Thanks to everyone who provided me feedback on the first pass, especially
those who suggested "shopt -u flame-off". Here's the second version.
Once again, would appreciate feedback.
Thanks,
Jon
I read your "Unix Shell Programming: The Next 50 Years" expecting
some well thought out wisdom. I was sorely disappointed.
The paper is lacking the generally accepted form of:
o What problem are you trying to solve?
o What have others done?
o What's our approach?
o How does it do?
Some particulars:
o The paper never defines what is meant by the term "Unix shell."
I think that you're using it to mean a command interpreter as
described in the POSIX 1003.2 documents.
o There is no 50 year old Unix shell. I started using Unix in the
early 1970s, and the command interpreter at the time (Ken Thompson's
shell) was nothing like later shells such as the Bourne shell (sh
since research V7 Unix), Korn shell (ksh), C shell (csh), and the
Bourne again shell (bash). Unix mainstreamed the notion of a
command interpreter that was not baked into the system. The paper
lacks any discussion of prior art. In practice, shell implementations
either predate the POSIX standard or were built afterwards and
include non-standard extensions.
o The paper repeats a claim that the shell has been largely ignored by
academia and industry. Yet, it does not include any references that
support that claim. In fact, the large body of published work on
shells and ongoing work on shells such as zsh shows that claim to be
incorrect.
o The paper applies universal complaints such as "unmaintainable" to the
shell; it doesn't call out any shell-specific problems. It doesn't
explain whether these complaints are against the scripts, the
implementation, or both. One of the reasons for the longevity of the
family of shells descended from Bourne's sh is that experienced
practicioners have been able to write easily maintainable code.
Scripts written in the 1980s are still around and working fine.
o The paper seems to complain that the fact that the shell is documented
is a problem. This is astonishing. Proper documentation has always
been a key component of being a professional in my decades of experience.
As a matter of fact, my boss telling me that "nobody will give a crap
about your work unless you write a good paper" when I was a teenager
at Bell Labs is what led me to UNIX and nroff.
o The paper includes non-sequiturs such as discussions about Docker
and systemd that have nothing to to with the shell.
o The paper has many "nop" statements such as "arguably improved"
that
don't actually say anything.
o Examples, such as the one on page 105 don't work as there is no input
to "cut".
o The single result in Figure 1 is insufficient evidence that the
approach works on a wide variety of problems.
o The paper gives the appearance that the authors don't actually understand
the semantics of the original Bourne shell. Not just my opinion; I
received an email from Steve Bourne after he read your paper, and I
consider him to be a subject matter expert.
o Proofreading should have caught things like "improve performance
performance" on page 107 among others.
I think that the paper is really trying to say:
o Programmable command interpreters such as those found in Unix-based
systems have been around for a long time. For this paper, we're
focusing on the GNU bash implementation of the POSIX P1003.2 shell.
Other command interpreters predate Unix.
o This implementation is used more often than many other scripting
languages because it is available and often installed as the default
command interpreter on most modern systems (Unix-based or otherwise).
In particular, it is often the default for Linux systems.
o The shell as defined above is being used in ways that are far more
complex than originally contemplated when Bourne created the original
syntax and semantics, much less the new features from kash adopted by
the POSIX standards committee. The combination of both the POSIX and
bash extensions to the Bourne shell exposes a new set of limitations
and issues such as performance.
o While much work has been done by the bash implementors, it's primarily
been in the area of expanding the functionality, usually in a
backward-compatible manner. Other shells such as the original ksh and
later ash and zsh were implemented with an eye towards the performance
of the internals and user perspectives.
o Performance optimization using modern techniques such as JIT compilation
have been applied to other languages but not to POSIX shell implementations.
This paper looks at doing that. It is unsurprising that techniques that
have worked elsewhere work here too.
It's hard to imagine that the application of this technique is all that's
required for a 50-year life extension. The title of this paper implies
that it's going to be comprehensive but instead concentrates on a couple
of projects. It ignores other active work on shells such as "fish". While
the issues with the paper remain, they would not have been quite so glaring
had it had a more modest title such as "Applying JIT Compilation to the
POSIX Shell".