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POSIX chose I rather than i as the case-insensitive flag for s///,
because apparently more seds support I than i. We're allegedly alone in
only supporting i. (On the Mac, sed supports neither.)
Strictly this isn't *currently* in POSIX, but it's been accepted for
issue 8.
Bug: https://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=779#c2050
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Used by the Linux kernel build when copying kernel headers to
kernel-headers.tar.gz.
Bug: http://b/152244851
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I came here because the new -Wno-unreachable-code-loop-increment warning
didn't like the for loop on line 86. That loop is indeed not necessary.
Use strend() to do a string suffix match.
Use memmem() to search. It's available on macOS and Android by default,
but it's behind _GNU_SOURCE for glibc, so add that to portability.h.
Output the tags in the same order as the Debian modinfo.
I've left "parmtype" in even though the Debian modinfo doesn't output it
at all.
Also fix the tests so that they work on a device that has modules for
multiple kernels installed (like my laptop) --- make sure that the two
modules we pick come from the same kernel.
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add: test for -D
fix: b/c/d/FILE not copying into a/ with -D option
dirname() is not needed when handling FLAG(D) since filename under
src or dest should not be changed.
github.com/landley/toybox/issues/165
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Add -e, and stop documenting no-op -W.
Fix sign issues, and add a few extra sanity checks.
Redo the BE/LE 16/32/64 reading.
Remove the NOSPACE=1 from the -l test, and fix the -l code to match the
binutils output. Most usefully, this fixes the weird way the NULL
section's empty name would cause misalignment in the section to segment
mapping output.
Add a test for -s (symbol table).
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These didn't work on a system where readlink is a symlink to toybox,
ironically.
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The e2fsprogs chattr(1) returns failure when it fails to do what was
asked of it, and so should we. Fixing this then reveals a lot of issues
with the tests that were being accidentally swept under the carpet.
The bulk of this patch is going through all the tests, removing the
duplicates and making the remaining tests more thorough.
I've tested this on ext4 and f2fs on a variety of 4.x and 5.x kernel
versions (but nothing older). We might need to reduce the list of
attribtues we try to toggle, but the more thorough tests use
well-supported attributes.
I've also fixed the -R test to actually involve a directory hierarchy.
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Fixed delete last word test. (script should not have \n since it is
cursor down in vim)
Added tests to check inserts
Added tests to check yank and push
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The tests now pass on all the systems available to me (cloud Android
with encrypted f2fs, current AOSP with regular f2fs, and current Debian
testing with ext4).
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Cope with all the extra flags added recently, and ignore random stuff
from the environment like extents and encryption.
Tested on a cloud Android emulator with f2fs.
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My previous attempt to fix this worked for ext-with-extents on the
desktop, but not for f2fs-with-encryption on cloud Android devices.
This feels quite a bit cleaner, and has the benefit of actually working
everywhere I've tried it.
I've also added perfunctory testing of -p too, which was missing before.
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I'm trying to switch Android over to toybox chattr/lsattr from
e2fsprogs. Remove those tests that relied on being able to use
chattr(1), remove the duplication that tested both a bare name and a
full path, take into account all the flags that lsattr can now output,
and cope with the fact that the exact flags you'll see depend on your
file system. (Unfortunately this means trusting lsattr in the lsattr
tests, which isn't ideal, but without a known environment I don't think
we can do any better.)
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Test file integrity after load, move, delete and save+exit. Drawing
of buffer is not tested yet.
Added -s script option, accept file that is run as startup script of
commands. File is parsed byte at time and handled as you had typed it.
If EOF has been reached without editor close command, editing is
continued normally using keyboard. This functionality is in vim and
neovim, but not in POSIX vi standard. nvi (vi used in some macs) has
-s with different meaning...
Some simple tests added, dw last line test fails, so test is disabled.
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The kernel script scripts/kconfig/merge_config.sh uses cp -T.
(Also sort the options into alphabetical order while adding -T, so that
eyeball binary search actually works when trying to find an option! Oddly,
they all show in reverse order because there's a bug in the help text
generator, but that's a problem for another day...)
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A 5.4 kernel returns EINVAL rather than ENOBUFS when you try to
configure an IPv6 address with the MTU set too small to support IPv6.
Rather than check for both errors, just check for generic failure for
now.
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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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One of these tests fails in the gap between the locale it's run in
changing the year and Europe/Berlin's changeover (caught by our
automated testing, which tends to celebrate every new year by finding
mistakes in tests like this).
Another test has been failing consistently since 2020 because the
default date output format includes the day of the week. Rather than
implement Zeller's Congruence in the shell, explicitly use a format that
doesn't include the day of the week for that test (and reuse the
now-fixed calculation of the current year used by the other
year-sensitive test).
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It turns out that zlib defaults to just copying data verbatim if the
input isn't in gzip format, rather than rejecting it. Explicitly add a
check that zlib isn't doing that. (The toybox inflation path already
errors out.)
Also add the missing test.
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Add basic smoketest while we're at it.
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None of the current tests are relevant on the Mac because small
symlinks are inlined into inodes, as are empty directories, so
everything's using zero blocks.
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::2 can legitimately be part of an IPv6 address, causing the test to
fail because the grep matches an unrelated part of the output. Be more
explicit about what we're actually searching for (as the previous test
already was) to avoid flakiness.
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The Mac iconv_open(3) doesn't follow Unicode TR#22 rules for charset
alias matching that bionic and glibc do (and, strictly, POSIX doesn't
say you have to even though it's obviously a good idea), so we have
to say exactly "UTF-8" rather than "utf8".
Additionally, the 2006-era bash 3.2 on current versions of macOS
(because it was the last GPLv2 bash) seems to have bugs that cause
it to mangle UTF-8 input, so we can't reliably echo a UTF-8 sequence
into a file. Use \x in the tests to work around this.
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BSDs call the root group "wheel" instead.
Also remove the duplicated "id id" from the progress output.
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/proc/self/exe doesn't exist, but $C already gives us the path to
the binary. /dev/full doesn't have any equivalent afaik, so skip
that test if /dev/full is missing.
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Check that the filename we fed in is output to stderr.
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