for the GPROF4 case. This allows a simpler method to be used for
non-statistical profiling (it allows overhead adjustments to be
subtracted from one counter without harm if that counter goes
negative; otherwise the adjustment would have to be distributed).
32 bit counters were already too small for GPROF4 with a 200MHz
clock. int64_t counters should be used.
Man page to come...
For now use: <brandelf -t Linux linuxbin> to brand, and just
<brandelf> to verify branding on a ELF file. FreeBSD native is
set with <brandelf -t FreeBSD freebsdbin>.
Old locate(1) programs still works with the new database format, print
some garbage for 8 bit characters, but don't core (maybe except char 30).
7-Bit Puritan should not notice any difference. Same speed,
Same database size if the database contain only ASCII characters.
Reviewed by: ache
parse.c(1.9) was:
revision 1.9
date: 1996/09/12 03:03:25; author: bde; state: Exp; lines: +7 -6
Fixed handling of `!=' assignment. Don't warn if the shell's output is
null, but warn if there was an error reading it.
Suggested by: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
- Add the .PHONY, .PARALLEL, and .WAIT directives
- Added the -B and -m commandline flags
- misc. man page cleanups
- numerous job-related enhancements
- removed unused header file (bit.h)
- add util.c for functions not found in other envs.
- and a few coordinated whitespace changes
Special thanks to Christos Zoulas <christos@netbsd.org>
for help in the merge. A 'diff -ur' between Net and
FreeBSD now only contains sccsid-related diffs. :)
Obtained from: NetBSD, christos@netbsd.org, and me
not officially documented and are subject to change.
-hdr and -ftr
Specify files to insert at the top and bottom of every
page. This is similar in result to the existing -ssi
option but everything happens at build time. If the
string @@UPDATED@@ appears in either file it will be
replaced with "Updated" followed by the current date.
-white
Make the pages black text on white background.
goes to a fair degree of trouble to enable something like this to
be safe: cd /tmp && find . -mtime +7 -delete
It removes both files and directories. It does not attempt to remove
immutable files (an earlier version I showed to a few people did a chflags
and tried to blow away even immutable files. Too risky..)
It is thought to be safe because it forces the fts(3) driven descent to
only do "minimal risk" stuff. specifically, -follow is disabled, it does
checking to see that it chdir'ed to the directory it thought it was
going to, it will *not* pass a pathname with a '/' character in it to
unlink(), so it should be totally immune to symlink tree races. If it runs
into something "fishy", it bails out rather than blunder ahead.. It's better
to do that if somebody is trying to compromise security rather than risk
giving them an opportunity. Since the unlink()/rmdir() is being called
from within the current working directory during the tree descent, there
are no fork/exec overheads or races.
As a side effect of this paranoia, you cannot do a
"find /somewhere/dir -delete", as the last argument to rmdir() is
"/somewhere/dir", and the checking won't allow it. Besides, one would use
rm -rf for that case anyway. :-)
Reviewed by: pst (some time ago, but I've removed the immutable file
deletion code that he complained about since he last saw it)
known to printf(3) and then used printf() to format it... The only
problem what the #define printf out1fmt. The code was behaving differently
when run as a shell builtin since out1fmt() isn't printf(3).
Simple hack. Print to a buffer and fputs (also #defined for sh) the
result. This should fix the printf builtin problem in PR#1673, rather
than leaving the call commented out. (printf.o was being statically linked
in anyway, we might as well use it)
creating a symbolic link from foo.html (from <label name="foo">) to
the numbered file, a shell script is built that can be used to make
the links at a later time (read: after installation in the target
directory).
having the same effect, and install a link for this. There is
historic precedence for the command hd(1) (with roughly that output
format) in Xenix, SCO, and a few SysV's that tooks the idea.
Also, added a couple of spaces to the -C format to make the output
better readable.
Ok'ed by: phk