flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning
message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command
line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that
want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined
colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is
directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable
terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483
terminal emulator.
As pointed out by jhb, a more scalable solution would be preferable
when multiple applications in the base system begin linking against
libh.
Submitted by: Doug Barton <DougB@gorean.org>
the long -l output format with the last commit. Fix it
by replacing the "%b %e" strftime format with "%Ef".
Make a note in the manual page that the LANG environment
variable affects the running of ls.
Reviewed by: ache
representation of time and date") won't change in time. Instead
of hard coding the locations of the time elements and hoping that
they don't move use strftime to generate the desired formats in
the first place.
PR: bin/7826
Don't use curses functions, use tputs instead
Add ^C reaction - reset colors
Optimization - don't turn off colors after EACH file printed.
Fix wrong ctype macro arg type in LSCOLORS parsing
this is extremely inefficient, instead write them all down at the
beginning.
The correct sequence to switch colours off is to first use 'op' if
it exists, otherwise use 'oc'. If neither of these exist then we
shouldn't be doing colour with this terminal.
Reviewed by: ache
to manage the ANSI colour sequences. Colour support is disabled
unless the TERM environment variable references a valid termcap.
* Allow optional compilation of the colour support in the Makefile,
defaulting to yes. This allows us to switch it off for fixit
floppies and other mediums where space is an issue and the extra
bloat of statically linking with ncurses isn't acceptable.
* Display a warning if colour is requested with '-G' but support
for it isn't compiled in.
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G
flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI
colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file
types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment
variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout
isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port.
PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616.