Make LineEditor::get_line() responsible for printing the prompt. That way
we can re-prompt after clearing the screen on ^L.
This makes the Serenity Terminal feel a little bit more like home :^)
This makes waitpid() return when a child process is stopped via a signal.
Use this in Shell to catch stopped children and return control to the
command line. :^)
Fixes#298.
When resizing the terminal, we now clear the entire current line and reset
the shell's LineEditor input state. This makes it look and feel kinda the
same as xterm.
Fixes#286.
A glob has to be resolved against the directory corresponding to
the part of the path it is found in, not the current directory.
For example, in /usr/i*/AK/, the glob has to be resolved inside
/usr. Moreover, an argument can contain more than one glob, such
as /u*/*/?, in which case they have to be resolved recursively.
In case a glob matches nothing, the argument should be used as is.
After reading a bunch of POSIX specs, I've learned that a file descriptor
is the number that refers to a file description, not the description itself.
So this patch renames FileDescriptor to FileDescription, and Process now has
FileDescription* file_description(int fd).
This was unnecessarily confusing. When we build up a chain of commands
connected by pipes, we now store the file descriptors of each end of
these pipes as rewirings in a vector. The rewirings are then put into
effect by calls to dup2().
If I'm understanding the standard C library correctly, setenv() copies while
putenv() does not. That's really confusing and putenv() basically sucks.
To know which environment variables to free on replacement and which ones to
leave alone, we keep track of the ones malloced by setenv in a side table.
This patch also moves Shell to using setenv() instead of putenv().
Fixes#29.
Also run it across the whole tree to get everything using the One True Style.
We don't yet run this in an automated fashion as it's a little slow, but
there is a snippet to do so in makeall.sh.
This is in keeping with how putenv should function. It does mean that
the shell's export command now leaks, but that's not a difficult fix.
Contributes to #29.
Hook this up in Terminal so that the '\a' character generates a beep.
Finally emit an '\a' character in the shell line editing code when
backspacing at the start of the line.