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[PATCH] env: support encoding of args into command.
From: |
Kaz Kylheku |
Subject: |
[PATCH] env: support encoding of args into command. |
Date: |
Wed, 24 May 2017 18:05:54 -0700 |
User-agent: |
Roundcube Webmail/0.9.2 |
This is a new feature which allows the command argument of env to encode
multiple extra arguments, as well as the relocation of the first
trailing argument among those arguments.
* src/env.c (usage): Mention the existence of the feature.
(expand_command_notation): New function.
(main): Detect whether the notation is present, based on the first
character of command. If so, filter the trailing part of the argument
vector through the expand_command_notation function, and use that.
Either way, the effective vector is referenced using the down_argv
variable and that is used for the execvp call.
If an error occurs, the diagnostic refers to the first element of
down_argv rather than the original argv.
* tests/misc/env.sh: Added some test cases. Doesn't probe all the corner
cases. I solemnly declare that I manually tested those corner cases,
like "env :" and "env :{}" and such, and used valgrind for
all the manual testing to be confident that there are no
overruns or uses of uninitialized bytes.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Documented feature. Added discussion about how
env is often used for the hash bang mechanism, and how the feature
relates to this use.
---
doc/coreutils.texi | 63
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
src/env.c | 64
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
tests/misc/env.sh | 18 +++++++++++++++
3 files changed, 143 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/doc/coreutils.texi b/doc/coreutils.texi
index 1834e92..9e1cb0c 100644
--- a/doc/coreutils.texi
+++ b/doc/coreutils.texi
@@ -16879,6 +16879,69 @@ env -u EDITOR PATH=/energy -- e=mc2 bar baz
@end itemize
+Note that the ability to run commands in a modified environment is
built into
+the shell language, using a very similar
@samp{@var{variable}=@var{value}}
+syntax; moreover, that syntax allows commands internal to the shell to
be run
+in a modified environment, which is not possible with the external
+@command{env}. Other scripting languages usually also have their own
built-in
+mechanisms for manipulating the environment around the execution of a
child
+program. Therefore the external @command{env} executable is rarely
needed for
+the purpose of running a command in a modified environment. Because
the
+@command{env} utility uses @env{PATH} to search for @var{command}, it
has come
+to be mainly used as a mechanism in "hash bang" scripting. In this
usage,
+scripts are written using the incantation @samp{#!/usr/bin/env interp}
where
+@var{interp} is the name of some scripting language interpreter. The
+@command{env} utility provides value by searching @env{PATH} for the
location
+of the interpreter executable. This allows the interpreter to be
installed in
+some chosen location, without that location having to be edited into
the hash
+bang scripts which refer to that interpreter.
+
+On some operating systems, the following issue exists: the hash bang
+interpreter mechanism allows only one argument. Therefore, if the
@command{env}
+incantation @samp{#!/usr/bin/env interp} is used, it is not possible to
pass an
+argument to @samp{interp}, which is a crippling limitation in some
+circumstances requiring clumsy workarounds. To overcome this
difficulty, the
+GNU Coreutils version of @command{env} supports a special notation:
+arguments for @var{command} can be embedded in the @var{command}
argument
+itself as follows. If @var{command} begins with the @samp{:} (colon)
+character, then that colon character is removed. The remainder of the
+argument is treated as record of colon-separated fields, and split
+accordingly. For instance if @var{command} is @samp{:foo:--bar:42},
then
+it is split into the fields @samp{foo}, @samp{--bar} and @samp{42}. The
+effective command is then just @samp{foo}. The other two fields will be
+passed as the first two arguments to @samp{foo}, inserted before the
+remaining @var{args}, if @samp{foo} is successfully found using
+@env{PATH} and executed.
+Furthermore, this special supports one more refinement.
+If, after colon splitting, one or more of the fields are
+equal to the character string @samp{@{@}} (open brace, closed brace)
+then the leftmost such field is replaced with the first of the
@var{args}
+which follow @var{command}. In this case, that argument is removed from
+@var{args}. If @var{args} is empty, then the field is not replaced.
+
+Example: @command{env} hash bang line for a script executed by the
+fictitious @samp{intercal} interpreter. The @samp{--strict-iso} option
+is passed to the interpreter, and the @samp{--verbose} option is
+passed to the script:
+
+@example
+#!/usr/bin/env :intercal:--strict-iso:@{@}:--verbose
+... script goes here ...
+@end example
+
+When the above hash bang script is invoked with the arguments
@samp{alpha} and
+@samp{omega}, @command{env} is invoked with four arguments arguments:
the
+argument @samp{:intercal:--strict-iso:@{@}:--verbose}, followed by the
+path name to the above script itself, followed by @samp{alpha} and
@samp{omega}.
+The @command{env} will parse the special notation in the command,
producing
+the fields @samp{intercal}, @samp{--strict-iso}, @samp{@{@}} and
+@samp{--verbose}. The @samp{@{@}} field is recognized and replaced with
+the first of the remaining arguments, which is the path to the
interpreter.
+This argument is then removed form the remaining arguments. Then
+@command{env} searches @env{PATH} for @samp{intercal}. Upon finding it,
+it executes the interpreter with the arguments @samp{--strict-iso},
+the name of the script, @samp{--verbose}, @samp{alpha} and
@samp{omega}.
+
The program accepts the following options. Also see @ref{Common
options}.
Options must precede operands.
diff --git a/src/env.c b/src/env.c
index 63d5c2c..20fafdd 100644
--- a/src/env.c
+++ b/src/env.c
@@ -18,6 +18,7 @@
#include <config.h>
#include <stdio.h>
+#include <assert.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <getopt.h>
@@ -70,11 +71,65 @@ Set each NAME to VALUE in the environment and run
COMMAND.\n\
\n\
A mere - implies -i. If no COMMAND, print the resulting
environment.\n\
"), stdout);
+ fputs (_("\
+\n\
+COMMAND supports a notation for encoding a command name plus one or
more\n\
+arguments. This is useful when env is used in #! (hash bang)
scripting.\n\
+Please see the Info documentation for the details.\n\
+"), stdout);
emit_ancillary_info (PROGRAM_NAME);
}
exit (status);
}
+char **
+expand_command_notation(char **argv)
+{
+ char *command = xstrdup(argv[0] + 1), *p, **pp, **nargv;
+ int nf, argc, a, rest = 1;
+
+ for (nf = 1, p = command; *p; p++)
+ {
+ if (*p == ':')
+ nf++;
+ }
+
+ for (argc = 0, pp = argv; *pp; argc++, pp++)
+ ; /* empty */
+
+ argc += nf - 1;
+
+ if ((nargv = malloc((argc + 1) * sizeof *nargv)) == NULL || command
== NULL)
+ die (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, _("out of memory"));
+
+ for (a = 0, p = command; ; p++)
+ {
+ char *arg = p;
+ char *end = p + strcspn(p, ":");
+ char ch = *end;
+
+ *end = 0;
+
+ if (rest < 2 && strcmp(arg, "{}") == 0 && argv[rest])
+ arg = argv[rest++];
+
+ nargv[a++] = arg;
+
+ if (ch == ':')
+ {
+ p = end;
+ continue;
+ }
+
+ break;
+ }
+
+ assert (a == nf);
+
+ memcpy(&nargv[a], &argv[rest], sizeof nargv[0] * (argc + 2 - rest -
a));
+ return nargv;
+}
+
int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
@@ -154,9 +209,14 @@ main (int argc, char **argv)
usage (EXIT_CANCELED);
}
- execvp (argv[optind], &argv[optind]);
+ char **rest_argv = argv + optind;
+ char **down_argv = (rest_argv[0][0] == ':')
+ ? expand_command_notation(rest_argv)
+ : rest_argv;
+
+ execvp (down_argv[0], down_argv);
int exit_status = errno == ENOENT ? EXIT_ENOENT : EXIT_CANNOT_INVOKE;
- error (0, errno, "%s", quote (argv[optind]));
+ error (0, errno, "%s", quote (down_argv[0]));
return exit_status;
}
diff --git a/tests/misc/env.sh b/tests/misc/env.sh
index f2f6ba8..aeb2b91 100755
--- a/tests/misc/env.sh
+++ b/tests/misc/env.sh
@@ -150,4 +150,22 @@ test "x$(sh -c '\c=d echo fail')" = xpass && #dash
0.5.4 fails so check first
returns_ 125 env -u a=b true || fail=1
returns_ 125 env -u '' true || fail=1
+# test the special env :command... notation for encoding arguments
+test "$(env :echo)" = "" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:)" = "" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:a)" = "a" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:a:b)" = "a b" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:a b)" = "a b" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:a: b)" = "a b" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:a:b c d)" = "a b c d" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:aa:bb cc dd)" = "aa bb cc dd" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:{}:bb cc dd)" = "cc bb dd" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:{} cc dd)" = "cc dd" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:{}:aa:bb cc dd)" = "cc aa bb dd" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:{})" = "{}" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:{}:{})" = "{} {}" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:{}:a)" = "{} a" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:{}:a b)" = "b a" || fail=1
+test "$(env :echo:{}:{} b)" = "b {}" || fail=1
+
Exit $fail
--
2.9.3