If `conv=block,sync` command-line arguments are given and there is at
least one partial record read from the input (for example, if the
length of the input is not divisible by the value of the `ibs`
argument), then output an extra block of `cbs` spaces.
For example, no extra spaces are printed in this example because the
input is of length 10, a multiple of `ibs`:
$ printf "012\nabcde\n" \
> | dd ibs=5 cbs=5 conv=block,sync status=noxfer \
> && echo $
012 abcde$
2+0 records in
0+1 records out
But in this example, 5 extra spaces are printed because the length of
the input is not a multiple of `ibs`:
$ printf "012\nabcdefg\n" \
> | dd ibs=5 cbs=5 conv=block,sync status=noxfer \
> && echo $
012 abcde $
2+1 records in
0+1 records out
1 truncated record
The number of spaces printed is the size of the conversion block,
given by `cbs`.
This should correct the usage strings in both the `--help` and user documentation. Previously, sometimes the name of the utils did not show up correctly.
Create a new module `blocks.rs` to contain the block-related helper
functions. This commit only moves the location of the code and related
tests, it does not change the functionality of `dd`.
Collect structs, implementations, and functions that have to do with
reporting number of blocks read and written into their own new module,
`progress.rs`. This commit also adds docstrings for everything and
unit tests for the significant methods. This commit does not change
the behavior of `dd`, just the organization of the code to make it
more maintainable and testable.
Prevent `dd` from terminating with an error when given the
command-line argument `of=/dev/null`. This commit allows the call to
`File::set_len()` to result in an error without causing the process to
terminate prematurely.
- Configured clap to take crate version, so version is now visible in docs.
- Added ABOUT string from expr help output, so about section is getting rendered in docs.
- Added USAGE section.
- Added HELP section for each args.
Place the "truncated records" line below the "records out" line in the
status report produced by `dd` and properly handle the singularization
of the word "record" in the case of 1 truncated record. This matches
the behavior of GNU `dd`.
For example
$ printf "ab" | dd cbs=1 conv=block status=noxfer > /dev/null
0+1 records in
0+1 records out
1 truncated record
$ printf "ab\ncd\n" | dd cbs=1 conv=block status=noxfer > /dev/null
0+1 records in
0+1 records out
2 truncated records
Add the `-e` flag, which indicates whether to elide (that is, remove)
empty files that would have been created by the `-n` option.
The `-n` command-line argument gives a specific number of chunks into
which the input files will be split. If the number of chunks is
greater than the number of bytes, then empty files will be created for
the excess chunks. But if `-e` is given, then empty files will not be
created.
For example, contrast
$ printf 'a\n' > f && split -e -n 3 f && cat xaa xab xac
a
cat: xac: No such file or directory
with
$ printf 'a\n' > f && split -n 3 f && cat xaa xab xac
a
Add support for the `-x` command-line option to `split`. This option
causes `split` to produce filenames with hexadecimal suffixes instead
of the default alphabetic suffixes.
Add a `NumericHexadecimal` member to the `SuffixType` enum so that a
future commit can add support for hexadecimal filename suffixes to the
`split` program.
Refactor the code to use a `SuffixType` enumeration with two members,
`Alphabetic` and `NumericDecimal`, representing the two currently
supported ways of producing filename suffixes. This prepares the code
to more easily support other formats, like numeric hexadecimal.
Clean up unit tests in the `dd` crate to make them easier to
manage. This commit does a few things.
* move test cases that test the complete functionality of the `dd`
program from the `dd_unit_tests` module up to the
`tests/by-util/test_dd.rs` module so that they can take advantage of
the testing framework and common testing tools provided by uutils,
* move test cases that test internal functions of the `dd`
implementation into the `tests` module within `dd.rs` so that they
live closer to the code they are testing,
* replace test cases defined by macros with test cases defined by
plain old functions to make the test cases easier to read at a
glance.
* include io-blksize parameter
* format changes for including io-blksize
Co-authored-by: DevSabb <devsabb@local>
Co-authored-by: Sylvestre Ledru <sylvestre@debian.org>
This change is needed to fix missing USAGE section for `od` in user docs.
With reference to this issue
https://github.com/uutils/coreutils/issues/2991, and missing USAGE
section from `od docs` at
https://uutils.github.io/coreutils-docs/user/utils/od.html, it was
found that the USAGE for od app was starts with an empty line and uudoc
only takes 1st line for using in USAGE section in docs.
This resulted in empty line in usage section for `od`
Add support for the `-x` command-line option to `split`. This option
causes `split` to produce filenames with hexadecimal suffixes instead
of the default alphabetic suffixes.
Add a `NumericHexadecimal` member to the `SuffixType` enum so that a
future commit can add support for hexadecimal filename suffixes to the
`split` program.
Refactor the code to use a `SuffixType` enumeration with two members,
`Alphabetic` and `NumericDecimal`, representing the two currently
supported ways of producing filename suffixes. This prepares the code
to more easily support other formats, like numeric hexadecimal.
Correct the accounting for partial records written by `dd` to the
output file. After this commit, if fewer than `obs` bytes are written,
then that is counted as a partial record. For example,
$ printf 'abc' | dd bs=2 status=noxfer > /dev/null
1+1 records in
1+1 records out
That is, one complete record and one partial record are read from the
input, one complete record and one partial record are written to the
output. Previously, `dd` reported two complete records and zero
partial records written to the output in this case.
Change the `filter_mount_list()` function so that it always produces
the same order of `MountInfo` objects. This change ultimately results
in `df` printing its table of filesystems in the same order on each
execution. Previously, the table was in an arbitrary order because the
`MountInfo` objects were read from a `HashMap`.
Fixes#3086.
* ls: add new optional arguments to --classify flag
The --classify flag in ls now takes an option when argument
that may have the values always, auto and none.
Modified clap argument to allow an optional parameter and
changed the classify flag value parsing logic to account for
this change.
* ls: add test for indicator-style, ind and classify with value none
* ls: require option paramter to --classify to use a = to specify flag value
* ls: account for all the undocumented possible values for the --classify flag
Added the other values for the --classify flag along with modifications to tests.
Also documented the inconsistency between GNU coreutils because we accept the
flag value even for the short version of the flag.
The iflag, oflag and conv cli arguments take a list of values
and the correct behavior is to collect all values from multiple
occurences of theme.
For example if we call `dd --iflag=directory --iflag=skip_bytes` this should
collect the two values, `directory` and `skip_bytes` for iflag.
The unittest was added for this case.
Replace `ByteSplitter` and `LineSplitter` with `ByteChunkWriter` and
`LineChunkWriter` respectively. This results in a more maintainable
design and an increase in the speed of splitting by lines.
Add the `ByteChunkWriter` and `LineChunkWriter` structs and
implementations, but don't use them yet. This structs offer an
alternative approach to writing chunks of output (contrasted with
`ByteSplitter` and `LineSplitter`). The main difference is that
control of which underlying file is being written is inside the writer
instead of outside.