I don't know about the pfksh bit, haven't been following that, and as the only
x86
I have running right now is a Mac Mini that I don't think I want to put Solaris
on,
I can't do anything with Indiana.
_However_, IIRC from the discussion, the ksh in Indiana _has_ to be ksh93, to be
open, redistributable, etc.
The proof would be this: try
ksh -c "echo ${.sh.version}"
If you get something like:
Version M 1993-12-28 s+
it's ksh93, while if you get:
ksh: ${.sh.version}: bad substitution
it's the old ksh88.
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