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authorRob Landley <rob@landley.net>2012-12-06 15:15:30 -0600
committerRob Landley <rob@landley.net>2012-12-06 15:15:30 -0600
commit62f00217cf92ec33b6a4700d1560cefe28eac1dd (patch)
tree80c590eea362db0a048737c3435a0aade82d3086 /www
parent3162c27324bb6a26cfb9e47b266d2a3ee451f47b (diff)
downloadtoybox-62f00217cf92ec33b6a4700d1560cefe28eac1dd.tar.gz
Update link to posix in docs (open group broke their website).
Diffstat (limited to 'www')
-rwxr-xr-xwww/roadmap.html8
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/www/roadmap.html b/www/roadmap.html
index 69095d11..ea705fff 100755
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@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ for Toybox's 1.0 release.</p>
<p>Our current candidate list combines the commands toybox already implements,
the development environment command list, the toolbox standard commands,
-various vendor configurations of busybox, a selected subset of the SUSv4
+various vendor configurations of busybox, a selected subset of the POSIX/SUSv4
standard, a couple of the less-insane bits of LSB, a few outright requests,
plus additional to-be-determined shell functionality.</p>
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ the IEEE POSIX committee's 2008 standard, the Single Unix Specification version
4, and the Open Group Base Specification edition 7 are all the same standard
from three sources.</p>
-<p>The <a href="http://opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/idx/utilities.html">"utilities"
+<p>The <a href="http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/idx/utilities.html">"utilities"
section</a>
of these standards is devoted to the unix command line, and are the best such
standard for our purposes. (My earlier work on BusyBox was implemented with
@@ -100,8 +100,8 @@ they DID standardize tends to be respected.</p>
<p>The Linux Standard Base's failure mode is different, they respond to
pressure by including special-case crap, such as allowing Red Hat to shoehorn
-RPM on the standard even though all sorts of distros (from Debian to Slackware)
-don't use it and probably never will. This means anything in the LSB is
+RPM on the standard even though all sorts of distros (Debian, Slackware, Arch,
+Gentoo) don't use it and probably never will. This means anything in the LSB is
at best a suggestion: arbitrary portions of this standard are widely
ignored.</p>