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README
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1992-11-20
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LS 4.7ljr
UPDATE TO 4.5 USER DOCUMENTATION
AND BUG/FEATURE FIXES SINCE 4.5 RELEASE
Fri Nov 20 01:07:41 1992
The ls.doc file has only been halfway updated to show all the changes
since the 4.5ljr release. Please read this README file for full
details. I've dragged my feet for a month now with regards to getting
the doc file updated. It just isn't going to happen in the near future
and thus I thought it better to release this now as is.
Thanks to Dan B. and Chris W. for their recent help in getting some
important bug and feature fixes into ls. Many others have helped
since 4.5 by reporting problems and oddness when ls is used under
3rd party shells. [BTW, ls was operating correctly, but I have added
a patch to ls that flushes Output() to work around limitations in
some user shells.]
Please read the manual if you have never read the LS 4.5ljr manual.
Please read the following if you have read the manual.
--
First release to be compiled with SAS/C v 6.0. Smaller and
Faster. Way to go SAS! :-)
--
For me:
Fixed bug that caused any format not ending in '\n' to have an output
problem! Extra junk after some entries was being output.
--
Added for Dan:
\" is now a valid way to include a quote on the command line. E.g.:
<some command> `ls -fHF "\"%n\" "`
will protect filenames with spaces in them.
--
For Dan:
Looked into problem related to removal of non-fixed disk while ls '-R' is
scanning the media. Basically ls puts up one requestor per subdirectory
in the current scan directory and then quits. Examine() / ExNext() appear
to have some weirdness and don't respond with the correct error message.
at least they don't set IoErr to the proper value under the OFS:
IoErr() returns ERROR_NO_MORE_ENTRIES! even if the scan is interrupted
due to disk removal --- what the hell? I'm leaving it alone.
Did fix one bug, ls wasn't actually checking IoErr() when ExNext()
quit returning entries!
Fixed AsimCDFS CD-ROM file handler / ls interaction. ls had a bug. It
didn't treat entries with non-listed filetype numbers as it should (I
guess - things are a bit vague in this area, IMHO). ls was just being
stricter than it should have been. Ls will now print any file entry with
a negative (or =3) type number as a file. It will still only recurse
into directories (>=0 & !=3) if they have a C= listed number.
In the long listing, s and S appear in the file type field in place
of - and d if special files.
--
For Chris:
[Filenote comments used to always come on the line following
the long listing entry for the file it referred to.]
The placement and way filenotes are displayed can now be modified
by setting the ls_highlight0.on and ls_highlight0.off local
environment variables (see subsection entitled, ``Environment
variables'') and the format string (see subsection entitled,
``Formatted Output'') and the 'w' string. The default format
string is "%p %5b %8s %d %n%w%C\n". The %C sequence is the place the
filenote will appear in the output if requested with the '-c' option.
If filenotes not requested or none present for a given file, %C
expands to 0 characters, even if the highlighting strings are set to
a displayable characters.
'%w' is expanded to the current w (for whitespace? set via '-w' command
line switch, e.g. ls -c -w " " ram:) string if %C would expands
to a non-zero number of characters for the current entry.
The %w string defaults to "\n".
ls_highlight0.on defaults to "\x9b" "2m/* " and ls_highlight0.off
defaults to " */\x9b" "22m". Thus all filenotes will appear on the
line after the normal long listing entry in an alternate color in
a C-style comment. E. g.
R(0);T(00.266) > ls -c ram:a
-----rwed c 1 0 Sep 30 22:37 a
/* this file is neat */
For example:
R(0);T(00.000) > set ls_highlight0.on " /** "
R(0);T(00.016) > set ls_highlight0.off " **/"
R(0);T(00.000) > ls -cw " " ram:a
-----rwed c 1 0 Sep 30 22:37 a /* this file is neat */
BTW, %w and -w are a hack, pure and simple.
--
new formats for -F option argument:
%C Print filenote comment if present and requested with '-c'.
Filenote comment will have the highlight entry 0 applied to it
(see comments given in section describing '-c' option) before
printing. In general, highlighting (ANSI color sequences, etc.)
should never be placed in the format string directly
as it will not be filtered out correctly when ls is given the
'-k' option or when ls is printing to a non-interactive device.
In %C's case, this is especially important and in fact nothing
related to filenote formatting should be included because not
all files have filenotes and in any event they are not always
printed.
'%w' is expanded to the current w (for whitespace? set via '-w' command
line switch, e.g. ls -c -w " " ram:) string if %C would expands
to a non-zero number of characters for the current entry.
--
New since 4.5ljr:
4.6ljr was an internal version that only fixed the Flush() 'problem'.
I've been meaning to release an update to ls for a long time...
...been busy with new job and...
...been waiting for SAS/C 6.0 offical release [couldn't release *anything*
based on it until the offical release.]
--
For various people:
hack to Flush (Output ()) before ls terminates to allow some broken
3rd party shells to work with ls's use of 2.0's buffered IO.
--
For Dan:
changing the hide pattern:
[NOTE: No support for changing how 'h' protection bit based
hiding works. It really doesn't seem worth the effort... :-)
I don't have any '+h' protected files anyways. And, excluding
files with other protection bit settings doesn't make a lot of
sense IMHO.]
"(#?.(info|bak)|.#?)" is the default hide pattern. This
can be changed by setting the ls_hidepattern local environment
variable (see subsection entitled, ``Environment variables'').
For example, the following issued in a shell (or added to a
shell-startup command file): set ls_hidepattern ".#?",
would cause Amiga ls to function as a normal unix ls.
--
update list of ls_highlight#'s:
With the advent of Amiga OS Release 2.04, there are now many more types of
entries that can appear on a filing system (a disk). A number is
associated with each entry type, e.g.:
-4 is associated with a FILE LINK (hard link)
-3 " " " PLAIN FILE
-2 - -1 " " " NOT USED CURRENTLY
0 " " " (hack to provide a space for) FILENOTE (related highlighing)
1 " " " ROOT
2 " " " USER DIR
3 " " " SYMBOLIC LINK (soft link)
4 " " " DIR LINK (hard link)
[the space for FILENOTE was always used this way, I just forgot to
document this aspect in 4.5]
--
Regards,
Loren
rittle@comm.mot.com