#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # Detect broken &&-chains in tests. # # At present, only &&-chains in subshells are examined by this linter; # top-level &&-chains are instead checked directly by the test framework. Like # the top-level &&-chain linter, the subshell linter (intentionally) does not # check &&-chains within {...} blocks. # # Checking for &&-chain breakage is done line-by-line by pure textual # inspection. # # Incomplete lines (those ending with "\") are stitched together with following # lines to simplify processing, particularly of "one-liner" statements. # Top-level here-docs are swallowed to avoid false positives within the # here-doc body, although the statement to which the here-doc is attached is # retained. # # Heuristics are used to detect end-of-subshell when the closing ")" is cuddled # with the final subshell statement on the same line: # # (cd foo && # bar) # # in order to avoid misinterpreting the ")" in constructs such as "x=$(...)" # and "case $x in *)" as ending the subshell. # # Lines missing a final "&&" are flagged with "?!AMP?!", as are lines which # chain commands with ";" internally rather than "&&". A line may be flagged # for both violations. # # Detection of a missing &&-link in a multi-line subshell is complicated by the # fact that the last statement before the closing ")" must not end with "&&". # Since processing is line-by-line, it is not known whether a missing "&&" is # legitimate or not until the _next_ line is seen. To accommodate this, within # multi-line subshells, each line is stored in sed's "hold" area until after # the next line is seen and processed. If the next line is a stand-alone ")", # then a missing "&&" on the previous line is legitimate; otherwise a missing # "&&" is a break in the &&-chain. # # ( # cd foo && # bar # ) # # In practical terms, when "bar" is encountered, it is flagged with "?!AMP?!", # but when the stand-alone ")" line is seen which closes the subshell, the # "?!AMP?!" violation is removed from the "bar" line (retrieved from the "hold" # area) since the final statement of a subshell must not end with "&&". The # final line of a subshell may still break the &&-chain by using ";" internally # to chain commands together rather than "&&", but an internal "?!AMP?!" is # never removed from a line even though a line-ending "?!AMP?!" might be. # # Care is taken to recognize the last _statement_ of a multi-line subshell, not # necessarily the last textual _line_ within the subshell, since &&-chaining # applies to statements, not to lines. Consequently, blank lines, comment # lines, and here-docs are swallowed (but not the command to which the here-doc # is attached), leaving the last statement in the "hold" area, not the last # line, thus simplifying &&-link checking. # # The final statement before "done" in for- and while-loops, and before "elif", # "else", and "fi" in if-then-else likewise must not end with "&&", thus # receives similar treatment. # # Swallowing here-docs with arbitrary tags requires a bit of finesse. When a # line such as "cat <cat <\n\1$/ is attempted to see if # the content inside "<...>" matches the entirety of the newly-read line. For # instance, if the next line read is "some data", when concatenated with the # target line, it becomes "cat <cat <" does match the text following the # newline, thus the closing here-doc tag has been found. The closing tag line # and the "<...>" prefix on the target line are then discarded, leaving just # the target line "cat <\1\2/ :hered N /^<\([^>]*\)>.*\n[ ]*\1[ ]*$/!{ s/\n.*$// bhered } s/^<[^>]*>// s/\n.*$// } :notdoc # one-liner "(...) &&" /^[ ]*!*[ ]*(..*)[ ]*&&[ ]*$/boneline # same as above but without trailing "&&" /^[ ]*!*[ ]*(..*)[ ]*$/boneline # one-liner "(...) >x" (or "2>x" or "|&]/boneline # multi-line "(...\n...)" /^[ ]*(/bsubsh # innocuous line -- print it and advance to next line b # found one-liner "(...)" -- mark suspect if it uses ";" internally rather than # "&&" (but not ";" in a string) :oneline /;/{ /"[^"]*;[^"]*"/!s/;/; ?!AMP?!/ } b :subsh # bare "(" line? -- stash for later printing /^[ ]*([ ]*$/ { h bnextln } # "(..." line -- "(" opening subshell cuddled with command; temporarily replace # "(" with sentinel "^" and process the line as if "(" had been seen solo on # the preceding line; this temporary replacement prevents several rules from # accidentally thinking "(" introduces a nested subshell; "^" is changed back # to "(" at output time x s/.*// x s/(/^/ bslurp :nextln N s/.*\n// :slurp # incomplete line "...\" /\\$/bicmplte # multi-line quoted string "...\n..."? /"/bdqstr # multi-line quoted string '...\n...'? (but not contraction in string "it's") /'/{ /"[^'"]*'[^'"]*"/!bsqstr } :folded # here-doc -- swallow it (but not "<<" in a string) /<<-*[ ]*[\\'"]*[A-Za-z0-9_]/{ /"[^"]*<<[^"]*"/!bheredoc } # comment or empty line -- discard since final non-comment, non-empty line # before closing ")", "done", "elsif", "else", or "fi" will need to be # re-visited to drop "suspect" marking since final line of those constructs # legitimately lacks "&&", so "suspect" mark must be removed /^[ ]*#/bnextln /^[ ]*$/bnextln # in-line comment -- strip it (but not "#" in a string, Bash ${#...} array # length, or Perforce "//depot/path#42" revision in filespec) /[ ]#/{ /"[^"]*#[^"]*"/!s/[ ]#.*$// } # one-liner "case ... esac" /^[ ^]*case[ ]*..*esac/bchkchn # multi-line "case ... esac" /^[ ^]*case[ ]..*[ ]in/bcase # multi-line "for ... done" or "while ... done" /^[ ^]*for[ ]..*[ ]in/bcont /^[ ^]*while[ ]/bcont /^[ ]*do[ ]/bcont /^[ ]*do[ ]*$/bcont /;[ ]*do/bcont /^[ ]*done[ ]*&&[ ]*$/bdone /^[ ]*done[ ]*$/bdone /^[ ]*done[ ]*[<>|]/bdone /^[ ]*done[ ]*)/bdone /||[ ]*exit[ ]/bcont /||[ ]*exit[ ]*$/bcont # multi-line "if...elsif...else...fi" /^[ ^]*if[ ]/bcont /^[ ]*then[ ]/bcont /^[ ]*then[ ]*$/bcont /;[ ]*then/bcont /^[ ]*elif[ ]/belse /^[ ]*elif[ ]*$/belse /^[ ]*else[ ]/belse /^[ ]*else[ ]*$/belse /^[ ]*fi[ ]*&&[ ]*$/bdone /^[ ]*fi[ ]*$/bdone /^[ ]*fi[ ]*[<>|]/bdone /^[ ]*fi[ ]*)/bdone # nested one-liner "(...) &&" /^[ ^]*(.*)[ ]*&&[ ]*$/bchkchn # nested one-liner "(...)" /^[ ^]*(.*)[ ]*$/bchkchn # nested one-liner "(...) >x" (or "2>x" or "|]/bchkchn # nested multi-line "(...\n...)" /^[ ^]*(/bnest # multi-line "{...\n...}" /^[ ^]*{/bblock # closing ")" on own line -- exit subshell /^[ ]*)/bclssolo # "$((...))" -- arithmetic expansion; not closing ")" /\$(([^)][^)]*))[^)]*$/bchkchn # "$(...)" -- command substitution; not closing ")" /\$([^)][^)]*)[^)]*$/bchkchn # multi-line "$(...\n...)" -- command substitution; treat as nested subshell /\$([^)]*$/bnest # "=(...)" -- Bash array assignment; not closing ")" /=(/bchkchn # closing "...) &&" /)[ ]*&&[ ]*$/bclose # closing "...)" /)[ ]*$/bclose # closing "...) >x" (or "2>x" or "|]/bclose :chkchn # mark suspect if line uses ";" internally rather than "&&" (but not ";" in a # string and not ";;" in one-liner "case...esac") /;/{ /;;/!{ /"[^"]*;[^"]*"/!s/;/; ?!AMP?!/ } } # line ends with pipe "...|" -- valid; not missing "&&" /|[ ]*$/bcont # missing end-of-line "&&" -- mark suspect /&&[ ]*$/!s/$/ ?!AMP?!/ :cont # retrieve and print previous line x s/^\([ ]*\)^/\1(/ s/?!HERE?!/<\1?!HERE?!\2\3/ :hdocsub N /^<\([^>]*\)>.*\n[ ]*\1[ ]*$/!{ s/\n.*$// bhdocsub } s/^<[^>]*>// s/\n.*$// bfolded # found "case ... in" -- pass through untouched :case x s/^\([ ]*\)^/\1(/ s/?!HERE?!/<