xref: /freebsd/contrib/nvi/ex/ex.c (revision e0c4386e)
1 /*-
2  * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993, 1994
3  *	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
4  * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996
5  *	Keith Bostic.  All rights reserved.
6  *
7  * See the LICENSE file for redistribution information.
8  */
9 
10 #include "config.h"
11 
12 #include <sys/types.h>
13 #include <sys/queue.h>
14 #include <sys/stat.h>
15 
16 #include <bitstring.h>
17 #include <ctype.h>
18 #include <errno.h>
19 #include <fcntl.h>
20 #include <limits.h>
21 #include <stdio.h>
22 #include <stdlib.h>
23 #include <string.h>
24 #include <unistd.h>
25 
26 #include "../common/common.h"
27 #include "../vi/vi.h"
28 
29 #if defined(DEBUG) && defined(COMLOG)
30 static void	ex_comlog(SCR *, EXCMD *);
31 #endif
32 static EXCMDLIST const *
33 		ex_comm_search(CHAR_T *, size_t);
34 static int	ex_discard(SCR *);
35 static int	ex_line(SCR *, EXCMD *, MARK *, int *, int *);
36 static int	ex_load(SCR *);
37 static void	ex_unknown(SCR *, CHAR_T *, size_t);
38 
39 /*
40  * ex --
41  *	Main ex loop.
42  *
43  * PUBLIC: int ex(SCR **);
44  */
45 int
46 ex(SCR **spp)
47 {
48 	EX_PRIVATE *exp;
49 	GS *gp;
50 	MSGS *mp;
51 	SCR *sp;
52 	TEXT *tp;
53 	u_int32_t flags;
54 
55 	sp = *spp;
56 	gp = sp->gp;
57 	exp = EXP(sp);
58 
59 	/* Start the ex screen. */
60 	if (ex_init(sp))
61 		return (1);
62 
63 	/* Flush any saved messages. */
64 	while ((mp = SLIST_FIRST(gp->msgq)) != NULL) {
65 		gp->scr_msg(sp, mp->mtype, mp->buf, mp->len);
66 		SLIST_REMOVE_HEAD(gp->msgq, q);
67 		free(mp->buf);
68 		free(mp);
69 	}
70 
71 	/* If reading from a file, errors should have name and line info. */
72 	if (F_ISSET(gp, G_SCRIPTED)) {
73 		gp->excmd.if_lno = 1;
74 		gp->excmd.if_name = "script";
75 	}
76 
77 	/*
78 	 * !!!
79 	 * Initialize the text flags.  The beautify edit option historically
80 	 * applied to ex command input read from a file.  In addition, the
81 	 * first time a ^H was discarded from the input, there was a message,
82 	 * "^H discarded", that was displayed.  We don't bother.
83 	 */
84 	LF_INIT(TXT_BACKSLASH | TXT_CNTRLD | TXT_CR);
85 	for (;; ++gp->excmd.if_lno) {
86 		/* Display status line and flush. */
87 		if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_STATUS)) {
88 			if (!F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_SILENT))
89 				msgq_status(sp, sp->lno, 0);
90 			F_CLR(sp, SC_STATUS);
91 		}
92 		(void)ex_fflush(sp);
93 
94 		/* Set the flags the user can reset. */
95 		if (O_ISSET(sp, O_BEAUTIFY))
96 			LF_SET(TXT_BEAUTIFY);
97 		if (O_ISSET(sp, O_PROMPT))
98 			LF_SET(TXT_PROMPT);
99 
100 		/* Clear any current interrupts, and get a command. */
101 		CLR_INTERRUPT(sp);
102 		if (ex_txt(sp, sp->tiq, ':', flags))
103 			return (1);
104 		if (INTERRUPTED(sp)) {
105 			(void)ex_puts(sp, "\n");
106 			(void)ex_fflush(sp);
107 			continue;
108 		}
109 
110 		/* Initialize the command structure. */
111 		CLEAR_EX_PARSER(&gp->excmd);
112 
113 		/*
114 		 * If the user entered a single carriage return, send
115 		 * ex_cmd() a separator -- it discards single newlines.
116 		 */
117 		tp = TAILQ_FIRST(sp->tiq);
118 		if (tp->len == 0) {
119 			gp->excmd.cp = L(" ");	/* __TK__ why not |? */
120 			gp->excmd.clen = 1;
121 		} else {
122 			gp->excmd.cp = tp->lb;
123 			gp->excmd.clen = tp->len;
124 		}
125 		F_INIT(&gp->excmd, E_NRSEP);
126 
127 		if (ex_cmd(sp) && F_ISSET(gp, G_SCRIPTED))
128 			return (1);
129 
130 		if (INTERRUPTED(sp)) {
131 			CLR_INTERRUPT(sp);
132 			msgq(sp, M_ERR, "170|Interrupted");
133 		}
134 
135 		/*
136 		 * If the last command caused a restart, or switched screens
137 		 * or into vi, return.
138 		 */
139 		if (F_ISSET(gp, G_SRESTART) || F_ISSET(sp, SC_SSWITCH | SC_VI)) {
140 			*spp = sp;
141 			break;
142 		}
143 
144 		/* If the last command switched files, we don't care. */
145 		F_CLR(sp, SC_FSWITCH);
146 
147 		/*
148 		 * If we're exiting this screen, move to the next one.  By
149 		 * definition, this means returning into vi, so return to the
150 		 * main editor loop.  The ordering is careful, don't discard
151 		 * the contents of sp until the end.
152 		 */
153 		if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EXIT | SC_EXIT_FORCE)) {
154 			if (file_end(sp, NULL, F_ISSET(sp, SC_EXIT_FORCE)))
155 				return (1);
156 			*spp = screen_next(sp);
157 			if (*spp) {
158 				F_CLR(*spp, SC_SCR_VI);
159 				F_SET(*spp, SC_SCR_EX);
160 			}
161 			return (screen_end(sp));
162 		}
163 	}
164 	return (0);
165 }
166 
167 /*
168  * ex_cmd --
169  *	The guts of the ex parser: parse and execute a string containing
170  *	ex commands.
171  *
172  * !!!
173  * This code MODIFIES the string that gets passed in, to delete quoting
174  * characters, etc.  The string cannot be readonly/text space, nor should
175  * you expect to use it again after ex_cmd() returns.
176  *
177  * !!!
178  * For the fun of it, if you want to see if a vi clone got the ex argument
179  * parsing right, try:
180  *
181  *	echo 'foo|bar' > file1; echo 'foo/bar' > file2;
182  *	vi
183  *	:edit +1|s/|/PIPE/|w file1| e file2|1 | s/\//SLASH/|wq
184  *
185  * or:	vi
186  *	:set|file|append|set|file
187  *
188  * For extra credit, try them in a startup .exrc file.
189  *
190  * PUBLIC: int ex_cmd(SCR *);
191  */
192 int
193 ex_cmd(SCR *sp)
194 {
195 	enum nresult nret;
196 	EX_PRIVATE *exp;
197 	EXCMD *ecp;
198 	GS *gp;
199 	MARK cur;
200 	recno_t lno;
201 	size_t arg1_len, discard, len;
202 	u_int32_t flags;
203 	long ltmp;
204 	int at_found, gv_found;
205 	int cnt, delim, isaddr, namelen;
206 	int newscreen, notempty, tmp, vi_address;
207 	CHAR_T *arg1, *s, *p, *t;
208 	CHAR_T ch = '\0';
209 	CHAR_T *n;
210 	char *np;
211 
212 	gp = sp->gp;
213 	exp = EXP(sp);
214 
215 	/*
216 	 * We always start running the command on the top of the stack.
217 	 * This means that *everything* must be resolved when we leave
218 	 * this function for any reason.
219 	 */
220 loop:	ecp = SLIST_FIRST(gp->ecq);
221 
222 	/* If we're reading a command from a file, set up error information. */
223 	if (ecp->if_name != NULL) {
224 		gp->if_lno = ecp->if_lno;
225 		gp->if_name = ecp->if_name;
226 	}
227 
228 	/*
229 	 * If a move to the end of the file is scheduled for this command,
230 	 * do it now.
231 	 */
232 	if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_MOVETOEND)) {
233 		if (db_last(sp, &sp->lno))
234 			goto rfail;
235 		sp->cno = 0;
236 		F_CLR(ecp, E_MOVETOEND);
237 	}
238 
239 	/* If we found a newline, increment the count now. */
240 	if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_NEWLINE)) {
241 		++gp->if_lno;
242 		++ecp->if_lno;
243 		F_CLR(ecp, E_NEWLINE);
244 	}
245 
246 	/* (Re)initialize the EXCMD structure, preserving some flags. */
247 	CLEAR_EX_CMD(ecp);
248 
249 	/* Initialize the argument structures. */
250 	if (argv_init(sp, ecp))
251 		goto err;
252 
253 	/* Initialize +cmd, saved command information. */
254 	arg1 = NULL;
255 	ecp->save_cmdlen = 0;
256 
257 	/* Skip <blank>s, empty lines.  */
258 	for (notempty = 0; ecp->clen > 0; ++ecp->cp, --ecp->clen)
259 		if ((ch = *ecp->cp) == '\n') {
260 			++gp->if_lno;
261 			++ecp->if_lno;
262 		} else if (cmdskip(ch))
263 			notempty = 1;
264 		else
265 			break;
266 
267 	/*
268 	 * !!!
269 	 * Permit extra colons at the start of the line.  Historically,
270 	 * ex/vi allowed a single extra one.  It's simpler not to count.
271 	 * The stripping is done here because, historically, any command
272 	 * could have preceding colons, e.g. ":g/pattern/:p" worked.
273 	 */
274 	if (ecp->clen != 0 && ch == ':') {
275 		notempty = 1;
276 		while (--ecp->clen > 0 && (ch = *++ecp->cp) == ':');
277 	}
278 
279 	/*
280 	 * Command lines that start with a double-quote are comments.
281 	 *
282 	 * !!!
283 	 * Historically, there was no escape or delimiter for a comment, e.g.
284 	 * :"foo|set was a single comment and nothing was output.  Since nvi
285 	 * permits users to escape <newline> characters into command lines, we
286 	 * have to check for that case.
287 	 */
288 	if (ecp->clen != 0 && ch == '"') {
289 		while (--ecp->clen > 0 && *++ecp->cp != '\n');
290 		if (*ecp->cp == '\n') {
291 			F_SET(ecp, E_NEWLINE);
292 			++ecp->cp;
293 			--ecp->clen;
294 		}
295 		goto loop;
296 	}
297 
298 	/* Skip whitespace. */
299 	for (; ecp->clen > 0; ++ecp->cp, --ecp->clen) {
300 		ch = *ecp->cp;
301 		if (!cmdskip(ch))
302 			break;
303 	}
304 
305 	/*
306 	 * The last point at which an empty line can mean do nothing.
307 	 *
308 	 * !!!
309 	 * Historically, in ex mode, lines containing only <blank> characters
310 	 * were the same as a single <carriage-return>, i.e. a default command.
311 	 * In vi mode, they were ignored.  In .exrc files this was a serious
312 	 * annoyance, as vi kept trying to treat them as print commands.  We
313 	 * ignore backward compatibility in this case, discarding lines that
314 	 * contain only <blank> characters from .exrc files.
315 	 *
316 	 * !!!
317 	 * This is where you end up when you're done a command, i.e. clen has
318 	 * gone to zero.  Continue if there are more commands to run.
319 	 */
320 	if (ecp->clen == 0 &&
321 	    (!notempty || F_ISSET(sp, SC_VI) || F_ISSET(ecp, E_BLIGNORE))) {
322 		if (ex_load(sp))
323 			goto rfail;
324 		ecp = SLIST_FIRST(gp->ecq);
325 		if (ecp->clen == 0)
326 			goto rsuccess;
327 		goto loop;
328 	}
329 
330 	/*
331 	 * Check to see if this is a command for which we may want to move
332 	 * the cursor back up to the previous line.  (The command :1<CR>
333 	 * wants a <newline> separator, but the command :<CR> wants to erase
334 	 * the command line.)  If the line is empty except for <blank>s,
335 	 * <carriage-return> or <eof>, we'll probably want to move up.  I
336 	 * don't think there's any way to get <blank> characters *after* the
337 	 * command character, but this is the ex parser, and I've been wrong
338 	 * before.
339 	 */
340 	if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_NRSEP) &&
341 	    ecp->clen != 0 && (ecp->clen != 1 || ecp->cp[0] != '\004'))
342 		F_CLR(ecp, E_NRSEP);
343 
344 	/* Parse command addresses. */
345 	if (ex_range(sp, ecp, &tmp))
346 		goto rfail;
347 	if (tmp)
348 		goto err;
349 
350 	/*
351 	 * Skip <blank>s and any more colons (the command :3,5:print
352 	 * worked, historically).
353 	 */
354 	for (; ecp->clen > 0; ++ecp->cp, --ecp->clen) {
355 		ch = *ecp->cp;
356 		if (!cmdskip(ch) && ch != ':')
357 			break;
358 	}
359 
360 	/*
361 	 * If no command, ex does the last specified of p, l, or #, and vi
362 	 * moves to the line.  Otherwise, determine the length of the command
363 	 * name by looking for the first non-alphabetic character.  (There
364 	 * are a few non-alphabetic characters in command names, but they're
365 	 * all single character commands.)  This isn't a great test, because
366 	 * it means that, for the command ":e +cut.c file", we'll report that
367 	 * the command "cut" wasn't known.  However, it makes ":e+35 file" work
368 	 * correctly.
369 	 *
370 	 * !!!
371 	 * Historically, lines with multiple adjacent (or <blank> separated)
372 	 * command separators were very strange.  For example, the command
373 	 * |||<carriage-return>, when the cursor was on line 1, displayed
374 	 * lines 2, 3 and 5 of the file.  In addition, the command "   |  "
375 	 * would only display the line after the next line, instead of the
376 	 * next two lines.  No ideas why.  It worked reasonably when executed
377 	 * from vi mode, and displayed lines 2, 3, and 4, so we do a default
378 	 * command for each separator.
379 	 */
380 #define	SINGLE_CHAR_COMMANDS	L("\004!#&*<=>@~")
381 	newscreen = 0;
382 	if (ecp->clen != 0 && ecp->cp[0] != '|' && ecp->cp[0] != '\n') {
383 		if (STRCHR(SINGLE_CHAR_COMMANDS, *ecp->cp)) {
384 			p = ecp->cp;
385 			++ecp->cp;
386 			--ecp->clen;
387 			namelen = 1;
388 		} else {
389 			for (p = ecp->cp;
390 			    ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp)
391 				if (!isazAZ(*ecp->cp))
392 					break;
393 			if ((namelen = ecp->cp - p) == 0) {
394 				msgq(sp, M_ERR, "080|Unknown command name");
395 				goto err;
396 			}
397 		}
398 
399 		/*
400 		 * !!!
401 		 * Historic vi permitted flags to immediately follow any
402 		 * subset of the 'delete' command, but then did not permit
403 		 * further arguments (flag, buffer, count).  Make it work.
404 		 * Permit further arguments for the few shreds of dignity
405 		 * it offers.
406 		 *
407 		 * Adding commands that start with 'd', and match "delete"
408 		 * up to a l, p, +, - or # character can break this code.
409 		 *
410 		 * !!!
411 		 * Capital letters beginning the command names ex, edit,
412 		 * next, previous, tag and visual (in vi mode) indicate the
413 		 * command should happen in a new screen.
414 		 */
415 		switch (p[0]) {
416 		case 'd':
417 			for (s = p,
418 			    n = cmds[C_DELETE].name; *s == *n; ++s, ++n);
419 			if (s[0] == 'l' || s[0] == 'p' || s[0] == '+' ||
420 			    s[0] == '-' || s[0] == '^' || s[0] == '#') {
421 				len = (ecp->cp - p) - (s - p);
422 				ecp->cp -= len;
423 				ecp->clen += len;
424 				ecp->rcmd = cmds[C_DELETE];
425 				ecp->rcmd.syntax = "1bca1";
426 				ecp->cmd = &ecp->rcmd;
427 				goto skip_srch;
428 			}
429 			break;
430 		case 'E': case 'F': case 'N': case 'P': case 'T': case 'V':
431 			newscreen = 1;
432 			p[0] = tolower(p[0]);
433 			break;
434 		}
435 
436 		/*
437 		 * Search the table for the command.
438 		 *
439 		 * !!!
440 		 * Historic vi permitted the mark to immediately follow the
441 		 * 'k' in the 'k' command.  Make it work.
442 		 *
443 		 * !!!
444 		 * Historic vi permitted any flag to follow the s command, e.g.
445 		 * "s/e/E/|s|sgc3p" was legal.  Make the command "sgc" work.
446 		 * Since the following characters all have to be flags, i.e.
447 		 * alphabetics, we can let the s command routine return errors
448 		 * if it was some illegal command string.  This code will break
449 		 * if an "sg" or similar command is ever added.  The substitute
450 		 * code doesn't care if it's a "cgr" flag or a "#lp" flag that
451 		 * follows the 's', but we limit the choices here to "cgr" so
452 		 * that we get unknown command messages for wrong combinations.
453 		 */
454 		if ((ecp->cmd = ex_comm_search(p, namelen)) == NULL)
455 			switch (p[0]) {
456 			case 'k':
457 				if (namelen == 2) {
458 					ecp->cp -= namelen - 1;
459 					ecp->clen += namelen - 1;
460 					ecp->cmd = &cmds[C_K];
461 					break;
462 				}
463 				goto unknown;
464 			case 's':
465 				for (s = p + 1, cnt = namelen; --cnt; ++s)
466 					if (s[0] != 'c' &&
467 					    s[0] != 'g' && s[0] != 'r')
468 						break;
469 				if (cnt == 0) {
470 					ecp->cp -= namelen - 1;
471 					ecp->clen += namelen - 1;
472 					ecp->rcmd = cmds[C_SUBSTITUTE];
473 					ecp->rcmd.fn = ex_subagain;
474 					ecp->cmd = &ecp->rcmd;
475 					break;
476 				}
477 				/* FALLTHROUGH */
478 			default:
479 unknown:			if (newscreen)
480 					p[0] = toupper(p[0]);
481 				ex_unknown(sp, p, namelen);
482 				goto err;
483 			}
484 
485 		/*
486 		 * The visual command has a different syntax when called
487 		 * from ex than when called from a vi colon command.  FMH.
488 		 * Make the change now, before we test for the newscreen
489 		 * semantic, so that we're testing the right one.
490 		 */
491 skip_srch:	if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_VISUAL_EX] && F_ISSET(sp, SC_VI))
492 			ecp->cmd = &cmds[C_VISUAL_VI];
493 
494 		/*
495 		 * !!!
496 		 * Historic vi permitted a capital 'P' at the beginning of
497 		 * any command that started with 'p'.  Probably wanted the
498 		 * P[rint] command for backward compatibility, and the code
499 		 * just made Preserve and Put work by accident.  Nvi uses
500 		 * Previous to mean previous-in-a-new-screen, so be careful.
501 		 */
502 		if (newscreen && !F_ISSET(ecp->cmd, E_NEWSCREEN) &&
503 		    (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_PRINT] ||
504 		    ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_PRESERVE]))
505 			newscreen = 0;
506 
507 		/* Test for a newscreen associated with this command. */
508 		if (newscreen && !F_ISSET(ecp->cmd, E_NEWSCREEN))
509 			goto unknown;
510 
511 		/* Secure means no shell access. */
512 		if (F_ISSET(ecp->cmd, E_SECURE) && O_ISSET(sp, O_SECURE)) {
513 			ex_wemsg(sp, ecp->cmd->name, EXM_SECURE);
514 			goto err;
515 		}
516 
517 		/*
518 		 * Multiple < and > characters; another "feature".  Note,
519 		 * The string passed to the underlying function may not be
520 		 * nul terminated in this case.
521 		 */
522 		if ((ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SHIFTL] && *p == '<') ||
523 		    (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SHIFTR] && *p == '>')) {
524 			for (ch = *p;
525 			    ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp)
526 				if (*ecp->cp != ch)
527 					break;
528 			if (argv_exp0(sp, ecp, p, ecp->cp - p))
529 				goto err;
530 		}
531 
532 		/* Set the format style flags for the next command. */
533 		if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_HASH])
534 			exp->fdef = E_C_HASH;
535 		else if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_LIST])
536 			exp->fdef = E_C_LIST;
537 		else if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_PRINT])
538 			exp->fdef = E_C_PRINT;
539 		F_CLR(ecp, E_USELASTCMD);
540 	} else {
541 		/* Print is the default command. */
542 		ecp->cmd = &cmds[C_PRINT];
543 
544 		/* Set the saved format flags. */
545 		F_SET(ecp, exp->fdef);
546 
547 		/*
548 		 * !!!
549 		 * If no address was specified, and it's not a global command,
550 		 * we up the address by one.  (I have no idea why globals are
551 		 * exempted, but it's (ahem) historic practice.)
552 		 */
553 		if (ecp->addrcnt == 0 && !F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL)) {
554 			ecp->addrcnt = 1;
555 			ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno + 1;
556 			ecp->addr1.cno = sp->cno;
557 		}
558 
559 		F_SET(ecp, E_USELASTCMD);
560 	}
561 
562 	/*
563 	 * !!!
564 	 * Historically, the number option applied to both ex and vi.  One
565 	 * strangeness was that ex didn't switch display formats until a
566 	 * command was entered, e.g. <CR>'s after the set didn't change to
567 	 * the new format, but :1p would.
568 	 */
569 	if (O_ISSET(sp, O_NUMBER)) {
570 		F_SET(ecp, E_OPTNUM);
571 		FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_HASH);
572 	} else
573 		F_CLR(ecp, E_OPTNUM);
574 
575 	/* Check for ex mode legality. */
576 	if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX) && (F_ISSET(ecp->cmd, E_VIONLY) || newscreen)) {
577 		msgq_wstr(sp, M_ERR, ecp->cmd->name,
578 		    "082|%s: command not available in ex mode");
579 		goto err;
580 	}
581 
582 	/* Add standard command flags. */
583 	F_SET(ecp, ecp->cmd->flags);
584 	if (!newscreen)
585 		F_CLR(ecp, E_NEWSCREEN);
586 
587 	/*
588 	 * There are three normal termination cases for an ex command.  They
589 	 * are the end of the string (ecp->clen), or unescaped (by <literal
590 	 * next> characters) <newline> or '|' characters.  As we're now past
591 	 * possible addresses, we can determine how long the command is, so we
592 	 * don't have to look for all the possible terminations.  Naturally,
593 	 * there are some exciting special cases:
594 	 *
595 	 * 1: The bang, global, v and the filter versions of the read and
596 	 *    write commands are delimited by <newline>s (they can contain
597 	 *    shell pipes).
598 	 * 2: The ex, edit, next and visual in vi mode commands all take ex
599 	 *    commands as their first arguments.
600 	 * 3: The s command takes an RE as its first argument, and wants it
601 	 *    to be specially delimited.
602 	 *
603 	 * Historically, '|' characters in the first argument of the ex, edit,
604 	 * next, vi visual, and s commands didn't delimit the command.  And,
605 	 * in the filter cases for read and write, and the bang, global and v
606 	 * commands, they did not delimit the command at all.
607 	 *
608 	 * For example, the following commands were legal:
609 	 *
610 	 *	:edit +25|s/abc/ABC/ file.c
611 	 *	:s/|/PIPE/
612 	 *	:read !spell % | columnate
613 	 *	:global/pattern/p|l
614 	 *
615 	 * It's not quite as simple as it sounds, however.  The command:
616 	 *
617 	 *	:s/a/b/|s/c/d|set
618 	 *
619 	 * was also legal, i.e. the historic ex parser (using the word loosely,
620 	 * since "parser" implies some regularity of syntax) delimited the RE's
621 	 * based on its delimiter and not anything so irretrievably vulgar as a
622 	 * command syntax.
623 	 *
624 	 * Anyhow, the following code makes this all work.  First, for the
625 	 * special cases we move past their special argument(s).  Then, we
626 	 * do normal command processing on whatever is left.  Barf-O-Rama.
627 	 */
628 	discard = 0;		/* Characters discarded from the command. */
629 	arg1_len = 0;
630 	ecp->save_cmd = ecp->cp;
631 	if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_EDIT] || ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_EX] ||
632 	    ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_NEXT] || ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_VISUAL_VI] ||
633 	    ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_VSPLIT]) {
634 		/*
635 		 * Move to the next non-whitespace character.  A '!'
636 		 * immediately following the command is eaten as a
637 		 * force flag.
638 		 */
639 		if (ecp->clen > 0 && *ecp->cp == '!') {
640 			++ecp->cp;
641 			--ecp->clen;
642 			FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_FORCE);
643 
644 			/* Reset, don't reparse. */
645 			ecp->save_cmd = ecp->cp;
646 		}
647 		for (; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp)
648 			if (!cmdskip(*ecp->cp))
649 				break;
650 		/*
651 		 * QUOTING NOTE:
652 		 *
653 		 * The historic implementation ignored all escape characters
654 		 * so there was no way to put a space or newline into the +cmd
655 		 * field.  We do a simplistic job of fixing it by moving to the
656 		 * first whitespace character that isn't escaped.  The escaping
657 		 * characters are stripped as no longer useful.
658 		 */
659 		if (ecp->clen > 0 && *ecp->cp == '+') {
660 			++ecp->cp;
661 			--ecp->clen;
662 			for (arg1 = p = ecp->cp;
663 			    ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) {
664 				ch = *ecp->cp;
665 				if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, ecp, ch) &&
666 				    ecp->clen > 1) {
667 					++discard;
668 					--ecp->clen;
669 					ch = *++ecp->cp;
670 				} else if (cmdskip(ch))
671 					break;
672 				*p++ = ch;
673 			}
674 			arg1_len = ecp->cp - arg1;
675 
676 			/* Reset, so the first argument isn't reparsed. */
677 			ecp->save_cmd = ecp->cp;
678 		}
679 	} else if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_BANG] ||
680 	    ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_GLOBAL] || ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_V]) {
681 		/*
682 		 * QUOTING NOTE:
683 		 *
684 		 * We use backslashes to escape <newline> characters, although
685 		 * this wasn't historic practice for the bang command.  It was
686 		 * for the global and v commands, and it's common usage when
687 		 * doing text insert during the command.  Escaping characters
688 		 * are stripped as no longer useful.
689 		 */
690 		for (p = ecp->cp; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) {
691 			ch = *ecp->cp;
692 			if (ch == '\\' && ecp->clen > 1 && ecp->cp[1] == '\n') {
693 				++discard;
694 				--ecp->clen;
695 				ch = *++ecp->cp;
696 
697 				++gp->if_lno;
698 				++ecp->if_lno;
699 			} else if (ch == '\n')
700 				break;
701 			*p++ = ch;
702 		}
703 	} else if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_READ] || ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_WRITE]) {
704 		/*
705 		 * For write commands, if the next character is a <blank>, and
706 		 * the next non-blank character is a '!', it's a filter command
707 		 * and we want to eat everything up to the <newline>.  For read
708 		 * commands, if the next non-blank character is a '!', it's a
709 		 * filter command and we want to eat everything up to the next
710 		 * <newline>.  Otherwise, we're done.
711 		 */
712 		for (tmp = 0; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) {
713 			ch = *ecp->cp;
714 			if (cmdskip(ch))
715 				tmp = 1;
716 			else
717 				break;
718 		}
719 		if (ecp->clen > 0 && ch == '!' &&
720 		    (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_READ] || tmp))
721 			for (; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp)
722 				if (ecp->cp[0] == '\n')
723 					break;
724 	} else if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SUBSTITUTE]) {
725 		/*
726 		 * Move to the next non-whitespace character, we'll use it as
727 		 * the delimiter.  If the character isn't an alphanumeric or
728 		 * a '|', it's the delimiter, so parse it.  Otherwise, we're
729 		 * into something like ":s g", so use the special s command.
730 		 */
731 		for (; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp)
732 			if (!cmdskip(ecp->cp[0]))
733 				break;
734 
735 		if (is09azAZ(ecp->cp[0]) || ecp->cp[0] == '|') {
736 			ecp->rcmd = cmds[C_SUBSTITUTE];
737 			ecp->rcmd.fn = ex_subagain;
738 			ecp->cmd = &ecp->rcmd;
739 		} else if (ecp->clen > 0) {
740 			/*
741 			 * QUOTING NOTE:
742 			 *
743 			 * Backslashes quote delimiter characters for RE's.
744 			 * The backslashes are NOT removed since they'll be
745 			 * used by the RE code.  Move to the third delimiter
746 			 * that's not escaped (or the end of the command).
747 			 */
748 			delim = *ecp->cp;
749 			++ecp->cp;
750 			--ecp->clen;
751 			for (cnt = 2; ecp->clen > 0 &&
752 			    cnt != 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp)
753 				if (ecp->cp[0] == '\\' &&
754 				    ecp->clen > 1) {
755 					++ecp->cp;
756 					--ecp->clen;
757 				} else if (ecp->cp[0] == delim)
758 					--cnt;
759 		}
760 	}
761 
762 	/*
763 	 * Use normal quoting and termination rules to find the end of this
764 	 * command.
765 	 *
766 	 * QUOTING NOTE:
767 	 *
768 	 * Historically, vi permitted ^V's to escape <newline>'s in the .exrc
769 	 * file.  It was almost certainly a bug, but that's what bug-for-bug
770 	 * compatibility means, Grasshopper.  Also, ^V's escape the command
771 	 * delimiters.  Literal next quote characters in front of the newlines,
772 	 * '|' characters or literal next characters are stripped as they're
773 	 * no longer useful.
774 	 */
775 	vi_address = ecp->clen != 0 && ecp->cp[0] != '\n';
776 	for (p = ecp->cp; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) {
777 		ch = ecp->cp[0];
778 		if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, ecp, ch) && ecp->clen > 1) {
779 			CHAR_T tmp = ecp->cp[1];
780 			if (tmp == '\n' || tmp == '|') {
781 				if (tmp == '\n') {
782 					++gp->if_lno;
783 					++ecp->if_lno;
784 				}
785 				++discard;
786 				--ecp->clen;
787 				++ecp->cp;
788 				ch = tmp;
789 			}
790 		} else if (ch == '\n' || ch == '|') {
791 			if (ch == '\n')
792 				F_SET(ecp, E_NEWLINE);
793 			--ecp->clen;
794 			break;
795 		}
796 		*p++ = ch;
797 	}
798 
799 	/*
800 	 * Save off the next command information, go back to the
801 	 * original start of the command.
802 	 */
803 	p = ecp->cp + 1;
804 	ecp->cp = ecp->save_cmd;
805 	ecp->save_cmd = p;
806 	ecp->save_cmdlen = ecp->clen;
807 	ecp->clen = ((ecp->save_cmd - ecp->cp) - 1) - discard;
808 
809 	/*
810 	 * QUOTING NOTE:
811 	 *
812 	 * The "set tags" command historically used a backslash, not the
813 	 * user's literal next character, to escape whitespace.  Handle
814 	 * it here instead of complicating the argv_exp3() code.  Note,
815 	 * this isn't a particularly complex trap, and if backslashes were
816 	 * legal in set commands, this would have to be much more complicated.
817 	 */
818 	if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SET]) {
819 		for (p = ecp->cp, len = ecp->clen; len > 0; --len, ++p)
820 			if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, ecp, *p) && len > 1) {
821 				--len;
822 				++p;
823 			} else if (*p == '\\')
824 				*p = CH_LITERAL;
825 	}
826 
827 	/*
828 	 * Set the default addresses.  It's an error to specify an address for
829 	 * a command that doesn't take them.  If two addresses are specified
830 	 * for a command that only takes one, lose the first one.  Two special
831 	 * cases here, some commands take 0 or 2 addresses.  For most of them
832 	 * (the E_ADDR2_ALL flag), 0 defaults to the entire file.  For one
833 	 * (the `!' command, the E_ADDR2_NONE flag), 0 defaults to no lines.
834 	 *
835 	 * Also, if the file is empty, some commands want to use an address of
836 	 * 0, i.e. the entire file is 0 to 0, and the default first address is
837 	 * 0.  Otherwise, an entire file is 1 to N and the default line is 1.
838 	 * Note, we also add the E_ADDR_ZERO flag to the command flags, for the
839 	 * case where the 0 address is only valid if it's a default address.
840 	 *
841 	 * Also, set a flag if we set the default addresses.  Some commands
842 	 * (ex: z) care if the user specified an address or if we just used
843 	 * the current cursor.
844 	 */
845 	switch (F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR1 | E_ADDR2 | E_ADDR2_ALL | E_ADDR2_NONE)) {
846 	case E_ADDR1:				/* One address: */
847 		switch (ecp->addrcnt) {
848 		case 0:				/* Default cursor/empty file. */
849 			ecp->addrcnt = 1;
850 			F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_DEF);
851 			if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERODEF)) {
852 				if (db_last(sp, &lno))
853 					goto err;
854 				if (lno == 0) {
855 					ecp->addr1.lno = 0;
856 					F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERO);
857 				} else
858 					ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno;
859 			} else
860 				ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno;
861 			ecp->addr1.cno = sp->cno;
862 			break;
863 		case 1:
864 			break;
865 		case 2:				/* Lose the first address. */
866 			ecp->addrcnt = 1;
867 			ecp->addr1 = ecp->addr2;
868 		}
869 		break;
870 	case E_ADDR2_NONE:			/* Zero/two addresses: */
871 		if (ecp->addrcnt == 0)		/* Default to nothing. */
872 			break;
873 		goto two_addr;
874 	case E_ADDR2_ALL:			/* Zero/two addresses: */
875 		if (ecp->addrcnt == 0) {	/* Default entire/empty file. */
876 			F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_DEF);
877 			ecp->addrcnt = 2;
878 			if (sp->ep == NULL)
879 				ecp->addr2.lno = 0;
880 			else if (db_last(sp, &ecp->addr2.lno))
881 				goto err;
882 			if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERODEF) &&
883 			    ecp->addr2.lno == 0) {
884 				ecp->addr1.lno = 0;
885 				F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERO);
886 			} else
887 				ecp->addr1.lno = 1;
888 			ecp->addr1.cno = ecp->addr2.cno = 0;
889 			F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR2_ALL);
890 			break;
891 		}
892 		/* FALLTHROUGH */
893 	case E_ADDR2:				/* Two addresses: */
894 two_addr:	switch (ecp->addrcnt) {
895 		case 0:				/* Default cursor/empty file. */
896 			ecp->addrcnt = 2;
897 			F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_DEF);
898 			if (sp->lno == 1 &&
899 			    F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERODEF)) {
900 				if (db_last(sp, &lno))
901 					goto err;
902 				if (lno == 0) {
903 					ecp->addr1.lno = ecp->addr2.lno = 0;
904 					F_SET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERO);
905 				} else
906 					ecp->addr1.lno =
907 					    ecp->addr2.lno = sp->lno;
908 			} else
909 				ecp->addr1.lno = ecp->addr2.lno = sp->lno;
910 			ecp->addr1.cno = ecp->addr2.cno = sp->cno;
911 			break;
912 		case 1:				/* Default to first address. */
913 			ecp->addrcnt = 2;
914 			ecp->addr2 = ecp->addr1;
915 			break;
916 		case 2:
917 			break;
918 		}
919 		break;
920 	default:
921 		if (ecp->addrcnt)		/* Error. */
922 			goto usage;
923 	}
924 
925 	/*
926 	 * !!!
927 	 * The ^D scroll command historically scrolled the value of the scroll
928 	 * option or to EOF.  It was an error if the cursor was already at EOF.
929 	 * (Leading addresses were permitted, but were then ignored.)
930 	 */
931 	if (ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SCROLL]) {
932 		ecp->addrcnt = 2;
933 		ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno + 1;
934 		ecp->addr2.lno = sp->lno + O_VAL(sp, O_SCROLL);
935 		ecp->addr1.cno = ecp->addr2.cno = sp->cno;
936 		if (db_last(sp, &lno))
937 			goto err;
938 		if (lno != 0 && lno > sp->lno && ecp->addr2.lno > lno)
939 			ecp->addr2.lno = lno;
940 	}
941 
942 	ecp->flagoff = 0;
943 	for (np = ecp->cmd->syntax; *np != '\0'; ++np) {
944 		/*
945 		 * The force flag is sensitive to leading whitespace, i.e.
946 		 * "next !" is different from "next!".  Handle it before
947 		 * skipping leading <blank>s.
948 		 */
949 		if (*np == '!') {
950 			if (ecp->clen > 0 && *ecp->cp == '!') {
951 				++ecp->cp;
952 				--ecp->clen;
953 				FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_FORCE);
954 			}
955 			continue;
956 		}
957 
958 		/* Skip leading <blank>s. */
959 		for (; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp)
960 			if (!cmdskip(*ecp->cp))
961 				break;
962 		if (ecp->clen == 0)
963 			break;
964 
965 		switch (*np) {
966 		case '1':				/* +, -, #, l, p */
967 			/*
968 			 * !!!
969 			 * Historically, some flags were ignored depending
970 			 * on where they occurred in the command line.  For
971 			 * example, in the command, ":3+++p--#", historic vi
972 			 * acted on the '#' flag, but ignored the '-' flags.
973 			 * It's unambiguous what the flags mean, so we just
974 			 * handle them regardless of the stupidity of their
975 			 * location.
976 			 */
977 			for (; ecp->clen; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp)
978 				switch (*ecp->cp) {
979 				case '+':
980 					++ecp->flagoff;
981 					break;
982 				case '-':
983 				case '^':
984 					--ecp->flagoff;
985 					break;
986 				case '#':
987 					F_CLR(ecp, E_OPTNUM);
988 					FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_HASH);
989 					exp->fdef |= E_C_HASH;
990 					break;
991 				case 'l':
992 					FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_LIST);
993 					exp->fdef |= E_C_LIST;
994 					break;
995 				case 'p':
996 					FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_PRINT);
997 					exp->fdef |= E_C_PRINT;
998 					break;
999 				default:
1000 					goto end_case1;
1001 				}
1002 end_case1:		break;
1003 		case '2':				/* -, ., +, ^ */
1004 		case '3':				/* -, ., +, ^, = */
1005 			for (; ecp->clen; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp)
1006 				switch (*ecp->cp) {
1007 				case '-':
1008 					FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_DASH);
1009 					break;
1010 				case '.':
1011 					FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_DOT);
1012 					break;
1013 				case '+':
1014 					FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_PLUS);
1015 					break;
1016 				case '^':
1017 					FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_CARAT);
1018 					break;
1019 				case '=':
1020 					if (*np == '3') {
1021 						FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_EQUAL);
1022 						break;
1023 					}
1024 					/* FALLTHROUGH */
1025 				default:
1026 					goto end_case23;
1027 				}
1028 end_case23:		break;
1029 		case 'b':				/* buffer */
1030 			/*
1031 			 * !!!
1032 			 * Historically, "d #" was a delete with a flag, not a
1033 			 * delete into the '#' buffer.  If the current command
1034 			 * permits a flag, don't use one as a buffer.  However,
1035 			 * the 'l' and 'p' flags were legal buffer names in the
1036 			 * historic ex, and were used as buffers, not flags.
1037 			 */
1038 			if ((ecp->cp[0] == '+' || ecp->cp[0] == '-' ||
1039 			    ecp->cp[0] == '^' || ecp->cp[0] == '#') &&
1040 			    strchr(np, '1') != NULL)
1041 				break;
1042 			/*
1043 			 * !!!
1044 			 * Digits can't be buffer names in ex commands, or the
1045 			 * command "d2" would be a delete into buffer '2', and
1046 			 * not a two-line deletion.
1047 			 */
1048 			if (!ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[0])) {
1049 				ecp->buffer = *ecp->cp;
1050 				++ecp->cp;
1051 				--ecp->clen;
1052 				FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_BUFFER);
1053 			}
1054 			break;
1055 		case 'c':				/* count [01+a] */
1056 			++np;
1057 			/* Validate any signed value. */
1058 			if (!ISDIGIT(*ecp->cp) && (*np != '+' ||
1059 			    (*ecp->cp != '+' && *ecp->cp != '-')))
1060 				break;
1061 			/* If a signed value, set appropriate flags. */
1062 			if (*ecp->cp == '-')
1063 				FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_COUNT_NEG);
1064 			else if (*ecp->cp == '+')
1065 				FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_COUNT_POS);
1066 			if ((nret =
1067 			    nget_slong(&ltmp, ecp->cp, &t, 10)) != NUM_OK) {
1068 				ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, nret);
1069 				goto err;
1070 			}
1071 			if (ltmp == 0 && *np != '0') {
1072 				msgq(sp, M_ERR, "083|Count may not be zero");
1073 				goto err;
1074 			}
1075 			ecp->clen -= (t - ecp->cp);
1076 			ecp->cp = t;
1077 
1078 			/*
1079 			 * Counts as address offsets occur in commands taking
1080 			 * two addresses.  Historic vi practice was to use
1081 			 * the count as an offset from the *second* address.
1082 			 *
1083 			 * Set a count flag; some underlying commands (see
1084 			 * join) do different things with counts than with
1085 			 * line addresses.
1086 			 */
1087 			if (*np == 'a') {
1088 				ecp->addr1 = ecp->addr2;
1089 				ecp->addr2.lno = ecp->addr1.lno + ltmp - 1;
1090 			} else
1091 				ecp->count = ltmp;
1092 			FL_SET(ecp->iflags, E_C_COUNT);
1093 			break;
1094 		case 'f':				/* file */
1095 			if (argv_exp2(sp, ecp, ecp->cp, ecp->clen))
1096 				goto err;
1097 			goto arg_cnt_chk;
1098 		case 'l':				/* line */
1099 			/*
1100 			 * Get a line specification.
1101 			 *
1102 			 * If the line was a search expression, we may have
1103 			 * changed state during the call, and we're now
1104 			 * searching the file.  Push ourselves onto the state
1105 			 * stack.
1106 			 */
1107 			if (ex_line(sp, ecp, &cur, &isaddr, &tmp))
1108 				goto rfail;
1109 			if (tmp)
1110 				goto err;
1111 
1112 			/* Line specifications are always required. */
1113 			if (!isaddr) {
1114 				msgq_wstr(sp, M_ERR, ecp->cp,
1115 				     "084|%s: bad line specification");
1116 				goto err;
1117 			}
1118 			/*
1119 			 * The target line should exist for these commands,
1120 			 * but 0 is legal for them as well.
1121 			 */
1122 			if (cur.lno != 0 && !db_exist(sp, cur.lno)) {
1123 				ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EOF, NUM_OK);
1124 				goto err;
1125 			}
1126 			ecp->lineno = cur.lno;
1127 			break;
1128 		case 'S':				/* string, file exp. */
1129 			if (ecp->clen != 0) {
1130 				if (argv_exp1(sp, ecp, ecp->cp,
1131 				    ecp->clen, ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_BANG]))
1132 					goto err;
1133 				goto addr_verify;
1134 			}
1135 			/* FALLTHROUGH */
1136 		case 's':				/* string */
1137 			if (argv_exp0(sp, ecp, ecp->cp, ecp->clen))
1138 				goto err;
1139 			goto addr_verify;
1140 		case 'W':				/* word string */
1141 			/*
1142 			 * QUOTING NOTE:
1143 			 *
1144 			 * Literal next characters escape the following
1145 			 * character.  Quoting characters are stripped here
1146 			 * since they are no longer useful.
1147 			 *
1148 			 * First there was the word.
1149 			 */
1150 			for (p = t = ecp->cp;
1151 			    ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) {
1152 				ch = *ecp->cp;
1153 				if (IS_ESCAPE(sp,
1154 				    ecp, ch) && ecp->clen > 1) {
1155 					--ecp->clen;
1156 					*p++ = *++ecp->cp;
1157 				} else if (cmdskip(ch)) {
1158 					++ecp->cp;
1159 					--ecp->clen;
1160 					break;
1161 				} else
1162 					*p++ = ch;
1163 			}
1164 			if (argv_exp0(sp, ecp, t, p - t))
1165 				goto err;
1166 
1167 			/* Delete intervening whitespace. */
1168 			for (; ecp->clen > 0;
1169 			    --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp) {
1170 				ch = *ecp->cp;
1171 				if (!cmdskip(ch))
1172 					break;
1173 			}
1174 			if (ecp->clen == 0)
1175 				goto usage;
1176 
1177 			/* Followed by the string. */
1178 			for (p = t = ecp->cp; ecp->clen > 0;
1179 			    --ecp->clen, ++ecp->cp, ++p) {
1180 				ch = *ecp->cp;
1181 				if (IS_ESCAPE(sp,
1182 				    ecp, ch) && ecp->clen > 1) {
1183 					--ecp->clen;
1184 					*p = *++ecp->cp;
1185 				} else
1186 					*p = ch;
1187 			}
1188 			if (argv_exp0(sp, ecp, t, p - t))
1189 				goto err;
1190 			goto addr_verify;
1191 		case 'w':				/* word */
1192 			if (argv_exp3(sp, ecp, ecp->cp, ecp->clen))
1193 				goto err;
1194 arg_cnt_chk:		if (*++np != 'N') {		/* N */
1195 				/*
1196 				 * If a number is specified, must either be
1197 				 * 0 or that number, if optional, and that
1198 				 * number, if required.
1199 				 */
1200 				tmp = *np - '0';
1201 				if ((*++np != 'o' || exp->argsoff != 0) &&
1202 				    exp->argsoff != tmp)
1203 					goto usage;
1204 			}
1205 			goto addr_verify;
1206 		default: {
1207 			size_t nlen;
1208 			char *nstr;
1209 
1210 			INT2CHAR(sp, ecp->cmd->name, STRLEN(ecp->cmd->name) + 1,
1211 			    nstr, nlen);
1212 			msgq(sp, M_ERR,
1213 			    "085|Internal syntax table error (%s: %s)",
1214 			    nstr, KEY_NAME(sp, *np));
1215 		}
1216 		}
1217 	}
1218 
1219 	/* Skip trailing whitespace. */
1220 	for (; ecp->clen > 0; --ecp->clen) {
1221 		ch = *ecp->cp++;
1222 		if (!cmdskip(ch))
1223 			break;
1224 	}
1225 
1226 	/*
1227 	 * There shouldn't be anything left, and no more required fields,
1228 	 * i.e neither 'l' or 'r' in the syntax string.
1229 	 */
1230 	if (ecp->clen != 0 || strpbrk(np, "lr")) {
1231 usage:		msgq(sp, M_ERR, "086|Usage: %s", ecp->cmd->usage);
1232 		goto err;
1233 	}
1234 
1235 	/*
1236 	 * Verify that the addresses are legal.  Check the addresses here,
1237 	 * because this is a place where all ex addresses pass through.
1238 	 * (They don't all pass through ex_line(), for instance.)  We're
1239 	 * assuming that any non-existent line doesn't exist because it's
1240 	 * past the end-of-file.  That's a pretty good guess.
1241 	 *
1242 	 * If it's a "default vi command", an address of zero is okay.
1243 	 */
1244 addr_verify:
1245 	switch (ecp->addrcnt) {
1246 	case 2:
1247 		/*
1248 		 * Historic ex/vi permitted commands with counts to go past
1249 		 * EOF.  So, for example, if the file only had 5 lines, the
1250 		 * ex command "1,6>" would fail, but the command ">300"
1251 		 * would succeed.  Since we don't want to have to make all
1252 		 * of the underlying commands handle random line numbers,
1253 		 * fix it here.
1254 		 */
1255 		if (ecp->addr2.lno == 0) {
1256 			if (!F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERO) &&
1257 			    (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX) ||
1258 			    !F_ISSET(ecp, E_USELASTCMD))) {
1259 				ex_badaddr(sp, ecp->cmd, A_ZERO, NUM_OK);
1260 				goto err;
1261 			}
1262 		} else if (!db_exist(sp, ecp->addr2.lno)) {
1263 			if (FL_ISSET(ecp->iflags, E_C_COUNT)) {
1264 				if (db_last(sp, &lno))
1265 					goto err;
1266 				ecp->addr2.lno = lno;
1267 			} else {
1268 				ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EOF, NUM_OK);
1269 				goto err;
1270 			}
1271 		}
1272 		/* FALLTHROUGH */
1273 	case 1:
1274 		if (ecp->addr1.lno == 0) {
1275 			if (!F_ISSET(ecp, E_ADDR_ZERO) &&
1276 			    (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX) ||
1277 			    !F_ISSET(ecp, E_USELASTCMD))) {
1278 				ex_badaddr(sp, ecp->cmd, A_ZERO, NUM_OK);
1279 				goto err;
1280 			}
1281 		} else if (!db_exist(sp, ecp->addr1.lno)) {
1282 			ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EOF, NUM_OK);
1283 			goto err;
1284 		}
1285 		break;
1286 	}
1287 
1288 	/*
1289 	 * If doing a default command and there's nothing left on the line,
1290 	 * vi just moves to the line.  For example, ":3" and ":'a,'b" just
1291 	 * move to line 3 and line 'b, respectively, but ":3|" prints line 3.
1292 	 *
1293 	 * !!!
1294 	 * In addition, IF THE LINE CHANGES, move to the first nonblank of
1295 	 * the line.
1296 	 *
1297 	 * !!!
1298 	 * This is done before the absolute mark gets set; historically,
1299 	 * "/a/,/b/" did NOT set vi's absolute mark, but "/a/,/b/d" did.
1300 	 */
1301 	if ((F_ISSET(sp, SC_VI) || F_ISSET(ecp, E_NOPRDEF)) &&
1302 	    F_ISSET(ecp, E_USELASTCMD) && vi_address == 0) {
1303 		switch (ecp->addrcnt) {
1304 		case 2:
1305 			if (sp->lno !=
1306 			    (ecp->addr2.lno ? ecp->addr2.lno : 1)) {
1307 				sp->lno =
1308 				    ecp->addr2.lno ? ecp->addr2.lno : 1;
1309 				sp->cno = 0;
1310 				(void)nonblank(sp, sp->lno, &sp->cno);
1311 			}
1312 			break;
1313 		case 1:
1314 			if (sp->lno !=
1315 			    (ecp->addr1.lno ? ecp->addr1.lno : 1)) {
1316 				sp->lno =
1317 				    ecp->addr1.lno ? ecp->addr1.lno : 1;
1318 				sp->cno = 0;
1319 				(void)nonblank(sp, sp->lno, &sp->cno);
1320 			}
1321 			break;
1322 		}
1323 		ecp->cp = ecp->save_cmd;
1324 		ecp->clen = ecp->save_cmdlen;
1325 		goto loop;
1326 	}
1327 
1328 	/*
1329 	 * Set the absolute mark -- we have to set it for vi here, in case
1330 	 * it's a compound command, e.g. ":5p|6" should set the absolute
1331 	 * mark for vi.
1332 	 */
1333 	if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_ABSMARK)) {
1334 		cur.lno = sp->lno;
1335 		cur.cno = sp->cno;
1336 		F_CLR(ecp, E_ABSMARK);
1337 		if (mark_set(sp, ABSMARK1, &cur, 1))
1338 			goto err;
1339 	}
1340 
1341 #if defined(DEBUG) && defined(COMLOG)
1342 	ex_comlog(sp, ecp);
1343 #endif
1344 	/* Increment the command count if not called from vi. */
1345 	if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX))
1346 		++sp->ccnt;
1347 
1348 	/*
1349 	 * If file state available, and not doing a global command,
1350 	 * log the start of an action.
1351 	 */
1352 	if (sp->ep != NULL && !F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL))
1353 		(void)log_cursor(sp);
1354 
1355 	/*
1356 	 * !!!
1357 	 * There are two special commands for the purposes of this code: the
1358 	 * default command (<carriage-return>) or the scrolling commands (^D
1359 	 * and <EOF>) as the first non-<blank> characters  in the line.
1360 	 *
1361 	 * If this is the first command in the command line, we received the
1362 	 * command from the ex command loop and we're talking to a tty, and
1363 	 * and there's nothing else on the command line, and it's one of the
1364 	 * special commands, we move back up to the previous line, and erase
1365 	 * the prompt character with the output.  Since ex runs in canonical
1366 	 * mode, we don't have to do anything else, a <newline> has already
1367 	 * been echoed by the tty driver.  It's OK if vi calls us -- we won't
1368 	 * be in ex mode so we'll do nothing.
1369 	 */
1370 	if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_NRSEP)) {
1371 		if (sp->ep != NULL &&
1372 		    F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX) && !F_ISSET(gp, G_SCRIPTED) &&
1373 		    (F_ISSET(ecp, E_USELASTCMD) || ecp->cmd == &cmds[C_SCROLL]))
1374 			gp->scr_ex_adjust(sp, EX_TERM_SCROLL);
1375 		F_CLR(ecp, E_NRSEP);
1376 	}
1377 
1378 	/*
1379 	 * Call the underlying function for the ex command.
1380 	 *
1381 	 * XXX
1382 	 * Interrupts behave like errors, for now.
1383 	 */
1384 	if (ecp->cmd->fn(sp, ecp) || INTERRUPTED(sp)) {
1385 		if (F_ISSET(gp, G_SCRIPTED))
1386 			F_SET(sp, SC_EXIT_FORCE);
1387 		goto err;
1388 	}
1389 
1390 #ifdef DEBUG
1391 	/* Make sure no function left global temporary space locked. */
1392 	if (F_ISSET(gp, G_TMP_INUSE)) {
1393 		F_CLR(gp, G_TMP_INUSE);
1394 		msgq_wstr(sp, M_ERR, ecp->cmd->name,
1395 		    "087|%s: temporary buffer not released");
1396 	}
1397 #endif
1398 	/*
1399 	 * Ex displayed the number of lines modified immediately after each
1400 	 * command, so the command "1,10d|1,10d" would display:
1401 	 *
1402 	 *	10 lines deleted
1403 	 *	10 lines deleted
1404 	 *	<autoprint line>
1405 	 *
1406 	 * Executing ex commands from vi only reported the final modified
1407 	 * lines message -- that's wrong enough that we don't match it.
1408 	 */
1409 	if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX))
1410 		mod_rpt(sp);
1411 
1412 	/*
1413 	 * Integrate any offset parsed by the underlying command, and make
1414 	 * sure the referenced line exists.
1415 	 *
1416 	 * XXX
1417 	 * May not match historic practice (which I've never been able to
1418 	 * completely figure out.)  For example, the '=' command from vi
1419 	 * mode often got the offset wrong, and complained it was too large,
1420 	 * but didn't seem to have a problem with the cursor.  If anyone
1421 	 * complains, ask them how it's supposed to work, they might know.
1422 	 */
1423 	if (sp->ep != NULL && ecp->flagoff) {
1424 		if (ecp->flagoff < 0) {
1425 			if (sp->lno <= -ecp->flagoff) {
1426 				msgq(sp, M_ERR,
1427 				    "088|Flag offset to before line 1");
1428 				goto err;
1429 			}
1430 		} else {
1431 			if (!NPFITS(MAX_REC_NUMBER, sp->lno, ecp->flagoff)) {
1432 				ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, NUM_OVER);
1433 				goto err;
1434 			}
1435 			if (!db_exist(sp, sp->lno + ecp->flagoff)) {
1436 				msgq(sp, M_ERR,
1437 				    "089|Flag offset past end-of-file");
1438 				goto err;
1439 			}
1440 		}
1441 		sp->lno += ecp->flagoff;
1442 	}
1443 
1444 	/*
1445 	 * If the command executed successfully, we may want to display a line
1446 	 * based on the autoprint option or an explicit print flag.  (Make sure
1447 	 * that there's a line to display.)  Also, the autoprint edit option is
1448 	 * turned off for the duration of global commands.
1449 	 */
1450 	if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX) && sp->ep != NULL && sp->lno != 0) {
1451 		/*
1452 		 * The print commands have already handled the `print' flags.
1453 		 * If so, clear them.
1454 		 */
1455 		if (FL_ISSET(ecp->iflags, E_CLRFLAG))
1456 			FL_CLR(ecp->iflags, E_C_HASH | E_C_LIST | E_C_PRINT);
1457 
1458 		/* If hash set only because of the number option, discard it. */
1459 		if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_OPTNUM))
1460 			FL_CLR(ecp->iflags, E_C_HASH);
1461 
1462 		/*
1463 		 * If there was an explicit flag to display the new cursor line,
1464 		 * or autoprint is set and a change was made, display the line.
1465 		 * If any print flags were set use them, else default to print.
1466 		 */
1467 		LF_INIT(FL_ISSET(ecp->iflags, E_C_HASH | E_C_LIST | E_C_PRINT));
1468 		if (!LF_ISSET(E_C_HASH | E_C_LIST | E_C_PRINT | E_NOAUTO) &&
1469 		    !F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL) &&
1470 		    O_ISSET(sp, O_AUTOPRINT) && F_ISSET(ecp, E_AUTOPRINT)) {
1471 			/* Honor the number option if autoprint is set. */
1472 			if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_OPTNUM))
1473 				LF_INIT(E_C_HASH);
1474 			else
1475 				LF_INIT(E_C_PRINT);
1476 		}
1477 
1478 		if (LF_ISSET(E_C_HASH | E_C_LIST | E_C_PRINT)) {
1479 			cur.lno = sp->lno;
1480 			cur.cno = 0;
1481 			(void)ex_print(sp, ecp, &cur, &cur, flags);
1482 		}
1483 	}
1484 
1485 	/*
1486 	 * If the command had an associated "+cmd", it has to be executed
1487 	 * before we finish executing any more of this ex command.  For
1488 	 * example, consider a .exrc file that contains the following lines:
1489 	 *
1490 	 *	:set all
1491 	 *	:edit +25 file.c|s/abc/ABC/|1
1492 	 *	:3,5 print
1493 	 *
1494 	 * This can happen more than once -- the historic vi simply hung or
1495 	 * dropped core, of course.  Prepend the + command back into the
1496 	 * current command and continue.  We may have to add an additional
1497 	 * <literal next> character.  We know that it will fit because we
1498 	 * discarded at least one space and the + character.
1499 	 */
1500 	if (arg1_len != 0) {
1501 		/*
1502 		 * If the last character of the + command was a <literal next>
1503 		 * character, it would be treated differently because of the
1504 		 * append.  Quote it, if necessary.
1505 		 */
1506 		if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, ecp, arg1[arg1_len - 1])) {
1507 			*--ecp->save_cmd = CH_LITERAL;
1508 			++ecp->save_cmdlen;
1509 		}
1510 
1511 		ecp->save_cmd -= arg1_len;
1512 		ecp->save_cmdlen += arg1_len;
1513 		MEMMOVE(ecp->save_cmd, arg1, arg1_len);
1514 
1515 		/*
1516 		 * Any commands executed from a +cmd are executed starting at
1517 		 * the first column of the last line of the file -- NOT the
1518 		 * first nonblank.)  The main file startup code doesn't know
1519 		 * that a +cmd was set, however, so it may have put us at the
1520 		 * top of the file.  (Note, this is safe because we must have
1521 		 * switched files to get here.)
1522 		 */
1523 		F_SET(ecp, E_MOVETOEND);
1524 	}
1525 
1526 	/* Update the current command. */
1527 	ecp->cp = ecp->save_cmd;
1528 	ecp->clen = ecp->save_cmdlen;
1529 
1530 	/*
1531 	 * !!!
1532 	 * If we've changed screens or underlying files, any pending global or
1533 	 * v command, or @ buffer that has associated addresses, has to be
1534 	 * discarded.  This is historic practice for globals, and necessary for
1535 	 * @ buffers that had associated addresses.
1536 	 *
1537 	 * Otherwise, if we've changed underlying files, it's not a problem,
1538 	 * we continue with the rest of the ex command(s), operating on the
1539 	 * new file.  However, if we switch screens (either by exiting or by
1540 	 * an explicit command), we have no way of knowing where to put output
1541 	 * messages, and, since we don't control screens here, we could screw
1542 	 * up the upper layers, (e.g. we could exit/reenter a screen multiple
1543 	 * times).  So, return and continue after we've got a new screen.
1544 	 */
1545 	if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EXIT | SC_EXIT_FORCE | SC_FSWITCH | SC_SSWITCH)) {
1546 		at_found = gv_found = 0;
1547 		SLIST_FOREACH(ecp, sp->gp->ecq, q)
1548 			switch (ecp->agv_flags) {
1549 			case 0:
1550 			case AGV_AT_NORANGE:
1551 				break;
1552 			case AGV_AT:
1553 				if (!at_found) {
1554 					at_found = 1;
1555 					msgq(sp, M_ERR,
1556 		"090|@ with range running when the file/screen changed");
1557 				}
1558 				break;
1559 			case AGV_GLOBAL:
1560 			case AGV_V:
1561 				if (!gv_found) {
1562 					gv_found = 1;
1563 					msgq(sp, M_ERR,
1564 		"091|Global/v command running when the file/screen changed");
1565 				}
1566 				break;
1567 			default:
1568 				abort();
1569 			}
1570 		if (at_found || gv_found)
1571 			goto discard;
1572 		if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_EXIT | SC_EXIT_FORCE | SC_SSWITCH))
1573 			goto rsuccess;
1574 	}
1575 
1576 	goto loop;
1577 	/* NOTREACHED */
1578 
1579 err:	/*
1580 	 * On command failure, we discard keys and pending commands remaining,
1581 	 * as well as any keys that were mapped and waiting.  The save_cmdlen
1582 	 * test is not necessarily correct.  If we fail early enough we don't
1583 	 * know if the entire string was a single command or not.  Guess, as
1584 	 * it's useful to know if commands other than the current one are being
1585 	 * discarded.
1586 	 */
1587 	if (ecp->save_cmdlen == 0)
1588 		for (; ecp->clen; --ecp->clen) {
1589 			ch = *ecp->cp++;
1590 			if (IS_ESCAPE(sp, ecp, ch) && ecp->clen > 1) {
1591 				--ecp->clen;
1592 				++ecp->cp;
1593 			} else if (ch == '\n' || ch == '|') {
1594 				if (ecp->clen > 1)
1595 					ecp->save_cmdlen = 1;
1596 				break;
1597 			}
1598 		}
1599 	if (ecp->save_cmdlen != 0 || SLIST_FIRST(gp->ecq) != &gp->excmd) {
1600 discard:	msgq(sp, M_BERR,
1601 		    "092|Ex command failed: pending commands discarded");
1602 		ex_discard(sp);
1603 	}
1604 	if (v_event_flush(sp, CH_MAPPED))
1605 		msgq(sp, M_BERR,
1606 		    "093|Ex command failed: mapped keys discarded");
1607 
1608 rfail:	tmp = 1;
1609 	if (0)
1610 rsuccess:	tmp = 0;
1611 
1612 	/* Turn off any file name error information. */
1613 	gp->if_name = NULL;
1614 
1615 	/* Turn off the global bit. */
1616 	F_CLR(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL);
1617 
1618 	return (tmp);
1619 }
1620 
1621 /*
1622  * ex_range --
1623  *	Get a line range for ex commands, or perform a vi ex address search.
1624  *
1625  * PUBLIC: int ex_range(SCR *, EXCMD *, int *);
1626  */
1627 int
1628 ex_range(SCR *sp, EXCMD *ecp, int *errp)
1629 {
1630 	enum { ADDR_FOUND, ADDR_NEED, ADDR_NONE } addr;
1631 	GS *gp;
1632 	EX_PRIVATE *exp;
1633 	MARK m;
1634 	int isaddr;
1635 
1636 	*errp = 0;
1637 
1638 	/*
1639 	 * Parse comma or semi-colon delimited line specs.
1640 	 *
1641 	 * Semi-colon delimiters update the current address to be the last
1642 	 * address.  For example, the command
1643 	 *
1644 	 *	:3;/pattern/ecp->cp
1645 	 *
1646 	 * will search for pattern from line 3.  In addition, if ecp->cp
1647 	 * is not a valid command, the current line will be left at 3, not
1648 	 * at the original address.
1649 	 *
1650 	 * Extra addresses are discarded, starting with the first.
1651 	 *
1652 	 * !!!
1653 	 * If any addresses are missing, they default to the current line.
1654 	 * This was historically true for both leading and trailing comma
1655 	 * delimited addresses as well as for trailing semicolon delimited
1656 	 * addresses.  For consistency, we make it true for leading semicolon
1657 	 * addresses as well.
1658 	 */
1659 	gp = sp->gp;
1660 	exp = EXP(sp);
1661 	for (addr = ADDR_NONE, ecp->addrcnt = 0; ecp->clen > 0;)
1662 		switch (*ecp->cp) {
1663 		case '%':		/* Entire file. */
1664 			/* Vi ex address searches didn't permit % signs. */
1665 			if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_VISEARCH))
1666 				goto ret;
1667 
1668 			/* It's an error if the file is empty. */
1669 			if (sp->ep == NULL) {
1670 				ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EMPTY, NUM_OK);
1671 				*errp = 1;
1672 				return (0);
1673 			}
1674 			/*
1675 			 * !!!
1676 			 * A percent character addresses all of the lines in
1677 			 * the file.  Historically, it couldn't be followed by
1678 			 * any other address.  We do it as a text substitution
1679 			 * for simplicity.  POSIX 1003.2 is expected to follow
1680 			 * this practice.
1681 			 *
1682 			 * If it's an empty file, the first line is 0, not 1.
1683 			 */
1684 			if (addr == ADDR_FOUND) {
1685 				ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_COMBO, NUM_OK);
1686 				*errp = 1;
1687 				return (0);
1688 			}
1689 			if (db_last(sp, &ecp->addr2.lno))
1690 				return (1);
1691 			ecp->addr1.lno = ecp->addr2.lno == 0 ? 0 : 1;
1692 			ecp->addr1.cno = ecp->addr2.cno = 0;
1693 			ecp->addrcnt = 2;
1694 			addr = ADDR_FOUND;
1695 			++ecp->cp;
1696 			--ecp->clen;
1697 			break;
1698 		case ',':	       /* Comma delimiter. */
1699 			/* Vi ex address searches didn't permit commas. */
1700 			if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_VISEARCH))
1701 				goto ret;
1702 			/* FALLTHROUGH */
1703 		case ';':	       /* Semi-colon delimiter. */
1704 			if (sp->ep == NULL) {
1705 				ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EMPTY, NUM_OK);
1706 				*errp = 1;
1707 				return (0);
1708 			}
1709 			if (addr != ADDR_FOUND)
1710 				switch (ecp->addrcnt) {
1711 				case 0:
1712 					ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno;
1713 					ecp->addr1.cno = sp->cno;
1714 					ecp->addrcnt = 1;
1715 					break;
1716 				case 2:
1717 					ecp->addr1 = ecp->addr2;
1718 					/* FALLTHROUGH */
1719 				case 1:
1720 					ecp->addr2.lno = sp->lno;
1721 					ecp->addr2.cno = sp->cno;
1722 					ecp->addrcnt = 2;
1723 					break;
1724 				}
1725 			if (*ecp->cp == ';')
1726 				switch (ecp->addrcnt) {
1727 				case 0:
1728 					abort();
1729 					/* NOTREACHED */
1730 				case 1:
1731 					sp->lno = ecp->addr1.lno;
1732 					sp->cno = ecp->addr1.cno;
1733 					break;
1734 				case 2:
1735 					sp->lno = ecp->addr2.lno;
1736 					sp->cno = ecp->addr2.cno;
1737 					break;
1738 				}
1739 			addr = ADDR_NEED;
1740 			/* FALLTHROUGH */
1741 		case ' ':		/* Whitespace. */
1742 		case '\t':		/* Whitespace. */
1743 			++ecp->cp;
1744 			--ecp->clen;
1745 			break;
1746 		default:
1747 			/* Get a line specification. */
1748 			if (ex_line(sp, ecp, &m, &isaddr, errp))
1749 				return (1);
1750 			if (*errp)
1751 				return (0);
1752 			if (!isaddr)
1753 				goto ret;
1754 			if (addr == ADDR_FOUND) {
1755 				ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_COMBO, NUM_OK);
1756 				*errp = 1;
1757 				return (0);
1758 			}
1759 			switch (ecp->addrcnt) {
1760 			case 0:
1761 				ecp->addr1 = m;
1762 				ecp->addrcnt = 1;
1763 				break;
1764 			case 1:
1765 				ecp->addr2 = m;
1766 				ecp->addrcnt = 2;
1767 				break;
1768 			case 2:
1769 				ecp->addr1 = ecp->addr2;
1770 				ecp->addr2 = m;
1771 				break;
1772 			}
1773 			addr = ADDR_FOUND;
1774 			break;
1775 		}
1776 
1777 	/*
1778 	 * !!!
1779 	 * Vi ex address searches are indifferent to order or trailing
1780 	 * semi-colons.
1781 	 */
1782 ret:	if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_VISEARCH))
1783 		return (0);
1784 
1785 	if (addr == ADDR_NEED)
1786 		switch (ecp->addrcnt) {
1787 		case 0:
1788 			ecp->addr1.lno = sp->lno;
1789 			ecp->addr1.cno = sp->cno;
1790 			ecp->addrcnt = 1;
1791 			break;
1792 		case 2:
1793 			ecp->addr1 = ecp->addr2;
1794 			/* FALLTHROUGH */
1795 		case 1:
1796 			ecp->addr2.lno = sp->lno;
1797 			ecp->addr2.cno = sp->cno;
1798 			ecp->addrcnt = 2;
1799 			break;
1800 		}
1801 
1802 	if (ecp->addrcnt == 2 && ecp->addr2.lno < ecp->addr1.lno) {
1803 		msgq(sp, M_ERR,
1804 		    "094|The second address is smaller than the first");
1805 		*errp = 1;
1806 	}
1807 	return (0);
1808 }
1809 
1810 /*
1811  * ex_line --
1812  *	Get a single line address specifier.
1813  *
1814  * The way the "previous context" mark worked was that any "non-relative"
1815  * motion set it.  While ex/vi wasn't totally consistent about this, ANY
1816  * numeric address, search pattern, '$', or mark reference in an address
1817  * was considered non-relative, and set the value.  Which should explain
1818  * why we're hacking marks down here.  The problem was that the mark was
1819  * only set if the command was called, i.e. we have to set a flag and test
1820  * it later.
1821  *
1822  * XXX
1823  * This is probably still not exactly historic practice, although I think
1824  * it's fairly close.
1825  */
1826 static int
1827 ex_line(SCR *sp, EXCMD *ecp, MARK *mp, int *isaddrp, int *errp)
1828 {
1829 	enum nresult nret;
1830 	EX_PRIVATE *exp;
1831 	GS *gp;
1832 	long total, val;
1833 	int isneg;
1834 	int (*sf)(SCR *, MARK *, MARK *, CHAR_T *, size_t, CHAR_T **, u_int);
1835 	CHAR_T *endp;
1836 
1837 	gp = sp->gp;
1838 	exp = EXP(sp);
1839 
1840 	*isaddrp = *errp = 0;
1841 	F_CLR(ecp, E_DELTA);
1842 
1843 	/* No addresses permitted until a file has been read in. */
1844 	if (sp->ep == NULL && STRCHR(L("$0123456789'\\/?.+-^"), *ecp->cp)) {
1845 		ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_EMPTY, NUM_OK);
1846 		*errp = 1;
1847 		return (0);
1848 	}
1849 
1850 	switch (*ecp->cp) {
1851 	case '$':				/* Last line in the file. */
1852 		*isaddrp = 1;
1853 		F_SET(ecp, E_ABSMARK);
1854 
1855 		mp->cno = 0;
1856 		if (db_last(sp, &mp->lno))
1857 			return (1);
1858 		++ecp->cp;
1859 		--ecp->clen;
1860 		break;				/* Absolute line number. */
1861 	case '0': case '1': case '2': case '3': case '4':
1862 	case '5': case '6': case '7': case '8': case '9':
1863 		*isaddrp = 1;
1864 		F_SET(ecp, E_ABSMARK);
1865 
1866 		if ((nret = nget_slong(&val, ecp->cp, &endp, 10)) != NUM_OK) {
1867 			ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, nret);
1868 			*errp = 1;
1869 			return (0);
1870 		}
1871 		if (!NPFITS(MAX_REC_NUMBER, 0, val)) {
1872 			ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, NUM_OVER);
1873 			*errp = 1;
1874 			return (0);
1875 		}
1876 		mp->lno = val;
1877 		mp->cno = 0;
1878 		ecp->clen -= (endp - ecp->cp);
1879 		ecp->cp = endp;
1880 		break;
1881 	case '\'':				/* Use a mark. */
1882 		*isaddrp = 1;
1883 		F_SET(ecp, E_ABSMARK);
1884 
1885 		if (ecp->clen == 1) {
1886 			msgq(sp, M_ERR, "095|No mark name supplied");
1887 			*errp = 1;
1888 			return (0);
1889 		}
1890 		if (mark_get(sp, ecp->cp[1], mp, M_ERR)) {
1891 			*errp = 1;
1892 			return (0);
1893 		}
1894 		ecp->cp += 2;
1895 		ecp->clen -= 2;
1896 		break;
1897 	case '\\':				/* Search: forward/backward. */
1898 		/*
1899 		 * !!!
1900 		 * I can't find any difference between // and \/ or between
1901 		 * ?? and \?.  Mark Horton doesn't remember there being any
1902 		 * difference.  C'est la vie.
1903 		 */
1904 		if (ecp->clen < 2 ||
1905 		    (ecp->cp[1] != '/' && ecp->cp[1] != '?')) {
1906 			msgq(sp, M_ERR, "096|\\ not followed by / or ?");
1907 			*errp = 1;
1908 			return (0);
1909 		}
1910 		++ecp->cp;
1911 		--ecp->clen;
1912 		sf = ecp->cp[0] == '/' ? f_search : b_search;
1913 		goto search;
1914 	case '/':				/* Search forward. */
1915 		sf = f_search;
1916 		goto search;
1917 	case '?':				/* Search backward. */
1918 		sf = b_search;
1919 
1920 search:		mp->lno = sp->lno;
1921 		mp->cno = sp->cno;
1922 		if (sf(sp, mp, mp, ecp->cp, ecp->clen, &endp,
1923 		    SEARCH_MSG | SEARCH_PARSE | SEARCH_SET |
1924 		    (F_ISSET(ecp, E_SEARCH_WMSG) ? SEARCH_WMSG : 0))) {
1925 			*errp = 1;
1926 			return (0);
1927 		}
1928 
1929 		/* Fix up the command pointers. */
1930 		ecp->clen -= (endp - ecp->cp);
1931 		ecp->cp = endp;
1932 
1933 		*isaddrp = 1;
1934 		F_SET(ecp, E_ABSMARK);
1935 		break;
1936 	case '.':				/* Current position. */
1937 		*isaddrp = 1;
1938 		mp->cno = sp->cno;
1939 
1940 		/* If an empty file, then '.' is 0, not 1. */
1941 		if (sp->lno == 1) {
1942 			if (db_last(sp, &mp->lno))
1943 				return (1);
1944 			if (mp->lno != 0)
1945 				mp->lno = 1;
1946 		} else
1947 			mp->lno = sp->lno;
1948 
1949 		/*
1950 		 * !!!
1951 		 * Historically, .<number> was the same as .+<number>, i.e.
1952 		 * the '+' could be omitted.  (This feature is found in ed
1953 		 * as well.)
1954 		 */
1955 		if (ecp->clen > 1 && ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[1]))
1956 			*ecp->cp = '+';
1957 		else {
1958 			++ecp->cp;
1959 			--ecp->clen;
1960 		}
1961 		break;
1962 	}
1963 
1964 	/* Skip trailing <blank>s. */
1965 	for (; ecp->clen > 0 &&
1966 	    cmdskip(ecp->cp[0]); ++ecp->cp, --ecp->clen);
1967 
1968 	/*
1969 	 * Evaluate any offset.  If no address yet found, the offset
1970 	 * is relative to ".".
1971 	 */
1972 	total = 0;
1973 	if (ecp->clen != 0 && (ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[0]) ||
1974 	    ecp->cp[0] == '+' || ecp->cp[0] == '-' ||
1975 	    ecp->cp[0] == '^')) {
1976 		if (!*isaddrp) {
1977 			*isaddrp = 1;
1978 			mp->lno = sp->lno;
1979 			mp->cno = sp->cno;
1980 		}
1981 		/*
1982 		 * Evaluate an offset, defined as:
1983 		 *
1984 		 *		[+-^<blank>]*[<blank>]*[0-9]*
1985 		 *
1986 		 * The rough translation is any number of signs, optionally
1987 		 * followed by numbers, or a number by itself, all <blank>
1988 		 * separated.
1989 		 *
1990 		 * !!!
1991 		 * All address offsets were additive, e.g. "2 2 3p" was the
1992 		 * same as "7p", or, "/ZZZ/ 2" was the same as "/ZZZ/+2".
1993 		 * Note, however, "2 /ZZZ/" was an error.  It was also legal
1994 		 * to insert signs without numbers, so "3 - 2" was legal, and
1995 		 * equal to 4.
1996 		 *
1997 		 * !!!
1998 		 * Offsets were historically permitted for any line address,
1999 		 * e.g. the command "1,2 copy 2 2 2 2" copied lines 1,2 after
2000 		 * line 8.
2001 		 *
2002 		 * !!!
2003 		 * Offsets were historically permitted for search commands,
2004 		 * and handled as addresses: "/pattern/2 2 2" was legal, and
2005 		 * referenced the 6th line after pattern.
2006 		 */
2007 		F_SET(ecp, E_DELTA);
2008 		for (;;) {
2009 			for (; ecp->clen > 0 && cmdskip(ecp->cp[0]);
2010 			    ++ecp->cp, --ecp->clen);
2011 			if (ecp->clen == 0 || (!ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[0]) &&
2012 			    ecp->cp[0] != '+' && ecp->cp[0] != '-' &&
2013 			    ecp->cp[0] != '^'))
2014 				break;
2015 			if (!ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[0]) &&
2016 			    !ISDIGIT(ecp->cp[1])) {
2017 				total += ecp->cp[0] == '+' ? 1 : -1;
2018 				--ecp->clen;
2019 				++ecp->cp;
2020 			} else {
2021 				if (ecp->cp[0] == '-' ||
2022 				    ecp->cp[0] == '^') {
2023 					++ecp->cp;
2024 					--ecp->clen;
2025 					isneg = 1;
2026 				} else
2027 					isneg = 0;
2028 
2029 				/* Get a signed long, add it to the total. */
2030 				if ((nret = nget_slong(&val,
2031 				    ecp->cp, &endp, 10)) != NUM_OK ||
2032 				    (nret = NADD_SLONG(sp,
2033 				    total, val)) != NUM_OK) {
2034 					ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, nret);
2035 					*errp = 1;
2036 					return (0);
2037 				}
2038 				total += isneg ? -val : val;
2039 				ecp->clen -= (endp - ecp->cp);
2040 				ecp->cp = endp;
2041 			}
2042 		}
2043 	}
2044 
2045 	/*
2046 	 * Any value less than 0 is an error.  Make sure that the new value
2047 	 * will fit into a recno_t.
2048 	 */
2049 	if (*isaddrp && total != 0) {
2050 		if (total < 0) {
2051 			if (-total > mp->lno) {
2052 				msgq(sp, M_ERR,
2053 			    "097|Reference to a line number less than 0");
2054 				*errp = 1;
2055 				return (0);
2056 			}
2057 		} else
2058 			if (!NPFITS(MAX_REC_NUMBER, mp->lno, total)) {
2059 				ex_badaddr(sp, NULL, A_NOTSET, NUM_OVER);
2060 				*errp = 1;
2061 				return (0);
2062 			}
2063 		mp->lno += total;
2064 	}
2065 	return (0);
2066 }
2067 
2068 
2069 /*
2070  * ex_load --
2071  *	Load up the next command, which may be an @ buffer or global command.
2072  */
2073 static int
2074 ex_load(SCR *sp)
2075 {
2076 	GS *gp;
2077 	EXCMD *ecp;
2078 	RANGE *rp;
2079 
2080 	F_CLR(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL);
2081 
2082 	/*
2083 	 * Lose any exhausted commands.  We know that the first command
2084 	 * can't be an AGV command, which makes things a bit easier.
2085 	 */
2086 	for (gp = sp->gp;;) {
2087 		ecp = SLIST_FIRST(gp->ecq);
2088 
2089 		/* Discard the allocated source name as requested. */
2090 		if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_NAMEDISCARD))
2091 			free(ecp->if_name);
2092 
2093 		/*
2094 		 * If we're back to the original structure, leave it around,
2095 		 * since we've returned to the beginning of the command stack.
2096 		 */
2097 		if (ecp == &gp->excmd) {
2098 			ecp->if_name = NULL;
2099 			return (0);
2100 		}
2101 
2102 		/*
2103 		 * ecp->clen will be 0 for the first discarded command, but
2104 		 * may not be 0 for subsequent ones, e.g. if the original
2105 		 * command was ":g/xx/@a|s/b/c/", then when we discard the
2106 		 * command pushed on the stack by the @a, we have to resume
2107 		 * the global command which included the substitute command.
2108 		 */
2109 		if (ecp->clen != 0)
2110 			return (0);
2111 
2112 		/*
2113 		 * If it's an @, global or v command, we may need to continue
2114 		 * the command on a different line.
2115 		 */
2116 		if (FL_ISSET(ecp->agv_flags, AGV_ALL)) {
2117 			/* Discard any exhausted ranges. */
2118 			while ((rp = TAILQ_FIRST(ecp->rq)) != NULL)
2119 				if (rp->start > rp->stop) {
2120 					TAILQ_REMOVE(ecp->rq, rp, q);
2121 					free(rp);
2122 				} else
2123 					break;
2124 
2125 			/* If there's another range, continue with it. */
2126 			if (rp != NULL)
2127 				break;
2128 
2129 			/* If it's a global/v command, fix up the last line. */
2130 			if (FL_ISSET(ecp->agv_flags,
2131 			    AGV_GLOBAL | AGV_V) && ecp->range_lno != OOBLNO) {
2132 				if (db_exist(sp, ecp->range_lno))
2133 					sp->lno = ecp->range_lno;
2134 				else {
2135 					if (db_last(sp, &sp->lno))
2136 						return (1);
2137 					if (sp->lno == 0)
2138 						sp->lno = 1;
2139 				}
2140 			}
2141 			free(ecp->o_cp);
2142 		}
2143 
2144 		/* Discard the EXCMD. */
2145 		SLIST_REMOVE_HEAD(gp->ecq, q);
2146 		free(ecp);
2147 	}
2148 
2149 	/*
2150 	 * We only get here if it's an active @, global or v command.  Set
2151 	 * the current line number, and get a new copy of the command for
2152 	 * the parser.  Note, the original pointer almost certainly moved,
2153 	 * so we have play games.
2154 	 */
2155 	ecp->cp = ecp->o_cp;
2156 	MEMCPY(ecp->cp, ecp->cp + ecp->o_clen, ecp->o_clen);
2157 	ecp->clen = ecp->o_clen;
2158 	ecp->range_lno = sp->lno = rp->start++;
2159 
2160 	if (FL_ISSET(ecp->agv_flags, AGV_GLOBAL | AGV_V))
2161 		F_SET(sp, SC_EX_GLOBAL);
2162 	return (0);
2163 }
2164 
2165 /*
2166  * ex_discard --
2167  *	Discard any pending ex commands.
2168  */
2169 static int
2170 ex_discard(SCR *sp)
2171 {
2172 	GS *gp;
2173 	EXCMD *ecp;
2174 	RANGE *rp;
2175 
2176 	/*
2177 	 * We know the first command can't be an AGV command, so we don't
2178 	 * process it specially.  We do, however, nail the command itself.
2179 	 */
2180 	for (gp = sp->gp;;) {
2181 		ecp = SLIST_FIRST(gp->ecq);
2182 		if (F_ISSET(ecp, E_NAMEDISCARD))
2183 			free(ecp->if_name);
2184 		/* Reset the last command without dropping it. */
2185 		if (ecp == &gp->excmd)
2186 			break;
2187 		if (FL_ISSET(ecp->agv_flags, AGV_ALL)) {
2188 			while ((rp = TAILQ_FIRST(ecp->rq)) != NULL) {
2189 				TAILQ_REMOVE(ecp->rq, rp, q);
2190 				free(rp);
2191 			}
2192 			free(ecp->o_cp);
2193 		}
2194 		SLIST_REMOVE_HEAD(gp->ecq, q);
2195 		free(ecp);
2196 	}
2197 
2198 	ecp->if_name = NULL;
2199 	ecp->clen = 0;
2200 	return (0);
2201 }
2202 
2203 /*
2204  * ex_unknown --
2205  *	Display an unknown command name.
2206  */
2207 static void
2208 ex_unknown(SCR *sp, CHAR_T *cmd, size_t len)
2209 {
2210 	size_t blen;
2211 	CHAR_T *bp;
2212 
2213 	GET_SPACE_GOTOW(sp, bp, blen, len + 1);
2214 	bp[len] = '\0';
2215 	MEMCPY(bp, cmd, len);
2216 	msgq_wstr(sp, M_ERR, bp, "098|The %s command is unknown");
2217 	FREE_SPACEW(sp, bp, blen);
2218 
2219 alloc_err:
2220 	return;
2221 }
2222 
2223 /*
2224  * ex_is_abbrev -
2225  *	The vi text input routine needs to know if ex thinks this is an
2226  *	[un]abbreviate command, so it can turn off abbreviations.  See
2227  *	the usual ranting in the vi/v_txt_ev.c:txt_abbrev() routine.
2228  *
2229  * PUBLIC: int ex_is_abbrev(CHAR_T *, size_t);
2230  */
2231 int
2232 ex_is_abbrev(CHAR_T *name, size_t len)
2233 {
2234 	EXCMDLIST const *cp;
2235 
2236 	return ((cp = ex_comm_search(name, len)) != NULL &&
2237 	    (cp == &cmds[C_ABBR] || cp == &cmds[C_UNABBREVIATE]));
2238 }
2239 
2240 /*
2241  * ex_is_unmap -
2242  *	The vi text input routine needs to know if ex thinks this is an
2243  *	unmap command, so it can turn off input mapping.  See the usual
2244  *	ranting in the vi/v_txt_ev.c:txt_unmap() routine.
2245  *
2246  * PUBLIC: int ex_is_unmap(CHAR_T *, size_t);
2247  */
2248 int
2249 ex_is_unmap(CHAR_T *name, size_t len)
2250 {
2251 	EXCMDLIST const *cp;
2252 
2253 	/*
2254 	 * The command the vi input routines are really interested in
2255 	 * is "unmap!", not just unmap.
2256 	 */
2257 	if (name[len - 1] != '!')
2258 		return (0);
2259 	--len;
2260 	return ((cp = ex_comm_search(name, len)) != NULL &&
2261 	    cp == &cmds[C_UNMAP]);
2262 }
2263 
2264 /*
2265  * ex_comm_search --
2266  *	Search for a command name.
2267  */
2268 static EXCMDLIST const *
2269 ex_comm_search(CHAR_T *name, size_t len)
2270 {
2271 	EXCMDLIST const *cp;
2272 
2273 	for (cp = cmds; cp->name != NULL; ++cp) {
2274 		if (cp->name[0] > name[0])
2275 			return (NULL);
2276 		if (cp->name[0] != name[0])
2277 			continue;
2278 		if (STRLEN(cp->name) >= len &&
2279 			!MEMCMP(name, cp->name, len))
2280 			return (cp);
2281 	}
2282 	return (NULL);
2283 }
2284 
2285 /*
2286  * ex_badaddr --
2287  *	Display a bad address message.
2288  *
2289  * PUBLIC: void ex_badaddr
2290  * PUBLIC:   (SCR *, EXCMDLIST const *, enum badaddr, enum nresult);
2291  */
2292 void
2293 ex_badaddr(SCR *sp, const EXCMDLIST *cp, enum badaddr ba, enum nresult nret)
2294 {
2295 	recno_t lno;
2296 
2297 	switch (nret) {
2298 	case NUM_OK:
2299 		break;
2300 	case NUM_ERR:
2301 		msgq(sp, M_SYSERR, NULL);
2302 		return;
2303 	case NUM_OVER:
2304 		msgq(sp, M_ERR, "099|Address value overflow");
2305 		return;
2306 	case NUM_UNDER:
2307 		msgq(sp, M_ERR, "100|Address value underflow");
2308 		return;
2309 	}
2310 
2311 	/*
2312 	 * When encountering an address error, tell the user if there's no
2313 	 * underlying file, that's the real problem.
2314 	 */
2315 	if (sp->ep == NULL) {
2316 		ex_wemsg(sp, cp ? cp->name : NULL, EXM_NOFILEYET);
2317 		return;
2318 	}
2319 
2320 	switch (ba) {
2321 	case A_COMBO:
2322 		msgq(sp, M_ERR, "101|Illegal address combination");
2323 		break;
2324 	case A_EOF:
2325 		if (db_last(sp, &lno))
2326 			return;
2327 		if (lno != 0) {
2328 			msgq(sp, M_ERR,
2329 			    "102|Illegal address: only %lu lines in the file",
2330 			    (u_long)lno);
2331 			break;
2332 		}
2333 		/* FALLTHROUGH */
2334 	case A_EMPTY:
2335 		msgq(sp, M_ERR, "103|Illegal address: the file is empty");
2336 		break;
2337 	case A_NOTSET:
2338 		abort();
2339 		/* NOTREACHED */
2340 	case A_ZERO:
2341 		msgq_wstr(sp, M_ERR, cp->name,
2342 		    "104|The %s command doesn't permit an address of 0");
2343 		break;
2344 	}
2345 	return;
2346 }
2347 
2348 #if defined(DEBUG) && defined(COMLOG)
2349 /*
2350  * ex_comlog --
2351  *	Log ex commands.
2352  */
2353 static void
2354 ex_comlog(sp, ecp)
2355 	SCR *sp;
2356 	EXCMD *ecp;
2357 {
2358 	TRACE(sp, "ecmd: "WS, ecp->cmd->name);
2359 	if (ecp->addrcnt > 0) {
2360 		TRACE(sp, " a1 %d", ecp->addr1.lno);
2361 		if (ecp->addrcnt > 1)
2362 			TRACE(sp, " a2: %d", ecp->addr2.lno);
2363 	}
2364 	if (ecp->lineno)
2365 		TRACE(sp, " line %d", ecp->lineno);
2366 	if (ecp->flags)
2367 		TRACE(sp, " flags 0x%x", ecp->flags);
2368 	if (FL_ISSET(ecp->iflags, E_C_BUFFER))
2369 		TRACE(sp, " buffer "WC, ecp->buffer);
2370 	if (ecp->argc) {
2371 		int cnt;
2372 		for (cnt = 0; cnt < ecp->argc; ++cnt)
2373 			TRACE(sp, " arg %d: {"WS"}", cnt, ecp->argv[cnt]->bp);
2374 	}
2375 	TRACE(sp, "\n");
2376 }
2377 #endif
2378