home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Shareware Overload Trio 2
/
Shareware Overload Trio Volume 2 (Chestnut CD-ROM).ISO
/
dir37
/
ms_sh23s.zip
/
README
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-08-26
|
7KB
|
170 lines
MS-DOS Shell Version 2.3 README September 1994
MS-DOS SHELL - Copyright (c) 1990,4 Data Logic Limited and Charles Forsyth
This code is based on (in part) the shell program written by Charles
Forsyth and is subject to the following copyright restrictions:
1. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted
provided that the above copyright notice is duplicated in the
source form and the copyright notice in file sh6.c is displayed
on entry to the program.
2. The sources (or parts thereof) or objects generated from the
sources (or parts of sources) cannot be sold under any circumstances.
$Header: /usr/users/istewart/shell/sh2.3/Release/RCS/ReadMe,v 2.3 1994/08/25 20:58:47 istewart Exp $
$Log: ReadMe,v $
Revision 2.3 1994/08/25 20:58:47 istewart
MS Shell 2.3 Release
Revision 2.2 1993/12/03 13:32:52 istewart
Release 2.2
Revision 2.1 1992/12/14 11:14:32 istewart
BETA 215 Fixes and 2.1 Release
Revision 2.0 1992/04/13 17:40:33 Ian_Stewartson
MS-Shell 2.0 Baseline release
________________________________________________________________________________
This is an implementation of the Unix Shell for MSDOS. As far as possible it
is compatible with the System V.4 program sh(1) with ksh(1) extension. The
following differences are noted:
1) Background or asynchronous commands are not supported under MSDOS. Some
support is provided under OS/2, but it is not as full as UNIX. You can
only run one command and not a pipeline in background.
2) Certain internal commands which have no equivalent MSDOS or OS/2 supported
functionality support (ulimit, time etc) are not provided.
3) Command hashing and accounting are not supported.
4) Some of the ksh functionality has not yet been implemented or made ksh
compatible (see Notes file).
5) The Shell uses all variables starting with a ~ (tilde) internally and will
not allow you to display them. I don't think this is a difference from
the user's view, just internally.
The Shell has been tested mainly under MSDOS 3.3, 4.01, 5.2, 6.0 and 6.2, OS/2
1.3, 2.0 and 2.1, and a prelimiary version can be built for Windows NT 3.1
(see notes files on this). It has exposed some shortcomings in the C6.0
compiler and MSDOS library. As such, using C5.1 and its library are prefered
when re-building the shell for MSDOS.
The following enhancements have been made for the MSDOS environment. These
enhancements are described in the appropriate section of the manual pages.
1) Under MSDOS (16-bit version), the Shell will swap itself out to one of
the following:
- Expanded memory
- Extended memory
- Disk (this is the slowest)
The swapping is controlled by the shell internal command swap. If
swapping is enabled, the shell only uses 3K of memory whilst a child
process is executing.
Note: Swapping to Extended memory is probably the most dangerous unless
you have an XMS memory manager available. The shell requires the
XMS manager to support the version 2 XMS specification.
2) Command line editing has been added for non VI or EMACS mode. A
configuration file (sh.ini) allows the Command Line editing keys to be
tailored to the users requirements.
3) The command line prompt can be programmed to display 'useful' information.
4) The shell uses Unix format file names (ie slashes and not backslashes) to
delimit directories. Some programs require certain environment variables
to be in MS-DOS format (using backslashes). The msdos or typeset -H
commands allows these variables to be marked so that they are set correctly
when the environment for a program is set up.
5) The format of the command line which the shell passes to a program is
configurable between normal, indirect files and environment variables
(see SH.1). A version of stdargv.c which supports the indirect file
format (and wildcards from a normal command line) is included.
6) Wild cards on drives (ie echo *:*.c will echo all the C files in the
current directories of each drive) are supported.
7) Full Interrupt 24 processing has been added.
8) Alternate command interpreters are supported in shell scripts a la
Unix V.4.
9) A number of OS/2 internal commands (start, detach) have been addded.
10) The Notes file describes the fixes and changes between Release 2.2 and
2.3
11) Significant parts of the shell have been re-written this release 2.1.
The following Bugs are known to exist in the Shell.
1) See Notes file.
2) I may have mis-interpreted the functionality of either the UNIX version
of sh or ksh (tell me about it).
The shell was built using Microsoft C 5.1 and MASM v5.1 in large model mode
for MSDOS and Microsoft C6.0 for OS/2 (16 bit) and WATCOM 9 for both 32-bit
versions (although EMX GCC 2.5 is supported for the 32 Bit version under
OS/2).
In addition, the version of open in your library must pass the O_NOINHERIT bit
on the MSDOS kernel. The Microsoft C v5.1 library (and possibly the v6.0) does
not pass this bit on to the MSDOS open System call. I fixed this using CodeView
to find where the library function masks off the bottom 2 bits. Extracted the
object from the library and patched mask from 0x03 to 0x83 in the object and
reload into the library. No Problem. The Patch.Lib document describes the
process in more detail.
You can do want you like with this software as long as you don't sell it or
remove the Copyright notices in the sources or object.
If you have any problems or want to let me know about any enhancements, I'd
love to hear about them. However, following this release, I will be leaving
Data Logic in the middle of September 94. I will not have an E-Mail address
at my new company, until I arrange a personal account in the New Year. I
expect to be in Europe for three months and will not arrange the personal
account until I return. You should be able to contact me by surface mail
at the address below, but don't expect a rapid response.
Ian Stewartson
OSI Group
Metropolis House
22 Percy Street
London W1P 9FF
United Kingdon.
Please don't contact Data Logic as it is unlikely have anyone there will
know anything about the shell.
Note:
Unix is a registered trademark of AT&T Bell Laboratories
Microsoft, MSDOS, MASM, MS Windows, Windows NT and CodeView are registered
trademarks of Microsoft Corporation
OS/2 is a registered trademark of Internation Business Machines Corporation
Acknowledgements:
This program is based on ideas, code or parts of code developed by:
David Korn and Steve Bourne (the original ideas)
Charles Forsyth (original source for the MINIX Shell program)
Erik Baalbergen (original source for the MINIX test program)
Paul Falstad (original source for the maths functions from GNU zsh program)
Simon J. Gerraty (the code for the new lexical analyser and the VI/EMACS
edit functions).
Ideas and fixes from lots of others.