POSIX testing (fixes #163) 2025-02-24 23:28:52 -07:00
e6f747d635 Merge branch 'npc-broken-tests' 2025-02-24 23:19:47 -07:00
9b699d7298 Makefile, tests/bonsai/scrut.mk: cleanup 2025-02-24 23:17:10 -07:00
941f931f8b Merge branch libfileis 2025-02-24 23:13:13 -07:00
f0eac562b3 tests: bonsai/npc.mk: fixed copyright header 2025-02-24 23:08:28 -07:00
138044e52f Merge branch 'optimizations' 2025-02-24 23:04:10 -07:00
bd8bc0094d rpn(1): fixes erroneous OpenBSD-gated import 2025-02-24 23:03:31 -07:00
99a99cdcb5 Merge branch 'style-c' 2025-02-24 22:59:50 -07:00
008c0624f6 tests: bonsai/npc.mk: removed test that is broken with GNU and BusyBox 2025-02-24 22:57:42 -07:00
982c67df13 intcmp(1), swab(1): consistent type annotations 2024-10-01 22:08:56 -06:00
07a2f1efc2 Merge branch 'man-fixes' 2024-09-11 15:42:58 -06:00
c4cd2563f9 scrut(1): fixes failing write test 2024-09-11 03:26:00 -06:00
8bdb72ece8 false(1): fixes pledge(2) invocation 2024-09-11 03:19:56 -06:00
ba73f50527 true(1): removes NULL from commented imports 2024-09-11 03:19:23 -06:00
579bb98874 true(1): fixes pledge(2) invocation 2024-09-11 03:18:01 -06:00
8f1e570b50 strcmp(1): fixes pledge(2) invocation 2024-09-11 03:15:58 -06:00
a43daf2cf2 str(1): fixes pledge(2) invocation 2024-09-11 03:15:13 -06:00
f25a499ca0 scrut(1): fixes pledge(2) invocation 2024-09-11 03:14:36 -06:00
e0b5467fb6 npc(1): fixes pledge invocation 2024-09-11 03:13:38 -06:00
7498b283ce mm(1): updates to use new unveil api 2024-09-11 02:32:32 -06:00
0b3ed37c38 libopenbsd.rs(3): makes using statically-allocated arrays possible 2024-09-11 02:32:03 -06:00
800a097903 swab(1): uses default for promises 2024-09-10 17:14:02 -06:00
1ccdc65d30 rpn(1): uses default for promises 2024-09-10 17:13:20 -06:00
df0a236f81 mm(1): uses default for Promises 2024-09-10 17:12:14 -06:00
e385d873ec intcmp(1): uses default value for Promises 2024-09-10 17:11:22 -06:00
73a75a32df hru(1): uses default Promises value for child processes 2024-09-10 17:10:26 -06:00
b8e5901d97 libopenbsd.rs(3): adds default value for Promises 2024-09-10 17:09:46 -06:00
f4bd4de2e4 fileis(1): various changes to make the code more efficient and idiomatic 2024-09-10 02:42:55 -06:00
f66fdef9c3 STYLE: avoid unbounded loops 2024-09-10 02:05:01 -06:00
b56a66f980 STYLE: fixes default case in example 2024-09-10 01:59:59 -06:00
f6559b464a STYLE: fix minor issues 2024-09-07 12:51:18 -06:00
accec33301 Makefile: fixes abuse of relative paths 2024-09-05 17:12:39 -06:00
444e682f02 Merge branch 'rdme' 2024-09-05 17:02:31 -06:00
790b12fb40 STYLE: changes numbering scheme to transcend headers, fixes minor errors 2024-09-05 15:55:32 -06:00
fde682a10e Makefile: fixes manpage installation location 2024-09-05 12:57:55 -06:00
4cb5ea78d7 STYLE: improves clarity, focus, distribution of items, adds more gripes, includes usage text style 2024-09-05 12:44:14 -06:00
62ce288524 rpn(1): makes rounding more efficient 2024-09-04 22:12:44 -06:00
DTB
87c9e29932 tests: bonsai/peek.mk 2024-09-01 08:51:33 -06:00
DTB
1037e32e6e peek(1): fix erroring on stdin/stdout redirection 2024-09-01 08:50:13 -06:00
DTB
5c70852890 peek.1: replace parens with square brackets 2024-09-01 08:50:12 -06:00
DTB
8ec18ccf75 peek(1): use stdbool.h 2024-09-01 08:50:12 -06:00
DTB
3bfdc62035 peek(1): better error on piping 2024-09-01 08:50:12 -06:00
DTB
7d174c1f7c peek(1): warn on pledge(2) or unveil(2) errors 2024-09-01 08:50:12 -06:00
DTB
3f41110617 peek(1): pledge(2) and unveil(2) on OpenBSD 2024-09-01 08:50:11 -06:00
DTB
7a69e1d516 peek.1: correct references to use the 1p section, add reference to stty(1p) 2024-09-01 08:50:11 -06:00
DTB
64e943f64a peek(1): fix ioerr typos 2024-09-01 08:50:11 -06:00
DTB
16dcd4da37 peek(1): more style fixes 2024-09-01 08:50:11 -06:00
DTB
d892fa1cac peek(1): update style 2024-09-01 08:50:11 -06:00
DTB
3862a95151 peek.1: s/inputted/input/ 2024-09-01 08:48:26 -06:00
DTB
264ae2e82c peek.1: fix version string 2024-09-01 08:48:26 -06:00
DTB
1634761593 peek.1: fix wording on -i 2024-09-01 08:48:26 -06:00
DTB
0b40360e7e Makefile: all: add peek 2024-09-01 08:48:26 -06:00
590d98d7f7 peek.1: updates to be more consistent with current documentation 2024-09-01 08:48:26 -06:00
DTB
07aa9a9abc peek(1): remove unused variables, clean up some typos 2024-09-01 08:48:25 -06:00
DTB
fce49bed85 peek(1): correct grammar 2024-09-01 08:46:56 -06:00
DTB
62b38a6765 peek(1): strip down to bare essentials, rewrite man page to match 2024-09-01 08:46:56 -06:00
DTB
23521bade5 peek(1): remove -p 2024-09-01 08:46:56 -06:00
DTB
3b774cab27 Import peek(1) from trinity/src 2024-09-01 08:46:52 -06:00
e889159619 CONTRIBUTING: made better 2024-08-30 21:22:53 -06:00
731e62ee7e rpn(1): made evaluation function more readable 2024-08-28 18:24:49 -06:00
f50bfeea92 fop(1): fixes panic on no arguments 2024-08-28 18:05:56 -06:00
8d00fa0afd fop(1): minor formatting change 2024-08-28 00:46:32 -06:00
9f520df82b strcmp(1): adds null unveil 2024-08-28 00:31:02 -06:00
41982c2f73 str(1): adds null unveil 2024-08-28 00:30:45 -06:00
6166a3ca36 npc(1): adds null unveil 2024-08-28 00:26:26 -06:00
efedcd3ae4 true(1), false(1): adds null unveils 2024-08-28 00:24:35 -06:00
8fd5bdf5a6 swab(1): adds null unveil 2024-08-28 00:15:15 -06:00
b946469da5 rpn(1): adds null unveil 2024-08-28 00:13:21 -06:00
06384c72fb intcmp(1): adds null unveil 2024-08-28 00:09:40 -06:00
9aeadd8f8f hru(1): adds null unveil 2024-08-27 23:57:12 -06:00
5b666d6858 fop(1): adds null unveil 2024-08-27 23:54:39 -06:00
b875aa1058 rpn(1): more improvements 2024-08-24 19:00:01 -06:00
cc53dab035 rpn(1): handles errors when writing to stdout 2024-08-24 18:18:27 -06:00
232629f4d3 hru(1): makes more efficient 2024-08-24 17:55:00 -06:00
ff4ff825bd swab(1): changes disparate error handling functions to one function 2024-08-24 17:26:26 -06:00
5eb71e90a3 tests/bonsai: rpn.mk: tests the standard input 2024-08-24 17:22:57 -06:00
a0138be79e rpn(1): refactor to make code more efficient, readable, and maintainable 2024-08-24 17:22:02 -06:00
150fa22f35 fop(1): changes casts to calls to .into() 2024-08-24 15:57:55 -06:00
f104598164 mm(1): updates error-handling functions and uncovers issue with error reporting 2024-08-24 15:53:58 -06:00
722679247a hru(1): uses new sysexits 2024-08-23 14:31:02 -06:00
4db4160019 swab(1): uses new sysexits 2024-08-23 14:23:11 -06:00
928dce0234 fop(1): uses new sysexits 2024-08-23 14:22:11 -06:00
1fffd3df52 Makefile: sets bindgen to output exit codes as u8 2024-08-23 14:21:43 -06:00
a14b8fb9d7 fop(1): adds functions for error handling 2024-08-23 13:35:30 -06:00
dd39aeff02 mm(1): adds ioerr(), usage(), and oser() functions 2024-08-22 00:22:05 -06:00
fbacfecce8 Merge branch 'linux-fix' (closes #158) 2024-08-21 22:43:29 -06:00
DTB
579ff65b67 tests: bonsai/npc.mk: drop redundant tab removal 2024-08-21 21:59:22 -06:00
DTB
334433536b tests: bonsai/npc.mk: fix harrowing ordeal of a Linux error 2024-08-21 21:57:10 -06:00
e9058803d3 mm(1): fixes to pledge(2) now; tests: bonsai/mm.mk: adds test for regression 2024-08-17 14:58:56 -06:00
71d4d6ba05 tests: bonsai/dj.mk, bonsai/rpn.mk: fixes testing on linux 2024-08-17 01:57:16 -06:00
821f5d09e9 fop(1), hru(1), intcmp(1), mm(1), rpn(1), swab(1): fixes conditional compilation 2024-08-17 01:51:25 -06:00
a4a556a5b6 mm(1): fixes extra file arguments not being unveil(2)ed 2024-08-16 18:43:51 -06:00
DTB
e2c03842a3 intcmp(1): remove extra newline 2024-08-13 12:13:47 -06:00
DTB
0fd66bff38 false(1), true(1): complete main prototype 2024-08-13 12:04:42 -06:00
DTB
0c4923016e Makefile: replace include/None.mk with /dev/null 2024-08-13 11:56:09 -06:00
e0c985f7ff libopenbsd.rs(3): uses c_char instead of i8 for portability 2024-08-14 00:32:28 -06:00
d2f8fb8106 README: improvements, community links 2024-08-12 17:53:43 -06:00
DTB
8646d5c4ee STYLE: make rules more granular and consistent, add examples 2024-08-08 02:31:54 -06:00
DTB
6d7173e438 libfileis(3): finish removal 2024-07-18 20:50:12 -06:00
DTB
958f08bd9e fileis.1: rename from scrut.1 2024-07-18 20:45:14 -06:00
DTB
02b5edae05 fileis(1): feature parity with C scrut(1) 2024-07-18 20:43:39 -06:00
DTB
0819eeb75d fileis(1): scrap libfileis(3), work on rewriting scrut(1) in Rust 2024-07-18 19:11:22 -06:00
DTB
cd875df547 README: attempt to clarify intent 2024-07-18 09:32:58 -06:00
DTB
0f12dcc552 scrut(1): fix ugly opt parsing 2024-07-15 14:28:00 -06:00
DTB
b9c4b49603 scrut(1): use libfileis 2024-07-15 14:13:53 -06:00
DTB
2c4349872c scrut(1): banish gotos 2024-07-15 13:55:01 -06:00
DTB
59fa3ed3d2 scrut(1): get rid of -h 2024-07-15 13:47:55 -06:00
DTB
71655a8559 libfileis(3): a library for scrutinizing files 2024-07-15 13:47:04 -06:00
52 changed files with 1143 additions and 667 deletions

View File

@@ -1,26 +1,29 @@
Make sure to read our code of conduct in the CONDUCT file.
When contributing a pull request to the main branch, please sign your commits
with a PGP key and add your name and the year to the bottom of the list of
copyright holders for the file. For example, an existing copyright header might
read:
Copyright Information
=====================
When editing a file, create a copyright statement correlated to your
identity so that it is easier to keep track of who has touched what file.
Pseudonymous contributions are welcome (and encouraged). Place new copyright
information below existing copyright information. If there is an existing
copyright statement:
* Copyright (c) 20222023 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
You would add your name below it like this:
you would add your name below it like this:
* Copyright (c) 20222023 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
* Copyright (c) 20XX Your Name <your e-mail address or website>
We accept contributions from people using aliases.
Only list years in which you modified the source file. For example:
* Copyright (c) 20202021, 2023 Your Name <your-address@example.com>
This header shows that “Your Name” worked on this source file in 2020, 2021, and
2023. Please use the en dash (“–”) to separate the years in the copyright
notice.
2023. Please use the en dash (“–”, U+2013) to separate consecutive years in the
copyright notice.
If you are contributing a new file, please prepend the following license header
text to it, replacing the proper text on the copyright line:
@@ -92,20 +95,263 @@ notice:
* USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
*/
Make sure lines never exceed 80 columns in width when using four-character
indentation steps. This helps contributors with smaller screens, those using
side-by-side editor windows or panes, and those who have no text wrapping in
their editor or terminal.
For usage text and help messages, do not implement a -h option. Instead, print
usage information when any erroneous option is specified. Follow the NetBSD
style guide for the usage texts output format [0].
Style
=====
“Everyone knows that debugging is twice as hard as writing a program in the
first place. So if youre as clever as you can be when you write it, how
will you ever debug it?”
Brian Kernighan, The Elements of Programming Style
The following guidelines are conducive to clear and readable code that is
consistent with the style of the rest of the Bonsai Computer System.
Use:
0. A single line for control flow statements short enough to be easily
understood at a glance:
if !(argc < 0) { usage(program_name); }
This applies to C switch statements and cases and Rust match statements, as
well:
switch (value) { /* aligning stuff to make it easier to read is fine */
case possibility: variable = foo; break;
default: variable = NULL; break;
}
1. Switch cases in C and match arms in Rust should start another level of
indentation:
switch (value) {
case possibility:
statement;
break;
default:
statement;
break;
}
match result {
Ok(n) => variable = n,
Err(e) => error = e,
}
2. Braces in control flow where their inclusion is left optional in C:
if (condition) { statement; }
3. Empty lines between different kinds of statements:
int t;
assert(io->bufuse > 0);
assert(io->bufuse <= io->bs);
if ((t = write(io->fd, io->buf, io->bufuse)) < 0) {
io->error = errno;
t = 0;
} else if (t > 0) {
memmove(io->buf, &(io->buf)[t], (io->bufuse -= t));
}
io->bytes += t;
io->prec += (t > 0 && io->bufuse > 0);
io->rec += (t > 0 && io->bufuse == 0);
return io;
4. Compiler options that yield the most useful warnings, such as -Wpedantic in
a lot of C compilers. Fix the warnings, too [0].
5. One more level of indentation and one argument per line when a function
call or statement header is too long to fit on one line:
let usage = format!(
"Usage: {} [-d delimiter] index command [args...]",
argv[0],
);
6. One more level of indentation than the keyword that initiated a multi-line
block.
if (condition) {
statement;
statement;
}
7. The return value of all non-void functions, or explicitly ignore them (like
casting to void in C) [0]:
if ((a = malloc(sizeof char)) == NULL) { /* handle this error */
(void)fprintf(stderr, "oh noes!"); /* explicitly ignore this one */
return EX_OSERR; /* ...because the program is exiting anyway */
}
8. The smallest possible scope for data [0].
9. Comments noting all the symbols and macros used from a C header file, next
to its include macro:
#include <unistd.h> /* close(2), getopt(3), lseek(2), read(2), write(2),
(space-aligned) * optarg, optind, STDIN_FILENO, STDOUT_FILENO */
10. Spaces in control flow statements, after the keyword and before the
opening brace:
for (i = 2; i < argc; ++i) {
11. In Rust, a trailing comma on all arguments or fields that are on their own
lines:
return Err(EvaluationError {
message: format!("{}: Invalid token", i),
code: EX_DATAERR,
})
12. In Rust, place extern statements after use statements that include standard
library crates. Group like statements:
use std::fs::Path;
extern crate strerror;
extern crate sysexits;
use strerror::StrError;
use sysexits::{ EX_OSERR, EX_USAGE };
13. If text is on the same line as a brace, spaces after an opening brace and
before a closing one:
use sysexits::{ EX_DATAERR, EX_IOERR, EX_UNAVAILABLE, EX_USAGE };
14. Alphabetic sorting, where applicable:
use std::io::{ BufWriter, Read, Write, stderr, stdin, stdout }
15. In Rust, use the to_owned() method on string types (str, OsStr, CStr, etc.)
and the to_string() method on other types.
Avoid:
16. Unbounded loops [0].
17. Function pointers [0].
18. Heap memory allocation [0].
19. Using too much nested logic (within reason).
20. Too many levels of dereferences [0]:
/* do not do this */
for (size_t i = 0; i < sizeof a / sizeof *a; ++i) {
if (a[i].id == MATCH) { a[i].val = 0; }
}
/* do this */
for (struct MadeUp *s = &a[0]; *s != NULL; s = &s[1]) {
if (s->id == MATCH) { s->val = 0; }
}
21. Using C preprocessor macros; the fewer, the better [0].
22. The exit(3p) and std::process::exit() functions; returning from the main
function skips a system call.
Do not use:
23. More than the length of one printed page for a function [0].
24. Recursion, as its complex and can unexpectedly overflow the stack [0].
25. Any functionality not in the POSIX C specification and language features not
in C99.
26. Do-while loops, as theyre unique to C and confusing for casual programmers.
27. Labels and goto statements; use sensible flow control [0].
28. Pointer arithmetic, as it tends to be confusing and unnecessary; use
index-reference patterns like &p[1] instead of p + 1. &p[n] is the address at
p + sizeof p * n, not p + n, like pointer arithmetic suggests.
29. C struct bitfields in unions, to access certain bits of bigger data types,
as its poorly defined in the C standards; use bit arithmetic.
30. C trigraphs.
31. Inclusions in C header files, to prevent multiple file inclusions.
32. C preprocessor variables to prevent multiple inclusions of the same file,
such as:
#ifdef _FILE
#define _FILE
/* file body */
#endif /* ifdef _FILE */
Instead, take the time to ensure other files arent including any files twice.
33. The gets(3p) function from <stdio.h>, as its impossible to prevent buffer
overflows when it's used; use fgets(3p) from <stdio.h>.
34. The scanf(3p) function from <stdio.h> [1].
35. Any functionality not described in the latest POSIX make(1) specification.
36. Macros which panic on failure in Rust (such as the print!() and println!()
macros). Use a function and handle any errors. However, do use the eprintln!()
macro for error messages. Handling an error for writing an error message is
redundant.
37. A -h option for help text. Instead, print usage information when any
erroneous option is specified. See the Usage Text section below.
38. Lines which exceed 80 columns in width when using four-column indentation
steps. This helps contributors with smaller screens, those using side-by-side
editor windows or panes, and those who have no text wrapping in their editor or
terminal.
Usage Text
==========
This section is adapted from the NetBSD style guide [2].
When programs are invoked incorrectly and in the synopsis of manual pages, uasge
text should be provided to the user. The following is the format used by this
project for this purpose:
All optional arguments are to be placed in square brackets (U+005B, U+005D).
Mutually exclusive arguments can be separated by a vertical line (U+007C).
Groups of arguments should be specified in alphabetical order in most cases. The
order of arguments and an example of these rules follows:
0. Options with no option arguments.
1. Options with option arguments. Arguments should be specified inside the same
square brackets as the options.
3. Non-option arguments.
"usage: f [-aDde] [-b b_arg] [-m m_arg] req1 req2 [opt1 [opt2]]\n"
"usage: f [-a | -b] [-c [-de] [-n number]]\n"
Committing
==========
When contributing to Bonsai, please sign your commit with a PGP key and create
the commit with an identity which can be easily contacted.
If committing a new utility, please include tests and documentation (see
tests/ and docs/) for the new tool.
If committing a new source file, format the commit message following these
guidelines:
Format commit messages following these guidelines:
$ git commit -m 'tool(1): add feature x'
@@ -131,7 +377,20 @@ $ git commit -m 'tool(1): fix #42 & add feature x'
Commit messages should be written in the present tense.
[0] <http://cvsweb.netbsd.org/bsdweb.cgi/~checkout~/src/share/misc/style>
References
==========
[0] <https://web.eecs.umich.edu/~imarkov/10rules.pdf>
[1] <http://sekrit.de/webdocs/c/beginners-guide-away-from-scanf.html>
[2] <http://cvsweb.netbsd.org/bsdweb.cgi/~checkout~/src/share/misc/style>
--
This work © 20232024 by Emma Tebibyte is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a
copy of this license, visit <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>
Copyright © 20232024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
Copyright © 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
Copyright © Wikipedia contributors
This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>.

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
# Copyright (c) 20232024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
# Copyright (c) 20232025 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
# Copyright (c) 20232024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
# Copyright (c) 2023 Sasha Koshka <sashakoshka@tebibyte.media>
# Copyright (c) 2024 Aaditya Aryal <aryalaadi123@gmail.com>
@@ -19,12 +19,12 @@ PREFIX ?= /usr/local
# for conditionally compiling OS features
OS != uname
OS_INCLUDE != test -e include/$(OS).mk && printf 'include/$(OS).mk\n' \
|| include/None.mk
|| printf '/dev/null\n'
# normalized prefix
PREFIX_N != dirname $(PREFIX)/.
PREFIX_N != realpath $(PREFIX)
MANDIR != test $(PREFIX_N) = / && printf '/usr/share/man\n' \
|| printf '/share/man\n'
|| printf '$(PREFIX_N)/man\n'
SYSEXITS != printf '\043include <sysexits.h>\n' | cpp -M - | tr ' ' '\n' \
| sed -n 's/sysexits\.h//p' || printf 'include\n'
@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ BIN = build/bin
default: all test
.PHONY: all
all: dj false fop hru intcmp mm npc rpn scrut str strcmp swab true
all: dj false fileis fop hru intcmp mm npc peek rpn str strcmp swab true
# keep build/include until bindgen(1) has stdin support
# https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-bindgen/issues/2703
@@ -54,15 +54,20 @@ clean:
rm -rf build dist
dist: all docs
mkdir -p $(DESTDIR)/$(PREFIX)/bin $(DESTDIR)/$(PREFIX)/$(MANDIR)/man1
cp build/bin/* $(DESTDIR)/$(PREFIX)/bin
cp build/docs/*.1 $(DESTDIR)/$(PREFIX)/$(MANDIR)/man1
mkdir -p $(DESTDIR)/$(PREFIX_N)/bin $(DESTDIR)/$(MANDIR)/man1
cp build/bin/* $(DESTDIR)/$(PREFIX_N)/bin
cp build/docs/*.1 $(DESTDIR)/$(MANDIR)/man1
.PHONY: install
install: dist
cp -r $(DESTDIR)/* /
include tests/tests.mk
TESTFILES != for file in tests/*.mk; do printf '%s ' "$$file"; done
TESTS != printf '%s\n' "$(TESTFILES)" | xargs -n1 basename \
| sed 's/\.mk/_tests/g'
include $(TESTFILES)
.PHONY: test
test: all $(TESTS) /tmp/getopt
@@ -95,7 +100,7 @@ build/o/libstrerror.rlib: build src/libstrerror.rs
src/libstrerror.rs
build/o/libsysexits.rlib: build/include/sysexits.h
bindgen --default-macro-constant-type signed --use-core --formatter=none \
bindgen --fit-macro-constant-types --default-macro-constant-type unsigned --use-core --formatter=none \
build/include/sysexits.h | $(RUSTC) $(RUSTFLAGS) --crate-type lib -o $@ -
# bandage solution until bindgen(1) gets stdin support
@@ -112,6 +117,11 @@ false: build/bin/false
build/bin/false: src/false.c build
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ src/false.c
.PHONY: fileis
fileis: build/bin/fileis
build/bin/fileis: src/fileis.rs build rustlibs
$(RUSTC) $(RUSTFLAGS) -o $@ src/fileis.rs
.PHONY: fop
fop: build/bin/fop
build/bin/fop: src/fop.rs build rustlibs
@@ -137,16 +147,16 @@ npc: build/bin/npc
build/bin/npc: src/npc.c build
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ src/npc.c
.PHONY: peek
peek: build/bin/peek
build/bin/peek: src/peek.c build
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ src/peek.c
.PHONY: rpn
rpn: build/bin/rpn
build/bin/rpn: src/rpn.rs build rustlibs
$(RUSTC) $(RUSTFLAGS) -o $@ src/rpn.rs
.PHONY: scrut
scrut: build/bin/scrut
build/bin/scrut: src/scrut.c build
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ src/scrut.c
.PHONY: str
str: build/bin/str
build/bin/str: src/str.c build

50
README
View File

@@ -1,24 +1,29 @@
“Seek not to walk the path of the masters; seek what they sought.”
Matsuo Basho
The Bonsai harakit utilities are a replacement for standard POSIX utilities
which aim to fill its niche while expanding on their capabilities. These new
tools are the result of the careful examination of the current state of POSIX
and Unix utilies. The Unix Philosophy of “do one thing and do it well” are their
core but they avoid clinging to the past.
Bonsais Harakit is an alternative to the standard POSIX utilities that aims to
be simpler, easier, and more powerful. These tools are the result of careful
examination of the current state common Unix utilities, POSIX-compliant and
otherwise, following frustrations with design decisions and implementation
details. They represent a vision of accomplishing everyday use cases with tools
that follow the Unix philosophy of “do one thing and do it well” without
clinging to the past.
The era of the original Unix tools has been long and fruitful, but they have
their flaws. This project originated from frustrations with the way certain
tools work and how other projects that extend POSIX dont make anything better.
The intent of Harakit is not to conform to or extend POSIX, like the GNU or BSD
utilities do, but to invent new utilities to perform the same tasks in more
intuitive ways. GNU and BSD extensions are convenient but often unhealthy,
forgetting the purposes of the tools they extend, or building into existing
utilities features that would be more useful as their own tools to be used
anywhere. Other utility sets aim to provide a number of fully-featured
programs to be used individually, Harakit utilities are meant to be easily
composable and work together in pipelines.
This project will not follow in the footsteps of GNU; extensions of POSIX will
not be found here. GNU extensions are a gateway to the misuse of the shell. The
harakit utilities will intentionally discourage use of the shell for purposes
beyond its scope.
See docs/ for more on the specific utilities currently implemented and see
CONTRIBUTING for guidelines for contributions.
See docs/ for more on the specific utilities currently implemented.
Building
========
Harakit utilities require a POSIX-compliant environment to compile, including a
C compiler and preprocessor (cc(1) and cpp(1) by default), an edition 2023 Rust
@@ -43,7 +48,22 @@ To remove all build and distributable files:
$ make clean
Contributing
============
See the CONTRIBUTING file for contribution guidelines.
Community
=========
xmpp://bonsai@covenant.murderu.us
irc://feeling.murderu.us/#bonsai
Read More
=========
An Introduction to the Unix Shell
<https://porkmail.org/era/unix/shell>
@@ -57,6 +77,10 @@ Master Foo Discourses on the Unix-Nature
Shell Programming!
<https://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/why-shell.html>
UNIX Style, or cat -v Considered Harmful
<http://harmful.cat-v.org/cat-v/>
--
Copyright © 20232024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
Copyright © 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>

124
STYLE
View File

@@ -1,124 +0,0 @@
The following guidelines are conducive to clear and readable code that is
consistent with the style of the rest of the Bonsai Computer System.
0. Braces are mandatory for all control flow.
1. Nested indentation should be kept to a minimum.
2. Empty lines should be placed between different kinds of statements:
int t;
assert(io->bufuse > 0);
assert(io->bufuse <= io->bs);
if ((t = write(io->fd, io->buf, io->bufuse)) < 0) {
io->error = errno;
t = 0;
} else if (t > 0) {
memmove(io->buf, &(io->buf)[t], (io->bufuse -= t));
}
io->bytes += t;
io->prec += (t > 0 && io->bufuse > 0);
io->rec += (t > 0 && io->bufuse == 0);
return io;
3. Each block of code should be indented once more than the keyword which
initiated the block:
switch (c) {
case 'e': mode |= EQUAL; break;
case 'g': mode |= GREATER; break;
case 'l': mode |= LESS; break;
default: return usage(s);
}
4. In C, spaces should be placed in control flow statements after the keyword
and before the opening brace:
for (i = 2; i < argc; ++i) {
5. If a function, a C control flow statement, or a Rust macro has arguments that
cause the statement to be broken into multiple lines, this should be done by
placing the arguments on a new line inside the parentheses:
let usage = format!(
"Usage: {} [-d delimiter] index command [args...]",
argv[0],
);
6. If Rust function arguments or fields are on their own lines, they should
always have a trailing comma:
return Err(EvaluationError {
message: format!("{}: Invalid token", i),
code: EX_DATAERR,
})
7. If text is on the same line as a brace, spaces should be placed after an
opening curly brace and before a closing one:
use sysexits::{ EX_DATAERR, EX_IOERR, EX_UNAVAILABLE, EX_USAGE };
8. If a control flow statement is short enough to be easily understood in a
glance, it may be placed on a single line:
if !(argc < 0) { usage(program_name); }
9. In C, note everything you use from a library in a comment subsequent to its
#include statement:
#include <unistd.h> /* close(2), getopt(3), lseek(2), read(2), write(2),
* optarg, optind, STDIN_FILENO, STDOUT_FILENO */
10. In Rust, place extern statements after use statements that include standard
library crates. Group alike statements:
use std::fs::Path;
extern crate strerror;
extern crate sysexits;
use strerror::StrError;
use sysexits::{ EX_OSERR, EX_USAGE };
11. Do not use do while loops in C.
12. Adhere to the following rules from the paper The Power of 10: Rules for
Developing Safety-Critical Code [0]:
1. Avoid complex flow constructs, such as goto and recursion.
2. All loops must have fixed bounds. This prevents runaway code.
3. Avoid heap memory allocation.
4. Restrict functions to the length of a single printed page.
6. Restrict the scope of data to the smallest possible.
7. Check the return value of all non-void functions, or cast to void to
indicate the return value is useless (such as in the case of using
fprintf(3p) to print to the standard error).
8. Use the preprocessor sparingly.
9. Limit pointer use to a single dereference, and do not use function
pointers.
10. Compile with all possible warnings active; all warnings should then be
addressed before release of the software (for C compilers, compile with
-Wpedantic).
13. Remember this quote from The Elements of Programming Style by Brian
Kernighan:
Everyone knows that debugging is twice as hard as writing a program in the
first place. So if you're as clever as you can be when you write it, how
will you ever debug it?
References
==========
[0] <https://web.eecs.umich.edu/~imarkov/10rules.pdf>
--
Copyright © 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
Copyright © Wikipedia contributors
This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>.

View File

@@ -4,7 +4,12 @@
.\" This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To see a copy of this license,
.\" visit <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>.
.\"
.TH DJ 1 2024-07-14 "Harakit X.X.X"
.TH DJ 1 2024-10-02 "Harakit X.X.X"
.SH PROLOGUE
\(lqSpin that track, catboy.\(rq
\(en DTB
.\"
.SH NAME
dj \(en disk jockey
.\"
@@ -207,7 +212,7 @@ which are not reported.
This program was based on the
.BR dd (1p)
utility as specified in POSIX. While character conversion may have been the
utility as specified in \*(Px. While character conversion may have been the
original intent of
.BR dd (1p),
it is irrelevant to its modern use. Because of this, this program eschews

View File

@@ -4,7 +4,15 @@
.\" This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To see a copy of this license,
.\" visit <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>.
.\"
.TH FALSE 1 2024-06-06 "Harakit X.X.X"
.TH FALSE 1 2024-10-02 "Harakit X.X.X"
.SH PROLOGUE
\(lqA monk asked Joshu, a Chinese Zen master: \(oqHas a dog Buddha-nature or
not?\(cq
Joshu answered: \(oqMu.\(cq\(rq
\(en Mumon, The Gateless Gate, trans. Nyogen Senzaki & Paul Reps
.\"
.SH NAME
false \(en do nothing, unsuccessfully
.\"
@@ -15,7 +23,7 @@ always be returned.
.\"
.SH RATIONALE
In POSIX.1-2017,
In \*(Px.1-2024,
.BR false (1p)
exists for the construction of control flow and loops based on a failure. This
implementation functions as described in that standard.

View File

@@ -1,15 +1,15 @@
.\" Copyright (c) 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
.\" Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
.\" Copyright (c) 20242025 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
.\"
.\" This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To see a copy of this license,
.\" visit <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>.
.\"
.TH SCRUT 1 2024-06-06 "Harakit X.X.X"
.TH FILEIS 1 2025-02-24 "Harakit X.X.X"
.SH NAME
scrut \(en scrutinize file properties
fileis \(en scrutinize file properties
.SH SYNOPSIS
scrut
fileis
.RB [ -LSbcdefgkprsuwx ]
.B file...
.\"
@@ -82,5 +82,6 @@ Copyright \(co 2024 DTB. License AGPLv3+: GNU AGPL version 3 or later
.\"
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR access (3p),
.BR chown (1p),
.BR lstat (3p),
.BR test (1p)

View File

@@ -5,6 +5,10 @@
.\" visit <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>.
.\"
.TH FOP 1 2024-06-17 "Harakit X.X.X"
.SH PROLOGUE
\(lqTwist it! Pull it! [Fop] it!\(rq
\(en \fIBop It\fP
.SH NAME
fop \(en field operator
.\"

View File

@@ -4,6 +4,13 @@
.\" visit <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>.
.\"
.TH HRU 1 2024-06-17 "Harakit X.X.X"
.SH PROLOGUE
\(lq\(oqHuman rights.\(cq Even the name is racist. The Federation is basically
a \fIhomo sapiens\fP-only club...\(rq
\(en Azetbur, daughter of Chancellor Gorkon, \fIStar Trek VI: The Undiscovered
Country\fP
.\"
.SH NAME
hru \(en human readable units
.\"

View File

@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ this is elegant but unintuitive.
.\"
.SH RATIONALE
The traditional tool for integer comparisons in POSIX and other Unix shells has
The traditional tool for integer comparisons in \*(Px and other Unix shells has
been
.BR test (1).
This tool also handles string comparisons and file scrutiny. These parts of its

View File

@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ The
.BR cat (1p)
and
.BR tee (1p)
programs specified in POSIX together provide similar functionality. The
programs specified in \*(Px together provide similar functionality. The
separation of the two sets of functionality into separate APIs seemed
unncessary.
.\"

View File

@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ The program operates in single-byte chunks regardless of intended encoding.
.\"
.SH RATIONALE
POSIX currently lacks a way to display non-printing characters in the terminal
\*(Px currently lacks a way to display non-printing characters in the terminal
using a standard tool. A popular extension to
.BR cat (1p),
the

111
docs/peek.1 Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,111 @@
.\" Copyright (c) 2023-2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
.\" Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
.\"
.\" This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To see a copy of this license,
.\" visit <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>.
.\"
.TH PEEK 1 2024-08-14 "Harakit X.X.X"
.SH NAME
peek \(en read from the standard input, furtively
.\"
.SH SYNOPSIS
peek
.RB [ -i ]
.\"
.SH DESCRIPTION
Read input from the standard input with terminal echo disabled.
.\"
.SH OPTIONS
.IP \fB-i\fP
Allows input to come from sources other than terminals (pipes).
.\"
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
In the event of an error, a debug message will be printed and the program will
exit with the appropriate
.BR sysexits.h (3)
error code.
In order to ensure the user\(cqs terminal is still usable after premature
termination, the program attempts to handle the SIGINT signal; if it cannot,
an error message is printed and execution continues. If the program is
interrupted, it exits unsuccessfully without an error message.
.\"
.SH RATIONALE
This tool was originally written to accept passwords in shell scripts as an
extremely simple alternative to the GNU Privacy Guard project\(cqs
.BR pinentry (1)
utility.
Accepting input without showing what is being typed is useful when keying in
secrets in public settings or in places where surveillance cameras are
installed.
.\"
.SH CAVEATS
This program does nothing to prevent others from seeing the key presses input to
a keyboard. It also does not protect against the sound of typing being analyzed
to determine what was input without needing to see screen or keyboard.
Accepting secrets in shell scripts is probably not advisable.
On systems that support it, the
.BR ioctl (2)
command TIOCSTI can be used to insert characters into the standard input. This
doesn't allow snooping but can be used for general mischief.
.\"
.SH EXAMPLES
This is an
.BR sh (1p)
command line that hashes a given password. It uses
.BR head (1p)
to only accept one line of input,
.BR xargs (1p)
and
.BR printf (1p)
to strip the trailing newline,
.BR htpasswd (1)
from Apache\(cqs utilities to hash the input with the bcrypt algorithm, and
.BR cut (1p)
to print only the resulting hash:
.RS
$ peek | head -n 1 | xargs printf '%s' | htpasswd -nBi _ | cut -d : -f 2
.RE
This is an
.BR sh (1p)
command line that allows a user to write blindly into a text file but displaying
only written lines. Some writers have the habit of prematurely revising their
work and use tools with functionality similar to this to prevent it.
It uses
.BR mm (1)
to pipe the output of the program to both the standard error and the regular
file writing.txt:
.RS
$ echo Input ^D to quit. && peek | mm -eo - >writing.txt
.RE
.\"
.SH AUTHOR
Written by DTB
.MT trinity@trinity.moe
.ME .
.\"
.SH COPYRIGHT
Copyright \(co 2023-2024 DTB. License AGPLv3+: GNU AGPL version 3 or later
<https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
.\"
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR ioctl (2),
.BR ioctl_tty (2),
.BR read (1p),
.BR sh (1p),
.BR stty (1p)

View File

@@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ hardware of any given machine.
An infix notation calculation utility,
.BR bc (1p),
is included in the POSIX standard, but does not accept expressions as arguments;
is included in the \*(Px standard, but does not accept expressions as arguments;
in scripts, any predefined, non-interactive input must be piped into the
program. A
.BR dc (1)

View File

@@ -47,13 +47,13 @@ visual similarity and not byte similarity.
.\"
.SH RATIONALE
The traditional tool for string comparisons in POSIX and other Unix shells has
The traditional tool for string comparisons in \*(Px and other Unix shells has
been
.BR test (1).
This tool also handles integer comparisons and file scrutiny. These parts of its
functionality have been broken out into multiple utilities.
This program\(cqs functionality may be performed on a POSIX-compliant system
This program\(cqs functionality may be performed on a \*(Px-compliant system
with
.BR test (1p).
.\"

View File

@@ -5,6 +5,11 @@
.\" visit <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>.
.\"
.TH TRUE 1 2024-06-06 "Harakit X.X.X"
.SH PROLOGUE
\(lqThe truth is one, there is no second about which a person who knows it
would argue with one who knows.\(rq
\(en The Buddha, Sutta Nip\[u0101]ta, trans. \[u1E6C]h\[u0101]nissaro Bhikkhu
.SH NAME
true \(en do nothing, successfully
.\"
@@ -15,7 +20,7 @@ always be returned.
.\"
.SH RATIONALE
In \fIPOSIX.1-2017\fP,
In \fI\*(Px.1-2024\fP,
.BR true (1p)
exists for the construction of control flow and loops based on a success. This
implementation functions as described in that standard.

View File

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
/*
* Copyright (c) 20232024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
* Copyright (c) 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
* SPDX-License-Identifier: CC0
*
* This work is marked with CC0 1.0. To view a copy of this license, visit
@@ -10,9 +11,9 @@
# include <unistd.h> /* pledge(2) */
#endif
int main() {
int main(void) {
#ifdef __OpenBSD__
pledge(NULL, NULL);
(void)pledge("stdio", "");
#endif
return 1;
return 1;
}

91
src/fileis.rs Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,91 @@
/*
* Copyright (c) 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
* Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
* SPDX-License-Identifier: AGPL-3.0-or-later
*
* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
* the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by the Free
* Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any
* later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
* FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Affero General Public License for more
* details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
* along with this program. If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
*/
use std::{
env::args,
fs::metadata,
os::unix::fs::{ FileTypeExt, MetadataExt },
process::ExitCode,
};
extern crate getopt;
extern crate strerror;
extern crate sysexits;
use getopt::GetOpt;
use strerror::StrError;
use sysexits::EX_USAGE;
const OPTS: &str = "bcdefgkprsuwxLS";
fn usage(argv0: &str) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("Usage: {} [-{}] file...", argv0, OPTS);
ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE)
}
fn main() -> ExitCode {
let argv = args().collect::<Vec<_>>();
let mut sel = String::with_capacity(OPTS.len()); // selected options
let mut optind: usize = 1; // argv[0]
while let Some(opt) = argv.getopt(OPTS) {
if let Ok(optchr) = opt.opt() { sel.push_str(optchr); }
else { return usage(&argv[0]); }
optind = opt.ind();
}
if optind == argv.len() { return usage(&argv[0]); }
for arg in argv.iter().skip(optind) {
let fmeta = match metadata(arg) {
Ok(m) => m,
Err(e) => { // no perms or nonexistent
eprintln!("{}: {}: {}", argv[0], arg, e.strerror());
return ExitCode::FAILURE;
},
};
let fmode = fmeta.mode();
let ftype = fmeta.file_type();
for selection in sel.chars() { // run all selected tests
match selection {
'b' if ftype.is_block_device() => (),
'c' if ftype.is_char_device() => (),
'e' => (), // exists or metadata would have errored
'd' if fmeta.is_dir() => (),
'f' if fmeta.is_file() => (),
'g' if fmode & 0o2000 /* S_ISGID */ != 0 => (), // setgid
'k' if fmode & 0o1000 /* S_ISVTX */ != 0 => (), // setvtx
'p' if ftype.is_fifo() => (),
'r' if fmode & 0o0400 /* S_IRUSR */ != 0 => (), // read access
'u' if fmode & 0o4000 /* S_ISUID */ != 0 => (), // setuid
'w' if fmode & 0o0200 /* S_IWUSR */ != 0 => (), // write access
'x' if fmode & 0o0100 /* S_IXUSR */ != 0 => (), // exec access
'L' if fmeta.is_symlink() => (),
'S' if ftype.is_socket() => (),
_ => { return ExitCode::FAILURE; }
}
}
}
ExitCode::SUCCESS
}

View File

@@ -18,8 +18,8 @@
use std::{
env::args,
io::{ Read, stdin, stdout, Write },
process::{ Command, exit, Stdio },
io::{ Error, Read, Write, stdin, stdout },
process::{ Command, ExitCode, Stdio, exit },
};
extern crate getopt;
@@ -32,25 +32,36 @@ use sysexits::{ EX_DATAERR, EX_IOERR, EX_UNAVAILABLE, EX_USAGE };
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use sysexits::EX_OSERR;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] extern crate openbsd;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use openbsd::{ Promises, pledge };
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use openbsd::{ Promises, pledge, unveil };
fn main() {
fn err(argv0: &String, e: Error) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv0, e.strerror());
}
fn usage(argv0: &String) -> u8 {
eprintln!("Usage: {} [-d delimiter] index command [args...]", argv0);
EX_USAGE
}
fn main() -> ExitCode {
let argv = args().collect::<Vec<String>>();
let mut d = '\u{1E}'.to_string(); /* ASCII record separator */
let mut optind = 1;
if cfg!(target_os="openbsd") {
let promises = Promises::new("stdio proc exec");
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] {
let promises = Promises::new("exec proc stdio unveil");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), None) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
exit(EX_OSERR);
err(&argv[0], e);
return ExitCode::from(EX_OSERR);
}
if let Err(e) = unveil(None, None) {
err(&argv[0], e);
return ExitCode::from(EX_OSERR);
}
}
let usage = format!(
"Usage: {} [-d delimiter] index command [args...]",
argv[0],
);
if argv.len() == 1 { return ExitCode::from(usage(&argv[0])); }
while let Some(opt) = argv.getopt("d:") {
match opt.opt() {
@@ -60,8 +71,7 @@ fn main() {
optind = opt.ind();
},
_ => {
eprintln!("{}", usage);
exit(EX_USAGE);
return ExitCode::from(usage(&argv[0]));
}
};
}
@@ -69,7 +79,7 @@ fn main() {
/* parse the specified index as a number we can use */
let index = argv[optind].parse::<usize>().unwrap_or_else(|e| {
eprintln!("{}: {}: {}", argv[0], argv[1], e);
exit(EX_DATAERR);
exit(EX_DATAERR.into());
});
/* index of the argv[0] for the operator command */
@@ -77,15 +87,14 @@ fn main() {
/* argv[0] of the operator command */
let operator = argv.get(command_arg).unwrap_or_else(|| {
eprintln!("{}", usage);
exit(EX_USAGE);
exit(usage(&argv[0]).into());
});
/* read entire standard input into memory */
let mut buf = String::new();
if let Err(e) = stdin().read_to_string(&mut buf) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
exit(EX_IOERR);
err(&argv[0], e);
exit(EX_IOERR.into());
};
/* split the buffer by the delimiter (by default, '\u{1E}') */
@@ -105,18 +114,14 @@ fn main() {
.stdout(Stdio::piped()) /* piped stdout to handle output ourselves */
.spawn()
.unwrap_or_else( |e| {
eprintln!("{}: {}: {}", argv[0], argv[command_arg], e.strerror());
exit(EX_UNAVAILABLE);
err(&argv[0], e);
exit(EX_UNAVAILABLE.into());
});
/* get field we want to pipe into spawned program */
let field = fields.get(index).unwrap_or_else(|| {
eprintln!(
"{}: {}: No such index in input",
argv[0],
index.to_string(),
);
exit(EX_DATAERR);
eprintln!("{}: {}: no such index in input", argv[0], index);
exit(EX_DATAERR.into());
});
/* get the stdin of the newly spawned program and feed it the field val */
@@ -126,8 +131,8 @@ fn main() {
}
let output = spawned.wait_with_output().unwrap_or_else(|e| {
eprintln!("{}: {}: {}", argv[0], argv[command_arg], e.strerror());
exit(EX_IOERR);
err(&argv[0], e);
exit(EX_IOERR.into());
});
/* get the output with which the original field will be replaced */
@@ -143,8 +148,8 @@ fn main() {
/* convert the output of the program to UTF-8 */
let new_field = String::from_utf8(replace).unwrap_or_else(|e| {
eprintln!("{}: {}: {}", argv[0], argv[command_arg], e);
exit(EX_IOERR);
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e);
exit(EX_IOERR.into());
});
/* store the new field in the old fields vector */
@@ -154,7 +159,9 @@ fn main() {
stdout().write_all(
fields.join(&d.to_string()).as_bytes()
).unwrap_or_else(|e| {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
exit(EX_IOERR);
err(&argv[0], e);
exit(EX_IOERR.into());
});
ExitCode::SUCCESS
}

View File

@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@
use std::{
cmp::Ordering,
env::args,
io::{ stdin, stdout, Write },
io::{ Write, stdin, stdout },
process::{ ExitCode, exit },
};
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ use sysexits::{ EX_DATAERR, EX_IOERR, EX_SOFTWARE, EX_USAGE };
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use sysexits::EX_OSERR;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] extern crate openbsd;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use openbsd::{ Promises, pledge };
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use openbsd::{ Promises, pledge, unveil };
/* list of SI prefixes */
const LIST: [(u32, &str); 10] = [
@@ -47,6 +47,16 @@ const LIST: [(u32, &str); 10] = [
(30, "Q"), /* quetta */
];
fn err(argv0: &String, message: String, code: Option<u8>) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv0, message);
ExitCode::from(code.unwrap_or(1 /* unknown error */))
}
fn usage(argv0: &String) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("Usage: {}", argv0);
ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE)
}
fn convert(input: u128) -> Result<(f64, (u32, &'static str)), String> {
/* preserve decimal places in output by casting to a float */
let mut out = (input as f64, (0_u32, ""));
@@ -81,53 +91,48 @@ fn convert(input: u128) -> Result<(f64, (u32, &'static str)), String> {
fn main() -> ExitCode {
let argv = args().collect::<Vec<String>>();
if let Some(_) = argv.get(1) {
eprintln!("Usage: {}", argv[0]);
return ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE as u8);
}
if let Some(_) = argv.get(1) { return usage(&argv[0]); }
if cfg!(target_os="openbsd") {
let promises = Promises::new("stdio");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), None) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
return ExitCode::from(EX_OSERR as u8);
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] {
let promises = Promises::new("stdio unveil");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), Some(Promises::default())) {
return err(&argv[0], e.strerror(), Some(EX_OSERR));
}
if let Err(e) = unveil(None, None) {
return err(&argv[0], e.strerror(), Some(EX_OSERR));
}
}
let mut buf = String::new();
while let Ok(_) = stdin().read_line(&mut buf) {
if buf.is_empty() { return ExitCode::SUCCESS; }
if let Err(e) = stdin().read_line(&mut buf) {
return err(&argv[0], e.strerror(), Some(EX_IOERR));
}
let n: u128 = match buf.trim().parse() {
Ok(f) => {
buf.clear();
f
},
Err(err) => {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], err);
return ExitCode::from(EX_DATAERR as u8);
},
};
if buf.is_empty() { return ExitCode::SUCCESS; }
let (number, prefix) = match convert(n) {
Ok(x) => x,
Err(err) => {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], err);
return ExitCode::from(EX_SOFTWARE as u8);
},
};
let n: u128 = match buf.trim().parse() {
Ok(f) => {
buf.clear();
f
},
Err(e) => return err(&argv[0], e.to_string(), Some(EX_DATAERR)),
};
let si_prefix = format!("{}B", prefix.1);
let (number, prefix) = convert(n).unwrap_or_else(|e| {
let _ = err(&argv[0], e.to_string(), None);
exit(EX_SOFTWARE.into());
});
/* round output number to one decimal place */
let out = ((number * 10.0).round() / 10.0).to_string();
let si_prefix = prefix.1.to_owned() + "B";
stdout().write_all(format!("{} {}\n", out, si_prefix).as_bytes())
.unwrap_or_else(|e| {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
exit(EX_IOERR);
});
/* round output number to one decimal place */
let rounded = (number * 10.0).round() / 10.0;
let out = rounded.to_string() + " " + &si_prefix + &'\n'.to_string();
if let Err(e) = stdout().write_all(out.as_bytes()) {
return err(&argv[0], e.strerror(), Some(EX_IOERR));
}
ExitCode::SUCCESS

View File

@@ -26,28 +26,35 @@ extern crate getopt;
extern crate sysexits;
use getopt::GetOpt;
use sysexits::EX_USAGE;
use sysexits::{ EX_DATAERR, EX_USAGE };
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use sysexits::EX_OSERR;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] extern crate openbsd;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] extern crate strerror;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use openbsd::{ Promises, pledge };
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use openbsd::{ Promises, pledge, unveil };
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use strerror::StrError;
fn err(argv0: &String, e: String, code: u8) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv0, e);
ExitCode::from(code)
}
fn usage(s: &str) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("Usage: {} [-egl] integer integer...", s);
ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE as u8)
fn usage(argv0: &String) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("Usage: {} [-egl] integer integer...", argv0);
ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE)
}
fn main() -> ExitCode {
let argv = args().collect::<Vec<String>>();
if cfg!(target_os="openbsd") {
let promises = Promises::new("stdio");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), None) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
return ExitCode::from(EX_OSERR as u8);
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] {
let promises = Promises::new("stdio unveil");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), Some(Promises::default())) {
return err(&argv[0], e.strerror(), EX_OSERR);
}
if let Err(e) = unveil(None, None) {
return err(&argv[0], e.strerror(), EX_OSERR);
}
}
@@ -79,8 +86,8 @@ fn main() -> ExitCode {
match arg.parse::<usize>() { /* parse current operand */
Ok(n) => currn = n,
Err(e) => {
eprintln!("{}: {}: {}", &argv[0], arg, e);
return ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE as u8);
let error = arg.to_owned() + ": " + &e.to_string();
return err(&argv[0], error, EX_DATAERR);
}
}

View File

@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@
*/
use std::{
ffi::CString,
ffi::{ CString, c_char },
io::Error,
ptr::null,
};
@@ -33,16 +33,20 @@ mod openbsd {
}
}
pub struct Promises(*const i8);
pub struct Promises(*const c_char);
impl Promises {
pub fn new(promises: &str) -> Self {
let p = CString::new(promises).unwrap();
Promises(p.into_raw() as *const i8)
Promises(p.into_raw() as *const c_char)
}
}
impl Default for Promises {
fn default() -> Self { Promises::new("") }
}
pub fn pledge(
promises: Option<Promises>, execpromises: Option<Promises>
) -> Result<(), Error> {
@@ -65,14 +69,12 @@ pub fn pledge(
pub struct UnveilPerms(CString);
impl UnveilPerms {
pub fn new(permissions: Vec<char>) -> Self {
if permissions.is_empty() {
return UnveilPerms(CString::new("").unwrap());
}
pub fn new<T: IntoIterator<Item = char>>(permissions: T) -> Self {
let perms = CString::new(
permissions.into_iter().collect::<String>()
).unwrap();
UnveilPerms(
CString::new(permissions.iter().collect::<String>()).unwrap()
)
UnveilPerms(perms)
}
}
@@ -81,11 +83,11 @@ pub fn unveil(
permissions: Option<UnveilPerms>,
) -> Result<(), Error> {
let path_c = path.map(CString::new).map(Result::unwrap);
let arg1 = path_c.map(|p| p.into_raw() as *const i8).unwrap_or(null());
let arg1 = path_c.map(|p| p.into_raw() as *const c_char).unwrap_or(null());
let arg2 = permissions
.map(|p| p.0.into_raw() as *const i8)
.unwrap_or(null());
let arg2 = permissions.map(|p| {
p.0.into_raw() as *const c_char
}).unwrap_or(null());
unsafe {
match openbsd::unveil(arg1, arg2) {

View File

@@ -20,9 +20,9 @@
use std::{
env::args,
fs::File,
io::{ stdin, stdout, stderr, BufWriter, Read, Write },
io::{ Error, BufWriter, Read, Write, stderr, stdin, stdout },
os::fd::{ AsRawFd, FromRawFd },
process::{ exit, ExitCode },
process::{ ExitCode, exit},
};
extern crate getopt;
@@ -47,15 +47,23 @@ use ArgMode::*;
enum ArgMode { In, Out }
fn err(argv0: &String, e: Error, code: Option<u8>) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv0, e.strerror());
ExitCode::from(code.unwrap_or(1 /* unknown error */))
}
fn usage(argv0: &String) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("Usage: {} [-aetu] [-i input] [-o output]", argv0);
ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE)
}
fn main() -> ExitCode {
let argv = args().collect::<Vec<_>>();
let usage = format!("Usage: {} [-aetu] [-i input] [-o output]", argv[0]);
if cfg!(target_os="openbsd") {
let promises = Promises::new("rpath stdio unveil");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), None) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
return ExitCode::from(EX_OSERR as u8);
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] {
let promises = Promises::new("cpath rpath stdio unveil wpath");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), Some(Promises::default())) {
return err(&argv[0], e, Some(EX_OSERR));
}
}
@@ -76,35 +84,16 @@ fn main() -> ExitCode {
Ok("t") => t = false,
Ok("i") => { /* add inputs */
let input = opt.arg().unwrap();
if cfg!(target_os="openbsd") {
let perms = UnveilPerms::new(vec!['r']);
if let Err(e) = unveil(Some(&input), Some(perms)) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
return ExitCode::from(EX_OSERR as u8);
}
}
ins.push(input);
mode = Some(In); /* latest argument == -i */
},
Ok("o") => { /* add output */
let output = opt.arg().unwrap();
if cfg!(target_os="openbsd") {
let perms = UnveilPerms::new(vec!['w', 'c']);
if let Err(e) = unveil(Some(&output), Some(perms)) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
return ExitCode::from(EX_OSERR as u8);
}
}
outs.push(output);
mode = Some(Out); /* latest argument == -o */
},
Err(_) | Ok(_) => {
eprintln!("{}", usage);
return ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE as u8);
return usage(&argv[0]);
},
};
@@ -124,16 +113,30 @@ fn main() -> ExitCode {
}
}
if cfg!(target_os="openbsd") {
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] {
for input in &ins {
let perms = UnveilPerms::new(['r']);
if let Err(e) = unveil(Some(&input), Some(perms)) {
return err(&argv[0], e, Some(EX_OSERR));
}
}
for output in &outs {
let perms = UnveilPerms::new(['c', 'w']);
if let Err(e) = unveil(Some(&output), Some(perms)) {
return err(&argv[0], e, Some(EX_OSERR));
}
}
if let Err(e) = unveil(None, None) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
return ExitCode::from(EX_OSERR as u8);
return err(&argv[0], e, Some(EX_OSERR));
}
}
if ins.is_empty() && outs.is_empty() && argv.len() > optind {
eprintln!("Usage: {}", usage);
return ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE as u8);
return usage(&argv[0]);
}
/* use stdin if no inputs are specified */
@@ -153,8 +156,8 @@ fn main() -> ExitCode {
match File::open(file) {
Ok(f) => f,
Err(e) => {
eprintln!("{}: {}: {}", argv[0], file, e.strerror());
exit(EX_IOERR);
let _ = err(&(argv[0].clone() + ": " + file), e, None);
exit(EX_IOERR.into());
},
}
}).collect::<Vec<_>>();
@@ -180,8 +183,8 @@ fn main() -> ExitCode {
match options {
Ok(f) => return f,
Err(e) => {
eprintln!("{}: {}: {}", argv[0], file, e.strerror());
exit(EX_IOERR);
let _ = err(&(argv[0].clone() + ": " + file), e, None);
exit(EX_IOERR.into());
},
};
}).collect::<Vec<_>>();
@@ -205,21 +208,19 @@ fn main() -> ExitCode {
for file in inputs {
for byte in file.bytes().map(|b| {
b.unwrap_or_else(|e| {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
exit(EX_IOERR);
let _ = err(&argv[0], e, None);
exit(EX_IOERR.into());
})
}) {
for out in &mut outputs {
if let Err(e) = out.write(&[byte]) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
return ExitCode::from(EX_IOERR as u8);
return err(&argv[0], e, Some(EX_IOERR));
}
if u {
/* immediately flush the output for -u */
if let Err(e) = out.flush() {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
return ExitCode::from(EX_IOERR as u8);
return err(&argv[0], e, Some(EX_IOERR));
}
}
}

View File

@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
#include <stdio.h> /* fprintf(3), fputs(3), getc(3), perror(3), putc(3), stdin,
* stdout, EOF */
#include <sysexits.h> /* EX_IOERR, EX_OK, EX_OSERR, EX_USAGE */
#include <unistd.h> /* pledge(2), getopt(3) */
#include <unistd.h> /* NULL, getopt(3), pledge(2), unveil(2) */
char *program_name = "npc";
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
char showtab = 0; /* prints tab characters in caret notation */
#ifdef __OpenBSD__
if (pledge("stdio", NULL) == -1) {
if (pledge("stdio unveil", "") == -1 || unveil(NULL, NULL)) {
perror(argv[0] == NULL ? program_name : argv[0]);
return EX_OSERR;
}

147
src/peek.c Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,147 @@
/*
* Copyright (c) 20232024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
* SPDX-License-Identifier: AGPL-3.0-or-later
*
* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
* the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by the Free
* Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any
* later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
* FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Affero General Public License for more
* details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
* along with this program. If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
*/
#include <signal.h> /* sigaction(2), signal(2), struct sigaction, SIGINT */
#include <stdbool.h> /* bool */
#include <stdio.h> /* fprintf(3), fgetc(3), perror(3), fputc(3), stderr, stdin,
* stdout, EOF, NULL */
#include <stdlib.h> /* exit(3), EXIT_FAILURE */
#include <sysexits.h> /* EX_IOERR, EX_OK, EX_USAGE */
#include <termios.h> /* tcgetattr(3), tcsetattr(3), struct termios, ECHO */
#include <unistd.h> /* getopt(3), isatty(3), pledge(2), unveil(2),
* STDIN_FILENO */
char *program_name = "peek";
/* Restores terminal echo; otherwise when a user ^Cs the terminal would
* continue to not display typed text. If sig isn't zero, this will terminate
* the program. */
static void
restore_echo(int sig) {
static struct termios t;
/* Failure isn't reported because this is the termination routine anyway;
* errors will be obvious. */
if (tcgetattr(STDIN_FILENO, &t) == 0) {
t.c_lflag |= ECHO;
(void)tcsetattr(STDIN_FILENO, TCSAFLUSH, &t);
}
if (sig != 0) { exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } /* Terminated by signal. */
return;
}
static int
ioerr(char *argv0) {
perror(argv0);
restore_echo(0);
return EX_IOERR;
}
static int
usage(char *argv0) {
(void)fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s [-i]\n", argv0);
return EX_USAGE;
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]){
bool is_term; /* Is stdin a terminal? */
bool must_be_term = 1; /* Must it be? */
#ifdef __OpenBSD__
if (pledge("stdio tty unveil", "") != 0 || unveil(NULL, NULL) != 0) {
/* This isn't fatal; these return values could be cast to void just as
* easily. */
(void)perror(argv[0] == NULL ? argv[0] : program_name);
}
#endif
is_term = isatty(STDIN_FILENO);
if (argc > 0) { /* option parsing */
int c;
program_name = argv[0];
while ((c = getopt(argc, argv, "i")) != -1) {
switch (c) {
case 'i': must_be_term = 0; break;
default: return usage(argv[0]);
}
}
if (argc > optind) { return usage(argv[0]); }
}
if (!is_term && must_be_term) {
(void)fprintf(
stderr,
"%s: Must be run in a terminal (specify -i to skip this check)\n",
argv[0]
);
return EX_USAGE;
}
if (is_term) {
{ /* Install signal handler */
/* There isn't a difference in functionality between the signal(2)
* and sigaction(2) methods. sigaction(2) is vastly preferred for
* portability but some older systems only have signal(2). */
/* Errors aren't terminating because the worst that happens is some
* terminal phooeyness if things go awry. */
#if defined _POSIX_C_SOURCE
struct sigaction act = { 0 };
act.sa_handler = restore_echo;
if (sigaction(SIGINT, &act, NULL) != 0) { perror(program_name); }
#else
if (signal(SIGINT, restore_echo) == SIG_ERR) {
perror(program_name);
}
#endif
}
{ /* Banish terminal echo */
/* This terminates when it fails because it's the whole point of
* the program. */
struct termios t;
if (tcgetattr(STDIN_FILENO, &t) != 0) {
return ioerr(program_name);
}
t.c_lflag ^= ECHO;
if (tcsetattr(STDIN_FILENO, TCSAFLUSH, &t) != 0) {
return ioerr(program_name);
}
}
}
{ /* Input loop */
int c;
while ((c = fgetc(stdin)) != EOF) {
if (fputc(c, stdout) == EOF) { return ioerr(program_name); }
}
}
if (is_term) { restore_echo(0); }
return EX_OK;
}

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
/*
* Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
* Copyright (c) 20242025 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
* SPDX-License-Identifier: AGPL-3.0-or-later
*
* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
@@ -46,21 +46,21 @@ use std::{
collections::VecDeque,
env::args,
fmt::{ self, Display, Formatter },
io::stdin,
io::{ Error, Write, stdin, stdout },
process::ExitCode,
};
use CalcType::*;
extern crate strerror;
extern crate sysexits;
use sysexits::EX_DATAERR;
use strerror::StrError;
use sysexits::{ EX_DATAERR, EX_IOERR };
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use sysexits::EX_OSERR;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] extern crate strerror;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] extern crate openbsd;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use strerror::StrError;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use openbsd::{ Promises, pledge };
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use openbsd::{ Promises, pledge, unveil };
#[derive(Clone, PartialEq, PartialOrd, Debug)]
/* enum CalcType is a type containing operations used in the calculator */
@@ -120,12 +120,46 @@ impl Display for CalcType {
#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
struct EvaluationError {
message: String,
code: i32,
code: u8,
}
/* Im no math nerd but I want the highest possible approximation of 0.9
* repeating and it seems this can give it to me */
const PRECISION_MOD: f64 = 0.9 + f64::EPSILON * 100.0;
impl StrError for EvaluationError {
fn strerror(&self) -> String {
self.message.clone()
}
}
fn err<T: StrError>(argv0: &String, e: &T, code: Option<u8>) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv0, e.strerror());
ExitCode::from(code.unwrap_or(1 /* unknown error */))
}
fn operate(
mut stack: VecDeque<f64>,
op: CalcType,
) -> Result<VecDeque<f64>, EvaluationError> {
let vals = (stack.pop_back(), stack.pop_back());
if let (Some(x), Some(y)) = vals {
match op {
Add => stack.push_back(y + x),
Subtract => stack.push_back(y - x),
Multiply => stack.push_back(y * x),
Divide => stack.push_back(y / x),
Power => stack.push_back(y.powf(x)),
Floor => stack.push_back((y / x).floor()),
Modulo => stack.push_back(y % x),
_ => {},
};
} else {
return Err(EvaluationError {
message: format!("{}: unexpected operation", op),
code: EX_DATAERR,
})
}
Ok(stack)
}
fn eval(
input: &str,
@@ -145,6 +179,7 @@ fn eval(
.rev()
.map(|t| CalcType::from(t))
.collect();
let mut ops: VecDeque<CalcType> = VecDeque::new();
while let Some(n) = toks.pop_back() {
@@ -152,36 +187,15 @@ fn eval(
Val(v) => stack.push_back(v),
Invalid(i) => {
return Err(EvaluationError {
message: format!("{}: Invalid token", i),
message: format!("{}: invalid token", i),
code: EX_DATAERR,
})
},
op => {
ops.push_back(op.clone());
oper = true;
let vals = (
stack.pop_back(),
stack.pop_back(),
);
if let (Some(x), Some(y)) = vals {
match op {
Add => stack.push_back(y + x),
Subtract => stack.push_back(y - x),
Multiply => stack.push_back(y * x),
Divide => stack.push_back(y / x),
Power => stack.push_back(y.powf(x)),
Floor => stack.push_back((y / x).floor()),
Modulo => stack.push_back(y % x),
_ => {},
};
} else {
return Err(EvaluationError {
message: format!("{}: Unexpected operation", op),
code: EX_DATAERR,
})
}
oper = true; /* this is an operation */
return operate(stack, op).map(|s| (s, oper));
},
};
}
@@ -190,51 +204,46 @@ fn eval(
}
/* Round a float to the given precision level */
fn round_precise(value: &f64, precision: usize) -> f64 {
let multiplier = 10_f64.powi(precision as i32);
fn round_precise(value: &f64) -> f64 {
/* Set floating-point precision for correcting rounding errors based on
* machine epsilon */
let precision = (-f64::EPSILON.log10()).floor() as i32;
let multiplier = 10_f64.powi(precision);
(value * multiplier).round() / multiplier
}
/* print the stack and let the caller know if evaluation should continue */
fn unstack(stack: VecDeque<f64>, op: bool) -> Result<bool, Error> {
if let Some(val) = stack.iter().last() {
if !op { return Ok(true); }
let out = round_precise(val).to_string() + &'\n'.to_string();
return stdout().write_all(out.as_bytes()).map(|_| true);
} else {
return Ok(false);
}
}
fn main() -> ExitCode {
let argv = args().collect::<Vec<String>>();
if cfg!(target_os="openbsd") {
let promises = Promises::new("stdio");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), None) {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], e.strerror());
return ExitCode::from(EX_OSERR as u8);
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] {
let promises = Promises::new("stdio unveil");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), Some(Promises::default())) {
return err(&argv[0], &e, Some(EX_OSERR));
}
if let Err(e) = unveil(None, None) {
return err(&argv[0], &e, Some(EX_OSERR));
}
}
let mut stack = VecDeque::new();
let mut buf = String::new();
/* Set floating-point precision for correcting rounding errors based on
* machine epsilon */
let precision = (-f64::EPSILON.log10() * PRECISION_MOD).ceil() as usize;
if argv.get(1).is_none() { /* read from stdin */
while let Ok(_) = stdin().read_line(&mut buf) {
match eval(&buf.trim(), stack) {
Ok(s) => {
buf.clear();
stack = s.0.clone();
let val = match stack.iter().last() {
Some(v) => v,
None => break,
};
if s.1 == false { continue; }
println!("{}", round_precise(val, precision).to_string());
},
Err(err) => {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], err.message);
return ExitCode::from(err.code as u8);
},
};
}
} else { /* read from argv */
if argv.get(1).is_some() { /* read expressions from argv */
/* join argv into an owned String joined by spaces minus argv[0] */
let input = argv
.iter()
@@ -245,20 +254,44 @@ fn main() -> ExitCode {
match eval(&input, stack) {
Ok(s) => {
stack = s.0.clone();
/* we can ignore the return value of unstack() because we are
* not continually evaluating from stdin */
if let Err(e) = unstack(s.0.clone(), s.1.clone()) {
return err(&argv[0], &e, Some(EX_IOERR));
}
let val = match stack.iter().last() {
Some(v) => v,
None => return ExitCode::SUCCESS,
};
println!("{}", round_precise(val, precision).to_string())
return ExitCode::SUCCESS;
},
Err(err) => {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv[0], err.message);
return ExitCode::from(err.code as u8);
Err(e) => {
return err(&argv[0], &e, Some(e.code));
},
};
}
/* else, read from stdin */
loop { /* take input until EOF */
if let Err(e) = stdin().read_line(&mut buf) {
return err(&argv[0], &e, Some(EX_IOERR));
}
match eval(&buf.trim(), stack) {
Ok(s) => {
buf.clear();
stack = s.0.clone(); /* out with the old, in with the new */
match unstack(s.0, s.1) {
Ok(b) if b => continue,
Ok(_) => break,
Err(e) => {
return err(&argv[0], &e, Some(EX_IOERR))
},
};
},
Err(e) => {
return err(&argv[0], &e, Some(e.code));
},
};
}
ExitCode::SUCCESS
}

View File

@@ -1,116 +0,0 @@
/*
* Copyright (c) 20232024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
* Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
* SPDX-License-Identifier: AGPL-3.0-or-later
*
* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
* the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by the Free
* Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any
* later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
* FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Affero General Public License for more
* details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
* along with this program. If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
*/
#include <assert.h> /* assert(3) */
#include <stdio.h> /* fprintf(3), stderr, NULL */
#include <stdlib.h> /* EXIT_FAILURE, EXIT_SUCCESS */
#include <string.h> /* memset(3), strchr(3) */
#include <sysexits.h> /* EX_OSERR, EX_USAGE */
#include <unistd.h> /* access(3), getopt(3), pledge(2), unveil(2), F_OK, R_OK,
* W_OK, X_OK */
#include <sys/stat.h> /* lstat(3), stat struct, S_ISBLK, S_ISCHR, S_ISDIR,
* S_ISFIFO, S_ISGID, S_ISREG, S_ISLNK, S_ISSOCK,
* S_ISUID, S_ISVTX */
char *program_name = "scrut";
#define OPTS "bcdefgkprsuwxLS"
/* this is an array so main:sel's size can be known at compile time */
static char opts[] = OPTS;
static int
usage(char *argv0) {
(void)fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s [-" OPTS "] file...\n", argv0);
return EX_USAGE;
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
char sel[(sizeof opts) / (sizeof *opts)];
program_name = argv[0] == NULL ? program_name : argv[0];
#ifdef __OpenBSD__
if (pledge("rpath stdio unveil", NULL) == -1) {
perror(program_name);
return EX_OSERR;
}
#endif
if (argc < 2) { return usage(program_name); }
{ /* option parsing */
char *p;
memset(sel, '\0', sizeof sel);
for (int c; (c = getopt(argc, argv, opts)) != -1;) {
if ((p = strchr(opts, c)) == NULL) { return usage(argv[0]); }
else {
assert(p - opts < sizeof sel / sizeof *sel); /* bounds check */
sel[p - opts] = c;
}
}
/* straighten out selections; permute out nulls */
p = sel;
for (size_t i = 0; i < (sizeof sel) / (sizeof *sel); ++i) {
if (sel[i] != '\0') {
*p = sel[i];
if (&sel[i] != p++) { sel[i] = '\0'; }
}
}
}
if (optind == argc) { return usage(argv[0]); }
for (argv += optind ; *argv != NULL; argv = &argv[1]) {
struct stat buf;
#ifdef __OpenBSD__
if (unveil(*argv, "r") == -1) {
perror(program_name);
return EX_OSERR;
}
#endif
if(access(*argv, F_OK) != 0 || lstat(*argv, &buf) == -1) {
return EXIT_FAILURE; /* doesn't exist or isn't stattable */
}
for (size_t i = 0; sel[i] != '\0'; ++i) {
if (
(sel[i] == 'b' && !S_ISBLK(buf.st_mode))
|| (sel[i] == 'c' && !S_ISCHR(buf.st_mode))
|| (sel[i] == 'd' && !S_ISDIR(buf.st_mode))
|| (sel[i] == 'e' && 0)
|| (sel[i] == 'f' && !S_ISREG(buf.st_mode))
|| (sel[i] == 'g' && !(buf.st_mode & S_ISGID))
|| (sel[i] == 'k' && !(buf.st_mode & S_ISVTX))
|| (sel[i] == 'p' && !S_ISFIFO(buf.st_mode))
|| (sel[i] == 'r' && access(*argv, R_OK) != 0)
|| (sel[i] == 'u' && !(buf.st_mode & S_ISUID))
|| (sel[i] == 'w' && access(*argv, W_OK) != 0)
|| (sel[i] == 'x' && access(*argv, X_OK) != 0)
|| (sel[i] == 'L' && !S_ISLNK(buf.st_mode))
|| (sel[i] == 'S' && !S_ISSOCK(buf.st_mode))
) { return EXIT_FAILURE; }
}
}
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}

View File

@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@
#include <sysexits.h> /* EX_OSERR, EX_USAGE */
#ifdef __OpenBSD__
# include <unistd.h> /* pledge(2) */
# include <unistd.h> /* pledge(2), unveil(2) */
#endif
char *program_name = "str";
@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
program_name = argv[0] == NULL ? program_name : argv[0];
#ifdef __OpenBSD__
if (pledge("stdio", NULL) == -1) {
if (pledge("stdio unveil", "") == -1 || unveil(NULL, NULL) == -1) {
perror(program_name);
return EX_OSERR;
}

View File

@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
#include <sysexits.h> /* EX_OK, EX_OSERR, EX_USAGE */
#ifdef __OpenBSD__
# include <unistd.h> /* pledge(2) */
# include <unistd.h> /* pledge(2), unveil(2) */
#endif
char *program_name = "strcmp";
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
unsigned int i;
#ifdef __OpenBSD__
if (pledge("stdio", NULL) == -1) {
if (pledge("stdio unveil", "") == -1 || unveil(NULL, NULL) == -1) {
perror(argv[0] == NULL ? program_name : argv[0]);
return EX_OSERR;

View File

@@ -33,31 +33,29 @@ use sysexits::{ EX_IOERR, EX_OK, EX_OSERR, EX_USAGE };
use strerror::StrError;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] extern crate openbsd;
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use openbsd::{ Promises, pledge };
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] use openbsd::{ Promises, pledge, unveil };
fn oserr(argv0: &str, e: Error) -> ExitCode {
fn err(argv0: &String, e: Error, code: u8) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv0, e.strerror());
ExitCode::from(EX_OSERR as u8)
ExitCode::from(code)
}
fn ioerr(argv0: &str, e: Error) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("{}: {}", argv0, e.strerror());
ExitCode::from(EX_IOERR as u8)
}
fn usage(s: &str) -> ExitCode {
fn usage(s: &String) -> ExitCode {
eprintln!("Usage: {} [-w word_size]", s);
ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE as u8)
ExitCode::from(EX_USAGE)
}
fn main() -> ExitCode {
let argv = args().collect::<Vec<String>>();
if cfg!(target_os="openbsd") {
let promises = Promises::new("stdio");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), None) {
return oserr(&argv[0], e);
#[cfg(target_os="openbsd")] {
let promises = Promises::new("stdio unveil");
if let Err(e) = pledge(Some(promises), Some(Promises::default())) {
return err(&argv[0], e, EX_OSERR);
}
if let Err(e) = unveil(None, None) {
return err(&argv[0], e, EX_OSERR);
}
}
@@ -88,22 +86,22 @@ fn main() -> ExitCode {
loop {
match input.read(&mut buf) {
Ok(0) => break ExitCode::from(EX_OK as u8), // read nothing; bye
Ok(0) => break ExitCode::from(EX_OK), // read nothing; bye
Ok(v) if v == wordsize => { // read full block; swab
let (left, right) = buf.split_at(v/2);
if let Err(e) = output.write(&right)
.and_then(|_| output.write(&left)) {
break ioerr(&argv[0], e);
break err(&argv[0], e, EX_IOERR);
}
},
Ok(v) => { // partial read; partially write
if let Err(e) = output.write(&buf[..v]) {
break ioerr(&argv[0], e);
break err(&argv[0], e, EX_IOERR);
}
},
Err(e) => break oserr(&argv[0], e)
Err(e) => break err(&argv[0], e, EX_OSERR)
}
}
}

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
/*
* Copyright (c) 20232024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
* Copyright (c) 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
* SPDX-License-Identifier: CC0
*
* This work is marked with CC0 1.0. To view a copy of this license, visit
@@ -10,8 +11,8 @@
# include <unistd.h> /* pledge(2) */
#endif
int main() {
int main(void) {
#ifdef __OpenBSD__
pledge(NULL, NULL);
(void)pledge("stdio", "");
#endif
}

View File

@@ -1,24 +1,13 @@
The testing suite contains two trees: the Bonsai tree and the POSIX tree:
Tests
=====
.
├── README
├── bonsai/
│   ├── dj.mk
│   ├── false.mk
│   ├── fop.mk
│   └── ...
├── posix/
└── tests.mk
The Harakit testing suite verifies the functionality of Harakit utilities
and checks for regressions and other issues relating to compliance to our
standards of practice.
The Bonsai tree tests the functionality of Harakit utilities for regressions and
other issues relating to compliance to our standards of practice.
The POSIX tests are currently a work-in-progress. Their status in this
repository is uncertain.
Both sets of tests also inherit the environment set by the top-level Makefile,
which sets the BIN variable to the build/bin directory at the root of the
project; therefore, each binary is located at $(BIN)/tool for idiomatic access.
Tests inherit the environment set by the top-level Makefile, which sets the BIN
variable to the build/bin directory at the root of the project; therefore, each
binary is located at $(BIN)/tool for idiomatic access.
Each test contains a set of PHONY targets which are prefixed with the name of
the tool being tested and an underscore. The first target is tests, which
@@ -27,10 +16,10 @@ included in the top Makefile, so they can be called from the root of the
repository. This also means that BIN can be set manually so that tests can be
run using make(1) inside of the tests directory:
$ make -f tests.mk BIN=../build/bin dj_tests
$ make -f dj.mk BIN=../build/bin dj_tests
--
Copyright © 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
Copyright © 20242025 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/>.

View File

@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ dj_tests: dj_help dj_full dj_null # dj_skip_stdin
dj_full: $(BIN)/dj /dev/full
case "$$(uname)" in \
Linux) \
$(BIN)/dj -Hi /dev/zero -o /dev/full 2>&1 \
! $(BIN)/dj -Hi /dev/zero -o /dev/full 2>&1 \
| tee /dev/stderr \
| xargs -I out test '1+0 > 0+0; 1024 > 0' = out \
;; \

View File

@@ -8,20 +8,20 @@
.PRAGMA: command_comment
.PHONY: scrut_tests
scrut_tests: scrut_help scrut_options
.PHONY: fileis_tests
fileis_tests: fileis_help fileis_options
.PHONY: scrut_help
scrut_help: $(BIN)/scrut
! $(BIN)/scrut -h
.PHONY: fileis_help
fileis_help: $(BIN)/fileis
! $(BIN)/fileis -h
.PHONY: scrut_options
# scrut tests file attributes, but files of a certain attribute aren't
.PHONY: fileis_options
# fileis tests file attributes, but files of a certain attribute aren't
# guaranteed to be present on a system. This test checks all of the files in
# harakit and, if test(1p) says a file matches a certain attribute, then checks
# scrut.
# fileis.
# opts are space-delimited (for command splitting), sel is not
scrut_options: $(BIN)/scrut
fileis_options: $(BIN)/fileis
set -e; \
opts="b c d e f g k p r s u w x L S"; \
sel=; \
@@ -30,12 +30,12 @@ scrut_options: $(BIN)/scrut
for opt in $$opts; \
do if ! printf "%s\n" $$sel | grep $$opt >/dev/null; then \
if test -$$opt "$$f"; then \
if ! $(BIN)/scrut -$$opt "$$f"; \
then printf "[!!] scrut -%s failed on %s.\n" \
if ! $(BIN)/fileis -$$opt "$$f"; \
then printf "[!!] fileis -%s failed on %s.\n" \
$$opt "$$f"; \
fi; \
sel="$$sel$$opt"; \
printf "[OK] Tested scrut -%s using %s\n" \
printf "[OK] Tested fileis -%s using %s\n" \
$$opt "$$f"; \
fi; \
fi; \

View File

@@ -24,6 +24,7 @@ fop_fail: $(BIN)/fop
! printf 'test\n' | $(BIN)/fop 1 cat
! printf 'test\n' | $(BIN)/fop 'test' cat
! printf 'test\n' | $(BIN)/fop -d'test' cat
! $(BIN)/fop
.PHONY: fop_functionality
fop_functionality: $(BIN)/fop

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
# Copyright (c) 2024 E$(NAME)a Tebibyte <e$(NAME)a@tebibyte.media>
# Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
# SPDX-License-Identifier: FSFAP
#
# Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
# notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is, without any warranty.
.PHONY: mm_tests
mm_tests: mm_args mm_help mm_stderr
mm_tests: mm_args mm_help mm_stderr mm_remaining mm_remaining_options
.PHONY: mm_none
mm_none: $(BIN)/mm
@@ -25,3 +25,16 @@ mm_help: $(BIN)/mm
# check if stderr is empty upon specifying -e
mm_stderr: $(BIN)/mm
test "$$(printf 'test\n' | $(BIN)/mm -e 2>&1 >/dev/null )" = "test"
.PHONY: mm_remaining
# check to make sure remaining arguments are used
mm_remaining: $(BIN)/mm
test "$$($(BIN)/mm -i README COPYING)" = "$$(cat README COPYING)"
$(BIN)/mm -i README -o /tmp/mm_test0 /tmp/mm_test1
diff /tmp/mm_test0 /tmp/mm_test1
.PHONY: mm_remaining_options
# check to make sure mm -i with trailing arguments interprets -o as one
mm_remaining_options:
! $(BIN)/mm -i README COPYING -o - 2>&1 | cut -d: -f2 \
| xargs test " -o" =

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
#!/bin/sh
# Copyright (c) 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
# Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
# Copyright (c) 20242025 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
# SPDX-License-Identifier: FSFAP
#
# Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are
@@ -26,17 +26,35 @@ npc_args:
.PHONY: npc_ascii
# Test 0x00 to 0x7f in input; in other words, the full 7b ASCII range.
npc_ascii: npc_ascii_controls npc_ascii_symbols npc_ascii_uppers # \
npc_ascii: npc_ascii_controls npc_ascii_uppers # npc_ascii_symbols \
# npc_ascii_lowers
.PHONY: npc_ascii_controls
# (control characters)
npc_ascii_controls:
# The following test prints the bytes 0x00 (inclusive) through 0x20
# (exclusive) and pipes them through npc(1). npc(1) should then replace all
# non-printing, non-space (in the isspace(3p) sense) characters with their
# graphical carat-char counterparts (see the npc(1) man page). The head(1p)
# invocation then strips off everything past the first line (or past the
# first newline byte, 0x0A) and xargs(1p) is used to test(1p) the output
# against the known good answer.
# Immediately before that newline, 0x09 is printed - in ASCII, the
# horizontal tab. If xargs' -I option is used, tr(1p) should used to delete
# that tab. If the tab is left as part of input, OpenBSD's xargs(1)
# implementation has been observed to strip it along with the other
# trailing whitespace (the newline), but Busybox's and GNU's xargs(1)
# implementations have been observed to leave the tab in. All three
# implementations strip off the trailing tab if `-I` is not used. The POSIX
# specification for `-I` is ambiguous as to which behavior is correct.
# This comment is the result of much bewilderment and debugging.
# ASCII 0x00 to 0x0a (before the newline, due to xargs(1p) issues)
awk 'BEGIN{ for (i = 0; i < 32; ++i) printf("%c", i); }' \
| $(BIN)/npc \
| head -n 1 \
| xargs -I out test "^@^A^B^C^D^E^F^G^H" = out
| xargs test "^@^A^B^C^D^E^F^G^H" =
# ASCII 0x0a (otherwise the head|tail sequence won't work) to 0x1f
awk 'BEGIN{ for (i = 0; i < 32; ++i) printf("%c", i); print }' \
@@ -45,14 +63,18 @@ npc_ascii_controls:
| tail -n 1 \
| xargs -I out test "^K^L^M^N^O^P^Q^R^S^T^U^V^W^X^Y^Z^[^\^]^^^_"
.PHONY: npc_ascii_symbols
# ASCII 0x1f to 0x3f (^_ and symbols)
npc_ascii_symbols:
# shell quoting olympics
awk 'BEGIN{ for (i = 31; i < 64; ++i) printf("%c", i); print }' \
| $(BIN)/npc \
| sed -e s"/\'/\\\'/g" -e 's/"/\\"/g' \
| xargs -I out test "^_ !\"#$$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?" = out
# This test is broken on Linux and will need closer inspection along with GNU
# xargs(1).
# .PHONY: npc_ascii_symbols
# # ASCII 0x1f to 0x3f (^_ and symbols)
# npc_ascii_symbols:
# # shell quoting olympics
# c="$(awk 'BEGIN{ for (i = 31; i < 64; ++i) printf("%c", i); print }')"
#
# printf '%s\n' "$c" | $(BIN)/npc \
# | sed -e s"/\'/\\\'/g" -e 's/"/\\"/g' \
# | tr -d '\n' \
# | xargs -I out test "^_ !\"#$$%&\'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?" = out
.PHONY: npc_ascii_uppers
# ASCII 0x40 to 0x5f (uppercases)

24
tests/peek.mk Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
# Copyright (c) 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
# SPDX-License-Identifier: FSFAP
#
# Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are
# permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this
# notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is, without any warranty.
# Testing peek is hard as it requires visual confirmation that text isn't being
# echoed. These tests don't go that far but are a start, and have already
# caught a bug in -i behavior.
.PHONY: peek_tests
peek_tests: peek_help peek_stdio
.PHONY: peek_help
peek_help: $(BIN)/peek
! $(BIN)/peek -h
.PHONY: peek_stdio
# Test peek -i
peek_stdio: $(BIN)/peek
printf 'Test.\n' \
| $(BIN)/peek -i \
| xargs test 'Test.' =

View File

@@ -1,22 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
# Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
# SPDX-License-Identifier: FSFAP
#
# Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are
# permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this
# notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is, without any warranty.
# Strictly POSIX-compliant cat(1) implementation. See cat(1p)
for arg in "$@"; do
case "$arg" in
-u) args="$(printf '%s %s\n' "$args" "$arg")" ;;
*) args="$(printf -- '%s -i %s\n' "$args" "$arg")" ;;
esac
done
# See IEEE Std 1003.1-2017 3.282
# https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap03.html#tag_03_282
IFS=' '
mm $args

View File

@@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
# Copyright (c) 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
# Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
# SPDX-License-Identifier: FSFAP
#
# Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are
# permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this
# notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is, without any warranty.
# Strictly POSIX-compliant false(1) implementation. See false(1p)
false "$@"

View File

@@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
# Copyright (c) 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
# Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
# SPDX-License-Identifier: FSFAP
#
# Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are
# permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this
# notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is, without any warranty.
# Strictly POSIX-compliant true(1) implementation. See true(1p)
true "$@"

View File

@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
set -ex
PATH="$PWD/bin:$PATH"

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@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
# notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is, without any warranty.
.PHONY: rpn_tests
rpn_tests: rpn_help rpn_add rpn_sub rpn_mul rpn_div rpn_mod rpn_flr
rpn_tests: rpn_help rpn_add rpn_sub rpn_mul rpn_div rpn_mod rpn_flr rpn_stdin
.PHONY: rpn_help
rpn_help: $(BIN)/rpn
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ rpn_mul: $(BIN)/rpn
.PHONY: rpn_div
rpn_div: $(BIN)/rpn
test "$$($(BIN)/rpn 12 5 /)" = 2.4
test "$$($(BIN)/rpn 3 0 /)" -eq inf
test "$$($(BIN)/rpn 3 0 /)" = inf
.PHONY: rpn_mod
rpn_mod: $(BIN)/rpn
@@ -41,3 +41,8 @@ rpn_mod: $(BIN)/rpn
rpn_flr: $(BIN)/rpn
test "$$($(BIN)/rpn 12 5 //)" -eq 2
test "$$($(BIN)/rpn 9 4 //)" -eq 2
# done last because all operations have been tested
.PHONY: rpn_stdin
rpn_stdin: $(BIN)/rpn
test "$$(printf '1\n2\n+\n3\n-\n' | $(BIN)/rpn | tail -n1)" -eq 0

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@@ -1,15 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
# SPDX-License-Identifier: FSFAP
#
# Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are
# permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this
# notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is, without any warranty.
#TESTFILES != for file in tests/bonsai/*.mk tests/posix/*.mk; do printf '%s ' "$$file"; done;
TESTFILES != for file in tests/bonsai/*.mk; do printf '%s ' "$$file"; done;
TESTS != printf '%s\n' "$(TESTFILES)" | xargs -n1 basename \
| sed 's/\.mk/_tests/g'
include $(TESTFILES)