| To: | austin-group-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|---|---|
| Subject: | Re: Invalid shell assignments in environment |
| From: | Geoff Clare <gwc@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| Date: | Fri, 3 Jul 2009 09:35:44 +0100 |
| References: | <200907012242.n61MgCCp020103@penguin.research.att.com> <4A4C2005.6030402@case.edu> <4a4c81a6.2tWl4Z9DpJUyvd+z%Joerg.Schilling@fokus.fraunhofer.de> <200907021327.n62DRe5k029384@penguin.research.att.com> <20090702143325.GA5491@squonk.masqnet> <200907021504.n62F4vPS001092@penguin.research.att.com> |
Glenn Fowler <gsf@research.att.com> wrote, on 02 Jul 2009: > > assume that the parent process supports UTF-8 chars in the environment > > should a child sh of the parent process, child in the C locale, > be able to prevent a grandchild process, grandchild in a UTF-8 locale, > from seeing those UTF-8 environment variables? Yes, since that is long-standing existing practice in some shells. -- Geoff Clare <g.clare@opengroup.org> The Open Group, Thames Tower, Station Road, Reading, RG1 1LX, England |
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