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184 Programming


SH(1) Unix Programmer's Manual SH(1)

NAME
sh, for, case, if, while, :, ., break,
continue, cd, eval, exec, exit, export, login,
read, readonly, set, shift, times, trap, umask,
wait - command language

SYNOPSIS
sh [ -ceiknrstuvx ] [ arg ] ...

DESCRIPTION
Sh is a command programming language that
executes commands read from a terminal or a
file. See invocation for the meaning of
arguments to the shell.

[...]

BUGS
If << is used to provide standard input to an
asynchronous process invoked by &, the shell
gets mixed up about naming the input document. A
garbage file /tmp/sh* is created, and the shell
complains about not being able to find the file
by another name.

We spent several minutes trying to understand this BUGS section, but we
couldn’t even figure out what the hell they were talking about. One Unix
expert we showed this to remarked, “As I stared at it and scratched my
head, it occurred to me that in the time it must have taken to track down the
bug and write the BUGS entry, the programmer could have fixed the damn
bug.”
Unfortunately, fixing a bug isn’t enough because they keep coming back
every time there is a new release of the OS. Way back in the early 1980s,
before each of the bugs in Unix had such a large cult following, a
programmer at BBN actually fixed the bug in Berkeley’s make that
requires starting rule lines with tab characters instead of any whitespace. It
wasn’t a hard fix—just a few lines of code.

Like any group of responsible citizens, the hackers at BBN sent the patch
back to Berkeley so the fix could be incorporated into the master Unix
sources. A year later, Berkeley released a new version of Unix with the
make bug still there. The BBN hackers fixed the bug a second time, and
once again sent the patch back to Berkeley.
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