options even though they look like primaries. (This is already documented
in the options themselves, but is sufficiently astonishing that I think it
deserves a BUGS entry as well.)
section.
Move the HISTORY section to place it before BUGS rather than after BUGS,
in order to minimize the chance of this error being reproduced in the
future. (Both mdoc(7) and 63% of manual pages have these sections listed
in this order.)
the depth of the current file relative to the starting
point of the traversal is n. The usual +/- modifiers
to the argument apply.
- while I'm here, fix -maxdepth in the case of a depth-first
traversal
Print the top ten maintainers of python module ports
(works with p5-* too):
find /usr/ports -depth 2 \! -name 'py-*' -prune -o \
-depth 3 -name Makefile -execdir make -VMAINTAINER \; \
| sort | uniq -c | sort -nr | head
PR: 66667
Reviewed by: ru, joerg
Approved by: joerg
MFC after: 2 weeks
ACLs. This is similar to what ls(1) can do. It is handy to
have it so that it can be used in conjunction with
"-exec setfacl {} \;" (to find(1)), among others.
This is the submitter's patch, but slightly modified.
PR: bin/65016
Submitted by: Christian S.J. Peron <maneo@bsdpro.com>
1: Document -follow under COMPATIBILITY.
2: Update an example to be a little more 'safe'.
3: Use '/' in place of '.' for an example; similar to other manual pages.
PR: 40196 (1), 39532 (2, 3)
Submitted by: Marc Silver <marcs@draenor.org> (2 and 3)
Discussed with: des (1)
hack, thereby allowing future extensions to the structure (e.g., for extended
attributes) without rebreaking the ABI. FTSENT now contains a pointer to the
parent stream, which fts_compar() can then take advantage of, avoiding the
undefined behavior previously warned about. As a consequence of this change,
the prototype of the comparison function passed to fts_open() has changed
to reflect the required amount of constness for its use. All callers in the
tree are updated to use the correct prototype.
Comparison functions can now make use of the new parent pointer to access
the new stream-specific private data pointer, which is intended to assist
creation of reentrant library routines which use fts(3) internally.
Not objected to in spirit by: -arch
- Make getvfsbyname() take a struct xvfsconf *.
- Convert several consumers of getvfsbyname() to use struct xvfsconf.
- Correct the getvfsbyname.3 manpage.
- Create a new vfs.conflist sysctl to dump all the struct xvfsconf in the
kernel, and rewrite getvfsbyname() to use this instead of the weird
existing API.
- Convert some {set,get,end}vfsent() consumers to use the new vfs.conflist
sysctl.
- Convert a vfsload() call in nfsiod.c to kldload() and remove the useless
vfsisloadable() and endvfsent() calls.
- Add a warning printf() in vfs_sysctl() to tell people they are using
an old userland.
After these changes, it's possible to modify struct vfsconf without
breaking the binary compatibility. Please note that these changes don't
break this compatibility either.
When bp will have updated mount_smbfs(8) with the patch I sent him, there
will be no more consumers of the {set,get,end}vfsent(), vfsisloadable()
and vfsload() API, and I will promptly delete it.
using sizeof() anyway. Use slightly more consistent (per-file) error
reporting for malloc(3) returning NULL. If "malloc failed" was being printed,
don't use err(3). If a NULL format is being used, use err(3). In one case
errx(3) was being used with strerror(3), so just use err(3).
Since then we have living with a GPL'ed find(1) due to grabbing getdate.y
from src/contrib/cvs and its user of the GPL'ed xtime.h. I don't even want
to think about how this could have affected people using our source base.
Would it have been too much trouble to do then what I did now?
Copied getdate.y (public domain) to usr.bin/find and change to use
standard system headers. find(1) now compiles simply with out having
to go to extra effort to do so.
Pointed hat to: phk
Build fixed on: gcc 3.1 using platforms