Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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a patch from Elliott Hughes, who said:
[PATCH] Add support for libcrypto for MD5/SHA.
Orders of magnitude faster (for architectures where OpenSSL/BoringSSL
has optimized assembler).
Also adds sha224sum, sha256sum, sha384sum, and sha512sum for folks
building with libcrypto.
The fallback portable C implementations could easily be refactored
to be API-compatible, but I don't know whether they'd stay here or
move to lib/ so I've left that part alone for now.
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The lack of support for named constants is not a regression relative
to the toolbox implementation.
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This is enough for everything on Android and everything except Java
on my desktop. Even desktop Chrome fits!
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to use this (and tail) as examples of simplicity of implementation winning
and losing.
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Support hex (requested by users).
Support status=noxfer and status=none (requested by users).
Fix status output.
Clarify large numbers in --help output.
Use O_TRUNC rather than ftruncate unless we're also seeking.
New tests.
Also partial cleanup (reuse of existing code, removal of non-GLOBALS globals,
and merge dd_main and do_dd).
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resulting macro.)
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They're really just arbitrary byte sequences of arbitrary length.
Sure, a 20-byte sequence is _probably_ a SHA-1, but there's no way
to know, so let's stop pretending...
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in [groups].
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is explicitly outright insane (%b handles octal escapes differently for no
obvious reason).
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Read any PT_NOTE sections to look for NT_GNU_BUILD_ID or Android API
level notes. I deliberately didn't NT_GNU_ABI_TAG because it's noisy --
every Linux executable has one -- but not something most command-line
users will have any use for. (And you can ask readelf(1) anyway.)
Also read the section headers to implement "stripped"/"not stripped".
This patch removes "uses %d libs" because it was actually just counting
dynamic sections in the ELF file, and there are only 0 or 1 of those in
a valid ELF flie. (If you really want this functionality, you have to
*parse* the dynamic section looking for the DT_NEEDED entries. But that's
more of a job for readelf(1) than file(1).)
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In main.c: used adjusted string with placeholers for removed options (so flag
values don't move based on config, allowing FORCE_FLAGS to work).
In scripts/mkflags.c: test was wrong, a bare longopt never matches a single
letter command, but it was treated as always matching when comparing
allyesconfig vs current config to determine which options were disabled, so
there was a corner case that got the flag values wrong.
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nandread was MTD-only, and we don't support MTD any more.
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top switched over a week or two back, and log switched today.
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It turns out that "default" goes nowhere. Whereas "silent" actually shows
up in the log. So document "silent" (which we already supported) but
remove support for "default".
Also make the spacing between levels in the help more regular; it looks
weird being in columns when there's only one row!
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It should come as no surprise to those who followed the development of
this that it's not well known which of the various names is actually the
thread name. Adding "thread" to the ps --help output seems like a good
idea.
I'm also assuming that "stat2" was meant to read "stat[2]", since that's
how it mostly appeared on the list while discussing this. Still fits in
80 columns.
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continues to get worse, and now can't handle INT_MAX/2 either. So our
first workaround _also_ broke.
But posix says "A negative precision is taken as if the precision were
omitted." and that _doesn't_ trigger the glibc bug, so use that instead.
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(Ubuntu's netstat is left justifying the inode field, and they're wrong.)
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7ca5dc4232b9ac5ee5cd25c8b5b33a58904cd251 didn't switch all callers over
to the new functions.
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Spotted while trying to diff netstat -nt against toybox netstat -nt.
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(I forget who reported this bug, wasn't me.)
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