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How do you write multiple records to a pipe, and how do you read them?
You need a way of delimiting them. Let's call this the "framing problem" — a term borrowed from network engineering.
This doc categorizes different formats, and shows how you handle them in YSH.
YSH is meant for writing correct shell programs.
Netstrings are a simple format defined by Daniel J Bernstein.
3:foo, # ASCII length, colon, byte string, comma
This format is easy to implement, and efficient to read and write.
But the encoded output may contain binary data, which isn't readable by a human using a terminal (or GUI). This is significant!
TODO: Implement read --netstr
and write --netstr
Now let's look at traditional Unix solutions, and their problems.
NUL
byteIn traditional Unix, newlines delimit "records". Here's how you read them in shell:
while IFS='' read -r; do # confusing idiom!
echo line=$REPLY
break # remaining bytes are still in the pipe
done
YSH has a simpler idiom:
while read --raw-line { # unbuffered
echo line=$_reply
break # remaining bytes are still in the pipe
}
Or you can read all lines:
for line in (stdin) { # buffered
echo line=$line
break # remaining bytes may be lost in a buffer
}
However, in Unix, all of these strings may have newlines:
argv
environ
But these C-style strings can't contain the NUL
byte, aka \0
. So GNU tools
have evolved support for another format:
find . -print0 # write data
xargs -0 # read data; also --null
grep -z # read data; also --null-data
sort -z # read data; also --zero-terminated
# (Why are all the names different?)
In Oils, we added a -0
flag to read
to understands this:
$ find . -print0 | { read -0 x; echo $x; read -0 x; echo $x; }
foo # could contain newlines!
bar
Shell has has here docs that look like this:
cat <<EOF
the string EOF
can't start a line
EOF
So you choose the delimiter, with the "word" you write after <<
.
Similarly, when your browser POSTs a form, it uses MIME multipart message format:
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=frontier
This is a message with multiple parts in MIME format.
--frontier
Content-Type: text/plain
This is the body of the message.
--frontier
So again, you choose a delimiter with boundary=frontier
, and then you
must recognize it later in the message.
\
escaping allows arbitrary bytesJSON can express strings with newlines:
"line 1 \n line 2"
It can also express the zero code point, which isn't the same as NUL byte:
"zero code point \u0000"
[J8 Notation][] is an extension of JSON that fixes this:
"NUL byte \y00"
(We use \y00
rather than \x00
, because Python and JavaScript both confuse
\x00
with U+0000
. The zero code point may be encoded as 2 or 4 NUL
bytes.)
TSV files are based on delimiters, but they aren't very readable in a terminal.
TODO
So TSV8 offers and "aligned" format:
#.ssv8 flag desc type
type Str Str Str
--verbose "do it \t verbosely" bool
--count "count only" int
So this format combines two strategies:
Traditional shells mostly support newline-based records. YSH supports:
NUL