1 /*- 2 * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993, 1994 3 * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 4 * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996 5 * Keith Bostic. All rights reserved. 6 * 7 * See the LICENSE file for redistribution information. 8 */ 9 10 #include "config.h" 11 12 #include <sys/types.h> 13 #include <sys/queue.h> 14 #include <sys/stat.h> 15 16 #include <bitstring.h> 17 #include <ctype.h> 18 #include <errno.h> 19 #include <fcntl.h> 20 #include <limits.h> 21 #include <stdio.h> 22 #include <stdlib.h> 23 #include <string.h> 24 #include <unistd.h> 25 26 #include "../common/common.h" 27 #include "../vi/vi.h" 28 29 #if defined(DEBUG) && defined(COMLOG) 30 static void ex_comlog(SCR *, EXCMD *); 31 #endif 32 static EXCMDLIST const * 33 ex_comm_search(CHAR_T *, size_t); 34 static int ex_discard(SCR *); 35 static int ex_line(SCR *, EXCMD *, MARK *, int *, int *); 36 static int ex_load(SCR *); 37 static void ex_unknown(SCR *, CHAR_T *, size_t); 38 39 /* 40 * ex -- 41 * Main ex loop. 42 * 43 * PUBLIC: int ex(SCR **); 44 */ 45 int 46 ex(SCR **spp) 47 { 48 EX_PRIVATE *exp; 49 GS *gp; 50 MSGS *mp; 51 SCR *sp; 52 TEXT *tp; 53 u_int32_t flags; 54 55 sp = *spp; 56 gp = sp->gp; 57 exp = EXP(sp); 58 59 /* Start the ex screen. */ 60 if (ex_init(sp)) 61 return (1); 62 63 /* Flush any saved messages. */ 64 while ((mp = SLIST_FIRST(gp->msgq)) != NULL) { 65 gp->scr_msg(sp, mp->mtype, mp->buf, mp->len); 66 SLIST_REMOVE_HEAD(gp->msgq, q); 67 free(mp->buf); 68 free(mp); 69 } 70 71 /* If reading from a file, errors should have name and line info. */ 72 if (F_ISSET(gp, G_SCRIPTED)) { 73 gp->excmd.if_lno = 1; 74 gp->excmd.if_name = "script"; 75 } 76 77 /* 78 * !!! 79 * Initialize the text flags. The beautify edit option historically 80 * applied to ex command input read from a file. In addition, the 81 * first time a ^H was discarded from the input, there was a message, 82 * "^H discarded", that was displayed. We don't bother. 83 */ 84 LF_INIT(TXT_BACKSLASH | TXT_CNTRLD | TXT_CR); 85 for (;; ++gp->excmd.if_lno) { 86 /* Display status line and flush. */ 87 if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_STATUS)) { 88 if (!F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_SILENT)) 89 msgq_status(sp, sp->lno, 0); 90 F_CLR(sp, SC_STATUS); 91 } 92 (void)ex_fflush(sp); 93 94 /* Set the flags the user can reset. */ 95 if (O_ISSET(sp, O_BEAUTIFY)) 96 LF_SET(TXT_BEAUTIFY); 97 if (O_ISSET(sp, O_PROMPT)) 98 LF_SET(TXT_PROMPT); 99 100 /* Clear any current interrupts, and get a command. */ 101 CLR_INTERRUPT(sp); 102 if (ex_txt(sp, sp->tiq, ':', flags)) 103 return (1); 104 if (INTERRUPTED(sp)) { 105 (void)ex_puts(sp, "\n"); 106 (void)ex_fflush(sp); 107 continue; 108 } 109 110 /* Initialize the command structure. */ 111 CLEAR_EX_PARSER(&gp->excmd); 112 113 /* 114 * If the user entered a single carriage return, send 115 * ex_cmd() a separator -- it discards single newlines. 116 */ 117 tp = TAILQ_FIRST(sp->tiq); 118 if (tp->len == 0) { 119 gp->excmd.cp = L(" "); /* __TK__ why not |? */ 120 gp->excmd.clen = 1; 121 } else { 122 gp->excmd.cp = tp->lb; 123 gp->excmd.clen = tp->len; 124 } 125 F_INIT(&gp->excmd, E_NRSEP); 126 127 if (ex_cmd(sp) && F_ISSET(gp, G_SCRIPTED)) 128 return (1); 129 130 if (INTERRUPTED(sp)) { 131 CLR_INTERRUPT(sp); 132 msgq(sp, M_ERR, "170|Interrupted"); 133 } 134 135 /* 136 * If the last command caused a restart, or switched screens 137 * or into vi, return. 138 */ 139 if (F_ISSET(gp, G_SRESTART) || F_ISSET(sp, SC_SSWITCH | SC_VI)) { 140 *spp = sp; 141 break; 142 } 143 144 /* If the last command switched files, we don't care. */ 145 F_CLR(sp, SC_FSWITCH); 146 147 /* 148 * If we're exiting this screen, move to the next one. By 149 * definition, this means returning into vi, so return to the 150 * main editor loop. The ordering is careful, don't discard 151 * the contents of sp until the end. 152 */ 153 if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EXIT | SC_EXIT_FORCE)) { 154 if (file_end(sp, NULL, F_ISSET(sp, SC_EXIT_FORCE))) 155 return (1); 156 *spp = screen_next(sp); 157 return (screen_end(sp)); 158 } 159 } 160 return (0); 161 } 162 163 /* 164 * ex_cmd -- 165 * The guts of the ex parser: parse and execute a string containing 166 * ex commands. 167 * 168 * !!! 169 * This code MODIFIES the string that gets passed in, to delete quoting 170 * characters, etc. The string cannot be readonly/text space, nor should 171 * you expect to use it again after ex_cmd() returns. 172 * 173 * !!! 174 * For the fun of it, if you want to see if a vi clone got the ex argument 175 * parsing right, try: 176 * 177 * echo 'foo|bar' > file1; echo 'foo/bar' > file2; 178 * vi 179 * :edit +1|s/|/PIPE/|w file1| e file2|1 | s/\//SLASH/|wq 180 * 181 * or: vi 182 * :set|file|append|set|file 183 * 184 * For extra credit, try them in a startup .exrc file. 185 * 186 * PUBLIC: int ex_cmd(SCR *); 187 */ 188 int 189 ex_cmd(SCR *sp) 190 { 191 enum nresult nret; 192 EX_PRIVATE *exp; 193 EXCMD *ecp; 194 GS *gp; 195 MARK cur; 196 recno_t lno; 197 size_t arg1_len, discard, len; 198 u_int32_t flags; 199 long ltmp; 200 int at_found, gv_found; 201 int cnt, delim, isaddr, namelen; 202 int newscreen, notempty, tmp, vi_address; 203 CHAR_T *arg1, *s, *p, *t; 204 CHAR_T ch = '\0'; 205 CHAR_T *n; 206 char *np; 207 208 gp = sp->gp; 209 exp = EXP(sp); 210 211 /* 212 * We always start running the command on the top of the stack. 213 * This means that *everything* must be resolved when we leave 214 * this function for any reason. 215 */ 216 loop: ecp = SLIST_FIRST(gp->ecq); 217 218 /* If we're reading a command from a file, set up error information. */ 219 if (ecp->if_name != NULL) { 220 gp->if_lno = ecp->if_lno; 221 gp->if_name = ecp->if_name; 222 } 223 224 /* 225 * If a move to the end of the file is scheduled for this command, 226 * do it now. 227 */ 228 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_MOVETOEND)) { 229 if (db_last(sp, &sp->lno)) 230 goto rfail; 231 sp->cno = 0; 232 F_CLR(ecp, E_MOVETOEND); 233 } 234 235 /* If we found a newline, increment the count now. */ 236 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_NEWLINE)) { 237 ++gp->if_lno; 238 ++ecp->if_lno; 239 F_CLR(ecp, E_NEWLINE); 240 } 241 242 /* (Re)initialize the EXCMD structure, preserving some flags. */ 243 CLEAR_EX_CMD(ecp); 244 245 /* Initialize the argument structures. */ 246 if (argv_init(sp, ecp)) 247 goto err; 248 249 /* Initialize +cmd, saved command information. */ 250 arg1 = NULL; 251 ecp->save_cmdlen = 0; 252 253 /* Skip <blank>s, empty lines. */ 254 for (notempty = 0; ecp->clen > 0; ++ecp->cp, --ecp->clen) 255 if ((ch = *ecp->cp) == '\n') { 256 ++gp->if_lno; 257 ++ecp->if_lno; 258 } else if (cmdskip(ch)) 259 notempty = 1; 260 else 261 break; 262 263 /* 264 * !!! 265 * Permit extra colons at the start of the line. Historically, 266 * ex/vi allowed a single extra one. It's simpler not to count. 267 * The stripping is done here because, historically, any command 268 * could have preceding colons, e.g. ":g/pattern/:p" worked. 269 */ 270 if (ecp->clen != 0 && ch == ':') { 271 notempty = 1; 272 while (--ecp->clen > 0 && (ch = *++ecp->cp) == ':'); 273 } 274 275 /* 276 * Command lines that start with a double-quote are comments. 277 * 278 * !!! 279 * Historically, there was no escape or delimiter for a comment, e.g. 280 * :"foo|set was a single comment and nothing was output. Since nvi 281 * permits users to escape <newline> characters into command lines, we 282 * have to check for that case. 283 */ 284 if (ecp->clen != 0 && ch == '"') { 285 while (--ecp->clen > 0 && *++ecp->cp != '\n'); 286 if (*ecp->cp == '\n') { 287 F_SET(ecp, E_NEWLINE); 288 ++ecp->cp; 289 --ecp->clen; 290 } 291 goto loop; 292 } 293 294 /* Skip whitespace. */ 295 for (; ecp->clen > 0; ++ecp->cp, --ecp->clen) { 296 ch = *ecp->cp; 297 if (!cmdskip(ch)) 298 break; 299 } 300 301 /* 302 * The last point at which an empty line can mean do nothing. 303 * 304 * !!! 305 * Historically, in ex mode, lines containing only <blank> characters 306 * were the same as a single <carriage-return>, i.e. a default command. 307 * In vi mode, they were ignored. In .exrc files this was a serious 308 * annoyance, as vi kept trying to treat them as print commands. We 309 * ignore backward compatibility in this case, discarding lines that 310 * contain only <blank> characters from .exrc files. 311 * 312 * !!! 313 * This is where you end up when you're done a command, i.e. clen has 314 * gone to zero. Continue if there are more commands to run. 315 */ 316 if (ecp->clen == 0 && 317 (!notempty || F_ISSET(sp, SC_VI) || F_ISSET(ecp, E_BLIGNORE))) { 318 if (ex_load(sp)) 319 goto rfail; 320 ecp = SLIST_FIRST(gp->ecq); 321 if (ecp->clen == 0) 322 goto rsuccess; 323 goto loop; 324 } 325 326 /* 327 * Check to see if this is a command for which we may want to move 328 * the cursor back up to the previous line. (The command :1<CR> 329 * wants a <newline> separator, but the command :<CR> wants to erase 330 * the command line.) If the line is empty except for <blank>s, 331 * <carriage-return> or <eof>, we'll probably want to move up. I 332 * don't think there's any way to get <blank> characters *after* the 333 * command character, but this is the ex parser, and I've been wrong 334 * before. 335 */ 336 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_NRSEP) && 337 ecp->clen != 0 && (ecp->clen != 1 || ecp->cp[0] != '\004')) 338 F_CLR(ecp, E_NRSEP); 339 340 /* Parse command addresses. */ 341 if (ex_range(sp, ecp, &tmp)) 342 goto rfail; 343 if (tmp) 344 goto err; 345 346 /* 347 * Skip <blank>s and any more colons (the command :3,5:print 348 * worked, historically). 349 */ 350 for (; ecp->clen > 0; ++ecp->cp, --ecp->clen) { 351 ch = *ecp->cp; 352 if (!cmdskip(ch) && ch != ':') 353 break; 354 } 355 356 /* 357 * If no command, ex does the last specified of p, l, or #, and vi 358 * moves to the line. Otherwise, determine the length of the command 359 * name by looking for the first non-alphabetic character. (There 360 * are a few non-alphabetic characters in command names, but they're 361 * all single character commands.) This isn't a great test, because 362 * it means that, for the command ":e +cut.c file", we'll report that 363 * the command "cut" wasn't known. However, it makes ":e+35 file" work 364 * correctly. 365 * 366 * !!! 367 * Historically, lines with multiple adjacent (or <blank> separated) 368 * command separators were very strange. For example, the command 369 * |||<carriage-return>, when the cursor was on line 1, displayed 370 * lines 2, 3 and 5 of the file. In addition, the command " | " 371 * would only display the line after the next line, instead of the 372 * next two lines. No ideas why. It worked reasonably when executed 373 * from vi mode, and displayed lines 2, 3, and 4, so we do a default 374 * command for each separator. 375 */ 376 #define SINGLE_CHAR_COMMANDS L("\004!#&*<=>@~") 377 newscreen = 0; 378 if (ecp->clen != 0 && ecp->cp[0] != '|' && ecp->cp[0] != '\n') { 379 if (STRCHR(SINGLE_CHAR_COMMANDS, *ecp->cp)) { 380 p = ecp->cp; 381 ++ecp->cp; 382 --ecp->clen; 383 namelen = 1; 384 } else { 385 for (p = ecp->cp; 386 ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) 387 if (!isazAZ(*ecp->cp)) 388 break; 389 if ((namelen = ecp->cp - p) == 0) { 390 msgq(sp, M_ERR, "080|Unknown command name"); 391 goto err; 392 } 393 } 394 395 /* 396 * !!! 397 * Historic vi permitted flags to immediately follow any 398 * subset of the 'delete' command, but then did not permit 399 * further arguments (flag, buffer, count). Make it work. 400 * Permit further arguments for the few shreds of dignity 401 * it offers. 402 * 403 * Adding commands that start with 'd', and match "delete" 404 * up to a l, p, +, - or # character can break this code. 405 * 406 * !!! 407 * Capital letters beginning the command names ex, edit, 408 * next, previous, tag and visual (in vi mode) indicate the 409 * command should happen in a new screen. 410 */ 411 switch (p[0]) { 412 case 'd': 413 for (s = p, 414 n = cmds[C_DELETE].name; *s == *n; ++s, ++n); 415 if (s[0] == 'l' || s[0] == 'p' || s[0] == '+' || 416 s[0] == '-' || s[0] == '^' || s[0] == '#') { 417 len = (ecp->cp - p) - (s - p); 418 ecp->cp -= len; 419 ecp->clen += len; 420 ecp->rcmd = cmds[C_DELETE]; 421 ecp->rcmd.syntax = "1bca1"; 422 ecp->cmd = &ecp->rcmd; 423 goto skip_srch; 424 } 425 break; 426 case 'E': case 'F': case 'N': case 'P': case 'T': case 'V': 427 newscreen = 1; 428 p[0] = tolower(p[0]); 429 break; 430 } 431 432 /* 433 * Search the table for the command. 434 * 435 * !!! 436 * Historic vi permitted the mark to immediately follow the 437 * 'k' in the 'k' command. Make it work. 438 * 439 * !!! 440 * Historic vi permitted any flag to follow the s command, e.g. 441 * "s/e/E/|s|sgc3p" was legal. Make the command "sgc" work. 442 * Since the following characters all have to be flags, i.e. 443 * alphabetics, we can let the s command routine return errors 444 * if it was some illegal command string. This code will break 445 * if an "sg" or similar command is ever added. The substitute 446 * code doesn't care if it's a "cgr" flag or a "#lp" flag that 447 * follows the 's', but we limit the choices here to "cgr" so 448 * that we get unknown command messages for wrong combinations. 449 */ 450 if ((ecp->cmd = ex_comm_search(p, namelen)) == NULL) 451 switch (p[0]) { 452 case 'k': 453 if (namelen == 2) { 454 ecp->cp -= namelen - 1; 455 ecp->clen += namelen - 1; 456 ecp->cmd = &cmds[C_K]; 457 break; 458 } 459 goto unknown; 460 case 's': 461 for (s = p + 1, cnt = namelen; --cnt; ++s) 462 if (s[0] != 'c' && 463 s[0] != 'g' && s[0] != 'r') 464 break; 465 if (cnt == 0) { 466 ecp->cp -= namelen - 1; 467 ecp->clen += namelen - 1; 468 ecp->rcmd = cmds[C_SUBSTITUTE]; 469 ecp->rcmd.fn = ex_subagain; 470 ecp->cmd = &ecp->rcmd; 471 break; 472 } 473 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 474 default: 475 unknown: if (newscreen) 476 p[0] = toupper(p[0]); 477 ex_unknown(sp, p, namelen); 478 goto err; 479 } 480 481 /* 482 * The visual command has a different syntax when called 483 * from ex than when called from a vi colon command. FMH. 484 * Make the change now, before we test for the newscreen 485 * semantic, so that we're testing the right one. 486 */ 487 skip_srch: if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_VISUAL_EX] && F_ISSET(sp, SC_VI)) 488 ecp->cmd = &cmds[C_VISUAL_VI]; 489 490 /* 491 * !!! 492 * Historic vi permitted a capital 'P' at the beginning of 493 * any command that started with 'p'. Probably wanted the 494 * P[rint] command for backward compatibility, and the code 495 * just made Preserve and Put work by accident. Nvi uses 496 * Previous to mean previous-in-a-new-screen, so be careful. 497 */ 498 if (newscreen && !F_ISSET(ecp->cmd, E_NEWSCREEN) && 499 (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_PRINT] || 500 ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_PRESERVE])) 501 newscreen = 0; 502 503 /* Test for a newscreen associated with this command. */ 504 if (newscreen && !F_ISSET(ecp->cmd, E_NEWSCREEN)) 505 goto unknown; 506 507 /* Secure means no shell access. */ 508 if (F_ISSET(ecp->cmd, E_SECURE) && O_ISSET(sp, O_SECURE)) { 509 ex_wemsg(sp, ecp->cmd->name, EXM_SECURE); 510 goto err; 511 } 512 513 /* 514 * Multiple < and > characters; another "feature". Note, 515 * The string passed to the underlying function may not be 516 * nul terminated in this case. 517 */ 518 if ((ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SHIFTL] && *p == '<') || 519 (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SHIFTR] && *p == '>')) { 520 for (ch = *p; 521 ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) 522 if (*ecp->cp != ch) 523 break; 524 if (argv_exp0(sp, ecp, p, ecp->cp - p)) 525 goto err; 526 } 527 528 /* Set the format style flags for the next command. */ 529 if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_HASH]) 530 exp->fdef = E_C_HASH; 531 else if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_LIST]) 532 exp->fdef = E_C_LIST; 533 else if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_PRINT]) 534 exp->fdef = E_C_PRINT; 535 F_CLR(ecp, E_USELASTCMD); 536 } else { 537 /* Print is the default command. */ 538 ecp->cmd = &cmds[C_PRINT]; 539 540 /* Set the saved format flags. */ 541 F_SET(ecp, exp->fdef); 542 543 /* 544 * !!! 545 * If no address was specified, and it's not a global command, 546 * we up the address by one. (I have no idea why globals are 547 * exempted, but it's (ahem) historic practice.) 548 */ 549 if (ecp->addrcnt == 0 && !F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL)) { 550 ecp->addrcnt = 1; 551 ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno + 1; 552 ecp->addr1.cno = sp->cno; 553 } 554 555 F_SET(ecp, E_USELASTCMD); 556 } 557 558 /* 559 * !!! 560 * Historically, the number option applied to both ex and vi. One 561 * strangeness was that ex didn't switch display formats until a 562 * command was entered, e.g. <CR>'s after the set didn't change to 563 * the new format, but :1p would. 564 */ 565 if (O_ISSET(sp, O_NUMBER)) { 566 F_SET(ecp, E_OPTNUM); 567 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_HASH); 568 } else 569 F_CLR(ecp, E_OPTNUM); 570 571 /* Check for ex mode legality. */ 572 if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX) && (F_ISSET(ecp->cmd, E_VIONLY) || newscreen)) { 573 msgq_wstr(sp, M_ERR, ecp->cmd->name, 574 "082|%s: command not available in ex mode"); 575 goto err; 576 } 577 578 /* Add standard command flags. */ 579 F_SET(ecp, ecp->cmd->flags); 580 if (!newscreen) 581 F_CLR(ecp, E_NEWSCREEN); 582 583 /* 584 * There are three normal termination cases for an ex command. They 585 * are the end of the string (ecp->clen), or unescaped (by <literal 586 * next> characters) <newline> or '|' characters. As we're now past 587 * possible addresses, we can determine how long the command is, so we 588 * don't have to look for all the possible terminations. Naturally, 589 * there are some exciting special cases: 590 * 591 * 1: The bang, global, v and the filter versions of the read and 592 * write commands are delimited by <newline>s (they can contain 593 * shell pipes). 594 * 2: The ex, edit, next and visual in vi mode commands all take ex 595 * commands as their first arguments. 596 * 3: The s command takes an RE as its first argument, and wants it 597 * to be specially delimited. 598 * 599 * Historically, '|' characters in the first argument of the ex, edit, 600 * next, vi visual, and s commands didn't delimit the command. And, 601 * in the filter cases for read and write, and the bang, global and v 602 * commands, they did not delimit the command at all. 603 * 604 * For example, the following commands were legal: 605 * 606 * :edit +25|s/abc/ABC/ file.c 607 * :s/|/PIPE/ 608 * :read !spell % | columnate 609 * :global/pattern/p|l 610 * 611 * It's not quite as simple as it sounds, however. The command: 612 * 613 * :s/a/b/|s/c/d|set 614 * 615 * was also legal, i.e. the historic ex parser (using the word loosely, 616 * since "parser" implies some regularity of syntax) delimited the RE's 617 * based on its delimiter and not anything so irretrievably vulgar as a 618 * command syntax. 619 * 620 * Anyhow, the following code makes this all work. First, for the 621 * special cases we move past their special argument(s). Then, we 622 * do normal command processing on whatever is left. Barf-O-Rama. 623 */ 624 discard = 0; /* Characters discarded from the command. */ 625 arg1_len = 0; 626 ecp->save_cmd = ecp->cp; 627 if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_EDIT] || ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_EX] || 628 ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_NEXT] || ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_VISUAL_VI] || 629 ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_VSPLIT]) { 630 /* 631 * Move to the next non-whitespace character. A '!' 632 * immediately following the command is eaten as a 633 * force flag. 634 */ 635 if (ecp->clen > 0 && *ecp->cp == '!') { 636 ++ecp->cp; 637 --ecp->clen; 638 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_FORCE); 639 640 /* Reset, don't reparse. */ 641 ecp->save_cmd = ecp->cp; 642 } 643 for (; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) 644 if (!cmdskip(*ecp->cp)) 645 break; 646 /* 647 * QUOTING NOTE: 648 * 649 * The historic implementation ignored all escape characters 650 * so there was no way to put a space or newline into the +cmd 651 * field. We do a simplistic job of fixing it by moving to the 652 * first whitespace character that isn't escaped. The escaping 653 * characters are stripped as no longer useful. 654 */ 655 if (ecp->clen > 0 && *ecp->cp == '+') { 656 ++ecp->cp; 657 --ecp->clen; 658 for (arg1 = p = ecp->cp; 659 ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) { 660 ch = *ecp->cp; 661 if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, ecp, ch) && 662 ecp->clen > 1) { 663 ++discard; 664 --ecp->clen; 665 ch = *++ecp->cp; 666 } else if (cmdskip(ch)) 667 break; 668 *p++ = ch; 669 } 670 arg1_len = ecp->cp - arg1; 671 672 /* Reset, so the first argument isn't reparsed. */ 673 ecp->save_cmd = ecp->cp; 674 } 675 } else if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_BANG] || 676 ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_GLOBAL] || ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_V]) { 677 /* 678 * QUOTING NOTE: 679 * 680 * We use backslashes to escape <newline> characters, although 681 * this wasn't historic practice for the bang command. It was 682 * for the global and v commands, and it's common usage when 683 * doing text insert during the command. Escaping characters 684 * are stripped as no longer useful. 685 */ 686 for (p = ecp->cp; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) { 687 ch = *ecp->cp; 688 if (ch == '\\' && ecp->clen > 1 && ecp->cp[1] == '\n') { 689 ++discard; 690 --ecp->clen; 691 ch = *++ecp->cp; 692 693 ++gp->if_lno; 694 ++ecp->if_lno; 695 } else if (ch == '\n') 696 break; 697 *p++ = ch; 698 } 699 } else if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_READ] || ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_WRITE]) { 700 /* 701 * For write commands, if the next character is a <blank>, and 702 * the next non-blank character is a '!', it's a filter command 703 * and we want to eat everything up to the <newline>. For read 704 * commands, if the next non-blank character is a '!', it's a 705 * filter command and we want to eat everything up to the next 706 * <newline>. Otherwise, we're done. 707 */ 708 for (tmp = 0; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) { 709 ch = *ecp->cp; 710 if (cmdskip(ch)) 711 tmp = 1; 712 else 713 break; 714 } 715 if (ecp->clen > 0 && ch == '!' && 716 (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_READ] || tmp)) 717 for (; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) 718 if (ecp->cp[0] == '\n') 719 break; 720 } else if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SUBSTITUTE]) { 721 /* 722 * Move to the next non-whitespace character, we'll use it as 723 * the delimiter. If the character isn't an alphanumeric or 724 * a '|', it's the delimiter, so parse it. Otherwise, we're 725 * into something like ":s g", so use the special s command. 726 */ 727 for (; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) 728 if (!cmdskip(ecp->cp[0])) 729 break; 730 731 if (is09azAZ(ecp->cp[0]) || ecp->cp[0] == '|') { 732 ecp->rcmd = cmds[C_SUBSTITUTE]; 733 ecp->rcmd.fn = ex_subagain; 734 ecp->cmd = &ecp->rcmd; 735 } else if (ecp->clen > 0) { 736 /* 737 * QUOTING NOTE: 738 * 739 * Backslashes quote delimiter characters for RE's. 740 * The backslashes are NOT removed since they'll be 741 * used by the RE code. Move to the third delimiter 742 * that's not escaped (or the end of the command). 743 */ 744 delim = *ecp->cp; 745 ++ecp->cp; 746 --ecp->clen; 747 for (cnt = 2; ecp->clen > 0 && 748 cnt != 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) 749 if (ecp->cp[0] == '\\' && 750 ecp->clen > 1) { 751 ++ecp->cp; 752 --ecp->clen; 753 } else if (ecp->cp[0] == delim) 754 --cnt; 755 } 756 } 757 758 /* 759 * Use normal quoting and termination rules to find the end of this 760 * command. 761 * 762 * QUOTING NOTE: 763 * 764 * Historically, vi permitted ^V's to escape <newline>'s in the .exrc 765 * file. It was almost certainly a bug, but that's what bug-for-bug 766 * compatibility means, Grasshopper. Also, ^V's escape the command 767 * delimiters. Literal next quote characters in front of the newlines, 768 * '|' characters or literal next characters are stripped as they're 769 * no longer useful. 770 */ 771 vi_address = ecp->clen != 0 && ecp->cp[0] != '\n'; 772 for (p = ecp->cp; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) { 773 ch = ecp->cp[0]; 774 if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, ecp, ch) && ecp->clen > 1) { 775 CHAR_T tmp = ecp->cp[1]; 776 if (tmp == '\n' || tmp == '|') { 777 if (tmp == '\n') { 778 ++gp->if_lno; 779 ++ecp->if_lno; 780 } 781 ++discard; 782 --ecp->clen; 783 ++ecp->cp; 784 ch = tmp; 785 } 786 } else if (ch == '\n' || ch == '|') { 787 if (ch == '\n') 788 F_SET(ecp, E_NEWLINE); 789 --ecp->clen; 790 break; 791 } 792 *p++ = ch; 793 } 794 795 /* 796 * Save off the next command information, go back to the 797 * original start of the command. 798 */ 799 p = ecp->cp + 1; 800 ecp->cp = ecp->save_cmd; 801 ecp->save_cmd = p; 802 ecp->save_cmdlen = ecp->clen; 803 ecp->clen = ((ecp->save_cmd - ecp->cp) - 1) - discard; 804 805 /* 806 * QUOTING NOTE: 807 * 808 * The "set tags" command historically used a backslash, not the 809 * user's literal next character, to escape whitespace. Handle 810 * it here instead of complicating the argv_exp3() code. Note, 811 * this isn't a particularly complex trap, and if backslashes were 812 * legal in set commands, this would have to be much more complicated. 813 */ 814 if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SET]) 815 for (p = ecp->cp, len = ecp->clen; len > 0; --len, ++p) 816 if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, ecp, *p) && len > 1) { 817 --len; 818 ++p; 819 } else if (*p == '\\') 820 *p = CH_LITERAL; 821 822 /* 823 * Set the default addresses. It's an error to specify an address for 824 * a command that doesn't take them. If two addresses are specified 825 * for a command that only takes one, lose the first one. Two special 826 * cases here, some commands take 0 or 2 addresses. For most of them 827 * (the E_ADDR2_ALL flag), 0 defaults to the entire file. For one 828 * (the `!' command, the E_ADDR2_NONE flag), 0 defaults to no lines. 829 * 830 * Also, if the file is empty, some commands want to use an address of 831 * 0, i.e. the entire file is 0 to 0, and the default first address is 832 * 0. Otherwise, an entire file is 1 to N and the default line is 1. 833 * Note, we also add the E_ADDR_ZERO flag to the command flags, for the 834 * case where the 0 address is only valid if it's a default address. 835 * 836 * Also, set a flag if we set the default addresses. Some commands 837 * (ex: z) care if the user specified an address or if we just used 838 * the current cursor. 839 */ 840 switch (F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR1 | E_ADDR2 | E_ADDR2_ALL | E_ADDR2_NONE)) { 841 case E_ADDR1: /* One address: */ 842 switch (ecp->addrcnt) { 843 case 0: /* Default cursor/empty file. */ 844 ecp->addrcnt = 1; 845 F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_DEF); 846 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERODEF)) { 847 if (db_last(sp, &lno)) 848 goto err; 849 if (lno == 0) { 850 ecp->addr1.lno = 0; 851 F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERO); 852 } else 853 ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno; 854 } else 855 ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno; 856 ecp->addr1.cno = sp->cno; 857 break; 858 case 1: 859 break; 860 case 2: /* Lose the first address. */ 861 ecp->addrcnt = 1; 862 ecp->addr1 = ecp->addr2; 863 } 864 break; 865 case E_ADDR2_NONE: /* Zero/two addresses: */ 866 if (ecp->addrcnt == 0) /* Default to nothing. */ 867 break; 868 goto two_addr; 869 case E_ADDR2_ALL: /* Zero/two addresses: */ 870 if (ecp->addrcnt == 0) { /* Default entire/empty file. */ 871 F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_DEF); 872 ecp->addrcnt = 2; 873 if (sp->ep == NULL) 874 ecp->addr2.lno = 0; 875 else if (db_last(sp, &ecp->addr2.lno)) 876 goto err; 877 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERODEF) && 878 ecp->addr2.lno == 0) { 879 ecp->addr1.lno = 0; 880 F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERO); 881 } else 882 ecp->addr1.lno = 1; 883 ecp->addr1.cno = ecp->addr2.cno = 0; 884 F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR2_ALL); 885 break; 886 } 887 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 888 case E_ADDR2: /* Two addresses: */ 889 two_addr: switch (ecp->addrcnt) { 890 case 0: /* Default cursor/empty file. */ 891 ecp->addrcnt = 2; 892 F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_DEF); 893 if (sp->lno == 1 && 894 F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERODEF)) { 895 if (db_last(sp, &lno)) 896 goto err; 897 if (lno == 0) { 898 ecp->addr1.lno = ecp->addr2.lno = 0; 899 F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERO); 900 } else 901 ecp->addr1.lno = 902 ecp->addr2.lno = sp->lno; 903 } else 904 ecp->addr1.lno = ecp->addr2.lno = sp->lno; 905 ecp->addr1.cno = ecp->addr2.cno = sp->cno; 906 break; 907 case 1: /* Default to first address. */ 908 ecp->addrcnt = 2; 909 ecp->addr2 = ecp->addr1; 910 break; 911 case 2: 912 break; 913 } 914 break; 915 default: 916 if (ecp->addrcnt) /* Error. */ 917 goto usage; 918 } 919 920 /* 921 * !!! 922 * The ^D scroll command historically scrolled the value of the scroll 923 * option or to EOF. It was an error if the cursor was already at EOF. 924 * (Leading addresses were permitted, but were then ignored.) 925 */ 926 if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SCROLL]) { 927 ecp->addrcnt = 2; 928 ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno + 1; 929 ecp->addr2.lno = sp->lno + O_VAL(sp, O_SCROLL); 930 ecp->addr1.cno = ecp->addr2.cno = sp->cno; 931 if (db_last(sp, &lno)) 932 goto err; 933 if (lno != 0 && lno > sp->lno && ecp->addr2.lno > lno) 934 ecp->addr2.lno = lno; 935 } 936 937 ecp->flagoff = 0; 938 for (np = ecp->cmd->syntax; *np != '\0'; ++np) { 939 /* 940 * The force flag is sensitive to leading whitespace, i.e. 941 * "next !" is different from "next!". Handle it before 942 * skipping leading <blank>s. 943 */ 944 if (*np == '!') { 945 if (ecp->clen > 0 && *ecp->cp == '!') { 946 ++ecp->cp; 947 --ecp->clen; 948 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_FORCE); 949 } 950 continue; 951 } 952 953 /* Skip leading <blank>s. */ 954 for (; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) 955 if (!cmdskip(*ecp->cp)) 956 break; 957 if (ecp->clen == 0) 958 break; 959 960 switch (*np) { 961 case '1': /* +, -, #, l, p */ 962 /* 963 * !!! 964 * Historically, some flags were ignored depending 965 * on where they occurred in the command line. For 966 * example, in the command, ":3+++p--#", historic vi 967 * acted on the '#' flag, but ignored the '-' flags. 968 * It's unambiguous what the flags mean, so we just 969 * handle them regardless of the stupidity of their 970 * location. 971 */ 972 for (; ecp->clen; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) 973 switch (*ecp->cp) { 974 case '+': 975 ++ecp->flagoff; 976 break; 977 case '-': 978 case '^': 979 --ecp->flagoff; 980 break; 981 case '#': 982 F_CLR(ecp, E_OPTNUM); 983 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_HASH); 984 exp->fdef |= E_C_HASH; 985 break; 986 case 'l': 987 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_LIST); 988 exp->fdef |= E_C_LIST; 989 break; 990 case 'p': 991 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_PRINT); 992 exp->fdef |= E_C_PRINT; 993 break; 994 default: 995 goto end_case1; 996 } 997 end_case1: break; 998 case '2': /* -, ., +, ^ */ 999 case '3': /* -, ., +, ^, = */ 1000 for (; ecp->clen; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) 1001 switch (*ecp->cp) { 1002 case '-': 1003 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_DASH); 1004 break; 1005 case '.': 1006 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_DOT); 1007 break; 1008 case '+': 1009 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_PLUS); 1010 break; 1011 case '^': 1012 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_CARAT); 1013 break; 1014 case '=': 1015 if (*np == '3') { 1016 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_EQUAL); 1017 break; 1018 } 1019 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 1020 default: 1021 goto end_case23; 1022 } 1023 end_case23: break; 1024 case 'b': /* buffer */ 1025 /* 1026 * !!! 1027 * Historically, "d #" was a delete with a flag, not a 1028 * delete into the '#' buffer. If the current command 1029 * permits a flag, don't use one as a buffer. However, 1030 * the 'l' and 'p' flags were legal buffer names in the 1031 * historic ex, and were used as buffers, not flags. 1032 */ 1033 if ((ecp->cp[0] == '+' || ecp->cp[0] == '-' || 1034 ecp->cp[0] == '^' || ecp->cp[0] == '#') && 1035 strchr(np, '1') != NULL) 1036 break; 1037 /* 1038 * !!! 1039 * Digits can't be buffer names in ex commands, or the 1040 * command "d2" would be a delete into buffer '2', and 1041 * not a two-line deletion. 1042 */ 1043 if (!ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[0])) { 1044 ecp->buffer = *ecp->cp; 1045 ++ecp->cp; 1046 --ecp->clen; 1047 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_BUFFER); 1048 } 1049 break; 1050 case 'c': /* count [01+a] */ 1051 ++np; 1052 /* Validate any signed value. */ 1053 if (!ISDIGIT(*ecp->cp) && (*np != '+' || 1054 (*ecp->cp != '+' && *ecp->cp != '-'))) 1055 break; 1056 /* If a signed value, set appropriate flags. */ 1057 if (*ecp->cp == '-') 1058 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_COUNT_NEG); 1059 else if (*ecp->cp == '+') 1060 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_COUNT_POS); 1061 if ((nret = 1062 nget_slong(<mp, ecp->cp, &t, 10)) != NUM_OK) { 1063 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, nret); 1064 goto err; 1065 } 1066 if (ltmp == 0 && *np != '0') { 1067 msgq(sp, M_ERR, "083|Count may not be zero"); 1068 goto err; 1069 } 1070 ecp->clen -= (t - ecp->cp); 1071 ecp->cp = t; 1072 1073 /* 1074 * Counts as address offsets occur in commands taking 1075 * two addresses. Historic vi practice was to use 1076 * the count as an offset from the *second* address. 1077 * 1078 * Set a count flag; some underlying commands (see 1079 * join) do different things with counts than with 1080 * line addresses. 1081 */ 1082 if (*np == 'a') { 1083 ecp->addr1 = ecp->addr2; 1084 ecp->addr2.lno = ecp->addr1.lno + ltmp - 1; 1085 } else 1086 ecp->count = ltmp; 1087 FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_COUNT); 1088 break; 1089 case 'f': /* file */ 1090 if (argv_exp2(sp, ecp, ecp->cp, ecp->clen)) 1091 goto err; 1092 goto arg_cnt_chk; 1093 case 'l': /* line */ 1094 /* 1095 * Get a line specification. 1096 * 1097 * If the line was a search expression, we may have 1098 * changed state during the call, and we're now 1099 * searching the file. Push ourselves onto the state 1100 * stack. 1101 */ 1102 if (ex_line(sp, ecp, &cur, &isaddr, &tmp)) 1103 goto rfail; 1104 if (tmp) 1105 goto err; 1106 1107 /* Line specifications are always required. */ 1108 if (!isaddr) { 1109 msgq_wstr(sp, M_ERR, ecp->cp, 1110 "084|%s: bad line specification"); 1111 goto err; 1112 } 1113 /* 1114 * The target line should exist for these commands, 1115 * but 0 is legal for them as well. 1116 */ 1117 if (cur.lno != 0 && !db_exist(sp, cur.lno)) { 1118 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EOF, NUM_OK); 1119 goto err; 1120 } 1121 ecp->lineno = cur.lno; 1122 break; 1123 case 'S': /* string, file exp. */ 1124 if (ecp->clen != 0) { 1125 if (argv_exp1(sp, ecp, ecp->cp, 1126 ecp->clen, ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_BANG])) 1127 goto err; 1128 goto addr_verify; 1129 } 1130 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 1131 case 's': /* string */ 1132 if (argv_exp0(sp, ecp, ecp->cp, ecp->clen)) 1133 goto err; 1134 goto addr_verify; 1135 case 'W': /* word string */ 1136 /* 1137 * QUOTING NOTE: 1138 * 1139 * Literal next characters escape the following 1140 * character. Quoting characters are stripped here 1141 * since they are no longer useful. 1142 * 1143 * First there was the word. 1144 */ 1145 for (p = t = ecp->cp; 1146 ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) { 1147 ch = *ecp->cp; 1148 if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, 1149 ecp, ch) && ecp->clen > 1) { 1150 --ecp->clen; 1151 *p++ = *++ecp->cp; 1152 } else if (cmdskip(ch)) { 1153 ++ecp->cp; 1154 --ecp->clen; 1155 break; 1156 } else 1157 *p++ = ch; 1158 } 1159 if (argv_exp0(sp, ecp, t, p - t)) 1160 goto err; 1161 1162 /* Delete intervening whitespace. */ 1163 for (; ecp->clen > 0; 1164 --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) { 1165 ch = *ecp->cp; 1166 if (!cmdskip(ch)) 1167 break; 1168 } 1169 if (ecp->clen == 0) 1170 goto usage; 1171 1172 /* Followed by the string. */ 1173 for (p = t = ecp->cp; ecp->clen > 0; 1174 --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp, ++p) { 1175 ch = *ecp->cp; 1176 if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, 1177 ecp, ch) && ecp->clen > 1) { 1178 --ecp->clen; 1179 *p = *++ecp->cp; 1180 } else 1181 *p = ch; 1182 } 1183 if (argv_exp0(sp, ecp, t, p - t)) 1184 goto err; 1185 goto addr_verify; 1186 case 'w': /* word */ 1187 if (argv_exp3(sp, ecp, ecp->cp, ecp->clen)) 1188 goto err; 1189 arg_cnt_chk: if (*++np != 'N') { /* N */ 1190 /* 1191 * If a number is specified, must either be 1192 * 0 or that number, if optional, and that 1193 * number, if required. 1194 */ 1195 tmp = *np - '0'; 1196 if ((*++np != 'o' || exp->argsoff != 0) && 1197 exp->argsoff != tmp) 1198 goto usage; 1199 } 1200 goto addr_verify; 1201 default: { 1202 size_t nlen; 1203 char *nstr; 1204 1205 INT2CHAR(sp, ecp->cmd->name, STRLEN(ecp->cmd->name) + 1, 1206 nstr, nlen); 1207 msgq(sp, M_ERR, 1208 "085|Internal syntax table error (%s: %s)", 1209 nstr, KEY_NAME(sp, *np)); 1210 } 1211 } 1212 } 1213 1214 /* Skip trailing whitespace. */ 1215 for (; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen) { 1216 ch = *ecp->cp++; 1217 if (!cmdskip(ch)) 1218 break; 1219 } 1220 1221 /* 1222 * There shouldn't be anything left, and no more required fields, 1223 * i.e neither 'l' or 'r' in the syntax string. 1224 */ 1225 if (ecp->clen != 0 || strpbrk(np, "lr")) { 1226 usage: msgq(sp, M_ERR, "086|Usage: %s", ecp->cmd->usage); 1227 goto err; 1228 } 1229 1230 /* 1231 * Verify that the addresses are legal. Check the addresses here, 1232 * because this is a place where all ex addresses pass through. 1233 * (They don't all pass through ex_line(), for instance.) We're 1234 * assuming that any non-existent line doesn't exist because it's 1235 * past the end-of-file. That's a pretty good guess. 1236 * 1237 * If it's a "default vi command", an address of zero is okay. 1238 */ 1239 addr_verify: 1240 switch (ecp->addrcnt) { 1241 case 2: 1242 /* 1243 * Historic ex/vi permitted commands with counts to go past 1244 * EOF. So, for example, if the file only had 5 lines, the 1245 * ex command "1,6>" would fail, but the command ">300" 1246 * would succeed. Since we don't want to have to make all 1247 * of the underlying commands handle random line numbers, 1248 * fix it here. 1249 */ 1250 if (ecp->addr2.lno == 0) { 1251 if (!F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERO) && 1252 (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX) || 1253 !F_ISSET(ecp, E_USELASTCMD))) { 1254 ex_badaddr(sp, ecp->cmd, A_ZERO, NUM_OK); 1255 goto err; 1256 } 1257 } else if (!db_exist(sp, ecp->addr2.lno)) 1258 if (FL_ISSET(ecp->iflags, E_C_COUNT)) { 1259 if (db_last(sp, &lno)) 1260 goto err; 1261 ecp->addr2.lno = lno; 1262 } else { 1263 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EOF, NUM_OK); 1264 goto err; 1265 } 1266 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 1267 case 1: 1268 if (ecp->addr1.lno == 0) { 1269 if (!F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERO) && 1270 (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX) || 1271 !F_ISSET(ecp, E_USELASTCMD))) { 1272 ex_badaddr(sp, ecp->cmd, A_ZERO, NUM_OK); 1273 goto err; 1274 } 1275 } else if (!db_exist(sp, ecp->addr1.lno)) { 1276 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EOF, NUM_OK); 1277 goto err; 1278 } 1279 break; 1280 } 1281 1282 /* 1283 * If doing a default command and there's nothing left on the line, 1284 * vi just moves to the line. For example, ":3" and ":'a,'b" just 1285 * move to line 3 and line 'b, respectively, but ":3|" prints line 3. 1286 * 1287 * !!! 1288 * In addition, IF THE LINE CHANGES, move to the first nonblank of 1289 * the line. 1290 * 1291 * !!! 1292 * This is done before the absolute mark gets set; historically, 1293 * "/a/,/b/" did NOT set vi's absolute mark, but "/a/,/b/d" did. 1294 */ 1295 if ((F_ISSET(sp, SC_VI) || F_ISSET(ecp, E_NOPRDEF)) && 1296 F_ISSET(ecp, E_USELASTCMD) && vi_address == 0) { 1297 switch (ecp->addrcnt) { 1298 case 2: 1299 if (sp->lno != 1300 (ecp->addr2.lno ? ecp->addr2.lno : 1)) { 1301 sp->lno = 1302 ecp->addr2.lno ? ecp->addr2.lno : 1; 1303 sp->cno = 0; 1304 (void)nonblank(sp, sp->lno, &sp->cno); 1305 } 1306 break; 1307 case 1: 1308 if (sp->lno != 1309 (ecp->addr1.lno ? ecp->addr1.lno : 1)) { 1310 sp->lno = 1311 ecp->addr1.lno ? ecp->addr1.lno : 1; 1312 sp->cno = 0; 1313 (void)nonblank(sp, sp->lno, &sp->cno); 1314 } 1315 break; 1316 } 1317 ecp->cp = ecp->save_cmd; 1318 ecp->clen = ecp->save_cmdlen; 1319 goto loop; 1320 } 1321 1322 /* 1323 * Set the absolute mark -- we have to set it for vi here, in case 1324 * it's a compound command, e.g. ":5p|6" should set the absolute 1325 * mark for vi. 1326 */ 1327 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_ABSMARK)) { 1328 cur.lno = sp->lno; 1329 cur.cno = sp->cno; 1330 F_CLR(ecp, E_ABSMARK); 1331 if (mark_set(sp, ABSMARK1, &cur, 1)) 1332 goto err; 1333 } 1334 1335 #if defined(DEBUG) && defined(COMLOG) 1336 ex_comlog(sp, ecp); 1337 #endif 1338 /* Increment the command count if not called from vi. */ 1339 if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX)) 1340 ++sp->ccnt; 1341 1342 /* 1343 * If file state available, and not doing a global command, 1344 * log the start of an action. 1345 */ 1346 if (sp->ep != NULL && !F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL)) 1347 (void)log_cursor(sp); 1348 1349 /* 1350 * !!! 1351 * There are two special commands for the purposes of this code: the 1352 * default command (<carriage-return>) or the scrolling commands (^D 1353 * and <EOF>) as the first non-<blank> characters in the line. 1354 * 1355 * If this is the first command in the command line, we received the 1356 * command from the ex command loop and we're talking to a tty, and 1357 * and there's nothing else on the command line, and it's one of the 1358 * special commands, we move back up to the previous line, and erase 1359 * the prompt character with the output. Since ex runs in canonical 1360 * mode, we don't have to do anything else, a <newline> has already 1361 * been echoed by the tty driver. It's OK if vi calls us -- we won't 1362 * be in ex mode so we'll do nothing. 1363 */ 1364 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_NRSEP)) { 1365 if (sp->ep != NULL && 1366 F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX) && !F_ISSET(gp, G_SCRIPTED) && 1367 (F_ISSET(ecp, E_USELASTCMD) || ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SCROLL])) 1368 gp->scr_ex_adjust(sp, EX_TERM_SCROLL); 1369 F_CLR(ecp, E_NRSEP); 1370 } 1371 1372 /* 1373 * Call the underlying function for the ex command. 1374 * 1375 * XXX 1376 * Interrupts behave like errors, for now. 1377 */ 1378 if (ecp->cmd->fn(sp, ecp) || INTERRUPTED(sp)) { 1379 if (F_ISSET(gp, G_SCRIPTED)) 1380 F_SET(sp, SC_EXIT_FORCE); 1381 goto err; 1382 } 1383 1384 #ifdef DEBUG 1385 /* Make sure no function left global temporary space locked. */ 1386 if (F_ISSET(gp, G_TMP_INUSE)) { 1387 F_CLR(gp, G_TMP_INUSE); 1388 msgq_wstr(sp, M_ERR, ecp->cmd->name, 1389 "087|%s: temporary buffer not released"); 1390 } 1391 #endif 1392 /* 1393 * Ex displayed the number of lines modified immediately after each 1394 * command, so the command "1,10d|1,10d" would display: 1395 * 1396 * 10 lines deleted 1397 * 10 lines deleted 1398 * <autoprint line> 1399 * 1400 * Executing ex commands from vi only reported the final modified 1401 * lines message -- that's wrong enough that we don't match it. 1402 */ 1403 if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX)) 1404 mod_rpt(sp); 1405 1406 /* 1407 * Integrate any offset parsed by the underlying command, and make 1408 * sure the referenced line exists. 1409 * 1410 * XXX 1411 * May not match historic practice (which I've never been able to 1412 * completely figure out.) For example, the '=' command from vi 1413 * mode often got the offset wrong, and complained it was too large, 1414 * but didn't seem to have a problem with the cursor. If anyone 1415 * complains, ask them how it's supposed to work, they might know. 1416 */ 1417 if (sp->ep != NULL && ecp->flagoff) { 1418 if (ecp->flagoff < 0) { 1419 if (sp->lno <= -ecp->flagoff) { 1420 msgq(sp, M_ERR, 1421 "088|Flag offset to before line 1"); 1422 goto err; 1423 } 1424 } else { 1425 if (!NPFITS(MAX_REC_NUMBER, sp->lno, ecp->flagoff)) { 1426 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, NUM_OVER); 1427 goto err; 1428 } 1429 if (!db_exist(sp, sp->lno + ecp->flagoff)) { 1430 msgq(sp, M_ERR, 1431 "089|Flag offset past end-of-file"); 1432 goto err; 1433 } 1434 } 1435 sp->lno += ecp->flagoff; 1436 } 1437 1438 /* 1439 * If the command executed successfully, we may want to display a line 1440 * based on the autoprint option or an explicit print flag. (Make sure 1441 * that there's a line to display.) Also, the autoprint edit option is 1442 * turned off for the duration of global commands. 1443 */ 1444 if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX) && sp->ep != NULL && sp->lno != 0) { 1445 /* 1446 * The print commands have already handled the `print' flags. 1447 * If so, clear them. 1448 */ 1449 if (FL_ISSET(ecp->iflags, E_CLRFLAG)) 1450 FL_CLR(ecp->iflags, E_C_HASH | E_C_LIST | E_C_PRINT); 1451 1452 /* If hash set only because of the number option, discard it. */ 1453 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_OPTNUM)) 1454 FL_CLR(ecp->iflags, E_C_HASH); 1455 1456 /* 1457 * If there was an explicit flag to display the new cursor line, 1458 * or autoprint is set and a change was made, display the line. 1459 * If any print flags were set use them, else default to print. 1460 */ 1461 LF_INIT(FL_ISSET(ecp->iflags, E_C_HASH | E_C_LIST | E_C_PRINT)); 1462 if (!LF_ISSET(E_C_HASH | E_C_LIST | E_C_PRINT | E_NOAUTO) && 1463 !F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL) && 1464 O_ISSET(sp, O_AUTOPRINT) && F_ISSET(ecp, E_AUTOPRINT)) 1465 LF_INIT(E_C_PRINT); 1466 1467 if (LF_ISSET(E_C_HASH | E_C_LIST | E_C_PRINT)) { 1468 cur.lno = sp->lno; 1469 cur.cno = 0; 1470 (void)ex_print(sp, ecp, &cur, &cur, flags); 1471 } 1472 } 1473 1474 /* 1475 * If the command had an associated "+cmd", it has to be executed 1476 * before we finish executing any more of this ex command. For 1477 * example, consider a .exrc file that contains the following lines: 1478 * 1479 * :set all 1480 * :edit +25 file.c|s/abc/ABC/|1 1481 * :3,5 print 1482 * 1483 * This can happen more than once -- the historic vi simply hung or 1484 * dropped core, of course. Prepend the + command back into the 1485 * current command and continue. We may have to add an additional 1486 * <literal next> character. We know that it will fit because we 1487 * discarded at least one space and the + character. 1488 */ 1489 if (arg1_len != 0) { 1490 /* 1491 * If the last character of the + command was a <literal next> 1492 * character, it would be treated differently because of the 1493 * append. Quote it, if necessary. 1494 */ 1495 if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, ecp, arg1[arg1_len - 1])) { 1496 *--ecp->save_cmd = CH_LITERAL; 1497 ++ecp->save_cmdlen; 1498 } 1499 1500 ecp->save_cmd -= arg1_len; 1501 ecp->save_cmdlen += arg1_len; 1502 MEMMOVE(ecp->save_cmd, arg1, arg1_len); 1503 1504 /* 1505 * Any commands executed from a +cmd are executed starting at 1506 * the first column of the last line of the file -- NOT the 1507 * first nonblank.) The main file startup code doesn't know 1508 * that a +cmd was set, however, so it may have put us at the 1509 * top of the file. (Note, this is safe because we must have 1510 * switched files to get here.) 1511 */ 1512 F_SET(ecp, E_MOVETOEND); 1513 } 1514 1515 /* Update the current command. */ 1516 ecp->cp = ecp->save_cmd; 1517 ecp->clen = ecp->save_cmdlen; 1518 1519 /* 1520 * !!! 1521 * If we've changed screens or underlying files, any pending global or 1522 * v command, or @ buffer that has associated addresses, has to be 1523 * discarded. This is historic practice for globals, and necessary for 1524 * @ buffers that had associated addresses. 1525 * 1526 * Otherwise, if we've changed underlying files, it's not a problem, 1527 * we continue with the rest of the ex command(s), operating on the 1528 * new file. However, if we switch screens (either by exiting or by 1529 * an explicit command), we have no way of knowing where to put output 1530 * messages, and, since we don't control screens here, we could screw 1531 * up the upper layers, (e.g. we could exit/reenter a screen multiple 1532 * times). So, return and continue after we've got a new screen. 1533 */ 1534 if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EXIT | SC_EXIT_FORCE | SC_FSWITCH | SC_SSWITCH)) { 1535 at_found = gv_found = 0; 1536 SLIST_FOREACH(ecp, sp->gp->ecq, q) 1537 switch (ecp->agv_flags) { 1538 case 0: 1539 case AGV_AT_NORANGE: 1540 break; 1541 case AGV_AT: 1542 if (!at_found) { 1543 at_found = 1; 1544 msgq(sp, M_ERR, 1545 "090|@ with range running when the file/screen changed"); 1546 } 1547 break; 1548 case AGV_GLOBAL: 1549 case AGV_V: 1550 if (!gv_found) { 1551 gv_found = 1; 1552 msgq(sp, M_ERR, 1553 "091|Global/v command running when the file/screen changed"); 1554 } 1555 break; 1556 default: 1557 abort(); 1558 } 1559 if (at_found || gv_found) 1560 goto discard; 1561 if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EXIT | SC_EXIT_FORCE | SC_SSWITCH)) 1562 goto rsuccess; 1563 } 1564 1565 goto loop; 1566 /* NOTREACHED */ 1567 1568 err: /* 1569 * On command failure, we discard keys and pending commands remaining, 1570 * as well as any keys that were mapped and waiting. The save_cmdlen 1571 * test is not necessarily correct. If we fail early enough we don't 1572 * know if the entire string was a single command or not. Guess, as 1573 * it's useful to know if commands other than the current one are being 1574 * discarded. 1575 */ 1576 if (ecp->save_cmdlen == 0) 1577 for (; ecp->clen; --ecp->clen) { 1578 ch = *ecp->cp++; 1579 if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, ecp, ch) && ecp->clen > 1) { 1580 --ecp->clen; 1581 ++ecp->cp; 1582 } else if (ch == '\n' || ch == '|') { 1583 if (ecp->clen > 1) 1584 ecp->save_cmdlen = 1; 1585 break; 1586 } 1587 } 1588 if (ecp->save_cmdlen != 0 || SLIST_FIRST(gp->ecq) != &gp->excmd) { 1589 discard: msgq(sp, M_BERR, 1590 "092|Ex command failed: pending commands discarded"); 1591 ex_discard(sp); 1592 } 1593 if (v_event_flush(sp, CH_MAPPED)) 1594 msgq(sp, M_BERR, 1595 "093|Ex command failed: mapped keys discarded"); 1596 1597 rfail: tmp = 1; 1598 if (0) 1599 rsuccess: tmp = 0; 1600 1601 /* Turn off any file name error information. */ 1602 gp->if_name = NULL; 1603 1604 /* Turn off the global bit. */ 1605 F_CLR(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL); 1606 1607 return (tmp); 1608 } 1609 1610 /* 1611 * ex_range -- 1612 * Get a line range for ex commands, or perform a vi ex address search. 1613 * 1614 * PUBLIC: int ex_range(SCR *, EXCMD *, int *); 1615 */ 1616 int 1617 ex_range(SCR *sp, EXCMD *ecp, int *errp) 1618 { 1619 enum { ADDR_FOUND, ADDR_NEED, ADDR_NONE } addr; 1620 GS *gp; 1621 EX_PRIVATE *exp; 1622 MARK m; 1623 int isaddr; 1624 1625 *errp = 0; 1626 1627 /* 1628 * Parse comma or semi-colon delimited line specs. 1629 * 1630 * Semi-colon delimiters update the current address to be the last 1631 * address. For example, the command 1632 * 1633 * :3;/pattern/ecp->cp 1634 * 1635 * will search for pattern from line 3. In addition, if ecp->cp 1636 * is not a valid command, the current line will be left at 3, not 1637 * at the original address. 1638 * 1639 * Extra addresses are discarded, starting with the first. 1640 * 1641 * !!! 1642 * If any addresses are missing, they default to the current line. 1643 * This was historically true for both leading and trailing comma 1644 * delimited addresses as well as for trailing semicolon delimited 1645 * addresses. For consistency, we make it true for leading semicolon 1646 * addresses as well. 1647 */ 1648 gp = sp->gp; 1649 exp = EXP(sp); 1650 for (addr = ADDR_NONE, ecp->addrcnt = 0; ecp->clen > 0;) 1651 switch (*ecp->cp) { 1652 case '%': /* Entire file. */ 1653 /* Vi ex address searches didn't permit % signs. */ 1654 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_VISEARCH)) 1655 goto ret; 1656 1657 /* It's an error if the file is empty. */ 1658 if (sp->ep == NULL) { 1659 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EMPTY, NUM_OK); 1660 *errp = 1; 1661 return (0); 1662 } 1663 /* 1664 * !!! 1665 * A percent character addresses all of the lines in 1666 * the file. Historically, it couldn't be followed by 1667 * any other address. We do it as a text substitution 1668 * for simplicity. POSIX 1003.2 is expected to follow 1669 * this practice. 1670 * 1671 * If it's an empty file, the first line is 0, not 1. 1672 */ 1673 if (addr == ADDR_FOUND) { 1674 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_COMBO, NUM_OK); 1675 *errp = 1; 1676 return (0); 1677 } 1678 if (db_last(sp, &ecp->addr2.lno)) 1679 return (1); 1680 ecp->addr1.lno = ecp->addr2.lno == 0 ? 0 : 1; 1681 ecp->addr1.cno = ecp->addr2.cno = 0; 1682 ecp->addrcnt = 2; 1683 addr = ADDR_FOUND; 1684 ++ecp->cp; 1685 --ecp->clen; 1686 break; 1687 case ',': /* Comma delimiter. */ 1688 /* Vi ex address searches didn't permit commas. */ 1689 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_VISEARCH)) 1690 goto ret; 1691 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 1692 case ';': /* Semi-colon delimiter. */ 1693 if (sp->ep == NULL) { 1694 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EMPTY, NUM_OK); 1695 *errp = 1; 1696 return (0); 1697 } 1698 if (addr != ADDR_FOUND) 1699 switch (ecp->addrcnt) { 1700 case 0: 1701 ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno; 1702 ecp->addr1.cno = sp->cno; 1703 ecp->addrcnt = 1; 1704 break; 1705 case 2: 1706 ecp->addr1 = ecp->addr2; 1707 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 1708 case 1: 1709 ecp->addr2.lno = sp->lno; 1710 ecp->addr2.cno = sp->cno; 1711 ecp->addrcnt = 2; 1712 break; 1713 } 1714 if (*ecp->cp == ';') 1715 switch (ecp->addrcnt) { 1716 case 0: 1717 abort(); 1718 /* NOTREACHED */ 1719 case 1: 1720 sp->lno = ecp->addr1.lno; 1721 sp->cno = ecp->addr1.cno; 1722 break; 1723 case 2: 1724 sp->lno = ecp->addr2.lno; 1725 sp->cno = ecp->addr2.cno; 1726 break; 1727 } 1728 addr = ADDR_NEED; 1729 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 1730 case ' ': /* Whitespace. */ 1731 case '\t': /* Whitespace. */ 1732 ++ecp->cp; 1733 --ecp->clen; 1734 break; 1735 default: 1736 /* Get a line specification. */ 1737 if (ex_line(sp, ecp, &m, &isaddr, errp)) 1738 return (1); 1739 if (*errp) 1740 return (0); 1741 if (!isaddr) 1742 goto ret; 1743 if (addr == ADDR_FOUND) { 1744 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_COMBO, NUM_OK); 1745 *errp = 1; 1746 return (0); 1747 } 1748 switch (ecp->addrcnt) { 1749 case 0: 1750 ecp->addr1 = m; 1751 ecp->addrcnt = 1; 1752 break; 1753 case 1: 1754 ecp->addr2 = m; 1755 ecp->addrcnt = 2; 1756 break; 1757 case 2: 1758 ecp->addr1 = ecp->addr2; 1759 ecp->addr2 = m; 1760 break; 1761 } 1762 addr = ADDR_FOUND; 1763 break; 1764 } 1765 1766 /* 1767 * !!! 1768 * Vi ex address searches are indifferent to order or trailing 1769 * semi-colons. 1770 */ 1771 ret: if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_VISEARCH)) 1772 return (0); 1773 1774 if (addr == ADDR_NEED) 1775 switch (ecp->addrcnt) { 1776 case 0: 1777 ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno; 1778 ecp->addr1.cno = sp->cno; 1779 ecp->addrcnt = 1; 1780 break; 1781 case 2: 1782 ecp->addr1 = ecp->addr2; 1783 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 1784 case 1: 1785 ecp->addr2.lno = sp->lno; 1786 ecp->addr2.cno = sp->cno; 1787 ecp->addrcnt = 2; 1788 break; 1789 } 1790 1791 if (ecp->addrcnt == 2 && ecp->addr2.lno < ecp->addr1.lno) { 1792 msgq(sp, M_ERR, 1793 "094|The second address is smaller than the first"); 1794 *errp = 1; 1795 } 1796 return (0); 1797 } 1798 1799 /* 1800 * ex_line -- 1801 * Get a single line address specifier. 1802 * 1803 * The way the "previous context" mark worked was that any "non-relative" 1804 * motion set it. While ex/vi wasn't totally consistent about this, ANY 1805 * numeric address, search pattern, '$', or mark reference in an address 1806 * was considered non-relative, and set the value. Which should explain 1807 * why we're hacking marks down here. The problem was that the mark was 1808 * only set if the command was called, i.e. we have to set a flag and test 1809 * it later. 1810 * 1811 * XXX 1812 * This is probably still not exactly historic practice, although I think 1813 * it's fairly close. 1814 */ 1815 static int 1816 ex_line(SCR *sp, EXCMD *ecp, MARK *mp, int *isaddrp, int *errp) 1817 { 1818 enum nresult nret; 1819 EX_PRIVATE *exp; 1820 GS *gp; 1821 long total, val; 1822 int isneg; 1823 int (*sf)(SCR *, MARK *, MARK *, CHAR_T *, size_t, CHAR_T **, u_int); 1824 CHAR_T *endp; 1825 1826 gp = sp->gp; 1827 exp = EXP(sp); 1828 1829 *isaddrp = *errp = 0; 1830 F_CLR(ecp, E_DELTA); 1831 1832 /* No addresses permitted until a file has been read in. */ 1833 if (sp->ep == NULL && STRCHR(L("$0123456789'\\/?.+-^"), *ecp->cp)) { 1834 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EMPTY, NUM_OK); 1835 *errp = 1; 1836 return (0); 1837 } 1838 1839 switch (*ecp->cp) { 1840 case '$': /* Last line in the file. */ 1841 *isaddrp = 1; 1842 F_SET(ecp, E_ABSMARK); 1843 1844 mp->cno = 0; 1845 if (db_last(sp, &mp->lno)) 1846 return (1); 1847 ++ecp->cp; 1848 --ecp->clen; 1849 break; /* Absolute line number. */ 1850 case '0': case '1': case '2': case '3': case '4': 1851 case '5': case '6': case '7': case '8': case '9': 1852 *isaddrp = 1; 1853 F_SET(ecp, E_ABSMARK); 1854 1855 if ((nret = nget_slong(&val, ecp->cp, &endp, 10)) != NUM_OK) { 1856 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, nret); 1857 *errp = 1; 1858 return (0); 1859 } 1860 if (!NPFITS(MAX_REC_NUMBER, 0, val)) { 1861 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, NUM_OVER); 1862 *errp = 1; 1863 return (0); 1864 } 1865 mp->lno = val; 1866 mp->cno = 0; 1867 ecp->clen -= (endp - ecp->cp); 1868 ecp->cp = endp; 1869 break; 1870 case '\'': /* Use a mark. */ 1871 *isaddrp = 1; 1872 F_SET(ecp, E_ABSMARK); 1873 1874 if (ecp->clen == 1) { 1875 msgq(sp, M_ERR, "095|No mark name supplied"); 1876 *errp = 1; 1877 return (0); 1878 } 1879 if (mark_get(sp, ecp->cp[1], mp, M_ERR)) { 1880 *errp = 1; 1881 return (0); 1882 } 1883 ecp->cp += 2; 1884 ecp->clen -= 2; 1885 break; 1886 case '\\': /* Search: forward/backward. */ 1887 /* 1888 * !!! 1889 * I can't find any difference between // and \/ or between 1890 * ?? and \?. Mark Horton doesn't remember there being any 1891 * difference. C'est la vie. 1892 */ 1893 if (ecp->clen < 2 || 1894 (ecp->cp[1] != '/' && ecp->cp[1] != '?')) { 1895 msgq(sp, M_ERR, "096|\\ not followed by / or ?"); 1896 *errp = 1; 1897 return (0); 1898 } 1899 ++ecp->cp; 1900 --ecp->clen; 1901 sf = ecp->cp[0] == '/' ? f_search : b_search; 1902 goto search; 1903 case '/': /* Search forward. */ 1904 sf = f_search; 1905 goto search; 1906 case '?': /* Search backward. */ 1907 sf = b_search; 1908 1909 search: mp->lno = sp->lno; 1910 mp->cno = sp->cno; 1911 if (sf(sp, mp, mp, ecp->cp, ecp->clen, &endp, 1912 SEARCH_MSG | SEARCH_PARSE | SEARCH_SET | 1913 (F_ISSET(ecp, E_SEARCH_WMSG) ? SEARCH_WMSG : 0))) { 1914 *errp = 1; 1915 return (0); 1916 } 1917 1918 /* Fix up the command pointers. */ 1919 ecp->clen -= (endp - ecp->cp); 1920 ecp->cp = endp; 1921 1922 *isaddrp = 1; 1923 F_SET(ecp, E_ABSMARK); 1924 break; 1925 case '.': /* Current position. */ 1926 *isaddrp = 1; 1927 mp->cno = sp->cno; 1928 1929 /* If an empty file, then '.' is 0, not 1. */ 1930 if (sp->lno == 1) { 1931 if (db_last(sp, &mp->lno)) 1932 return (1); 1933 if (mp->lno != 0) 1934 mp->lno = 1; 1935 } else 1936 mp->lno = sp->lno; 1937 1938 /* 1939 * !!! 1940 * Historically, .<number> was the same as .+<number>, i.e. 1941 * the '+' could be omitted. (This feature is found in ed 1942 * as well.) 1943 */ 1944 if (ecp->clen > 1 && ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[1])) 1945 *ecp->cp = '+'; 1946 else { 1947 ++ecp->cp; 1948 --ecp->clen; 1949 } 1950 break; 1951 } 1952 1953 /* Skip trailing <blank>s. */ 1954 for (; ecp->clen > 0 && 1955 cmdskip(ecp->cp[0]); ++ecp->cp, --ecp->clen); 1956 1957 /* 1958 * Evaluate any offset. If no address yet found, the offset 1959 * is relative to ".". 1960 */ 1961 total = 0; 1962 if (ecp->clen != 0 && (ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[0]) || 1963 ecp->cp[0] == '+' || ecp->cp[0] == '-' || 1964 ecp->cp[0] == '^')) { 1965 if (!*isaddrp) { 1966 *isaddrp = 1; 1967 mp->lno = sp->lno; 1968 mp->cno = sp->cno; 1969 } 1970 /* 1971 * Evaluate an offset, defined as: 1972 * 1973 * [+-^<blank>]*[<blank>]*[0-9]* 1974 * 1975 * The rough translation is any number of signs, optionally 1976 * followed by numbers, or a number by itself, all <blank> 1977 * separated. 1978 * 1979 * !!! 1980 * All address offsets were additive, e.g. "2 2 3p" was the 1981 * same as "7p", or, "/ZZZ/ 2" was the same as "/ZZZ/+2". 1982 * Note, however, "2 /ZZZ/" was an error. It was also legal 1983 * to insert signs without numbers, so "3 - 2" was legal, and 1984 * equal to 4. 1985 * 1986 * !!! 1987 * Offsets were historically permitted for any line address, 1988 * e.g. the command "1,2 copy 2 2 2 2" copied lines 1,2 after 1989 * line 8. 1990 * 1991 * !!! 1992 * Offsets were historically permitted for search commands, 1993 * and handled as addresses: "/pattern/2 2 2" was legal, and 1994 * referenced the 6th line after pattern. 1995 */ 1996 F_SET(ecp, E_DELTA); 1997 for (;;) { 1998 for (; ecp->clen > 0 && cmdskip(ecp->cp[0]); 1999 ++ecp->cp, --ecp->clen); 2000 if (ecp->clen == 0 || (!ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[0]) && 2001 ecp->cp[0] != '+' && ecp->cp[0] != '-' && 2002 ecp->cp[0] != '^')) 2003 break; 2004 if (!ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[0]) && 2005 !ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[1])) { 2006 total += ecp->cp[0] == '+' ? 1 : -1; 2007 --ecp->clen; 2008 ++ecp->cp; 2009 } else { 2010 if (ecp->cp[0] == '-' || 2011 ecp->cp[0] == '^') { 2012 ++ecp->cp; 2013 --ecp->clen; 2014 isneg = 1; 2015 } else 2016 isneg = 0; 2017 2018 /* Get a signed long, add it to the total. */ 2019 if ((nret = nget_slong(&val, 2020 ecp->cp, &endp, 10)) != NUM_OK || 2021 (nret = NADD_SLONG(sp, 2022 total, val)) != NUM_OK) { 2023 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, nret); 2024 *errp = 1; 2025 return (0); 2026 } 2027 total += isneg ? -val : val; 2028 ecp->clen -= (endp - ecp->cp); 2029 ecp->cp = endp; 2030 } 2031 } 2032 } 2033 2034 /* 2035 * Any value less than 0 is an error. Make sure that the new value 2036 * will fit into a recno_t. 2037 */ 2038 if (*isaddrp && total != 0) { 2039 if (total < 0) { 2040 if (-total > mp->lno) { 2041 msgq(sp, M_ERR, 2042 "097|Reference to a line number less than 0"); 2043 *errp = 1; 2044 return (0); 2045 } 2046 } else 2047 if (!NPFITS(MAX_REC_NUMBER, mp->lno, total)) { 2048 ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, NUM_OVER); 2049 *errp = 1; 2050 return (0); 2051 } 2052 mp->lno += total; 2053 } 2054 return (0); 2055 } 2056 2057 2058 /* 2059 * ex_load -- 2060 * Load up the next command, which may be an @ buffer or global command. 2061 */ 2062 static int 2063 ex_load(SCR *sp) 2064 { 2065 GS *gp; 2066 EXCMD *ecp; 2067 RANGE *rp; 2068 2069 F_CLR(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL); 2070 2071 /* 2072 * Lose any exhausted commands. We know that the first command 2073 * can't be an AGV command, which makes things a bit easier. 2074 */ 2075 for (gp = sp->gp;;) { 2076 ecp = SLIST_FIRST(gp->ecq); 2077 2078 /* Discard the allocated source name as requested. */ 2079 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_NAMEDISCARD)) 2080 free(ecp->if_name); 2081 2082 /* 2083 * If we're back to the original structure, leave it around, 2084 * since we've returned to the beginning of the command stack. 2085 */ 2086 if (ecp == &gp->excmd) { 2087 ecp->if_name = NULL; 2088 return (0); 2089 } 2090 2091 /* 2092 * ecp->clen will be 0 for the first discarded command, but 2093 * may not be 0 for subsequent ones, e.g. if the original 2094 * command was ":g/xx/@a|s/b/c/", then when we discard the 2095 * command pushed on the stack by the @a, we have to resume 2096 * the global command which included the substitute command. 2097 */ 2098 if (ecp->clen != 0) 2099 return (0); 2100 2101 /* 2102 * If it's an @, global or v command, we may need to continue 2103 * the command on a different line. 2104 */ 2105 if (FL_ISSET(ecp->agv_flags, AGV_ALL)) { 2106 /* Discard any exhausted ranges. */ 2107 while ((rp = TAILQ_FIRST(ecp->rq)) != NULL) 2108 if (rp->start > rp->stop) { 2109 TAILQ_REMOVE(ecp->rq, rp, q); 2110 free(rp); 2111 } else 2112 break; 2113 2114 /* If there's another range, continue with it. */ 2115 if (rp != NULL) 2116 break; 2117 2118 /* If it's a global/v command, fix up the last line. */ 2119 if (FL_ISSET(ecp->agv_flags, 2120 AGV_GLOBAL | AGV_V) && ecp->range_lno != OOBLNO) 2121 if (db_exist(sp, ecp->range_lno)) 2122 sp->lno = ecp->range_lno; 2123 else { 2124 if (db_last(sp, &sp->lno)) 2125 return (1); 2126 if (sp->lno == 0) 2127 sp->lno = 1; 2128 } 2129 free(ecp->o_cp); 2130 } 2131 2132 /* Discard the EXCMD. */ 2133 SLIST_REMOVE_HEAD(gp->ecq, q); 2134 free(ecp); 2135 } 2136 2137 /* 2138 * We only get here if it's an active @, global or v command. Set 2139 * the current line number, and get a new copy of the command for 2140 * the parser. Note, the original pointer almost certainly moved, 2141 * so we have play games. 2142 */ 2143 ecp->cp = ecp->o_cp; 2144 MEMCPY(ecp->cp, ecp->cp + ecp->o_clen, ecp->o_clen); 2145 ecp->clen = ecp->o_clen; 2146 ecp->range_lno = sp->lno = rp->start++; 2147 2148 if (FL_ISSET(ecp->agv_flags, AGV_GLOBAL | AGV_V)) 2149 F_SET(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL); 2150 return (0); 2151 } 2152 2153 /* 2154 * ex_discard -- 2155 * Discard any pending ex commands. 2156 */ 2157 static int 2158 ex_discard(SCR *sp) 2159 { 2160 GS *gp; 2161 EXCMD *ecp; 2162 RANGE *rp; 2163 2164 /* 2165 * We know the first command can't be an AGV command, so we don't 2166 * process it specially. We do, however, nail the command itself. 2167 */ 2168 for (gp = sp->gp;;) { 2169 ecp = SLIST_FIRST(gp->ecq); 2170 if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_NAMEDISCARD)) 2171 free(ecp->if_name); 2172 /* Reset the last command without dropping it. */ 2173 if (ecp == &gp->excmd) 2174 break; 2175 if (FL_ISSET(ecp->agv_flags, AGV_ALL)) { 2176 while ((rp = TAILQ_FIRST(ecp->rq)) != NULL) { 2177 TAILQ_REMOVE(ecp->rq, rp, q); 2178 free(rp); 2179 } 2180 free(ecp->o_cp); 2181 } 2182 SLIST_REMOVE_HEAD(gp->ecq, q); 2183 free(ecp); 2184 } 2185 2186 ecp->if_name = NULL; 2187 ecp->clen = 0; 2188 return (0); 2189 } 2190 2191 /* 2192 * ex_unknown -- 2193 * Display an unknown command name. 2194 */ 2195 static void 2196 ex_unknown(SCR *sp, CHAR_T *cmd, size_t len) 2197 { 2198 size_t blen; 2199 CHAR_T *bp; 2200 2201 GET_SPACE_GOTOW(sp, bp, blen, len + 1); 2202 bp[len] = '\0'; 2203 MEMCPY(bp, cmd, len); 2204 msgq_wstr(sp, M_ERR, bp, "098|The %s command is unknown"); 2205 FREE_SPACEW(sp, bp, blen); 2206 2207 alloc_err: 2208 return; 2209 } 2210 2211 /* 2212 * ex_is_abbrev - 2213 * The vi text input routine needs to know if ex thinks this is an 2214 * [un]abbreviate command, so it can turn off abbreviations. See 2215 * the usual ranting in the vi/v_txt_ev.c:txt_abbrev() routine. 2216 * 2217 * PUBLIC: int ex_is_abbrev(CHAR_T *, size_t); 2218 */ 2219 int 2220 ex_is_abbrev(CHAR_T *name, size_t len) 2221 { 2222 EXCMDLIST const *cp; 2223 2224 return ((cp = ex_comm_search(name, len)) != NULL && 2225 (cp == &cmds[C_ABBR] || cp == &cmds[C_UNABBREVIATE])); 2226 } 2227 2228 /* 2229 * ex_is_unmap - 2230 * The vi text input routine needs to know if ex thinks this is an 2231 * unmap command, so it can turn off input mapping. See the usual 2232 * ranting in the vi/v_txt_ev.c:txt_unmap() routine. 2233 * 2234 * PUBLIC: int ex_is_unmap(CHAR_T *, size_t); 2235 */ 2236 int 2237 ex_is_unmap(CHAR_T *name, size_t len) 2238 { 2239 EXCMDLIST const *cp; 2240 2241 /* 2242 * The command the vi input routines are really interested in 2243 * is "unmap!", not just unmap. 2244 */ 2245 if (name[len - 1] != '!') 2246 return (0); 2247 --len; 2248 return ((cp = ex_comm_search(name, len)) != NULL && 2249 cp == &cmds[C_UNMAP]); 2250 } 2251 2252 /* 2253 * ex_comm_search -- 2254 * Search for a command name. 2255 */ 2256 static EXCMDLIST const * 2257 ex_comm_search(CHAR_T *name, size_t len) 2258 { 2259 EXCMDLIST const *cp; 2260 2261 for (cp = cmds; cp->name != NULL; ++cp) { 2262 if (cp->name[0] > name[0]) 2263 return (NULL); 2264 if (cp->name[0] != name[0]) 2265 continue; 2266 if (!MEMCMP(name, cp->name, len)) 2267 return (cp); 2268 } 2269 return (NULL); 2270 } 2271 2272 /* 2273 * ex_badaddr -- 2274 * Display a bad address message. 2275 * 2276 * PUBLIC: void ex_badaddr 2277 * PUBLIC: (SCR *, EXCMDLIST const *, enum badaddr, enum nresult); 2278 */ 2279 void 2280 ex_badaddr(SCR *sp, const EXCMDLIST *cp, enum badaddr ba, enum nresult nret) 2281 { 2282 recno_t lno; 2283 2284 switch (nret) { 2285 case NUM_OK: 2286 break; 2287 case NUM_ERR: 2288 msgq(sp, M_SYSERR, NULL); 2289 return; 2290 case NUM_OVER: 2291 msgq(sp, M_ERR, "099|Address value overflow"); 2292 return; 2293 case NUM_UNDER: 2294 msgq(sp, M_ERR, "100|Address value underflow"); 2295 return; 2296 } 2297 2298 /* 2299 * When encountering an address error, tell the user if there's no 2300 * underlying file, that's the real problem. 2301 */ 2302 if (sp->ep == NULL) { 2303 ex_wemsg(sp, cp ? cp->name : NULL, EXM_NOFILEYET); 2304 return; 2305 } 2306 2307 switch (ba) { 2308 case A_COMBO: 2309 msgq(sp, M_ERR, "101|Illegal address combination"); 2310 break; 2311 case A_EOF: 2312 if (db_last(sp, &lno)) 2313 return; 2314 if (lno != 0) { 2315 msgq(sp, M_ERR, 2316 "102|Illegal address: only %lu lines in the file", 2317 (u_long)lno); 2318 break; 2319 } 2320 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 2321 case A_EMPTY: 2322 msgq(sp, M_ERR, "103|Illegal address: the file is empty"); 2323 break; 2324 case A_NOTSET: 2325 abort(); 2326 /* NOTREACHED */ 2327 case A_ZERO: 2328 msgq_wstr(sp, M_ERR, cp->name, 2329 "104|The %s command doesn't permit an address of 0"); 2330 break; 2331 } 2332 return; 2333 } 2334 2335 #if defined(DEBUG) && defined(COMLOG) 2336 /* 2337 * ex_comlog -- 2338 * Log ex commands. 2339 */ 2340 static void 2341 ex_comlog(sp, ecp) 2342 SCR *sp; 2343 EXCMD *ecp; 2344 { 2345 TRACE(sp, "ecmd: "WS, ecp->cmd->name); 2346 if (ecp->addrcnt > 0) { 2347 TRACE(sp, " a1 %d", ecp->addr1.lno); 2348 if (ecp->addrcnt > 1) 2349 TRACE(sp, " a2: %d", ecp->addr2.lno); 2350 } 2351 if (ecp->lineno) 2352 TRACE(sp, " line %d", ecp->lineno); 2353 if (ecp->flags) 2354 TRACE(sp, " flags 0x%x", ecp->flags); 2355 if (FL_ISSET(ecp->iflags, E_C_BUFFER)) 2356 TRACE(sp, " buffer "WC, ecp->buffer); 2357 if (ecp->argc) { 2358 int cnt; 2359 for (cnt = 0; cnt < ecp->argc; ++cnt) 2360 TRACE(sp, " arg %d: {"WS"}", cnt, ecp->argv[cnt]->bp); 2361 } 2362 TRACE(sp, "\n"); 2363 } 2364 #endif 2365