ALX Simple Shell team project done by Ahmed Mahmoud and Ayman Belahsen
This is the last project of sprint 1 of the ALX SE PROGRAM.
Read or watch:
- Unix shell
- Thompson shell
- Ken Thompson
- Everything you need to know to start coding your own shell concept page
man or help:
sh(Runshas well)
At the end of this project, you are expected to be able to explain to anyone, without the help of Google:
- Who designed and implemented the original Unix operating system
- Who wrote the first version of the UNIX shell
- Who invented the B programming language (the direct predecessor to the C programming language)
- Who is Ken Thompson
- How does a shell work
- What is a pid and a ppid
- How to manipulate the environment of the current process
- What is the difference between a function and a system call
- How to create processes
- What are the three prototypes of
main - How does the shell use the
PATHto find the programs - How to execute another program with the
execvesystem call - How to suspend the execution of a process until one of its children terminates
- What is
EOF/ “end-of-file”?
- You are tasked to come up with solutions for the tasks below yourself to meet with the above learning objectives.
- You will not be able to meet the objectives of this or any following project by copying and pasting someone else’s work.
- You are not allowed to publish any content of this project.
- Any form of plagiarism is strictly forbidden and will result in removal from the program.
- Allowed editors:
vi,vim,emacs - All your files will be compiled on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS using
gcc, using the options-Wall -Werror -Wextra -pedantic -std=gnu89 - All your files should end with a new line
- A
README.mdfile, at the root of the folder of the project is mandatory - Your code should use the
Bettystyle. It will be checked using betty-style.pl and betty-doc.pl - Your shell should not have any memory leaks
- No more than 5 functions per file
- All your header files should be include guarded
- Use system calls only when you need to (why?)
- Write a
READMEwith the description of your project - You should have an
AUTHORSfile at the root of your repository, listing all individuals having contributed content to the repository. Format, see Docker
*There should be one project repository per group. If you and your partner have a repository with the same name in both your accounts, you risk a 0% score. Add your partner as a collaborator. *
- Unless specified otherwise, your program must have the exact same output as
sh(/bin/sh) as well as the exact same error output. - The only difference is when you print an error, the name of the program must be equivalent to your
argv[0](See below)
Example of error with sh:
$ echo "qwerty" | /bin/sh
/bin/sh: 1: qwerty: not found
$ echo "qwerty" | /bin/../bin/sh
/bin/../bin/sh: 1: qwerty: not found
$
Same error with your program hsh:
$ echo "qwerty" | ./hsh
./hsh: 1: qwerty: not found
$ echo "qwerty" | ./././hsh
./././hsh: 1: qwerty: not found
$
access(man 2 access)chdir(man 2 chdir)close(man 2 close)closedir(man 3 closedir)execve(man 2 execve)exit(man 3 exit)_exit(man 2 _exit)fflush(man 3 fflush)fork(man 2 fork)free(man 3 free)getcwd(man 3 getcwd)getline(man 3 getline)getpid(man 2 getpid)isatty(man 3 isatty)kill(man 2 kill)malloc(man 3 malloc)open(man 2 open)opendir(man 3 opendir)perror(man 3 perror)read(man 2 read)readdir(man 3 readdir)signal(man 2 signal)stat(__xstat) (man 2 stat)lstat(__lxstat) (man 2 lstat)fstat(__fxstat) (man 2 fstat)strtok(man 3 strtok)wait(man 2 wait)waitpid(man 2 waitpid)wait3(man 2 wait3)wait4(man 2 wait4)write(man 2 write)
Your shell will be compiled this way:
gcc -Wall -Werror -Wextra -pedantic -std=gnu89 *.c -o hsh
Your shell should work like this in interactive mode:
$ ./hsh
($) /bin/ls
hsh main.c shell.c
($)
($) exit
$
But also in non-interactive mode:
$ echo "/bin/ls" | ./hsh
hsh main.c shell.c test_ls_2
$
$ cat test_ls_2
/bin/ls
/bin/ls
$
$ cat test_ls_2 | ./hsh
hsh main.c shell.c test_ls_2
hsh main.c shell.c test_ls_2
$
The Checker will be released at the end of the project (1-2 days before the deadline). We strongly encourage the entire class to work together to create a suite of checks covering both regular tests and edge cases for each task. See task 8. Test suite.