Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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* NEWS: Add header line for next release.
* .prev-version: Record previous version.
* cfg.mk (old_NEWS_hash): Auto-update.
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* NEWS: Record release date.
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* src/tail.c (tail_forever_inotify): Handle the case where
tail --follow=name with inotify, is not able to add a watch on
a specified directory. This may happen due to inotify resource
limits or if the directory is currently missing or inaccessible.
In all these cases, revert to polling which will try to reopen
the file later. Note inotify returns ENOSPC when it runs out
of resources, and instead we report a particular error message,
lest users think one of their file systems is full.
(main): Document another caveat with using inotify, where we
currently don't recheck directories recreated after the
initial watch is setup.
* tests/tail-2/F-vs-rename: Fix the endless loop triggered by
the above issue.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-hash-abuse: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/wait: Don't fail in the resource exhaustion case.
* tests/tail-2/F-vs-missing: A new test for this failure mode
which was until now just triggered on older buggy linux kernels
which returned ENOSPC constantly from inotify_add_watch().
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
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The bug was introduced with commit 23f6d41f, 19-02-2003.
* src/split.c (bytes_split, lines_split, line_bytes_split):
Correctly check the return from full_read().
* tests/misc/split-fail: Ensure split fails when
it can't read its input.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
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* src/stat.c (print_statfs, usage): Drop %C, since it applies to
files, not file systems.
(out_file_context): Match style of other out_* functions.
(print_stat): Update caller.
* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Document %C.
* NEWS: Document the change.
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* src/stat.c (default_format): Include context when present.
* NEWS: Update blurb explaining the replacement for -Z.
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Yes, this patch intentionally leaks the results of default_format(),
since it is called only twice, and since the results are in scope
until main() exits. Not worth the extra code to pacify valgrind.
* src/stat.c (main): Hoist default format computation out of loop.
(do_statfs, do_stat): Move default format generation...
(default_format): ...into new function. Allocate the result in
pieces, rather than repeating mostly-similar chunks. Allow
translation of verbose format. Pass a second format to do_stat,
for the one aspect of the default format that is conditional on
file type.
* NEWS: Document the translation aspect.
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* src/stat.c (epoch_time): New function.
(print_stat): Use it for %[WXYZ].
* NEWS: Document this.
* tests/touch/60-seconds: Adjust test to match.
* tests/misc/stat-birthtime: Likewise.
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* src/stat.c (print_stat): New %w and %W formats.
(do_stat): Include %w in default format.
(usage): Document new specifiers.
* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Likewise.
* NEWS: Likewise.
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* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention the du-exclude--vs--cycle-dir fix.
Reported by Graham Cobb in http://bugs.debian.org/598438,
that bug was fixed by the 2010-07-24 commit, 77428214f,
"du: tune, and fix some -L bugs with dangling or cyclic symlinks"
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This valid translation spec aborted:
LC_ALL=en_US.iso-8859-1 tr '[:upper:]- ' '[:lower:]_'
This invalid translation spec aborted:
LC_ALL=en_US.iso-8859-1 tr '[:upper:] ' '[:lower:]'
This was caused by commit 6efd1046, 05-01-2008,
"Avoid tr case-conversion failure in some locales"
This misaligned conversion spec was allowed:
LC_ALL=C tr 'A-Y[:lower:]' 'a-z[:upper:]'
This was caused by commit af5d0c36, 21-10-2007,
"tr: do not reject an unmatched [:lower:] or [:upper:] in SET1"
This misaligned spec was allowed by extending the class:
LC_ALL=C tr '[:upper:] ' '[:lower:]'
* src/tr.c (validate_case_classes): A new function to check
alignment of case conversion classes. Also it adjusts the
length of the sets so that locales with different numbers of
upper and lower case characters, don't cause issues.
(string2_extend): Disallow extending the case conversion
class as in the above example. That is locale dependent
and most likely not what the user wants.
(validate): Do the simple test for "restricted" char classes
earlier, so we don't redundantly do more expensive validation.
(main): Remove the case class validation, and simplify.
* tests/misc/tr-case-class: A new test to test the various
alignment and locale issues, associated with case conversion.
* tests/misc/tr: Move case conversion tests to new tr-case-class.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fixes.
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* src/rm.c (long_opts, main): Resolve a fixme.
* NEWS: Document the change.
Based on a report by William Plusnick.
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* src/tac.c (main): Reading a line longer than 16KiB would cause
tac to realloc its primary buffer. Then, just before exit, tac
would mistakenly free the original (now free'd) buffer.
This bug was introduced by commit be6c13e7, "maint: always free a
buffer, to avoid even semblance of a leak".
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* tests/misc/tac (double-free): New test, to exercise this.
Reported by Salvo Tomaselli in <http://bugs.debian.org/594666>.
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* src/find-mount-point.c: A new file refactoring
find_mount_point() out from df.c
* src/find-mount-point.h: Likewise.
* src/df.c: Use the new find-mount-point module.
* src/stat.c (print_stat): Handle the new %m format.
(find_bind_mount): A new function to
return the bind mount for a file if any.
(out_mount_mount): Print the bind mount for a file, or else
the standard mount point given by the find-mount-point module.
(usage): Document the %m format directive.
* src/Makefile.am: Reference the refactored find-mount-point.c
* po/POTFILES.in: Add find_mount_point.c to the translation list
* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Document %m,
and how it may differ from the mount point that df outputs.
* test/misc/stat-mount: A new test to correlate mount points
output from df and stat.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature
* THANKS: Add the author
Signed-off-by: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>
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* src/df (show_point): Remove the optimization for comparing
the specified path with the device name, as this produces
inconsistent results in the presence of bind mounts. For bind
mounts, the device name is populated with the bind mount target.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
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* NEWS: Document this.
* src/sort.c (getmonth): Omit LEN arg, as MONTH is now null-terminated.
(compare_random): Don't null-terminate keys, as caller now does that.
(compare_version): Remove.
(debug_key): Null-terminate string for getmonth.
(keycompare): Support combining -R with any of -d, -f, -i, -V.
Also, support combining -V with any of -d, -i.
(check_ordering_compatibility): Allow newly-supported combinations.
* tests/misc/sort (02q, 02r, 02s): New tests, for new combinations.
(incompat2): Now test -nR, since -fR are now compatible.
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* NEWS: Document changes to sort -h, which are now minor with
respect to the pre-July-30th version.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Likewise. The
documentation now describes how -h comparison is done rather than
being vague with border cases.
* src/sort.c (long_double, strtold): Move back to general_numcompare.
(LD, compute_human): Remove.
(find_unit_order): Remove THOU_SEP parameter, since thousands
separators are now allowed by all callers. Revert to previous
behavior of sorting by suffix, and returning the order rather than
2 * order + binary, since we no longer care whether binary powers
are being used. However, treat all zeros the same, instead of
sorting 0M before 0G; this is more consistent with the desired
behavior of sorting -1G before -1M.
* tests/misc/sort (h1, h3, h6): Adjust to match mostly-reverted
behavior. However, check that all zeros sort together.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: Omit a "_", since the trailing "i"
in "1234Gi" is no longer part of the key.
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* NEWS: Document changes to sort -h.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Likewise.
* src/sort.c (long_double, strtold): Move to prelude, since they're
now used by multiple functions.
(LD): New macro.
(struct keyfield.iec_present): Remove this member. All uses removed.
(check_mixed_SI_IEC): Remove. This code was busted in the presence
of multiple threads, as it had a race condition.
(find_unit_order): Remove arg KEY; add arg THOU_SEP; arg ENDPTR is
now char ** rather than char const **. Return an integer that
distinguishes decimal from binary powers. Parse the number
consistently with the intersection of strtold and strnumcmp.
Set *ENDPTR unconditionally.
(compute_human): New static function.
(human_numcompare): Remove arg KEY. Remove 'const' from other args.
Use strnumcmp if possible, but fall back on floating point if not.
(numcompare, general_numcompare): Arg EA is now char ** rather
than char const **.
(numcompare): Adjust to new find_unit_order signature and behavior.
(keycompare): Adjus to new human_numcompare signature.
* tests/misc/sort (h1, h3, h4, h6): Adjust to new behavior.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: Likewise.
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* NEWS: Add another blank line before the previous version.
(Bug fixes): Move to the start.
(Changes in behavior): Add the item about the du mem usage change
from the "New features" section.
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This patch is by Gene Auyeung, Chris Dickens, Chen Guo, and Mike
Nichols, based off of a patch by Paul Eggert, Glen Lenker, et. al.,
with a basic heap implementation based off of the GDSL heap,
originally by Nicolas Darnis.
The number of sorts done in parallel is limited to the number
of available processors by default, or can be further restricted
with the --parallel option.
On a dual-die, 8 core Intel Xeon, results show sorting with
8 threads is almost 4 times faster than using a single thread.
Timings when sorting a 96MB file:
THREADS TIME (s)
1 5.10
2 2.87
4 1.75
8 1.31
Single threaded sorting has also been improved,
especially for cheaper comparison operations:
COMMAND BEFORE (s) AFTER (s)
sort 8.822 8.716
sort -g 10.336 10.222
sort -n 3.077 2.961
LANG=C sort 2.169 2.066
* bootstrap.conf: Add heap, pthread.
* coreutils.texi (sort): Describe the new --parallel option.
* gl/lib/heap.c: New file. Very basic heap implementation.
* gl/lib/heap.h: New file.
* gl/modules/heap: New file.
* src/Makefile.am: Add LIB_PTHREAD.
* src/sort.c: Include heap.h, nproc.h, pthread.h.
(MAX_MERGE): New macro.
(SUBTHREAD_LINES_HEURISTIC, PARALLEL_OPTION): New constants.
(MERGE_END, MERGE_ROOT): New constants.
(struct merge_node): New struct.
(struct merge_node_queue): New struct.
(sortlines temp): Remove declaration.
(usage, long_options, main): New option, --parallel.
(specify_nthreads): New function.
(mergelines): New signature, to emphasize the fact that the HI area
must be part of the destination. All callers changed.
(sequential_sort): New function, renamed from sortlines. Merge in
the functionality of sortlines_temp.
(compare_nodes): New function.
(lock_node, unlock_node): New functions.
(queue_destroy): New function.
(queue_init): New function.
(queue_insert): New function.
(queue_pop): New function.
(write_unique): New function.
(mergelines_node): New function.
(check_insert): New function.
(update_parent): New function.
(merge_loop): New function.
(sortlines): Rewrite to support and use parallelism, with a new
signature. All callers changed.
(struct thread_args): New struct.
(sortlines_thread): New function.
(sortlines_temp): Remove.
(sort): New argument NTHREADS. All uses changed. Output moved to
mergelines_node.
(main): disable threading if we are sorting at random.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/sort-benchmark-random.
* tests/misc/sort-benchmark-random: New file.
Signed-off-by: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>
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When processing a hard-linked file, du must keep track of the file's
device and inode numbers in order to avoid counting its storage
more than once. When du would process many hard linked files --
as are created by some backup tools -- the amount of memory required
for the supporting data structure could become prohibitively large.
This patch takes advantage of the fact that the amount of information
in the numbers of the typical dev,inode pair is far less than even
32 bits, and hence usually fits in the space of a pointer, be it
32 or 64 bits wide. A typical du traversal examines files on no
more than a handful of distinct devices, so the device number can
be encoded in just a few bits. Similarly, few inode numbers use
all of the high bits in an ino_t. Before, we would represent the
dev,inode pair using a naive struct, and allocate space for each.
Thus, an entry in the hash table consisted of a pointer (to that
struct) and a "next" pointer. With this change, we encode the
dev,inode information and put those bits in place of the pointer,
and thus do away with the need to allocate additional space for
each dev,inode pair.
* src/du.c: Include "di-set.h".
Don't include "hash.h"; it's no longer used.
(INITIAL_DI_SET_SIZE): Define.
(di_set): New global, to replace "htab".
(entry_hash, entry_compare, hash_init): Remove functions.
(hash_ins): Use di-set functions, rather than ones from the hash module.
(main): Likewise.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add the new di-set module.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
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* NEWS: Mention this.
* src/du.c (hash_all): New static var.
(process_file): Use it.
(main): Set it.
* tests/du/hard-link: Add a couple of test cases to help make
sure this bug stays squashed.
* tests/du/files0-from: Adjust existing tests to reflect
change in semantics with duplicate arguments.
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* src/copy.c (copy_attr): A new function which merges copy_attr_by_fd
and copy_attr_by_name. Also display all errors when --attributes-only
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Skip copying the file contents if specified.
Refactor the SELinux error handling code a little and display all
SELinux errors when only copying attributes.
* src/copy.h (struct cp_options): Add a data_copy_required boolean
* src/cp.c (main): Default to copying data but don't if specified
* src/install.c: Default to copying data
* src/mv.c: Likewise
tests/cp/reflink-perm: Add a test to check that --attributes-only
does not copy data
* tests/cp/acl: Likewise. Also refactor to remove redundant
acl manipulation
* doc/coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Describe the new option
* NEWS: Mention the new feature
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Previously we defaulted to "long-iso" format in locales without
specific format translations, like the en_* locales for example.
This reverts part of commit 6837183d, 08-11-2005, "ls ... acts like
--time-style='posix-long-iso' if the locale settings are messed up"
* src/ls.c (decode_switches): Only use the ISO format when specified.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
Reported by Daniel Qarras at http://bugzilla.redhat.com/525134
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* src/stat.c (main): Remove support for the --context (-Z) option.
In upstream releases this option has always been a no-op. It was
first ignored for compatibility, and since the June 2008 commit,
574f7614 (coreutils-7.0), its use has evoked a warning.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
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* src/touch.c (main): Remove support for the deprecated, long-named
--file option, which is an alternate name for --reference (-r).
That option was undocumented with the arrival of --reference, in
the 1995-10-29 commit, 8b92864e1d. Since the 2009-02-09 commit,
ed85df444a, use of --file has elicited a warning. Not only was
this code due for removal, but the long-name-use-detecting code
was buggy in that it would use a stale or uninitialized "long_idx",
as reported by Robin H. Johnson in http://bugs.gentoo.org/322421.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
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Previously we copied `dd` and suppressed error messages
when truncating neither regular files or shared mem objects.
This was valid for `dd`, as truncation is ancillary to copying
it may also do, but for `truncate` we should display all errors.
Also we used the st_size from non regular files which is undefined,
so we display an error when the user tries this.
* src/truncate (do_truncate): Error when referencing the size
of non regular files or non shared memory objects. Display all
errors returned by ftruncate().
(main): Error when referencing the size of non regular files or
non shared memory objects. Don't suppress error messages for
any file types that can't be opened for writing.
* tests/misc/truncate-dir-fail: Check that referencing the
size of a directory is not supported.
* tests/misc/truncate-fifo: Ensure the test doesn't hang
by using the `timeout` command. Don't test the return from
running ftruncate on the fifo as it's system dependent as
to whether this fails or not.
NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
Reported by Jim Meyering.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (truncate invocation): Mention that --reference
bases the --size rather than just setting it.
* src/truncate.c (usage): Likewise. Also remove the clause
describing --size and --reference as being mutually exclusive.
(do_truncate): Add an extra parameter to hold the size
of a referenced file, and use it if positive.
(main): Pass the size of a referenced file to do_truncate().
* tests/misc/truncate-parameters: Adjust for the new combinations.
* NEWS: Mention the change
Suggested by Richard W.M. Jones
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* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* src/du.c (DEBUG_OPT): Remove. Use long-named ---debug instead.
Commented out.
(MAX_DEPTH_OPTION): Remove. Use 'd' instead.
(main): Insert literal "d:"; remove DEBUG_OPT.
* doc/coreutils.texi (du invocation): Add -d to indices.
* tests/du/max-depth: Exercise -d, too.
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* src/sort.c (usage): Mention --debug can output warnings to stderr.
Also split the translatable string to aid translation.
(default_key_compare): A new function refactored from main(),
and now also called from the new key_warnings() function.
(key_to_opts): A new function refactored from incompatible_options(),
and now also called from the new key_warnings() function.
(key_numeric): A new function refactored to test if key is numeric.
(key_warnings): A new function to output warnings to stderr,
about questionable use of various options. Currently it warns
about zero length keys and ineffective global options.
(incompatible_options): Refactor out key_to_opts()
(main): Use key_init() to initialize gkey. Refactor out
default_key_compare(). Call key_warnings() in debug mode.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Mention that warnings
are output by --debug.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-warn: A new test for debug warnings.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature
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* src/sort (usage): Add description for --debug.
(write_bytes): Pass a line structure so it can subsequently
be passed to compare to highlight the keys when in debug mode.
Also transform TAB and NUL characters written to stdout so
that the highlighting in debug mode aligns correctly.
(human_numcompare): Pass an "endptr" so we can record the extent
of the number matched.
(general_numcompare): Likewise.
(find_unit_order): Likewise.
(getmonth): Likewise.
(numcompare): Likewise. Note we reuse find_unit_order() for this,
which is a good enough approximation, and means we don't need to
change the strnumcmp() interface.
(check_mixed_SI_IEC): Return whether iec_present, so that can be
used to set the "endptr" in find_unit_order. Also make the key
parameter optional, which will be the case from numcompare().
(count_tabs): A new function to determine how much to adjust
the mbswidth() values by (TABs don't have a width).
(mark_key): A new function to output the key highlighting to stdout.
(debug_key): A new function to determine the offset and width
of the key highlighting.
(key_compare): Pass the show_debug parameter so the key highlighting
is only displayed when explicitly called. For each key type, set
the length (lena) and whether leading blanks are auto skipped (skipb)
which are then used by debug_key() to highlight the portion of the
key used in the comparison.
(compare): Pass the show_debug parameter so the key highlighting
is only displayed when explicitly called. Call debug_key() to
highlight the last resort comparison.
(check): Output highlighting for disorder line to stdout.
(main): Process the --debug option and make it mutually exlusive
with the -o option as I don't see it useful there, even potentially
harmful if someone left a --debug in by mistake when updating a file.
Also restricting debug output to stdout, simplifies the logic
for dealing with temporary files.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Describe the --debug option,
and reference it from the --key description.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: A new test for highlighting keys.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
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* src/sort.c (general_numcompare): Use long doubles unconditionally,
and strtold when available, to convert numbers with greater range and
precision. Performance was seen to be on par with standard doubles.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Amend the -g description to
mention long double rather than double, and strtold rather than strtod.
* src/getlimits.c (main): Output floating point limits for use in tests.
* tests/misc/sort-float: A new test to ensure sort is using long
doubles when possible, and that locale specific floats are handled.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* tests/test-lib.sh (getlimits_): Normalize indenting.
* NEWS: Mention the new behaviour.
Reported by Nelson Beebe.
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* NEWS: Add header line for next release.
* .prev-version: Record previous version.
* cfg.mk (old_NEWS_hash): Auto-update.
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* NEWS: Record release date.
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* NEWS: Mention that cp and mv from the previous release did
not support preserving extended attributes (fixed in e489fd04).
Improve the grammar for the "cp capabilities" item.
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This regression was introduced in commit 224a69b5, 2009-02-24,
"sort: Fix two bugs with determining the end of field".
The specific regression being that we include 1 field too many when
an end field is specified using obsolescent key syntax (+POS -POS).
* src/sort.c (struct keyfield): Clarify the description of the eword
member, as suggested by Alan Curry.
(main): When processing obsolescent format key specifications,
normalize eword to a zero based count when no specific end char is given
for an end field. This matches what's done when keys are specified with -k.
* tests/misc/sort: Add a few more tests for the obsolescent key formats,
with test 07i being the particular failure addressed by this change.
* THANKS: Add Alan Curry who precisely identified the issue.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Reported by Santiago Rodríguez
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* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Copy xattrs _after_ setting file ownership
so that capabilities are not cleared when setting ownership.
* tests/cp/capability: A new root test.
* tests/Makefile.am (root_tests): Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
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Based on a report from Kim Hansen who wanted to
send a KILL signal to the monitored command
when `timeout` itself received a termination signal.
Rather than changing such a signal into a KILL,
we provide the more general mechanism of sending
the KILL after the specified grace period.
* src/timeout.c (cleanup): If a non zero kill delay
is specified, (re)set the alarm to that delay, after
which a KILL signal will be sent to the process group.
(usage): Mention the new option. Separate the description
of DURATION since it's now specified in 2 places.
Clarify that the duration is an integer.
(parse_duration): A new function refactored from main(),
since this logic is now called for two parameters.
(main): Parse the -k option.
* doc/coreutils.texi (timeout invocation): Describe the
new --kill-after option and use @display rather than
@table to show the duration suffixes. Clarify that
a duration of 0 disables the associated timeout.
* tests/misc/timeout-parameters: Check invalid --kill-after.
* tests/misc/timeout: Check a valid --kill-after works.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
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* src/sort.c (char fold_toupper[]): Change to unsigned
so as the correct comparisons are made in getmonth().
This fixes unibyte locales where abbreviated months
have characters that are > 0x7F, but it also works for
multibyte locales with the caveat that multibyte characters
are matched case sensitively.
With this change, the following example sorts correctly:
$ echo -e "1 márta\n2 Feabhra" | LANG=ga_IE.utf8 sort -k2,2M
2 Feabhra
1 márta
* src/sort.c (inittables): Since we ignore blanks around months
in the input, don't include them when they're present in the locale.
With this change, the following example sorts correctly:
$ echo -e "1 2月\n2 1月" | LANG=ja_JP.utf8 sort -k2,2M
2 1月
1 2月
* tests/misc/sort-month: A new test to exercise the above cases.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
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Output the NORMAL attribute before non file name text.
This attribute will continue into file names that would
not otherwise be colored unless FILE is also set.
The regression was introduced with commit 483297d5, 28-02-2009,
"ls --color no longer outputs unnecessary escape sequences".
* src/ls.c (set_normal_color): A new function to output the
NORMAL attribute sequence if it's enabled.
(print_current_files): Output NORMAL before printing long format info.
(print_file_name_and_frills): Output NORMAL before printing file name.
(print_color_indicator): Reset the attributes before a file name with
attributes so that NORMAL attributes will not combine with them.
(print_name_with_quoting): Ensure attributes are reset after printing
the file name if NORMAL attributes were output.
* tests/ls/color-norm: A new test for NORMAL and FILE combinations.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Reported in https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?26512
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* NEWS: s/contains/contain/
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Previously passing an empty parameter to -t would
raise an error, but now it means to treat each line
as a single field for matching. This matches the
default operation of `sort` which is usually used
in conjunction with join.
* src/join.c (main): Set the field delimiter to '\n' if
an empty parameter is passed to -t.
(usage): Mention the operation of -t ''.
* tests/misc/join: Add 2 new tests, for the existing -t '\0'
and the new -t '' functionality.
* doc/coreutils.texi (join invocation): Mention that
join -t '' always operates on the whole line, while
join -t '\0' usually does.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
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This essentially allows one to use --check-order with headings.
Note join without --check-order will already handle the common case
where headings do match in each file, however using --check-order will fail
often when the header sorts after the first line of data.
Note also that this will join header lines from each file even if
they don't match, with headings from the first file being used.
* NEWS: Mention the new option.
* doc/coreutils.texi (join invocation): Describe the new option.
* src/join.c (usage): Likewise.
(join): Join the header lines unconditionally.
* tests/misc/join: Add 5 new tests.
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* src/ls.c (main): With --color, avoid emitting the final color-
resetting escape sequence when it would be a no-op.
* tests/ls/color-clear-to-eol: Adjust expected output accordingly.
* tests/ls/color-dtype-dir: Likewise.
* tests/ls/multihardlink: Likewise.
* tests/ls/stat-free-symlinks: Likewise.
* tests/misc/ls-misc: Likewise.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
C de-Avillez rebased and adapted four of the new sl-dangle*
tests in tests/misc/ls-misc.
Reported by Jim Avera in
http://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/coreutils/+bug/494663
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Enabled when coreutils is configured with --with-tty-group.
Based on a patch written by Piotr Gackiewicz. Details at
http://bugzilla.redhat.com/454261
* src/who.c (is_tty_writable): A new function returning true if a TTY
device is writable by the group. Additionally it checks the group to be
the same as TTY_GROUP_NAME when compiled with --with-tty-group.
* m4/jm-macros.m4: Introduce a new configure option --with-tty-group.
* NEWS: Mention the change.
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* NEWS: Add header line for next release.
* .prev-version: Record previous version.
* cfg.mk (old_NEWS_hash): Auto-update.
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* NEWS: Record release date.
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Configure is supposed to detect insufficient XATTR support.
However, if a system has the required headers, but no library,
the configure script would mistakenly enable USE_XATTR.
* m4/xattr.m4 (gl_FUNC_XATTR): If the attr_copy_file function
is not found, don't set USE_XATTR.
Nelson Beebe reported a link failure on RHEL 5.3.
Also, do not let the combination of --disable-xattr and
a stray LIB_XATTR environment setting perturb the build.
* NEWS (Build-related): Mention it.
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* NEWS (Build-related): Mention the wchar.h issue.
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