Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Colin Percival
11d9aa6707 Step 1 of eliminating the "games" distribution: Move binaries to /usr/bin;
update paths; and include everything in the "base" distribution.

The "games" distribution being optional made sense when there were more
games and we had small disks; but the "games-like" games were moved into
the ports tree a dozen years ago and the remaining "utility-like" games
occupy less than 0.001% of my laptop's small hard drive.  Meanwhile every
new user is confronted by the question "do you want games installed" when
they they try to install FreeBSD.

The next steps will be:

2. Removing punch card (bcd, ppt), phase-of-moon (pom), clock (grdc), and
caesar cipher (caesar, rot13) utilities.  I intend to keep fortune, factor,
morse, number, primes, and random, since there is evidence that those are
still being used.

3. Merging src/games into src/usr.bin.

This change will not be MFCed.

Reviewed by:	jmg
Discussed at:	EuroBSDCon
Approved by:	gjb (release-affecting changes)
2015-02-12 05:35:00 +00:00
Ulrich Spörlein
fb2ad9d3a4 Reencode files from latin1 to UTF-8.
This makes a tiny percentage of entries in calendars ugly for latin1
users, but fixes them for UTF-8 users.

This badly needs a solution involving locale-dependent re-encoding.
2011-12-30 10:59:15 +00:00
Johan Karlsson
1f05bc6c92 Add the -a option to report all matches instead of only the
first of each requested type.

Approved by: joerg, sheldonh (mentor)
2002-08-22 01:50:51 +00:00
Johan Karlsson
103d66460c Define all paths in pathnames.h
Approved by:	joerg, sheldonh (mentor)
2002-07-25 23:04:31 +00:00
Johan Karlsson
8e4c33e9e7 Teach whereis(1) about games.
Approved by:	joerg, sheldonh (mentor)
2002-07-24 14:35:29 +00:00
Joerg Wunsch
e97f67f532 Complete rewrite, once again.
This is basically a ``C compilation'' of the former whereis.pl file,
employing the same algorithms, and aiming at being mostly
UI-compatible to the old (legally tainted) 4.3BSD whereis(1).  In
comparision, the 4.4BSD-Lite version is just another variant of
which(1) only, where in particular the option to search for source
directories is sorely missing.

While i was at it, i added two more options which i contemplated doing
long since.  -x will suppress the run of locate(1) to find sources
that could not be found otherwise, potentially saving a lot of time
(but obviously, risking to not find some sources that are well hidden
in the tree).  -q will omit the leading name of the query, so in
particular, you can now do something like:

	cd `whereis -qs ls`

I'd explicitly like to thank johan for his review which was quite a
bit more than an average review, including sending me a lot of diffs.

Reviewed by:	johan
2002-07-11 21:20:54 +00:00