* 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.
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.
Correct the `test_split::test_suffixes_exhausted` test case so that it
actually exercises the intended behavior of `split`. Previously, the
test fixture contained 26 bytes. After this commit, the test fixture
contains 27 bytes. When using a suffix width of one, only 26 filenames
should be available when naming chunk files---one for each lowercase
ASCII letter. This commit ensures that the filenames will be exhausted
as intended by the test.
Show a warning if the `skip=N` command-line argument would cause `dd`
to skip past the end of the input. For example:
$ printf "abcd" | dd bs=1 skip=5 count=0 status=noxfer
'standard input': cannot skip to specified offset
0+0 records in
0+0 records out
Show a warning when a block size includes "0x" since this is
ambiguous: the user may have meant "multiply the next number by zero"
or they may have meant "the following characters should be interpreted
as a hexadecimal number".
When specifying `seek=N` and *not* specifying `conv=notrunc`, truncate
the output file to `N` blocks instead of truncating it to zero before
starting to write output. For example
$ printf "abc" > outfile
$ printf "123" | dd bs=1 skip=1 seek=1 count=1 status=noxfer of=outfile
1+0 records in
1+0 records out
$ cat outfile
a2
Fixes#3068.
When this option is present, the files argument is not processed. This option processes the file list from provided file, splitting them by the ascii NUL (\0) character. When files0-from is '-', the file list is processed from stdin.
Using this escaped character will cause `printf` to stop generating characters.
For instance,
```rust
hbina@akarin ~/g/uutils (hbina-add-test-for-additional-escape)> cargo run --quiet -- printf "%s\c%s" a b
a⏎
```
Signed-off-by: Hanif Ariffin <hanif.ariffin.4326@gmail.com>
* test_sort: Output sorted files to a file with different name
Signed-off-by: Hanif Bin Ariffin <hanif.ariffin.43262@gmail.com>
* Fix the test by saving the environment variable
Signed-off-by: Hanif Bin Ariffin <hanif.ariffin.43262@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Hanif Bin Ariffin <hanif.ariffin.43262@gmail.com>
This avoids hacking around the short options of these command line
arguments that have been introduced by clap. Additionally, we test and
correctly handle the combination of both version and help. The GNU
binary will ignore both arguments in this case while clap would perform
the first one. A test for this edge case was added.
This allows for `-t` to take invalid unicode (but still single-byte) values
on unix-like platforms. Other platforms, which as of the time of this commit
do not support `OsStr::as_bytes()`, could possibly be supported in the future,
but would require design decisions as to what that means.
Prevent usize underflow when reducing the size of a file by more than
its current size. For example, if `f` is a file with 3 bytes, then
truncate -s-5 f
will now set the size of the file to 0 instead of causing a panic.
Improve the error message that gets printed when a directory does not
exist. After this commit, the error message is
truncate: cannot open '{file}' for writing: No such file or directory
where `{file}` is the name of a file in a directory that does not
exist.
Change a word in the error message displayed when an increment value
of 0 is provided to `seq`. This commit changes the message from "Zero
increment argument" to "Zero increment value" to match the GNU `seq`
error message.
Add an error for division by zero. Previously, running `truncate -s /0
file` or `-s %0` would panic due to division by zero. After this
change, it writes an error message "division by zero" to stderr and
terminates with an error code.