This is required by our FORTIFY_SOURCE implementation as it
does more inlining. As a rule of thumb, FORTIFY_SOURCE doubles
the number of inlines except that in grep inlining
blows up for some reason.
Some users build FreeBSD as non-root in Perforce workspaces. By default,
Perforce sets files read-only unless they're explicitly being edited.
As a result, the -f argument must be used to cp in order to override the
read-only flag when copying source files to object directories. Bare use of
'cp' should be avoided in the future.
Update all current users of 'cp' in the src tree.
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Makefiles should not assume that source files can be overwritten. This is the
common case for Perforce source trees.
This is a followup commit to r211243 in the same vein.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFSpectraBSD: r1036319 on 2014/01/29, r1046711 on 2014/03/06
- Allow disabling bzip2 support with WITHOUT_BZIP2
- Fix handling patterns that start with a dot
- Remove superfluous semicolon
Approved by: delphij (mentor)
backported that was written for the TRE integration project in Google
Summer of Code 2011. This is a temporary solution until the whole
regex library is not replaced so that BSD grep development can continue
and the backported code gets some review and testing. This change only
improves scalability slightly, there is no big performance boost yet
but several minor bugs have been found and fixed.
Approved by: delphij (mentor)
Sposored by: Google Summer of Code 2011
MFC after: 1 week
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
- Makefile nit
- Add more CVS/SVN keywords to make it easier to track changes from NetBSD
in case they add further improvements
Approved by: delphij (mentor)
Obtained from: The NetBSD Project
Deliverables: Small and clean code (1,4 KSLOC vs GNU's 8,5 KSLOC),
lower memory usage than GNU grep, GNU compatibility,
BSD license.
TODO: Performance is somewhat behind GNU grep but it is only
significant for bigger searches. The reason is complex, the
most important factor is that GNU grep uses lots of
optimizations to improve the speed of the regex library.
First, we need a modern regex library (practically by adopting
TRE), add support for GNU-style non-standard regexes and then
reevalute the performance issues and look for bottlenecks. In
the meantime, for those, who need better performance, it is
possible to build GNU grep by setting WITH_GNU_GREP.
Approved by: delphij (mentor)
Obtained from: OpenBSD (http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/usr.bin/grep/),
freegrep (http://github.com/howardjp/freegrep)
Sponsored by: Google SoC 2008
Portbuild tests run by: kris, pav, erwin
Acknowledgements to: fjoe (as SoC 2008 mentor),
everyone who helped in reviewing and testing