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header {
div {
h1 {-POSIX Pitfalls}
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}
figure .quote {
blockquote {
p {=
Plan 9 argues that given a few carefully implemented abstractions it
is possible to produce a small operating system that provides
support for the largest systems on a variety of architectures and
networks.
}
}
figcaption {=
@cite{-The Use of Name Spaces in Plan 9} by Rob Pike et al.
}
}
}
main {
h2 #prologue {-Prologue}
p {-
Since the moment I decided to take software development more seriously,
I have been absolutely enamored by the Shell @x-ref{-1} — the POSIX
shell to be more specific. The syntax is questionable at times, and the
available resources outside of the POSIX specification itself are
absolutely piss-poor as a result of the average *NIX user failing to
understand the difference between @code{-/bin/sh} and Bash @x-ref{-2}.
What @em{-really} drew me into the Shell was the powerful idea of
composability, and being able to combine simple tools to form a much
more powerful one in only a handful of lines. I talked more about this
@a href="/blog/extend" {-in my previous post}.
}
p {-
It didn’t take long for me to find issues with my beloved
@code{-/bin/sh} however. Like it or not, the modern shells we all use
such as Bash and Zsh are all based on a that is approaching half a
century in age. It some things right — like the idea that you can use
loops and conditional statements in a pipeline — but it also got a lot
of things wrong, and these are things that we can improve on. The most
obvious deficiency in POSIX shells is the absolutely abhorrent handling
of whitespace.
}
p {-
There have been quite a few alternatives to the POSIX shell made over
the years, although I find this to be an area that is shockingly
underdeveloped. If you’re reading this, I implore you to attempt to
design your own shell, no matter how simple. If you know how to make
one, you can experiment with new ideas! If you don’t, it’s a really
great learning experience, even if all your shell can do is spawn a
process.
}
aside {
p data-ref="1" {-
My first ever ‘programming’ language that I learnt was actually
Windows Batch Script back on my elementary school laptops.
}
p data-ref="2" {-
If you see someone using Oh-My-Zsh unironically, you can rest assured
they know absolutely nothing about how their shell works.
}
}
h2 #alternatives {-Alternatives to POSIX}
p {-
There are a few alternatives shells that have managed to garner a
respectable userbase. Fish, Powershell, Nushell, and Elvish just
to name the ones I can think of off the top of my head have all managed
to get a userbase while giving the finger to POSIX. I do believe that
ditching POSIX is a necessity to create a half-decent modern shell. I
have used Fish for close to a year before and it is probably my favorite
of the bunch; it tries to do its own thing with its own ideas, but it
still remains highly familiar for those coming from POSIX.
}
p {-
I’m not entirely happy with Fish though. Fish and most of the other
modern shells all fall in my opinion to the classic trap of
over-engineering; they try to do too much and lose sight of what the
shell is fundamentally all about. The philosophy of the shell is to
manipulate streams by composing small- and simple tools, yet Fish
bundles in a whole host of builtins that add nothing while replacing
functionality that is already solved by existing tools. You can read
from @code{-/dev/urandom} to generate random numbers, yet Fish added a
@code{-random} builtin. You can do arbitrary-precision mathematics with
the Bc and Dc calculators, yet Fish added the @code{-math} builtin. The
same goes for the @code{-string} builtin.
}
p {-
I do appreciate Fish though, because despite loosing sight of what a
shell should be (in my opinion), they still tried something new, and I
respect that. The same goes for all the other shells out there. Also
they definitely do get some things right. Using Fish as an example once
again, they decided to just remove the ‘?’ wildcard from globs entirely
— a move I completely support.
}
p {-
All in all, while I don’t think any of these ‘mainstream’ alternatives
got it right, they are a great source of inspiration for me as to what I
should or should not do should I make my own shell.
}
h2 #andy {-Introducing Andy}
p {-
Andy is a shell that I’ve been meaning to make for around 2 years now
which never materialized as a result of a lack of dedicated focus, and a
lack of a thought-out vision and -design. Part of why I’m writing this
in fact is to help me develop a proper vision for what I want Andy to
be; I find that discussing and writing about things helps a lot with
this kind of thing.
}
p {-
I want the philosophy of Andy to reflect that of the original Bourne
Shell, and the less features the better — ‘less is more’ as Ludwig Mies
van der Rohe famously said. That being said, not all features should be
thrown to the wayside; if a feature is simple to understand, simple to
implement, and solves a real problem, there is no problem in adding it.
}
p {-
Take process redirection for example. To properly compare the outputs
of two processes in POSIX shell, we need to do this whole rigmarole:
}
figure {
pre {= m4_fmt_code(proc-diff.sh.gsp) }
}
p {-
Now compare that to the Bash solution using process redirections:
}
figure {
pre {= m4_fmt_code(proc-diff.bash.gsp) }
}
p {-
The Bash solution is more readable, and far easier to understand at a
glance. It’s also a lot better functionally in that it doesn’t require
you to need to need to manually cleanup your temporary file (something
which might fail if your script receives certain signals). It’s more
efficient too; instead of waiting for @code{-cmd2} to write all its
output to a temporary file for us to read, both @code{-cmd1} and
@code{-cmd2} are run in parallel to each other. This can obviously be
solved using named pipes, but now we’re adding more complexity to our
application.
}
p {-
There are a few fundamental ‘problems’ I want to fix in Andy. The first
is whitespace handling; safe POSIX shell scripts will contain almost as
many quotation marks to avoid word-splitting as Lisp programs contain
parenthesis. This is an absolute must, under no circumstance should
strings be expanding into even more strings without the explicit consent
of the user; it’s a recipe for disaster and it’s the shell-equivelant of
the null-pointer-exception.
}
p {-
The second major fix I want to make is in terms of datatypes. For this
I took major inspiration from Plan 9’s Rc shell. While the fundamental
datatype of the shell is the @em{-stream} — which is well-represented by
the string — we very often are working with @em{-lists} of items. Lists
of filenames, lists of regular expression matches, etc. I want lists to
be a first-class citizen of Andy.
}
p {-
Outside of these major changes, there are other minor changes I want to
make. I want to use a C-style syntax similar (but even simpler) than
that of Rc. The whole ‘if-then’ and ‘esac’ business is both overly
verbose for a language that needs to work well in a m4_abbr(REPL), and
just plain ugly. A friend of mine even suggested that the reason the
Bourne Shell decided to call them ‘case-statements’ instead of
‘switch-statements’ like every other language was that nobody would
remember how to spell ‘hctiws’.
}
p {-
I also want to allow functions to take named arguments, and to
completely remove the need for newline-escaping, allowing for readable
multiline pipelines.
}
p {-
In ‘@a
href="https://blog.plover.com/Unix/whitespace.html"
{=
The shell and its crappy handling of whitespace
}’, the author Mark Dominus offers an example piece of shell script to
rename @code{-*.jpeg} files to @code{-*.jpg}. Take note of all the
quoting that is required in his example in order to properly handle
filenames with spaces, as well as the seemingly useless ‘do’ keyword:
}
figure {
pre .sh {= m4_fmt_code(suf.bash.gsp) }
}
p {-
Here is how I envision such a solution in Andy:
}
figure {
pre .sh {= m4_fmt_code(suf.an.gsp) }
}
p {-
Notice the complete lack of quotes in the Andy solution, because it
lacks the retardation of automatic word-expansion. The syntax is also
minimal, fast to type, and visually out of the way. C-style braces work
well here; they’re only one character each. We can also completely
remove the ‘do’ keyword, and potentially even make the binding of an
iteration variable optional — I’m not sure about that yet though.
}
p {-
I’m currently in the process of actively developing Andy, and I will
probably make another post on here soon detailing the current progress
and features of the shell. I hope to soon be able to use Andy as my
primary shell; both for scripting and interactive use.
}
}
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