'read' command to return an error if the user fails to supply any
input withink a given time period. The behaviour of this option is
similar to that of the like-named option in ksh93.
Reviewed by: joerg
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
face of aliases. Note, bash doesn't do aliases while running scripts, but
"real" ksh does..
Also:
Reduce redundant .Nm macros in (unused) bltin/echo.1
nuke error2, it's hardly used.
More -Wall cleanups
dont do certain history operations if NO_HISTORY defined
handle quad_t's from resource limits
Submitted by: Steve Price <sprice@hiwaay.net> (minor tweaks by me)
- don't put \n on error() calls, error adds it already.
- don't prepend "ulimit" on error() calls in miscbltin.c.
- getopt typo on ulimit -p -> -u conversion
- get/setrlimit() calls were not being error checked
ulimit formatting cleanup from me, use same wording as bash on Bruce's
suggestion. Add ulimit arg to output on Joerg's suggestion.
merge of parallel duplicate work by Steve Price and myself. :-]
There are some changes to the build that are my fault... mkinit.c was
trying (poorly) to duplicate some of the work that make(1) is designed to
do. The Makefile hackery is my fault too, the depend list was incomplete
because of some explicit OBJS+= entries, so mkdep wasn't picking up their
source file #includes.
This closes a pile of /bin/sh PR's, but not all of them..
Submitted by: Steve Price <steve@bonsai.hiwaay.net>, peter
o fix brokeness for 1>&5 redirection, where `5' was an invalid file
descriptor, but no error message has been generated
o fix brokeness for redirect to/from myself case
command and badly needed in sh(1) for everybody who wants to modify
the system-wide limits from inside /etc/rc.
The options are similar to other system's implemantations of this
command, with the FreeBSD additions for -m (memoryuse) and -p (max
processes) that are not available on other systems.