diff options
-rw-r--r-- | system/csh/README | 11 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | system/csh/README_Slackware.txt | 79 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | system/csh/bufsiz.diff | 30 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | system/csh/csh.SlackBuild | 106 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | system/csh/csh.info | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | system/csh/csh.login | 77 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | system/csh/doinst.sh | 19 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | system/csh/slack-desc | 19 |
8 files changed, 353 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/system/csh/README b/system/csh/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..12230bebd9 --- /dev/null +++ b/system/csh/README @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +csh (C shell from BSD) + +The C shell was originally written at UCB to overcome limitations in the +Bourne shell. Its flexibility and comfort (at that time) quickly made +it the shell of choice until more advanced shells like ksh, bash, zsh +or tcsh appeared. Most of the latter incorporate features original to csh. + +This build is based on OpenBSD sources from 2011. + +For Slackware-specific details about this build of csh, see the file +README_Slackware.txt. Seriously, really, read it. diff --git a/system/csh/README_Slackware.txt b/system/csh/README_Slackware.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e3ebbcd0dc --- /dev/null +++ b/system/csh/README_Slackware.txt @@ -0,0 +1,79 @@ + +Notes for using SlackBuilds.org csh package: + +This csh build conflicts slightly with Slackware's tcsh package. The +easiest way to use this is to "removepkg tcsh" before installing csh. If +you want to do this, you can skip the next section. + + +Installing csh and tcsh together +-------------------------------- + +It's possible for csh to coexist with tcsh, with a few caveats: + +The shell is installed as /usr/bin/csh to avoid conflicting with +Slackware's own tcsh package (which makes /bin/csh a symlink to tcsh). If +you want to make /bin/csh point to the real csh, you have two choices: + +1. remove the /bin/csh symlink before installing the csh package: + # rm -f /bin/csh + The /bin/csh symlink will get created when csh is installed. + +2. adjust the symlink manually after csh installation: + # rm -f /bin/csh + # ln -s ../usr/bin/csh /bin/csh + This works the same way as e.g. the /usr/bin/vi symlink, which points + to either elvis or vim. + +If you have both csh and Slackware's tcsh installed, and you remove csh, +you'll want to reinstall tcsh to clean up afterwards. + +Removing tcsh while csh is installed should be perfectly OK. + +Installing/upgrading tcsh when csh is already installed is probably a +bad idea. Remove csh first, install tcsh, then install csh. + +As far as I know, nothing in Slackware depends on tcsh, so if you +mess things up, you won't break your OS. You can always put things +back to Slackware's default state by removing both csh and tsch, then +reinstalling tcsh. + + +Using csh as a login shell +-------------------------- + +If you want to use csh as a login shell, be aware that Slackware's +shipped /etc/csh.login (from the etc package) contains tcsh-specific +code, which prevents the /etc/profile.d/*.csh scripts from running. This +won't prevent you from logging in, but your environment won't be set up +correctly, you'll see "[: No match." errors, and your prompt won't show +your username, hostname, current directory as tsch does. + +To fix this, you can replace /etc/csh.login with the /etc/csh.login.new +installed with the csh package. It behaves the same as the original, +for tcsh, and has conditional code to make csh behave correctly. + + # cp /etc/csh.login /etc/csh.login.orig # back up original just in case + # mv /etc/csh.login.new /etc/csh.login + +If you don't want to replace Slackware's csh.login, just rm +/etc/csh.login.new and forget about it. + + +Other notes +----------- + +You should read the man page for csh. Also +/usr/doc/csh-$VERSION/paper.(txt|pdf) is a good intro to the C shell for +beginning users. Also, if you're an experienced tcsh user, you might +re-read the NEW FEATURES section in tcsh's man page (it describes the +tcsh features you won't find in csh). + +NEVER make csh the default shell for the root account! In fact, it's +probably a bad idea to ever change root's default shell on any Linux or +UNIX system, especially a third-party one that isn't shipped with the OS. + +The man page for csh states that "Words can be no longer than 1024 +characters", but this build of csh increases the limit to 8192 (actually, +BUFSIZ as defined in stdio.h). This was done so Slackware's profile.d +scripts will work correctly (particularly coreutils-dircolor.sh). diff --git a/system/csh/bufsiz.diff b/system/csh/bufsiz.diff new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..21d58a124a --- /dev/null +++ b/system/csh/bufsiz.diff @@ -0,0 +1,30 @@ +diff -Naur csh-20110502.orig/csh.h csh-20110502.patched/csh.h +--- csh-20110502.orig/csh.h 2014-04-25 17:31:52.000000000 -0400 ++++ csh-20110502.patched/csh.h 2014-04-25 17:34:08.000000000 -0400 +@@ -36,12 +36,10 @@ + * Fundamental definitions which may vary from system to system. + * + * BUFSIZ The i/o buffering size; also limits word size ++ * 20140425 bkw: moved below the #include <stdio.h> since ++ * we want to use the system's default BUFSIZ. + * MAILINTVL How often to mailcheck; more often is more expensive + */ +-#ifndef BUFSIZ +-#define BUFSIZ 1024 /* default buffer size */ +-#endif /* BUFSIZ */ +- + #ifndef MAXPATHLEN + #define MAXPATHLEN BUFSIZ + #endif +@@ -96,6 +94,11 @@ + #include <stdio.h> + FILE *cshin, *cshout, *csherr; + ++/* 20140425 bkw: moved here so stdio.h is what initially defines BUFSIZ. */ ++#ifndef BUFSIZ ++#define BUFSIZ 1024 /* default buffer size */ ++#endif /* BUFSIZ */ ++ + #include <stdio_ext.h> + #define fpurge __fpurge + diff --git a/system/csh/csh.SlackBuild b/system/csh/csh.SlackBuild new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..a6b63c5c1a --- /dev/null +++ b/system/csh/csh.SlackBuild @@ -0,0 +1,106 @@ +#!/bin/sh + +# Slackware build script for csh + +# Written by B. Watson (yalhcru@gmail.com) + +# Licensed under the WTFPL. See http://www.wtfpl.net/txt/copying/ for details. + +PRGNAM=csh +VERSION=${VERSION:-20110502} +BUILD=${BUILD:-1} +TAG=${TAG:-_SBo} + +if [ -z "$ARCH" ]; then + case "$( uname -m )" in + i?86) ARCH=i486 ;; + arm*) ARCH=arm ;; + *) ARCH=$( uname -m ) ;; + esac +fi + +CWD=$(pwd) +TMP=${TMP:-/tmp/SBo} +PKG=$TMP/package-$PRGNAM +OUTPUT=${OUTPUT:-/tmp} + +if [ "$ARCH" = "i486" ]; then + SLKCFLAGS="-O2 -march=i486 -mtune=i686" + LIBDIRSUFFIX="" +elif [ "$ARCH" = "i686" ]; then + SLKCFLAGS="-O2 -march=i686 -mtune=i686" + LIBDIRSUFFIX="" +elif [ "$ARCH" = "x86_64" ]; then + SLKCFLAGS="-O2 -fPIC" + LIBDIRSUFFIX="64" +else + SLKCFLAGS="-O2" + LIBDIRSUFFIX="" +fi + +set -e + +# Grr. +TARNAM="${PRGNAM}_${VERSION}.orig" +DIRNAM="${PRGNAM}-${VERSION}.orig" + +rm -rf $PKG +mkdir -p $TMP $PKG $OUTPUT +cd $TMP +rm -rf $DIRNAM +tar xvf $CWD/$TARNAM.tar.gz +cd $DIRNAM +tar xvf $CWD/${PRGNAM}_${VERSION}-2.debian.tar.gz +chown -R root:root . +find -L . \ + \( -perm 777 -o -perm 775 -o -perm 750 -o -perm 711 -o -perm 555 \ + -o -perm 511 \) -exec chmod 755 {} \; -o \ + \( -perm 666 -o -perm 664 -o -perm 640 -o -perm 600 -o -perm 444 \ + -o -perm 440 -o -perm 400 \) -exec chmod 644 {} \; + +# Apply all of Debian's patches. +for diff in debian/patches/*.diff; do + patch -p1 < $diff +done + +# My own patch, keeps csh.h from defining its own (tiny) BUFSIZ. Might +# make I/O more efficient, and allows /etc/profile.d/coreutils-dircolors.sh +# to set a giant $LS_OPTIONS value without "Word too long" error. +patch -p1 < $CWD/bufsiz.diff + +# use Slackware standard flags +sed -i "1iCFLAGS=$SLKCFLAGS" Makefile + +# The LIBC= isn't even used, but Slackware64's pmake is broken: it has +# /usr/lib/libc.a hard-coded, and pmake wants to build that (and can't), +# even though the csh binary is dynamic and doesn't even need libc.a! +# Also don't know why I have to make const.h separately, but it works. +pmake const.h +pmake LIBC=/usr/lib$LIBDIRSUFFIX/libc.a +cd USD.doc +pmake paper.ps paper.txt +cd - + +# I think this is the first time I've ever seen 'make install' gzip the +# man pages and strip the binary! BSD FTW! +mkdir -p $PKG/usr/bin $PKG/usr/man/man1 +pmake install DESTDIR=$PKG BINDIR=/usr/bin MANDIR=/usr/man + +# Technically this conflicts with Slackware's etc package, but the file +# that's modified still works exactly the same with tcsh. Also it's a .new +# config file, requires manual intervention. +mkdir -p $PKG/etc +cat $CWD/csh.login > $PKG/etc/csh.login.new + +DOCDIR=$PKG/usr/doc/$PRGNAM-$VERSION +mkdir -p $DOCDIR +cp -a USD.doc/paper.* $DOCDIR +cat $CWD/$PRGNAM.SlackBuild > $DOCDIR/$PRGNAM.SlackBuild +cat $CWD/README_Slackware.txt > $DOCDIR/README_Slackware.txt + +mkdir -p $PKG/install +cat $CWD/slack-desc > $PKG/install/slack-desc +cat $CWD/doinst.sh > $PKG/install/doinst.sh + +cd $PKG +/sbin/makepkg -l y -c n $OUTPUT/$PRGNAM-$VERSION-$ARCH-$BUILD$TAG.${PKGTYPE:-tgz} diff --git a/system/csh/csh.info b/system/csh/csh.info new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..8a1e477f06 --- /dev/null +++ b/system/csh/csh.info @@ -0,0 +1,12 @@ +PRGNAM="csh" +VERSION="20110502" +HOMEPAGE="https://packages.debian.org/sid/csh" +DOWNLOAD="http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/c/csh/csh_20110502.orig.tar.gz \ + http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/c/csh/csh_20110502-2.debian.tar.gz" +MD5SUM="578c40bfa54c09c8affbc434e34fb40c \ + d38e605854996cd5ce5217eed665ca19" +DOWNLOAD_x86_64="" +MD5SUM_x86_64="" +REQUIRES="libbsd" +MAINTAINER="B. Watson" +EMAIL="yalhcru@gmail.com" diff --git a/system/csh/csh.login b/system/csh/csh.login new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e65a03c02f --- /dev/null +++ b/system/csh/csh.login @@ -0,0 +1,77 @@ +# /etc/csh.login: This file contains login defaults used by csh and tcsh. + +# This version is slightly modified for use with the SlackBuilds.org build of +# Berkeley csh (but still works with tcsh). Changes are marked with ##BKW. +# For tcsh, this behaves exactly like the original. + +# Set up some environment variables: +if ($?prompt) then + umask 022 + set cdpath = ( /var/spool ) + set notify + set history = 100 + setenv MANPATH /usr/local/man:/usr/man + setenv MINICOM "-c on" + setenv HOSTNAME "`cat /etc/HOSTNAME`" + setenv LESS "-M" + setenv LESSOPEN "|lesspipe.sh %s" + set path = ( $path /usr/games ) +endif + +# If the user doesn't have a .inputrc, use the one in /etc. +if (! -r "$HOME/.inputrc") then + setenv INPUTRC /etc/inputrc +endif + +# I had problems with the backspace key installed by 'tset', but you might want +# to try it anyway instead of the section below it. I think with the right +# /etc/termcap it would work. +# eval `tset -sQ "$term"` + +# Set TERM to linux for unknown type or unset variable: +if ! $?TERM setenv TERM linux +if ("$TERM" == "") setenv TERM linux +if ("$TERM" == "unknown") setenv TERM linux + +##BKW unfortunately plain csh doesn't support the handy prompt % macros, so +# we have to do some complex and ugly stuff for csh. However, tcsh will still +# use the macros. + +# Set the default shell prompt: +if $?tcsh then + set prompt = "%n@%m:%~%# " +else + set _promptchar = $prompt + # cache the hostname, assume it will never change (usually true) + set _hostname = `hostname` + alias _setprompt 'set prompt="$user@${_hostname}:$cwd$_promptchar "' + alias cd 'cd \!*;_setprompt' + alias chdir 'chdir \!*;_setprompt' + alias pushd 'pushd \!*;_setprompt' + alias popd 'popd \!*;_setprompt' + cd +endif + +# Notify user of incoming mail. This can be overridden in the user's +# local startup file (~/.login) +biff y >& /dev/null + +# Set an empty MANPATH if none exists (this prevents some profile.d scripts +# from exiting from trying to access an unset variable): +if ! $?MANPATH setenv MANPATH "" + +# Append any additional csh scripts found in /etc/profile.d/: +##BKW plain csh doesn't support [ ] unless nonomatch is set, so move the +# 'set nonomatch' and 'unset nonomatch' outside of the for loop. +set nonomatch +[ -d /etc/profile.d ] +if ($status == 0) then + foreach file ( /etc/profile.d/*.csh ) + [ -x $file ] + if ($status == 0) then + source $file + endif + end + unset file +endif +unset nonomatch diff --git a/system/csh/doinst.sh b/system/csh/doinst.sh new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..5dec6bfce4 --- /dev/null +++ b/system/csh/doinst.sh @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +config() { + NEW="$1" + OLD="$(dirname $NEW)/$(basename $NEW .new)" + # If there's no config file by that name, mv it over: + if [ ! -r $OLD ]; then + mv $NEW $OLD + elif [ "$(cat $OLD | md5sum)" = "$(cat $NEW | md5sum)" ]; then + # toss the redundant copy + rm $NEW + fi + # Otherwise, we leave the .new copy for the admin to consider... +} + +config etc/csh.login.new + +# If there's no csh link, take over: +if [ ! -r bin/csh ]; then + ( cd bin ; ln -sf ../usr/bin/csh csh ) +fi diff --git a/system/csh/slack-desc b/system/csh/slack-desc new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..fb0b6a785a --- /dev/null +++ b/system/csh/slack-desc @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +# HOW TO EDIT THIS FILE: +# The "handy ruler" below makes it easier to edit a package description. +# Line up the first '|' above the ':' following the base package name, and +# the '|' on the right side marks the last column you can put a character in. +# You must make exactly 11 lines for the formatting to be correct. It's also +# customary to leave one space after the ':' except on otherwise blank lines. + + |-----handy-ruler------------------------------------------------------| +csh: csh (C shell from BSD) +csh: +csh: The C shell was originally written at UCB to overcome limitations in +csh: the Bourne shell. Its flexibility and comfort (at that time) quickly +csh: made it the shell of choice until more advanced shells like ksh, +csh: bash, zsh or tcsh appeared. Most of the latter incorporate features +csh: original to csh. +csh: +csh: This build is based on OpenBSD sources from 2011. +csh: +csh: |