The tcsh 6.14 uses libiconv to convert catalogs to appropriate charset
dynamically. However, we don't have libiconv in our tree. So, I made
some hack to load libiconv dynamically. If libiconv is available, you
can use catalogs for more locales than the locales which catalog is
actually installed.
To use this feature, you need to symlink catalogs to appropriate
locales. You can do this by installing ports/shells/tcsh_nls.
bin/csh/Makefile: 1.38
bin/csh/config.h: 1.13
bin/csh/iconv.h: 1.1
bin/csh/iconv_stub.c: 1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/C/charset: 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/et/charset 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/finnish/charset 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/french/charset 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/german/charset 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/greek/charset 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/italian/charset 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/ja/charset 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/pl/charset 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/russian/charset 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/spanish/charset 1.1.1.1
contrib/tcsh/nls/ukrainian/charset 1.1.1.1
Approved by: re (hrs)
ls.c r1.81 and ls.1 r1.92:
date: 2005/11/10 00:02:32; author: mux; state: Exp; lines: +16 -8
Add a -I option to disable the automatic -A flag for the super-user.
ls.1 r1.93:
date: 2005/11/10 14:26:50; author: mux; state: Exp; lines: +2 -1
Mention the non-standardness of the -I option in ls(1).
Attempt to complete the userspace integration of POSIX.1e extended ACLs.
This includes adding support for ACLs into cp(1) and mv(1) userspace
utilities.
For mv(1), if _PC_ACL_EXTENDED is in effect for the source AND destination
operands, the destination file's ACLs shall reflect the source.
For cp(1), if _PC_ACL_EXTENDED is in effect for both source and destination
operands, and -p has been specified, the ACLs from the source shall be
preserved on the destination.
- Support for command -v and -V.
- Fixes for the errexit option.
- A fix for a crash caused by SIGINT.
- POSIX compliant set +o ouput.
- A fix for unalias' exit code.
- Man page updates.
- Code cleanups, WARNS 3.
converting the stat() call to a lstat() call, which will cover the
situation. One can exercise this bug by referring a dangling link with
something like */the-link.
Approved by: re (scottl)
Submitted by: Simon 'corecode' Schubert [corecode fs ei tum de]
Obtained from: NetBSD via DragonFlyBSD (NetBSD rev. 1.51 and DragonFly
rev. 1.6)
MFC After: 3 days
promised by the Argument List Processing section introduction.
What follows the option in the options list is its long name,
not its argument (as is the case for the -c option). Also
sort references in the SEE ALSO section.
Approved by: re (blanket)
sort(1). This functionality is provided by the -S option now, and it
is useful even though a similar effect is achievable with sort(1),
since the latter doesn't work in combination with -h. This option is
also present in NetBSD, OpenBSD, and GNU fileutils, so there's clearly
a demand for it.
Noticed by: asmodai
have this option with identical semantics (sorting large files first).
-r can be used to reverse the sort if that is desired.
PR: 81625
Submitted by: Kostas Blekos <mplekos@physics.upatras.gr>, keramida
benefit of scripts start out as: #!/bin/sh -- # -*- perl -*-
With this fix in place, we can commit a change to kern/imgact_shell.c
so FreeBSD will process the `#!' line in shell-scripts in a more
standard fashion.
PR: 16393
Mentioned on: freebsd-arch
analogous to chmod(1)'s -h. It allows setting flags on symbolic links,
which *do* exist in 5.x+ despite a claim to the contrary in the
chflags(1) man page.
Suggested by: Chris Dillon
variable to show up correctly.
Note: This is really a bug with the stock tcsh configure.in script not
including <sys/types.h> before <utmp.h>. But, since config.h is maintained
separate from the contrib sources, this is the correct fix.
Noticed by: ache
- Move the description of the ``-c string'' option closer to the option itself.
- Add an ENVIRONMENT section (1)
- Add more .Xr cross references to the SEE ALSO section.
Obtained from: NetBSD (1)