Justin Pryzby [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Package: coreutils
Version: 5.94-1
Severity: minor
Tags: upstream patch
X-Fuzzies-Translation: yes
:.!man ls |grep -i sort
Reformatting ls(1), please wait...
Sort entries alphabetically if none of -cftuSUX nor --sort.
Thanks for reporting this. All these failures seem to be due to a
portability problem in lib/closeout.c. Could you please run, say, cp
--verbose /dev/null /tmp/foo - /dev/null in a debugger, putting a
breakpoint on the close_stdout function, and see why it isn't calling
'error' with a nonzero
Mart Somermaa [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
What is the general consensus on adding the '--human-readable-bytesize'
otpion to sort?
A problem with it is figuring out how to add lots of options to sort.
We're running out of letters. This one probably doesn't deserve a
single letter. And yet
Hi Paul,
* Paul Eggert wrote on Tue, May 30, 2006 at 09:51:17AM CEST:
Thanks for reporting this. All these failures seem to be due to a
portability problem in lib/closeout.c. Could you please run, say, cp
--verbose /dev/null /tmp/foo - /dev/null in a debugger, putting a
breakpoint on the
Ralf Wildenhues [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
(I assume you meant ... - 2/dev/null.)
Yes, thanks. Actually, the 2/dev/null can be omitted.
Seems fclose (stdout) isn't returning an error in this case.
Ouch. I suppose one possibility is a bug in the HP-UX C library.
Another is that stdout
Ralf Wildenhues [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I get 3 failures on hppa2.0w-hp-hpux11.23:
Regarding this one,
misc/close-stdout
it's because HP-UX's exec-family functions are not POSIX conforming.
As described in http://www.opengroup.org/susv3xsh/execl.html, calling
exec* with one or more of the
Albert Chin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, May 28, 2006 at 07:58:24PM +0200, Jim Meyering wrote:
I have to confess that I wonder if it's worth trying to work around
bugs in AIX 4. Is it still officially supported? Is it used by many?
I haven't had access to such a system for a few years
Paul Eggert wrote:
Mart Somermaa [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
What is the general consensus on adding the '--human-readable-bytesize'
otpion to sort?
A problem with it is figuring out how to add lots of options to sort.
We're running out of letters. This one probably doesn't deserve
On Tue, May 30, 2006 at 11:25:14AM +0200, Jim Meyering wrote:
Albert Chin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, May 28, 2006 at 07:58:24PM +0200, Jim Meyering wrote:
I have to confess that I wonder if it's worth trying to work around
bugs in AIX 4. Is it still officially supported? Is it used
Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
Not sure if I have much motivation for fighting this into glibc, but
here you go. I'm unsure if conditionalizing away the #undef __strndup
is wrong for some system.
Tested on AIX 4.3.3, 5.1, 5.2 (first has strnlen and strndup broken,
second has strnlen fixed, last has
Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
Tested on AIX 4.3.3, 5.1, 5.2 (first has strnlen and strndup broken,
second has strnlen fixed, last has both fixed)
Hmm? My results for AIX 5.1 differ: On AIX 5.1.0.0 I get
checking whether strndup is declared... yes
checking for working strndup... no
checking whether
Hi Bruno,
* Bruno Haible wrote on Tue, May 30, 2006 at 09:11:04PM CEST:
I added your patch to gnulib, with 4 modifications:
Thanks for applying, your modifications are all good.
+ test $gl_cv_func_strndup = no
+ if test $gl_cv_func_strndup = no; then
Was this intended redundancy or
* Bruno Haible wrote on Tue, May 30, 2006 at 09:29:37PM CEST:
Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
Tested on AIX 4.3.3, 5.1, 5.2 (first has strnlen and strndup broken,
second has strnlen fixed, last has both fixed)
Hmm? My results for AIX 5.1 differ: On AIX 5.1.0.0 I get
checking whether strndup is
Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
Hmm? My results for AIX 5.1 differ: On AIX 5.1.0.0 I get
checking whether strndup is declared... yes
checking for working strndup... no
checking whether strnlen is declared... yes
checking for working strnlen... no
(lslpp -L). The one I tested on has:
On Tue, May 30, 2006 at 09:48:24PM +0200, Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
* Bruno Haible wrote on Tue, May 30, 2006 at 09:29:37PM CEST:
Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
Tested on AIX 4.3.3, 5.1, 5.2 (first has strnlen and strndup broken,
second has strnlen fixed, last has both fixed)
Hmm? My results
On Sun, May 28, 2006 at 05:52:45PM +0200, Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
... AIX strndup is severely broken, at least on 4.3.3 and 5.1, similar
to its strnlen; see also[1]. See for example this test:
$ cat a.c \EOF
#include stdio.h
#include stdlib.h
extern char *strndup (const char *,
On Tue, May 30, 2006 at 10:27:48PM +0200, Bruno Haible wrote:
Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
Hmm? My results for AIX 5.1 differ: On AIX 5.1.0.0 I get
checking whether strndup is declared... yes
checking for working strndup... no
checking whether strnlen is declared... yes
checking for
Date: Tue, 30 May 2006 07:24:31 +0200
From: Ralf Wildenhues [EMAIL PROTECTED]
* Sam Sirlin wrote on Mon, May 29, 2006 at 10:41:03PM CEST:
From: Ralf Wildenhues [EMAIL PROTECTED]
/bin/bash --version
echo $PATH
type mkdir expr dirname basename
Hi Sam,
* Sam Sirlin wrote on Wed, May 31, 2006 at 01:11:49AM CEST:
From: Ralf Wildenhues [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Is your script home-grown or does it have some wider usage? What does
it output upon
dirname -- /
It's old code from SVr2, so it may be lurking around on old systems.
Mart Somermaa [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
- the implementation is simple, effective and 2^n/10^n-problem agnostic
(at the cost of comparing 10K less than 1M, which is not a problem
as we assume the input to be properly scaled).
That's the cost that I'm worried about. The input is not
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