Now you can specify a multibyte-delimiter to cut, which should
definitely be possible for the end-user (Fuck POSIX).
Looking at GNU/coreutils' cut(1)[0], which basically ignores the difference
between characters and bytes, the -n-option and which is bloated as hell,
one has to wonder why they are still default. This is insane!
Things like this personally keep me motivated to make sbase better
every day.
[0]: http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=coreutils.git;a=blob;f=src/cut.c;hb=HEAD
NSFW! You have been warned.
sbase - suckless unix tools
===========================
sbase is a collection of unix tools that are inherently portable
across UNIX and UNIX-like systems.
The following tools are implemented ('*' == finished, '#' == UTF-8 support,
'=' == implicit UTF-8 support):
UTILITY POSIX 2008 COMPLIANT MISSING OPTIONS
------- -------------------- ---------------
=* basename yes none
=* cal yes none
=* cat yes none
= chgrp no -h, -H, -L, -P
=* chmod yes none
= chown no -h, -H, -L, -P
= chroot non-posix none
=* cksum yes none
* cmp yes none
* cols non-posix none
=* comm yes none
= cp no -H, -i, -L
=* cron non-posix none
#* cut yes none
= date yes none
= dirname yes none
= du no -H, -L, -x
= echo yes none
= env yes none
# expand yes none
expr yes none
=* false yes none
fold yes none
* grep yes none
head yes none
= hostname non-posix none
=* kill yes none
= link yes none
= ln yes none
=* logger yes none
= logname yes none
= ls no -C, -R, -q, -u
md5sum non-posix none
= mkdir yes none
= mkfifo yes none
= mktemp non-posix none
= mv no -i
= nice yes none
= nl no -d, -f, -h, -l, -n, -p, -v, -w
= nohup yes none
paste yes none
= printenv non-posix none
printf stolen stolen
=* pwd yes none
= readlink non-posix none
= renice yes none
= rm no -i
= rmdir no -p
= sleep yes none
= setsid non-posix none
sort no -m, -o, -d, -f, -i
split yes none
= sponge non-posix none
strings no -a, -n, -t
= sync non-posix none
= tail no -c, -f
= tar non-posix none
= tee no -i
test yes none
= touch no -r
#* tr yes none
=* true yes none
= tty yes none
= uudecode no -o
= uuencode no -m
= uname yes none
# unexpand yes none
= uniq no -f, -s
= unlink yes none
seq non-posix none
= sha1sum non-posix none
= sha256sum non-posix none
= sha512sum non-posix none
wc yes none
= xargs no -I, -L, -p, -s, -t, -x
= yes yes none
The complement of sbase is ubase[1] which is Linux-specific and
provides all the non-portable tools. Together they are intended to
form a base system similar to busybox but much smaller and suckless.
Building
--------
You need GNU make to build sbase on OpenBSD.
To build sbase, simply type make. You may have to fiddle with
config.mk depending on your system.
You can also build sbase-box, which generates a single binary
containing all the required tools. You can then symlink the
individual tools to sbase-box.
Ideally you will want to statically link sbase. If you are on Linux
we recommend using musl-libc[2].
Portability
-----------
sbase has been compiled on a variety of different operating systems,
including Linux, *BSD, OSX, Haiku, Solaris, SCO OpenServer and others.
Various combinations of operating systems and architectures have also
been built.
You can build sbase with gcc, clang, tcc, nwcc and pcc.
[1] http://git.suckless.org/ubase/
[2] http://www.musl-libc.org/