returns, exit gracefully with 0.
This fixes the behavior you see when you specify libc.so. It occurs
because ldd(1) itself is linked with libc.so.
$ ldd /usr/lib/libc.so
/usr/lib/libc.so:
ldd: /usr/lib/libc.so: (null)
/usr/lib/libc.so: exit status 1
Reviewed by: silence of audit@
to using arithmatic to determine buffer sizes to encode into.
Diane Bruce pointed out to me that BSD/OS did MIME too, so I want to match
their output, too, since my decision of 8 output groups was wholly arbitrary.
is wrong, even though our C compiler doesn't understand that exit() eats
control of the program, and as such can sometimes complain that main() reaches
the bottom of its body without an explicit return().
Aside from that, the functional usefulness of changing it is effectively nil,
so back it out.
Submitted by: mike
deprecation warning from the utility and manual page. Since this utility
is required by POSIX, it's not likely to be removed any time soon.
This is leading up to the addition of the P1003.1-2001 -s -A -j -N -t options.
PR: 36783
using sizeof() anyway. Use slightly more consistent (per-file) error
reporting for malloc(3) returning NULL. If "malloc failed" was being printed,
don't use err(3). If a NULL format is being used, use err(3). In one case
errx(3) was being used with strerror(3), so just use err(3).
stdout. Unfortunately, DES mfc'ed this change in 1.15.2.1 (this
part probably should not have been) so it is broken there too.
truss is documented to use stderr, and other implementations use stderr.
Submitted by: Arne Dag Fidjestøl <adf@idi.ntnu.no>
* 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.