Continue my parade on introspection tools by fixing:
- failed to check for null after reallocf
- avoid the comma operator
- mark usage as dead
- correct size of len
- initialize all maybe uninitialized vars with bogus values. This shuts
up the compiler, and causes crashes if it changes later.
- mark noreturn as noreturn
- removed unused macro
- handle x_procstate as runtime rather than pre-processor
- avoid using void functions in condtionals
Tested with clang, gcc 7, gcc 9
This eliminates the difficult to follow mapping of a string list. It
moves numbers from "#define" into (more) debuggable enums. More
generally, it follows the trend of moving more data into a more central
mechanism.
The help output is a little worse: " " is not rendered well, and there
are duplicate entries, but that will be fixed in a followup.
It's clearer now when a variable represents a toggable command line option.
Many options were stored in the parser's state structure, so fix also that.
- remove WARNS?=6. It is default
- we no longer have cast-qual problems
- remove unused macros
- remove unneeded casts
- add include guard for loadavg.h
This removes the getuid check for delay==0. It didn't prevent users from
writing similar programs in the general case. In theory, if top(1) is
among one of the few restricted programs you're allowed to run, it may
have helped a little, but there are better ways of handling that case.
I had changed this from a for loop to a memset during an earlier
cleanup. This change was incorrect so revert it.
While here, clean up
Reported by: flo
original commit log by miller@OpenBSD r1.46:
Fix exit value when diffing directories with missing files and the -N
or -P options are not used. From Ibrahim Khalifa
Again motivated by upcoming work to rewrite a bunch of this- single-letter
variable names and slightly misleading variable names ("lastmatches" to
indicate that the last matched) are not helpful.
- By popular demand, implement a different switch ("T") for toggling
between thread id and process id.
- Add an assert that the size of command chars is as expected.
- Also clean up some messiness I found when implementing this.
- Further document the new flag.
Requested by: flo, ronald-lists@klop.ws, bapt
PR: 139389 (for the record)
X-MFC-With: r334474
(or peel off the band-aid, whatever floats your boat)
This addresses two separate issues:
1.) Nothing within bsdgrep actually knew whether it cared about line numbers
or not.
2.) The file layer knew nothing about the context in which it was being
called.
#1 is only important when we're *not* processing line-by-line. #2 is
debatably a good idea; the parsing context is only handy because that's
where we store current offset information and, as of this commit, whether or
not it needs to be line-aware.
Admittedly, this is a clang-scan complaint... but it wasn't wrong. fts_flags
is initialized by all cases in the switch(), which should be fairly obvious.
Annotate this anyways.
Neither procfile nor grep_tree return anything meaningful to their callers.
None of the callers actually care about how many lines were matched in all
of the files they processed; it's all about "did anything match?"
This is generally just a light refactoring to remind me of what actually
matters as I'm rewriting these bits to care less about 'stuff'.
GNU grep as in actually in base does not have any translations support
compiled in, so no functionnality loss.
We do support 193 locales in base, we will never catch up on that number of
translation with bsd grep.
Removing NLS support make bsd grep consistent with the other binaries in base
which are not translated, and also reduce a little bit the code.
Reviewed by: kevans
Approved by: kevans
Discussed with: kevans @BSDCan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15682