When hitting Ctrl+C sort now deletes any temporary files. To make this easier I
created a new struct `TmpDirWrapper` that handles the creation of new temporary
files and the registration of the signal handler.
The ToDo list was updated to mark `chcon` as done.
Building and testing `chcon` requires enabling the `feat_selinux` feature. If `make` is used for building, then please specify `SELINUX_ENABLED=1` if building and testing on a system where SELinux is not enabled.
- Adds words to cspell exceptions
- Converts test macros to use Default trait.
- Converts parser to use Default trait.
- Adds Windows-friendly test files for block/unblock when nl is present
in test/spec file.
Make all tests lock a mutex to ensure that they're run in series rather than
parallel. We must take this precaution due to the fact that all tests are run
in parallel as threads of one parent process. As all threads in a process share
e.g. environment variables, we use the Mutex to ensure they're run one after
another.
This way we can guarantee that tests that rely on environment variables to have
specific values will see these variables, too.
An alternative implementation could have used the [rusty fork][1] crate to run
all tests that need env variables in separate processes rather than threads.
However, rusty fork likely wouldn't run on all platforms that the utilities are
supposed to run on.
- runs rustfmt on test_dd.rs
- eliminates compiler warnings
- adds many words to spellchecker ignore list
- adds sanity test for vexing conv=nocreat issue. Still WIP.
This makes clap wrap the help text according to the terminal width,
which improves readability for terminal widths < 120 chars,
because clap defaults to a width of 120 chars without this feature.
This reimplements version_cmp, which is used in sort and ls to sort
according to versions.
However, it is not bug-for-bug identical with GNU's implementation.
I reported a bug with GNU here:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-coreutils/2021-06/msg00045.html
This implementation does not contain the bugs regarding the handling of
file extensions and null bytes.
This adds a hidden `completion` subcommand to coreutils. When invoked with
`coreutils completion <utility> <shell>` a completion file will be printed
to stdout. When running `make install` those files will be created for all
utilities and copied to the appropriate locations.
`make install` will install completions for zsh, fish and bash; however,
clap also supports generating completions for powershell and elvish.
With this patch all utilities are required to have a publich uu_app function
that returns a clap::App in addition to the uumain function.
- Adds print fn's
- Modifies internal fn's as needed to track read/write state
- Modifies status update thread to respect status level
- Adds signal handler for SIGUSR1 (print xfer stats)
- Use `unicode_segmentation` and `unicode_width` to determine proper `break_line` position.
- Keep track of total_width as suggested by @tertsdiepraam.
- Add unittest for ZWJ unicode case
Related to #2319.
Port argument parsing from getopts to clap.
The only difference I have observed is that clap auto-generates -h and
-V short options for help and version, and there is no way (in clap 2.x)
to disable them.
If we notice that we can represent all arguments as BigInts, take a
different code path. Just like GNU seq this means we can print an
infinite amount of numbers in this case.
* expr: support arbitrary precision integers
Instead of i64s we now use BigInts for integer operations. This means
that no result or input can be out of range.
The representation of integer flags was changed from i64 to u8 to make
their intention clearer.
* expr: allow big numbers as arguments as well
Also adds some tests
* expr: use num-traits to check bigints for 0 and 1
* expr: remove obsolete refs
match ergonomics made these avoidable.
* formatting
Co-authored-by: Sylvestre Ledru <sylvestre@debian.org>
Instead of using a BufReader and reading each line separately,
allocating a String for each one, we read to a chunk. Lines are
references to this chunk. This makes the allocator's job much easier
and yields performance improvements.
Chunks are read on a separate thread to further improve performance.
This closes#2181.
`who --lookup` is failing with a runtime panic (double free).
Since `crate::dns-lookup` already includes a safe wrapper for `getaddrinfo`
I used this crate instead of further debugging the existing code in
utmpx::canon_host().
* It was neccessary to remove the version constraint for libc in uucore.
* ls: Implement total size feature
- Implement total size reporting that was missing
- Fix minor formatting / readability nits
* tests: Add tests for ls total sizes feature
* ls: Fix MSRV build errors due to unsupported attributes for if blocks
* ls: Add windows support for total sizes feature
- Add windows support (defaults to file size as block sizes related
infromation is not avialable on windows)
- Renamed some functions
Moved argument parsing to clap and added tests to cover using "-" as
stdin, passing in too many file arguments, and updated the "wrap" error
message in the tests.
It is much faster to just write the lines to disk, separated by \n
(or \0 if zero-terminated is enabled), instead of serializing to json.
external_sort now knows of the Line struct instead of interacting with
it using the ExternallySortable trait. Similarly, it now uses the
crash_if_err! macro to handle errors, instead of bubbling them up.
Some functions were changed from taking &[Line] as the input to taking
an Iterator<Item = Line>. This removes the need to collect to a Vec
when not necessary.
Add crossterm as dependency
Complete the paging portion
Fixed tests
cp: extract linux COW logic into function
cp: add --reflink support for macOS
Fixes#1773
Fix error in Cargo.lock
Quit automatically if not much output is left
Remove unnecessary redox and windows specific code
Handle line wrapping
Put everything according to uutils coding standards
Add support for multiple files
Fix failing test
Use the args argument to get cli arguments
Fix bug where text is repeated multiple times during printing
Add a little prompt
Add a top file prompt for multiple files
Change println in loops to stdout.write and setup terminal only once
Fix bug where all lines were printed in a single row
Remove useless file and fix failing test
Fix another test
* ls: added creation time
* ls: Added most time features
Missing support for posix-,Format+, translating via locales. Also required more tests
* ls: rustfmt
* ls: Additional changes and fixes
Fixed the argument order, fixed a wrong iso format.
* ls: additional tests for styles
* ls: perfected arg parsing on time styles
* fix birthime test
* ls: Use 'stdout_str' in new tests
* ls: Disabled birthtime test for windows
* ls: removed indoc as a dependency
* ls: birthime test, sync first created file
* ls: birthime test, add comment explaining sync
* Removed ruby testfile birth_test.rb
This accidentally got commited in a merge
Note, I needed to change the error messages in one of the tests because
getopt and clap have different error messages when not providing a
default value
* Use buffered stdout to reduce write sys calls.
This simple change yielded the biggest performace gain.
* Use `for_byte_record_with_terminator` from the `bstr` crate.
This is to minimize the per line copying needed by
`BufReader::read_until`. The `cut_fields` and `cut_fields_delimiter`
functions used `read_until` to iterate over lines. That required copying
each input line to the line buffer. With
`for_byte_record_with_terminator` copying is minimized as it calls our
closure with a reference to BufReader's buffer most of the time. It
needs to copy (internally) only to process any incomplete lines at the
end of the buffer.
* Re-write `Searcher` to use `memchr`.
Switch from the naive implementation to one that uses `memchr`.
* Rewrite `cut_bytes` almost entirely.
This was already well optimized. The performance gain in this case is
not from avoiding copying. In fact, it needed zero copying whereas new
implementation introduces some copying similar to `cut_fields` described
above. But the occassional copying cost is more than offset by the use
of the very fast `memchr` inside `for_byte_record_with_terminator`.
This change also simplifies the code significantly. Removed the `buffer`
module.
- 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.
* Various fixes and performance improvements
* fix a typo
Co-authored-by: Michael Debertol <michael.debertol@gmail.com>
* Fix month parse for months with leading whitespace
* Implement test for months whitespace fix
* Confirm human numeric works as expected with whitespace with a test
* Correct arg help value name for --parallel
* Fix SemVer non version lines/empty line sorting with a test
Co-authored-by: Sylvestre Ledru <sledru@mozilla.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Debertol <michael.debertol@gmail.com>
* cat: Unrevert splice patch
* cat: Add fifo test
* cat: Add tests for error cases
* cat: Add tests for character devices
* wc: Make sure we handle short splice writes
* cat: Fix tests for 1.40.0 compiler
* cat: Run rustfmt on test_cat.rs
* Run 'cargo +1.40.0 update'
* sort: implement basic -k and -t support
This allows to specify keys after the -k flag and a custom field
separator using -t.
Support for options for specific keys is still missing, and the -b flag
is not passed down correctly.
* sort: implement support for key options
* remove unstable feature use
* don't pipe in input when we expect a failure
* only tokenize when needed, remove a clone()
* improve comments
* fix clippy lints
* re-add test
* buffer writes to stdout
* fix ignore_non_printing
and make the test fail in case it is broken :)
* move attribute to the right position
* add more tests
* add my name to the copyright section
* disallow dead code
* move a comment
* re-add a loc
* use smallvec for a perf improvement in the common case
* add BENCHMARKING.md
* add ignore_case to benchmarks
* Replace outdated time 0.1 dependancy with latest version of chrono
I also noticed that times are being miscalculated on linux, so I fixed that.
* Add time test for issue #2042
* Cleanup use declarations
* Tie time test to `touch` feature
- if we compile with the right OS feature flag then we should have it,
even on Windows
- Adds support for calling dd fn from cl
- Adds basic cl tests from project root
- Adds support for multiplier strings (c, w, b, kB, KB, KiB, ... EB, E,
EiB.
* Issue #1622 port `du` to windows
* Attempt to support Rust 1.32
Old version was getting "attributes are not yet allowed on `if`
expressions" on Rust 1.32
* Less #[cfg]
* Less duplicate code.
I need the return and the semicolon after if otherwise the second #[cfg]
leads to unexpected token complilation error
* More accurate size on disk calculations for windows
* Expect the same output on windows as with WSL
* Better matches output from du on WSL
* In the absence of feedback I'm disabling these tests on Windows.
They require `ln`. Windows does not ship with this utility.
* Use the coreutils version of `ln` to test `du`
`fn ccmd` is courtesy of @Artoria2e5
* Look up inodes (file ids) on Windows
* One more #[cfg(windows)] to prevent unreachable statement warning on linux
* cat: Improve performance, especially on Linux
* cat: Don't use io::copy for splice fallback
On my MacBook Pro 2020, it is around 25% faster to not use io::copy.
* cat: Only fall back to generic copy if first splice fails
* cat: Don't double buffer stdout
* cat: Don't use experimental or-pattern syntax
* cat: Remove nix symbol use from non-Linux
* wc: Don't read() if we only need to count number of bytes
* Resolve a few code review comments
* Use write macros instead of print
* Fix wc tests in case only one thing is printed
* wc: Fix style
* wc: Use return value of first splice rather than second
* wc: Make main loop more readable
* wc: Don't unwrap on failed write to stdout
* wc: Increment error count when stats fail to print
* Re-add Cargo.lock
* mkfifo: general refactor, move to clap, add unimplemented flags
* chore: update Cargo.lock
* chore: delete unused variables, simplify multiple lines with crash
* test: add tests
* chore: revert the use of crash
* test: use even more invalid mod mode
* install: implement `-C` / `--compare`
GNU coreutils [1] checks the following: whether
- either file is nonexistent,
- there's a sticky bit or set[ug]id bit in play,
- either file isn't a regular file,
- the sizes of both files mismatch,
- the destination file's owner differs from intended, or
- the contents of both files mismatch.
[1] https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/coreutils.git/tree/src/install.c?h=v8.32#n174
* Add test: non-regular files
* Forgot a #[test]
* Give up on non-regular file test
* `cargo fmt` install.rs
* date: implement set date for unix and windows
Parsing the date string is not fully implemented yet, as in it relies
on the internals of chrono - things like "Mon, 14 Aug 2006 02:34:56 -0600"
do not work, nor does "2006-08-14 02:34:56" (no TZ / local time). This
is no different to using the "--date" option however, and will get fixed
when `parse_date` is a bit smarter.
Only supports unix and Windows platforms for now.
This avoids allocating on the heap when factoring most numbers,
without using much space on the stack.
This is ~3.5% faster than the previous commit, and ~8.3% faster than “master”.
* hashsum: switch from getopts to clap
Additionally, slightly refactor. This commit will be the first of
a series of commits refactoring (at the very least) `hashsum`.
* bump the minimal version of rustc to 1.32
* feature(ln): implement -r
* fix two issues
* Use cow
* rustfmt the change
* with cargo.lock 1.31
* try to unbreak windows
- hotfix transitive bug in 'failure' forcing MinSRV increase to rust v1.33.0 by pinning 'backtrace' to <= 0.3.31
.# [why]
'failure' was using 'backtrace' `version = "0.3.3"`, which by semantic version
auto-upgrade was pulling in 'backtrace' > v0.3.30 (specifically, v0.3.40 most
recently). 'backtrace' v0.3.31 introduces use of `#[cfg(target_vendor = ...)]`
which requires rust v1.33.0. So, 'backtrace' is forcing an upgrade of MinSRV
to rust v1.33.0 with the change from backtrace v0.3.30 to backtrace v0.3.31.
Technically, by being less than v1.0.0, 'backtrace' has no semantic version
requirement. And there is debate about whether increasing MinSRV is a semantic
change. But, in my strong opinion, breaking our MinSRV statement is definitely
a semantic change.
* ref: <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/RELEASES.md>