#! /bin/sh # Test whether \s matches SP and UTF-8 multi-byte white space characters. # # Copyright (C) 2013-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc. # # Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, # are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright # notice and this notice are preserved. . "${srcdir=.}/init.sh"; path_prepend_ ../src require_en_utf8_locale_ LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 export LC_ALL # It would have been nice to be able to use all UTF8 characters # with the Unicode WSpace=Y character property, # https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitespace_character, but that # would currently cause distracting failures everywhere I've tried. # Instead, I've listed each with an indicator column, telling what # this test should do if the system's locale/tools produce the # wrong answer. # The values in that column: # X required on all systems (fail if \s or \S fail to work as expected) # x required on "modern enough" systems # O optional: \s or \S misbehavior elicits a warning, but never failure utf8_space_characters=$(sed 's/.*: *//;s/ */\\x/g' <<\EOF U+0009 Horizontal Tab: X 09 U+000A Line feed: O 0a U+000B Vertical Tab: X 0b U+000C Form feed: X 0c U+000D Carriage return: X 0d U+0020 SPACE: X 20 U+0085 Next line: O 85 U+00A0 NO-BREAK SPACE: O c2 a0 U+1680 OGHAM SPACE MARK: x e1 9a 80 U+2000 EN QUAD: x e2 80 80 U+2001 EM QUAD: x e2 80 81 U+2002 EN SPACE: x e2 80 82 U+2003 EM SPACE: x e2 80 83 U+2004 THREE-PER-EM SPACE: x e2 80 84 U+2005 FOUR-PER-EM SPACE: x e2 80 85 U+2006 SIX-PER-EM SPACE: x e2 80 86 U+2007 FIGURE SPACE: O e2 80 87 U+2008 PUNCTUATION SPACE: x e2 80 88 U+2009 THIN SPACE: x e2 80 89 U+200A HAIR SPACE: x e2 80 8a U+200B ZERO WIDTH SPACE: O e2 80 8b U+202F NARROW NO-BREAK SPACE: O e2 80 af U+205F MEDIUM MATHEMATICAL SPACE: x e2 81 9f U+3000 IDEOGRAPHIC SPACE: x e3 80 80 EOF ) fail=0 # On systems that are not "modern enough," simply warn when an "x"-marked # character is not classified as white space. Too many systems # have inadequate UTF-8 tables in this respect, and that lack should not # discourage/confuse those who consider whether to install grep. # As for what constitutes "modern enough", I've arbitrarily started # with "Fedora 20 or newer". Tested additions welcome. modern_enough=0 grep -iE 'fedora release [2-9][0-9]+\b' /etc/redhat-release >/dev/null 2>&1 \ && modern_enough=1 for i in $utf8_space_characters; do eval 'fail() { fail=1; }' m=ERROR case $i in X*) ;; x*) test $modern_enough = 1 || { eval 'fail() { :; }'; m=warning; } ;; O*) m=warning; eval 'fail() { :; }' ;; *) warn_ "unexpected prefix: $i"; exit 1 ;; esac # Strip the prefix byte. i=${i#?} hex_printf_ "$i" | grep -q '^\s$' \ || { warn_ " $m: \\s failed to match $i in the $LC_ALL locale"; fail; } hex_printf_ "$i" | returns_ 1 grep -q '\S' \ || { warn_ " $m: \\S mistakenly matched $i in the $LC_ALL locale"; fail; } done # This is a separate test, only nominally related to \s. # It is solely to get coverage of a code path (exercising dfa.c's # match_mb_charset function) that would have otherwise been untouched. # However, as of the change-set adding this new test, match_mb_charset # is unreachable via grep. printf '\0' | returns_ 1 grep -aE '^\s?$' > out 2>&1 || fail=1 compare /dev/null out Exit $fail