On 08/28/2016 03:20 PM, Gene Pavlovsky wrote: > Re-posting a reply I got from Henri (aka Houder) houder@xs4all.nl > His letter follows: > > Hi Gene, > > Reread your entry to the mailing list ... > >> Apparently the latest bash in Cygwin modified the read builtin to use >> Cygwin-specific shell option igncr to control ignoring \r characters >> in the input (still not clear if that ignores \r\n sequences, or \r >> followed by anything else will be also ignored). > If the igncr shell option (currently Cygwin-specific, but Chet says that he is amenable to reviewing it for upstream inclusion in 4.5 once 4.4 is released any day now) is enabled, then it eats ALL \r, regardless of context. In other words, it ignores all carriage returns, as per the name. >> I considered enabling the `igncr` option everywhere, by declaring a >> SHELLOPTS=igncr Windows environment variable, however immediately it >> created an issue with my two-line PS1 prompt, which contains \n. >> >> # PS1='\e[1;30m\D{%T}\e[m$(test \j -ne 0 && echo " >> \e[1;37mj:\j\e[m")${STY:+ \e[1;32m${STY%%.*}\e[m} \e[1;33m\w\e[m\n# ' >> 14:32:22 /usr/local/bin >> # set -o igncr >> bash: command substitution: line 1: syntax error near unexpected token `)' >> bash: command substitution: line 1: `test 0 -ne 0 && echo " j:0")' >> 14:32:24{STY:+ } /usr/local/bin >> # set +o igncr >> 14:32:26 /usr/local/bin >> # >> >> What's wrong with this? It works fine on a Linux box. >> I'm considering rolling back bash until I can figure this out. Eating \n is NOT supposed to happen, so it may be that some other bug is still present in the code. At least you have given me a test case, so I can try and reproduce it, and upload a version of bash that does not have the problem if I can find where the bug actually lives. But it seems like \n handling in PS1 is independent of any change in handing in the 'read' builtin. As evidence, I ran the following test using the older bash-4.3.42-4 build: $ bash-4.3.42-4 $ set -o igncr $ PS1='$(date)\n# ' bash: command substitution: line 1: syntax error near unexpected token ')' bash: command substitution: line 1: `date)' $ exit So you have uncovered a latent problem, unrelated to the recent igncr fixes, but which is indeed tied to the overall igncr patches, and which you had no reason to trip over until the igncr change to 'read' changed your desire to use igncr. -- Eric Blake eblake redhat com +1-919-301-3266 Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org