From 5ab5ccd94bda49db30e7c600364cc4e14e88df9b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tom Ryder Date: Sat, 17 Dec 2016 20:03:40 +1300 Subject: Move ksh.sh shim into ksh subdir So it doesn't get installed on systems where I don't use ksh, since it's mostly not needed --- sh/shrc.d/ksh.sh | 30 ------------------------------ 1 file changed, 30 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 sh/shrc.d/ksh.sh (limited to 'sh') diff --git a/sh/shrc.d/ksh.sh b/sh/shrc.d/ksh.sh deleted file mode 100644 index 6c134e88..00000000 --- a/sh/shrc.d/ksh.sh +++ /dev/null @@ -1,30 +0,0 @@ -# If we're running some kind of ksh, we'll need to source its specific -# configuration if it was defined or if we can find it. Bash and Zsh invoke -# their own rc files first, which I've written to then look for ~/.shrc; ksh -# does it the other way around. - -# Unfortunately, this isn't very simple, because KSH_VERSION is set by PDKSH -# and derivatives, and in ksh93t+ and above, but not in earlier versions of -# ksh93. - -# If it's not already set, we'll try hard to set it to something before we -# proceed ... -if [ -z "$KSH_VERSION" ] ; then - - # Test whether we have content in the .sh.version variable. The odd name - # causes at least Bash to panic, so we suppress errors, and we run it in a - # subshell to work around parsing error precedence. - ( test -n "${.sh.version}" ) 2>/dev/null || return - - # If it is, that's our KSH_VERSION - KSH_VERSION=${.sh.version} -fi - -# If KSH_ENV isn't already set, set it -[ -n "$KSH_ENV" ] || KSH_ENV=$HOME/.kshrc - -# Check the file named in KSH_ENV exists -[ -f "$KSH_ENV" ] || return - -# Source it (finally) -. "$KSH_ENV" -- cgit v1.2.3