don't try to find a hidden meaning in the strange order. The list used
to be sorted in rev. 1.1 from 4.4BSD but the order was broken as soon as
in rev. 1.2 by a single-character fix.
MFC after: 3 days
This ensures that the value written is both compatible with
older mtree versions (which expect the value after the period
to be an integer count of nanoseconds after the whole second)
and is a correct floating-point value.
Leave the parsing code unchanged so it will continue to read
older files.
remove the format specification from mtree.8.
I also need to reconcile a few issues between this
mtree.5 and what is actually implemented in FreeBSD's
mtree utility.
MFC after: 30 days
order. This allows direct comparison of the output of two different
runs, regardless of the order in which readdir(2) returns directory
entries.
MFC after: 3 weeks
specification, but not in the file hierarchy.
PR: bin/99531
Submitted by: skv
Obtained from: NetBSD, originally from Ed Symanzik
Regress. test: test/test05.sh
MFC after: 1 month
change the permissions. Failures are still recorded.
This allows mtree to do a generally better job of things when uid != 0.
Sponsored by: ActiveState/Sophos
Partially submitted by: neilw at ActiveState dot com
Reviewed by: neilw at ActiveState dot com
MFC after: 3 weeks
sha512, I did not do that since it is not entirely clear where "the one
true place" to hold their implementations is going to be. Sha256 is
different since mtree already links against libmd.
Make recommended procedure for integrity checking in the manpage
consistent.
Fix a bug with -f spec1 -f spec2 comparison, which prevented
test/tes03.sh from running successfully.
Reviewed by: phk, cperciva
depending on namespace pollution in <sys/stat.h> for the declarations of
struct timeval and utimes().
Fixed some style bugs in rev.1.30 and some nearby style bugs (mainly
unsorting and missing or extra blank lines).
Removed a wrong comment that was obtained from NetBSD in rev.1.14. It said
that chflags() reset the times that were set "above" by utimes(), but
utimes wasn't "above" in FreeBSD until rev.1.30, and chflags() does't
actually reset the times.
names containing glob(3) expressions would appear verbatim in the
output.
If such an mtree file were used by mtree in update mode, wrong things
would happen.
how `crc' is actually defined.
- Remove an unnecessary `extern' variable declaration.
Data type corrections:
- Define a variable which contains a file byte offset value as type
off_t as required by the `crc' function.
- Change the type of a variable carrying a CRC checksum from `u_long'
to `uint32_t'.
- Substitute the wrong `extern' variable declaration of `crc_total'
by putting a correct one in the shared header extern.h.
`crc_total' is defined as an `uint32_t', thus fixing
incorrect mtree checksums on big-endian LP64 machines.