Make it clear that <blank> characters just are spaces or tabs and
not a special group which needs special treatment for wide characters.
Also, and that was the only problem here, correctly calculate the
offset given by the key definitions for the start- and end-characters
using libutf-utility-functions.
Mark the progress in the README and put parentheses around the missing
flags which are insane to implement for no real gain.
I kind of missed that the sorting was still not properly done.
parse_flags() and addkeydef() are independent of everything else,
so they can be put at the bottom.
Sorting the other functions reveals the true hierarchy much better.
This is much easier to read than having yet another handrolled
list implementation.
Tested and more or less clearly equivalent.
Now that I have uni-vac, I'll have enough time to refactor more.
Using $(LD) directly for linking can cause issues with cross-compilers
and various other toolchains, as various libraries such as libc may not
be implicitly linked in, causing symbol resolution errors.
Linking through the C compiler frontend solves this issue.
1) Don't default to a space for numeric conversions. Instead,
set flag to 0 and work with it on a case-basis.
This fixes the wrong output of "printf %d 20" which had a
space prepended to it (" 20").
2) Add precision for doiuxX, which is zero-padding.
This fixes the wrong output of "printf %.5d 20" to properly
print "00020".
Thanks to emg for reporting these!
The original flush-stdin loop (with fgets()) hung until the user
entered some extraneous characters for it to kill.
emg's FIXME about nulls still applies.
Previously, 'cksum *' exited early if * contained a directory or
other file causing an fread() error.
Exit status is set to indicate an error has occurred.
glibc breaks tools on 32bit systems due to a design flaw not allowing
64bit file offsets and only doing so with a cryptic flag.
Also, make sure to tell users about -lrt, which might be needed on
some systems.
Where should I start? It's a rather irrelevant tool and broken as is.
We'll re-add it as soon as the code has been fixed by the original
author.
Until then, better keep it out or some kids get hurt.
This was broken in multiple ways. For instance, the overlay-
check of identical files (name and target) was omitted for
symbolic links for some reason.
While at it, I fixed the stat-handling, improved the error-
messages so the right paths were shown and removed the
illegimite bail-out when the target-fstatat failed (we want
only a warning here as well).
Get rid of the !!()-constructs and use ret where available (or introduce it).
In some cases, there would be an "abort" on the first fshut-error, but we want
to close all files and report all warnings and then quit, not just the warning
for the first file.
The argument handling was quite garbled up. So I fixed it.
In the process, it drops a lot of locs.
Previously, it would lead to an off-by-one in an edge case, so
stop messing around with argv and use an idiomatic fp- and fname-
array.
Now this works fine and is much easier to read.
This is also the first step towards going back to strcmp() instead
of handrolling the "-"-checks.
Otherwise, we run into problems in a typical autoconf-based build
system:
- config.status is created at some point between two seconds.
- config.status is run, generating Makefile by first writing to a file
in /tmp, and then mv-ing it to Makefile.
- If this mv happens before the beginning of the next second, Makefile
will be created with the same tv_sec as config.status, but with
tv_nsec = 0.
- When make runs, it sees that Makefile is older than config.status,
and re-runs config.status to generate Makefile.
In general, POSIX does not define /dev/std{in, out, err} because it
does not want to depend on the dev-filesystem.
For utilities, it thus introduced the '-'-keyword to denote standard
input (and output in some cases) and the programs have to deal with
it accordingly.
Sadly, the design of many tools doesn't allow strict shell-redirections
and many scripts don't even use this feature when possible.
Thus, we made the decision to implement it consistently across all
tools where it makes sense (namely those which read files).
Along the way, I spotted some behavioural bugs in libutil/crypt.c and
others where it was forgotten to fshut the files after use.