- adds case-insensitive matching in sed s/// epxressions
- consolodates common regcomp code in grep & sed into bb_regcomp and put in
utility.c
- cleans up a bunch of cruft
Howdy,
Bug #1006 reports that
ln -s /tmp/foo .
does not work correctly. In fact, it appears that any instantiation of
ln -s FILE... DIRECTORY
does not work. The following patch adds support for this form, which
then fixes the particular instance noted in the bug report.
In the process, I needed the basename function. This appears in the
string.h provided by glibc, but not uC-libc. So I wrote my own to go in
utility.c, called get_last_path_component. I also modified the basename
utility to use this function.
At some point it might be desirous to use the basename from the library
if it exists, and otherwise compile our own. But I don't know how to do
this.
Matt
GROWBY - 1, then it writes the null character just after the buffer. Yipe.
Fix thanks to Matt Kraai <kraai@alumni.carnegiemellon.edu> Thanks Matt!
-Erik
leave setkeycodes active, busybox will not link. Also fix a trivial
use-before-initialize warning. Both fixes from Jon McClintock
<jonm@bluemug.com>.
-Erik
escape seq. code from tr and echo into utility.c. Fix thanks to
Matt Kraai <kraai@alumni.carnegiemellon.edu>.
* This should close Bug #1015. Please test.
-Erik
utility.c and replaced them with get_line_from_file() from the new grep.c.
Also changed declaration in internal.h and replaced instances of
cstring_lineFromFile() in dc.c and sort.c with get_line_from_file(). Tested
them and they worked fine.
* cp/mv now accepts (and ignores) the -f flag, since it always
does force anyway
* tail can now accept -<num> commands (e.g. -10) for better
compatibility with the standard tail command
* added a simple id implementation; doesn't support supp. groups yet
'chown foo:bar' in addition to 'chown foo.bar', and fix a bug in the
busybox globbing routine such that 'find /dir -name [i]' no longer
segfaults.
-Erik
utility.c :: cstring_alloc()
utility.c :: cstring_lineFromFile() /* they're at the bottom */
so that I could read in lines of arbitrary length from FILE*s
(instead of using fgets(huge_ass_buffer,...)).
+ I tested it out on sort, and it seems to be fine.
rather then busylooping trying to kill the first one until it dies.
Should be more efficient now, and will only send one signal to each
specified process.
-Erik