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Last updated Jul '99 for pdksh-5.2.14.
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	(check ftp://ftp.cs.mun.ca:/pub/pdksh/ or
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	 http://www.cs.mun.ca/~michael/pdksh/ for new versions/patches)
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PD-ksh is a mostly complete AT&T ksh look-alike (see NOTES file for a list
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of things not supported).  Work is mostly finished to make it fully
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compatible with both POSIX and AT&T ksh (when the two don't conflict).
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Since pdksh is free and compiles and runs on most common unix systems, it
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is very useful in creating a consistent user interface across multiple
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machines.  For example, in the CS dept. of MUN, pdksh is installed on a
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variety of machines including Suns, HPs, DecStations, pcs running Linux,
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etc., and is the login shell of ~5200 users.
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PDksh is currently being maintained by Michael Rendell (michael@cs.mun.ca),
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who took over from Simon J. Gerraty (sjg@zen.void.oz.au) at the later's
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suggestion.  A short list of things that have been added since the last
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public pdksh release (4.9) are auto-configuration, arrays, $(( .. )),
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[[ .. ]], variable attributes, co-processes, extended file globbing,
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many POSIXisms and many bug fixes.  See the NEWS and ChangeLog files for
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other features added and bugs fixed.
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Note that pdksh is provided AS IS, with NO WARRANTY, either expressed or
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implied.  Also note that although the bulk of the code in pdksh is in the
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public domain, some files are copyrighten (but freely distributable) and
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subject to certain conditions (eg, don't remove copyright, document any
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changes, etc.).  See the LEGAL file for details.
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If you would like to be notified via email of new releases as they become
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available, send mail to pdksh-request@cs.mun.ca with subject
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"send release notifications" (or "don't send release notifications" to stop
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them).
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Files of interest:
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	NEWS		short list of noticeable changes in various versions.
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	CONTRIBUTORS	short history of pdksh, people who contributed, etc.
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	NOTES		lists of known bugs in pdksh, at&t ksh, and posix.
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	PROJECTS	list of things that need to be done in pdksh.
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	BUG-REPORTS	list of recently reported bugs that have been fixed
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			and all reported bugs that haven't been fixed.
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	LEGAL		A file detailing legal issues concerning pdksh.
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	etc/*		system profile and kshrc files used by Simon J. Gerraty.
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	misc/README*	readme files from previous versions.
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	misc/Changes*	changelog files from previous versions.
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	os2/*		files and info needed to compile ksh on os/2.
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	tests/*		pdksh's regression testing system.
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Compiling/Installing:
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  The quick way:
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	./configure
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	make
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	make check	# optional
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	make install	# will install /usr/local/bin/ksh
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			#  and /usr/local/man/man1/ksh.1
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	[add path-to-installed-pdksh to /etc/shells]
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  The more detailed description:
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    * run "configure --help | your-favorite-pager" and look at the
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      --enable-* and --disable-* options (they are at the end).
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      Select any you options you wish to enable/disable
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      (most people can skip this step).
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    * run configure: this is a GNU autoconf configure script that will generate
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      a Makefile and a config.h.  Some of the useful options to configure are:
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	--prefix=PATH	    indicates the directory tree under which the binary
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			    and man page are installed (ie, PATH/bin/ksh and
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			    PATH/man/man1/ksh.1).
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			    The default prefix is /usr/local.
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	--exec-prefix=PATH  overrides --prefix for machine dependent files
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			    (ie, the ksh binary)
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	--program-prefix=pd install binary and man page as pdksh and pdksh.1
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	--verbose	    show what is being defined as script runs
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      Note that you don't have to build in the source directory.  To build
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      in a separate directory, do something like:
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		$ mkdir objs
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		$ cd objs
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		$ ../configure --verbose
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		....
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		$ make
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      See the file INSTALL for a more complete description of configure and its
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      generic options (ksh specific options are documented in the --help output)
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    * miscellaneous configuration notes:
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	* If your make doesn't understand VPATH, you must compile in
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	  the source directory.
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	* On DecStations, MIPS and SONY machines with older C compilers that
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	  can't handle "int * volatile x", you should use gcc or turn off
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	  optimization.  The problem is configure defines volatile to nothing
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	  since the compiler can't handle it properly, but the compiler does
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	  optimizations that the volatile is meant to prevent.   So.  Use gcc.
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	* On MIPS RISC/os 5.0 systems, sysv environment, <signal.h> is
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	  messed up - it defines sigset_t, but not any of the rest of
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	  the posix signals (the sigset_t typedef should be in the
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	  ifdef KERNEL section) - also doesn't have waitpid() or wait3().
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	  Things compile up ok in the svr4 environment, but it dumps core
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	  in __start (perhaps our system doesn't have the full svr4
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	  environ?).  Try compiling in the bsd43 environ instead (still not
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	  perfect - see BUG-REPORTS file), using gcc - cc has problems with
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	  macro expansions in the argument of a macro (in this case, the ARGS
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	  macro).
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	* On TitanOS (Stardent/Titan), use `CC="cc -43" configure ...'.
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	  When configure finishes, edit config.h, undef HAVE_DIRENT_H and
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	  define HAVE_SYS_DIR_H (the dirent.h header file is broken).
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	* On Linux (red hat distribution), check that /dev/tty has mode 0666
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	  (not mode 0644).  If it has the wrong permissions, ksh will print
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	  warnings about not being able to do job control.
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	* on NeXT machines (3.2, probably other releases), the siglist.out file
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	  won't be generated correctly if you try to use the system's compiler
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	  (it has a broken cc -E and strange header files).  There are two
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	  ways to make it work:
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	    1) if you have gcc, use it (for everything).  Alternatively,
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	       force configure to use it for CPP, i.e., use
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		  CPP="gcc -E" configure ...
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	    2) Force configure to use some extra CPPFLAGS, using
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		  CPPFLAGS="XXX" configure ...
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	       where XXX is obtained from running "cc -v YYY.c" on some
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	       C file.  Look at the options passed to cpp (there are lots
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	       of them...) and replace the XXX above with them.
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	  Make sure you do a "make distclean" (or "rm config.cache") if
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	  you re-run configure with a difference CPP or CPPFLAGS.
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	  Also note that if you are building multiple arch binaries, you
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	  will have to specify both CC and CPP.
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    * run make: everything should compile and link without problems.
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    * run make check: this fires up a perl script that checks for some known
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      and some fixed bugs.  The script prints pass/fail for tests it expected
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      to pass/fail, and PASS/FAIL for tests it expected to fail/pass.  If you
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      don't have perl, or if your perl doesn't work (most common problem is
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      the .ph header files are missing or broken), you can run
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	  ENV= path-to-pdksh-executable misc/Bugs path-to-pdksh-executable
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      instead.
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    * run make install: this installs ksh (in /usr/local/bin/ksh by default,
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      or where ever you told configure to put things).
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    * add path-to-installed-pdksh to /etc/shells if it's not already there.
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      This is only needed if you intend to use pdksh as a login shell (things
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      like ftp won't allow users to connect in if their shell isn't in this
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      file).
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The following is a list of machines that pdksh is reported to work on:
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    -/PC Linux 1.x,2.x
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    -/PC NetBSD 0.9a
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    -/PC BSDI 1.1
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    -/PC FreeBSD 2.x, 3.x
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    -/PC OpenBSD
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    -/PC Interactive/Sunsoft 3.0.1 and 4.1 (note that problems have been
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	    reported with isc3.2 - see the BUG-REPORTS file)
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    -/PC OS/2
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    Commadore/Amiga NetBSD 1.0
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    Dec/alpha OSF/1 v2.x, v3.x
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    Dec/alpha NetBSD 1.1B
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    Dec/pmax Ultrix 4.2
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    Dec/vax Ultrix 2.2 (not tested recently :-))
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    Dec/vax 4.3BSD+NFS (MtXinu) (not tested recently :-))
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    HP/pa HP-UX 9.01
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    IBM/RS/6000 AIX 3.2.5
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    MIPS/m120 RISC/os 5.0 (bsd43 environ)
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    NeXT NeXTStep 3.2
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    SGI/IRIX 6.2
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    Sun/sun4 SunOS 4.1.3, 4.1.4
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    Sun/sun4 Solaris 2.x
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    Sun/sun386i SunOS 4.0.2
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    Sun/sun3 SunOS 4.0.3, 4.1.1_U1
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    Stardent/TitanOS 4.2
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Newer versions of pdksh may be available from
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	ftp://ftp.cs.mun.ca:/pub/pdksh/
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you may want to check for one if you run into any problems, as the problem may
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already be fixed (you can get new release notifications automatically - see
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above).  The file pdksh-unstable-XXX.tar.gz has the very latest version which
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may not compile (it is generated automatically when changes are detected
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in the main source repository) - it is for those who want to follow
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changes as they are made.
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You can send bug reports, fixes, and enhancements to pdksh@cs.mun.ca (please
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don't assume I will see bug reports that are posted to some newsgroup or
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mailing list - I probably won't).
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If you are reporting a bug (with or without a fix), please include
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	* the version of pdksh you are using (see version.c, or, if you are
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	  running pdksh, try echo $KSH_VERSION),
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	* the machine, operating system and compiler you are using,
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	* and a description of how to repeat the bug (a small shell
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	  script that demonstrates the bug is best).
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as well as the following, if relevant (if you aren't sure, include them)
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	* what options you are using (both configure options and set -o options)
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	* the output of configure, with the verbose flag
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	  (eg, make distclean; ./configure --verbose)
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	* the contents of config.log (this is created by the configure script)
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	* if you are using gcc (the GNU C compiler), which version it is.
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BTW, THE MOST FREQUENTLY REPORTED BUG IS
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	echo hi | read a; echo $a	# Does not print hi
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I'm aware of this and there is no need to report it.
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Michael Rendell, michael@cs.mun.ca