Part of the code was transliterated from GNU's implementation in C,
and used flags to store settings. Instead, we can use enums to avoid
magic values or binary operations to extract flags.
- prevent duplicate errors from both us and `walkdir` by instructing `walkdir'
to skip directories we failed to read metadata for.
- don't directly display `walkdir`'s errors, but format them ourselves to
match gnu's format
This way later code can assume `src` and `dest` to be the actual paths
of source and destination, and do not have to constantly check
`options.dereference`.
This requires moving the error context calculation to the beginning as
well, since later steps no longer operate with the same file paths as
supplied by the user.
Fix a mix-up between ownership and mode. The latter (mode / file permissions)
can also be set on windows (which however only affects the read-only flag),
while there doesn't seem to be a straight-forward way to change file ownership
on windows.
Copy the acl as well when copying the mode. This is a non-default feature and can be
enabled with --features feat_acl, because it doesn't seem to work on CI.
It is only available for unix so far.
Copy the SELinux context if possible.
Makes the -o auto option construct a format at initialization, rather
than try to handle it as a special case when printing lines. Fixes bugs
when combined with -e, especially when combined with -a.
Rust recently added new error kinds, which causes tests to fail on beta/nightly.
However, we can't match for these new error kinds because they are marked as unstable.
As a workaround we call `.to_string()` on the original error and strip
the ` (os error XX)` bit. The downside of this is that
the error messages are not capitalized.
* Used .as_path() and .as_str() when required:
when the argument required is a Path and not a PathBuf,
or an str and not a Path, respectively.
* Changed display_items to take Vec<PathData>, which is passed, instead of [PathData]
* Added a pad_right function.
* Implemented column-formating to mimic the behavior of GNU coreutils's ls
Added returns in display_dir_entry_size that keep track of uname and
group lengths.
Renamed variables to make more sense.
Changed display_item_long to take all the lengths it needs to render
correctly.
Implemented owner, group, and author padding right to mimic GNU ls.
* Added a todo for future quality-of-life cache addition.
* Documented display_item_long, as a first step in documenting all functions.
* Revert "Used .as_path() and .as_str() when required:"
This reverts commit b88db6a817.
* Revert "Changed display_items to take Vec<PathData>, which is passed, instead of [PathData]"
This reverts commit 0c690dda8d.
* Ran cargo fmt to get rid of Style/format `fmt` testing error.
* Added a test for `ls -l` and `ls -lan` line formats.
* Changed uname -> username for cspell. Removed extra blank line for rustfmt.
Fix a bug in `seq` where the number of characters needed to print the
number was computed incorrectly in some cases. This commit changes the
computation of the width to be after parsing the number instead of
before, in order to accommodate inputs like `1e3`, which requires four
digits when printing the number, not three.
Combine the `first`, `increment`, and `last` parameters of the
`print_seq()` and `print_seq_integers()` functions into a `RangeF64` or
`RangeInt` type, respectively.
- Implement all of GNU's fiddly little details
- Don't assume Linux for error codes
- Accept badly-encoded filenames
- Report errors after the fact instead of checking ahead of time
- General cleanup
rmdir now passes GNU's tests.