pkgsrc/textproc/ja-grep/distinfo

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Update to 2.4.2 with latest patch (2.4.2-mlb2). Provided by OBATA Akio in PR 31895. Patch changes unknown. Mainstream changes between 2.0 and 2.4.2: Version 2.4.2 - Added more check in configure to default the grep-${version}/src/regex.c instead of the one in GNU Lib C. Version 2.4.1 - If the final byte of an input file is not a newline, grep now silently supplies one. - The new option --binary-files=TYPE makes grep assume that a binary input file is of type TYPE. --binary-files='binary' (the default) outputs a 1-line summary of matches. --binary-files='without-match' assumes binary files do not match. --binary-files='text' treats binary files as text (equivalent to the -a or --text option). - New option -I; equivalent to --binary-files='without-match'. Version 2.4: - egrep is now equivalent to `grep -E' as required by POSIX, removing a longstanding source of confusion and incompatibility. `grep' is now more forgiving about stray `{'s, for backward compatibility with traditional egrep. - The lower bound of an interval is not optional. You must use an explicit zero, e.g. `x{0,10}' instead of `x{,10}'. (The old documentation incorrectly claimed that it was optional.) - The --revert-match option has been renamed to --invert-match. - The --fixed-regexp option has been renamed to --fixed-string. - New option -H or --with-filename. - New option --mmap. By default, GNU grep now uses read instead of mmap. This is faster on some hosts, and is safer on all. - The new option -z or --null-data causes `grep' to treat a zero byte (the ASCII NUL character) as a line terminator in input data, and to treat newlines as ordinary data. - The new option -Z or --null causes `grep' to output a zero byte instead of the normal separator after a file name. - These two options can be used with commands like `find -print0', `perl -0', `sort -z', and `xargs -0' to process arbitrary file names, even those that contain newlines. - The environment variable GREP_OPTIONS specifies default options; e.g. GREP_OPTIONS='--directories=skip' reestablishes grep 2.1's behavior of silently skipping directories. - You can specify a matcher multiple times without error, e.g. `grep -E -E' or `fgrep -F'. It is still an error to specify conflicting matchers. - -u and -U are now allowed on non-DOS hosts, and have no effect. - Modifications of the tests scripts to go around the "Broken Pipe" errors from bash. See Bash FAQ. - New option -r or --recursive or --directories=recurse. (This option was also in grep 2.3, but wasn't announced here.) - --without-included-regex disable, was causing bogus reports .i.e doing more harm then good. Version 2.3: - When searching a binary file FOO, grep now just reports `Binary file FOO matches' instead of outputting binary data. This is typically more useful than the old behavior, and it is also more consistent with other utilities like `diff'. A file is considered to be binary if it contains a NUL (i.e. zero) byte. The new -a or --text option causes `grep' to assume that all input is text. (This option has the same meaning as with `diff'.) Use it if you want binary data in your output. - `grep' now searches directories just like ordinary files; it no longer silently skips directories. This is the traditional behavior of Unix text utilities (in particular, of traditional `grep'). Hence `grep PATTERN DIRECTORY' should report `grep: DIRECTORY: Is a directory' on hosts where the operating system does not permit programs to read directories directly, and `grep: DIRECTORY: Binary file matches' (or nothing) otherwise. The new -d ACTION or --directories=ACTION option affects directory handling. `-d skip' causes `grep' to silently skip directories, as in grep 2.1; `-d read' (the default) causes `grep' to read directories if possible, as in earlier versions of grep. - The MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows ports now behave identically to the GNU and Unix ports with respect to binary files and directories. Version 2.2: Bug fix release. - Status error number fix. - Skipping directories removed. - Many typos fix. - -f /dev/null fix(not to consider as an empty pattern). - Checks for wctype/wchar. - -E was using the wrong matcher fix. - bug in regex char class fix - Fixes for DJGPP Version 2.1: This is a bug fix release(see Changelog) i.e. no new features. - More compliance to GNU standard. - Long options. - Internationalisation. - Use automake/autoconf. - Directory hierarchy change. - Sigvec with -e on Linux corrected. - Sigvec with -f on Linux corrected. - Sigvec with the mmap() corrected. - Bug in kwset corrected. - -q, -L and -l stop on first match. - New and improve regex.[ch] from Ulrich Drepper. - New and improve dfa.[ch] from Arnold Robbins. - Prototypes for over zealous C compiler. - Not scanning a file, if it's a directory (cause problems on Sun). - Ported to MS-DOS/MS-Windows with DJGPP tools. See Changelog for the full story and proper credits.
2006-03-11 14:10:42 +01:00
$NetBSD: distinfo,v 1.4 2006/03/11 13:10:42 wiz Exp $
Update to 2.4.2 with latest patch (2.4.2-mlb2). Provided by OBATA Akio in PR 31895. Patch changes unknown. Mainstream changes between 2.0 and 2.4.2: Version 2.4.2 - Added more check in configure to default the grep-${version}/src/regex.c instead of the one in GNU Lib C. Version 2.4.1 - If the final byte of an input file is not a newline, grep now silently supplies one. - The new option --binary-files=TYPE makes grep assume that a binary input file is of type TYPE. --binary-files='binary' (the default) outputs a 1-line summary of matches. --binary-files='without-match' assumes binary files do not match. --binary-files='text' treats binary files as text (equivalent to the -a or --text option). - New option -I; equivalent to --binary-files='without-match'. Version 2.4: - egrep is now equivalent to `grep -E' as required by POSIX, removing a longstanding source of confusion and incompatibility. `grep' is now more forgiving about stray `{'s, for backward compatibility with traditional egrep. - The lower bound of an interval is not optional. You must use an explicit zero, e.g. `x{0,10}' instead of `x{,10}'. (The old documentation incorrectly claimed that it was optional.) - The --revert-match option has been renamed to --invert-match. - The --fixed-regexp option has been renamed to --fixed-string. - New option -H or --with-filename. - New option --mmap. By default, GNU grep now uses read instead of mmap. This is faster on some hosts, and is safer on all. - The new option -z or --null-data causes `grep' to treat a zero byte (the ASCII NUL character) as a line terminator in input data, and to treat newlines as ordinary data. - The new option -Z or --null causes `grep' to output a zero byte instead of the normal separator after a file name. - These two options can be used with commands like `find -print0', `perl -0', `sort -z', and `xargs -0' to process arbitrary file names, even those that contain newlines. - The environment variable GREP_OPTIONS specifies default options; e.g. GREP_OPTIONS='--directories=skip' reestablishes grep 2.1's behavior of silently skipping directories. - You can specify a matcher multiple times without error, e.g. `grep -E -E' or `fgrep -F'. It is still an error to specify conflicting matchers. - -u and -U are now allowed on non-DOS hosts, and have no effect. - Modifications of the tests scripts to go around the "Broken Pipe" errors from bash. See Bash FAQ. - New option -r or --recursive or --directories=recurse. (This option was also in grep 2.3, but wasn't announced here.) - --without-included-regex disable, was causing bogus reports .i.e doing more harm then good. Version 2.3: - When searching a binary file FOO, grep now just reports `Binary file FOO matches' instead of outputting binary data. This is typically more useful than the old behavior, and it is also more consistent with other utilities like `diff'. A file is considered to be binary if it contains a NUL (i.e. zero) byte. The new -a or --text option causes `grep' to assume that all input is text. (This option has the same meaning as with `diff'.) Use it if you want binary data in your output. - `grep' now searches directories just like ordinary files; it no longer silently skips directories. This is the traditional behavior of Unix text utilities (in particular, of traditional `grep'). Hence `grep PATTERN DIRECTORY' should report `grep: DIRECTORY: Is a directory' on hosts where the operating system does not permit programs to read directories directly, and `grep: DIRECTORY: Binary file matches' (or nothing) otherwise. The new -d ACTION or --directories=ACTION option affects directory handling. `-d skip' causes `grep' to silently skip directories, as in grep 2.1; `-d read' (the default) causes `grep' to read directories if possible, as in earlier versions of grep. - The MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows ports now behave identically to the GNU and Unix ports with respect to binary files and directories. Version 2.2: Bug fix release. - Status error number fix. - Skipping directories removed. - Many typos fix. - -f /dev/null fix(not to consider as an empty pattern). - Checks for wctype/wchar. - -E was using the wrong matcher fix. - bug in regex char class fix - Fixes for DJGPP Version 2.1: This is a bug fix release(see Changelog) i.e. no new features. - More compliance to GNU standard. - Long options. - Internationalisation. - Use automake/autoconf. - Directory hierarchy change. - Sigvec with -e on Linux corrected. - Sigvec with -f on Linux corrected. - Sigvec with the mmap() corrected. - Bug in kwset corrected. - -q, -L and -l stop on first match. - New and improve regex.[ch] from Ulrich Drepper. - New and improve dfa.[ch] from Arnold Robbins. - Prototypes for over zealous C compiler. - Not scanning a file, if it's a directory (cause problems on Sun). - Ported to MS-DOS/MS-Windows with DJGPP tools. See Changelog for the full story and proper credits.
2006-03-11 14:10:42 +01:00
SHA1 (grep-2.4.2.tar.gz) = 83fbd0fcb6ec4b10edf438a28d12608a4f06d588
RMD160 (grep-2.4.2.tar.gz) = 768399d130cb517889ccfea952e6bc6798dd27cc
Size (grep-2.4.2.tar.gz) = 460582 bytes
SHA1 (grep-2.4.2-mlb2.patch.gz) = d2df678e73efd995db2a41cba110e1d0c1ff5104
RMD160 (grep-2.4.2-mlb2.patch.gz) = d1d59c8e252d4ef5096843f6ea2fed0277237ecb
Size (grep-2.4.2-mlb2.patch.gz) = 39453 bytes