Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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* src/timeout.c (settimeout): A new function to convert
from a floating point duration and call alarm() or
timer_settime() if that's available.
(parse_duration): Return a double rather than unsigned int.
(usage): Mention floating point is supported.
(main): Pass the double to settimeout() rather than
calling alarm() directly with the parsed int.
(cleanup): Likewise.
* doc/coreutils.texi (timeout invocation): Say floating point timeouts
now supported, and mention the caveat with resolution.
* bootstrap.conf: Include the timer-time gnulib module.
* tests/misc/timeout-parameters: Add a test with nanoseconds.
* NEWS: Mention the improvement.
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Or more accurately, commands not started from the shell prompt,
that are interactive, or need to receive Ctrl-C etc. from the terminal.
* doc/coreutils.texi (timeout invocation): Document --foreground.
* src/timeout.c (main): Set the foreground flag and don't create
a separate group.
(cleanup): Only send a signal directly to the monitored command
when the foreground flag is set.
(usage): Describe --foreground.
* tests/misc/timeout-group: Add a new test.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference new test.
NEWS: Mention the new option.
Reported by Shay Shimony
Analysis by Alan Curry
Fix suggested by Paul Eggert
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Use this new option with --check when the input is expected to
consist solely of checksum lines. With only --check, an invalid
line evokes a warning, but the program can still exit successfully.
With --strict, any invalid line makes the program exit non-zero.
* src/md5sum.c (strict, STRICT_OPTION): Declare/define.
(long_options): Add "strict".
(usage): Describe --strict.
(digest_check): Count improperly_formatted lines, too, and use
that number and the global "strict" to determine the return value.
(main): Handle STRICT_OPTION.
Reject --strict without --check.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Describe it.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
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* src/date.c (usage): As above, for --help.
* doc/coreutils.texi (Time conversion specifiers): Likewise.
Reported by Britton Leo Kerin in http://bugs.debian.org/115833.
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* docs/coreutils.texi (stdbuf invocation): Expand on the different
reasons for disabling buffering on input and output.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (stdbuf invocation): List the contraints
on the command being controlled, up front.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (tail invocation): Adjust, and add an example.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (tail invocation): Use @var{n}, not @var{N}.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (tail invocation) [-f]: Mention how inotify
kernel support makes a difference.
Prompted by http://bugzilla.redhat.com/662900
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* doc/coreutils.texi (od invocation): Typesetting of "bytes" was wrong.
Fix it via s/@code/@var/ so it's consistent.
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Even on a system with d_type support, the default use of --color
makes ls stat every file in order to be able to honor settings like
EXEC, STICKY, ORPHAN, SETUID, etc., because those settings require
information that is not provided by dirent.d_type. However, if
for a potentially large performance gain, you are willing to disable
those settings, you can now make ls --color give type-related coloring
and perform no stat calls at all (other than the unavoidable call-per-
command-line argument). Before this change, even with all of those
attributes disabled, ls --color would still stat every directory.
Now, we're down to the minimum of one stat call per command-line arg.
* src/ls.c (gobble_file): With --color, don't stat a
non-command-line-specified directory when no directory-coloring
attribute is enabled.
* tests/init.cfg (require_dirent_d_type_): New function.
* tests/d_type-check: New script, mostly from Pádraig Brady.
* tests/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Add it.
* tests/ls/stat-free-color: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* doc/coreutils.texi (General output formatting): Describe how
to use dircolors to make ls --color refrain from calling stat
on a d_type-enabled file system.
Prompted by a query from Josef Bacik.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (split invocation): Describe --filter=CMD.
* NEWS (New feature): Mention it.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (tail invocation): Mention it.
* src/tail.c (usage): Likewise.
(tail_forever_inotify): Clarify comment.
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* src/fiemap.h: s/can not/cannot/
* NEWS: s/in/is/
* doc/coreutils.texi: Remove spurious "and".
s/effect/affect/
Use matched ``...'' quotes.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (Standards conformance): Give value of
_POSIX2_VERSION matching the _POSIX_C_SOURCE of POSIX 2008.
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Make GNU coreutils' test recognize "==" as a synonym for "=".
This is already the case in GNU coreutils' expr, bash, ksh,
busybox ash, FreeBSD-current /bin/sh and /bin/test, and
OpenBSD's /bin/sh.
Before, env test a '==' a would fail with this diagnostic:
"test: ==: binary operator expected". Now, it succeeds.
* src/test.c: Accept "==" as a synonym for "=".
* doc/coreutils.texi (String tests): Document it.
Reported as http://debbugs.gnu.org/8263
Also see http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=375
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* src/dd.c (FFS_MASK): A new macro (Find First Set) refactored
from the following enum as it's now used twice.
(usage): Mention the new 'nocache' flag.
(cache_round): A new function to help ignore requests
to drop cache, that are less than page_size.
(invalidate_cache): A new function to call posix_fadvise()
with the appropriate offset and length. Note we don't
use fdadvise() so we can detect errors when count=0.
(dd_copy): Call invalidate_cache() for the portions read.
(iwrite): Likewise for the portions written.
(main): Call invalidate_cache for page_size slop or
for full file when count=0.
* cfg.mk (sc_dd_O_FLAGS): Adjust to pass.
* doc/coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Describe the 'nocache' flag,
and give some examples of how it can be used.
* tests/dd/nocache: A new test.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Clarify that bs= can
cause parital reads to be immediately written to output.
* src/dd.c (usage): Hint that bs= can cause partial writes.
See http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=8171
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* src/dd.c (usage): Move 'sync' up with other data transformation
options. Having it alongside 'fsync' and 'fdatasync' is
particularly confusing. Also the double line description of
the 'sync' option, serves as a visual break from the "flag"
type options that follow.
* doc/coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Apply the same grouping
as above, by splitting the "conv=" table in two.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (cut invocation): Remove the tr -s '[:blank:]'
example, as it doesn't handle leading and trailing blanks. Add `awk`
examples for common field processing operations often asked about.
Also document a `join` hack, to achieve the same thing. Note the
join options are ordered so as to be compatible with other systems.
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This allows one to use join as a field extractor like:
join -a1 -o 1.3,1.1 - /dev/null
* src/join.c (join): Don't flag unpairable lines when
one of the files is empty.
* tests/misc/join: Add a new test for empty input, and adjust
a previous test that was only checking against empty input.
* doc/coreutils.texi (join invocation): Document the change.
* NEWS: Likewise.
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Lines with a different number of fields than the first line,
will be truncated or padded.
* src/join.c (prfields): A new function refactored from prjoin(),
to output all but the join field.
(prjoin): Don't swap line1 and line2 when line1 is blank
so that the padding is applied to the right place.
(main): Handle the -o 'auto' option.
* tests/misc/join: Add 6 new cases to test the auto format.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
Suggestion from Assaf Gordon
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* doc/coreutils.texi (mayConflictWithShellBuiltIn): Fix wording.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (Floating point): New section.
(od invocation, tail invocation, sort invocation, printf invocation):
(sleep invocation, seq invocation): Refer and defer to it. See
<http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-coreutils/2011-01/msg00031.html>.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (shred invocation): Give an example showing how
to invoke shred in single-pass mode, and warn that -n0 --zero may
be inadequate.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (tr's Character sets): Document how a 9-bit
octal value is interpreted. tr does not ignore the ninth bit.
(echo invocation, printf invocation): Document that any ninth
bit in \OOO is ignored. (http://debbugs.gnu.org/7574)
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Run "make update-copyright".
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* cfg.mk (LINE_LEN_MAX, FILTER_LONG_LINES): New macros.
(sc_long_lines): New rule.
* HACKING: Use shorter URLs to the same material.
* doc/Makefile.am, doc/coreutils.texi, m4/boottime.m4:
* man/help2man, man/stdbuf.x, src/Makefile.am, src/cat.c, src/copy.c:
* src/cp.c, src/dd.c, src/df.c, src/du.c, src/groups.c, src/install.c:
* src/ls.c, src/md5sum.c, src/mv.c, src/od.c, src/pinky.c, src/ptx.c:
* src/readlink.c, src/remove.c, src/rmdir.c, src/setuidgid.c:
* src/sort.c, src/tail.c, src/touch.c, tests/Coreutils.pm:
* tests/cp/existing-perm-race, tests/cp/perm, tests/cp/preserve-gid:
* tests/du/2g, tests/du/long-from-unreadable, tests/init.sh:
* tests/install/basic-1, tests/ls/nameless-uid:
* tests/ls/readdir-mountpoint-inode, tests/misc/chroot-credentials:
* tests/misc/cut, tests/misc/date, tests/misc/join, tests/misc/md5sum:
* tests/misc/sha1sum, tests/misc/sha224sum, tests/misc/sort:
* tests/misc/sort-continue, tests/misc/sort-files0-from:
* tests/misc/sort-rand, tests/misc/stdbuf, tests/misc/tr:
* tests/misc/uniq, tests/mv/atomic, tests/mv/part-fail:
* tests/mv/part-symlink, tests/mv/sticky-to-xpart, tests/pr/pr-tests:
* tests/rm/fail-2eperm, tests/rm/interactive-always:
Reformat to fit within 80 columns.
* doc/Makefile.am (BAD_POSIX_PERL): New macro.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Reword slightly, to make menus and
index lines shorter.
* src/md5sum.c: Redo --help output so that it fits within 79
columns, since that's a bit more portable and all the other --help
strings fit in 79 columns.
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* src/sort.c (main): If --parallel isn't specified,
restrict the number of threads to 8 by default.
If the --parallel option is specified, then
allow any number of threads to be set, independent
of the number of processors on the system.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Document the changes
to determining the number of threads to use.
Mention the memory overhead when using multiple threads.
* tests/misc/sort-spinlock-abuse: Allow single core
systems that support pthreads.
* tests/misc/sort-stale-thread-mem: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sort-unique-segv: Likewise.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behaviour.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (split invocation): Add examples.
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Those options are useful only on systems that lack inotify support
and in the unusual event that a system with inotify support must
resort to polling.
* src/tail.c (usage): Note that the --max-unchanged-stats=N and
--sleep-interval=N options are rarely useful on systems with
inotify support.
* doc/coreutils.texi (tail invocation): Likewise.
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* src/split.c (usage, long_options, main): New options --number,
--unbuffered, --elide-empty-files.
(set_suffix_length): New function to auto increase suffix length
to handle a specified number of files.
(create): New function. Refactored from cwrite() and ofile_open().
(bytes_split): Add max_files argument to support byte chunking.
(lines_chunk_split): New function. Split file into chunks of lines.
(bytes_chunk_extract): New function. Extract a chunk of file.
(of_info): New struct. Used by functions lines_rr and ofile_open
to keep track of file descriptors associated with output files.
(ofile_open): New function. Shuffle file descriptors when there
are more output files than available file descriptors.
(lines_rr): New function to distribute lines round-robin to files.
(chunk_parse): New function. Parses K/N syntax.
* tests/misc/split-bchunk: New test for byte chunking.
* tests/misc/split-lchunk: New test for line delimited chunking.
* tests/misc/split-rchunk: New test for round-robin chunking.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference new tests.
* tests/misc/split-fail: Add failure scenarios for new options.
* tests/misc/split-l: Fix a typo. s/ln/split/.
* doc/coreutils.texi (split invocation): Document --number.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* .mailmap: Map new email address for shortlog.
Signed-off-by: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>
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* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Add sentence-ending period.
* NEWS: Correct stat change description: s/floating point //.
* cfg.mk (old_NEWS_hash): Update, to match this NEWS change.
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* src/stat.c: Don't include fstimeprec.c.
(out_epoch_sec): Don't call fstimeprec.
* NEWS: Update description.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Likewise.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (csplit invocation): Say that %d and %i are
aliases for %u.
* src/csplit.c (FLAG_THOUSANDS, FLAG_ALTERNATIVE): New constants.
(get_format_flags): Now take char const * and int * and return
size_t. It now stores info about the flags instead of merely
scanning them. Also, it handles '0' correctly. Drop support for
the undocumented '+' and ' ' flags since the value is unsigned.
Add support for the (undocumented) "'" flag. All uses changed.
(get_format_width, get_format_prec): Remove.
(check_format_conv_type): Renamed from get_format_conv_type, with
a different signature. It now converts the format to one that is
compatible with unsigned int, and checks flags. All uses changed.
(max_out): Have snprintf compute the number of bytes needed rather
than attempting to do it ourselves (which doesn't work portably
with outlandish formats such as %4294967296d).
(check_format_conv_type, main): Check for overflow in size
calculations. Don't assume size_t fits in unsigned int.
* tests/misc/csplit: Check for proper handling of flags, with
%0#6.3x. Coreutils 8.6 mishandles this somewhat-weird example.
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* NEWS: Document this.
* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Likewise.
* gl/lib/fstimeprec.c, gl/lib/fstimeprec.h, gl/modules/fstimeprec:
* gl/modules/fstimeprec-tests, gl/tests/test-fstimeprec.c:
New files.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add fstimeprec.
* src/stat.c: Include fstimeprec.h. Don't include xstrtol.h.
(decimal_point, decimal_point_len): New static vars.
(main): Initialize them.
(epoch_sec, out_ns): Remove.
(out_int, out_uint): Now returns whatever printf returned.
(out_minus_zero, out_epoch_secs): New functions.
(print_stat): Use out_epoch_sec instead of out_ns and epoch_sec.
(print_stat, print_it, usage): Remove the %:X-style formats.
* tests/misc/stat-nanoseconds: Set TZ=UTC0 to avoid problems
with weird time zones. Use a time stamp near the Epoch so that we
don't have to worry about leap seconds. Redo test cases to match
new behavior.
* tests/touch/60-seconds: Change %Y.%:Y to %.9Y, to adjust to
new behavior.
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This reverts part of the recent commit 9069af45,
"stat: print timestamps to full resolution", which made %X, %Y, %Z
print floating point numbers. We prefer to retain portability of
%X, %Y and %Z uses, while still providing access to full-resolution
time stamps via modified format strings. Also make the new
%W consistent.
* src/stat.c: Include "xstrtol.h".
(print_it): Accept a new %...:[XYZ] format directive,
e.g., %:X, to print the nanoseconds portion of the corresponding time.
For example, %3.3:Y prints the zero-padded, truncated, milliseconds
part of the time of last modification.
(print_it): Update print_func signature to match.
(neg_to_zero): New helper function.
(epoch_time): Remove function; replace with...
(epoch_sec): New function; use timetostr.
(out_ns): New function. Use "09" only when no other modifier
is specified.
(print_statfs): Change type of "m" to unsigned int,
now that it must accommodate values larger than 255.
(print_stat): Likewise.
Map :X to a code of 'X' + 256. Likewise for Y, Z and W.
(usage): Update.
* tests/touch/60-seconds: Use %Y.%:Y in place of %Y.
* tests/misc/stat-nanoseconds: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention this.
With improvements by Pádraig Brady.
Thanks to Andreas Schwab for raising the issue.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Change the description slightly
so as users might not immediately discount using this option.
Mention that --reflink is overridden by the other linking options and
--attributes-only, and give an example where this might be useful.
* src/copy.c (copy_internal): Bypass the reflink if
--attributes-only is specifed.
* tests/cp/reflink-perm: Ensure both --reflink modes are
overridden by --attributes-only.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
Reported by Jim Meyering.
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* .gitignore: Anchor most patterns. Remove .tarball-version.
* doc/.gitignore: Anchor all patterns.
Remove getdate.texi and get_date.texi.
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* gnulib: Update to latest.
* src/date.c (includes, batch_convert, main): Track rename.
* src/touch.c (includes, get_reldate): Likewise.
* doc/coreutils.texi (Top, Date input formats): Likewise.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Likewise.
* doc/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Likewise.
* doc/.gitignore: Likewise.
* bootstrap: Synchronize from upstream.
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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 (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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* gnulib: Update to latest.
* doc/coreutils.texi (date): Reflect new module name.
* doc/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Likewise.
* doc/.gitignore: Likewise.
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* tests/misc/stat-mount: Don't try to correlate the
mount points output by df and stat, as they're similar,
but sometimes different in the presence of bind mounts.
* doc/coretuils.texi (stat invocation): Clarify the
bind mount difference between stat and df.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation). Since there is
no lstatfs, document that -L is implicit with -f.
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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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* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Use @pxref inside parentheses.
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* doc/coreutils.texi (md5sum invocation): Mention currently known
security problems. Don't recommend SHA-1 as alternative.
* man/md5sum.x (BUGS): Warn about the vulnerabilities and
reference the SHA-2 based alternatives.
Reported by Simon Josefsson
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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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