Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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with range checks for seconds, minutes, hours, day of month, and month.
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Four-digit years were being mangled by the code for two-digit years.
Move all the two-digit year code into the "we only saw two digits" case.
Add some new tests and fix existing tests.
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Correctly and portably check for non-normal dates, and explicitly show
the "before" and "after" dates (in the format of the user's choosing).
Clear the struct tm in date_main rather than parse_default because on
one path the struct tm is actually initialized. Explicitly clear the
tm_sec field in parse_default because -- experiment shows -- that
should not be preserved. Only do the "what does this 2-digit year
mean?" dance if we actually parsed a 2-digit year. Show the right
string in the error message if strptime fails.
Also add more tests, and use UTC in the tests to avoid flakiness.
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uninitialized trash in struct tm fields could segfault glibc's strftime().
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not stomping on gnu's "an extra argument tells it to set the time so let's
add -s to do the same thing" extension).
Nanoseconds aren't uniformly supported by these apis, so had to stick it in
GLOBALS() and pull it out later. Awkward, open to suggestions for a better way.
(Also, the setting API is microseconds, not nanoseconds. Collect nano, convert
to micro so we can switch APIs later without changing date's external UI again.)
Oh, and shrink really_long_name_mktime() with a for() loop (and rename it)
although I may go back and redo that for portability to hypothetical libraries
if I can convert this mess to struct timespec with proper nanoseconds support.
But that needs an extended strptime() which needs an extended struct tm,
and between us and that is convincing posix computers got fast enough to
care about fractions of a second.
(Yes, I'm aware gnu added %N to date without adding it to strptime, implying
they reimplemented strptime longhand inside date. I'm not doing that.)
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Humans get upset when date(1) lets mktime(3) work out what the 99th day
of the 99th month would be rather than rejecting the invalid date. For
the subtly wrong cases, rather than get into the leap year business,
let's rely on localtime_r(3).
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work.)
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variable can never actually be used uninitialized but gcc's warning generator can't tell and fails spamwards" warning.
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Isaac's roadmap update.
Mercurial's "import" command is still broken, committing local tree changes to files that weren't even touched by the patch because the hg developers inisist, when I point out how stupid it is, that they meant to do that. (hg record can do hunks, but import can't even track _files_.)
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Some glibc commands are irrelevant because they're for functionality
that is excluded from musl (mtrace, rpc*, localedef, iconvconfig, nscd).
getconf and catchsegv look like candidates for the development toolchain;
locale and iconv were already triaged.
getent is pretty lame, but it and the timezone stuff (tzselect zic
zdump) are the only new possibly interesting commands.
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right in years (ubuntu broke its' vim implementation). Remove trailing spaces. Add/remove blank lines. Re-wordwrap in places. Update documentation with new coding style.
The actual code should be the same afterward, this is just cosmetic refactoring.
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FOR_commandname before #including toys.h to trigger it. Rename DEFINE_GLOBALS() to just GLOBALS() (because I could never remember if it was DECLARE_GLOBALS). Convert existing commands to use new infrastructure, and replace optflag constants with FLAG_ macros where appropriate.
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