Rc — The Plan 9 Shell
Tom Duff
ABSTRACT
Rc is a command interpreter for Plan 9 that provides similar facilities to UNIX’s Bourne shell, with some small additions and less idiosyncratic syntax. This paper uses numerous examples to describe rc’s features, and contrasts rc with the Bourne shell, a model that many readers will be familiar with.
1. Introduction
Rc is similar in spirit but different in detail from UNIX’s Bourne shell. This paper describes rc’s principal features with many small examples and a few larger ones. It assumes familiarity with the Bourne shell.
2. Simple commands
For the simplest uses rc has syntax familiar to Bourne-shell users. All of the following behave as expected:
date
cat /lib/news/build
who >user.names
who >>user.names
wc <file
echo [a-f]*.c
who | wc
who; date
vc *.c &
mk && v.out /*/bin/fb/*
rm -r junk || echo rm failed!
3. Quotation
An argument that contains a space or one of rc’s other syntax characters must be enclosed in apostrophes (’):
rm ’odd file name’
An apostrophe in a quoted argument must be doubled:
echo ’How’’s your father?’
4. Patterns
An unquoted argument that contains any of the characters * ? [ is a pattern to be matched against file names. A * character matches any sequence of characters, ? matches any single character, and [class] matches any character in the class, unless the first character of class is ~, in which case the class is complemented. The class may also contain pairs of characters separated by -, standing for all characters lexically between the two. The character / must appear explicitly in a pattern, as must the path name components . and ... A pattern is replaced by a list of arguments, one for each path name matched, except that a pattern matching no names is not replaced by the empty list; rather it stands for itself.
5. Variables
UNIX’s Bourne shell offers string-valued variables. Rc provides variables whose values are lists of arguments — that is, arrays of strings. This is the principal difference between rc and traditional UNIX command interpreters. Variables may be given values by typing, for example:
path=(. /bin)
user=td
font=/lib/font/bit/pelm/ascii.9.font
The parentheses indicate that the value assigned to path is a list of two strings. The variables user and font are assigned lists containing a single string.
The value of a variable can be substituted into a command by preceding its name with a $, like this:
echo $path
If path had been set as above, this would be equivalent to
echo . /bin
Variables may be subscripted by numbers or lists of numbers, like this:
echo $path(2)
echo $path(2 1 2)
These are equivalent to
echo /bin
echo /bin . /bin
There can be no space separating the variable’s name from the left parenthesis; otherwise, the subscript would be considered a separate parenthesized list.
The number of strings in a variable can be determined by the $# operator. For example,
echo $#path
would print 2 for this example.
The following two assignments are subtly different:
empty=()
null=’’
The first sets empty to a list containing no strings. The second sets null to a list containing a single string, but the string contains no characters.
Although these may seem like more or less the same thing (in Bourne’s shell, they are indistinguishable), they behave differently in almost all circumstances. Among other things
echo $#empty
prints 0, whereas
echo $#null
prints 1.
All variables that have never been set have the value ().
Occasionally, it is convenient to treat a variable’s value as a single string. The elements of a string are concatenated into a single string, with spaces between the elements, by the $" operator. Thus, if we set
list=(How now brown cow)
string=$"list
then both
echo $list
and
echo $string
cause the same output, viz:
How now brown cow
but
echo $#list $#string
will output
4 1
because $list has four members, but $string has a single member, with three spaces separating its words.
6. Arguments
When rc is reading its input from a file, the file has access to the arguments supplied on rc’s command line. The variable $* initially has the list of arguments assigned to it. The names $1, $2, etc. are synonyms for $*(1), $*(2), etc. In addition, $0 is the name of the file from which rc’s input is being read.
7. Concatenation
Rc has a string concatenation operator, the caret ^, to build arguments out of pieces.
echo hully^gully
is exactly equivalent to
echo hullygully
Suppose variable i contains the name of a command. Then
vc $i^.c
vl -o $1 $i^.v
might compile the command’s source code, leaving the result in the appropriate file.
Concatenation distributes over lists. The following
echo (a b c)^(1 2 3)
src=(main subr io)
cc $src^.c
are equivalent to
echo a1 b2 c3
cc main.c subr.c io.c
In detail, the rule is: if both operands of ^ are lists of the same non-zero number of strings, they are concatenated pairwise. Otherwise, if one of the operands is a single string, it is concatenated with each member of the other operand in turn. Any other combination of operands is an error.
8. Free carets
User demand has dictated that rc insert carets in certain places, to make the syntax look more like the Bourne shell. For example, this:
cc -$flags $stems.c
is equivalent to
cc -^$flags $stems^.c
In general, rc will insert ^ between two arguments that are not separated by white space. Specifically, whenever one of $’‘ follows a quoted or unquoted word, or an unquoted word follows a quoted word with no intervening blanks or tabs, an implicit ^ is inserted between the two. If an unquoted word immediately following a $ contains a character other than an alphanumeric, underscore or *, a ^ is inserted before the first such character.
9. Command substitution
It is often useful to build an argument list from the output of a command. Rc allows a command, enclosed in braces and preceded by a left quote, ‘{...}, anywhere that an argument is required. The command is executed and its standard output captured. The characters stored in the variable ifs are used to split the output into arguments. For example,
cat ‘{ls -tr|sed 10q}
will concatenate the ten oldest files in the current directory in temporal order, given the default ifs setting of space, tab, and newline.
10. Pipeline branching
The normal pipeline notation is general enough for almost all cases. Very occasionally it is useful to have pipelines that are not linear. Pipeline topologies more general than trees can require arbitrarily large pipe buffers, or worse, can cause deadlock. Rc has syntax for some kinds of non-linear but treelike pipelines. For example,
cmp <{old} <{new}
will regression-test a new version of a command. < or > followed by a command in braces causes the command to be run with its standard output or input attached to a pipe. The parent command (cmp in the example) is started with the other end of the pipe attached to some file descriptor or other, and with an argument that will connect to the pipe when opened (e.g., /dev/fd/6). Some commands are unprepared to deal with input files that turn out not to be seekable. For example diff needs to read its input twice.
11. Exit status
When a command exits it returns status to the program that executed it. On Plan 9 status is a character string describing an error condition. On normal termination it is empty.
Rc captures command exit status in the variable $status. For a simple command the value of $status is just as described above. For a pipeline $status is set to the concatenation of the statuses of the pipeline components with | characters for separators.
Rc has a several kinds of control flow, many of them conditioned by the status returned from previously executed commands. Any $status containing only 0’s and |’s has boolean value true. Any other status is false.
12. Command grouping
A sequence of commands enclosed in {} may be used anywhere a command is required. For example:
{sleep 3600;echo ’Time’’s up!’}&
will wait an hour in the background, then print a message. Without the braces,
sleep 3600;echo ’Time’’s up!’&
would lock up the terminal for an hour, then print the message in the background.
13. Control flow — for
A command may be executed once for each member of a list by typing, for example:
for(i in printf scanf putchar) look $i /usr/td/lib/dw.dat
This looks for each of the words printf, scanf and putchar in the given file. The general form is
for(name in list) command
or
for(name) command
In the first case command is executed once for each member of list with that member assigned to variable name. If the clause ‘‘in list’’ is missing, ‘‘in $*’’ is assumed.
14. Conditional execution — if
Rc also provides a general if-statement. For example:
for(i in *.c) if(cpp $i >/tmp/$i) vc /tmp/$i
runs the C compiler on each C source program that cpp processes without error. An ‘if not’ statement provides a two-tailed conditional. For example:
for(i){
if(test -f /tmp/$i) echo $i already in /tmp
if not cp $i /tmp
}
This loops over each file in $*, copying to /tmp those that do not already appear there, and printing a message for those that do.
15. Control flow — while
Rc’s while statement looks like this:
while(newer subr.v subr.c) sleep 5
This waits until subr.v is newer than subr.c, presumably because the C compiler finished with it.
If the controlling command is empty, the loop will not terminate. Thus,
while() echo y
emulates the yes command.
16. Control flow — switch
Rc provides a switch statement to do pattern-matching on arbitrary strings. Its general form is
switch(word){
case pattern ...
commands
case pattern ...
commands
...
}
Rc attempts to match the word against the patterns in each case statement in turn. Patterns are the same as for filename matching, except that / and . and .. need not be matched explicitly.
If any pattern matches, the commands following that case up to the next case (or the end of the switch) are executed, and execution of the switch is complete. For example,
switch($#*){
case 1
cat >>$1
case 2
cat >>$2 <$1
case *
echo ’Usage: append [from] to’
}
is an append command. Called with one file argument, it appends its standard input to the named file. With two, the first is appended to the second. Any other number elicits an error message.
The built-in ~ command also matches patterns, and is often more concise than a switch. Its arguments are a string and a list of patterns. It sets $status to true if and only if any of the patterns matches the string. The following example processes option arguments for the man(1) command:
opt=()
while(~ $1 -* [1-9] 10){
switch($1){
case [1-9] 10
sec=$1 secn=$1
case -f
c=f s=f
case -[qwnt]
cmd=$1
case -T*
T=$1
case -*
opt=($opt $1)
}
shift
}
17. Functions
Functions may be defined by typing
fn name { commands }
Subsequently, whenever a command named name is encountered, the remainder of the command’s argument list will assigned to $* and rc will execute the commands. The value of $* will be restored on completion. For example:
fn g {
grep $1 *.[hcyl]
}
defines g pattern to look for occurrences of pattern in all program source files in the current directory.
Function definitions are deleted by writing
fn name
with no function body.
18. Command execution
Rc does one of several things to execute a simple command. If the command name is the name of a function defined using fn, the function is executed. Otherwise, if it is the name of a built-in command, the built-in is executed directly by rc. Otherwise, directories mentioned in the variable $path are searched until an executable file is found. Extensive use of the $path variable is discouraged in Plan 9. Instead, use the default (. /bin) and bind what you need into /bin.
19. Built-in commands
Several commands are executed internally by rc because they are difficult to implement otherwise.
. [-i] file ... Execute commands from file. $* is set for the duration to the reminder of the argument list following file. $path is used to search for file. Option -i indicates interactive input — a prompt (found in $prompt) is printed before each command is read.
builtin command ... Execute command as usual except that any function named command is ignored. For example,
fn cd{
builtin cd $* && pwd
}
defines a replacement for the cd built-in (see below) that announces the full name of the new directory.
cd [dir] Change the current directory to dir. The default argument is $home. $cdpath is a list of places in which to search for dir.
eval [arg ...] The arguments are concatenated (separated by spaces) into a string, read as input to rc, and executed. For example,
x=’$y’
y=Doody
eval echo Howdy, $x
would echo
Howdy, Doody
since the arguments of eval would be
echo Howdy, $y
after substituting for $x.
exec [command ...] Rc replaces itself with the given command. This is like a goto — rc does not wait for the command to exit, and does not return to read any more commands.
exit [status] Rc exits immediately with the given status. If none is given, the current value of $status is used.
flag f [+-] This command manipulates and tests the command line flags (described below).
flag f +
sets flag f.
flag f -
clears flag f.
flag f
tests flag f, setting $status appropriately. Thus
if(flag x) flag v +
sets the -v flag if the -x flag is already set.
rfork [nNeEsfF] This uses the Plan 9 rfork system entry to put rc into a new process group with the following attributes:
Section fork(2) of the Programmer’s Manual describes these attributes in more detail.
shift [n] Delete the first n (default 1) elements of $*.
wait [pid] Wait for the process with the given pid to exit. If no pid is given, all outstanding processes are waited for.
whatis name ... Print the value of each name in a form suitable for input to rc. The output is an assignment to a variable, the definition of a function, a call to builtin for a built-in command, or the path name of a binary program. For example,
whatis path g cd who
might print
path=(. /bin)
fn g {gre -e $1 *.[hycl]}
builtin cd
/bin/who
~ subject pattern ... The subject is matched against each pattern in turn. On a match, $status is set to true. Otherwise, it is set to ’no match’. Patterns are the same as for filename matching. The patterns are not subjected to filename replacement before the ~ command is executed, so they need not be enclosed in quotation marks, unless of course, a literal match for * [ or ? is required. For example
~ $1 ?
matches any single character, whereas
~ $1 ’?’
only matches a literal question mark.
20. Advanced I/O Redirection
Rc allows redirection of file descriptors other than 0 and 1 (standard input and output) by specifying the file descriptor in square brackets [ ] after the < or >. For example,
vc junk.c >[2]junk.diag
saves the compiler’s diagnostics from standard error in junk.diag.
File descriptors may be replaced by a copy, in the sense of dup(2), of an already-open file by typing, for example
vc junk.c >[2=1]
This replaces file descriptor 2 with a copy of file descriptor 1. It is more useful in conjunction with other redirections, like this
vc junk.c >junk.out >[2=1]
Redirections are evaluated from left to right, so this redirects file descriptor 1 to junk.out, then points file descriptor 2 at the same file. By contrast,
vc junk.c >[2=1] >junk.out
redirects file descriptor 2 to a copy of file descriptor 1 (presumably the terminal), and then directs file descriptor 1 to a file. In the first case, standard and diagnostic output will be intermixed in junk.out. In the second, diagnostic output will appear on the terminal, and standard output will be sent to the file.
File descriptors may be closed by using the duplication notation with an empty right-hand side. For example,
vc junk.c >[2=]
will discard diagnostics from the compilation.
Arbitrary file descriptors may be sent through a pipe by typing, for example,
vc junk.c |[2] grep -v ’^$’
This deletes blank lines from the C compiler’s error output. Note that the output of grep still appears on file descriptor 1.
Occasionally you may wish to connect the input side of a pipe to some file descriptor other than zero. The notation
cmd1 |[5=19] cmd2
creates a pipeline with cmd1’s file descriptor 5 connected through a pipe to cmd2’s file descriptor 19.
21. Here documents
Rc procedures may include data, called ‘‘here documents’’, to be provided as input to commands, as in this version of the tel command
for(i) grep $i <<!
...
tor 2T-402 2912
kevin 2C-514 2842
bill 2C-562 7214
...
!
A here document is introduced by the redirection symbol <<, followed by an arbitrary EOF marker (! in the example). Lines following the command, up to a line containing only the EOF marker are saved in a temporary file that is connected to the command’s standard input when it is run.
Rc does variable substitution in here documents. The following command:
ed $3 <<EOF
g/$1/s//$2/g
w
EOF
changes all occurrences of $1 to $2 in file $3. To include a literal $ in a here document, type $$. If the name of a variable is followed immediately by ^, the caret is deleted.
Variable substitution can be entirely suppressed by enclosing the EOF marker following << in quotation marks, as in <<’EOF’.
Here documents may be provided on file descriptors other than 0 by typing, for example,
cmd <<[4]End
...
End
If a here document appears within a compound block, the contents of the document must be after the whole block:
for(i in $*){
mail $i <<EOF
}
words to live by
EOF
22. Catching Notes
Rc scripts normally terminate when an interrupt is received from the terminal. A function with the name of a UNIX signal, in lower case, is defined in the usual way, but called when rc receives the corresponding note. The notify(2) section of the Programmer’s Manual discusses notes in some detail. Notes of interest are:
sighup The note was ‘hangup’. Plan 9 sends this when the terminal has disconnected from rc.
sigint The note was ‘interrupt’, usually sent when the interrupt character (ASCII DEL) is typed on the terminal.
sigterm The note was ‘kill’, normally sent by kill(1).
sigexit An artificial note sent when rc is about to exit.
As an example,
fn sigint{
rm /tmp/junk
exit
}
sets a trap for the keyboard interrupt that removes a temporary file before exiting.
Notes will be ignored if the note routine is set to {}. Signals revert to their default behavior when their handlers’ definitions are deleted.
23. Environment
The environment is a list of name-value pairs made available to executing binaries. On Plan 9, the environment is stored in a file system named #e, normally mounted on /env. The value of each variable is stored in a separate file, with components terminated by zero bytes. (The file system is maintained entirely in core, so no disk or network access is involved.) The contents of /env are shared on a per-process group basis − when a new process group is created it effectively attaches /env to a new file system initialized with a copy of the old one. A consequence of this organization is that commands can change environment entries and see the changes reflected in rc.
Functions also appear in the environment, named by prefixing fn# to their names, like /env/fn#roff.
24. Local Variables
It is often useful to set a variable for the duration of a single command. An assignment followed by a command has this effect. For example
a=global
a=local echo $a
echo $a
will print
local
global
This works even for compound commands, like
f=/fairly/long/file/name {
{ wc $f; spell $f; diff $f.old $f } |
pr -h ’Facts about ’$f | lp -dfn
}
25. Examples — cd, pwd
Here is a pair of functions that provide enhanced versions of the standard cd and pwd commands. (Thanks to Rob Pike for these.)
ps1=’% ’ # default prompt
tab=’ ’ # a tab character
fn cd{
builtin cd $1 &&
switch($#*){
case 0
dir=$home
prompt=($ps1 $tab)
case *
switch($1)
case /*
dir=$1
prompt=(‘{basename ‘{pwd}}^$ps1 $tab)
case */* ..*
dir=()
prompt=(‘{basename ‘{pwd}}^$ps1 $tab)
case *
dir=()
prompt=($1^$ps1 $tab)
}
}
}
fn pwd{
if(~ $#dir 0)
dir=‘{/bin/pwd}
echo $dir
}
Function pwd is a version of the standard pwd that caches its value in variable $dir, because the genuine pwd can be quite slow to execute. (Recent versions of Plan 9 have very fast implementations of pwd, reducing the advantage of the pwd function.)
Function cd calls the cd built-in, and checks that it was successful. If so, it sets $dir and $prompt. The prompt will include the last component of the current directory (except in the home directory, where it will be null), and $dir will be reset either to the correct value or to (), so that the pwd function will work correctly.
26. Examples — man
The man command prints pages of the Programmer’s Manual. It is called, for example, as
man 2 sinh
man rc
man -t cat
In the first case, the page for sinh in section 2 is printed. In the second case, the manual page for rc is printed. Since no manual section is specified, all sections are searched for the page, and it is found in section 1. In the third case, the page for cat is typeset (the -t option).
cd /sys/man || {
echo $0: No manual! >[1=2]
exit 1
}
NT=n # default nroff
s=’*’ # section, default try all
for(i) switch($i){
case -t
NT=t
case -n
NT=n
case -*
echo Usage: $0 ’[-nt] [section] page ...’ >[1=2]
exit 1
case [1-9] 10
s=$i
case *
eval ’pages=’$s/$i
for(page in $pages){
if(test -f $page)
$NT^roff -man $page
if not
echo $0: $i not found >[1=2]
}
}
Note the use of eval to make a list of candidate manual pages. Without eval, the * stored in $s would not trigger filename matching — it’s enclosed in quotation marks, and even if it weren’t, it would be expanded when assigned to $s. Eval causes its arguments to be re-processed by rc’s parser and interpreter, effectively delaying evaluation of the * until the assignment to $pages.
27. Examples — holmdel
The following rc script plays the deceptively simple game holmdel, in which the players alternately name Bell Labs locations, the winner being the first to mention Holmdel.
t=/tmp/holmdel$pid
fn read{
$1=‘{awk ’{print;exit}’}
}
ifs=’
’ # just a newline
fn sigexit sigint sigquit sighup{
rm -f $t
exit
}
cat <<’!’ >$t
Allentown
Atlanta
Cedar Crest
Chester
Columbus
Elmhurst
Fullerton
Holmdel
Indian Hill
Merrimack Valley
Morristown
Neptune
Piscataway
Reading
Short Hills
South Plainfield
Summit
Whippany
West Long Branch
!
while(){
lab=‘{fortune $t}
echo $lab
if(~ $lab Holmdel){
echo You lose.
exit
}
while(read lab; ! grep -i -s $lab $t) echo No such location.
if(~ $lab [hH]olmdel){
echo You win.
exit
}
}
This script is worth describing in detail (rather, it would be if it weren’t so silly.)
Variable $t is an abbreviation for the name of a temporary file. Including $pid, initialized by rc to its process-id, in the names of temporary files insures that their names won’t collide, in case more than one instance of the script is running at a time.
Function read’s argument is the name of a variable into which a line gathered from standard input is read. $ifs is set to just a newline. Thus read’s input is not split apart at spaces, but the terminating newline is deleted.
A handler is set to catch sigint, sigquit, and sighup, and the artificial sigexit signal. It just removes the temporary file and exits.
The temporary file is initialized from a here document containing a list of Bell Labs locations, and the main loop starts.
First, the program guesses a location (in $lab) using the fortune program to pick a random line from the location list. It prints the location, and if it guessed Holmdel, prints a message and exits.
Then it uses the read function to get lines from standard input and validity-check them until it gets a legal name. Note that the condition part of a while can be a compound command. Only the exit status of the last command in the sequence is checked.
Again, if the result is Holmdel, it prints a message and exits. Otherwise it goes back to the top of the loop.
28. Design Principles
Rc draws heavily from Steve Bourne’s /bin/sh. Any successor of the Bourne shell is bound to suffer in comparison. I have tried to fix its best-acknowledged shortcomings and to simplify things wherever possible, usually by omitting inessential features. Only when irresistibly tempted have I introduced novel ideas. Obviously I have tinkered extensively with Bourne’s syntax.
The most important principle in rc’s design is that it’s not a macro processor. Input is never scanned more than once by the lexical and syntactic analysis code (except, of course, by the eval command, whose raison d’être is to break the rule).
Bourne shell scripts can often be made to run wild by passing them arguments containing spaces. These will be split into multiple arguments using IFS, often at inopportune times. In rc, values of variables, including command line arguments, are not re-read when substituted into a command. Arguments have presumably been scanned in the parent process, and ought not to be re-read.
Why does Bourne re-scan commands after variable substitution? He needs to be able to store lists of arguments in variables whose values are character strings. If we eliminate re-scanning, we must change the type of variables, so that they can explicitly carry lists of strings.
This introduces some conceptual complications. We need a notation for lists of words. There are two different kinds of concatenation, for strings — $a^$b, and lists — ($a $b). The difference between () and ’’ is confusing to novices, although the distinction is arguably sensible — a null argument is not the same as no argument.
Bourne also rescans input when doing command substitution. This is because the text enclosed in back-quotes is not a string, but a command. Properly, it ought to be parsed when the enclosing command is, but this makes it difficult to handle nested command substitutions, like this:
size=‘wc -l \‘ls -t|sed 1q\‘‘
The inner back-quotes must be escaped to avoid terminating the outer command. This can get much worse than the above example; the number of \’s required is exponential in the nesting depth. Rc fixes this by making the backquote a unary operator whose argument is a command, like this:
size=‘{wc -l ‘{ls -t|sed 1q}}
No escapes are ever required, and the whole thing is parsed in one pass.
For similar reasons rc defines signal handlers as though they were functions, instead of associating a string with each signal, as Bourne does, with the attendant possibility of getting a syntax error message in response to typing the interrupt character. Since rc parses input when typed, it reports errors when you make them.
For all this trouble, we gain substantial semantic simplifications. There is no need for the distinction between $* and $@. There is no need for four types of quotation, nor the extremely complicated rules that govern them. In rc you use quotation marks when you want a syntax character to appear in an argument, or an argument that is the empty string, and at no other time. IFS is no longer used, except in the one case where it was indispensable: converting command output into argument lists during command substitution.
This also avoids an important UNIX security hole. In UNIX, the system and popen functions call /bin/sh to execute a command. It is impossible to use either of these routines with any assurance that the specified command will be executed, even if the caller of system or popen specifies a full path name for the command. This can be devastating if it occurs in a set-userid program. The problem is that IFS is used to split the command into words, so an attacker can just set IFS=/ in his environment and leave a Trojan horse named usr or bin in the current working directory before running the privileged program. Rc fixes this by never rescanning input for any reason.
Most of the other differences between rc and the Bourne shell are not so serious. I eliminated Bourne’s peculiar forms of variable substitution, like
echo ${a=b} ${c-d} ${e?error}
because they are little used, redundant and easily expressed in less abstruse terms. I deleted the builtins export, readonly, break, continue, read, return, set, times and unset because they seem redundant or only marginally useful.
Where Bourne’s syntax draws from Algol 68, rc’s is based on C or Awk. This is harder to defend. I believe that, for example
if(test -f junk) rm junk
is better syntax than
if test -f junk; then rm junk; fi
because it is less cluttered with keywords, it avoids the semicolons that Bourne requires in odd places, and the syntax characters better set off the active parts of the command.
The one bit of large-scale syntax that Bourne unquestionably does better than rc is the if statement with else clause. Rc’s if has no terminating fi-like bracket. As a result, the parser cannot tell whether or not to expect an else clause without looking ahead in its input. The problem is that after reading, for example
if(test -f junk) echo junk found
in interactive mode, rc cannot decide whether to execute it immediately and print $prompt(1), or to print $prompt(2) and wait for the else to be typed. In the Bourne shell, this is not a problem, because the if command must end with fi, regardless of whether it contains an else or not.
Rc’s admittedly feeble solution is to declare that the else clause is a separate statement, with the semantic proviso that it must immediately follow an if, and to call it if not rather than else, as a reminder that something odd is going on. The only noticeable consequence of this is that the braces are required in the construction
for(i){
if(test -f $i) echo $i found
if not echo $i not found
}
and that rc resolves the ‘‘dangling else’’ ambiguity in opposition to most people’s expectations.
It is remarkable that in the four most recent editions of the UNIX system programmer’s manual the Bourne shell grammar described in the manual page does not admit the command who|wc. This is surely an oversight, but it suggests something darker: nobody really knows what the Bourne shell’s grammar is. Even examination of the source code is little help. The parser is implemented by recursive descent, but the routines corresponding to the syntactic categories all have a flag argument that subtly changes their operation depending on the context. Rc’s parser is implemented using yacc, so I can say precisely what the grammar is.
29. Acknowledgements
Rob Pike, Howard Trickey and other Plan 9 users have been insistent, incessant sources of good ideas and criticism. Some examples in this document are plagiarized from [Bourne], as are most of rc’s good features.
30. Reference
S. R. Bourne, UNIX Time-Sharing System: The UNIX Shell, Bell System Technical Journal, Volume 57 number 6, July-August 1978