POSIX revision 1.4 1 1.4 tls # $NetBSD: POSIX,v 1.4 1997/01/09 20:21:25 tls Exp $
2 1.3 cgd # from: @(#)POSIX 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/6/93
3 1.1 alm
4 1.1 alm Comments on the IEEE P1003.2 Draft 12
5 1.1 alm Part 2: Shell and Utilities
6 1.1 alm Section 4.55: sed - Stream editor
7 1.1 alm
8 1.1 alm Diomidis Spinellis <dds (a] doc.ic.ac.uk>
9 1.1 alm Keith Bostic <bostic (a] cs.berkeley.edu>
10 1.1 alm
11 1.1 alm In the following paragraphs, "wrong" usually means "inconsistent with
12 1.1 alm historic practice", as most of the following comments refer to
13 1.1 alm undocumented inconsistencies between the historical versions of sed and
14 1.1 alm the POSIX 1003.2 standard. All the comments are notes taken while
15 1.1 alm implementing a POSIX-compatible version of sed, and should not be
16 1.1 alm interpreted as official opinions or criticism towards the POSIX committee.
17 1.1 alm All uses of "POSIX" refer to section 4.55, Draft 12 of POSIX 1003.2.
18 1.1 alm
19 1.1 alm 1. 32V and BSD derived implementations of sed strip the text
20 1.1 alm arguments of the a, c and i commands of their initial blanks,
21 1.1 alm i.e.
22 1.1 alm
23 1.1 alm #!/bin/sed -f
24 1.1 alm a\
25 1.1 alm foo\
26 1.1 alm \ indent\
27 1.1 alm bar
28 1.1 alm
29 1.1 alm produces:
30 1.1 alm
31 1.1 alm foo
32 1.1 alm indent
33 1.1 alm bar
34 1.1 alm
35 1.1 alm POSIX does not specify this behavior as the System V versions of
36 1.1 alm sed do not do this stripping. The argument against stripping is
37 1.1 alm that it is difficult to write sed scripts that have leading blanks
38 1.1 alm if they are stripped. The argument for stripping is that it is
39 1.1 alm difficult to write readable sed scripts unless indentation is allowed
40 1.1 alm and ignored, and leading whitespace is obtainable by entering a
41 1.1 alm backslash in front of it. This implementation follows the BSD
42 1.1 alm historic practice.
43 1.1 alm
44 1.1 alm 2. Historical versions of sed required that the w flag be the last
45 1.1 alm flag to an s command as it takes an additional argument. This
46 1.1 alm is obvious, but not specified in POSIX.
47 1.1 alm
48 1.1 alm 3. Historical versions of sed required that whitespace follow a w
49 1.1 alm flag to an s command. This is not specified in POSIX. This
50 1.1 alm implementation permits whitespace but does not require it.
51 1.1 alm
52 1.1 alm 4. Historical versions of sed permitted any number of whitespace
53 1.1 alm characters to follow the w command. This is not specified in
54 1.1 alm POSIX. This implementation permits whitespace but does not
55 1.1 alm require it.
56 1.1 alm
57 1.1 alm 5. The rule for the l command differs from historic practice. Table
58 1.1 alm 2-15 includes the various ANSI C escape sequences, including \\
59 1.1 alm for backslash. Some historical versions of sed displayed two
60 1.1 alm digit octal numbers, too, not three as specified by POSIX. POSIX
61 1.1 alm is a cleanup, and is followed by this implementation.
62 1.1 alm
63 1.1 alm 6. The POSIX specification for ! does not specify that for a single
64 1.1 alm command the command must not contain an address specification
65 1.1 alm whereas the command list can contain address specifications. The
66 1.1 alm specification for ! implies that "3!/hello/p" works, and it never
67 1.1 alm has, historically. Note,
68 1.1 alm
69 1.1 alm 3!{
70 1.1 alm /hello/p
71 1.1 alm }
72 1.1 alm
73 1.1 alm does work.
74 1.1 alm
75 1.1 alm 7. POSIX does not specify what happens with consecutive ! commands
76 1.1 alm (e.g. /foo/!!!p). Historic implementations allow any number of
77 1.1 alm !'s without changing the behaviour. (It seems logical that each
78 1.1 alm one might reverse the behaviour.) This implementation follows
79 1.1 alm historic practice.
80 1.1 alm
81 1.1 alm 8. Historic versions of sed permitted commands to be separated
82 1.1 alm by semi-colons, e.g. 'sed -ne '1p;2p;3q' printed the first
83 1.1 alm three lines of a file. This is not specified by POSIX.
84 1.1 alm Note, the ; command separator is not allowed for the commands
85 1.1 alm a, c, i, w, r, :, b, t, # and at the end of a w flag in the s
86 1.1 alm command. This implementation follows historic practice and
87 1.1 alm implements the ; separator.
88 1.1 alm
89 1.1 alm 9. Historic versions of sed terminated the script if EOF was reached
90 1.1 alm during the execution of the 'n' command, i.e.:
91 1.1 alm
92 1.1 alm sed -e '
93 1.1 alm n
94 1.1 alm i\
95 1.1 alm hello
96 1.1 alm ' </dev/null
97 1.1 alm
98 1.1 alm did not produce any output. POSIX does not specify this behavior.
99 1.1 alm This implementation follows historic practice.
100 1.1 alm
101 1.2 cgd 10. Deleted.
102 1.1 alm
103 1.1 alm 11. Historical implementations do not output the change text of a c
104 1.1 alm command in the case of an address range whose first line number
105 1.1 alm is greater than the second (e.g. 3,1). POSIX requires that the
106 1.1 alm text be output. Since the historic behavior doesn't seem to have
107 1.1 alm any particular purpose, this implementation follows the POSIX
108 1.1 alm behavior.
109 1.1 alm
110 1.1 alm 12. POSIX does not specify whether address ranges are checked and
111 1.1 alm reset if a command is not executed due to a jump. The following
112 1.1 alm program will behave in different ways depending on whether the
113 1.1 alm 'c' command is triggered at the third line, i.e. will the text
114 1.1 alm be output even though line 3 of the input will never logically
115 1.1 alm encounter that command.
116 1.1 alm
117 1.1 alm 2,4b
118 1.1 alm 1,3c\
119 1.1 alm text
120 1.1 alm
121 1.1 alm Historic implementations, and this implementation, do not output
122 1.1 alm the text in the above example. The general rule, therefore,
123 1.1 alm is that a range whose second address is never matched extends to
124 1.1 alm the end of the input.
125 1.1 alm
126 1.1 alm 13. Historical implementations allow an output suppressing #n at the
127 1.1 alm beginning of -e arguments as well as in a script file. POSIX
128 1.1 alm does not specify this. This implementation follows historical
129 1.1 alm practice.
130 1.1 alm
131 1.1 alm 14. POSIX does not explicitly specify how sed behaves if no script is
132 1.1 alm specified. Since the sed Synopsis permits this form of the command,
133 1.1 alm and the language in the Description section states that the input
134 1.1 alm is output, it seems reasonable that it behave like the cat(1)
135 1.1 alm command. Historic sed implementations behave differently for "ls |
136 1.1 alm sed", where they produce no output, and "ls | sed -e#", where they
137 1.1 alm behave like cat. This implementation behaves like cat in both cases.
138 1.1 alm
139 1.1 alm 15. The POSIX requirement to open all w files at the beginning makes
140 1.1 alm sed behave nonintuitively when the w commands are preceded by
141 1.1 alm addresses or are within conditional blocks. This implementation
142 1.1 alm follows historic practice and POSIX, by default, and provides the
143 1.1 alm -a option which opens the files only when they are needed.
144 1.1 alm
145 1.1 alm 16. POSIX does not specify how escape sequences other than \n and \D
146 1.1 alm (where D is the delimiter character) are to be treated. This is
147 1.1 alm reasonable, however, it also doesn't state that the backslash is
148 1.1 alm to be discarded from the output regardless. A strict reading of
149 1.1 alm POSIX would be that "echo xyz | sed s/./\a" would display "\ayz".
150 1.1 alm As historic sed implementations always discarded the backslash,
151 1.1 alm this implementation does as well.
152 1.1 alm
153 1.1 alm 17. POSIX specifies that an address can be "empty". This implies
154 1.1 alm that constructs like ",d" or "1,d" and ",5d" are allowed. This
155 1.1 alm is not true for historic implementations or this implementation
156 1.1 alm of sed.
157 1.1 alm
158 1.1 alm 18. The b t and : commands are documented in POSIX to ignore leading
159 1.1 alm white space, but no mention is made of trailing white space.
160 1.1 alm Historic implementations of sed assigned different locations to
161 1.1 alm the labels "x" and "x ". This is not useful, and leads to subtle
162 1.1 alm programming errors, but it is historic practice and changing it
163 1.1 alm could theoretically break working scripts. This implementation
164 1.1 alm follows historic practice.
165 1.1 alm
166 1.1 alm 19. Although POSIX specifies that reading from files that do not exist
167 1.1 alm from within the script must not terminate the script, it does not
168 1.1 alm specify what happens if a write command fails. Historic practice
169 1.1 alm is to fail immediately if the file cannot be opened or written.
170 1.1 alm This implementation follows historic practice.
171 1.1 alm
172 1.1 alm 20. Historic practice is that the \n construct can be used for either
173 1.1 alm string1 or string2 of the y command. This is not specified by
174 1.1 alm POSIX. This implementation follows historic practice.
175 1.1 alm
176 1.2 cgd 21. Deleted.
177 1.1 alm
178 1.1 alm 22. Historic implementations of sed ignore the RE delimiter characters
179 1.1 alm within character classes. This is not specified in POSIX. This
180 1.1 alm implementation follows historic practice.
181 1.1 alm
182 1.1 alm 23. Historic implementations handle empty RE's in a special way: the
183 1.1 alm empty RE is interpreted as if it were the last RE encountered,
184 1.1 alm whether in an address or elsewhere. POSIX does not document this
185 1.1 alm behavior. For example the command:
186 1.1 alm
187 1.1 alm sed -e /abc/s//XXX/
188 1.1 alm
189 1.1 alm substitutes XXX for the pattern abc. The semantics of "the last
190 1.1 alm RE" can be defined in two different ways:
191 1.1 alm
192 1.1 alm 1. The last RE encountered when compiling (lexical/static scope).
193 1.1 alm 2. The last RE encountered while running (dynamic scope).
194 1.1 alm
195 1.1 alm While many historical implementations fail on programs depending
196 1.1 alm on scope differences, the SunOS version exhibited dynamic scope
197 1.1 alm behaviour. This implementation does dynamic scoping, as this seems
198 1.1 alm the most useful and in order to remain consistent with historical
199 1.1 alm practice.
200