Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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The maximum unicode code point is 0x10ffff which is 21 bits.
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Other dd implementations always show the status on exit, whether success
or failure. Fix that by using xsigatexit() (and clarify the comment for
that function a little, since it didn't previously address the "at exit"
part of its behavior at all).
This also fixes SIGUSR1 behavior so that we show the status immediately
rather than on the next trip round the read/write loop.
Tested with `dd of=/dev/full`, sending SIGUSR1 twice from another shell
(to see the status immediately each time, without exiting), then hitting
^C (to see the status and then exiting), then restarting dd and hitting
enter (to see a write error followed by the status before exiting).
Bug: https://issuetracker.google.com/177017283
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Add a test, with comment that "make install_test" doesn't currently exist...
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Add new toy `base32`. Add tests for `base32`.
base32 is added by adapting the base64 encode/decode function to also do
base32 encoding/decoding. Then their respective main functions set up
the global parameter `n` to be the number of bits used in the encoding
(5 for base32 and 6 for base64) and `align` to align the result to a
certain length via padding. These are deliberately kept as parameters to
enable future expansion for other bases easily.
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Based loosely on the Plan9/Inferno utility, and a convenient way to go back
and forth between code points and utf8 sequences.
This patch also fixes a couple of bugs in wctoutf8 (and the tests for this
toy effectively serve as unit tests for wctoutf8/utf8towc).
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Change 5109da9b3e6a898c8e0ad647303a1b375e3d97d3 caused test.test to call
chmod with mode `u+s+s` which passes on the host (where you have a
toybox test but a GNU chmod) but fails on Android where chmod is toybox
too.
Add the missing loop to string_to_mode(), which means this will also
affect other toys, but that seems like a feature (and, for example, GNU
mkdir also accepts a mode like `a=r+w+x`).
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The comma thing turned into an internationalization can of worms,
don't go there. Keep the "show megabytes on systems with >10G"
logic which includes not showing 0.0 for single digit values.
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and use the comma format when selected even if <3 digits (no 0.0M)
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Helps for terminals narrower than 80 columns (such as ConnectBot on a
current Android device).
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This is a follow-on from 310eefe, addressing the case where sscanf fails
and returns -1.
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because scanf("0%o") needs a 0 _and_ one or more digits. So add it to
the end of the \n translation list (where it returns the null terminator).
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refactoring while I was looking at the codepath.
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The shift was a remnant from when BLKGETSIZE (which measures in
blocks) was being used on Linux. The Mac has two separate ioctls
for block count and block size, which we're already multiplying
together. And on Linux we're using BLKGETSIZE64, which returns a
result in bytes, not blocks. So lose the shift.
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The recent re-enablement of the BLKGETSIZE64 code broke the Mac
build. Use the equivalent <sys/disk.h> ioctl() pair instead.
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(Update to the 64 bit API while we're there. And yes, I checked in the
kernel, it's 512 byte units.)
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Basic readelf(1) implementation, with output close enough to the binutils
version to be usable with scripts that expect the binutils version. This
started as an implementation of nm(1) until I realized that I almost always
want readelf instead, and that you actually have to do much of the work
needed for readelf just to implement nm. Arguably nm (being part of POSIX)
belongs in toybox while readelf doesn't. An argument could also be made that
neither really belongs in toybox, belonging in a separate set of development
tools (such as binutils or the LLVM binutils).
Doesn't support most of the architecture-specific stuff, most notably
relocations, but is aware of things like ARM exidx sections and the common
register state notes in core dumps for the "big four" architectures: arm,
arm64, x86, and x86-64.
Doesn't support symbol versions (but probably should).
Doesn't support section groups or the -t "section details" (which is a long
form of -S "section headers" that I've never seen used in practice and which
isn't part of -a). Doesn't support dumping unwind info or the hash table
bucket histograms.
Reuses the table of ELF architectures from file(1).
Not fuzzed, but successfully parses all the ELF files in my Ubuntu 18.04
system's lib directories. Attempts to exit with an error when presented with
an invalid ELF file rather than struggle on as binutils seems to.
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builtin, and add -u.
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Major/minor device encoding is not portable. No two BSDs agree with
each other, and Darwin is different again.
Everyone does agree on having major()/minor()/makedev() macros, but
they disagree whether they should be in <sys/types.h> (the BSDs
including Darwin, and old versions of glibc) or <sys/sysmacros.h>
(glibc >= 2.26 and bionic).
This fixes `ls -l /dev/zero` and `stat /dev/zero` on Mac.
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And a few small cleanups while I was there.
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(it returns a malloc), and doesn't match the object lifetime of getbasename()
(which always returns some or all of its argument string). The dirname() in
libc modifies its argument string, but that's what posix says to do:
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799.2008edition/functions/dirname.html
so I guess we can live with it.
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In order to be used as drop in replacement for dirname()
If path is a null pointer or points to an empty string,
dirname() shall return a pointer to the string "." .
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The downside is we don't use assembly optimized libc comparison functions,
but the common case is short/no matches until full match. Probably net win.
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The Linux kernel uses the --max-args synonym for -n.
Barbarians who use vi need xargs' -o to be able to do something like:
find -name xargs.c | xargs vi # Sad vi.
find -name xargs.c | xargs -o vi # Happy vi.
The -p option needs fixing to read from /dev/tty because stdin is
otherwise occupied in xargs. I think xargs is the only place that needs
this, so it didn't seem sensible to make all callers to yesno() be
specific about which they wanted, hence the new function.
Also remove the documentation for the build-time XARGS_PEDANTIC option
which isn't actually implemented.
Also add a TODO for -P (which is used by at least one script in the
Linux kernel).
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This was the last user of get_rawline, which lets us remove it.
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Test: no EBADF in `strace -e close ./toybox tac /proc/version`
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Before this patch, we're effectively doing `pidof -x` all the time. This
patch changes names_to_pid() to allow us to say whether or not we want to
include scripts, and adjusts the callers appropriately.
Also add tests for `pidof` versus `pidof -x` which pass after this
patch, without regressing the existing killall tests.
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Change names_to_pid() so that we can actually match shell scripts with
long names (the code to get the shell script's name was correct, but
there was an extra test preventing us from actually comparing it to the
sought name).
In kill.c itself, remove a dead test for -l and switch to the FLAG()
macro.
Also extend the tests to explicitly cover long and short names.
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macOS doesn't have real-time signals, and it has a slightly different
set of non-portable signals from Linux.
With this, the toybox `kill -l` output matches the default macOS kill(1).
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Include all the signals, not just the POSIX ones.
In particular, improve support for real-time signals. My attempt to
switch AOSP builds over to toybox timeout got reverted when I broke the
ART build bots which use SIGRTMIN+2.
Also fix `kill -l 3` to show "QUIT" and `kill -l QUIT` to show "3".
Also make the `kill -l` output include numbers and names, and format it
to look better on a 80x24 tty, because it's always August 1978 somewhere.
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This only implements the format specifiers that I've seen used in the
wild (which is actually a significant fraction of the total supported by
findutils' find). The most obvious gap is in the time support. I'm happy
to add more, but didn't want to add stuff "just because".
I'd say %A@, %C@, and -- for SELinux users -- %Z are probably the most
plausibly useful formats still missing. I don't think the human-readable
date formatting is particularly useful unless someone's seen it actually
used in the wild. The %T+ "full ISO" format being the most likely
exception to that.
Anyway, this is enough for me get started building AOSP with toybox find.
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This is a 15 year old freebsd extension (presumably thus also available on
MacOS) that glibc adopted in 2004, uClibc adopted in 2005, and bionic
supports. The only thing that DOESN'T support it is musl, once again
because its maintainer explicitly decided not to
(https://www.openwall.com/lists/musl/2013/01/15/26), so add an #ifdef
to let musl stay uniquely broken. (It'll stop at first NUL, everything
else can match NULs).
Finally fixes "s/x/y/g on a megabyte line of x's takes forever" issue.
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Don't strlen() to find NUL to skip to until after we've confirmed first
section hasn't got a match (by calling regexec() on it).
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leaking memory), and mod env command to test it.
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