- All assert_eq in tests/common/util.rs now print a pretty diff on test
failures.
- {stdout, stderr}_is_fixture now compare the expected output and the
fixture as Strings, which leads to more usable diffs.
This adds a --debug flag, which, when activated, will draw lines below
the characters that are actually used for comparisons.
This is not a complete implementation of --debug. It should, quoting the man page
for GNU sort: "annotate the part of the line used to sort, and warn
about questionable usage to stderr". Warning about "questionable usage"
is not part of this patch.
This change required some adjustments to be able to get the range that
is actually used for comparisons. Most notably, general numeric comparisons
were rewritten, fixing some bugs along the lines.
Testing is mostly done by adding fixtures for the expected debug output of
existing tests.
* ls: Remove allocations by eliminating collect/clones
* ls: Introduce PathData structure
- PathData will hold Path related metadata / strings that are required
frequently in subsequent functions
- All data is precomputed and cached and subsequent functions just
use cached data
* ls: Cache more data related to paths
- Cache filename and sort by filename instead of full path
- Cache uid->usr and gid->grp mappings
https://github.com/uutils/coreutils/pull/2099/files
* ls: Add BENCHMARKING.md
* ls: Document PathData structure
* tests/ls: Add testcase for error paths with width option
* ls: Fix unused import warning
cached will be only used for unix currently as current use of
caching gid/uid mappings is only relevant on unix
* ls: Suggest checking syscall count in BENCHMARKING.md
* ls: Remove mentions of sort in BENCHMARKING.md
* ls: Remove dependency on cached
Implement caching using HashMap and lazy_static
* ls: Fix MSRV error related to map_or
Rust 1.40 did not support map_or for result types
Trailing separators were included at the end of the last token, but they
should not be.
This changes tokenize_with_separator as suggested by @cbjadwani.
GNU sort disallows these combinations, presumably because they are
likely not what the user really wants.
Ignoring characters would cause things to be put together that aren't
together in the input. For example, -dn would cause "0.12" or "0,12" to
be parsed as "12" which is highly unexpected and confusing.