forthcoming. This commit also has a number of style(9) fixes and
minor corrections so the code works better with the build system being
used for non-FreeBSD builds.
Many thanks to: Jaakko Heinonen, who proposed a mechanism for extended
attribute support and implemented both the machine-independent portion
and the Linux-specific portion.
(I'm not using GPL, but I still think there are good
ideas in the GNU projects. ;-) Among other things,
this should make it easier for clients of bsdtar to
recognize it automatically:
bsdtar --version | grep bsdtar
chdir(), be sure to undo the effects of the chdir before continuing.
Without this, after hitting a directory with mode 0111 (for example),
tar will get lost, and won't add any yet unvisted files to your
archive. (Or possibly add the wrong files, I suppose...)
Reviewed By: kientzle@
option is undocumented because it does nothing. It does nothing
because bsdtar never needs it. It is accepted because gnutar does
sometimes need it and many scripts use it.
Reported by: Pawel Jakub Dawidek
when list the archive contents, then try to extract selected files
(file selection always works against unedited pathnames). With this change,
-t always shows the pathnames as they appear in the archive.
Thanks to: Robert Watson
This causes attempts to update a non-existent file to report
an actual error instead of triggering an assertion failure.
PR: bin/87911
Thanks to: roemer.ulrich
MFC after: 3 days
Note: This does not entirely fix bin/87911. I need to decide on
the "correct" response when someone tries to update a non-existent
archive file.
set up before it is called, so move the progname initialization before
the first possible call to bsdtar_warnc().
Thanks to: Stanislav Sedov
PR: bin/83366
MFC after: 7 days
(combine with existing seconds-based), treat '-' as punctuation rather
than a negative number indicator (eliminates several special cases),
use a single list of special words instead of several separate lists,
use table-driven abbreviation logic (eliminate duplicate word entries
and special-case abbreviation and plural handling). The result is
shorter, simpler (judging from comments, earlier maintainers didn't
understand the special handling for "negative years"), handles more
cases (e.g., "tu" is now a recognized abbreviation for "tuesday",
"3rd" is now equivalent to "third") and it has 2 fewer shift/reduce
conflicts.
particular, acl support is no longer enabled on FreeBSD 4, acl support
should be correctly enabled on Linux, dirent.d_namlen should be
correctly detected on platforms that support it.
Thanks to: Greg Lewis, Juergen Lock, and Jaakko Heinonen
extraction and creation. While I'm here, fix a bug reported by Garrett
Wollman: when stripping the leading '/' from the path "/", don't produce
an entry with an empty name; produce "." instead.
Also, reduce the WARNS level to 5 since different build environments
end up using different Yacc skeletons. The BSD one does not
predeclare yyparse, the FSF one does, so it's not really possible to
consistently enforce both -Wmissing-prototypes and -Wredundant-decls.
switches to support selecting files by time of modification.
Special thanks to: Steven M. Bellovin, Rich $alz, and Jim Berets,
authors of the public-domain getdate.y date-parsing code.
source code. Include configure logic to pick up the
system one when it exists and use the fallback version
when it doesn't exist. Set the default for FreeBSD
to use the system version.
With this, bsdtar should now be quite portable.
In particular:
-W excl=text
fails because "excl" is a prefix of both "exclude" and "exclude-from". But,
-W exclude=text
is okay because it matches "exclude" exactly.
Thanks to: Jose F Nieves
MFC after: 7 days
synonym for --format. Update the man page to reflect this. While
I'm here, change the man page to document "tar" rather than "bsdtar,"
update some comments about -l compatibility and fix a few grammar nits.
throw out the whole thing and stop tracking links entirely. That will
break all remaining hardlinks, but should free up enough memory to
let everything finish.
For -l, upset everyone by breaking it. Specifically, -l now produces
a lengthy error message that suggests --check-links (POSIX -l) or
--one-file-system (GNU -l) instead. However, if POSIXLY_CORRECT is set,
use the POSIX interpretation.
For -o, please everyone by making it work both ways:
* -xo uses POSIX behavior
* -co uses "almost GNU" behavior (as close as we can get until
libarchive implements a true V7 tar format)
of course, but I make an effort to accomodate GNU tar scripts that
use -o with -c (with a meaning that totally contradicts SUSv2) by
only issuing a benign warning message in that case.
* Don't change the umask; the library now ignores the umask if
you set EXTRACT_PERM
* Set the EXTRACT_ACL and EXTRACT_FFLAGS bits (used to be
controlled by EXTRACT_PERM).
* Add --null option (sort #defines here)
* Add process_lines function to util.c that reads newline-terminated
or null-terminated lines (with self-sizing buffers, etc) and iteratively
invokes a provided function. Use this to dramatically simplify:
-T handling for -c, --exclude-from-file, and --include-from-file.
* Add -T handling to -x (via include_from_file)
Hopefully, this will fix the openoffice port and a couple of
others that rely on -T and --null.
Instead, display a warning, clean up, and let main() return the error.
In particular, this means that chdir() problems won't leave broken
archives, though they will prompt an error exit value.
This requires some non-trivial surgery to the options parsing.
While here, let people who only have getopt() access long options
through the -W longopt=value convention.