* It now knows about the existence of #elif which would have
caused it to produce incorrect results in some situations.
* It can now process #if and #elif lines according to the
values of symbols that are specified on the command line.
The expression parser is only a simple subset of what C
allows but it should be sufficient for most real-world
code (it can cope with everything it finds in xterm).
* It has an option for printing all of the symbols that might
control #if processing. The unifdefall script uses this
option along with cpp -dM to strip all #ifs from a file.
* It has much larger static limits.
* It handles nested #ifs much more completely.
There have also been many style improvements: KNF; ANSI function
definitions; all global stuff moved to the top of the file; use
stdbool instead of h0h0bool; const-correctness; err(3) instead
of fprintf(stderr, ...); enum instead of #define; commentary.
I used NetBSD's unifdef as the basis of this since it has received
the most attention over the years.
PR: 37454
Reviewed by: markm, dwmalone
Approved by: dwmalone (mentor)
MFC after: 3 weeks
marker. Exit non-zero if we cannot open one of the input files. Update
standards conformance and exit status statements in manual page.
PR: 36130
Approved by: mike
mktemp(3). It would be amazingly unlikely, but the former method
could result in a symlink attack. A better solution would use
${TMPDIR}, though.
o Make sed not overwrite old backup files with no warning.
the requested utility. This is how nice(1) traditionall behaved,
and the behaviour required by SUSv3 and POSIX.2 UPE.
Submitted by: Peter Avalos <pavalos@theshell.com> (partially)
Reviewed by: mike
Replace "command" with "utility" in the manual page & source to be more
consistent with the terminology used in the standard, and to hint that
shell builtin commands won't work.
Submitted by: Peter Avalos <pavalos@theshell.com> (partially)
Approved by: mike
via INCS. Implemented INCSLINKS (equivalent to SYMLINKS) to
handle symlinking include files. Allow for multiple groups of
include files to be installed, with the powerful INCSGROUPS knob.
Documentation to follow.
Added standard `includes' and `incsinstall' targets, use them
in Makefile.inc1. Headers from the following makefiles were
not installed before (during `includes' in Makefile.inc1):
kerberos5/lib/libtelnet/Makefile
lib/libbz2/Makefile
lib/libdevinfo/Makefile
lib/libform/Makefile
lib/libisc/Makefile
lib/libmenu/Makefile
lib/libmilter/Makefile
lib/libpanel/Makefile
Replaced all `beforeinstall' targets for installing includes
with the INCS stuff.
Renamed INCDIR to INCSDIR, for consistency with FILES and SCRIPTS,
and for compatibility with NetBSD. Similarly for INCOWN, INCGRP,
and INCMODE.
Consistently use INCLUDEDIR instead of /usr/include.
gnu/lib/libstdc++/Makefile and gnu/lib/libsupc++/Makefile changes
were only lightly tested due to the missing contrib/libstdc++-v3.
I fully tested the pre-WIP_GCC31 version of this patch with the
contrib/libstdc++.295 stuff.
These changes have been tested on i386 with the -DNO_WERROR "make
world" and "make release".
indicates that not everything worked as expected. Exit non-zero if we
timed out while transmitting or receiving a file or if the file did
not exist, etc.
MFC After: 3 days (re@ willing)
environment variable that specifies the name of the strip(1)
program to use. The envvar is "STRIPBIN". The more natural
choice would be "STRIP", but that one is taken already.
Perl for such things. The key difference to Perl is that a backup extension
*MUST* be specified, because on one hand it isn't recommended to have options
which optionally take a parameter, and on the other hand, it'd be slightly
unpleasent to implement proper handling for that.
The difference between this and the version posted to developers@ is that it
does handle multiple files in argv after the getopt(3) handling "correctly",
in that the inplace editing-specific code has been moved out to a function,
and that function is used beyond the first file in our linked list.
This option has been documented as FreeBSD-specific in the manpage.
Reviewed by: developers@ (got feedback from: des, fanf, sobomax, roberto,
obrien)
MFC after: 1 week
Write status information to stdout instead of stderr.
Exit status when an error occurs musn't be 1, that is reserved for
indicating that messages are disabled.
These changes bring mesg(1) up to SUSv3 conformance.
Reviewed by: mike
back on (and count_win is recreated).
- Create info_win as the same size for all invocations.
PR: 37552
Submitted by: Mark Valentine <mark@thuvia.demon.co.uk>
MFC after: 1 week
the prompt in their native language.
Also make the prompt fit what POSIX asks for (?...).
This should not affect use of -p with yes(1) [as every locale I know of matches
'y' as YESEXPR as well], but that's what -t is for anyway. -p is meant to be
really used interactively.
Submitted by: tjr, jmallett