This knob removes the tools that are exclusively used to view and
maintain the databases maintained by utmpx, namely last, users, who,
wtmpcvt, ac, lastlogin and utxrm.
The tool w is not in this list, because it has some other functionality
which is unrelated to utmpx; it is hardlinked to the uptime tool.
comparsion as nullfs will copy f_type from underlayer FS.
PR: bin/156258
Submitted by: Marcin Wisnicki <mwisnicki+freebsd@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 month
- Make -F and -w work together
- Fix --color to colorize all of the matches
PR: bin/156826
Submitted by: Yuri Pankov <yuri.pankov@gmail.com>
Approved by: delphij (mentor)
the '-c' argument is passed to the shell, not to su(1), which would
indicate the login class.
'su -m <user> -c <command>'
Submitted by: Warren Block <wblock@wonkity.com> (followup to 157078)
MFC after: 5 days
Ignoring the parameter with the unknown options is unlikely to be what was
intended.
Example:
find -n .
Note that things like
find -n
already caused an exit, equivalent to "find" by itself.
in grotty(1). This makes it possible to view colorized manpages in
color.
When MANPAGER environment variable is set, use it instead of PAGER.
Why another environment variable, one might ask? With color output
enabled, both a terminal and a pager should support the ANSI color
escapes. On a supporting terminal, less(1) with option -R would be
such a pager, while "more -s" (the current default pager for man(1))
will show garbage. It means a different default pager is needed when
color output is enabled, but many people have PAGER set customary,
and it's unlikely to support ANSI color escapes, so introducing yet
another variable (MANPAGER) seemed like a good option to me:
- if MANPAGER is set, use that unconditionally;
- if you disable color support (it is by default), and don't set
MANPAGER, you get an old behavior: -P pager, $PAGER, "more -s",
in that order;
- if you enable color support (by setting MANCOLOR), and don't set
MANPAGER, we ignore PAGER which is unlikely to support ANSI color
escapes, and you get: -P pager, "less -Rs", in that order;
- you might have good reasons for different man(1) and general
purpose pagers;
- later versions of GNU man(1) support MANPAGER.
If set to a numeric value, used as the width manpages should be
displayed. Otherwise, if set to a special value ``tty'', and
output is to a terminal, the pages may be displayed over the
whole width of the screen.
rather than at the bottom of the manpage.
- Remove an obsolete comment about SWAIT being a stale state. It was
resurrected for a different purpose in FreeBSD 5 to mark idle ithreads.
- Add a comment documenting that the SLEEP and LOCK states typically
display the name of the event being waited on with lock names being
prefixed with an asterisk and sleep event names not having a prefix.
MFC after: 1 week
idle threads). The process is displayed by default (subject to whether or
not system processes are displayed) to preserve existing behavior. The
system idle process can be hidden via the '-z' command line argument or the
'z' key while top is running. When it is hidden, top more closely matches
the behavior of FreeBSD <= 4.x where idle time was not accounted to any
process.
MFC after: 2 weeks
This means these features do not work as expected with multibyte characters.
This perhaps less than ideal behaviour matches printf(3) and is specified by
POSIX.
Examples:
LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 printf '%d\n' $(printf \'\\303\\244)
LC_ALL=en_US.ISO8859-1 printf '%d\n' $(printf \'\\344)
Both of these should print 228.
Like some other shells, incomplete or invalid multibyte characters yield the
value of the first byte without a warning.
Note that there is no general way to go back from the character code to the
character.
If WITH_BSD_GREP is not set, it will be 'bsdgrep' and GNUgrep will be
'[ef]grep'. Otherwise, BSD-grep will be the grep family, and GNUgrep
will be 'gnugrep'.
Discussed with: brooks
When we are operating on a symbolic link pointing to an existing
file, bail out by default, but go ahead if -f is specified.
Submitted by: arundel
MFC after: 2 weeks