From: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> When a0a630192d (t/check-non-portable-shell: detect "FOO=bar shell_func", 2018-07-13) added the check for one-shot environment variable assignment for shell functions, the primary reason given for avoiding them was that, under some shells, the assignment outlives the invocation of the shell function, thus could potentially negatively impact subsequent commands in the same test, as well as subsequent tests. However, it has recently become apparent that this is not the only potential problem with one-shot assignments and shell functions. Another problem is that some shells do not actually export the variable to commands which the function invokes[1]. More significantly, however, the behavior of one-shot assignments with shell functions is not specified by POSIX[2]. Given this new understanding, the presented error message ("assignment extends beyond 'shell_func'") is too specific and potentially misleading. Address this by emitting a less specific error message. (Note that the wording "is not portable" is chosen over the more specific "behavior not specified by POSIX" for consistency with almost all other error message issued by this "lint" script.) [1]: https://lore.kernel.org/git/xmqqbk2p9lwi.fsf_-_@gitster.g/ [2]: https://lore.kernel.org/git/xmqq34o19jj1.fsf@gitster.g/ Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- t/check-non-portable-shell.pl | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/t/check-non-portable-shell.pl b/t/check-non-portable-shell.pl index b2b28c2ced..179efaa39d 100755 --- a/t/check-non-portable-shell.pl +++ b/t/check-non-portable-shell.pl @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ sub err { /\blocal\s+[A-Za-z0-9_]*=\$([A-Za-z0-9_{]|[(][^(])/ and err q(quote "$val" in 'local var=$val'); /^\s*([A-Z0-9_]+=(\w*|(["']).*?\3)\s+)+(\w+)/ and exists($func{$4}) and - err '"FOO=bar shell_func" assignment extends beyond "shell_func"'; + err '"FOO=bar shell_func" is not portable'; $line = ''; # this resets our $. for each file close ARGV if eof; -- 2.45.2