how can i recover the command line used to launch a script from inside itself 
(up to a difference in quote types)?

e.g. if the command is

$ ./myscript foo "bar" 'baz' "quux quuux" 'fred barney' wilma

i'd like to be able to print, at a bare minimum,

foo bar baz 'quux quuux' 'fred barney' wilma

if i set -x and print "$@", i can see the quotes i'm looking for in the trace, 
but i can't figure out how to get them into the regular output

$ cat ./myscript
cat ./myscript
#!/Users/adavies/src/ksh93/arch/darwin.i386/bin/ksh -eux
print "$@"
$ /Users/adavies/src/ksh93/arch/darwin.i386/bin/ksh --version
/Users/adavies/src/ksh93/arch/darwin.i386/bin/ksh --version
  version         sh (AT&T Research) 93u 2011-02-08
$ ./myscript foo "bar" 'baz' "quux quuux" 'fred barney' wilma
./myscript foo "bar" 'baz' "quux quuux" 'fred barney' wilma
+ print foo bar baz 'quux quuux' 'fred barney' wilma
foo bar baz quux quuux fred barney wilma
$ 

basically i'm looking for a way to include custom debug/verbose output in 
wrappers

e.g.

$ doitbetter myscript foo "bar" 'baz' "quux quuux" 'fred barney' wilma

should be able to say

doitbetter: doing `myscript foo "bar" 'baz' "quux quuux" 'fred barney' wilma' 
better!

if i put it in verbose mode
-- 
Aaron Davies
[email protected]
_______________________________________________
ast-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.research.att.com/mailman/listinfo/ast-users

Reply via email to