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author | Indrajith K L | 2022-12-03 17:00:20 +0530 |
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committer | Indrajith K L | 2022-12-03 17:00:20 +0530 |
commit | f5c4671bfbad96bf346bd7e9a21fc4317b4959df (patch) | |
tree | 2764fc62da58f2ba8da7ed341643fc359873142f /coreutils-5.3.0-bin/contrib/coreutils/5.3.0/coreutils-5.3.0-src/doc | |
download | cli-tools-windows-master.tar.gz cli-tools-windows-master.tar.bz2 cli-tools-windows-master.zip |
Diffstat (limited to 'coreutils-5.3.0-bin/contrib/coreutils/5.3.0/coreutils-5.3.0-src/doc')
-rw-r--r-- | coreutils-5.3.0-bin/contrib/coreutils/5.3.0/coreutils-5.3.0-src/doc/ChangeLog | 1219 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | coreutils-5.3.0-bin/contrib/coreutils/5.3.0/coreutils-5.3.0-src/doc/coreutils.info | 14780 |
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diff --git a/coreutils-5.3.0-bin/contrib/coreutils/5.3.0/coreutils-5.3.0-src/doc/ChangeLog b/coreutils-5.3.0-bin/contrib/coreutils/5.3.0/coreutils-5.3.0-src/doc/ChangeLog new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9cf6bf9 --- /dev/null +++ b/coreutils-5.3.0-bin/contrib/coreutils/5.3.0/coreutils-5.3.0-src/doc/ChangeLog @@ -0,0 +1,1219 @@ +2005-01-07 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Specify that a string + of zero digits is interpreted as 0. Reported by Ulrich Hermisson. + +2005-01-04 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (shred invocation): Clarify that shred works fine + with journaled file systems that are configured not to journal + file system data. Also mention BFS and NTFS. + +2004-12-15 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (ls invocation): Change minor problem to be + "subdirectory not found", since top-level trouble is now serious. + (dircolors invocation): Quote argument to eval. Problem reported + by Stephane Chazelas. + +2004-12-11 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (join invocation): Mention that blank separators + in the -o option need to be quoted. Problem reported by Phil Clayton. + +2004-12-10 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (id invocation): -G also prints main group. + Problem reported by Tim Waugh. + +2004-12-09 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (ls invocation): Document new "ls" exit status. + +2004-12-08 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * getdate.texi (Time of day items, Time zone items): + Describe new formats +00:00, UTC+00:00. + +2004-12-04 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (cut invocation): Say when --complement is useful. + +2004-10-01 Paolo Bonzini <bonzini@gnu.org> + + * coreutils.texi (cut invocation): Document --complement and + adjust the documentation of -b, -c, -f. + +2004-11-27 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (du invocation): Use if=/dev/null rather + than :|. Problem reported by Dan Jacobson. + Use "seek=2GiB" rather than the wordier "seek=`echo '2^31'|bc`". + Say "KiB" not the (inaccurate) "kilobytes". + Similarly for "GiB" and "gigabytes". + +2004-11-16 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi: Changes inspired by Debian coreutils 5.2.1-2. + (General output formatting): -x doesn't have an operand. + (Formatting the file names): Warn that even with -N unprintable + chars are still printed as '?' some times. + (rm invocation): Reword rm -d to note that it's sometimes useful + on non-directories. + (logname invocation, users invocation, who invocation): + The utmp and wtmp file names vary from system to system. + + * getdate.texi (General date syntax): "next" is 1, not 2. + Document that "second" isn't allowed as an ordinal number. + +2004-11-15 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Reword the new dd message. + +2004-11-14 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (dd invocation): dd now outputs total bytes, + seconds, and bytes per second. + +2004-11-03 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * Makefile.am (_W, W_): New macros. + (check-texinfo): Use them instead of assuming grep -w (which is not + portable). + +2004-10-29 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi: Document TZ better, and adjust to new getdate.texi. + (Top): Update menu. + (pr invocation, Formatting file timestamps, touch invocation, + stat invocation, who invocation, date invocation, Options for date): + Mention TZ. + * getdate.texi: Sync from gnulib. + +2004-10-28 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (Standards conformance): Use "head -10" rather + than "head -1" as example of obsolete usage, since the POSIX + consensus is that "head -1" could be supported even if we don't + yet have clear consensus on "head -10". See today's revision to + the SUS FAQ + <http://www.opengroup.org/austin/papers/single_unix_faq.html>. + +2004-10-24 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (pathchk invocation): Options must precede operands. + +2004-10-17 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (pathchk invocation): Overall lengths are + OS limits, not file system limits. Component length checks + apply to all components, not merely to existing ones. Say + that nonexistent names are not errors. For -p, omit all + checks based on the underlying file system, not merely length + checks. Explain what the portable file name character set is. + +2004-10-15 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (printf invocation): Mention ISO/IEC 10646 as + well as Unicode. Various minor formatting cleanups. + +2004-10-13 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Move LC_ALL, LC_COLLATE + index entries to proper paragraph. + +2004-10-12 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Add `builtin' and `builtins' to + the list of words to avoid. + +2004-10-11 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (Special built-in utilities): New node. + (printf invocation): builtin -> built-in, for consistency + with POSIX terminology. + (test invocation, pwd invocation): + Use specific rather than generic language to warn about + built-in commands. + (chroot invocation, env invocation, nice invocation, nohup invocation): + Warn that command must not be a special built-in. + (env invocation): Warn about environment variables with unusual + spellings, or duplicates. + +2004-09-26 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (ls invocation): Document "ls --hide". + +2004-09-24 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (chmod invocation): Warn about "chmod -w file". + +2004-09-23 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (tail invocation): Fix bugs in the description of + the obsolete syntax (e.g., it does not support -k or -m). Warn + about usages like "tail -" and "tail -c 4" that are ambigous on + older systems. + +2004-09-20 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (mv invocation, rm invocation): Say "the response + is affirmative" rather than "the response begins with y or Y", + so that the documentation is accurate in non-English locales. + Problem reported by Munzir Taha. + +2004-09-18 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Distinguish between options + (e.g., --help) and operands (e.g., if=file). Move miscellaneous + stuff after the operand descriptions, for clarity. + +2004-09-09 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (sort invocation): -u disables the last-resort + comparison, too. Revamp its description. + (test invocation): Document -r, -w, -x more carefully. + +2004-09-08 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (Common options): Some programs don't reorder + options. + (tr invocation, echo invocation, printf invocation, test invocation, + expr invocation, basename invocation, chroot invocation, + nice invocation, nohup invocation, seq invocation): + This program doesn't reorder options. + (tr invocation): Mention --help, --version, --. + (echo invocation): Mention that -- isn't special. + (test invocation): Mention that the expression is optional, + and that test ! EXPR is like ! test EXPR. + Mention that -h and -L don't dereference symlinks. + (expr invocation): Mention --help, --version. + + * coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Add remarks about sort -u + versus sort | uniq. Prompted by a question from Andrew Noymer. + +2004-09-06 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (od invocation): Several changes for POSIX + and FreeBSD compatibility. Add support for XSI syntax + (POSIX 1003.1-2004). Rename -s[N] to -S N. Remove documentation + for -h. -i is now -t dI (not d2) and -l is now -t dL (not d4). + +2004-09-05 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (String tests): Improve quality of warning about + quoting strings for the shell. + +2004-09-03 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Specify which conversion options + are mutually exclusive. Give a bit more detail about ascii, + ebcdic, and ibm conversions. + +2004-08-24 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + POSIX-conformance fixes for "expand" and "unexpand". + * coreutils.texi: Standardize on "tab stop" (the POSIX usage) + rather than "tabstop". + (unexpand invocation): Use "blank" rather than "space" when + POSIX requires "blank". Define "blank". Initial blanks are + converted even if there's just one. For -a, convert two or + more blanks only if they occur just before a tab stop. + +2004-08-19 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (chown invocation): Fix synopsis: + group must always be preceded by separator. + "chown : file" and "chown '' file" don't change the owner or group. + Update the explanation of what happens to the set-user-ID or + set-group-ID bits, e.g., they sometimes are not cleared if they + denote mandatory locking. Change "find"-oriented examples to use + chown -h. + +2004-08-18 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (printf invocation): Clarify how "printf" is + supposed to work with extra arguments, missing arguments, etc. + +2004-08-10 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + POSIX-conformance fixes for "-" used as an operand. + * coreutils.texi (Common options): Clarify that "-" means + stdin/stdout only when it is an operand, not when it is an + option-argument. + (shred invocation): "shred -- -" is equivalent to "shred -", + not to "shred ./-". + (tee invocation): "tee -" means to copy (again) to stdout. + +2004-07-25 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (nice invocation): Document the "nice value", and + how it affects the scheduling priority. (The old documentation + implied that the nice value equaled the scheduling priority, which + isn't accurate.) Document that the range of nice values might + exceed -20..19. Specify what happens when you give a nice value + that is out of range, or when you don't have permissions to lower + the nice value. Bash doesn't have a builtin 'nice', so don't say + "most shells" have one. + +2004-04-03 Dmitry V. Levin <ldv@altlinux.org> + + * coreutils.texi (readlink invocation): Document new + "readlink -f" behaviour and new canonicalize options, -e and -m. + +2004-07-02 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Disallow `filename' in .texi files. + Spell it like `file name' instead, to be consistent. + Fail if a @footnote directive follows non-punctuation. + Fail upon use of @url. Use @uref instead. + +2004-07-01 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (Common options, Target directory, cp invocation, + install invocation, mv invocation, ln invocation): Add -t as a + short option for --target-directory, and -T as a short option for + --no-target-directory. Clean up relevant synopses a bit, so that + the language is similar for all. + +2004-06-30 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi: Put the right amount of space at sentence ends. + Make sure "i.e." and "e.g." are followed by commas (the GNU style). + Put blank lines before and after every @example, prefer the + previous line to end in ":" (when not a sentence end, for consistency), + and prepend @noindent to the following line when appropriate. + In examples, use "--" arguments when needed to prevent undesired + interpretation of operands as options. + Use "file name" rather than "filename", as per the GNU coding standards. + Remove unwanted spaces before @footnote. + Use "---" when appropriate, instead of " -- ". + Use "name" (or something like that) rather than "path" or "pathname", + since the GNU coding standards don't allow "path". + Use @acronym, @command, @minus{}, @samp in a few places, + where appropriate. + (Target directory): Clarify description of example. + (fmt invocation): Give issue number for reference, and reword + for clarity. + (sort invocation): Note that xargs without -0 also mishandles + file names containing some special characters other than newline. + (Translating): Mention that \012 is not universally portable. + Use '\0' rather than '\000'. + (Squeezing): bourne -> Bourne. + Fix unportable usage of '\n' by replacing it with '[\n*]'. + (More details about version sort): Remove unnecessary indent + in examples. + (dd invocation): Use 'kill -s USR1', not 'kill -USR1', as POSIX + indicates that the former is more portable (the latter is an XSI + extension). + (shred invocation): Use @uref rather than @url, and use a more-typical + style for the date. + (kill invocation): Clarify usage; for example, "kill -s TERM -1" + isn't allowed. + (seq invocation): Reword to avoid implying that printf necessarily + fails for numbers outside the 32-bit range. Prefer separating + options from their operands. + (Opening the software toolbox): Give an online reference to + Robbins's article, and give a date. Don't imply that the + current documentation is unchanged from his article. + (Putting the tools together): Rework examples so that they don't + assume the C locale; nowadays many users now operate outside the C + locale by default. While we're at it, don't assume ASCII either. + Indent example to match actual output from GNU uniq. Remove some + unnecessary and confusing brackets from 'tr' operands. "Software + Tools in Pascal" is back in print, according to Amazon anyway. + Add references to Kernighan's online copies of examples. + +2004-06-30 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi, perm.texi: Standardize on "file system" rather + than "filesystem", as POSIX prefers it with a space. + +2004-06-29 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (Common options, Target directory, cp + invocation, install invocation, mv invocation, ln invocation): + Likewise. + (link invocation): Explain how to rewrite link using ln now + that we have --no-target-directory. + (ln invocation): Explain that --no-target-directory subsumes + --no-dereference. + (unlink invocation): Modify wording to match new wording in + link invocation. + +2004-06-25 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (install invocation): Document + --target-directory in synopsis, too. + +2004-06-15 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (yes invocation): "--" is now supported. + (false invocation, true invocation): --help and --version now + work unconditionally. + +2004-06-07 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi: Remove menu references to just-removed subsection. + +2004-06-06 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (tr invocation): Remove the section describing + how POSIXLY_CORRECT changes tr's behavior. + +2004-06-02 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (cut invocation): Clarify what --output-delimiter=STR + does with byte/character ranges. + +2004-06-01 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (tr invocation): Mention -C. + +2004-05-13 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (echo invocation): Document today's changes. + +2004-05-17 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + chgrp and chown now dereference symlinks by default, per POSIX. + * coreutils.texi (chgrp invocation, chown invocation): Document it. + +2004-05-13 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Document that "sort -m -o F" + might write F before reading all the input. + +2004-05-09 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Change IO to I/O. + * Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Check for the above. + +2004-04-25 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Mention -k earlier, so + that the options are in alphabetical order. Describe how -b works + more-accurately; this involves fixing some examples, too. Mention + what happens if the start field falls after an end field or after + a line end. Warn about using -k without -b, -g, -M, -n, or -t. + Add an example of how to sort IPv4 addresses and Apache Common + Log Format dates. Remove a duplicate example. + (Putting the tools together): Use separate options rather + than agglomerating them. + +2004-03-27 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + cp -pu and mv -u (when copying) now take the destination + file system time stamp resolution into account. + + * coreutils.texi (mv invocation): Document this. + (cp invocation): Document -u (it was missing!) with new behavior. + +2004-04-08 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> + + * coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Remove noctty flag from dd. + +2004-04-07 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + New dd conv= symbols nocreat, excl, fdatasync, fsync, + and new dd options iflag= and oflag=. + + * coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Document them. + +2004-04-07 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (stty invocation - Input): Document new iutf8 option. + +2004-04-04 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Correct --format description. + +2004-02-25 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (Block size): Document new envvar BLOCKSIZE. + +2004-03-24 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Add a check to ensure future + consistency in using @sc{nul}, not `NUL'. + +2004-03-23 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi: Use @sc{nul} consistently for NUL. + (du invocation): FILE0 -> FILE. + +2004-03-23 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (du invocation): --files0-from is useful with + --total (-c), not with --summarize. + +2004-03-22 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi: Tweak a few lines that resulted in + `overfull hbox' warnings. + +2004-03-03 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (du invocation): Document new option: --file0-from=F. + +2004-02-29 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (touch invocation): + Describe use of fractional seconds. + (date invocation, Options for date): Likewise. + * getdate.texi (General date syntax, Time of day items): Likewise. + * coreutils.texi (date invocation): Mention effect of LC_TIME. + (Options for date): Describe new --iso-8601=ns option. + + * getdate.texi: Add copyright notice. Change getdate to + get_date when talking about the function name. + (Seconds since the Epoch): New section, containing the time_t + info moved from Date input formats section, along with new + info about the @ syntax. Mention negative time stamps, + fractional time stamps, and leap seconds. + (General date syntax): Modernize examples a bit to reflect new + features. + (General date syntax, Relative items in date strings): + Use ' rather than " to quote formats. + (Time of day items): Add an example with fractional seconds. + Describe fractional-second syntax. + +2004-03-15 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (date invocation): Add missing `C' to %[...] range + in the `Date directives:: ...' menu entry. From Bob Proulx. + + * coreutils.texi: Add FIXME comment: + The following don't have `invocation' nodes: [, pinky, shasum, uptime. + +2004-03-10 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Sorting the output): Remove description of + ls's --sort=directory option. ls doesn't accept that option, yet. + Reported by Arvind Autar. + + * coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Improve description of + cp's --sparse=WHEN option. + + * coreutils.texi (nl invocation): Specify that these are _basic_ + regular expressions (BRE), and add a link to grep's documentation. + Suggestion from Dan Jacobson. + +2004-02-23 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (chown invocation): Document that chown now falls + back on USER.GROUP parsing regardless of POSIX version, as POSIX + 1003.1-2001 allows that behavior as a compatible extension. + +2004-02-22 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (du invocation): Mention that using du's -H option + currently evokes a warning. + +2004-02-15 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (expr invocation): + Document what forms integers may take, and say "integer" + consistently instead of "number". Warn about operands + that "expr" can misinterpret, and how to work around the + problem. + +2004-02-17 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (csplit invocation): Correct typo (s/LINE/N/) + in description of `N' pattern. From Reuben Thomas <rrt@sc3d.org> + +2004-02-11 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Time directives): The %s value *is* changed by the + --date=DATE option; don't say otherwise. Patch from Padraig Brady. + +2004-02-10 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (Formatting the file names): + Improve wording for --quoting-style documentation. + Suggestions by Bruno Haible. + +2004-02-02 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (nice invocation): Add examples. + Prompted by a suggestion from Dan Jacobson. + (factor invocation): Add an example. + Update timing numbers for a more modern CPU. + +2004-01-27 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (seq invocation): Remove `@dots{}' at end of synopsis. + Separate `Synopses' section into three examples. + Clarify first paragraph. @w{}-protect an expression.1 + Use @option{--option}, rather than @code{--option}. + +2004-01-19 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (Exit status): Document that ordinary failure + might not exit with status 1 on unusual platforms. + Mention chroot, env, nice, and su as having unusual exit + status patterns. Don't bother to mention true and false + since their exit status patterns are actually normal. + (sort invocation, su invocation): Mention its unusual exit + status pattern. + (chroot invocation): Simplify description of exit status 1. + Remove duplicate description of status 127. + (env invocation): Use consistent tenses; simplifiy description + of status 1. + (nice invocation): Likewise. + +2003-12-15 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (touch invocation): touch -r and -d can now + both be specified, with -r specifying the origin for -d. + +2004-01-15 Alfred M. Szmidt <ams@kemisten.nu> + + Factor out some common options. + * coreutils.texi (Common options): Define macros here. + (What information is listed, cp invocation): Use the macro(s). + (install invocation, mv invocation, ln invocation): Likewise. + (df invocation, du invocation): Likewise. + +2004-01-09 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + Document the exit status of each and every program. + * coreutils.texi (yes invocation): Document that a write error + makes `yes' exit unsuccessfully. + (chroot invocation): Enumerate the meaning of exit status values. + (nice invocation): Likewise. + (Exit status) [@macro exitstatus]: New macro. + Use @exitstatus to describe the exit status of most programs. + +2004-01-02 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (du invocation): Mention that -H will eventually + mean not --si, but --dereference-args (-D). + +2003-12-20 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (du invocation): Describe new option: -0, --null. + +2003-12-03 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (What information is listed, chroot invocation): + Adjust example 'ls' output to match new behavior with narrower + output columns. + (The cut command): Remove example that cut the output of + 'ls -l'. The output was incorrect even with the old 'ls', and + the whole idea of using 'cut' on 'ls -l' output is bogus anyway. + +2003-11-24 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + Parse floating-point operands and options in the C locale. + POSIX requires this for printf, and we might as well be + consistent elsewhere (tail, sleep, seq). + + * coreutils.texi (tail invocation, printf invocation, + sleep invocation, seq invocation): Document this. + +2003-11-24 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Traversing symlinks, Treating / specially): + New sections. + (rm invocation, chown invocation, chmod invocation, chgrp invocation): + Describe new options, --preserve-root and --no-preserve-root. + +2003-11-11 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (chown invocation) [chownchgrpoptions]: New macro + describing -H, -L, -P options. Use it here. + (chgrp invocation): And here. + +2003-11-09 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Fix typo in example. + +2003-10-15 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (ln invocation): Note that --directory, -d, -F + probably won't work even for superuser. Suggestion from Dan Jacobson. + +2003-09-29 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (csplit invocation): + The regexp offset need not have a sign; POSIX requires support + for signless offets. + +2003-10-03 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (du invocation): Describe -P, --no-dereference. + +2003-09-28 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Translating): Correct typo in menu description. + From A Costa. + +2003-09-02 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (sort invocation): -d now overrides -i. + "whitespace" -> "blanks"; "whitespace" isn't correct. + -t '\0' now specifies a NUL tab. + +2003-08-17 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (who invocation): Add an entry for -l, --login. + Remove `-l' from the entry for --lookup. + (who invocation): Begin adding missing option documentation. + +2003-08-07 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (split invocation): + Add -d or --numeric-suffixes option to 'split'. + +2003-07-31 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * getdate.texi (General date syntax): Add --rfc-2822 option to GNU date. + * coreutils.texi (Options for date): Fix a typo in format: + it's now %d not %_d. Add URLs. + +2003-07-31 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * getdate.texi (Relative items in date strings): Warn about + fuzz in relative units. + +2003-07-29 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (tail invocation): Restore two end-of-sentence words + that were mistakenly removed on 2002-09-13. Reported by Paul Worrall. + +2003-07-28 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Explain that a SIGUSR1 signal + makes dd give a progress report to stderr. + +2003-07-24 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi: Document changes of 2003-07-24. + +2003-07-24 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (su invocation): Use `@subsection', not invalid + `@heading'. + +2003-07-17 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (expr invocation): Exit status is 2 if the + expression is syntactically invalid, 3 if there is some other error. + This change is for conformance to POSIX. + +2003-07-14 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (uname invocation): Explain the POSIX + terminology behind uname -m and uname -s. + +2003-07-13 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (chown invocation): Warn that chown + now clears set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits on some systems. + From Bob Proulx. + (nohup invocation): Tell what happens when stdout is not a terminal. + Based on a suggestion from Steven Mocking. + +2003-07-10 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Standards conformance): Mention that uses like + `tail -1' and `head -1', like `sort +1', are non conforming. + (chown invocation): Say that using `.' as a separator may not work. + +2003-06-25 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Time directives) [%s]: Add a cross reference + to the related examples. + (Examples of date): Add an @anchor here, along with a few more examples. + Suggestion from Dan Jacobson. + +2003-06-12 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (wc invocation): Tweak wording: wc prints counts in + the order `newline, word, byte'. Suggestion from Keith M. Briggs. + Also change `lines' to `newlines'. + +2003-05-14 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (head invocation): Document --bytes=-N and --lines=-N. + +2003-05-13 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (uniq invocation, squeezing, The uniq command): + Use "repeated" rather than "duplicate" to describe adjacent + duplicates; this simplifies the description and makes it more + consistent with POSIX. + (uniq invocation): Make it clear that -d and -u suppress the + output of lines, rather than cause some lines to be output. + Mention what happens if a line lacks enough fields or characters. + +2003-05-13 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (true invocation): Mention that it is possible to + make true --help or true --version (in non-POSIX mode) exit nonzero. + Suggestion from Paul Eggert. + +2003-05-10 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Exit status): Remove `uniq' from the list. + It uses standard exit codes. + (More details about version sort): Note that strverscmp, and hence + `ls -v', does not use LC_COLLATE. Reported by From: Andrey Borzenkov. + +2003-04-21 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + Fix printf POSIX compatibility bug reported by Ben Harris in + <http://mail.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-coreutils/2003-04/msg00070.html>. + * coreutils.texi (printf invocation): It's \NNN in the format, + \0NNN in the %b operand. + +2003-04-10 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Check for uses of non-zero. + I prefer to spell it `nonzero'. + + * coreutils.texi (readlink invocation): Tweak description a little. + +2003-04-04 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * Makefile.am (constants.texi): Rename target (thus enabling it), + now that fileutils, textutils, and sh-utils have been merged. + (MAINTAINERCLEANFILES): Define. + +2003-04-02 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (false invocation): Note that false exits + unsuccessfully even with --help and --version. + + * Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Don't fail if perl is missing. + Reported by Nelson Beebe. + +2003-03-27 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (printf invocation): Fix formatting bugs. + From Paul Eggert. + (sort invocation): Describe sort's --stable (-s) option. + +2003-03-13 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (shred invocation): Mention that --exact + is now the default for non-regular files. + +2003-03-02 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Exit status): New section. + Suggestion from Michael Stone. + +2003-02-21 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (du invocation): Document --apparent-size. + Adjust documentation of --bytes (-b). + (stat invocation): Describe %B. + +2003-02-07 Richard Dawe <rich@phekda.freeserve.co.uk> + + * coreutils.texi: Use @command instead of @code for program names. + + * perm.texi (Mode Structure): Mention filesystem-specific + permissions and that mounting a filesystem as read-only may + override actual file permissions. Use @command instead + of @code for program names. + +2003-02-06 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi: Adjust alignment and mention `file, text, shell' + on the `* Coreutils:...' dirently line. From Karl Berry. + +2003-02-05 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Allow bare `POSIX' to be used on + direntry lines. + + * coreutils.texi: Use new form of @direntry. + Put unlink in its proper place. Adjust wording in some + dir entry descriptions, mainly so they fit in 80 columns. + Don't use mark-up like @acronym{POSIX} in direntries. + Mostly from Karl Berry. + +2003-01-25 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (cut invocation): Describe new functionality of + --output-delimiter=STR. + +2003-01-24 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (The cut command): Give an example of using cut -c + with an output delimiter. From Jan Nieuwenhuizen. + + * coreutils.texi (The cut command): Extend the new example a little. + (Formatting file timestamps): Fix typo: s/%M:S/%M:%S/. + + * coreutils.texi: Change each use of `Core-utils' to `Coreutils'. + From Karl Berry. + +2003-01-19 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Which files are listed): Document new option: + --dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir. + +2003-01-15 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + Change ls -H back to the way it was yesterday, since this is + compatible with FreeBSD and the POSIX spec is confusing + and somewhat contradictory. + + * coreutils.texi (Which files are listed, General output + formatting): Undo last change. + +2003-01-15 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (General output formatting): Reflect option name change: + s/--dereference-command-line/--dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir/. + Say that this option changes how ls treats only symlinks to directories + specified on the command line. + +2002-08-27 Dmitry V. Levin <ldv@altlinux.org> + + * coreutils.texi: Document readlink. + +2002-12-14 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (mknod invocation): Specify how major and minor mode + numbers are interpreted. Report forwarded by Kristin E Thomas. + +2002-11-13 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Examples of expr): Remove bogus `^'s. + Reported by Thomas Goerlich. + +2002-11-09 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (What information is listed) [--dired]: + Correct parts of --dired description. Reported by Andre Spiegel. + Include a lot more description, with examples. + +2002-11-06 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (printf invocation): Fix typo in index: + change \0x prefix to \x. + Change \xhhh to \xhh. + +2002-10-07 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + Add support for locale-specific size indications (e.g., + thousands-separators) and for explicit size suffixes on output. + + * coreutils.texi (Block size): Say that: + This affects display format as well as block size. + Fractional block counts are rounded up. + ls file size blocksize defaults to 1. + A block size spec preceded by ' generates thousands separators. + A suffix without a preceding integer generates suffixes. + (tail invocation): 32k -> 32 KiB. + (What information is listed): ls -h is now equivalent to + ls --block-size=human, and ls -H is now equivalent to + ls --block-size=si. Displayed file size is now always affected by + --block-size. + +2002-09-13 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (tail invocation): In --sleep-interval=NUMBER, + NUMBER may now be a floating point number. + (stat invocation): Remove references to now-removed %S and %C. + (Time directives) [%S]: Explain why the range is [0..60]. + +2002-08-30 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi [START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY]: Don't use sc{} on LHS. + Fix typo: s/permission/permissions/. From Michail Litvak. + +2002-08-02 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (uniq invocation): uniq now obeys LC_COLLATE. + +2002-07-29 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (nohup invocation): Change behavior to conform to + POSIX 1003.1-2001: + - Do not adjust scheduling priority. + - Redirects stderr to stdout, if stderr is not a terminal. + - Exit status is now 126 if command was found but not invoked, + 127 if nohup failed or if command was not found. + +2002-07-24 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Time directives): Document %P, %R, %e, %F, + %g, %G, and %V + +2002-07-22 Martin Michlmayr <tbm@cyrius.com> + + * coreutils.texi (Formatting the file names): Document + that -N/--literal are equivalent to --quoting-style=literal. + Reported by Oskar Liljeblad as Debian bug#103612. + +2002-07-10 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (du invocation): s/PAT/PATTERN/. + From Martin Michlmayr. + +2002-07-08 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Remove unnecessary "$@" in example; + Texinfo would render the @" as an umlaut over the following character. + From Paul Eggert. + * Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Check for the above. + +2002-07-06 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Remove description of --secure. + +2002-07-03 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Rename --link/-l + to --dereference/-L. Rewrite description of --dereference. + +2002-06-26 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (Putting the tools together): Don't mention egrep, + since it's not part of POSIX 1003.1-2001. + +2002-06-21 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (stat invocation): New section. From Michael Meskes. + +2002-05-19 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (ls invocation): Document new option: --author. + +2002-06-03 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (rm invocation): Add the warning (also in the --help + output) that the contents of a removed file are often recoverable. + +2002-05-27 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Adapt to reflect that now we use + @acronym{POSIX}. + +2002-05-26 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi: Use @acronym in place of most uses of @sc. + * getdate.texi (Date input formats): Likewise. + +2002-04-28 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi: Change `@code{PROG}' to `@command{PROG}'. + +2002-04-28 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (kill invocation): Document the above. + Document POSIX signals better. + +2002-04-15 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi: Document kill. + Written by Marcus Brinkmann. + +2002-04-13 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi: Document link and unlink. + +2002-04-08 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi: Use new directives, @copying and @insertcopying, + thus now requiring texinfo-4.2 to create the .info file. + +2002-02-26 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (File characteristic tests): Document the + behavior of test -nt and -ot when one of the files does not exist, + using the same behavior that is documented in ksh93. + +2002-03-05 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (cut invocation): Say that selected input is + written in the same order that it is read, and is written + exactly once. + +2002-03-03 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + Make cp -r equivalent to cp -R. Add a new cp option --copy-contents + for people who want to emulate the traditional (and rarely desirable) + cp -r behavior. + + * coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Document this. + Fix some related minor bugs: --no-dereference is no longer + equivalent to -d, and --archive (-a) can override the other + symlink options. Warn that cp -R is not portable on symbolic + links unless you also specify -P. + +2002-03-02 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Document that cp -r + preserves symlinks. Emphasize non-portability of cp -r. + +2002-02-27 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (Time directives): Add %N for nanoseconds. + This documents the recent change to 'ls'. + +2002-02-28 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (pr invocation): Reword to avoid using `:' + in an @opindex entry -- info doesn't permit it. + +2002-02-27 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (Formatting file timestamps): Document new + time-formatting method: --time-style=+FORMAT. + +2002-02-18 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (seq invocation): In the example, use "tail + -n 3", not "tail -3", to conform to POSIX 1003.1-2001. + +2002-02-17 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (tsort background): New section. + From Ian Lance Taylor. + (tsort invocation): Add a more realistic example. + +2002-02-15 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi: Document _POSIX2_VERSION. + (Standards Conformance): New section. + +2002-01-24 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY): Remove a few entries + and clean up a few others based on suggestions from Bob Proulx. + +2002-02-14 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + Add support for POSIX 1003.1-2001, which requires removal for + support of obsolete "+" option syntax in sort, tail, and uniq. + * coreutils.texi: Document this. (Also, document a similar + change to "touch", for fileutils). + +2002-01-12 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (shred invocation): List some journaled filesystems. + +2001-11-10 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (Date directives): Document %u. + +2001-11-07 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (paste invocation): Give examples. + Thanks to Dan Jacobson for suggesting the examples. + +2001-11-05 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Recommend setting LC_ALL=C, + not LC_COLLATE=C. Explain how the latter can cause problems. + Based on a message from Paul Eggert. + (ls invocation): Recommend setting LC_ALL=C, not LC_COLLATE=C. + +2001-10-21 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Describe --reply=... + +2001-10-17 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (cp invocation): `cp --no-dereference' is + no longer equivalent to `cp -d'. + `cp -d' is equivalent to `--no-dereference --preserve=links'. + cp's -P option means --no-dereference, not --parents. + Describe new optional argument to --preserve. + Describe new option: --no-preserve=ATTRIBUTE_LIST. + +2001-09-23 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Redirect stderr of `grep -w' to + /dev/null, so people with old versions of grep don't see the failure. + +2001-09-16 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (mv invocation): Describe new option: + --reply={yes,no,query}. Fix a few typos. + +2001-09-15 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (uniq invocation): The input need not + be sorted. Try to clarify -d versus -D versus -u. + +2001-09-12 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (tail invocation): Document new option: -F. + From Herbert Xu. + +2001-09-04 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi (join invocation): Describe the GNU + extension to join, which does not require sorted input when + the input contains no unpairable lines. + +2001-09-03 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi: + New 'uname' options -i or --hardware-platform, + and -o or --operating-system. + 'uname -a' now outputs -i and -o information at the end. + New uname option --kernel-version is an alias for -v. + Uname option --release has been renamed to --kernel-release, + and --sysname has been renamed to --kernel-name; + the old options will work for a while, but are no longer documented. + +2001-08-24 Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au> + + * coreutils.texi (cut invocation): Document how cut treats lines + with no separators. + +2001-06-19 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi: expr now uses LC_COLLATE for string comparison, + as per POSIX. + +2001-08-25 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi: Use @option, rather than @samp everywhere. + +2001-06-21 Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> + + * coreutils.texi: 'expr' now requires '+' rather than 'quote' + to quote tokens. + +2001-07-14 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Reflect 2001-07-08 change to + cp (via copy.c). + +2001-06-16 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * Makefile.am (info_TEXINFOS): Reflect renaming: s/omni-/core/. + * coreutils.texi: Likewise. + + * coreutils.texi: New, renamed from omni-utils.texi. + * omni-utils.texi: Removed, renamed to coreutils.texi. + + * omni-utils.texi (ls invocation): Mention the effect of locale. + Reported by Keith Thompson. + +2001-05-24 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * texinfo.tex: Update from master source. + + * omni-utils.texi (ls invocation): Document more clearly what ls + does when given no arguments. + +2001-05-21 Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> + + * textutils.texi: Remove file. + + * Makefile.am ($(DVIS), $(INFO_DEPS)): Depend on $(EXTRA_DIST). + (DISABLED_constants.texi): New rule -- disabled for now. + + This directory is now shared by fileutils, textutils, and sh-utils. diff --git a/coreutils-5.3.0-bin/contrib/coreutils/5.3.0/coreutils-5.3.0-src/doc/coreutils.info b/coreutils-5.3.0-bin/contrib/coreutils/5.3.0/coreutils-5.3.0-src/doc/coreutils.info new file mode 100644 index 0000000..263ca12 --- /dev/null +++ b/coreutils-5.3.0-bin/contrib/coreutils/5.3.0/coreutils-5.3.0-src/doc/coreutils.info @@ -0,0 +1,14780 @@ +This is coreutils.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.8 from +coreutils.texi. + +INFO-DIR-SECTION Basics +START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY +* Coreutils: (coreutils). Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. +* Common options: (coreutils)Common options. Common options. +* File permissions: (coreutils)File permissions. Access modes. +* Date input formats: (coreutils)Date input formats. +END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY + +INFO-DIR-SECTION Individual utilities +START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY +* basename: (coreutils)basename invocation. Strip directory and suffix. +* cat: (coreutils)cat invocation. Concatenate and write files. +* chgrp: (coreutils)chgrp invocation. Change file groups. +* chmod: (coreutils)chmod invocation. Change file permissions. +* chown: (coreutils)chown invocation. Change file owners/groups. +* chroot: (coreutils)chroot invocation. Specify the root directory. +* cksum: (coreutils)cksum invocation. Print POSIX CRC checksum. +* comm: (coreutils)comm invocation. Compare sorted files by line. +* cp: (coreutils)cp invocation. Copy files. +* csplit: (coreutils)csplit invocation. Split by context. +* cut: (coreutils)cut invocation. Print selected parts of lines. +* date: (coreutils)date invocation. Print/set system date and time. +* dd: (coreutils)dd invocation. Copy and convert a file. +* df: (coreutils)df invocation. Report file system disk usage. +* dir: (coreutils)dir invocation. List directories briefly. +* dircolors: (coreutils)dircolors invocation. Color setup for ls. +* dirname: (coreutils)dirname invocation. Strip non-directory suffix. +* du: (coreutils)du invocation. Report on disk usage. +* echo: (coreutils)echo invocation. Print a line of text. +* env: (coreutils)env invocation. Modify the environment. +* expand: (coreutils)expand invocation. Convert tabs to spaces. +* expr: (coreutils)expr invocation. Evaluate expressions. +* factor: (coreutils)factor invocation. Print prime factors +* false: (coreutils)false invocation. Do nothing, unsuccessfully. +* fmt: (coreutils)fmt invocation. Reformat paragraph text. +* fold: (coreutils)fold invocation. Wrap long input lines. +* groups: (coreutils)groups invocation. Print group names a user is in. +* head: (coreutils)head invocation. Output the first part of files. +* hostid: (coreutils)hostid invocation. Print numeric host identifier. +* hostname: (coreutils)hostname invocation. Print or set system name. +* id: (coreutils)id invocation. Print real/effective uid/gid. +* install: (coreutils)install invocation. Copy and change attributes. +* join: (coreutils)join invocation. Join lines on a common field. +* kill: (coreutils)kill invocation. Send a signal to processes. +* link: (coreutils)link invocation. Make hard links between files. +* ln: (coreutils)ln invocation. Make links between files. +* logname: (coreutils)logname invocation. Print current login name. +* ls: (coreutils)ls invocation. List directory contents. +* md5sum: (coreutils)md5sum invocation. Print or check message-digests. +* mkdir: (coreutils)mkdir invocation. Create directories. +* mkfifo: (coreutils)mkfifo invocation. Create FIFOs (named pipes). +* mknod: (coreutils)mknod invocation. Create special files. +* mv: (coreutils)mv invocation. Rename files. +* nice: (coreutils)nice invocation. Modify scheduling priority. +* nl: (coreutils)nl invocation. Number lines and write files. +* nohup: (coreutils)nohup invocation. Immunize to hangups. +* od: (coreutils)od invocation. Dump files in octal, etc. +* paste: (coreutils)paste invocation. Merge lines of files. +* pathchk: (coreutils)pathchk invocation. Check file name portability. +* pr: (coreutils)pr invocation. Paginate or columnate files. +* printenv: (coreutils)printenv invocation. Print environment variables. +* printf: (coreutils)printf invocation. Format and print data. +* ptx: (coreutils)ptx invocation. Produce permuted indexes. +* pwd: (coreutils)pwd invocation. Print working directory. +* readlink: (coreutils)readlink invocation. Print referent of a symlink. +* rm: (coreutils)rm invocation. Remove files. +* rmdir: (coreutils)rmdir invocation. Remove empty directories. +* seq: (coreutils)seq invocation. Print numeric sequences +* shred: (coreutils)shred invocation. Remove files more securely. +* sleep: (coreutils)sleep invocation. Delay for a specified time. +* sort: (coreutils)sort invocation. Sort text files. +* split: (coreutils)split invocation. Split into fixed-size pieces. +* stat: (coreutils)stat invocation. Report file(system) status. +* stty: (coreutils)stty invocation. Print/change terminal settings. +* su: (coreutils)su invocation. Modify user and group id. +* sum: (coreutils)sum invocation. Print traditional checksum. +* sync: (coreutils)sync invocation. Synchronize memory and disk. +* tac: (coreutils)tac invocation. Reverse files. +* tail: (coreutils)tail invocation. Output the last part of files. +* tee: (coreutils)tee invocation. Redirect to multiple files. +* test: (coreutils)test invocation. File/string tests. +* touch: (coreutils)touch invocation. Change file timestamps. +* tr: (coreutils)tr invocation. Translate characters. +* true: (coreutils)true invocation. Do nothing, successfully. +* tsort: (coreutils)tsort invocation. Topological sort. +* tty: (coreutils)tty invocation. Print terminal name. +* uname: (coreutils)uname invocation. Print system information. +* unexpand: (coreutils)unexpand invocation. Convert spaces to tabs. +* uniq: (coreutils)uniq invocation. Uniquify files. +* unlink: (coreutils)unlink invocation. Removal via unlink(2). +* users: (coreutils)users invocation. Print current user names. +* vdir: (coreutils)vdir invocation. List directories verbosely. +* wc: (coreutils)wc invocation. Line, word, and byte counts. +* who: (coreutils)who invocation. Print who is logged in. +* whoami: (coreutils)whoami invocation. Print effective user id. +* yes: (coreutils)yes invocation. Print a string indefinitely. +END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY + + This manual documents version 5.3.0 of the GNU core utilities, +including the standard programs for text and file manipulation. + + Copyright (C) 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Free +Software Foundation, Inc. + + Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this + document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, + Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software + Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, + and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included + in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Top, Next: Introduction, Up: (dir) + +GNU Coreutils +************* + +This manual documents version 5.3.0 of the GNU core utilities, +including the standard programs for text and file manipulation. + + Copyright (C) 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Free +Software Foundation, Inc. + + Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this + document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, + Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software + Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, + and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included + in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". + +* Menu: + +* Introduction:: Caveats, overview, and authors. +* Common options:: Common options. +* Output of entire files:: cat tac nl od +* Formatting file contents:: fmt pr fold +* Output of parts of files:: head tail split csplit +* Summarizing files:: wc sum cksum md5sum +* Operating on sorted files:: sort uniq comm ptx tsort +* Operating on fields within a line:: cut paste join +* Operating on characters:: tr expand unexpand +* Directory listing:: ls dir vdir d v dircolors +* Basic operations:: cp dd install mv rm shred +* Special file types:: ln mkdir rmdir mkfifo mknod +* Changing file attributes:: chgrp chmod chown touch +* Disk usage:: df du stat sync +* Printing text:: echo printf yes +* Conditions:: false true test expr +* Redirection:: tee +* File name manipulation:: dirname basename pathchk +* Working context:: pwd stty printenv tty +* User information:: id logname whoami groups users who +* System context:: date uname hostname +* Modified command invocation:: chroot env nice nohup su +* Process control:: kill +* Delaying:: sleep +* Numeric operations:: factor seq +* File permissions:: Access modes. +* Date input formats:: Specifying date strings. +* Opening the software toolbox:: The software tools philosophy. +* GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation. +* Index:: General index. + + --- The Detailed Node Listing --- + +Common Options + +* Exit status:: Indicating program success or failure. +* Backup options:: Backup options +* Block size:: Block size +* Target directory:: Target directory +* Trailing slashes:: Trailing slashes +* Traversing symlinks:: Traversing symlinks to directories +* Treating / specially:: Treating / specially +* Standards conformance:: Standards conformance + +Output of entire files + +* cat invocation:: Concatenate and write files. +* tac invocation:: Concatenate and write files in reverse. +* nl invocation:: Number lines and write files. +* od invocation:: Write files in octal or other formats. + +Formatting file contents + +* fmt invocation:: Reformat paragraph text. +* pr invocation:: Paginate or columnate files for printing. +* fold invocation:: Wrap input lines to fit in specified width. + +Output of parts of files + +* head invocation:: Output the first part of files. +* tail invocation:: Output the last part of files. +* split invocation:: Split a file into fixed-size pieces. +* csplit invocation:: Split a file into context-determined pieces. + +Summarizing files + +* wc invocation:: Print newline, word, and byte counts. +* sum invocation:: Print checksum and block counts. +* cksum invocation:: Print CRC checksum and byte counts. +* md5sum invocation:: Print or check message-digests. + +Operating on sorted files + +* sort invocation:: Sort text files. +* uniq invocation:: Uniquify files. +* comm invocation:: Compare two sorted files line by line. +* ptx invocation:: Produce a permuted index of file contents. +* tsort invocation:: Topological sort. + +`ptx': Produce permuted indexes + +* General options in ptx:: Options which affect general program behavior. +* Charset selection in ptx:: Underlying character set considerations. +* Input processing in ptx:: Input fields, contexts, and keyword selection. +* Output formatting in ptx:: Types of output format, and sizing the fields. +* Compatibility in ptx:: The GNU extensions to `ptx' + +Operating on fields within a line + +* cut invocation:: Print selected parts of lines. +* paste invocation:: Merge lines of files. +* join invocation:: Join lines on a common field. + +Operating on characters + +* tr invocation:: Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters. +* expand invocation:: Convert tabs to spaces. +* unexpand invocation:: Convert spaces to tabs. + +`tr': Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters + +* Character sets:: Specifying sets of characters. +* Translating:: Changing one set of characters to another. +* Squeezing:: Squeezing repeats and deleting. + +Directory listing + +* ls invocation:: List directory contents +* dir invocation:: Briefly list directory contents +* vdir invocation:: Verbosely list directory contents +* dircolors invocation:: Color setup for `ls' + +`ls': List directory contents + +* Which files are listed:: Which files are listed +* What information is listed:: What information is listed +* Sorting the output:: Sorting the output +* More details about version sort:: More details about version sort +* General output formatting:: General output formatting +* Formatting the file names:: Formatting the file names + +Basic operations + +* cp invocation:: Copy files and directories +* dd invocation:: Convert and copy a file +* install invocation:: Copy files and set attributes +* mv invocation:: Move (rename) files +* rm invocation:: Remove files or directories +* shred invocation:: Remove files more securely + +Special file types + +* link invocation:: Make a hard link via the link syscall +* ln invocation:: Make links between files +* mkdir invocation:: Make directories +* mkfifo invocation:: Make FIFOs (named pipes) +* mknod invocation:: Make block or character special files +* readlink invocation:: Print the referent of a symbolic link +* rmdir invocation:: Remove empty directories +* unlink invocation:: Remove files via unlink syscall + +Changing file attributes + +* chown invocation:: Change file owner and group +* chgrp invocation:: Change group ownership +* chmod invocation:: Change access permissions +* touch invocation:: Change file timestamps + +Disk usage + +* df invocation:: Report file system disk space usage +* du invocation:: Estimate file space usage +* stat invocation:: Report file or file system status +* sync invocation:: Synchronize data on disk with memory + +Printing text + +* echo invocation:: Print a line of text +* printf invocation:: Format and print data +* yes invocation:: Print a string until interrupted + +Conditions + +* false invocation:: Do nothing, unsuccessfully +* true invocation:: Do nothing, successfully +* test invocation:: Check file types and compare values +* expr invocation:: Evaluate expressions + +`test': Check file types and compare values + +* File type tests:: File type tests +* Access permission tests:: Access permission tests +* File characteristic tests:: File characteristic tests +* String tests:: String tests +* Numeric tests:: Numeric tests + +`expr': Evaluate expression + +* String expressions:: + : match substr index length +* Numeric expressions:: + - * / % +* Relations for expr:: | & < <= = == != >= > +* Examples of expr:: Examples of using `expr' + +Redirection + +* tee invocation:: Redirect output to multiple files + +File name manipulation + +* basename invocation:: Strip directory and suffix from a file name +* dirname invocation:: Strip non-directory suffix from a file name +* pathchk invocation:: Check file name portability + +Working context + +* pwd invocation:: Print working directory +* stty invocation:: Print or change terminal characteristics +* printenv invocation:: Print all or some environment variables +* tty invocation:: Print file name of terminal on standard input + +`stty': Print or change terminal characteristics + +* Control:: Control settings +* Input:: Input settings +* Output:: Output settings +* Local:: Local settings +* Combination:: Combination settings +* Characters:: Special characters +* Special:: Special settings + +User information + +* id invocation:: Print real and effective uid and gid +* logname invocation:: Print current login name +* whoami invocation:: Print effective user id +* groups invocation:: Print group names a user is in +* users invocation:: Print login names of users currently logged in +* who invocation:: Print who is currently logged in + +System context + +* date invocation:: Print or set system date and time +* uname invocation:: Print system information +* hostname invocation:: Print or set system name +* hostid invocation:: Print numeric host identifier. + +`date': Print or set system date and time + +* Time directives:: Time directives +* Date directives:: Date directives +* Literal directives:: Literal directives +* Padding:: Padding +* Setting the time:: Setting the time +* Options for date:: Options for `date' +* Examples of date:: Examples of `date' + +Modified command invocation + +* chroot invocation:: Run a command with a different root directory +* env invocation:: Run a command in a modified environment +* nice invocation:: Run a command with modified scheduling priority +* nohup invocation:: Run a command immune to hangups +* su invocation:: Run a command with substitute user and group id + +Process control + +* kill invocation:: Sending a signal to processes. + +Delaying + +* sleep invocation:: Delay for a specified time + +Numeric operations + +* factor invocation:: Print prime factors +* seq invocation:: Print numeric sequences + +File permissions + +* Mode Structure:: Structure of File Permissions +* Symbolic Modes:: Mnemonic permissions representation +* Numeric Modes:: Permissions as octal numbers + +Date input formats + +* General date syntax:: Common rules. +* Calendar date items:: 19 Dec 1994. +* Time of day items:: 9:20pm. +* Time zone items:: EST, PDT, GMT. +* Day of week items:: Monday and others. +* Relative items in date strings:: next tuesday, 2 years ago. +* Pure numbers in date strings:: 19931219, 1440. +* Seconds since the Epoch:: @1078100502. +* Specifying time zone rules:: TZ="America/New_York", TZ="UTC0". +* Authors of get_date:: Bellovin, Eggert, Salz, Berets, et al. + +Opening the software toolbox + +* Toolbox introduction:: Toolbox introduction +* I/O redirection:: I/O redirection +* The who command:: The `who' command +* The cut command:: The `cut' command +* The sort command:: The `sort' command +* The uniq command:: The `uniq' command +* Putting the tools together:: Putting the tools together + +GNU Free Documentation License + +* How to use this License for your documents:: + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Common options, Prev: Top, Up: Top + +1 Introduction +************** + +This manual is a work in progress: many sections make no attempt to +explain basic concepts in a way suitable for novices. Thus, if you are +interested, please get involved in improving this manual. The entire +GNU community will benefit. + + The GNU utilities documented here are mostly compatible with the +POSIX standard. Please report bugs to <bug-coreutils@gnu.org>. +Remember to include the version number, machine architecture, input +files, and any other information needed to reproduce the bug: your +input, what you expected, what you got, and why it is wrong. Diffs are +welcome, but please include a description of the problem as well, since +this is sometimes difficult to infer. *Note Bugs: (gcc)Bugs. + + This manual was originally derived from the Unix man pages in the +distributions, which were written by David MacKenzie and updated by Jim +Meyering. What you are reading now is the authoritative documentation +for these utilities; the man pages are no longer being maintained. The +original `fmt' man page was written by Ross Paterson. Franc,ois Pinard +did the initial conversion to Texinfo format. Karl Berry did the +indexing, some reorganization, and editing of the results. Brian +Youmans of the Free Software Foundation office staff combined the +manuals for textutils, fileutils, and sh-utils to produce the present +omnibus manual. Richard Stallman contributed his usual invaluable +insights to the overall process. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Common options, Next: Output of entire files, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top + +2 Common options +**************** + +Certain options are available in all of these programs. Rather than +writing identical descriptions for each of the programs, they are +described here. (In fact, every GNU program accepts (or should accept) +these options.) + + Normally options and operands can appear in any order, and programs +act as if all the options appear before any operands. For example, +`sort -r passwd -t :' acts like `sort -r -t : passwd', since `:' is an +option-argument of `-t'. However, if the `POSIXLY_CORRECT' environment +variable is set, options must appear before operands, unless otherwise +specified for a particular command. + + A few programs can usefully have trailing operands with leading `-'. +With such a program, options must precede operands even if +`POSIXLY_CORRECT' is not set, and this fact is noted in the program +description. For example, the `env' command's options must appear +before its operands, since in some cases the operands specify a command +that itself contains options. + + Some of these programs recognize the `--help' and `--version' +options only when one of them is the sole command line argument. + +`--help' + Print a usage message listing all available options, then exit + successfully. + +`--version' + Print the version number, then exit successfully. + +`--' + Delimit the option list. Later arguments, if any, are treated as + operands even if they begin with `-'. For example, `sort -- -r' + reads from the file named `-r'. + + + A single `-' operand is not really an option, though it looks like +one. It stands for standard input, or for standard output if that is +clear from the context. For example, `sort -' reads from standard +input, and is equivalent to plain `sort', and `tee -' writes an extra +copy of its input to standard output. Unless otherwise specified, `-' +can appear as any operand that requires a file name. + +* Menu: + +* Exit status:: Indicating program success or failure. +* Backup options:: -b -S -V, in some programs. +* Block size:: BLOCK_SIZE and --block-size, in some programs. +* Target directory:: Specifying a target directory, in some programs. +* Trailing slashes:: --strip-trailing-slashes, in some programs. +* Traversing symlinks:: -H, -L, or -P, in some programs. +* Treating / specially:: --preserve-root and --no-preserve-root. +* Special built-in utilities:: `break', `:', `eval', ... +* Standards conformance:: Conformance to the POSIX standard. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Exit status, Next: Backup options, Up: Common options + +2.1 Exit status +=============== + +Nearly every command invocation yields an integral "exit status" that +can be used to change how other commands work. For the vast majority +of commands, an exit status of zero indicates success. Failure is +indicated by a nonzero value--typically `1', though it may differ on +unusual platforms as POSIX requires only that it be nonzero. + + However, some of the programs documented here do produce other exit +status values and a few associate different meanings with the values +`0' and `1'. Here are some of the exceptions: `chroot', `env', `expr', +`nice', `nohup', `printenv', `sort', `su', `test', `tty'. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Backup options, Next: Block size, Prev: Exit status, Up: Common options + +2.2 Backup options +================== + +Some GNU programs (at least `cp', `install', `ln', and `mv') optionally +make backups of files before writing new versions. These options +control the details of these backups. The options are also briefly +mentioned in the descriptions of the particular programs. + +`-b' +`--backup[=METHOD]' + Make a backup of each file that would otherwise be overwritten or + removed. Without this option, the original versions are destroyed. + Use METHOD to determine the type of backups to make. When this + option is used but METHOD is not specified, then the value of the + `VERSION_CONTROL' environment variable is used. And if + `VERSION_CONTROL' is not set, the default backup type is + `existing'. + + Note that the short form of this option, `-b' does not accept any + argument. Using `-b' is equivalent to using `--backup=existing'. + + This option corresponds to the Emacs variable `version-control'; + the values for METHOD are the same as those used in Emacs. This + option also accepts more descriptive names. The valid METHODs are + (unique abbreviations are accepted): + + `none' + `off' + Never make backups. + + `numbered' + `t' + Always make numbered backups. + + `existing' + `nil' + Make numbered backups of files that already have them, simple + backups of the others. + + `simple' + `never' + Always make simple backups. Please note `never' is not to be + confused with `none'. + + +`-S SUFFIX' +`--suffix=SUFFIX' + Append SUFFIX to each backup file made with `-b'. If this option + is not specified, the value of the `SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX' + environment variable is used. And if `SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX' is not + set, the default is `~', just as in Emacs. + +`--version-control=METHOD' + This option is obsolete and will be removed in a future release. + It has been replaced with `--backup'. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Block size, Next: Target directory, Prev: Backup options, Up: Common options + +2.3 Block size +============== + +Some GNU programs (at least `df', `du', and `ls') display sizes in +"blocks". You can adjust the block size and method of display to make +sizes easier to read. The block size used for display is independent +of any file system block size. Fractional block counts are rounded up +to the nearest integer. + + The default block size is chosen by examining the following +environment variables in turn; the first one that is set determines the +block size. + +`DF_BLOCK_SIZE' + This specifies the default block size for the `df' command. + Similarly, `DU_BLOCK_SIZE' specifies the default for `du' and + `LS_BLOCK_SIZE' for `ls'. + +`BLOCK_SIZE' + This specifies the default block size for all three commands, if + the above command-specific environment variables are not set. + +`BLOCKSIZE' + This specifies the default block size for all values that are + normally printed as blocks, if neither `BLOCK_SIZE' nor the above + command-specific environment variables are set. Unlike the other + environment variables, `BLOCKSIZE' does not affect values that are + normally printed as byte counts, e.g., the file sizes contained in + `ls -l' output. + +`POSIXLY_CORRECT' + If neither `COMMAND_BLOCK_SIZE', nor `BLOCK_SIZE', nor `BLOCKSIZE' + is set, but this variable is set, the block size defaults to 512. + + + If none of the above environment variables are set, the block size +currently defaults to 1024 bytes in most contexts, but this number may +change in the future. For `ls' file sizes, the block size defaults to +1 byte. + + A block size specification can be a positive integer specifying the +number of bytes per block, or it can be `human-readable' or `si' to +select a human-readable format. Integers may be followed by suffixes +that are upward compatible with the SI prefixes +(http://www.bipm.fr/enus/3_SI/si-prefixes.html) for decimal multiples +and with the IEC 60027-2 prefixes for binary multiples +(http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html). + + With human-readable formats, output sizes are followed by a size +letter such as `M' for megabytes. `BLOCK_SIZE=human-readable' uses +powers of 1024; `M' stands for 1,048,576 bytes. `BLOCK_SIZE=si' is +similar, but uses powers of 1000 and appends `B'; `MB' stands for +1,000,000 bytes. + + A block size specification preceded by `'' causes output sizes to be +displayed with thousands separators. The `LC_NUMERIC' locale specifies +the thousands separator and grouping. For example, in an American +English locale, `--block-size="'1kB"' would cause a size of 1234000 +bytes to be displayed as `1,234'. In the default C locale, there is no +thousands separator so a leading `'' has no effect. + + An integer block size can be followed by a suffix to specify a +multiple of that size. A bare size letter, or one followed by `iB', +specifies a multiple using powers of 1024. A size letter followed by +`B' specifies powers of 1000 instead. For example, `1M' and `1MiB' are +equivalent to `1048576', whereas `1MB' is equivalent to `1000000'. + + A plain suffix without a preceding integer acts as if `1' were +prepended, except that it causes a size indication to be appended to +the output. For example, `--block-size="kB"' displays 3000 as `3kB'. + + The following suffixes are defined. Large sizes like `1Y' may be +rejected by your computer due to limitations of its arithmetic. + +`kB' + kilobyte: 10^3 = 1000. + +`k' +`K' +`KiB' + kibibyte: 2^10 = 1024. `K' is special: the SI prefix is `k' and + the IEC 60027-2 prefix is `Ki', but tradition and POSIX use `k' to + mean `KiB'. + +`MB' + megabyte: 10^6 = 1,000,000. + +`M' +`MiB' + mebibyte: 2^20 = 1,048,576. + +`GB' + gigabyte: 10^9 = 1,000,000,000. + +`G' +`GiB' + gibibyte: 2^30 = 1,073,741,824. + +`TB' + terabyte: 10^12 = 1,000,000,000,000. + +`T' +`TiB' + tebibyte: 2^40 = 1,099,511,627,776. + +`PB' + petabyte: 10^15 = 1,000,000,000,000,000. + +`P' +`PiB' + pebibyte: 2^50 = 1,125,899,906,842,624. + +`EB' + exabyte: 10^18 = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000. + +`E' +`EiB' + exbibyte: 2^60 = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976. + +`ZB' + zettabyte: 10^21 = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 + +`Z' +`ZiB' + 2^70 = 1,180,591,620,717,411,303,424. (`Zi' is a GNU extension to + IEC 60027-2.) + +`YB' + yottabyte: 10^24 = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. + +`Y' +`YiB' + 2^80 = 1,208,925,819,614,629,174,706,176. (`Yi' is a GNU + extension to IEC 60027-2.) + + Block size defaults can be overridden by an explicit +`--block-size=SIZE' option. The `-k' option is equivalent to +`--block-size=1K', which is the default unless the `POSIXLY_CORRECT' +environment variable is set. The `-h' or `--human-readable' option is +equivalent to `--block-size=human-readable'. The `--si' option is +equivalent to `--block-size=si'. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Target directory, Next: Trailing slashes, Prev: Block size, Up: Common options + +2.4 Target directory +==================== + +The `cp', `install', `ln', and `mv' commands normally treat the last +operand specially when it is a directory or a symbolic link to a +directory. For example, `cp source dest' is equivalent to `cp source +dest/source' if `dest' is a directory. Sometimes this behavior is not +exactly what is wanted, so these commands support the following options +to allow more fine-grained control: + +`-T' +`--no-target-directory' + Do not treat the last operand specially when it is a directory or a + symbolic link to a directory. This can help avoid race conditions + in programs that operate in a shared area. For example, when the + command `mv /tmp/source /tmp/dest' succeeds, there is no guarantee + that `/tmp/source' was renamed to `/tmp/dest': it could have been + renamed to `/tmp/dest/source' instead, if some other process + created `/tmp/dest' as a directory. However, if `mv -T + /tmp/source /tmp/dest' succeeds, there is no question that + `/tmp/source' was renamed to `/tmp/dest'. + + In the opposite situation, where you want the last operand to be + treated as a directory and want a diagnostic otherwise, you can use + the `--target-directory' (`-t') option. + +`-t DIRECTORY' +`--target-directory=DIRECTORY' + Use DIRECTORY as the directory component of each destination file + name. + + The interface for most programs is that after processing options + and a finite (possibly zero) number of fixed-position arguments, + the remaining argument list is either expected to be empty, or is + a list of items (usually files) that will all be handled + identically. The `xargs' program is designed to work well with + this convention. + + The commands in the `mv'-family are unusual in that they take a + variable number of arguments with a special case at the _end_ + (namely, the target directory). This makes it nontrivial to + perform some operations, e.g., "move all files from here to + ../d/", because `mv * ../d/' might exhaust the argument space, and + `ls | xargs ...' doesn't have a clean way to specify an extra + final argument for each invocation of the subject command. (It + can be done by going through a shell command, but that requires + more human labor and brain power than it should.) + + The `--target-directory' (`-t') option allows the `cp', `install', + `ln', and `mv' programs to be used conveniently with `xargs'. For + example, you can move the files from the current directory to a + sibling directory, `d' like this: + + ls | xargs mv -t ../d -- + + However, this doesn't move files whose names begin with `.'. If + you use the GNU `find' program, you can move those files too, with + this command: + + find . -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 \ + | xargs mv -t ../d + + But both of the above approaches fail if there are no files in the + current directory, or if any file has a name containing a blank or + some other special characters. The following example removes + those limitations and requires both GNU `find' and GNU `xargs': + + find . -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -print0 \ + | xargs --null --no-run-if-empty \ + mv -t ../d + + +The `--target-directory' (`-t') and `--no-target-directory' (`-T') +options cannot be combined. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Trailing slashes, Next: Traversing symlinks, Prev: Target directory, Up: Common options + +2.5 Trailing slashes +==================== + +Some GNU programs (at least `cp' and `mv') allow you to remove any +trailing slashes from each SOURCE argument before operating on it. The +`--strip-trailing-slashes' option enables this behavior. + + This is useful when a SOURCE argument may have a trailing slash and +specify a symbolic link to a directory. This scenario is in fact rather +common because some shells can automatically append a trailing slash +when performing file name completion on such symbolic links. Without +this option, `mv', for example, (via the system's rename function) must +interpret a trailing slash as a request to dereference the symbolic link +and so must rename the indirectly referenced _directory_ and not the +symbolic link. Although it may seem surprising that such behavior be +the default, it is required by POSIX and is consistent with other parts +of that standard. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Traversing symlinks, Next: Treating / specially, Prev: Trailing slashes, Up: Common options + +2.6 Traversing symlinks +======================= + +The following options modify how `chown' and `chgrp' traverse a +hierarchy when the `--recursive' (`-R') option is also specified. If +more than one of the following options is specified, only the final one +takes effect. These options specify whether processing a symbolic link +to a directory entails operating on just the symbolic link or on all +files in the hierarchy rooted at that directory. + + These options are independent of `--dereference' and +`--no-dereference' (`-h'), which control whether to modify a symlink or +its referent. + +`-H' + If `--recursive' (`-R') is specified and a command line argument + is a symbolic link to a directory, traverse it. + +`-L' + In a recursive traversal, traverse every symbolic link to a + directory that is encountered. + +`-P' + Do not traverse any symbolic links. This is the default if none + of `-H', `-L', or `-P' is specified. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Treating / specially, Next: Special built-in utilities, Prev: Traversing symlinks, Up: Common options + +2.7 Treating / specially +======================== + +Certain commands can operate destructively on entire hierarchies. For +example, if a user with appropriate privileges mistakenly runs `rm -rf +/ tmp/junk' or `cd /bin; rm -rf ../', that may remove all files on the +entire system. Since there are so few (1) legitimate uses for such a +command, GNU `rm' provides the `--preserve-root' option to make it so +`rm' declines to operate on any directory that resolves to `/'. The +default is still to allow `rm -rf /' to operate unimpeded. Another new +option, `--no-preserve-root', cancels the effect of any preceding +`--preserve-root' option. Note that the `--preserve-root' behavior may +become the default for `rm'. + + The commands `chgrp', `chmod' and `chown' can also operate +destructively on entire hierarchies, so they too support these options. +Although, unlike `rm', they don't actually unlink files, these +commands are arguably more dangerous when operating recursively on `/', +since they often work much more quickly, and hence damage more files +before an alert user can interrupt them. + + ---------- Footnotes ---------- + + (1) If you know of one, please write to <bug-coreutils@gnu.org>. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Special built-in utilities, Next: Standards conformance, Prev: Treating / specially, Up: Common options + +2.8 Special built-in utilities +============================== + +Some programs like `nice' can invoke other programs; for example, the +command `nice cat file' invokes the program `cat' by executing the +command `cat file'. However, "special built-in utilities" like `exit' +cannot be invoked this way. For example, the command `nice exit' does +not have a well-defined behavior: it may generate an error message +instead of exiting. + + Here is a list of the special built-in utilities that are +standardized by POSIX 1003.1-2004. + + . : break continue eval exec exit export readonly return set shift + times trap unset + + For example, because `.', `:', and `exec' are special, the commands +`nice . foo.sh', `nice :', and `nice exec pwd' do not work as you might +expect. + + Many shells extend this list. For example, Bash has several extra +special built-in utilities like `history', and `suspend', and with Bash +the command `nice suspend' generates an error message instead of +suspending. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Standards conformance, Prev: Special built-in utilities, Up: Common options + +2.9 Standards conformance +========================= + +In a few cases, the GNU utilities' default behavior is incompatible +with the POSIX standard. To suppress these incompatibilities, define +the `POSIXLY_CORRECT' environment variable. Unless you are checking +for POSIX conformance, you probably do not need to define +`POSIXLY_CORRECT'. + + Newer versions of POSIX are occasionally incompatible with older +versions. For example, older versions of POSIX required the command +`sort +1' to sort based on the second and succeeding fields in each +input line, but starting with POSIX 1003.1-2001 the same command is +required to sort the file named `+1', and you must instead use the +command `sort -k 2' to get the field-based sort. + + The GNU utilities normally conform to the version of POSIX that is +standard for your system. To cause them to conform to a different +version of POSIX, define the `_POSIX2_VERSION' environment variable to +a value of the form YYYYMM specifying the year and month the standard +was adopted. Two values are currently supported for `_POSIX2_VERSION': +`199209' stands for POSIX 1003.2-1992, and `200112' stands for POSIX +1003.1-2001. For example, if you are running older software that +assumes an older version of POSIX and uses `sort +1', `head -10', or +`tail +10', you can work around the compatibility problems by setting +`_POSIX2_VERSION=199209' in your environment. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Output of entire files, Next: Formatting file contents, Prev: Common options, Up: Top + +3 Output of entire files +************************ + +These commands read and write entire files, possibly transforming them +in some way. + +* Menu: + +* cat invocation:: Concatenate and write files. +* tac invocation:: Concatenate and write files in reverse. +* nl invocation:: Number lines and write files. +* od invocation:: Write files in octal or other formats. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: cat invocation, Next: tac invocation, Up: Output of entire files + +3.1 `cat': Concatenate and write files +====================================== + +`cat' copies each FILE (`-' means standard input), or standard input if +none are given, to standard output. Synopsis: + + cat [OPTION] [FILE]... + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-A' +`--show-all' + Equivalent to `-vET'. + +`-B' +`--binary' + On MS-DOS and MS-Windows only, read and write the files in binary + mode. By default, `cat' on MS-DOS/MS-Windows uses binary mode + only when standard output is redirected to a file or a pipe; this + option overrides that. Binary file I/O is used so that the files + retain their format (Unix text as opposed to DOS text and binary), + because `cat' is frequently used as a file-copying program. Some + options (see below) cause `cat' to read and write files in text + mode because in those cases the original file contents aren't + important (e.g., when lines are numbered by `cat', or when line + endings should be marked). This is so these options work as + DOS/Windows users would expect; for example, DOS-style text files + have their lines end with the CR-LF pair of characters, which + won't be processed as an empty line by `-b' unless the file is + read in text mode. + +`-b' +`--number-nonblank' + Number all nonblank output lines, starting with 1. On MS-DOS and + MS-Windows, this option causes `cat' to read and write files in + text mode. + +`-e' + Equivalent to `-vE'. + +`-E' +`--show-ends' + Display a `$' after the end of each line. On MS-DOS and + MS-Windows, this option causes `cat' to read and write files in + text mode. + +`-n' +`--number' + Number all output lines, starting with 1. On MS-DOS and + MS-Windows, this option causes `cat' to read and write files in + text mode. + +`-s' +`--squeeze-blank' + Replace multiple adjacent blank lines with a single blank line. On + MS-DOS and MS-Windows, this option causes `cat' to read and write + files in text mode. + +`-t' + Equivalent to `-vT'. + +`-T' +`--show-tabs' + Display TAB characters as `^I'. + +`-u' + Ignored; for Unix compatibility. + +`-v' +`--show-nonprinting' + Display control characters except for LFD and TAB using `^' + notation and precede characters that have the high bit set with + `M-'. On MS-DOS and MS-Windows, this option causes `cat' to read + files and standard input in DOS binary mode, so the CR characters + at the end of each line are also visible. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: tac invocation, Next: nl invocation, Prev: cat invocation, Up: Output of entire files + +3.2 `tac': Concatenate and write files in reverse +================================================= + +`tac' copies each FILE (`-' means standard input), or standard input if +none are given, to standard output, reversing the records (lines by +default) in each separately. Synopsis: + + tac [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + "Records" are separated by instances of a string (newline by +default). By default, this separator string is attached to the end of +the record that it follows in the file. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-b' +`--before' + The separator is attached to the beginning of the record that it + precedes in the file. + +`-r' +`--regex' + Treat the separator string as a regular expression. Users of `tac' + on MS-DOS/MS-Windows should note that, since `tac' reads files in + binary mode, each line of a text file might end with a CR/LF pair + instead of the Unix-style LF. + +`-s SEPARATOR' +`--separator=SEPARATOR' + Use SEPARATOR as the record separator, instead of newline. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: nl invocation, Next: od invocation, Prev: tac invocation, Up: Output of entire files + +3.3 `nl': Number lines and write files +====================================== + +`nl' writes each FILE (`-' means standard input), or standard input if +none are given, to standard output, with line numbers added to some or +all of the lines. Synopsis: + + nl [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + `nl' decomposes its input into (logical) pages; by default, the line +number is reset to 1 at the top of each logical page. `nl' treats all +of the input files as a single document; it does not reset line numbers +or logical pages between files. + + A logical page consists of three sections: header, body, and footer. +Any of the sections can be empty. Each can be numbered in a different +style from the others. + + The beginnings of the sections of logical pages are indicated in the +input file by a line containing exactly one of these delimiter strings: + +`\:\:\:' + start of header; + +`\:\:' + start of body; + +`\:' + start of footer. + + The two characters from which these strings are made can be changed +from `\' and `:' via options (see below), but the pattern and length of +each string cannot be changed. + + A section delimiter is replaced by an empty line on output. Any text +that comes before the first section delimiter string in the input file +is considered to be part of a body section, so `nl' treats a file that +contains no section delimiters as a single body section. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-b STYLE' +`--body-numbering=STYLE' + Select the numbering style for lines in the body section of each + logical page. When a line is not numbered, the current line number + is not incremented, but the line number separator character is + still prepended to the line. The styles are: + + `a' + number all lines, + + `t' + number only nonempty lines (default for body), + + `n' + do not number lines (default for header and footer), + + `pBRE' + number only lines that contain a match for the basic regular + expression BRE. *Note Regular Expressions: (grep)Regular + Expressions. + +`-d CD' +`--section-delimiter=CD' + Set the section delimiter characters to CD; default is `\:'. If + only C is given, the second remains `:'. (Remember to protect `\' + or other metacharacters from shell expansion with quotes or extra + backslashes.) + +`-f STYLE' +`--footer-numbering=STYLE' + Analogous to `--body-numbering'. + +`-h STYLE' +`--header-numbering=STYLE' + Analogous to `--body-numbering'. + +`-i NUMBER' +`--page-increment=NUMBER' + Increment line numbers by NUMBER (default 1). + +`-l NUMBER' +`--join-blank-lines=NUMBER' + Consider NUMBER (default 1) consecutive empty lines to be one + logical line for numbering, and only number the last one. Where + fewer than NUMBER consecutive empty lines occur, do not number + them. An empty line is one that contains no characters, not even + spaces or tabs. + +`-n FORMAT' +`--number-format=FORMAT' + Select the line numbering format (default is `rn'): + + `ln' + left justified, no leading zeros; + + `rn' + right justified, no leading zeros; + + `rz' + right justified, leading zeros. + +`-p' +`--no-renumber' + Do not reset the line number at the start of a logical page. + +`-s STRING' +`--number-separator=STRING' + Separate the line number from the text line in the output with + STRING (default is the TAB character). + +`-v NUMBER' +`--starting-line-number=NUMBER' + Set the initial line number on each logical page to NUMBER + (default 1). + +`-w NUMBER' +`--number-width=NUMBER' + Use NUMBER characters for line numbers (default 6). + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: od invocation, Prev: nl invocation, Up: Output of entire files + +3.4 `od': Write files in octal or other formats +=============================================== + +`od' writes an unambiguous representation of each FILE (`-' means +standard input), or standard input if none are given. Synopses: + + od [OPTION]... [FILE]... + od [-abcdfilosx]... [FILE] [[+]OFFSET[.][b]] + od [OPTION]... --traditional [FILE] [[+]OFFSET[.][b] [[+]LABEL[.][b]]] + + Each line of output consists of the offset in the input, followed by +groups of data from the file. By default, `od' prints the offset in +octal, and each group of file data is a C `short int''s worth of input +printed as a single octal number. + + If OFFSET is given, it specifies how many input bytes to skip before +formatting and writing. By default, it is interpreted as an octal +number, but the optional trailing decimal point causes it to be +interpretated as decimal. If no decimal is specified and the offset +begins with `0x' or `0X' it is interpreted as a hexadecimal number. If +there is a trailing `b', the number of bytes skipped will be OFFSET +multiplied by 512. + + If a command is of both the first and second forms, the second form +is assumed if the last operand begins with `+' or (if there are two +operands) a digit. For example, in `od foo 10' and `od +10' the `10' +is an offset, whereas in `od 10' the `10' is a file name. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-A RADIX' +`--address-radix=RADIX' + Select the base in which file offsets are printed. RADIX can be + one of the following: + + `d' + decimal; + + `o' + octal; + + `x' + hexadecimal; + + `n' + none (do not print offsets). + + The default is octal. + +`-j BYTES' +`--skip-bytes=BYTES' + Skip BYTES input bytes before formatting and writing. If BYTES + begins with `0x' or `0X', it is interpreted in hexadecimal; + otherwise, if it begins with `0', in octal; otherwise, in decimal. + Appending `b' multiplies BYTES by 512, `k' by 1024, and `m' by + 1048576. + +`-N BYTES' +`--read-bytes=BYTES' + Output at most BYTES bytes of the input. Prefixes and suffixes on + `bytes' are interpreted as for the `-j' option. + +`-S N' +`--strings[=N]' + Instead of the normal output, output only "string constants": at + least N consecutive ASCII graphic characters, followed by a null + (zero) byte. + + If N is omitted with `--strings', the default is 3. + +`-t TYPE' +`--format=TYPE' + Select the format in which to output the file data. TYPE is a + string of one or more of the below type indicator characters. If + you include more than one type indicator character in a single TYPE + string, or use this option more than once, `od' writes one copy of + each output line using each of the data types that you specified, + in the order that you specified. + + Adding a trailing "z" to any type specification appends a display + of the ASCII character representation of the printable characters + to the output line generated by the type specification. + + `a' + named character + + `c' + ASCII character or backslash escape, + + `d' + signed decimal + + `f' + floating point + + `o' + octal + + `u' + unsigned decimal + + `x' + hexadecimal + + The type `a' outputs things like `sp' for space, `nl' for newline, + and `nul' for a null (zero) byte. Type `c' outputs ` ', `\n', and + `\0', respectively. + + Except for types `a' and `c', you can specify the number of bytes + to use in interpreting each number in the given data type by + following the type indicator character with a decimal integer. + Alternately, you can specify the size of one of the C compiler's + built-in data types by following the type indicator character with + one of the following characters. For integers (`d', `o', `u', + `x'): + + `C' + char + + `S' + short + + `I' + int + + `L' + long + + For floating point (`f'): + + F + float + + D + double + + L + long double + +`-v' +`--output-duplicates' + Output consecutive lines that are identical. By default, when two + or more consecutive output lines would be identical, `od' outputs + only the first line, and puts just an asterisk on the following + line to indicate the elision. + +`-w N' +`--width[=N]' + Dump `n' input bytes per output line. This must be a multiple of + the least common multiple of the sizes associated with the + specified output types. + + If this option is not given at all, the default is 16. If N is + omitted with `--width', the default is 32. On older systems, GNU + `od' instead supports an obsolete option `-w[N]', where N also + defaults to 32. POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) + does not allow `-w' without an argument; use `--width' instead. + + + The next several options are shorthands for format specifications. +GNU `od' accepts any combination of shorthands and format specification +options. These options accumulate. + +`-a' + Output as named characters. Equivalent to `-t a'. + +`-b' + Output as octal bytes. Equivalent to `-t o1'. + +`-c' + Output as ASCII characters or backslash escapes. Equivalent to + `-t c'. + +`-d' + Output as unsigned decimal two-byte units. Equivalent to `-t u2'. + +`-f' + Output as floats. Equivalent to `-t fF'. + +`-i' + Output as decimal ints. Equivalent to `-t dI'. + +`-l' + Output as decimal long ints. Equivalent to `-t dL'. + +`-o' + Output as octal two-byte units. Equivalent to `-t o2'. + +`-s' + Output as decimal two-byte units. Equivalent to `-t d2'. + +`-x' + Output as hexadecimal two-byte units. Equivalent to `-t x2'. + +`--traditional' + Recognize the non-option label argument that traditional `od' + accepted. The following syntax: + + od --traditional [FILE] [[+]OFFSET[.][b] [[+]LABEL[.][b]]] + + can be used to specify at most one file and optional arguments + specifying an offset and a pseudo-start address, LABEL. The LABEL + argument is interpreted just like OFFSET, but it specifies an + initial pseudo-address. The pseudo-addresses are displayed in + parentheses following any normal address. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Formatting file contents, Next: Output of parts of files, Prev: Output of entire files, Up: Top + +4 Formatting file contents +************************** + +These commands reformat the contents of files. + +* Menu: + +* fmt invocation:: Reformat paragraph text. +* pr invocation:: Paginate or columnate files for printing. +* fold invocation:: Wrap input lines to fit in specified width. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: fmt invocation, Next: pr invocation, Up: Formatting file contents + +4.1 `fmt': Reformat paragraph text +================================== + +`fmt' fills and joins lines to produce output lines of (at most) a +given number of characters (75 by default). Synopsis: + + fmt [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + `fmt' reads from the specified FILE arguments (or standard input if +none are given), and writes to standard output. + + By default, blank lines, spaces between words, and indentation are +preserved in the output; successive input lines with different +indentation are not joined; tabs are expanded on input and introduced on +output. + + `fmt' prefers breaking lines at the end of a sentence, and tries to +avoid line breaks after the first word of a sentence or before the last +word of a sentence. A "sentence break" is defined as either the end of +a paragraph or a word ending in any of `.?!', followed by two spaces or +end of line, ignoring any intervening parentheses or quotes. Like TeX, +`fmt' reads entire "paragraphs" before choosing line breaks; the +algorithm is a variant of that given by Donald E. Knuth and Michael F. +Plass in "Breaking Paragraphs Into Lines", `Software--Practice & +Experience' 11, 11 (November 1981), 1119-1184. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-c' +`--crown-margin' + "Crown margin" mode: preserve the indentation of the first two + lines within a paragraph, and align the left margin of each + subsequent line with that of the second line. + +`-t' +`--tagged-paragraph' + "Tagged paragraph" mode: like crown margin mode, except that if + indentation of the first line of a paragraph is the same as the + indentation of the second, the first line is treated as a one-line + paragraph. + +`-s' +`--split-only' + Split lines only. Do not join short lines to form longer ones. + This prevents sample lines of code, and other such "formatted" + text from being unduly combined. + +`-u' +`--uniform-spacing' + Uniform spacing. Reduce spacing between words to one space, and + spacing between sentences to two spaces. + +`-WIDTH' +`-w WIDTH' +`--width=WIDTH' + Fill output lines up to WIDTH characters (default 75). `fmt' + initially tries to make lines about 7% shorter than this, to give + it room to balance line lengths. + +`-p PREFIX' +`--prefix=PREFIX' + Only lines beginning with PREFIX (possibly preceded by whitespace) + are subject to formatting. The prefix and any preceding + whitespace are stripped for the formatting and then re-attached to + each formatted output line. One use is to format certain kinds of + program comments, while leaving the code unchanged. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: pr invocation, Next: fold invocation, Prev: fmt invocation, Up: Formatting file contents + +4.2 `pr': Paginate or columnate files for printing +================================================== + +`pr' writes each FILE (`-' means standard input), or standard input if +none are given, to standard output, paginating and optionally +outputting in multicolumn format; optionally merges all FILEs, printing +all in parallel, one per column. Synopsis: + + pr [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + By default, a 5-line header is printed at each page: two blank lines; +a line with the date, the file name, and the page count; and two more +blank lines. A footer of five blank lines is also printed. With the +`-F' option, a 3-line header is printed: the leading two blank lines are +omitted; no footer is used. The default PAGE_LENGTH in both cases is 66 +lines. The default number of text lines changes from 56 (without `-F') +to 63 (with `-F'). The text line of the header takes the form `DATE +STRING PAGE', with spaces inserted around STRING so that the line takes +up the full PAGE_WIDTH. Here, DATE is the date (see the `-D' or +`--date-format' option for details), STRING is the centered header +string, and PAGE identifies the page number. The `LC_MESSAGES' locale +category affects the spelling of PAGE; in the default C locale, it is +`Page NUMBER' where NUMBER is the decimal page number. + + Form feeds in the input cause page breaks in the output. Multiple +form feeds produce empty pages. + + Columns are of equal width, separated by an optional string (default +is `space'). For multicolumn output, lines will always be truncated to +PAGE_WIDTH (default 72), unless you use the `-J' option. For single +column output no line truncation occurs by default. Use `-W' option to +truncate lines in that case. + + The following changes were made in version 1.22i and apply to later +versions of `pr': - Brian + * Some small LETTER OPTIONS (`-s', `-w') have been redefined for + better POSIX compliance. The output of some further cases has + been adapted to other Unix systems. These changes are not + compatible with earlier versions of the program. + + * Some NEW CAPITAL LETTER options (`-J', `-S', `-W') have been + introduced to turn off unexpected interferences of small letter + options. The `-N' option and the second argument LAST_PAGE of + `+FIRST_PAGE' offer more flexibility. The detailed handling of + form feeds set in the input files requires the `-T' option. + + * Capital letter options override small letter ones. + + * Some of the option-arguments (compare `-s', `-e', `-i', `-n') + cannot be specified as separate arguments from the preceding + option letter (already stated in the POSIX specification). + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`+FIRST_PAGE[:LAST_PAGE]' +`--pages=FIRST_PAGE[:LAST_PAGE]' + Begin printing with page FIRST_PAGE and stop with LAST_PAGE. + Missing `:LAST_PAGE' implies end of file. While estimating the + number of skipped pages each form feed in the input file results + in a new page. Page counting with and without `+FIRST_PAGE' is + identical. By default, counting starts with the first page of + input file (not first page printed). Line numbering may be + altered by `-N' option. + +`-COLUMN' +`--columns=COLUMN' + With each single FILE, produce COLUMN columns of output (default + is 1) and print columns down, unless `-a' is used. The column + width is automatically decreased as COLUMN increases; unless you + use the `-W/-w' option to increase PAGE_WIDTH as well. This + option might well cause some lines to be truncated. The number of + lines in the columns on each page are balanced. The options `-e' + and `-i' are on for multiple text-column output. Together with + `-J' option column alignment and line truncation is turned off. + Lines of full length are joined in a free field format and `-S' + option may set field separators. `-COLUMN' may not be used with + `-m' option. + +`-a' +`--across' + With each single FILE, print columns across rather than down. The + `-COLUMN' option must be given with COLUMN greater than one. If a + line is too long to fit in a column, it is truncated. + +`-c' +`--show-control-chars' + Print control characters using hat notation (e.g., `^G'); print + other nonprinting characters in octal backslash notation. By + default, nonprinting characters are not changed. + +`-d' +`--double-space' + Double space the output. + +`-D FORMAT' +`--date-format=FORMAT' + Format header dates using FORMAT, using the same conventions as + for the the command `date +FORMAT'; *Note date invocation::. + Except for directives, which start with `%', characters in FORMAT + are printed unchanged. You can use this option to specify an + arbitrary string in place of the header date, e.g., + `--date-format="Monday morning"'. + + Normally the date format defaults to `%Y-%m-%d %H:%M' (for + example, `2001-12-04 23:59'); but if the `POSIXLY_CORRECT' + environment variable is set and the `LC_TIME' locale category + specifies the POSIX locale, the default is `%b %e %H:%M %Y' (for + example, `Dec 4 23:59 2001'. + + Time stamps are listed according to the time zone rules specified + by the `TZ' environment variable, or by the system default rules if + `TZ' is not set. *Note Specifying the Time Zone with `TZ': + (libc)TZ Variable. + +`-e[IN-TABCHAR[IN-TABWIDTH]]' +`--expand-tabs[=IN-TABCHAR[IN-TABWIDTH]]' + Expand TABs to spaces on input. Optional argument IN-TABCHAR is + the input tab character (default is the TAB character). Second + optional argument IN-TABWIDTH is the input tab character's width + (default is 8). + +`-f' +`-F' +`--form-feed' + Use a form feed instead of newlines to separate output pages. The + default page length of 66 lines is not altered. But the number of + lines of text per page changes from default 56 to 63 lines. + +`-h HEADER' +`--header=HEADER' + Replace the file name in the header with the centered string + HEADER. When using the shell, HEADER should be quoted and should + be separated from `-h' by a space. + +`-i[OUT-TABCHAR[OUT-TABWIDTH]]' +`--output-tabs[=OUT-TABCHAR[OUT-TABWIDTH]]' + Replace spaces with TABs on output. Optional argument OUT-TABCHAR + is the output tab character (default is the TAB character). + Second optional argument OUT-TABWIDTH is the output tab + character's width (default is 8). + +`-J' +`--join-lines' + Merge lines of full length. Used together with the column options + `-COLUMN', `-a -COLUMN' or `-m'. Turns off `-W/-w' line + truncation; no column alignment used; may be used with + `--sep-string[=STRING]'. `-J' has been introduced (together with + `-W' and `--sep-string') to disentangle the old (POSIX-compliant) + options `-w' and `-s' along with the three column options. + +`-l PAGE_LENGTH' +`--length=PAGE_LENGTH' + Set the page length to PAGE_LENGTH (default 66) lines, including + the lines of the header [and the footer]. If PAGE_LENGTH is less + than or equal to 10 (or <= 3 with `-F'), the header and footer are + omitted, and all form feeds set in input files are eliminated, as + if the `-T' option had been given. + +`-m' +`--merge' + Merge and print all FILEs in parallel, one in each column. If a + line is too long to fit in a column, it is truncated, unless the + `-J' option is used. `--sep-string[=STRING]' may be used. Empty + pages in some FILEs (form feeds set) produce empty columns, still + marked by STRING. The result is a continuous line numbering and + column marking throughout the whole merged file. Completely empty + merged pages show no separators or line numbers. The default + header becomes `DATE PAGE' with spaces inserted in the middle; this + may be used with the `-h' or `--header' option to fill up the + middle blank part. + +`-n[NUMBER-SEPARATOR[DIGITS]]' +`--number-lines[=NUMBER-SEPARATOR[DIGITS]]' + Provide DIGITS digit line numbering (default for DIGITS is 5). + With multicolumn output the number occupies the first DIGITS + column positions of each text column or only each line of `-m' + output. With single column output the number precedes each line + just as `-m' does. Default counting of the line numbers starts + with the first line of the input file (not the first line printed, + compare the `--page' option and `-N' option). Optional argument + NUMBER-SEPARATOR is the character appended to the line number to + separate it from the text followed. The default separator is the + TAB character. In a strict sense a TAB is always printed with + single column output only. The TAB-width varies with the + TAB-position, e.g., with the left MARGIN specified by `-o' option. + With multicolumn output priority is given to `equal width of + output columns' (a POSIX specification). The TAB-width is fixed + to the value of the first column and does not change with + different values of left MARGIN. That means a fixed number of + spaces is always printed in the place of the NUMBER-SEPARATOR TAB. + The tabification depends upon the output position. + +`-N LINE_NUMBER' +`--first-line-number=LINE_NUMBER' + Start line counting with the number LINE_NUMBER at first line of + first page printed (in most cases not the first line of the input + file). + +`-o MARGIN' +`--indent=MARGIN' + Indent each line with a margin MARGIN spaces wide (default is + zero). The total page width is the size of the margin plus the + PAGE_WIDTH set with the `-W/-w' option. A limited overflow may + occur with numbered single column output (compare `-n' option). + +`-r' +`--no-file-warnings' + Do not print a warning message when an argument FILE cannot be + opened. (The exit status will still be nonzero, however.) + +`-s[CHAR]' +`--separator[=CHAR]' + Separate columns by a single character CHAR. The default for CHAR + is the TAB character without `-w' and `no character' with `-w'. + Without `-s' the default separator `space' is set. `-s[char]' + turns off line truncation of all three column options + (`-COLUMN'|`-a -COLUMN'|`-m') unless `-w' is set. This is a + POSIX-compliant formulation. + +`-S STRING' +`--sep-string[=STRING]' + Use STRING to separate output columns. The `-S' option doesn't + affect the `-W/-w' option, unlike the `-s' option which does. It + does not affect line truncation or column alignment. Without + `-S', and with `-J', `pr' uses the default output separator, TAB. + Without `-S' or `-J', `pr' uses a `space' (same as `-S" "'). With + `-SSTRING', STRING must be nonempty; `--sep-string' with no STRING + is equivalent to `--sep-string=""'. + + On older systems, `pr' instead supports an obsolete option + `-S[STRING]', where STRING is optional. POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note + Standards conformance::) does not allow this older usage. To + specify an empty STRING portably, use `--sep-string'. + +`-t' +`--omit-header' + Do not print the usual header [and footer] on each page, and do + not fill out the bottom of pages (with blank lines or a form + feed). No page structure is produced, but form feeds set in the + input files are retained. The predefined pagination is not + changed. `-t' or `-T' may be useful together with other options; + e.g.: `-t -e4', expand TAB characters in the input file to 4 + spaces but don't make any other changes. Use of `-t' overrides + `-h'. + +`-T' +`--omit-pagination' + Do not print header [and footer]. In addition eliminate all form + feeds set in the input files. + +`-v' +`--show-nonprinting' + Print nonprinting characters in octal backslash notation. + +`-w PAGE_WIDTH' +`--width=PAGE_WIDTH' + Set page width to PAGE_WIDTH characters for multiple text-column + output only (default for PAGE_WIDTH is 72). `-s[CHAR]' turns off + the default page width and any line truncation and column + alignment. Lines of full length are merged, regardless of the + column options set. No PAGE_WIDTH setting is possible with single + column output. A POSIX-compliant formulation. + +`-W PAGE_WIDTH' +`--page_width=PAGE_WIDTH' + Set the page width to PAGE_WIDTH characters. That's valid with and + without a column option. Text lines are truncated, unless `-J' is + used. Together with one of the three column options (`-COLUMN', + `-a -COLUMN' or `-m') column alignment is always used. The + separator options `-S' or `-s' don't affect the `-W' option. + Default is 72 characters. Without `-W PAGE_WIDTH' and without any + of the column options NO line truncation is used (defined to keep + downward compatibility and to meet most frequent tasks). That's + equivalent to `-W 72 -J'. The header line is never truncated. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: fold invocation, Prev: pr invocation, Up: Formatting file contents + +4.3 `fold': Wrap input lines to fit in specified width +====================================================== + +`fold' writes each FILE (`-' means standard input), or standard input +if none are given, to standard output, breaking long lines. Synopsis: + + fold [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + By default, `fold' breaks lines wider than 80 columns. The output +is split into as many lines as necessary. + + `fold' counts screen columns by default; thus, a tab may count more +than one column, backspace decreases the column count, and carriage +return sets the column to zero. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-b' +`--bytes' + Count bytes rather than columns, so that tabs, backspaces, and + carriage returns are each counted as taking up one column, just + like other characters. + +`-s' +`--spaces' + Break at word boundaries: the line is broken after the last blank + before the maximum line length. If the line contains no such + blanks, the line is broken at the maximum line length as usual. + +`-w WIDTH' +`--width=WIDTH' + Use a maximum line length of WIDTH columns instead of 80. + + On older systems, `fold' supports an obsolete option `-WIDTH'. + POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) does not allow + this; use `-w WIDTH' instead. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Output of parts of files, Next: Summarizing files, Prev: Formatting file contents, Up: Top + +5 Output of parts of files +************************** + +These commands output pieces of the input. + +* Menu: + +* head invocation:: Output the first part of files. +* tail invocation:: Output the last part of files. +* split invocation:: Split a file into fixed-size pieces. +* csplit invocation:: Split a file into context-determined pieces. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: head invocation, Next: tail invocation, Up: Output of parts of files + +5.1 `head': Output the first part of files +========================================== + +`head' prints the first part (10 lines by default) of each FILE; it +reads from standard input if no files are given or when given a FILE of +`-'. Synopsis: + + head [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + If more than one FILE is specified, `head' prints a one-line header +consisting of: + + ==> FILE NAME <== + +before the output for each FILE. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-c N' +`--bytes=N' + Print the first N bytes, instead of initial lines. Appending `b' + multiplies N by 512, `k' by 1024, and `m' by 1048576. However, if + N starts with a `-', print all but the last N bytes of each file. + +`-n N' +`--lines=N' + Output the first N lines. However, if N starts with a `-', print + all but the last N lines of each file. + +`-q' +`--quiet' +`--silent' + Never print file name headers. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Always print file name headers. + + + On older systems, `head' supports an obsolete option +`-COUNTOPTIONS', which is recognized only if it is specified first. +COUNT is a decimal number optionally followed by a size letter (`b', +`k', `m') as in `-c', or `l' to mean count by lines, or other option +letters (`cqv'). POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) +does not allow this; use `-c COUNT' or `-n COUNT' instead. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: tail invocation, Next: split invocation, Prev: head invocation, Up: Output of parts of files + +5.2 `tail': Output the last part of files +========================================= + +`tail' prints the last part (10 lines by default) of each FILE; it +reads from standard input if no files are given or when given a FILE of +`-'. Synopsis: + + tail [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + If more than one FILE is specified, `tail' prints a one-line header +consisting of: + + ==> FILE NAME <== + +before the output for each FILE. + + GNU `tail' can output any amount of data (some other versions of +`tail' cannot). It also has no `-r' option (print in reverse), since +reversing a file is really a different job from printing the end of a +file; BSD `tail' (which is the one with `-r') can only reverse files +that are at most as large as its buffer, which is typically 32 KiB. A +more reliable and versatile way to reverse files is the GNU `tac' +command. + + If any option-argument is a number N starting with a `+', `tail' +begins printing with the Nth item from the start of each file, instead +of from the end. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-c BYTES' +`--bytes=BYTES' + Output the last BYTES bytes, instead of final lines. Appending + `b' multiplies BYTES by 512, `k' by 1024, and `m' by 1048576. + +`-f' +`--follow[=HOW]' + Loop forever trying to read more characters at the end of the file, + presumably because the file is growing. This option is ignored if + no FILE operand is specified and standard input is a pipe. If + more than one file is given, `tail' prints a header whenever it + gets output from a different file, to indicate which file that + output is from. + + There are two ways to specify how you'd like to track files with + this option, but that difference is noticeable only when a + followed file is removed or renamed. If you'd like to continue to + track the end of a growing file even after it has been unlinked, + use `--follow=descriptor'. This is the default behavior, but it + is not useful if you're tracking a log file that may be rotated + (removed or renamed, then reopened). In that case, use + `--follow=name' to track the named file by reopening it + periodically to see if it has been removed and recreated by some + other program. + + No matter which method you use, if the tracked file is determined + to have shrunk, `tail' prints a message saying the file has been + truncated and resumes tracking the end of the file from the + newly-determined endpoint. + + When a file is removed, `tail''s behavior depends on whether it is + following the name or the descriptor. When following by name, + tail can detect that a file has been removed and gives a message + to that effect, and if `--retry' has been specified it will + continue checking periodically to see if the file reappears. When + following a descriptor, tail does not detect that the file has + been unlinked or renamed and issues no message; even though the + file may no longer be accessible via its original name, it may + still be growing. + + The option values `descriptor' and `name' may be specified only + with the long form of the option, not with `-f'. + +`-F' + This option is the same as `--follow=name --retry'. That is, tail + will attempt to reopen a file when it is removed. Should this + fail, tail will keep trying until it becomes accessible again. + +`--retry' + This option is meaningful only when following by name. Without + this option, when tail encounters a file that doesn't exist or is + otherwise inaccessible, it reports that fact and never checks it + again. + +`--sleep-interval=NUMBER' + Change the number of seconds to wait between iterations (the + default is 1.0). During one iteration, every specified file is + checked to see if it has changed size. Historical implementations + of `tail' have required that NUMBER be an integer. However, GNU + `tail' accepts an arbitrary floating point number (using a period + before any fractional digits). + +`--pid=PID' + When following by name or by descriptor, you may specify the + process ID, PID, of the sole writer of all FILE arguments. Then, + shortly after that process terminates, tail will also terminate. + This will work properly only if the writer and the tailing process + are running on the same machine. For example, to save the output + of a build in a file and to watch the file grow, if you invoke + `make' and `tail' like this then the tail process will stop when + your build completes. Without this option, you would have had to + kill the `tail -f' process yourself. + + $ make >& makerr & tail --pid=$! -f makerr + + If you specify a PID that is not in use or that does not correspond + to the process that is writing to the tailed files, then `tail' + may terminate long before any FILEs stop growing or it may not + terminate until long after the real writer has terminated. Note + that `--pid' cannot be supported on some systems; `tail' will + print a warning if this is the case. + +`--max-unchanged-stats=N' + When tailing a file by name, if there have been N (default + n=5) consecutive iterations for which the file has not changed, + then `open'/`fstat' the file to determine if that file name is + still associated with the same device/inode-number pair as before. + When following a log file that is rotated, this is approximately + the number of seconds between when tail prints the last + pre-rotation lines and when it prints the lines that have + accumulated in the new log file. This option is meaningful only + when following by name. + +`-n N' +`--lines=N' + Output the last N lines. + +`-q' +`--quiet' +`--silent' + Never print file name headers. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Always print file name headers. + + + On older systems, `tail' supports an obsolete option +`-COUNT[bcl][f]', which is recognized only if it is specified first. +COUNT is an optional decimal number optionally followed by a size +letter (`b', `c', `l') to mean count by 512-byte blocks, bytes, or +lines, optionally followed by `f' which has the same meaning as `-f'. +Also, the leading `-' can be replaced by `+' with the same meaning as +in counts. POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) does not +allow most of these obsolete usages; use `-c COUNT[b]', `-n COUNT', +and/or `-f' instead. + + On older systems, obsolete usage overrides normal usage, so portable +shell scripts should avoid commands that can be interpreted either way. +For example, use `tail -- - file' rather than `tail - file', and use +`tail -c4' rather than `tail -c 4'. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: split invocation, Next: csplit invocation, Prev: tail invocation, Up: Output of parts of files + +5.3 `split': Split a file into fixed-size pieces +================================================ + +`split' creates output files containing consecutive sections of INPUT +(standard input if none is given or INPUT is `-'). Synopsis: + + split [OPTION] [INPUT [PREFIX]] + + By default, `split' puts 1000 lines of INPUT (or whatever is left +over for the last section), into each output file. + + The output files' names consist of PREFIX (`x' by default) followed +by a group of characters (`aa', `ab', ... by default), such that +concatenating the output files in traditional sorted order by file name +produces the original input file. If the output file names are +exhausted, `split' reports an error without deleting the output files +that it did create. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-a LENGTH' +`--suffix-length=LENGTH' + Use suffixes of length LENGTH. The default LENGTH is 2. + +`-l LINES' +`--lines=LINES' + Put LINES lines of INPUT into each output file. + + On older systems, `split' supports an obsolete option `-LINES'. + POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) does not allow + this; use `-l LINES' instead. + +`-b BYTES' +`--bytes=BYTES' + Put the first BYTES bytes of INPUT into each output file. + Appending `b' multiplies BYTES by 512, `k' by 1024, and `m' by + 1048576. + +`-C BYTES' +`--line-bytes=BYTES' + Put into each output file as many complete lines of INPUT as + possible without exceeding BYTES bytes. For lines longer than + BYTES bytes, put BYTES bytes into each output file until less than + BYTES bytes of the line are left, then continue normally. BYTES + has the same format as for the `--bytes' option. + +`-d' +`--numeric-suffixes' + Use digits in suffixes rather than lower-case letters. + +`--verbose' + Write a diagnostic to standard error just before each output file + is opened. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: csplit invocation, Prev: split invocation, Up: Output of parts of files + +5.4 `csplit': Split a file into context-determined pieces +========================================================= + +`csplit' creates zero or more output files containing sections of INPUT +(standard input if INPUT is `-'). Synopsis: + + csplit [OPTION]... INPUT PATTERN... + + The contents of the output files are determined by the PATTERN +arguments, as detailed below. An error occurs if a PATTERN argument +refers to a nonexistent line of the input file (e.g., if no remaining +line matches a given regular expression). After every PATTERN has been +matched, any remaining input is copied into one last output file. + + By default, `csplit' prints the number of bytes written to each +output file after it has been created. + + The types of pattern arguments are: + +`N' + Create an output file containing the input up to but not including + line N (a positive integer). If followed by a repeat count, also + create an output file containing the next N lines of the input + file once for each repeat. + +`/REGEXP/[OFFSET]' + Create an output file containing the current line up to (but not + including) the next line of the input file that contains a match + for REGEXP. The optional OFFSET is an integer. If it is given, + the input up to (but not including) the matching line plus or + minus OFFSET is put into the output file, and the line after that + begins the next section of input. + +`%REGEXP%[OFFSET]' + Like the previous type, except that it does not create an output + file, so that section of the input file is effectively ignored. + +`{REPEAT-COUNT}' + Repeat the previous pattern REPEAT-COUNT additional times. The + REPEAT-COUNT can either be a positive integer or an asterisk, + meaning repeat as many times as necessary until the input is + exhausted. + + + The output files' names consist of a prefix (`xx' by default) +followed by a suffix. By default, the suffix is an ascending sequence +of two-digit decimal numbers from `00' to `99'. In any case, +concatenating the output files in sorted order by file name produces the +original input file. + + By default, if `csplit' encounters an error or receives a hangup, +interrupt, quit, or terminate signal, it removes any output files that +it has created so far before it exits. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-f PREFIX' +`--prefix=PREFIX' + Use PREFIX as the output file name prefix. + +`-b SUFFIX' +`--suffix=SUFFIX' + Use SUFFIX as the output file name suffix. When this option is + specified, the suffix string must include exactly one + `printf(3)'-style conversion specification, possibly including + format specification flags, a field width, a precision + specifications, or all of these kinds of modifiers. The format + letter must convert a binary integer argument to readable form; + thus, only `d', `i', `u', `o', `x', and `X' conversions are + allowed. The entire SUFFIX is given (with the current output file + number) to `sprintf(3)' to form the file name suffixes for each of + the individual output files in turn. If this option is used, the + `--digits' option is ignored. + +`-n DIGITS' +`--digits=DIGITS' + Use output file names containing numbers that are DIGITS digits + long instead of the default 2. + +`-k' +`--keep-files' + Do not remove output files when errors are encountered. + +`-z' +`--elide-empty-files' + Suppress the generation of zero-length output files. (In cases + where the section delimiters of the input file are supposed to + mark the first lines of each of the sections, the first output + file will generally be a zero-length file unless you use this + option.) The output file sequence numbers always run + consecutively starting from 0, even when this option is specified. + +`-s' +`-q' +`--silent' +`--quiet' + Do not print counts of output file sizes. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Summarizing files, Next: Operating on sorted files, Prev: Output of parts of files, Up: Top + +6 Summarizing files +******************* + +These commands generate just a few numbers representing entire contents +of files. + +* Menu: + +* wc invocation:: Print newline, word, and byte counts. +* sum invocation:: Print checksum and block counts. +* cksum invocation:: Print CRC checksum and byte counts. +* md5sum invocation:: Print or check message-digests. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: wc invocation, Next: sum invocation, Up: Summarizing files + +6.1 `wc': Print newline, word, and byte counts +============================================== + +`wc' counts the number of bytes, characters, whitespace-separated +words, and newlines in each given FILE, or standard input if none are +given or for a FILE of `-'. Synopsis: + + wc [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + `wc' prints one line of counts for each file, and if the file was +given as an argument, it prints the file name following the counts. If +more than one FILE is given, `wc' prints a final line containing the +cumulative counts, with the file name `total'. The counts are printed +in this order: newlines, words, characters, bytes. Each count is +printed right-justified in a field with at least one space between +fields so that the numbers and file names normally line up nicely in +columns. The width of the count fields varies depending on the inputs, +so you should not depend on a particular field width. However, as a +GNU extension, if only one count is printed, it is guaranteed to be +printed without leading spaces. + + By default, `wc' prints three counts: the newline, words, and byte +counts. Options can specify that only certain counts be printed. +Options do not undo others previously given, so + + wc --bytes --words + +prints both the byte counts and the word counts. + + With the `--max-line-length' option, `wc' prints the length of the +longest line per file, and if there is more than one file it prints the +maximum (not the sum) of those lengths. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-c' +`--bytes' + Print only the byte counts. + +`-m' +`--chars' + Print only the character counts. + +`-w' +`--words' + Print only the word counts. + +`-l' +`--lines' + Print only the newline counts. + +`-L' +`--max-line-length' + Print only the maximum line lengths. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: sum invocation, Next: cksum invocation, Prev: wc invocation, Up: Summarizing files + +6.2 `sum': Print checksum and block counts +========================================== + +`sum' computes a 16-bit checksum for each given FILE, or standard input +if none are given or for a FILE of `-'. Synopsis: + + sum [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + `sum' prints the checksum for each FILE followed by the number of +blocks in the file (rounded up). If more than one FILE is given, file +names are also printed (by default). (With the `--sysv' option, +corresponding file names are printed when there is at least one file +argument.) + + By default, GNU `sum' computes checksums using an algorithm +compatible with BSD `sum' and prints file sizes in units of 1024-byte +blocks. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-r' + Use the default (BSD compatible) algorithm. This option is + included for compatibility with the System V `sum'. Unless `-s' + was also given, it has no effect. + +`-s' +`--sysv' + Compute checksums using an algorithm compatible with System V + `sum''s default, and print file sizes in units of 512-byte blocks. + + + `sum' is provided for compatibility; the `cksum' program (see next +section) is preferable in new applications. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: cksum invocation, Next: md5sum invocation, Prev: sum invocation, Up: Summarizing files + +6.3 `cksum': Print CRC checksum and byte counts +=============================================== + +`cksum' computes a cyclic redundancy check (CRC) checksum for each +given FILE, or standard input if none are given or for a FILE of `-'. +Synopsis: + + cksum [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + `cksum' prints the CRC checksum for each file along with the number +of bytes in the file, and the file name unless no arguments were given. + + `cksum' is typically used to ensure that files transferred by +unreliable means (e.g., netnews) have not been corrupted, by comparing +the `cksum' output for the received files with the `cksum' output for +the original files (typically given in the distribution). + + The CRC algorithm is specified by the POSIX standard. It is not +compatible with the BSD or System V `sum' algorithms (see the previous +section); it is more robust. + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: md5sum invocation, Prev: cksum invocation, Up: Summarizing files + +6.4 `md5sum': Print or check message-digests +============================================ + +`md5sum' computes a 128-bit checksum (or "fingerprint" or +"message-digest") for each specified FILE. If a FILE is specified as +`-' or if no files are given `md5sum' computes the checksum for the +standard input. `md5sum' can also determine whether a file and +checksum are consistent. Synopses: + + md5sum [OPTION]... [FILE]... + md5sum [OPTION]... --check [FILE] + + For each FILE, `md5sum' outputs the MD5 checksum, a flag indicating +a binary or text input file, and the file name. If FILE is omitted or +specified as `-', standard input is read. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-b' +`--binary' + Treat all input files as binary. This option has no effect on Unix + systems, since they don't distinguish between binary and text + files. This option is useful on systems that have different + internal and external character representations. On MS-DOS and + MS-Windows, this is the default. + +`-c' +`--check' + Read file names and checksum information from the single FILE (or + from stdin if no FILE was specified) and report whether each named + file and the corresponding checksum data are consistent. The + input to this mode of `md5sum' is usually the output of a prior, + checksum-generating run of `md5sum'. Each valid line of input + consists of an MD5 checksum, a binary/text flag, and then a file + name. Binary files are marked with `*', text with ` '. For each + such line, `md5sum' reads the named file and computes its MD5 + checksum. Then, if the computed message digest does not match the + one on the line with the file name, the file is noted as having + failed the test. Otherwise, the file passes the test. By + default, for each valid line, one line is written to standard + output indicating whether the named file passed the test. After + all checks have been performed, if there were any failures, a + warning is issued to standard error. Use the `--status' option to + inhibit that output. If any listed file cannot be opened or read, + if any valid line has an MD5 checksum inconsistent with the + associated file, or if no valid line is found, `md5sum' exits with + nonzero status. Otherwise, it exits successfully. + +`--status' + This option is useful only when verifying checksums. When + verifying checksums, don't generate the default one-line-per-file + diagnostic and don't output the warning summarizing any failures. + Failures to open or read a file still evoke individual diagnostics + to standard error. If all listed files are readable and are + consistent with the associated MD5 checksums, exit successfully. + Otherwise exit with a status code indicating there was a failure. + +`-t' +`--text' + Treat all input files as text files. This is the reverse of + `--binary'. + +`-w' +`--warn' + When verifying checksums, warn about improperly formatted MD5 + checksum lines. This option is useful only if all but a few lines + in the checked input are valid. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Operating on sorted files, Next: Operating on fields within a line, Prev: Summarizing files, Up: Top + +7 Operating on sorted files +*************************** + +These commands work with (or produce) sorted files. + +* Menu: + +* sort invocation:: Sort text files. +* uniq invocation:: Uniquify files. +* comm invocation:: Compare two sorted files line by line. +* ptx invocation:: Produce a permuted index of file contents. +* tsort invocation:: Topological sort. +* tsort background:: Where tsort came from. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: sort invocation, Next: uniq invocation, Up: Operating on sorted files + +7.1 `sort': Sort text files +=========================== + +`sort' sorts, merges, or compares all the lines from the given files, +or standard input if none are given or for a FILE of `-'. By default, +`sort' writes the results to standard output. Synopsis: + + sort [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + `sort' has three modes of operation: sort (the default), merge, and +check for sortedness. The following options change the operation mode: + +`-c' +`--check' + Check whether the given files are already sorted: if they are not + all sorted, print an error message and exit with a status of 1. + Otherwise, exit successfully. + +`-m' +`--merge' + Merge the given files by sorting them as a group. Each input file + must always be individually sorted. It always works to sort + instead of merge; merging is provided because it is faster, in the + case where it works. + + + A pair of lines is compared as follows: `sort' compares each pair of +fields, in the order specified on the command line, according to the +associated ordering options, until a difference is found or no fields +are left. If no key fields are specified, `sort' uses a default key of +the entire line. Finally, as a last resort when all keys compare +equal, `sort' compares entire lines as if no ordering options other +than `--reverse' (`-r') were specified. The `--stable' (`-s') option +disables this "last-resort comparison" so that lines in which all +fields compare equal are left in their original relative order. The +`--unique' (`-u') option also disables the last-resort comparison. + + Unless otherwise specified, all comparisons use the character +collating sequence specified by the `LC_COLLATE' locale.(1) + + GNU `sort' (as specified for all GNU utilities) has no limit on +input line length or restrictions on bytes allowed within lines. In +addition, if the final byte of an input file is not a newline, GNU +`sort' silently supplies one. A line's trailing newline is not part of +the line for comparison purposes. + + Exit status: + + 0 if no error occurred + 1 if invoked with `-c' and the input is not properly sorted + 2 if an error occurred + + If the environment variable `TMPDIR' is set, `sort' uses its value +as the directory for temporary files instead of `/tmp'. The +`--temporary-directory' (`-T') option in turn overrides the environment +variable. + + The following options affect the ordering of output lines. They may +be specified globally or as part of a specific key field. If no key +fields are specified, global options apply to comparison of entire +lines; otherwise the global options are inherited by key fields that do +not specify any special options of their own. In pre-POSIX versions of +`sort', global options affect only later key fields, so portable shell +scripts should specify global options first. + +`-b' +`--ignore-leading-blanks' + Ignore leading blanks when finding sort keys in each line. The + `LC_CTYPE' locale determines character types. + +`-d' +`--dictionary-order' + Sort in "phone directory" order: ignore all characters except + letters, digits and blanks when sorting. The `LC_CTYPE' locale + determines character types. + +`-f' +`--ignore-case' + Fold lowercase characters into the equivalent uppercase characters + when comparing so that, for example, `b' and `B' sort as equal. + The `LC_CTYPE' locale determines character types. + +`-g' +`--general-numeric-sort' + Sort numerically, using the standard C function `strtod' to convert + a prefix of each line to a double-precision floating point number. + This allows floating point numbers to be specified in scientific + notation, like `1.0e-34' and `10e100'. The `LC_NUMERIC' locale + determines the decimal-point character. Do not report overflow, + underflow, or conversion errors. Use the following collating + sequence: + + * Lines that do not start with numbers (all considered to be + equal). + + * NaNs ("Not a Number" values, in IEEE floating point + arithmetic) in a consistent but machine-dependent order. + + * Minus infinity. + + * Finite numbers in ascending numeric order (with -0 and +0 + equal). + + * Plus infinity. + + Use this option only if there is no alternative; it is much slower + than `--numeric-sort' (`-n') and it can lose information when + converting to floating point. + +`-i' +`--ignore-nonprinting' + Ignore nonprinting characters. The `LC_CTYPE' locale determines + character types. This option has no effect if the stronger + `--dictionary-order' (`-d') option is also given. + +`-M' +`--month-sort' + An initial string, consisting of any amount of blanks, followed by + a month name abbreviation, is folded to UPPER case and compared in + the order `JAN' < `FEB' < ... < `DEC'. Invalid names compare low + to valid names. The `LC_TIME' locale category determines the + month spellings. + +`-n' +`--numeric-sort' + Sort numerically: the number begins each line; specifically, it + consists of optional blanks, an optional `-' sign, and zero or more + digits possibly separated by thousands separators, optionally + followed by a decimal-point character and zero or more digits. A + string of no digits is interpreted as `0'. The `LC_NUMERIC' + locale specifies the decimal-point character and thousands + separator. + + Numeric sort uses what might be considered an unconventional + method to compare strings representing floating point numbers. + Rather than first converting each string to the C `double' type + and then comparing those values, `sort' aligns the decimal-point + characters in the two strings and compares the strings a character + at a time. One benefit of using this approach is its speed. In + practice this is much more efficient than performing the two + corresponding string-to-double (or even string-to-integer) + conversions and then comparing doubles. In addition, there is no + corresponding loss of precision. Converting each string to + `double' before comparison would limit precision to about 16 + digits on most systems. + + Neither a leading `+' nor exponential notation is recognized. To + compare such strings numerically, use the `--general-numeric-sort' + (`-g') option. + +`-r' +`--reverse' + Reverse the result of comparison, so that lines with greater key + values appear earlier in the output instead of later. + + + Other options are: + +`-k POS1[,POS2]' +`--key=POS1[,POS2]' + Specify a sort field that consists of the part of the line between + POS1 and POS2 (or the end of the line, if POS2 is omitted), + _inclusive_. Fields and character positions are numbered starting + with 1. So to sort on the second field, you'd use `--key=2,2' + (`-k 2,2'). See below for more examples. + +`-o OUTPUT-FILE' +`--output=OUTPUT-FILE' + Write output to OUTPUT-FILE instead of standard output. Normally, + `sort' reads all input before opening OUTPUT-FILE, so you can + safely sort a file in place by using commands like `sort -o F F' + and `cat F | sort -o F'. However, `sort' with `--merge' (`-m') + can open the output file before reading all input, so a command + like `cat F | sort -m -o F - G' is not safe as `sort' might start + writing `F' before `cat' is done reading it. + + On newer systems, `-o' cannot appear after an input file if + `POSIXLY_CORRECT' is set, e.g., `sort F -o F'. Portable scripts + should specify `-o OUTPUT-FILE' before any input files. + +`-s' +`--stable' + Make `sort' stable by disabling its last-resort comparison. This + option has no effect if no fields or global ordering options other + than `--reverse' (`-R') are specified. + +`-S SIZE' +`--buffer-size=SIZE' + Use a main-memory sort buffer of the given SIZE. By default, SIZE + is in units of 1024 bytes. Appending `%' causes SIZE to be + interpreted as a percentage of physical memory. Appending `K' + multiplies SIZE by 1024 (the default), `M' by 1,048,576, `G' by + 1,073,741,824, and so on for `T', `P', `E', `Z', and `Y'. + Appending `b' causes SIZE to be interpreted as a byte count, with + no multiplication. + + This option can improve the performance of `sort' by causing it to + start with a larger or smaller sort buffer than the default. + However, this option affects only the initial buffer size. The + buffer grows beyond SIZE if `sort' encounters input lines larger + than SIZE. + +`-t SEPARATOR' +`--field-separator=SEPARATOR' + Use character SEPARATOR as the field separator when finding the + sort keys in each line. By default, fields are separated by the + empty string between a non-blank character and a blank character. + That is, given the input line ` foo bar', `sort' breaks it into + fields ` foo' and ` bar'. The field separator is not considered + to be part of either the field preceding or the field following, + so with `sort -t " "' the same input line has three fields: an + empty field, `foo', and `bar'. However, fields that extend to the + end of the line, as `-k 2', or fields consisting of a range, as + `-k 2,3', retain the field separators present between the + endpoints of the range. + + To specify a zero byte (ASCII NUL (Null) character) as the field + separator, use the two-character string `\0', e.g., `sort -t '\0''. + +`-T TEMPDIR' +`--temporary-directory=TEMPDIR' + Use directory TEMPDIR to store temporary files, overriding the + `TMPDIR' environment variable. If this option is given more than + once, temporary files are stored in all the directories given. If + you have a large sort or merge that is I/O-bound, you can often + improve performance by using this option to specify directories on + different disks and controllers. + +`-u' +`--unique' + Normally, output only the first of a sequence of lines that compare + equal. For the `--check' (`-c') option, check that no pair of + consecutive lines compares equal. + + This option also disables the default last-resort comparison. + + The commands `sort -u' and `sort | uniq' are equivalent, but this + equivalence does not extend to arbitrary `sort' options. For + example, `sort -n -u' inspects only the value of the initial + numeric string when checking for uniqueness, whereas `sort -n | + uniq' inspects the entire line. *Note uniq invocation::. + +`-z' +`--zero-terminated' + Treat the input as a set of lines, each terminated by a zero byte + (ASCII NUL (Null) character) instead of an ASCII LF (Line Feed). + This option can be useful in conjunction with `perl -0' or `find + -print0' and `xargs -0' which do the same in order to reliably + handle arbitrary file names (even those containing blanks or other + special characters). + + + Historical (BSD and System V) implementations of `sort' have +differed in their interpretation of some options, particularly `-b', +`-f', and `-n'. GNU sort follows the POSIX behavior, which is usually +(but not always!) like the System V behavior. According to POSIX, `-n' +no longer implies `-b'. For consistency, `-M' has been changed in the +same way. This may affect the meaning of character positions in field +specifications in obscure cases. The only fix is to add an explicit +`-b'. + + A position in a sort field specified with the `-k' option has the +form `F.C', where F is the number of the field to use and C is the +number of the first character from the beginning of the field. In a +start position, an omitted `.C' stands for the field's first character. +In an end position, an omitted or zero `.C' stands for the field's +last character. If the start field falls after the end of the line or +after the end field, the field is empty. If the `-b' option was +specified, the `.C' part of a field specification is counted from the +first nonblank character of the field. + + A sort key position may also have any of the option letters `Mbdfinr' +appended to it, in which case the global ordering options are not used +for that particular field. The `-b' option may be independently +attached to either or both of the start and end positions of a field +specification, and if it is inherited from the global options it will +be attached to both. If input lines can contain leading or adjacent +blanks and `-t' is not used, then `-k' is typically combined with `-b', +`-g', `-M', or `-n'; otherwise the varying numbers of leading blanks in +fields can cause confusing results. + + Keys can span multiple fields. + + On older systems, `sort' supports an obsolete origin-zero syntax +`+POS1 [-POS2]' for specifying sort keys. POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note +Standards conformance::) does not allow this; use `-k' instead. + + Here are some examples to illustrate various combinations of options. + + * Sort in descending (reverse) numeric order. + + sort -n -r + + * Sort alphabetically, omitting the first and second fields and the + blanks at the start of the third field. This uses a single key + composed of the characters beginning at the start of the first + nonblank character in field three and extending to the end of each + line. + + sort -k 3b + + * Sort numerically on the second field and resolve ties by sorting + alphabetically on the third and fourth characters of field five. + Use `:' as the field delimiter. + + sort -t : -k 2,2n -k 5.3,5.4 + + Note that if you had written `-k 2n' instead of `-k 2,2n' `sort' + would have used all characters beginning in the second field and + extending to the end of the line as the primary _numeric_ key. + For the large majority of applications, treating keys spanning + more than one field as numeric will not do what you expect. + + Also note that the `n' modifier was applied to the field-end + specifier for the first key. It would have been equivalent to + specify `-k 2n,2' or `-k 2n,2n'. All modifiers except `b' apply + to the associated _field_, regardless of whether the modifier + character is attached to the field-start and/or the field-end part + of the key specifier. + + * Sort the password file on the fifth field and ignore any leading + blanks. Sort lines with equal values in field five on the numeric + user ID in field three. Fields are separated by `:'. + + sort -t : -k 5b,5 -k 3,3n /etc/passwd + sort -t : -n -k 5b,5 -k 3,3 /etc/passwd + sort -t : -b -k 5,5 -k 3,3n /etc/passwd + + These three commands have equivalent effect. The first specifies + that the first key's start position ignores leading blanks and the + second key is sorted numerically. The other two commands rely on + global options being inherited by sort keys that lack modifiers. + The inheritance works in this case because `-k 5b,5b' and `-k + 5b,5' are equivalent, as the location of a field-end lacking a `.C' + character position is not affected by whether initial blanks are + skipped. + + * Sort a set of log files, primarily by IPv4 address and secondarily + by time stamp. If two lines' primary and secondary keys are + identical, output the lines in the same order that they were + input. The log files contain lines that look like this: + + 4.150.156.3 - - [01/Apr/2004:06:31:51 +0000] message 1 + 211.24.3.231 - - [24/Apr/2004:20:17:39 +0000] message 2 + + Fields are separated by exactly one space. Sort IPv4 addresses + lexicographically, e.g., 212.61.52.2 sorts before 212.129.233.201 + because 61 is less than 129. + + sort -s -t ' ' -k 4.9n -k 4.5M -k 4.2n -k 4.14,4.21 file*.log | + sort -s -t '.' -k 1,1n -k 2,2n -k 3,3n -k 4,4n + + This example cannot be done with a single `sort' invocation, since + IPv4 address components are separated by `.' while dates come just + after a space. So it is broken down into two invocations of + `sort': the first sorts by time stamp and the second by IPv4 + address. The time stamp is sorted by year, then month, then day, + and finally by hour-minute-second field, using `-k' to isolate each + field. Except for hour-minute-second there's no need to specify + the end of each key field, since the `n' and `M' modifiers sort + based on leading prefixes that cannot cross field boundaries. The + IPv4 addresses are sorted lexicographically. The second sort uses + `-s' so that ties in the primary key are broken by the secondary + key; the first sort uses `-s' so that the combination of the two + sorts is stable. + + * Generate a tags file in case-insensitive sorted order. + + find src -type f -print0 | sort -z -f | xargs -0 etags --append + + The use of `-print0', `-z', and `-0' in this case means that file + names that contain blanks or other special characters are not + broken up by the sort operation. + + + ---------- Footnotes ---------- + + (1) If you use a non-POSIX locale (e.g., by setting `LC_ALL' to +`en_US'), then `sort' may produce output that is sorted differently +than you're accustomed to. In that case, set the `LC_ALL' environment +variable to `C'. Note that setting only `LC_COLLATE' has two problems. +First, it is ineffective if `LC_ALL' is also set. Second, it has +undefined behavior if `LC_CTYPE' (or `LANG', if `LC_CTYPE' is unset) is +set to an incompatible value. For example, you get undefined behavior +if `LC_CTYPE' is `ja_JP.PCK' but `LC_COLLATE' is `en_US.UTF-8'. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: uniq invocation, Next: comm invocation, Prev: sort invocation, Up: Operating on sorted files + +7.2 `uniq': Uniquify files +========================== + +`uniq' writes the unique lines in the given `input', or standard input +if nothing is given or for an INPUT name of `-'. Synopsis: + + uniq [OPTION]... [INPUT [OUTPUT]] + + By default, `uniq' prints its input lines, except that it discards +all but the first of adjacent repeated lines, so that no output lines +are repeated. Optionally, it can instead discard lines that are not +repeated, or all repeated lines. + + The input need not be sorted, but repeated input lines are detected +only if they are adjacent. If you want to discard non-adjacent +duplicate lines, perhaps you want to use `sort -u'. *Note sort +invocation::. + + Comparisons use the character collating sequence specified by the +`LC_COLLATE' locale category. + + If no OUTPUT file is specified, `uniq' writes to standard output. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-f N' +`--skip-fields=N' + Skip N fields on each line before checking for uniqueness. Use a + null string for comparison if a line has fewer than N fields. + Fields are sequences of non-space non-tab characters that are + separated from each other by at least one space or tab. + + On older systems, `uniq' supports an obsolete option `-N'. POSIX + 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) does not allow this; + use `-f N' instead. + +`-s N' +`--skip-chars=N' + Skip N characters before checking for uniqueness. Use a null + string for comparison if a line has fewer than N characters. If + you use both the field and character skipping options, fields are + skipped over first. + + On older systems, `uniq' supports an obsolete option `+N'. POSIX + 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) does not allow this; + use `-s N' instead. + +`-c' +`--count' + Print the number of times each line occurred along with the line. + +`-i' +`--ignore-case' + Ignore differences in case when comparing lines. + +`-d' +`--repeated' + Discard lines that are not repeated. When used by itself, this + option causes `uniq' to print the first copy of each repeated line, + and nothing else. + +`-D' +`--all-repeated[=DELIMIT-METHOD]' + Do not discard the second and subsequent repeated input lines, but + discard lines that are not repeated. This option is useful mainly + in conjunction with other options e.g., to ignore case or to + compare only selected fields. The optional DELIMIT-METHOD tells + how to delimit groups of repeated lines, and must be one of the + following: + + `none' + Do not delimit groups of repeated lines. This is equivalent + to `--all-repeated' (`-D'). + + `prepend' + Output a newline before each group of repeated lines. + + `separate' + Separate groups of repeated lines with a single newline. + This is the same as using `prepend', except that there is no + newline before the first group, and hence may be better + suited for output direct to users. + + Note that when groups are delimited and the input stream contains + two or more consecutive blank lines, then the output is ambiguous. + To avoid that, filter the input through `tr -s '\n'' to replace + each sequence of consecutive newlines with a single newline. + + This is a GNU extension. + +`-u' +`--unique' + Discard the first repeated line. When used by itself, this option + causes `uniq' to print unique lines, and nothing else. + +`-w N' +`--check-chars=N' + Compare at most N characters on each line (after skipping any + specified fields and characters). By default the entire rest of + the lines are compared. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: comm invocation, Next: ptx invocation, Prev: uniq invocation, Up: Operating on sorted files + +7.3 `comm': Compare two sorted files line by line +================================================= + +`comm' writes to standard output lines that are common, and lines that +are unique, to two input files; a file name of `-' means standard +input. Synopsis: + + comm [OPTION]... FILE1 FILE2 + + Before `comm' can be used, the input files must be sorted using the +collating sequence specified by the `LC_COLLATE' locale. If an input +file ends in a non-newline character, a newline is silently appended. +The `sort' command with no options always outputs a file that is +suitable input to `comm'. + + With no options, `comm' produces three-column output. Column one +contains lines unique to FILE1, column two contains lines unique to +FILE2, and column three contains lines common to both files. Columns +are separated by a single TAB character. + + The options `-1', `-2', and `-3' suppress printing of the +corresponding columns. Also see *Note Common options::. + + Unlike some other comparison utilities, `comm' has an exit status +that does not depend on the result of the comparison. Upon normal +completion `comm' produces an exit code of zero. If there is an error +it exits with nonzero status. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: tsort invocation, Next: tsort background, Prev: ptx invocation, Up: Operating on sorted files + +7.4 `tsort': Topological sort +============================= + +`tsort' performs a topological sort on the given FILE, or standard +input if no input file is given or for a FILE of `-'. For more details +and some history, see *Note tsort background::. Synopsis: + + tsort [OPTION] [FILE] + + `tsort' reads its input as pairs of strings, separated by blanks, +indicating a partial ordering. The output is a total ordering that +corresponds to the given partial ordering. + + For example + + tsort <<EOF + a b c + d + e f + b c d e + EOF + +will produce the output + + a + b + c + d + e + f + + Consider a more realistic example. You have a large set of +functions all in one file, and they may all be declared static except +one. Currently that one (say `main') is the first function defined in +the file, and the ones it calls directly follow it, followed by those +they call, etc. Let's say that you are determined to take advantage of +prototypes, so you have to choose between declaring all of those +functions (which means duplicating a lot of information from the +definitions) and rearranging the functions so that as many as possible +are defined before they are used. One way to automate the latter +process is to get a list for each function of the functions it calls +directly. Many programs can generate such lists. They describe a call +graph. Consider the following list, in which a given line indicates +that the function on the left calls the one on the right directly. + + main parse_options + main tail_file + main tail_forever + tail_file pretty_name + tail_file write_header + tail_file tail + tail_forever recheck + tail_forever pretty_name + tail_forever write_header + tail_forever dump_remainder + tail tail_lines + tail tail_bytes + tail_lines start_lines + tail_lines dump_remainder + tail_lines file_lines + tail_lines pipe_lines + tail_bytes xlseek + tail_bytes start_bytes + tail_bytes dump_remainder + tail_bytes pipe_bytes + file_lines dump_remainder + recheck pretty_name + + then you can use `tsort' to produce an ordering of those functions +that satisfies your requirement. + + example$ tsort call-graph | tac + dump_remainder + start_lines + file_lines + pipe_lines + xlseek + start_bytes + pipe_bytes + tail_lines + tail_bytes + pretty_name + write_header + tail + recheck + parse_options + tail_file + tail_forever + main + + `tsort' detects any cycles in the input and writes the first cycle +encountered to standard error. + + Note that for a given partial ordering, generally there is no unique +total ordering. In the context of the call graph above, the function +`parse_options' may be placed anywhere in the list as long as it +precedes `main'. + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: tsort background, Prev: tsort invocation, Up: Operating on sorted files + +7.5 `tsort': Background +======================= + +`tsort' exists because very early versions of the Unix linker processed +an archive file exactly once, and in order. As `ld' read each object +in the archive, it decided whether it was needed in the program based on +whether it defined any symbols which were undefined at that point in +the link. + + This meant that dependencies within the archive had to be handled +specially. For example, `scanf' probably calls `read'. That means +that in a single pass through an archive, it was important for `scanf.o' +to appear before read.o, because otherwise a program which calls +`scanf' but not `read' might end up with an unexpected unresolved +reference to `read'. + + The way to address this problem was to first generate a set of +dependencies of one object file on another. This was done by a shell +script called `lorder'. The GNU tools don't provide a version of +lorder, as far as I know, but you can still find it in BSD +distributions. + + Then you ran `tsort' over the `lorder' output, and you used the +resulting sort to define the order in which you added objects to the +archive. + + This whole procedure has been obsolete since about 1980, because +Unix archives now contain a symbol table (traditionally built by +`ranlib', now generally built by `ar' itself), and the Unix linker uses +the symbol table to effectively make multiple passes over an archive +file. + + Anyhow, that's where tsort came from. To solve an old problem with +the way the linker handled archive files, which has since been solved +in different ways. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: ptx invocation, Next: tsort invocation, Prev: comm invocation, Up: Operating on sorted files + +7.6 `ptx': Produce permuted indexes +=================================== + +`ptx' reads a text file and essentially produces a permuted index, with +each keyword in its context. The calling sketch is either one of: + + ptx [OPTION ...] [FILE ...] + ptx -G [OPTION ...] [INPUT [OUTPUT]] + + The `-G' (or its equivalent: `--traditional') option disables all +GNU extensions and reverts to traditional mode, thus introducing some +limitations and changing several of the program's default option values. +When `-G' is not specified, GNU extensions are always enabled. GNU +extensions to `ptx' are documented wherever appropriate in this +document. For the full list, see *Note Compatibility in ptx::. + + Individual options are explained in the following sections. + + When GNU extensions are enabled, there may be zero, one or several +FILEs after the options. If there is no FILE, the program reads the +standard input. If there is one or several FILEs, they give the name +of input files which are all read in turn, as if all the input files +were concatenated. However, there is a full contextual break between +each file and, when automatic referencing is requested, file names and +line numbers refer to individual text input files. In all cases, the +program outputs the permuted index to the standard output. + + When GNU extensions are _not_ enabled, that is, when the program +operates in traditional mode, there may be zero, one or two parameters +besides the options. If there are no parameters, the program reads the +standard input and outputs the permuted index to the standard output. +If there is only one parameter, it names the text INPUT to be read +instead of the standard input. If two parameters are given, they give +respectively the name of the INPUT file to read and the name of the +OUTPUT file to produce. _Be very careful_ to note that, in this case, +the contents of file given by the second parameter is destroyed. This +behavior is dictated by System V `ptx' compatibility; GNU Standards +normally discourage output parameters not introduced by an option. + + Note that for _any_ file named as the value of an option or as an +input text file, a single dash `-' may be used, in which case standard +input is assumed. However, it would not make sense to use this +convention more than once per program invocation. + +* Menu: + +* General options in ptx:: Options which affect general program behavior. +* Charset selection in ptx:: Underlying character set considerations. +* Input processing in ptx:: Input fields, contexts, and keyword selection. +* Output formatting in ptx:: Types of output format, and sizing the fields. +* Compatibility in ptx:: + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: General options in ptx, Next: Charset selection in ptx, Up: ptx invocation + +7.6.1 General options +--------------------- + +`-C' +`--copyright' + Print a short note about the copyright and copying conditions, then + exit without further processing. + +`-G' +`--traditional' + As already explained, this option disables all GNU extensions to + `ptx' and switches to traditional mode. + +`--help' + Print a short help on standard output, then exit without further + processing. + +`--version' + Print the program version on standard output, then exit without + further processing. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Charset selection in ptx, Next: Input processing in ptx, Prev: General options in ptx, Up: ptx invocation + +7.6.2 Charset selection +----------------------- + +As it is set up now, the program assumes that the input file is coded +using 8-bit ISO 8859-1 code, also known as Latin-1 character set, +_unless_ it is compiled for MS-DOS, in which case it uses the character +set of the IBM-PC. (GNU `ptx' is not known to work on smaller MS-DOS +machines anymore.) Compared to 7-bit ASCII, the set of characters +which are letters is different; this alters the behavior of regular +expression matching. Thus, the default regular expression for a +keyword allows foreign or diacriticized letters. Keyword sorting, +however, is still crude; it obeys the underlying character set ordering +quite blindly. + +`-f' +`--ignore-case' + Fold lower case letters to upper case for sorting. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Input processing in ptx, Next: Output formatting in ptx, Prev: Charset selection in ptx, Up: ptx invocation + +7.6.3 Word selection and input processing +----------------------------------------- + +`-b FILE' + +`--break-file=FILE' + This option provides an alternative (to `-W') method of describing + which characters make up words. It introduces the name of a file + which contains a list of characters which can_not_ be part of one + word; this file is called the "Break file". Any character which + is not part of the Break file is a word constituent. If both + options `-b' and `-W' are specified, then `-W' has precedence and + `-b' is ignored. + + When GNU extensions are enabled, the only way to avoid newline as a + break character is to write all the break characters in the file + with no newline at all, not even at the end of the file. When GNU + extensions are disabled, spaces, tabs and newlines are always + considered as break characters even if not included in the Break + file. + +`-i FILE' +`--ignore-file=FILE' + The file associated with this option contains a list of words + which will never be taken as keywords in concordance output. It + is called the "Ignore file". The file contains exactly one word + in each line; the end of line separation of words is not subject + to the value of the `-S' option. + + There is a default Ignore file used by `ptx' when this option is + not specified, usually found in `/usr/local/lib/eign' if this has + not been changed at installation time. If you want to deactivate + the default Ignore file, specify `/dev/null' instead. + +`-o FILE' +`--only-file=FILE' + The file associated with this option contains a list of words + which will be retained in concordance output; any word not + mentioned in this file is ignored. The file is called the "Only + file". The file contains exactly one word in each line; the end + of line separation of words is not subject to the value of the + `-S' option. + + There is no default for the Only file. When both an Only file and + an Ignore file are specified, a word is considered a keyword only + if it is listed in the Only file and not in the Ignore file. + +`-r' +`--references' + On each input line, the leading sequence of non-white space + characters will be taken to be a reference that has the purpose of + identifying this input line in the resulting permuted index. For + more information about reference production, see *Note Output + formatting in ptx::. Using this option changes the default value + for option `-S'. + + Using this option, the program does not try very hard to remove + references from contexts in output, but it succeeds in doing so + _when_ the context ends exactly at the newline. If option `-r' is + used with `-S' default value, or when GNU extensions are disabled, + this condition is always met and references are completely + excluded from the output contexts. + +`-S REGEXP' +`--sentence-regexp=REGEXP' + This option selects which regular expression will describe the end + of a line or the end of a sentence. In fact, this regular + expression is not the only distinction between end of lines or end + of sentences, and input line boundaries have no special + significance outside this option. By default, when GNU extensions + are enabled and if `-r' option is not used, end of sentences are + used. In this case, this REGEX is imported from GNU Emacs: + + [.?!][]\"')}]*\\($\\|\t\\| \\)[ \t\n]* + + Whenever GNU extensions are disabled or if `-r' option is used, end + of lines are used; in this case, the default REGEXP is just: + + \n + + Using an empty REGEXP is equivalent to completely disabling end of + line or end of sentence recognition. In this case, the whole file + is considered to be a single big line or sentence. The user might + want to disallow all truncation flag generation as well, through + option `-F ""'. *Note Syntax of Regular Expressions: + (emacs)Regexps. + + When the keywords happen to be near the beginning of the input + line or sentence, this often creates an unused area at the + beginning of the output context line; when the keywords happen to + be near the end of the input line or sentence, this often creates + an unused area at the end of the output context line. The program + tries to fill those unused areas by wrapping around context in + them; the tail of the input line or sentence is used to fill the + unused area on the left of the output line; the head of the input + line or sentence is used to fill the unused area on the right of + the output line. + + As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed + escape sequences from the C language are recognized and converted + to the corresponding characters by `ptx' itself. + +`-W REGEXP' +`--word-regexp=REGEXP' + This option selects which regular expression will describe each + keyword. By default, if GNU extensions are enabled, a word is a + sequence of letters; the REGEXP used is `\w+'. When GNU + extensions are disabled, a word is by default anything which ends + with a space, a tab or a newline; the REGEXP used is `[^ \t\n]+'. + + An empty REGEXP is equivalent to not using this option. *Note + Syntax of Regular Expressions: (emacs)Regexps. + + As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed + escape sequences, as found in the C language, are recognized and + converted to the corresponding characters by `ptx' itself. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Output formatting in ptx, Next: Compatibility in ptx, Prev: Input processing in ptx, Up: ptx invocation + +7.6.4 Output formatting +----------------------- + +Output format is mainly controlled by the `-O' and `-T' options +described in the table below. When neither `-O' nor `-T' are selected, +and if GNU extensions are enabled, the program chooses an output format +suitable for a dumb terminal. Each keyword occurrence is output to the +center of one line, surrounded by its left and right contexts. Each +field is properly justified, so the concordance output can be readily +observed. As a special feature, if automatic references are selected +by option `-A' and are output before the left context, that is, if +option `-R' is _not_ selected, then a colon is added after the +reference; this nicely interfaces with GNU Emacs `next-error' +processing. In this default output format, each white space character, +like newline and tab, is merely changed to exactly one space, with no +special attempt to compress consecutive spaces. This might change in +the future. Except for those white space characters, every other +character of the underlying set of 256 characters is transmitted +verbatim. + + Output format is further controlled by the following options. + +`-g NUMBER' +`--gap-size=NUMBER' + Select the size of the minimum white space gap between the fields + on the output line. + +`-w NUMBER' +`--width=NUMBER' + Select the maximum output width of each final line. If references + are used, they are included or excluded from the maximum output + width depending on the value of option `-R'. If this option is not + selected, that is, when references are output before the left + context, the maximum output width takes into account the maximum + length of all references. If this option is selected, that is, + when references are output after the right context, the maximum + output width does not take into account the space taken by + references, nor the gap that precedes them. + +`-A' +`--auto-reference' + Select automatic references. Each input line will have an + automatic reference made up of the file name and the line ordinal, + with a single colon between them. However, the file name will be + empty when standard input is being read. If both `-A' and `-r' + are selected, then the input reference is still read and skipped, + but the automatic reference is used at output time, overriding the + input reference. + +`-R' +`--right-side-refs' + In the default output format, when option `-R' is not used, any + references produced by the effect of options `-r' or `-A' are + placed to the far right of output lines, after the right context. + With default output format, when the `-R' option is specified, + references are rather placed at the beginning of each output line, + before the left context. For any other output format, option `-R' + is ignored, with one exception: with `-R' the width of references + is _not_ taken into account in total output width given by `-w'. + + This option is automatically selected whenever GNU extensions are + disabled. + +`-F STRING' +`--flac-truncation=STRING' + This option will request that any truncation in the output be + reported using the string STRING. Most output fields + theoretically extend towards the beginning or the end of the + current line, or current sentence, as selected with option `-S'. + But there is a maximum allowed output line width, changeable + through option `-w', which is further divided into space for + various output fields. When a field has to be truncated because + it cannot extend beyond the beginning or the end of the current + line to fit in, then a truncation occurs. By default, the string + used is a single slash, as in `-F /'. + + STRING may have more than one character, as in `-F ...'. Also, in + the particular case when STRING is empty (`-F ""'), truncation + flagging is disabled, and no truncation marks are appended in this + case. + + As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed + escape sequences, as found in the C language, are recognized and + converted to the corresponding characters by `ptx' itself. + +`-M STRING' +`--macro-name=STRING' + Select another STRING to be used instead of `xx', while generating + output suitable for `nroff', `troff' or TeX. + +`-O' +`--format=roff' + Choose an output format suitable for `nroff' or `troff' + processing. Each output line will look like: + + .xx "TAIL" "BEFORE" "KEYWORD_AND_AFTER" "HEAD" "REF" + + so it will be possible to write a `.xx' roff macro to take care of + the output typesetting. This is the default output format when GNU + extensions are disabled. Option `-M' can be used to change `xx' + to another macro name. + + In this output format, each non-graphical character, like newline + and tab, is merely changed to exactly one space, with no special + attempt to compress consecutive spaces. Each quote character: `"' + is doubled so it will be correctly processed by `nroff' or `troff'. + +`-T' +`--format=tex' + Choose an output format suitable for TeX processing. Each output + line will look like: + + \xx {TAIL}{BEFORE}{KEYWORD}{AFTER}{HEAD}{REF} + + so it will be possible to write a `\xx' definition to take care of + the output typesetting. Note that when references are not being + produced, that is, neither option `-A' nor option `-r' is + selected, the last parameter of each `\xx' call is inhibited. + Option `-M' can be used to change `xx' to another macro name. + + In this output format, some special characters, like `$', `%', + `&', `#' and `_' are automatically protected with a backslash. + Curly brackets `{', `}' are protected with a backslash and a pair + of dollar signs (to force mathematical mode). The backslash + itself produces the sequence `\backslash{}'. Circumflex and tilde + diacritical marks produce the sequence `^\{ }' and `~\{ }' + respectively. Other diacriticized characters of the underlying + character set produce an appropriate TeX sequence as far as + possible. The other non-graphical characters, like newline and + tab, and all other characters which are not part of ASCII, are + merely changed to exactly one space, with no special attempt to + compress consecutive spaces. Let me know how to improve this + special character processing for TeX. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Compatibility in ptx, Prev: Output formatting in ptx, Up: ptx invocation + +7.6.5 The GNU extensions to `ptx' +--------------------------------- + +This version of `ptx' contains a few features which do not exist in +System V `ptx'. These extra features are suppressed by using the `-G' +command line option, unless overridden by other command line options. +Some GNU extensions cannot be recovered by overriding, so the simple +rule is to avoid `-G' if you care about GNU extensions. Here are the +differences between this program and System V `ptx'. + + * This program can read many input files at once, it always writes + the resulting concordance on standard output. On the other hand, + System V `ptx' reads only one file and sends the result to + standard output or, if a second FILE parameter is given on the + command, to that FILE. + + Having output parameters not introduced by options is a dangerous + practice which GNU avoids as far as possible. So, for using `ptx' + portably between GNU and System V, you should always use it with a + single input file, and always expect the result on standard + output. You might also want to automatically configure in a `-G' + option to `ptx' calls in products using `ptx', if the configurator + finds that the installed `ptx' accepts `-G'. + + * The only options available in System V `ptx' are options `-b', + `-f', `-g', `-i', `-o', `-r', `-t' and `-w'. All other options + are GNU extensions and are not repeated in this enumeration. + Moreover, some options have a slightly different meaning when GNU + extensions are enabled, as explained below. + + * By default, concordance output is not formatted for `troff' or + `nroff'. It is rather formatted for a dumb terminal. `troff' or + `nroff' output may still be selected through option `-O'. + + * Unless `-R' option is used, the maximum reference width is + subtracted from the total output line width. With GNU extensions + disabled, width of references is not taken into account in the + output line width computations. + + * All 256 characters, even NULs, are always read and processed from + input file with no adverse effect, even if GNU extensions are + disabled. However, System V `ptx' does not accept 8-bit + characters, a few control characters are rejected, and the tilde + `~' is also rejected. + + * Input line length is only limited by available memory, even if GNU + extensions are disabled. However, System V `ptx' processes only + the first 200 characters in each line. + + * The break (non-word) characters default to be every character + except all letters of the underlying character set, diacriticized + or not. When GNU extensions are disabled, the break characters + default to space, tab and newline only. + + * The program makes better use of output line width. If GNU + extensions are disabled, the program rather tries to imitate + System V `ptx', but still, there are some slight disposition + glitches this program does not completely reproduce. + + * The user can specify both an Ignore file and an Only file. This + is not allowed with System V `ptx'. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Operating on fields within a line, Next: Operating on characters, Prev: Operating on sorted files, Up: Top + +8 Operating on fields within a line +*********************************** + +* Menu: + +* cut invocation:: Print selected parts of lines. +* paste invocation:: Merge lines of files. +* join invocation:: Join lines on a common field. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: cut invocation, Next: paste invocation, Up: Operating on fields within a line + +8.1 `cut': Print selected parts of lines +======================================== + +`cut' writes to standard output selected parts of each line of each +input file, or standard input if no files are given or for a file name +of `-'. Synopsis: + + cut [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + In the table which follows, the BYTE-LIST, CHARACTER-LIST, and +FIELD-LIST are one or more numbers or ranges (two numbers separated by +a dash) separated by commas. Bytes, characters, and fields are +numbered starting at 1. Incomplete ranges may be given: `-M' means +`1-M'; `N-' means `N' through end of line or last field. The list +elements can be repeated, can overlap, and can be specified in any +order; but the selected input is written in the same order that it is +read, and is written exactly once. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-b BYTE-LIST' +`--bytes=BYTE-LIST' + Select for printing only the bytes in positions listed in + BYTE-LIST. Tabs and backspaces are treated like any other + character; they take up 1 byte. If an output delimiter is + specified, (see the description of `--output-delimiter'), then + output that string between ranges of selected bytes. + +`-c CHARACTER-LIST' +`--characters=CHARACTER-LIST' + Select for printing only the characters in positions listed in + CHARACTER-LIST. The same as `-b' for now, but + internationalization will change that. Tabs and backspaces are + treated like any other character; they take up 1 character. If an + output delimiter is specified, (see the description of + `--output-delimiter'), then output that string between ranges of + selected bytes. + +`-f FIELD-LIST' +`--fields=FIELD-LIST' + Select for printing only the fields listed in FIELD-LIST. Fields + are separated by a TAB character by default. Also print any line + that contains no delimiter character, unless the + `--only-delimited' (`-s') option is specified + +`-d INPUT_DELIM_BYTE' +`--delimiter=INPUT_DELIM_BYTE' + For `-f', fields are separated in the input by the first character + in INPUT_DELIM_BYTE (default is TAB). + +`-n' + Do not split multi-byte characters (no-op for now). + +`-s' +`--only-delimited' + For `-f', do not print lines that do not contain the field + separator character. Normally, any line without a field separator + is printed verbatim. + +`--output-delimiter=OUTPUT_DELIM_STRING' + With `-f', output fields are separated by OUTPUT_DELIM_STRING. + The default with `-f' is to use the input delimiter. When using + `-b' or `-c' to select ranges of byte or character offsets (as + opposed to ranges of fields), output OUTPUT_DELIM_STRING between + non-overlapping ranges of selected bytes. + +`--complement' + This option is a GNU extension. Select for printing the + complement of the bytes, characters or fields selected with the + `-b', `-c' or `-f' options. In other words, do _not_ print the + bytes, characters or fields specified via those options. This + option is useful when you have many fields and want to print all + but a few of them. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: paste invocation, Next: join invocation, Prev: cut invocation, Up: Operating on fields within a line + +8.2 `paste': Merge lines of files +================================= + +`paste' writes to standard output lines consisting of sequentially +corresponding lines of each given file, separated by a TAB character. +Standard input is used for a file name of `-' or if no input files are +given. + + For example: + + $ cat num2 + 1 + 2 + $ cat let3 + a + b + c + $ paste num2 let3 + 1 a + 2 b + c + + Synopsis: + + paste [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-s' +`--serial' + Paste the lines of one file at a time rather than one line from + each file. Using the above example data: + + $ paste -s num2 let3 + 1 2 + a b c + +`-d DELIM-LIST' +`--delimiters=DELIM-LIST' + Consecutively use the characters in DELIM-LIST instead of TAB to + separate merged lines. When DELIM-LIST is exhausted, start again + at its beginning. Using the above example data: + + $ paste -d '%_' num2 let3 num2 + 1%a_1 + 2%b_2 + %c_ + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: join invocation, Prev: paste invocation, Up: Operating on fields within a line + +8.3 `join': Join lines on a common field +======================================== + +`join' writes to standard output a line for each pair of input lines +that have identical join fields. Synopsis: + + join [OPTION]... FILE1 FILE2 + + Either FILE1 or FILE2 (but not both) can be `-', meaning standard +input. FILE1 and FILE2 should be sorted on the join fields. + + Normally, the sort order is that of the collating sequence specified +by the `LC_COLLATE' locale. Unless the `-t' option is given, the sort +comparison ignores blanks at the start of the join field, as in `sort +-b'. If the `--ignore-case' option is given, the sort comparison +ignores the case of characters in the join field, as in `sort -f'. + + However, as a GNU extension, if the input has no unpairable lines the +sort order can be any order that considers two fields to be equal if and +only if the sort comparison described above considers them to be equal. +For example: + + $ cat file1 + a a1 + c c1 + b b1 + $ cat file2 + a a2 + c c2 + b b2 + $ join file1 file2 + a a1 a2 + c c1 c2 + b b1 b2 + + The defaults are: the join field is the first field in each line; +fields in the input are separated by one or more blanks, with leading +blanks on the line ignored; fields in the output are separated by a +space; each output line consists of the join field, the remaining +fields from FILE1, then the remaining fields from FILE2. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-a FILE-NUMBER' + Print a line for each unpairable line in file FILE-NUMBER (either + `1' or `2'), in addition to the normal output. + +`-e STRING' + Replace those output fields that are missing in the input with + STRING. + +`-i' +`--ignore-case' + Ignore differences in case when comparing keys. With this option, + the lines of the input files must be ordered in the same way. Use + `sort -f' to produce this ordering. + +`-1 FIELD' + Join on field FIELD (a positive integer) of file 1. + +`-2 FIELD' + Join on field FIELD (a positive integer) of file 2. + +`-j FIELD' + Equivalent to `-1 FIELD -2 FIELD'. + +`-o FIELD-LIST' + Construct each output line according to the format in FIELD-LIST. + Each element in FIELD-LIST is either the single character `0' or + has the form M.N where the file number, M, is `1' or `2' and N is + a positive field number. + + A field specification of `0' denotes the join field. In most + cases, the functionality of the `0' field spec may be reproduced + using the explicit M.N that corresponds to the join field. + However, when printing unpairable lines (using either of the `-a' + or `-v' options), there is no way to specify the join field using + M.N in FIELD-LIST if there are unpairable lines in both files. To + give `join' that functionality, POSIX invented the `0' field + specification notation. + + The elements in FIELD-LIST are separated by commas or blanks. + Blank separators typically need to be quoted for the shell. For + example, the commands `join -o 1.2,2.2' and `join -o '1.2 2.2'' + are equivalent. + + All output lines--including those printed because of any -a or -v + option--are subject to the specified FIELD-LIST. + +`-t CHAR' + Use character CHAR as the input and output field separator. Treat + as significant each occurrence of CHAR in the input file. + +`-v FILE-NUMBER' + Print a line for each unpairable line in file FILE-NUMBER (either + `1' or `2'), instead of the normal output. + + + In addition, when GNU `join' is invoked with exactly one argument, +the `--help' and `--version' options are recognized. *Note Common +options::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Operating on characters, Next: Directory listing, Prev: Operating on fields within a line, Up: Top + +9 Operating on characters +************************* + +This commands operate on individual characters. + +* Menu: + +* tr invocation:: Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters. +* expand invocation:: Convert tabs to spaces. +* unexpand invocation:: Convert spaces to tabs. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: tr invocation, Next: expand invocation, Up: Operating on characters + +9.1 `tr': Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters +====================================================== + +Synopsis: + + tr [OPTION]... SET1 [SET2] + + `tr' copies standard input to standard output, performing one of the +following operations: + + * translate, and optionally squeeze repeated characters in the + result, + + * squeeze repeated characters, + + * delete characters, + + * delete characters, then squeeze repeated characters from the + result. + + The SET1 and (if given) SET2 arguments define ordered sets of +characters, referred to below as SET1 and SET2. These sets are the +characters of the input that `tr' operates on. The `--complement' +(`-c', `-C') option replaces SET1 with its complement (all of the +characters that are not in SET1). + + Currently `tr' fully supports only single-byte characters. +Eventually it will support multibyte characters; when it does, the `-C' +option will cause it to complement the set of characters, whereas `-c' +will cause it to complement the set of values. This distinction will +matter only when some values are not characters, and this is possible +only in locales using multibyte encodings when the input contains +encoding errors. + + The program accepts the `--help' and `--version' options. *Note +Common options::. Options must precede operands. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + +* Menu: + +* Character sets:: Specifying sets of characters. +* Translating:: Changing one set of characters to another. +* Squeezing:: Squeezing repeats and deleting. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Character sets, Next: Translating, Up: tr invocation + +9.1.1 Specifying sets of characters +----------------------------------- + +The format of the SET1 and SET2 arguments resembles the format of +regular expressions; however, they are not regular expressions, only +lists of characters. Most characters simply represent themselves in +these strings, but the strings can contain the shorthands listed below, +for convenience. Some of them can be used only in SET1 or SET2, as +noted below. + +Backslash escapes + A backslash followed by a character not listed below causes an + error message. + + `\a' + Control-G. + + `\b' + Control-H. + + `\f' + Control-L. + + `\n' + Control-J. + + `\r' + Control-M. + + `\t' + Control-I. + + `\v' + Control-K. + + `\OOO' + The character with the value given by OOO, which is 1 to 3 + octal digits, + + `\\' + A backslash. + +Ranges + The notation `M-N' expands to all of the characters from M through + N, in ascending order. M should collate before N; if it doesn't, + an error results. As an example, `0-9' is the same as + `0123456789'. + + GNU `tr' does not support the System V syntax that uses square + brackets to enclose ranges. Translations specified in that format + sometimes work as expected, since the brackets are often + transliterated to themselves. However, they should be avoided + because they sometimes behave unexpectedly. For example, `tr -d + '[0-9]'' deletes brackets as well as digits. + + Many historically common and even accepted uses of ranges are not + portable. For example, on EBCDIC hosts using the `A-Z' range will + not do what most would expect because `A' through `Z' are not + contiguous as they are in ASCII. If you can rely on a POSIX + compliant version of `tr', then the best way to work around this + is to use character classes (see below). Otherwise, it is most + portable (and most ugly) to enumerate the members of the ranges. + +Repeated characters + The notation `[C*N]' in SET2 expands to N copies of character C. + Thus, `[y*6]' is the same as `yyyyyy'. The notation `[C*]' in + STRING2 expands to as many copies of C as are needed to make SET2 + as long as SET1. If N begins with `0', it is interpreted in + octal, otherwise in decimal. + +Character classes + The notation `[:CLASS:]' expands to all of the characters in the + (predefined) class CLASS. The characters expand in no particular + order, except for the `upper' and `lower' classes, which expand in + ascending order. When the `--delete' (`-d') and + `--squeeze-repeats' (`-s') options are both given, any character + class can be used in SET2. Otherwise, only the character classes + `lower' and `upper' are accepted in SET2, and then only if the + corresponding character class (`upper' and `lower', respectively) + is specified in the same relative position in SET1. Doing this + specifies case conversion. The class names are given below; an + error results when an invalid class name is given. + + `alnum' + Letters and digits. + + `alpha' + Letters. + + `blank' + Horizontal whitespace. + + `cntrl' + Control characters. + + `digit' + Digits. + + `graph' + Printable characters, not including space. + + `lower' + Lowercase letters. + + `print' + Printable characters, including space. + + `punct' + Punctuation characters. + + `space' + Horizontal or vertical whitespace. + + `upper' + Uppercase letters. + + `xdigit' + Hexadecimal digits. + +Equivalence classes + The syntax `[=C=]' expands to all of the characters that are + equivalent to C, in no particular order. Equivalence classes are + a relatively recent invention intended to support non-English + alphabets. But there seems to be no standard way to define them + or determine their contents. Therefore, they are not fully + implemented in GNU `tr'; each character's equivalence class + consists only of that character, which is of no particular use. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Translating, Next: Squeezing, Prev: Character sets, Up: tr invocation + +9.1.2 Translating +----------------- + +`tr' performs translation when SET1 and SET2 are both given and the +`--delete' (`-d') option is not given. `tr' translates each character +of its input that is in SET1 to the corresponding character in SET2. +Characters not in SET1 are passed through unchanged. When a character +appears more than once in SET1 and the corresponding characters in SET2 +are not all the same, only the final one is used. For example, these +two commands are equivalent: + + tr aaa xyz + tr a z + + A common use of `tr' is to convert lowercase characters to +uppercase. This can be done in many ways. Here are three of them: + + tr abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ + tr a-z A-Z + tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]' + +But note that using ranges like `a-z' above is not portable. + + When `tr' is performing translation, SET1 and SET2 typically have +the same length. If SET1 is shorter than SET2, the extra characters at +the end of SET2 are ignored. + + On the other hand, making SET1 longer than SET2 is not portable; +POSIX says that the result is undefined. In this situation, BSD `tr' +pads SET2 to the length of SET1 by repeating the last character of SET2 +as many times as necessary. System V `tr' truncates SET1 to the length +of SET2. + + By default, GNU `tr' handles this case like BSD `tr'. When the +`--truncate-set1' (`-t') option is given, GNU `tr' handles this case +like the System V `tr' instead. This option is ignored for operations +other than translation. + + Acting like System V `tr' in this case breaks the relatively common +BSD idiom: + + tr -cs A-Za-z0-9 '\012' + +because it converts only zero bytes (the first element in the +complement of SET1), rather than all non-alphanumerics, to newlines. + +By the way, the above idiom is not portable because it uses ranges, and +it assumes that the octal code for newline is 012. Assuming a POSIX +compliant `tr', here is a better way to write it: + + tr -cs '[:alnum:]' '[\n*]' + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Squeezing, Prev: Translating, Up: tr invocation + +9.1.3 Squeezing repeats and deleting +------------------------------------ + +When given just the `--delete' (`-d') option, `tr' removes any input +characters that are in SET1. + + When given just the `--squeeze-repeats' (`-s') option, `tr' replaces +each input sequence of a repeated character that is in SET1 with a +single occurrence of that character. + + When given both `--delete' and `--squeeze-repeats', `tr' first +performs any deletions using SET1, then squeezes repeats from any +remaining characters using SET2. + + The `--squeeze-repeats' option may also be used when translating, in +which case `tr' first performs translation, then squeezes repeats from +any remaining characters using SET2. + + Here are some examples to illustrate various combinations of options: + + * Remove all zero bytes: + + tr -d '\0' + + * Put all words on lines by themselves. This converts all + non-alphanumeric characters to newlines, then squeezes each string + of repeated newlines into a single newline: + + tr -cs '[:alnum:]' '[\n*]' + + * Convert each sequence of repeated newlines to a single newline: + + tr -s '\n' + + * Find doubled occurrences of words in a document. For example, + people often write "the the" with the repeated words separated by + a newline. The Bourne shell script below works first by + converting each sequence of punctuation and blank characters to a + single newline. That puts each "word" on a line by itself. Next + it maps all uppercase characters to lower case, and finally it + runs `uniq' with the `-d' option to print out only the words that + were repeated. + + #!/bin/sh + cat -- "$@" \ + | tr -s '[:punct:][:blank:]' '[\n*]' \ + | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' \ + | uniq -d + + * Deleting a small set of characters is usually straightforward. + For example, to remove all `a's, `x's, and `M's you would do this: + + tr -d axM + + However, when `-' is one of those characters, it can be tricky + because `-' has special meanings. Performing the same task as + above but also removing all `-' characters, we might try `tr -d + -axM', but that would fail because `tr' would try to interpret + `-a' as a command-line option. Alternatively, we could try + putting the hyphen inside the string, `tr -d a-xM', but that + wouldn't work either because it would make `tr' interpret `a-x' as + the range of characters `a'...`x' rather than the three. One way + to solve the problem is to put the hyphen at the end of the list + of characters: + + tr -d axM- + + Or you can use `--' to terminate option processing: + + tr -d -- -axM + + More generally, use the character class notation `[=c=]' with `-' + (or any other character) in place of the `c': + + tr -d '[=-=]axM' + + Note how single quotes are used in the above example to protect the + square brackets from interpretation by a shell. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: expand invocation, Next: unexpand invocation, Prev: tr invocation, Up: Operating on characters + +9.2 `expand': Convert tabs to spaces +==================================== + +`expand' writes the contents of each given FILE, or standard input if +none are given or for a FILE of `-', to standard output, with tab +characters converted to the appropriate number of spaces. Synopsis: + + expand [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + By default, `expand' converts all tabs to spaces. It preserves +backspace characters in the output; they decrement the column count for +tab calculations. The default action is equivalent to `-t 8' (set tabs +every 8 columns). + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-t TAB1[,TAB2]...' +`--tabs=TAB1[,TAB2]...' + If only one tab stop is given, set the tabs TAB1 spaces apart + (default is 8). Otherwise, set the tabs at columns TAB1, TAB2, + ... (numbered from 0), and replace any tabs beyond the last tab + stop given with single spaces. Tab stops can be separated by + blanks as well as by commas. + + On older systems, `expand' supports an obsolete option + `-TAB1[,TAB2]...', where tab stops must be separated by commas. + POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) does not allow + this; use `-t TAB1[,TAB2]...' instead. + +`-i' +`--initial' + Only convert initial tabs (those that precede all non-space or + non-tab characters) on each line to spaces. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: unexpand invocation, Prev: expand invocation, Up: Operating on characters + +9.3 `unexpand': Convert spaces to tabs +====================================== + +`unexpand' writes the contents of each given FILE, or standard input if +none are given or for a FILE of `-', to standard output, converting +blanks at the beginning of each line into as many tab characters as +needed. In the default POSIX locale, a "blank" is a space or a tab; +other locales may specify additional blank characters. Synopsis: + + unexpand [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + By default, `unexpand' converts only initial blanks (those that +precede all non-blank characters) on each line. It preserves backspace +characters in the output; they decrement the column count for tab +calculations. By default, tabs are set at every 8th column. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-t TAB1[,TAB2]...' +`--tabs=TAB1[,TAB2]...' + If only one tab stop is given, set the tabs TAB1 columns apart + instead of the default 8. Otherwise, set the tabs at columns + TAB1, TAB2, ... (numbered from 0), and leave blanks beyond the tab + stops given unchanged. Tab stops can be separated by blanks as + well as by commas. This option implies the `-a' option. + + On older systems, `unexpand' supports an obsolete option + `-TAB1[,TAB2]...', where tab stops must be separated by commas. + (Unlike `-t', this obsolete option does not imply `-a'.) POSIX + 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) does not allow this; + use `--first-only -t TAB1[,TAB2]...' instead. + +`-a' +`--all' + Also convert all sequences of two or more blanks just before a tab + stop. even if they occur after non-blank characters in a line. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Directory listing, Next: Basic operations, Prev: Operating on characters, Up: Top + +10 Directory listing +******************** + +This chapter describes the `ls' command and its variants `dir' and +`vdir', which list information about files. + +* Menu: + +* ls invocation:: List directory contents. +* dir invocation:: Briefly ls. +* vdir invocation:: Verbosely ls. +* dircolors invocation:: Color setup for ls, etc. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: ls invocation, Next: dir invocation, Up: Directory listing + +10.1 `ls': List directory contents +================================== + +The `ls' program lists information about files (of any type, including +directories). Options and file arguments can be intermixed +arbitrarily, as usual. + + For non-option command-line arguments that are directories, by +default `ls' lists the contents of directories, not recursively, and +omitting files with names beginning with `.'. For other non-option +arguments, by default `ls' lists just the file name. If no non-option +argument is specified, `ls' operates on the current directory, acting +as if it had been invoked with a single argument of `.'. + + By default, the output is sorted alphabetically, according to the +locale settings in effect.(1) If standard output is a terminal, the +output is in columns (sorted vertically) and control characters are +output as question marks; otherwise, the output is listed one per line +and control characters are output as-is. + + Because `ls' is such a fundamental program, it has accumulated many +options over the years. They are described in the subsections below; +within each section, options are listed alphabetically (ignoring case). +The division of options into the subsections is not absolute, since some +options affect more than one aspect of `ls''s operation. + + Exit status: + + 0 success + 1 minor problems (e.g., a subdirectory was not found) + 2 serious trouble (e.g., memory exhausted) + + Also see *Note Common options::. + +* Menu: + +* Which files are listed:: +* What information is listed:: +* Sorting the output:: +* More details about version sort:: +* General output formatting:: +* Formatting file timestamps:: +* Formatting the file names:: + + ---------- Footnotes ---------- + + (1) If you use a non-POSIX locale (e.g., by setting `LC_ALL' to +`en_US'), then `ls' may produce output that is sorted differently than +you're accustomed to. In that case, set the `LC_ALL' environment +variable to `C'. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Which files are listed, Next: What information is listed, Up: ls invocation + +10.1.1 Which files are listed +----------------------------- + +These options determine which files `ls' lists information for. By +default, `ls' lists files and the contents of any directories on the +command line, except that in directories it ignores files whose names +start with `.'. + +`-a' +`--all' + In directories, do not ignore file names that start with `.'. + +`-A' +`--almost-all' + In directories, do not ignore all file names that start with `.'; + ignore only `.' and `..'. The `--all' (`-a') option overrides + this option. + +`-B' +`--ignore-backups' + In directories, ignore files that end with `~'. This option is + equivalent to `--ignore='*~' --ignore='.*~''. + +`-d' +`--directory' + List just the names of directories, as with other types of files, + rather than listing their contents. Do not follow symbolic links + listed on the command line unless the `--dereference-command-line' + (`-H'), `--dereference' (`-L'), or + `--dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir' options are specified. + +`-H' +`--dereference-command-line' + If a command line argument specifies a symbolic link, show + information for the file the link references rather than for the + link itself. + +`--dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir' + Do not dereference symbolic links, with one exception: if a + command line argument specifies a symbolic link that refers to a + directory, show information for that directory rather than for the + link itself. This is the default behavior when no other + dereferencing-related option has been specified (`--classify' + (`-F'), `--directory' (`-d'), (`-l'), `--dereference' (`-L'), or + `--dereference-command-line' (`-H')). + +`--hide=PATTERN' + In directories, ignore files whose names match the shell pattern + PATTERN, unless the `--all' (`-a') or `--almost-all' (`-A') is + also given. This option acts like `--ignore=PATTERN' except that + it has no effect if `--all' (`-a') or `--almost-all' (`-A') is + also given. + + This option can be useful in shell aliases. For example, if `lx' + is an alias for `ls --hide='*~'' and `ly' is an alias for `ls + --ignore='*~'', then the command `lx -A' lists the file `README~' + even though `ly -A' would not. + +`-I PATTERN' +`--ignore=PATTERN' + In directories, ignore files whose names match the shell pattern + (not regular expression) PATTERN. As in the shell, an initial `.' + in a file name does not match a wildcard at the start of PATTERN. + Sometimes it is useful to give this option several times. For + example, + + $ ls --ignore='.??*' --ignore='.[^.]' --ignore='#*' + + The first option ignores names of length 3 or more that start with + `.', the second ignores all two-character names that start with `.' + except `..', and the third ignores names that start with `#'. + +`-L' +`--dereference' + When showing file information for a symbolic link, show information + for the file the link references rather than the link itself. + However, even with this option, `ls' still prints the name of the + link itself, not the name of the file that the link points to. + +`-R' +`--recursive' + List the contents of all directories recursively. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: What information is listed, Next: Sorting the output, Prev: Which files are listed, Up: ls invocation + +10.1.2 What information is listed +--------------------------------- + +These options affect the information that `ls' displays. By default, +only file names are shown. + +`--author' + List each file's author when producing long format directory + listings. In GNU/Hurd, file authors can differ from their owners, + but in other operating systems the two are the same. + +`-D' +`--dired' + With the long listing (`-l') format, print an additional line after + the main output: + + //DIRED// BEG1 END1 BEG2 END2 ... + + The BEGN and ENDN are unsigned integers that record the byte + position of the beginning and end of each file name in the output. + This makes it easy for Emacs to find the names, even when they + contain unusual characters such as space or newline, without fancy + searching. + + If directories are being listed recursively (`-R'), output a + similar line with offsets for each subdirectory name: + + //SUBDIRED// BEG1 END1 ... + + Finally, output a line of the form: + + //DIRED-OPTIONS// --quoting-style=WORD + + where WORD is the quoting style (*note Formatting the file + names::). + + Here is an actual example: + + $ mkdir -p a/sub/deeper a/sub2 + $ touch a/f1 a/f2 + $ touch a/sub/deeper/file + $ ls -gloRF --dired a + a: + total 8 + -rw-r--r-- 1 0 Dec 3 00:50 f1 + -rw-r--r-- 1 0 Dec 3 00:50 f2 + drwxr-xr-x 3 4096 Dec 3 00:50 sub/ + drwxr-xr-x 2 4096 Dec 3 00:50 sub2/ + + a/sub: + total 4 + drwxr-xr-x 2 4096 Dec 3 00:50 deeper/ + + a/sub/deeper: + total 0 + -rw-r--r-- 1 0 Dec 3 00:50 file + + a/sub2: + total 0 + //DIRED// 49 51 86 88 123 126 162 166 222 228 288 292 + //SUBDIRED// 2 3 171 176 233 245 296 302 + //DIRED-OPTIONS// --quoting-style=literal + + Note that the pairs of offsets on the `//DIRED//' line above + delimit these names: `f1', `f2', `sub', `sub2', `deeper', `file'. + The offsets on the `//SUBDIRED//' line delimit the following + directory names: `a', `a/sub', `a/sub/deeper', `a/sub2'. + + Here is an example of how to extract the fifth entry name, + `deeper', corresponding to the pair of offsets, 222 and 228: + + $ ls -gloRF --dired a > out + $ dd bs=1 skip=222 count=6 < out 2>/dev/null; echo + deeper + + Note that although the listing above includes a trailing slash for + the `deeper' entry, the offsets select the name without the + trailing slash. However, if you invoke `ls' with `--dired' along + with an option like `--escape' (aka `-b') and operate on a file + whose name contains special characters, notice that the backslash + _is_ included: + + $ touch 'a b' + $ ls -blog --dired 'a b' + -rw-r--r-- 1 0 Dec 3 00:52 a\ b + //DIRED// 31 35 + //DIRED-OPTIONS// --quoting-style=escape + + If you use a quoting style that adds quote marks (e.g., + `--quoting-style=c'), then the offsets include the quote marks. + So beware that the user may select the quoting style via the + environment variable `QUOTING_STYLE'. Hence, applications using + `--dired' should either specify an explicit + `--quoting-style=literal' option (aka `-N' or `--literal') on the + command line, or else be prepared to parse the escaped names. + +`--full-time' + Produce long format directory listings, and list times in full. + It is equivalent to using `--format=long' with + `--time-style=full-iso' (*note Formatting file timestamps::). + +`-g' + Produce long format directory listings, but don't display owner + information. + +`-G' +`--no-group' + Inhibit display of group information in a long format directory + listing. (This is the default in some non-GNU versions of `ls', + so we provide this option for compatibility.) + +`-h' +`--human-readable' + Append a size letter to each size, such as `M' for mebibytes. + Powers of 1024 are used, not 1000; `M' stands for 1,048,576 bytes. + Use the `--si' option if you prefer powers of 1000. + +`-i' +`--inode' + Print the inode number (also called the file serial number and + index number) of each file to the left of the file name. (This + number uniquely identifies each file within a particular file + system.) + +`-l' +`--format=long' +`--format=verbose' + In addition to the name of each file, print the file type, + permissions, number of hard links, owner name, group name, size, + and timestamp (*note Formatting file timestamps::), normally the + modification time. + + Normally the size is printed as a byte count without punctuation, + but this can be overridden (*note Block size::). For example, `-h' + prints an abbreviated, human-readable count, and + `--block-size="'1"' prints a byte count with the thousands + separator of the current locale. + + For each directory that is listed, preface the files with a line + `total BLOCKS', where BLOCKS is the total disk allocation for all + files in that directory. The block size currently defaults to 1024 + bytes, but this can be overridden (*note Block size::). The + BLOCKS computed counts each hard link separately; this is arguably + a deficiency. + + The permissions listed are similar to symbolic mode specifications + (*note Symbolic Modes::). But `ls' combines multiple bits into the + third character of each set of permissions as follows: + `s' + If the setuid or setgid bit and the corresponding executable + bit are both set. + + `S' + If the setuid or setgid bit is set but the corresponding + executable bit is not set. + + `t' + If the sticky bit and the other-executable bit are both set. + + `T' + If the sticky bit is set but the other-executable bit is not + set. + + `x' + If the executable bit is set and none of the above apply. + + `-' + Otherwise. + + Following the permission bits is a single character that specifies + whether an alternate access method applies to the file. When that + character is a space, there is no alternate access method. When it + is a printing character (e.g., `+'), then there is such a method. + +`-n' +`--numeric-uid-gid' + Produce long format directory listings, but display numeric UIDs + and GIDs instead of the owner and group names. + +`-o' + Produce long format directory listings, but don't display group + information. It is equivalent to using `--format=long' with + `--no-group' . + +`-s' +`--size' + Print the disk allocation of each file to the left of the file + name. This is the amount of disk space used by the file, which is + usually a bit more than the file's size, but it can be less if the + file has holes. + + Normally the disk allocation is printed in units of 1024 bytes, + but this can be overridden (*note Block size::). + + For files that are NFS-mounted from an HP-UX system to a BSD + system, this option reports sizes that are half the correct + values. On HP-UX systems, it reports sizes that are twice the + correct values for files that are NFS-mounted from BSD systems. + This is due to a flaw in HP-UX; it also affects the HP-UX `ls' + program. + +`--si' + Append an SI-style abbreviation to each size, such as `MB' for + megabytes. Powers of 1000 are used, not 1024; `MB' stands for + 1,000,000 bytes. This option is equivalent to `--block-size=si'. + Use the `-h' or `--human-readable' option if you prefer powers of + 1024. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Sorting the output, Next: More details about version sort, Prev: What information is listed, Up: ls invocation + +10.1.3 Sorting the output +------------------------- + +These options change the order in which `ls' sorts the information it +outputs. By default, sorting is done by character code (e.g., ASCII +order). + +`-c' +`--time=ctime' +`--time=status' +`--time=use' + If the long listing format (e.g., `-l', `-o') is being used, print + the status change time (the `ctime' in the inode) instead of the + modification time. When explicitly sorting by time (`--sort=time' + or `-t') or when not using a long listing format, sort according + to the status change time. + +`-f' + Primarily, like `-U'--do not sort; list the files in whatever + order they are stored in the directory. But also enable `-a' (list + all files) and disable `-l', `--color', and `-s' (if they were + specified before the `-f'). + +`-r' +`--reverse' + Reverse whatever the sorting method is--e.g., list files in reverse + alphabetical order, youngest first, smallest first, or whatever. + +`-S' +`--sort=size' + Sort by file size, largest first. + +`-t' +`--sort=time' + Sort by modification time (the `mtime' in the inode), newest first. + +`-u' +`--time=atime' +`--time=access' + If the long listing format (e.g., `--format=long') is being used, + print the last access time (the `atime' in the inode). When + explicitly sorting by time (`--sort=time' or `-t') or when not + using a long listing format, sort according to the access time. + +`-U' +`--sort=none' + Do not sort; list the files in whatever order they are stored in + the directory. (Do not do any of the other unrelated things that + `-f' does.) This is especially useful when listing very large + directories, since not doing any sorting can be noticeably faster. + +`-v' +`--sort=version' + Sort by version name and number, lowest first. It behaves like a + default sort, except that each sequence of decimal digits is + treated numerically as an index/version number. (*Note More + details about version sort::.) + +`-X' +`--sort=extension' + Sort directory contents alphabetically by file extension + (characters after the last `.'); files with no extension are + sorted first. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: More details about version sort, Next: General output formatting, Prev: Sorting the output, Up: ls invocation + +10.1.4 More details about version sort +-------------------------------------- + +The version sort takes into account the fact that file names frequently +include indices or version numbers. Standard sorting functions usually +do not produce the ordering that people expect because comparisons are +made on a character-by-character basis. The version sort addresses +this problem, and is especially useful when browsing directories that +contain many files with indices/version numbers in their names: + + $ ls -1 $ ls -1v + foo.zml-1.gz foo.zml-1.gz + foo.zml-100.gz foo.zml-2.gz + foo.zml-12.gz foo.zml-6.gz + foo.zml-13.gz foo.zml-12.gz + foo.zml-2.gz foo.zml-13.gz + foo.zml-25.gz foo.zml-25.gz + foo.zml-6.gz foo.zml-100.gz + + Note also that numeric parts with leading zeroes are considered as +fractional one: + + $ ls -1 $ ls -1v + abc-1.007.tgz abc-1.007.tgz + abc-1.012b.tgz abc-1.01a.tgz + abc-1.01a.tgz abc-1.012b.tgz + + This functionality is implemented using the `strverscmp' function. +*Note String/Array Comparison: (libc)String/Array Comparison. One +result of that implementation decision is that `ls -v' does not use the +locale category, `LC_COLLATE'. As a result, non-numeric prefixes are +sorted as if `LC_COLLATE' were set to `C'. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: General output formatting, Next: Formatting file timestamps, Prev: More details about version sort, Up: ls invocation + +10.1.5 General output formatting +-------------------------------- + +These options affect the appearance of the overall output. + +`-1' +`--format=single-column' + List one file per line. This is the default for `ls' when standard + output is not a terminal. + +`-C' +`--format=vertical' + List files in columns, sorted vertically. This is the default for + `ls' if standard output is a terminal. It is always the default + for the `dir' and `d' programs. GNU `ls' uses variable width + columns to display as many files as possible in the fewest lines. + +`--color [=WHEN]' + Specify whether to use color for distinguishing file types. WHEN + may be omitted, or one of: + * none - Do not use color at all. This is the default. + + * auto - Only use color if standard output is a terminal. + + * always - Always use color. + Specifying `--color' and no WHEN is equivalent to `--color=always'. + Piping a colorized listing through a pager like `more' or `less' + usually produces unreadable results. However, using `more -f' + does seem to work. + +`-F' +`--classify' +`--indicator-style=classify' + Append a character to each file name indicating the file type. + Also, for regular files that are executable, append `*'. The file + type indicators are `/' for directories, `@' for symbolic links, + `|' for FIFOs, `=' for sockets, and nothing for regular files. Do + not follow symbolic links listed on the command line unless the + `--dereference-command-line' (`-H'), `--dereference' (`-L'), or + `--dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir' options are specified. + +`--indicator-style=WORD' + Append a character indicator with style WORD to entry names, as + follows: + `none' + Do not append any character indicator; this is the default. + + `file-type' + Append `/' for directories, `@' for symbolic links, `|' for + FIFOs, `=' for sockets, and nothing for regular files. This + is the same as the `-p' or `--file-type' option. + + `classify' + Append `*' for executable regular files, otherwise behave as + for `file-type'. This is the same as the `-F' or + `--classify' option. + +`-k' + Print file sizes in 1024-byte blocks, overriding the default block + size (*note Block size::). This option is equivalent to + `--block-size=1K'. + +`-m' +`--format=commas' + List files horizontally, with as many as will fit on each line, + separated by `, ' (a comma and a space). + +`-p' +`--file-type' +`--indicator-style=file-type' + Append a character to each file name indicating the file type. + This is like `-F', except that executables are not marked. + +`-x' +`--format=across' +`--format=horizontal' + List the files in columns, sorted horizontally. + +`-T COLS' +`--tabsize=COLS' + Assume that each tab stop is COLS columns wide. The default is 8. + `ls' uses tabs where possible in the output, for efficiency. If + COLS is zero, do not use tabs at all. + +`-w' +`--width=COLS' + Assume the screen is COLS columns wide. The default is taken from + the terminal settings if possible; otherwise the environment + variable `COLUMNS' is used if it is set; otherwise the default is + 80. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Formatting file timestamps, Next: Formatting the file names, Prev: General output formatting, Up: ls invocation + +10.1.6 Formatting file timestamps +--------------------------------- + +By default, file timestamps are listed in abbreviated form. Most +locales use a timestamp like `2002-03-30 23:45'. However, the default +POSIX locale uses a date like `Mar 30 2002' for non-recent timestamps, +and a date-without-year and time like `Mar 30 23:45' for recent +timestamps. + + A timestamp is considered to be "recent" if it is less than six +months old, and is not dated in the future. If a timestamp dated today +is not listed in recent form, the timestamp is in the future, which +means you probably have clock skew problems which may break programs +like `make' that rely on file timestamps. + + Time stamps are listed according to the time zone rules specified by +the `TZ' environment variable, or by the system default rules if `TZ' +is not set. *Note Specifying the Time Zone with `TZ': (libc)TZ +Variable. + + The following option changes how file timestamps are printed. + +`--time-style=STYLE' + List timestamps in style STYLE. The STYLE should be one of the + following: + + `+FORMAT' + List timestamps using FORMAT, where FORMAT is interpreted + like the format argument of `date' (*note date invocation::). + For example, `--time-style="+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"' causes `ls' + to list timestamps like `2002-03-30 23:45:56'. As with + `date', FORMAT's interpretation is affected by the `LC_TIME' + locale category. + + If FORMAT contains two format strings separated by a newline, + the former is used for non-recent files and the latter for + recent files; if you want output columns to line up, you may + need to insert spaces in one of the two formats. + + `full-iso' + List timestamps in full using ISO 8601 date, time, and time + zone format with nanosecond precision, e.g., `2002-03-30 + 23:45:56.477817180 -0700'. This style is equivalent to + `+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%N %z'. + + This is useful because the time output includes all the + information that is available from the operating system. For + example, this can help explain `make''s behavior, since GNU + `make' uses the full timestamp to determine whether a file is + out of date. + + `long-iso' + List ISO 8601 date and time in minutes, e.g., `2002-03-30 + 23:45'. These timestamps are shorter than `full-iso' + timestamps, and are usually good enough for everyday work. + This style is equivalent to `%Y-%m-%d %H:%M'. + + `iso' + List ISO 8601 dates for non-recent timestamps (e.g., + `2002-03-30 '), and ISO 8601 month, day, hour, and minute for + recent timestamps (e.g., `03-30 23:45'). These timestamps + are uglier than `long-iso' timestamps, but they carry nearly + the same information in a smaller space and their brevity + helps `ls' output fit within traditional 80-column output + lines. The following two `ls' invocations are equivalent: + + newline=' + ' + ls -l --time-style="+%Y-%m-%d $newline%m-%d %H:%M" + ls -l --time-style="iso" + + `locale' + List timestamps in a locale-dependent form. For example, a + Finnish locale might list non-recent timestamps like `maalis + 30 2002' and recent timestamps like `maalis 30 23:45'. + Locale-dependent timestamps typically consume more space than + `iso' timestamps and are harder for programs to parse because + locale conventions vary so widely, but they are easier for + many people to read. + + The `LC_TIME' locale category specifies the timestamp format. + The default POSIX locale uses timestamps like `Mar 30 2002' + and `Mar 30 23:45'; in this locale, the following two `ls' + invocations are equivalent: + + newline=' + ' + ls -l --time-style="+%b %e %Y$newline%b %e %H:%M" + ls -l --time-style="locale" + + Other locales behave differently. For example, in a German + locale, `--time-style="locale"' might be equivalent to + `--time-style="+%e. %b %Y $newline%e. %b %H:%M"' and might + generate timestamps like `30. Ma"r 2002 ' and `30. Ma"r + 23:45'. + + `posix-STYLE' + List POSIX-locale timestamps if the `LC_TIME' locale category + is POSIX, STYLE timestamps otherwise. For example, the + default style, which is `posix-long-iso', lists timestamps + like `Mar 30 2002' and `Mar 30 23:45' when in the POSIX + locale, and like `2002-03-30 23:45' otherwise. + + You can specify the default value of the `--time-style' option with +the environment variable `TIME_STYLE'; if `TIME_STYLE' is not set the +default style is `posix-long-iso'. GNU Emacs 21 and later can parse +ISO dates, but older Emacs versions do not, so if you are using an +older version of Emacs and specify a non-POSIX locale, you may need to +set `TIME_STYLE="locale"'. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Formatting the file names, Prev: Formatting file timestamps, Up: ls invocation + +10.1.7 Formatting the file names +-------------------------------- + +These options change how file names themselves are printed. + +`-b' +`--escape' +`--quoting-style=escape' + Quote nongraphic characters in file names using alphabetic and + octal backslash sequences like those used in C. + +`-N' +`--literal' +`--quoting-style=literal' + Do not quote file names. However, with `ls' nongraphic characters + are still printed as question marks if the output is a terminal + and you do not specify the `--show-control-chars' option. + +`-q' +`--hide-control-chars' + Print question marks instead of nongraphic characters in file + names. This is the default if the output is a terminal and the + program is `ls'. + +`-Q' +`--quote-name' +`--quoting-style=c' + Enclose file names in double quotes and quote nongraphic + characters as in C. + +`--quoting-style=WORD' + Use style WORD to quote file names and other strings that may + contain arbitrary characters. The WORD should be one of the + following: + `literal' + Output strings as-is; this is the same as the `-N' or + `--literal' option. + + `shell' + Quote strings for the shell if they contain shell + metacharacters or would cause ambiguous output. The quoting + is suitable for POSIX-compatible shells like `bash', but it + does not always work for incompatible shells like `csh'. + + `shell-always' + Quote strings for the shell, even if they would normally not + require quoting. + + `c' + Quote strings as for C character string literals, including + the surrounding double-quote characters; this is the same as + the `-Q' or `--quote-name' option. + + `escape' + Quote strings as for C character string literals, except omit + the surrounding double-quote characters; this is the same as + the `-b' or `--escape' option. + + `clocale' + Quote strings as for C character string literals, except use + surrounding quotation marks appropriate for the locale. + + `locale' + Quote strings as for C character string literals, except use + surrounding quotation marks appropriate for the locale, and + quote `like this' instead of "like this" in the default C + locale. This looks nicer on many displays. + + You can specify the default value of the `--quoting-style' option + with the environment variable `QUOTING_STYLE'. If that environment + variable is not set, the default value is `literal', but this + default may change to `shell' in a future version of this package. + +`--show-control-chars' + Print nongraphic characters as-is in file names. This is the + default unless the output is a terminal and the program is `ls'. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: dir invocation, Next: vdir invocation, Prev: ls invocation, Up: Directory listing + +10.2 `dir': Briefly list directory contents +=========================================== + +`dir' (also installed as `d') is equivalent to `ls -C -b'; that is, by +default files are listed in columns, sorted vertically, and special +characters are represented by backslash escape sequences. + + *Note `ls': ls invocation. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: vdir invocation, Next: dircolors invocation, Prev: dir invocation, Up: Directory listing + +10.3 `vdir': Verbosely list directory contents +============================================== + +`vdir' (also installed as `v') is equivalent to `ls -l -b'; that is, by +default files are listed in long format and special characters are +represented by backslash escape sequences. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: dircolors invocation, Prev: vdir invocation, Up: Directory listing + +10.4 `dircolors': Color setup for `ls' +====================================== + +`dircolors' outputs a sequence of shell commands to set up the terminal +for color output from `ls' (and `dir', etc.). Typical usage: + + eval "`dircolors [OPTION]... [FILE]`" + + If FILE is specified, `dircolors' reads it to determine which colors +to use for which file types and extensions. Otherwise, a precompiled +database is used. For details on the format of these files, run +`dircolors --print-database'. + + The output is a shell command to set the `LS_COLORS' environment +variable. You can specify the shell syntax to use on the command line, +or `dircolors' will guess it from the value of the `SHELL' environment +variable. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-b' +`--sh' +`--bourne-shell' + Output Bourne shell commands. This is the default if the `SHELL' + environment variable is set and does not end with `csh' or `tcsh'. + +`-c' +`--csh' +`--c-shell' + Output C shell commands. This is the default if `SHELL' ends with + `csh' or `tcsh'. + +`-p' +`--print-database' + Print the (compiled-in) default color configuration database. This + output is itself a valid configuration file, and is fairly + descriptive of the possibilities. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Basic operations, Next: Special file types, Prev: Directory listing, Up: Top + +11 Basic operations +******************* + +This chapter describes the commands for basic file manipulation: +copying, moving (renaming), and deleting (removing). + +* Menu: + +* cp invocation:: Copy files. +* dd invocation:: Convert and copy a file. +* install invocation:: Copy files and set attributes. +* mv invocation:: Move (rename) files. +* rm invocation:: Remove files or directories. +* shred invocation:: Remove files more securely. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: cp invocation, Next: dd invocation, Up: Basic operations + +11.1 `cp': Copy files and directories +===================================== + +`cp' copies files (or, optionally, directories). The copy is +completely independent of the original. You can either copy one file to +another, or copy arbitrarily many files to a destination directory. +Synopses: + + cp [OPTION]... [-T] SOURCE DEST + cp [OPTION]... SOURCE... DIRECTORY + cp [OPTION]... -t DIRECTORY SOURCE... + + * If two file names are given, `cp' copies the first file to the + second. + + * If the `--target-directory' (`-t') option is given, or failing + that if the last file is a directory and the + `--no-target-directory' (`-T') option is not given, `cp' copies + each SOURCE file to the specified directory, using the SOURCEs' + names. + + Generally, files are written just as they are read. For exceptions, +see the `--sparse' option below. + + By default, `cp' does not copy directories. However, the `-R', +`-a', and `-r' options cause `cp' to copy recursively by descending +into source directories and copying files to corresponding destination +directories. + + By default, `cp' follows symbolic links only when not copying +recursively. This default can be overridden with the `--archive' +(`-a'), `-d', `--dereference' (`-L'), `--no-dereference' (`-P'), and +`-H' options. If more than one of these options is specified, the last +one silently overrides the others. + + By default, `cp' copies the contents of special files only when not +copying recursively. This default can be overridden with the +`--copy-contents' option. + + `cp' generally refuses to copy a file onto itself, with the +following exception: if `--force --backup' is specified with SOURCE and +DEST identical, and referring to a regular file, `cp' will make a +backup file, either regular or numbered, as specified in the usual ways +(*note Backup options::). This is useful when you simply want to make +a backup of an existing file before changing it. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-a' +`--archive' + Preserve as much as possible of the structure and attributes of the + original files in the copy (but do not attempt to preserve internal + directory structure; i.e., `ls -U' may list the entries in a copied + directory in a different order). Equivalent to `-dpPR'. + +`-b' +`--backup[=METHOD]' + *Note Backup options::. Make a backup of each file that would + otherwise be overwritten or removed. As a special case, `cp' + makes a backup of SOURCE when the force and backup options are + given and SOURCE and DEST are the same name for an existing, + regular file. One useful application of this combination of + options is this tiny Bourne shell script: + + #!/bin/sh + # Usage: backup FILE... + # Create a GNU-style backup of each listed FILE. + for i; do + cp --backup --force -- "$i" "$i" + done + +`--copy-contents' + If copying recursively, copy the contents of any special files + (e.g., FIFOs and device files) as if they were regular files. + This means trying to read the data in each source file and writing + it to the destination. It is usually a mistake to use this + option, as it normally has undesirable effects on special files + like FIFOs and the ones typically found in the `/dev' directory. + In most cases, `cp -R --copy-contents' will hang indefinitely + trying to read from FIFOs and special files like `/dev/console', + and it will fill up your destination disk if you use it to copy + `/dev/zero'. This option has no effect unless copying + recursively, and it does not affect the copying of symbolic links. + +`-d' + Copy symbolic links as symbolic links rather than copying the + files that they point to, and preserve hard links between source + files in the copies. Equivalent to `--no-dereference + --preserve=links'. + +`-f' +`--force' + When copying without this option and an existing destination file + cannot be opened for writing, the copy fails. However, with + `--force'), when a destination file cannot be opened, `cp' then + unlinks it and tries to open it again. Contrast this behavior + with that enabled by `--link' and `--symbolic-link', whereby the + destination file is never opened but rather is unlinked + unconditionally. Also see the description of + `--remove-destination'. + +`-H' + If a command line argument specifies a symbolic link, then copy the + file it points to rather than the symbolic link itself. However, + copy (preserving its nature) any symbolic link that is encountered + via recursive traversal. + +`-i' +`--interactive' + Prompt whether to overwrite existing regular destination files. + +`-l' +`--link' + Make hard links instead of copies of non-directories. + +`-L' +`--dereference' + Always follow symbolic links. + +`-P' +`--no-dereference' + Copy symbolic links as symbolic links rather than copying the + files that they point to. + +`-p' +`--preserve[=ATTRIBUTE_LIST]' + Preserve the specified attributes of the original files. If + specified, the ATTRIBUTE_LIST must be a comma-separated list of + one or more of the following strings: + + `mode' + Preserve the permission attributes. + + `ownership' + Preserve the owner and group. On most modern systems, only + the super-user may change the owner of a file, and regular + users may preserve the group ownership of a file only if they + happen to be a member of the desired group. + + `timestamps' + Preserve the times of last access and last modification. + + `links' + Preserve in the destination files any links between + corresponding source files. + + `all' + Preserve all file attributes. Equivalent to specifying all + of the above. + + Using `--preserve' with no ATTRIBUTE_LIST is equivalent to + `--preserve=mode,ownership,timestamps'. + + In the absence of this option, each destination file is created + with the permissions of the corresponding source file, minus the + bits set in the umask and minus the set-user-id and set-group-id + bits. *Note File permissions::. + +`--no-preserve=ATTRIBUTE_LIST' + Do not preserve the specified attributes. The ATTRIBUTE_LIST has + the same form as for `--preserve'. + +`--parents' + Form the name of each destination file by appending to the target + directory a slash and the specified name of the source file. The + last argument given to `cp' must be the name of an existing + directory. For example, the command: + + cp --parents a/b/c existing_dir + + copies the file `a/b/c' to `existing_dir/a/b/c', creating any + missing intermediate directories. + +`--reply[=HOW]' + Using `--reply=yes' makes `cp' act as if `yes' were given as a + response to every prompt about a destination file. That + effectively cancels any preceding `--interactive' or `-i' option. + Specify `--reply=no' to make `cp' act as if `no' were given as a + response to every prompt about a destination file. Specify + `--reply=query' to make `cp' prompt the user about each existing + destination file. + +`-R' +`-r' +`--recursive' + Copy directories recursively. Symbolic links are not followed by + default; see the `--archive' (`-a'), `-d', `--dereference' (`-L'), + `--no-dereference' (`-P'), and `-H' options. Special files are + copied by creating a destination file of the same type as the + source; see the `--copy-contents' option. It is not portable to + use `-r' to copy symbolic links or special files. On some non-GNU + systems, `-r' implies the equivalent of `-L' and `--copy-contents' + for historical reasons. Also, it is not portable to use `-R' to + copy symbolic links unless you also specify `-P', as POSIX allows + implementations that dereference symbolic links by default. + +`--remove-destination' + Remove each existing destination file before attempting to open it + (contrast with `-f' above). + +`--sparse=WHEN' + A "sparse file" contains "holes"--a sequence of zero bytes that + does not occupy any physical disk blocks; the `read' system call + reads these as zeroes. This can both save considerable disk space + and increase speed, since many binary files contain lots of + consecutive zero bytes. By default, `cp' detects holes in input + source files via a crude heuristic and makes the corresponding + output file sparse as well. Only regular files may be sparse. + + The WHEN value can be one of the following: + `auto' + The default behavior: if the input file is sparse, attempt to + make the output file sparse, too. However, if an output file + exists but refers to a non-regular file, then do not attempt + to make it sparse. + + `always' + For each sufficiently long sequence of zero bytes in the + input file, attempt to create a corresponding hole in the + output file, even if the input file does not appear to be + sparse. This is useful when the input file resides on a file + system that does not support sparse files (for example, + `efs' file systems in SGI IRIX 5.3 and earlier), but the + output file is on a type of file system that does support + them. Holes may be created only in regular files, so if the + destination file is of some other type, `cp' does not even + try to make it sparse. + + `never' + Never make the output file sparse. This is useful in + creating a file for use with the `mkswap' command, since such + a file must not have any holes. + +`--strip-trailing-slashes' + Remove any trailing slashes from each SOURCE argument. *Note + Trailing slashes::. + +`-s' +`--symbolic-link' + Make symbolic links instead of copies of non-directories. All + source file names must be absolute (starting with `/') unless the + destination files are in the current directory. This option merely + results in an error message on systems that do not support + symbolic links. + +`-S SUFFIX' +`--suffix=SUFFIX' + Append SUFFIX to each backup file made with `-b'. *Note Backup + options::. + +`-t DIRECTORY' +`--target-directory=DIRECTORY' + Specify the destination DIRECTORY. *Note Target directory::. + +`-T' +`--no-target-directory' + Do not treat the last operand specially when it is a directory or a + symbolic link to a directory. *Note Target directory::. + +`-u' +`--update' + Do not copy a non-directory that has an existing destination with + the same or newer modification time. If time stamps are being + preserved, the comparison is to the source time stamp truncated to + the resolutions of the destination file system and of the system + calls used to update time stamps; this avoids duplicate work if + several `cp -pu' commands are executed with the same source and + destination. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Print the name of each file before copying it. + +`-V METHOD' +`--version-control=METHOD' + Change the type of backups made with `-b'. The METHOD argument + can be `none' (or `off'), `numbered' (or `t'), `existing' (or + `nil'), or `never' (or `simple'). *Note Backup options::. + +`-x' +`--one-file-system' + Skip subdirectories that are on different file systems from the + one that the copy started on. However, mount point directories + _are_ copied. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: dd invocation, Next: install invocation, Prev: cp invocation, Up: Basic operations + +11.2 `dd': Convert and copy a file +================================== + +`dd' copies a file (from standard input to standard output, by default) +with a changeable I/O block size, while optionally performing +conversions on it. Synopses: + + dd [OPERAND]... + dd OPTION + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. `dd' accepts the following operands. + +`if=FILE' + Read from FILE instead of standard input. + +`of=FILE' + Write to FILE instead of standard output. Unless `conv=notrunc' + is given, `dd' truncates FILE to zero bytes (or the size specified + with `seek='). + +`ibs=BYTES' + Read BYTES bytes at a time. + +`obs=BYTES' + Write BYTES bytes at a time. + +`bs=BYTES' + Both read and write BYTES bytes at a time. This overrides `ibs' + and `obs'. + +`cbs=BYTES' + Convert BYTES bytes at a time. + +`skip=BLOCKS' + Skip BLOCKS `ibs'-byte blocks in the input file before copying. + +`seek=BLOCKS' + Skip BLOCKS `obs'-byte blocks in the output file before copying. + +`count=BLOCKS' + Copy BLOCKS `ibs'-byte blocks from the input file, instead of + everything until the end of the file. + +`conv=CONVERSION[,CONVERSION]...' + Convert the file as specified by the CONVERSION argument(s). (No + spaces around any comma(s).) + + Conversions: + + `ascii' + Convert EBCDIC to ASCII, using the conversion table specified + by POSIX. This provides a 1:1 translation for all 256 bytes. + + `ebcdic' + Convert ASCII to EBCDIC. This is the inverse of the `ascii' + conversion. + + `ibm' + Convert ASCII to alternate EBCDIC, using the alternate + conversion table specified by POSIX. This is not a 1:1 + translation, but reflects common historical practice for `~', + `[', and `]'. + + The `ascii', `ebcdic', and `ibm' conversions are mutually + exclusive. + + `block' + For each line in the input, output `cbs' bytes, replacing the + input newline with a space and padding with spaces as + necessary. + + `unblock' + Replace trailing spaces in each `cbs'-sized input block with a + newline. + + The `block' and `unblock' conversions are mutually exclusive. + + `lcase' + Change uppercase letters to lowercase. + + `ucase' + Change lowercase letters to uppercase. + + The `lcase' and `ucase' conversions are mutually exclusive. + + `swab' + Swap every pair of input bytes. GNU `dd', unlike others, + works when an odd number of bytes are read--the last byte is + simply copied (since there is nothing to swap it with). + + `noerror' + Continue after read errors. + + `nocreat' + Do not create the output file; the output file must already + exist. + + `excl' + Fail if the output file already exists; `dd' must create the + output file itself. + + The `excl' and `nocreat' conversions are mutually exclusive. + + `notrunc' + Do not truncate the output file. + + `sync' + Pad every input block to size of `ibs' with trailing zero + bytes. When used with `block' or `unblock', pad with spaces + instead of zero bytes. + + `fdatasync' + Synchronize output data just before finishing. This forces a + physical write of output data. + + `fsync' + Synchronize output data and metadata just before finishing. + This forces a physical write of output data and metadata. + + +`iflag=FLAG[,FLAG]...' + Access the input file using the flags specified by the FLAG + argument(s). (No spaces around any comma(s).) + +`oflag=FLAG[,FLAG]...' + Access the output file using the flags specified by the FLAG + argument(s). (No spaces around any comma(s).) + + Flags: + + `append' + Write in append mode, so that even if some other process is + writing to this file, every `dd' write will append to the + current contents of the file. This flag makes sense only for + output. + + `direct' + Use direct I/O for data, avoiding the buffer cache. + + `dsync' + Use synchronized I/O for data. For the output file, this + forces a physical write of output data on each write. For + the input file, this flag can matter when reading from a + remote file that has been written to synchronously by some + other process. Metadata (e.g., last-access and last-modified + time) is not necessarily synchronized. + + `sync' + Use synchronized I/O for both data and metadata. + + `nonblock' + Use non-blocking I/O. + + `nofollow' + Do not follow symbolic links. + + `noctty' + Do not assign the file to be a controlling terminal for `dd'. + This has no effect when the file is not a terminal. On many + hosts (e.g., GNU/Linux hosts), this option has no effect at + all. + + + These flags are not supported on all systems, and `dd' rejects + attempts to use them when they are not supported. When reading + from standard input or writing to standard output, the `nofollow' + and `noctty' flags should not be specified, and the other flags + (e.g., `nonblock') can affect how other processes behave with the + affected file descriptors, even after `dd' exits. + + + The numeric-valued strings above (BYTES and BLOCKS) can be followed +by a multiplier: `b'=512, `c'=1, `w'=2, `xM'=M, or any of the standard +block size suffixes like `k'=1024 (*note Block size::). + + Use different `dd' invocations to use different block sizes for +skipping and I/O. For example, the following shell commands copy data +in 512 KiB blocks between a disk and a tape, but do not save or restore +a 4 KiB label at the start of the disk: + + disk=/dev/rdsk/c0t1d0s2 + tape=/dev/rmt/0 + + # Copy all but the label from disk to tape. + (dd bs=4k skip=1 count=0 && dd bs=512k) <$disk >$tape + + # Copy from tape back to disk, but leave the disk label alone. + (dd bs=4k seek=1 count=0 && dd bs=512k) <$tape >$disk + + Note that sending a `SIGUSR1' signal to a running `dd' process makes +it print I/O statistics to standard error, then to resume copying. In +the example below, `dd' is run in the background to copy 10 million +blocks. The `kill' command makes it output intermediate I/O statistics, +and when `dd' completes, it outputs the final statistics. + + $ dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null count=10MB & pid=$! + $ kill -s USR1 $pid; wait $pid + 3385223+0 records in + 3385223+0 records out + 1733234176 bytes (1.7 GB) copied, 6.42173 seconds, 270 MB/s + 10000000+0 records in + 10000000+0 records out + 5120000000 bytes (5.1 GB) copied, 18.913 seconds, 271 MB/s + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: install invocation, Next: mv invocation, Prev: dd invocation, Up: Basic operations + +11.3 `install': Copy files and set attributes +============================================= + +`install' copies files while setting their permission modes and, if +possible, their owner and group. Synopses: + + install [OPTION]... [-T] SOURCE DEST + install [OPTION]... SOURCE... DIRECTORY + install [OPTION]... -t DIRECTORY SOURCE... + install [OPTION]... -d DIRECTORY... + + * If two file names are given, `install' copies the first file to the + second. + + * If the `--target-directory' (`-t') option is given, or failing + that if the last file is a directory and the + `--no-target-directory' (`-T') option is not given, `install' + copies each SOURCE file to the specified directory, using the + SOURCEs' names. + + * If the `--directory' (`-d') option is given, `install' creates + each DIRECTORY and any missing parent directories. + + `install' is similar to `cp', but allows you to control the +attributes of destination files. It is typically used in Makefiles to +copy programs into their destination directories. It refuses to copy +files onto themselves. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-b' +`--backup[=METHOD]' + *Note Backup options::. Make a backup of each file that would + otherwise be overwritten or removed. + +`-c' + Ignored; for compatibility with old Unix versions of `install'. + +`-d' +`--directory' + Create each given directory and any missing parent directories, + setting the owner, group and mode as given on the command line or + to the defaults. It also gives any parent directories it creates + those attributes. (This is different from the SunOS 4.x + `install', which gives directories that it creates the default + attributes.) + +`-g GROUP' +`--group=GROUP' + Set the group ownership of installed files or directories to + GROUP. The default is the process's current group. GROUP may be + either a group name or a numeric group id. + +`-m MODE' +`--mode=MODE' + Set the permissions for the installed file or directory to MODE, + which can be either an octal number, or a symbolic mode as in + `chmod', with 0 as the point of departure (*note File + permissions::). The default mode is `u=rwx,go=rx'--read, write, + and execute for the owner, and read and execute for group and + other. + +`-o OWNER' +`--owner=OWNER' + If `install' has appropriate privileges (is run as root), set the + ownership of installed files or directories to OWNER. The default + is `root'. OWNER may be either a user name or a numeric user ID. + +`-p' +`--preserve-timestamps' + Set the time of last access and the time of last modification of + each installed file to match those of each corresponding original + file. When a file is installed without this option, its last + access and last modification times are both set to the time of + installation. This option is useful if you want to use the last + modification times of installed files to keep track of when they + were last built as opposed to when they were last installed. + +`-s' +`--strip' + Strip the symbol tables from installed binary executables. + +`-S SUFFIX' +`--suffix=SUFFIX' + Append SUFFIX to each backup file made with `-b'. *Note Backup + options::. + +`-t DIRECTORY' +`--target-directory=DIRECTORY' + Specify the destination DIRECTORY. *Note Target directory::. + +`-T' +`--no-target-directory' + Do not treat the last operand specially when it is a directory or a + symbolic link to a directory. *Note Target directory::. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Print the name of each file before copying it. + +`-V METHOD' +`--version-control=METHOD' + Change the type of backups made with `-b'. The METHOD argument + can be `none' (or `off'), `numbered' (or `t'), `existing' (or + `nil'), or `never' (or `simple'). *Note Backup options::. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: mv invocation, Next: rm invocation, Prev: install invocation, Up: Basic operations + +11.4 `mv': Move (rename) files +============================== + +`mv' moves or renames files (or directories). Synopses: + + mv [OPTION]... [-T] SOURCE DEST + mv [OPTION]... SOURCE... DIRECTORY + mv [OPTION]... -t DIRECTORY SOURCE... + + * If two file names are given, `mv' moves the first file to the + second. + + * If the `--target-directory' (`-t') option is given, or failing + that if the last file is a directory and the + `--no-target-directory' (`-T') option is not given, `mv' moves + each SOURCE file to the specified directory, using the SOURCEs' + names. + + `mv' can move any type of file from one file system to another. +Prior to version `4.0' of the fileutils, `mv' could move only regular +files between file systems. For example, now `mv' can move an entire +directory hierarchy including special device files from one partition +to another. It first uses some of the same code that's used by `cp -a' +to copy the requested directories and files, then (assuming the copy +succeeded) it removes the originals. If the copy fails, then the part +that was copied to the destination partition is removed. If you were +to copy three directories from one partition to another and the copy of +the first directory succeeded, but the second didn't, the first would +be left on the destination partition and the second and third would be +left on the original partition. + + If a destination file exists but is normally unwritable, standard +input is a terminal, and the `-f' or `--force' option is not given, +`mv' prompts the user for whether to replace the file. (You might own +the file, or have write permission on its directory.) If the response +is not affirmative, the file is skipped. + + _Warning_: If you try to move a symlink that points to a directory, +and you specify the symlink with a trailing slash, then `mv' doesn't +move the symlink but instead moves the directory referenced by the +symlink. *Note Trailing slashes::. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-b' +`--backup[=METHOD]' + *Note Backup options::. Make a backup of each file that would + otherwise be overwritten or removed. + +`-f' +`--force' + Do not prompt the user before removing a destination file. + +`-i' +`--interactive' + Prompt whether to overwrite each existing destination file, + regardless of its permissions. If the response is not + affirmative, the file is skipped. + +`--reply[=HOW]' + Specifying `--reply=yes' is equivalent to using `--force'. + Specify `--reply=no' to make `mv' act as if `no' were given as a + response to every prompt about a destination file. Specify + `--reply=query' to make `mv' prompt the user about each existing + destination file. + +`-u' +`--update' + Do not move a non-directory that has an existing destination with + the same or newer modification time. If the move is across file + system boundaries, the comparison is to the source time stamp + truncated to the resolutions of the destination file system and of + the system calls used to update time stamps; this avoids duplicate + work if several `mv -u' commands are executed with the same source + and destination. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Print the name of each file before moving it. + +`--strip-trailing-slashes' + Remove any trailing slashes from each SOURCE argument. *Note + Trailing slashes::. + +`-S SUFFIX' +`--suffix=SUFFIX' + Append SUFFIX to each backup file made with `-b'. *Note Backup + options::. + +`-t DIRECTORY' +`--target-directory=DIRECTORY' + Specify the destination DIRECTORY. *Note Target directory::. + +`-T' +`--no-target-directory' + Do not treat the last operand specially when it is a directory or a + symbolic link to a directory. *Note Target directory::. + +`-V METHOD' +`--version-control=METHOD' + Change the type of backups made with `-b'. The METHOD argument + can be `none' (or `off'), `numbered' (or `t'), `existing' (or + `nil'), or `never' (or `simple'). *Note Backup options::. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: rm invocation, Next: shred invocation, Prev: mv invocation, Up: Basic operations + +11.5 `rm': Remove files or directories +====================================== + +`rm' removes each given FILE. By default, it does not remove +directories. Synopsis: + + rm [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + If a file is unwritable, standard input is a terminal, and the `-f' +or `--force' option is not given, or the `-i' or `--interactive' option +_is_ given, `rm' prompts the user for whether to remove the file. If +the response is not affirmative, the file is skipped. + + _Warning_: If you use `rm' to remove a file, it is usually possible +to recover the contents of that file. If you want more assurance that +the contents are truly unrecoverable, consider using `shred'. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-d' +`--directory' + Use the `unlink' function unconditionally rather than attempting + to check whether the file is a directory and using `rmdir' if it + is a directory. This can be useful on corrupted file systems where + `unlink' works even though other, file-checking functions fail. + For directories, this works only if you have appropriate + privileges and if your operating system supports `unlink' for + directories. Because unlinking a directory causes any files in + the deleted directory to become unreferenced, it is wise to `fsck' + the file system afterwards. + +`-f' +`--force' + Ignore nonexistent files and never prompt the user. Ignore any + previous `--interactive' (`-i') option. + +`-i' +`--interactive' + Prompt whether to remove each file. If the response is not + affirmative, the file is skipped. Ignore any previous `--force' + (`-f') option. + +`--preserve-root' + Fail upon any attempt to remove the file system root, `/', when + used with the `--recursive' option. Without `--recursive', this + option has no effect. *Note Treating / specially::. + +`--no-preserve-root' + Cancel the effect of any preceding `--preserve-root' option. + *Note Treating / specially::. + +`-r' +`-R' +`--recursive' + Remove the contents of directories recursively. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Print the name of each file before removing it. + + + One common question is how to remove files whose names begin with a +`-'. GNU `rm', like every program that uses the `getopt' function to +parse its arguments, lets you use the `--' option to indicate that all +following arguments are non-options. To remove a file called `-f' in +the current directory, you could type either: + + rm -- -f + +or: + + rm ./-f + + The Unix `rm' program's use of a single `-' for this purpose +predates the development of the getopt standard syntax. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: shred invocation, Prev: rm invocation, Up: Basic operations + +11.6 `shred': Remove files more securely +======================================== + +`shred' overwrites devices or files, to help prevent even very +expensive hardware from recovering the data. + + Ordinarily when you remove a file (*note rm invocation::), the data +is not actually destroyed. Only the index listing where the file is +stored is destroyed, and the storage is made available for reuse. +There are undelete utilities that will attempt to reconstruct the index +and can bring the file back if the parts were not reused. + + On a busy system with a nearly-full drive, space can get reused in a +few seconds. But there is no way to know for sure. If you have +sensitive data, you may want to be sure that recovery is not possible +by actually overwriting the file with non-sensitive data. + + However, even after doing that, it is possible to take the disk back +to a laboratory and use a lot of sensitive (and expensive) equipment to +look for the faint "echoes" of the original data underneath the +overwritten data. If the data has only been overwritten once, it's not +even that hard. + + The best way to remove something irretrievably is to destroy the +media it's on with acid, melt it down, or the like. For cheap +removable media like floppy disks, this is the preferred method. +However, hard drives are expensive and hard to melt, so the `shred' +utility tries to achieve a similar effect non-destructively. + + This uses many overwrite passes, with the data patterns chosen to +maximize the damage they do to the old data. While this will work on +floppies, the patterns are designed for best effect on hard drives. +For more details, see the source code and Peter Gutmann's paper `Secure +Deletion of Data from Magnetic and Solid-State Memory' +(http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/secure_del.html), from the +proceedings of the Sixth USENIX Security Symposium (San Jose, +California, July 22-25, 1996). + + *Please note* that `shred' relies on a very important assumption: +that the file system overwrites data in place. This is the traditional +way to do things, but many modern file system designs do not satisfy +this assumption. Exceptions include: + + * Log-structured or journaled file systems, such as those supplied + with AIX and Solaris, and JFS, ReiserFS, XFS, Ext3, BFS, NTFS etc. + when they are configured to journal _data_. + + * File systems that write redundant data and carry on even if some + writes fail, such as RAID-based file systems. + + * File systems that make snapshots, such as Network Appliance's NFS + server. + + * File systems that cache in temporary locations, such as NFS + version 3 clients. + + * Compressed file systems. + + If you are not sure how your file system operates, then you should +assume that it does not overwrite data in place, which means that shred +cannot reliably operate on regular files in your file system. + + Generally speaking, it is more reliable to shred a device than a +file, since this bypasses the problem of file system design mentioned +above. However, even shredding devices is not always completely +reliable. For example, most disks map out bad sectors invisibly to the +application; if the bad sectors contain sensitive data, `shred' won't +be able to destroy it. + + `shred' makes no attempt to detect or report this problem, just as +it makes no attempt to do anything about backups. However, since it is +more reliable to shred devices than files, `shred' by default does not +truncate or remove the output file. This default is more suitable for +devices, which typically cannot be truncated and should not be removed. + + Finally, consider the risk of backups and mirrors. File system +backups and remote mirrors may contain copies of the file that cannot +be removed, and that will allow a shredded file to be recovered later. +So if you keep any data you may later want to destroy using `shred', be +sure that it is not backed up or mirrored. + + shred [OPTION]... FILE[...] + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-f' +`--force' + Override file permissions if necessary to allow overwriting. + +`-NUMBER' +`-n NUMBER' +`--iterations=NUMBER' + By default, `shred' uses 25 passes of overwrite. This is enough + for all of the useful overwrite patterns to be used at least once. + You can reduce this to save time, or increase it if you have a lot + of time to waste. + +`-s BYTES' +`--size=BYTES' + Shred the first BYTES bytes of the file. The default is to shred + the whole file. BYTES can be followed by a size specification like + `K', `M', or `G' to specify a multiple. *Note Block size::. + +`-u' +`--remove' + After shredding a file, truncate it (if possible) and then remove + it. If a file has multiple links, only the named links will be + removed. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Display status updates as sterilization proceeds. + +`-x' +`--exact' + By default, `shred' rounds the size of a regular file up to the + next multiple of the file system block size to fully erase the + last block of the file. Use `--exact' to suppress that behavior. + Thus, by default if you shred a 10-byte regular file on a system + with 512-byte blocks, the resulting file will be 512 bytes long. + With this option, shred does not increase the apparent size of the + file. + +`-z' +`--zero' + Normally, the last pass that `shred' writes is made up of random + data. If this would be conspicuous on your hard drive (for + example, because it looks like encrypted data), or you just think + it's tidier, the `--zero' option adds an additional overwrite pass + with all zero bits. This is in addition to the number of passes + specified by the `--iterations' option. + + + You might use the following command to erase all trace of the file +system you'd created on the floppy disk in your first drive. That +command takes about 20 minutes to erase a "1.44MB" (actually 1440 KiB) +floppy. + + shred --verbose /dev/fd0 + + Similarly, to erase all data on a selected partition of your hard +disk, you could give a command like this: + + shred --verbose /dev/sda5 + + A FILE of `-' denotes standard output. The intended use of this is +to shred a removed temporary file. For example: + + i=`tempfile -m 0600` + exec 3<>"$i" + rm -- "$i" + echo "Hello, world" >&3 + shred - >&3 + exec 3>- + + However, the command `shred - >file' does not shred the contents of +FILE, since the shell truncates FILE before invoking `shred'. Use the +command `shred file' or (if using a Bourne-compatible shell) the +command `shred - 1<>file' instead. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Special file types, Next: Changing file attributes, Prev: Basic operations, Up: Top + +12 Special file types +********************* + +This chapter describes commands which create special types of files (and +`rmdir', which removes directories, one special file type). + + Although Unix-like operating systems have markedly fewer special file +types than others, not _everything_ can be treated only as the +undifferentiated byte stream of "normal files". For example, when a +file is created or removed, the system must record this information, +which it does in a "directory"--a special type of file. Although you +can read directories as normal files, if you're curious, in order for +the system to do its job it must impose a structure, a certain order, +on the bytes of the file. Thus it is a "special" type of file. + + Besides directories, other special file types include named pipes +(FIFOs), symbolic links, sockets, and so-called "special files". + +* Menu: + +* link invocation:: Make a hard link via the link syscall +* ln invocation:: Make links between files. +* mkdir invocation:: Make directories. +* mkfifo invocation:: Make FIFOs (named pipes). +* mknod invocation:: Make block or character special files. +* readlink invocation:: Print the referent of a symbolic link. +* rmdir invocation:: Remove empty directories. +* unlink invocation:: Remove files via the unlink syscall + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: link invocation, Next: ln invocation, Up: Special file types + +12.1 `link': Make a hard link via the link syscall +================================================== + +`link' creates a single hard link at a time. It is a minimalist +interface to the system-provided `link' function. *Note Hard Links: +(libc)Hard Links. It avoids the bells and whistles of the more +commonly-used `ln' command (*note ln invocation::). Synopsis: + + link FILENAME LINKNAME + + FILENAME must specify an existing file, and LINKNAME must specify a +nonexistent entry in an existing directory. `link' simply calls `link +(FILENAME, LINKNAME)' to create the link. + + On a GNU system, this command acts like `ln --directory +--no-target-directory FILENAME LINKNAME'. However, the `--directory' +and `--no-target-directory' options are not specified by POSIX, and the +`link' command is more portable in practice. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: ln invocation, Next: mkdir invocation, Prev: link invocation, Up: Special file types + +12.2 `ln': Make links between files +=================================== + +`ln' makes links between files. By default, it makes hard links; with +the `-s' option, it makes symbolic (or "soft") links. Synopses: + + ln [OPTION]... [-T] TARGET LINKNAME + ln [OPTION]... TARGET + ln [OPTION]... TARGET... DIRECTORY + ln [OPTION]... -t DIRECTORY TARGET... + + * If two file names are given, `ln' creates a link to the first file + from the second. + + * If one TARGET is given, `ln' creates a link to that file in the + current directory. + + * If the `--target-directory' (`-t') option is given, or failing + that if the last file is a directory and the + `--no-target-directory' (`-T') option is not given, `ln' creates a + link to each TARGET file in the specified directory, using the + TARGETs' names. + + + Normally `ln' does not remove existing files. Use the `--force' +(`-f') option to remove them unconditionally, the `--interactive' +(`-i') option to remove them conditionally, and the `--backup' (`-b') +option to rename them. + + A "hard link" is another name for an existing file; the link and the +original are indistinguishable. Technically speaking, they share the +same inode, and the inode contains all the information about a +file--indeed, it is not incorrect to say that the inode _is_ the file. +On all existing implementations, you cannot make a hard link to a +directory, and hard links cannot cross file system boundaries. (These +restrictions are not mandated by POSIX, however.) + + "Symbolic links" ("symlinks" for short), on the other hand, are a +special file type (which not all kernels support: System V release 3 +(and older) systems lack symlinks) in which the link file actually +refers to a different file, by name. When most operations (opening, +reading, writing, and so on) are passed the symbolic link file, the +kernel automatically "dereferences" the link and operates on the target +of the link. But some operations (e.g., removing) work on the link +file itself, rather than on its target. *Note Symbolic Links: +(libc)Symbolic Links. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-b' +`--backup[=METHOD]' + *Note Backup options::. Make a backup of each file that would + otherwise be overwritten or removed. + +`-d' +`-F' +`--directory' + Allow the super-user to attempt to make hard links to directories. + However, note that this will probably fail due to system + restrictions, even for the super-user. + +`-f' +`--force' + Remove existing destination files. + +`-i' +`--interactive' + Prompt whether to remove existing destination files. + +`-n' +`--no-dereference' + Do not treat the last operand specially when it is a symbolic link + to a directory. Instead, treat it as if it were a normal file. + + When the destination is an actual directory (not a symlink to one), + there is no ambiguity. The link is created in that directory. + But when the specified destination is a symlink to a directory, + there are two ways to treat the user's request. `ln' can treat + the destination just as it would a normal directory and create the + link in it. On the other hand, the destination can be viewed as a + non-directory--as the symlink itself. In that case, `ln' must + delete or backup that symlink before creating the new link. The + default is to treat a destination that is a symlink to a directory + just like a directory. + + This option is weaker than the `--no-target-directory' (`-T') + option, so it has no effect if both options are given. + +`-s' +`--symbolic' + Make symbolic links instead of hard links. This option merely + produces an error message on systems that do not support symbolic + links. + +`-S SUFFIX' +`--suffix=SUFFIX' + Append SUFFIX to each backup file made with `-b'. *Note Backup + options::. + +`-t DIRECTORY' +`--target-directory=DIRECTORY' + Specify the destination DIRECTORY. *Note Target directory::. + +`-T' +`--no-target-directory' + Do not treat the last operand specially when it is a directory or a + symbolic link to a directory. *Note Target directory::. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Print the name of each file before linking it. + +`-V METHOD' +`--version-control=METHOD' + Change the type of backups made with `-b'. The METHOD argument + can be `none' (or `off'), `numbered' (or `t'), `existing' (or + `nil'), or `never' (or `simple'). *Note Backup options::. + + + Examples: + + ln -s /some/name # creates link ./name pointing to /some/name + ln -s /some/name myname # creates link ./myname pointing to /some/name + ln -s a b .. # creates links ../a and ../b pointing to ./a and ./b + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: mkdir invocation, Next: mkfifo invocation, Prev: ln invocation, Up: Special file types + +12.3 `mkdir': Make directories +============================== + +`mkdir' creates directories with the specified names. Synopsis: + + mkdir [OPTION]... NAME... + + If a NAME is an existing file but not a directory, `mkdir' prints a +warning message on stderr and will exit with a status of 1 after +processing any remaining NAMEs. The same is done when a NAME is an +existing directory and the -p option is not given. If a NAME is an +existing directory and the -p option is given, `mkdir' will ignore it. +That is, `mkdir' will not print a warning, raise an error, or change +the mode of the directory (even if the -m option is given), and will +move on to processing any remaining NAMEs. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-m MODE' +`--mode=MODE' + Set the mode of created directories to MODE, which is symbolic as + in `chmod' and uses `a=rwx' (read, write and execute allowed for + everyone) minus the bits set in the umask for the point of the + departure. *Note File permissions::. + +`-p' +`--parents' + Make any missing parent directories for each argument. The mode + for parent directories is set to the umask modified by `u+wx'. + Ignore arguments corresponding to existing directories. + +`-v' + +`--verbose' + Print a message for each created directory. This is most useful + with `--parents'. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: mkfifo invocation, Next: mknod invocation, Prev: mkdir invocation, Up: Special file types + +12.4 `mkfifo': Make FIFOs (named pipes) +======================================= + +`mkfifo' creates FIFOs (also called "named pipes") with the specified +names. Synopsis: + + mkfifo [OPTION] NAME... + + A "FIFO" is a special file type that permits independent processes +to communicate. One process opens the FIFO file for writing, and +another for reading, after which data can flow as with the usual +anonymous pipe in shells or elsewhere. + + The program accepts the following option. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-m MODE' +`--mode=MODE' + Set the mode of created FIFOs to MODE, which is symbolic as in + `chmod' and uses `a=rw' (read and write allowed for everyone) minus + the bits set in the umask for the point of departure. *Note File + permissions::. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: mknod invocation, Next: readlink invocation, Prev: mkfifo invocation, Up: Special file types + +12.5 `mknod': Make block or character special files +=================================================== + +`mknod' creates a FIFO, character special file, or block special file +with the specified name. Synopsis: + + mknod [OPTION]... NAME TYPE [MAJOR MINOR] + + Unlike the phrase "special file type" above, the term "special file" +has a technical meaning on Unix: something that can generate or receive +data. Usually this corresponds to a physical piece of hardware, e.g., +a printer or a disk. (These files are typically created at +system-configuration time.) The `mknod' command is what creates files +of this type. Such devices can be read either a character at a time or +a "block" (many characters) at a time, hence we say there are "block +special" files and "character special" files. + + The arguments after NAME specify the type of file to make: + +`p' + for a FIFO + +`b' + for a block special file + +`c' + for a character special file + + + When making a block or character special file, the major and minor +device numbers must be given after the file type. If a major or minor +device number begins with `0x' or `0X', it is interpreted as +hexadecimal; otherwise, if it begins with `0', as octal; otherwise, as +decimal. + + The program accepts the following option. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-m MODE' +`--mode=MODE' + Set the mode of created files to MODE, which is symbolic as in + `chmod' and uses `a=rw' minus the bits set in the umask as the + point of departure. *Note File permissions::. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: readlink invocation, Next: rmdir invocation, Prev: mknod invocation, Up: Special file types + +12.6 `readlink': Print the referent of a symbolic link +====================================================== + +`readlink' may work in one of two supported modes: + +`Readlink mode' + `readlink' outputs the value of the given symbolic link. If + `readlink' is invoked with an argument other than the name of a + symbolic link, it produces no output and exits with a nonzero exit + code. + +`Canonicalize mode' + `readlink' outputs the absolute name of the given file which + contains no `.', `..' components nor any repeated separators (`/') + or symbolic links. + + + readlink [OPTION] FILE + + By default, `readlink' operates in readlink mode. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-f' +`--canonicalize' + Activate canonicalize mode. If any path component except the last + one is missing or unavailable, `readlink' produces no output and + exits with a nonzero exit code. + +`-e' +`--canonicalize-existing' + Activate canonicalize mode. If any path component is missing or + unavailable, `readlink' produces no output and exits with a + nonzero exit code. + +`-m' +`--canonicalize-missing' + Activate canonicalize mode. If any path component is missing or + unavailable, `readlink' treats it as a directory. + +`-n' +`--no-newline' + Do not output the trailing newline. + +`-s' +`-q' +`--silent' +`--quiet' + Suppress most error messages. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Report error messages. + + + The `readlink' utility first appeared in OpenBSD 2.1. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: rmdir invocation, Next: unlink invocation, Prev: readlink invocation, Up: Special file types + +12.7 `rmdir': Remove empty directories +====================================== + +`rmdir' removes empty directories. Synopsis: + + rmdir [OPTION]... DIRECTORY... + + If any DIRECTORY argument does not refer to an existing empty +directory, it is an error. + + The program accepts the following option. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`--ignore-fail-on-non-empty' + Ignore each failure to remove a directory that is solely because + the directory is non-empty. + +`-p' +`--parents' + Remove DIRECTORY, then try to remove each component of DIRECTORY. + So, for example, `rmdir -p a/b/c' is similar to `rmdir a/b/c a/b + a'. As such, it fails if any of those directories turns out not + to be empty. Use the `--ignore-fail-on-non-empty' option to make + it so such a failure does not evoke a diagnostic and does not + cause `rmdir' to exit unsuccessfully. + +`-v' + +`--verbose' + Give a diagnostic for each successful removal. DIRECTORY is + removed. + + + *Note rm invocation::, for how to remove non-empty directories +(recursively). + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: unlink invocation, Prev: rmdir invocation, Up: Special file types + +12.8 `unlink': Remove files via the unlink syscall +================================================== + +`unlink' deletes a single specified file name. It is a minimalist +interface to the system-provided `unlink' function. *Note Deleting +Files: (libc)Deleting Files. Synopsis: It avoids the bells and +whistles of the more commonly-used `rm' command (*note rm invocation::). + + unlink FILENAME + + On some systems `unlink' can be used to delete the name of a +directory. On others, it can be used that way only by a privileged +user. In the GNU system `unlink' can never delete the name of a +directory. + + The `unlink' command honors the `--help' and `--version' options. +To remove a file whose name begins with `-', prefix the name with `./', +e.g., `unlink ./--help'. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Changing file attributes, Next: Disk usage, Prev: Special file types, Up: Top + +13 Changing file attributes +*************************** + +A file is not merely its contents, a name, and a file type (*note +Special file types::). A file also has an owner (a userid), a group (a +group id), permissions (what the owner can do with the file, what +people in the group can do, and what everyone else can do), various +timestamps, and other information. Collectively, we call these a file's +"attributes". + + These commands change file attributes. + +* Menu: + +* chgrp invocation:: Change file groups. +* chmod invocation:: Change access permissions. +* chown invocation:: Change file owners and groups. +* touch invocation:: Change file timestamps. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: chown invocation, Next: touch invocation, Prev: chmod invocation, Up: Changing file attributes + +13.1 `chown': Change file owner and group +========================================= + +`chown' changes the user and/or group ownership of each given FILE to +NEW-OWNER or to the user and group of an existing reference file. +Synopsis: + + chown [OPTION]... {NEW-OWNER | --reference=REF_FILE} FILE... + + If used, NEW-OWNER specifies the new owner and/or group as follows +(with no embedded white space): + + [OWNER] [ : [GROUP] ] + + Specifically: + +OWNER + If only an OWNER (a user name or numeric user id) is given, that + user is made the owner of each given file, and the files' group is + not changed. + +OWNER`:'GROUP + If the OWNER is followed by a colon and a GROUP (a group name or + numeric group id), with no spaces between them, the group + ownership of the files is changed as well (to GROUP). + +OWNER`:' + If a colon but no group name follows OWNER, that user is made the + owner of the files and the group of the files is changed to + OWNER's login group. + +`:'GROUP + If the colon and following GROUP are given, but the owner is + omitted, only the group of the files is changed; in this case, + `chown' performs the same function as `chgrp'. + +`:' + If only a colon is given, or if NEW-OWNER is empty, neither the + owner nor the group is changed. + + + Some older scripts may still use `.' in place of the `:' separator. +POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) does not require +support for that, but for backward compatibility GNU `chown' supports +`.' so long as no ambiguity results. New scripts should avoid the use +of `.' because it is not portable, and because it has undesirable +results if the entire OWNER`.'GROUP happens to identify a user whose +name contains `.'. + + The `chown' command sometimes clears the set-user-ID or set-group-ID +permission bits. This behavior depends on the policy and functionality +of the underlying `chown' system call, which may make system-dependent +file mode modifications outside the control of the `chown' command. +For example, the `chown' command might not affect those bits when +operated as the superuser, or if the bits signify some function other +than executable permission (e.g., mandatory locking). When in doubt, +check the underlying system behavior. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-c' +`--changes' + Verbosely describe the action for each FILE whose ownership + actually changes. + +`-f' +`--silent' +`--quiet' + Do not print error messages about files whose ownership cannot be + changed. + +`--from=OLD-OWNER' + Change a FILE's ownership only if it has current attributes + specified by OLD-OWNER. OLD-OWNER has the same form as NEW-OWNER + described above. This option is useful primarily from a security + standpoint in that it narrows considerably the window of potential + abuse. For example, to reflect a UID numbering change for one + user's files without an option like this, `root' might run + + find / -owner OLDUSER -print0 | xargs -0 chown -h NEWUSER + + But that is dangerous because the interval between when the `find' + tests the existing file's owner and when the `chown' is actually + run may be quite large. One way to narrow the gap would be to + invoke chown for each file as it is found: + + find / -owner OLDUSER -exec chown -h NEWUSER {} \; + + But that is very slow if there are many affected files. With this + option, it is safer (the gap is narrower still) though still not + perfect: + + chown -h -R --from=OLDUSER NEWUSER / + +`--dereference' + Do not act on symbolic links themselves but rather on what they + point to. This is the default. + +`-h' +`--no-dereference' + Act on symbolic links themselves instead of what they point to. + This mode relies on the `lchown' system call. On systems that do + not provide the `lchown' system call, `chown' fails when a file + specified on the command line is a symbolic link. By default, no + diagnostic is issued for symbolic links encountered during a + recursive traversal, but see `--verbose'. + +`--preserve-root' + Fail upon any attempt to recursively change the file system root, + `/'. Without `--recursive', this option has no effect. *Note + Treating / specially::. + +`--no-preserve-root' + Cancel the effect of any preceding `--preserve-root' option. + *Note Treating / specially::. + +`--reference=REF_FILE' + Change the user and group of each FILE to be the same as those of + REF_FILE. If REF_FILE is a symbolic link, do not use the user and + group of the symbolic link, but rather those of the file it refers + to. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Output a diagnostic for every file processed. If a symbolic link + is encountered during a recursive traversal on a system without + the `lchown' system call, and `--no-dereference' is in effect, + then issue a diagnostic saying neither the symbolic link nor its + referent is being changed. + +`-R' +`--recursive' + Recursively change ownership of directories and their contents. + +`-H' + If `--recursive' (`-R') is specified and a command line argument + is a symbolic link to a directory, traverse it. *Note Traversing + symlinks::. + +`-L' + In a recursive traversal, traverse every symbolic link to a + directory that is encountered. *Note Traversing symlinks::. + +`-P' + Do not traverse any symbolic links. This is the default if none + of `-H', `-L', or `-P' is specified. *Note Traversing symlinks::. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: chgrp invocation, Next: chmod invocation, Up: Changing file attributes + +13.2 `chgrp': Change group ownership +==================================== + +`chgrp' changes the group ownership of each given FILE to GROUP (which +can be either a group name or a numeric group id) or to the group of an +existing reference file. Synopsis: + + chgrp [OPTION]... {GROUP | --reference=REF_FILE} FILE... + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-c' +`--changes' + Verbosely describe the action for each FILE whose group actually + changes. + +`-f' +`--silent' +`--quiet' + Do not print error messages about files whose group cannot be + changed. + +`--dereference' + Do not act on symbolic links themselves but rather on what they + point to. This is the default. + +`-h' +`--no-dereference' + Act on symbolic links themselves instead of what they point to. + This mode relies on the `lchown' system call. On systems that do + not provide the `lchown' system call, `chgrp' fails when a file + specified on the command line is a symbolic link. By default, no + diagnostic is issued for symbolic links encountered during a + recursive traversal, but see `--verbose'. + +`--preserve-root' + Fail upon any attempt to recursively change the file system root, + `/'. Without `--recursive', this option has no effect. *Note + Treating / specially::. + +`--no-preserve-root' + Cancel the effect of any preceding `--preserve-root' option. + *Note Treating / specially::. + +`--reference=REF_FILE' + Change the group of each FILE to be the same as that of REF_FILE. + If REF_FILE is a symbolic link, do not use the group of the + symbolic link, but rather that of the file it refers to. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Output a diagnostic for every file processed. If a symbolic link + is encountered during a recursive traversal on a system without + the `lchown' system call, and `--no-dereference' is in effect, + then issue a diagnostic saying neither the symbolic link nor its + referent is being changed. + +`-R' +`--recursive' + Recursively change the group ownership of directories and their + contents. + +`-H' + If `--recursive' (`-R') is specified and a command line argument + is a symbolic link to a directory, traverse it. *Note Traversing + symlinks::. + +`-L' + In a recursive traversal, traverse every symbolic link to a + directory that is encountered. *Note Traversing symlinks::. + +`-P' + Do not traverse any symbolic links. This is the default if none + of `-H', `-L', or `-P' is specified. *Note Traversing symlinks::. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: chmod invocation, Next: chown invocation, Prev: chgrp invocation, Up: Changing file attributes + +13.3 `chmod': Change access permissions +======================================= + +`chmod' changes the access permissions of the named files. Synopsis: + + chmod [OPTION]... {MODE | --reference=REF_FILE} FILE... + + `chmod' never changes the permissions of symbolic links, since the +`chmod' system call cannot change their permissions. This is not a +problem since the permissions of symbolic links are never used. +However, for each symbolic link listed on the command line, `chmod' +changes the permissions of the pointed-to file. In contrast, `chmod' +ignores symbolic links encountered during recursive directory +traversals. + + If used, MODE specifies the new permissions. For details, see the +section on *Note File permissions::. In the extremely rare cases where +MODE has leading `-', a portable script should use `--' first, e.g., +`chmod -- -w file'. Typically, though, `chmod a-w file' is preferable. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-c' +`--changes' + Verbosely describe the action for each FILE whose permissions + actually changes. + +`-f' +`--silent' +`--quiet' + Do not print error messages about files whose permissions cannot be + changed. + +`--preserve-root' + Fail upon any attempt to recursively change the file system root, + `/'. Without `--recursive', this option has no effect. *Note + Treating / specially::. + +`--no-preserve-root' + Cancel the effect of any preceding `--preserve-root' option. + *Note Treating / specially::. + +`-v' +`--verbose' + Verbosely describe the action or non-action taken for every FILE. + +`--reference=REF_FILE' + Change the mode of each FILE to be the same as that of REF_FILE. + *Note File permissions::. If REF_FILE is a symbolic link, do not + use the mode of the symbolic link, but rather that of the file it + refers to. + +`-R' +`--recursive' + Recursively change permissions of directories and their contents. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: touch invocation, Prev: chown invocation, Up: Changing file attributes + +13.4 `touch': Change file timestamps +==================================== + +`touch' changes the access and/or modification times of the specified +files. Synopsis: + + touch [OPTION]... FILE... + + On older systems, `touch' supports an obsolete syntax, as follows. +If the first FILE would be a valid argument to the `-t' option and no +timestamp is given with any of the `-d', `-r', or `-t' options and the +`--' argument is not given, that argument is interpreted as the time +for the other files instead of as a file name. POSIX 1003.1-2001 +(*note Standards conformance::) does not allow this; use `-t' instead. + + Any FILE that does not exist is created empty. + + If changing both the access and modification times to the current +time, `touch' can change the timestamps for files that the user running +it does not own but has write permission for. Otherwise, the user must +own the files. + + Although `touch' provides options for changing two of the times--the +times of last access and modification--of a file, there is actually a +third one as well: the inode change time. This is often referred to as +a file's `ctime'. The inode change time represents the time when the +file's meta-information last changed. One common example of this is +when the permissions of a file change. Changing the permissions +doesn't access the file, so the atime doesn't change, nor does it +modify the file, so the mtime doesn't change. Yet, something about the +file itself has changed, and this must be noted somewhere. This is the +job of the ctime field. This is necessary, so that, for example, a +backup program can make a fresh copy of the file, including the new +permissions value. Another operation that modifies a file's ctime +without affecting the others is renaming. In any case, it is not +possible, in normal operations, for a user to change the ctime field to +a user-specified value. + + Time stamps assume the time zone rules specified by the `TZ' +environment variable, or by the system default rules if `TZ' is not +set. *Note Specifying the Time Zone with `TZ': (libc)TZ Variable. You +can avoid avoid ambiguities during daylight saving transitions by using +UTC time stamps. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-a' +`--time=atime' +`--time=access' +`--time=use' + Change the access time only. + +`-c' +`--no-create' + Do not create files that do not exist. + +`-d' +`--date=TIME' + Use TIME instead of the current time. It can contain month names, + time zones, `am' and `pm', `yesterday', etc. For example, + `--date="2004-02-27 14:19:13.489392193 +0530"' specifies the + instant of time that is 489,392,193 nanoseconds after February 27, + 2004 at 2:19:13 PM in a time zone that is 5 hours and 30 minutes + east of UTC. *Note Date input formats::. File systems that do + not support high-resolution time stamps silently ignore any excess + precision here. + +`-f' + Ignored; for compatibility with BSD versions of `touch'. + +`-m' +`--time=mtime' +`--time=modify' + Change the modification time only. + +`-r FILE' +`--reference=FILE' + Use the times of the reference FILE instead of the current time. + If this option is combined with the `--date=TIME' (`-d TIME') + option, the reference FILE's time is the origin for any relative + TIMEs given, but is otherwise ignored. For example, `-r foo -d + '-5 seconds'' specifies a time stamp equal to five seconds before + the corresponding time stamp for `foo'. + +`-t [[CC]YY]MMDDhhmm[.ss]' + Use the argument (optional four-digit or two-digit years, months, + days, hours, minutes, optional seconds) instead of the current + time. If the year is specified with only two digits, then CC is + 20 for years in the range 0 ... 68, and 19 for years in 69 ... 99. + If no digits of the year are specified, the argument is + interpreted as a date in the current year. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Disk usage, Next: Printing text, Prev: Changing file attributes, Up: Top + +14 Disk usage +************* + +No disk can hold an infinite amount of data. These commands report on +how much disk storage is in use or available. (This has nothing much to +do with how much _main memory_, i.e., RAM, a program is using when it +runs; for that, you want `ps' or `pstat' or `swap' or some such +command.) + +* Menu: + +* df invocation:: Report file system disk space usage. +* du invocation:: Estimate file space usage. +* stat invocation:: Report file or file system status. +* sync invocation:: Synchronize memory and disk. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: df invocation, Next: du invocation, Up: Disk usage + +14.1 `df': Report file system disk space usage +============================================== + +`df' reports the amount of disk space used and available on file +systems. Synopsis: + + df [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + With no arguments, `df' reports the space used and available on all +currently mounted file systems (of all types). Otherwise, `df' reports +on the file system containing each argument FILE. + + Normally the disk space is printed in units of 1024 bytes, but this +can be overridden (*note Block size::). Non-integer quantities are +rounded up to the next higher unit. + + If an argument FILE is a disk device file containing a mounted file +system, `df' shows the space available on that file system rather than +on the file system containing the device node (i.e., the root file +system). GNU `df' does not attempt to determine the disk usage on +unmounted file systems, because on most kinds of systems doing so +requires extremely nonportable intimate knowledge of file system +structures. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-a' +`--all' + Include in the listing file systems that have a size of 0 blocks, + which are omitted by default. Such file systems are typically + special-purpose pseudo-file-systems, such as automounter entries. + Also, file systems of type "ignore" or "auto", supported by some + operating systems, are only included if this option is specified. + +`-B SIZE' +`--block-size=SIZE' + Scale sizes by SIZE before printing them (*note Block size::). + For example, `-BG' prints sizes in units of 1,073,741,824 bytes. + +`-h' +`--human-readable' + Append a size letter to each size, such as `M' for mebibytes. + Powers of 1024 are used, not 1000; `M' stands for 1,048,576 bytes. + Use the `--si' option if you prefer powers of 1000. + +`-H' + Equivalent to `--si'. + +`-i' +`--inodes' + List inode usage information instead of block usage. An inode + (short for index node) contains information about a file such as + its owner, permissions, timestamps, and location on the disk. + +`-k' + Print sizes in 1024-byte blocks, overriding the default block size + (*note Block size::). This option is equivalent to + `--block-size=1K'. + +`-l' +`--local' + Limit the listing to local file systems. By default, remote file + systems are also listed. + +`--no-sync' + Do not invoke the `sync' system call before getting any usage data. + This may make `df' run significantly faster on systems with many + disks, but on some systems (notably SunOS) the results may be + slightly out of date. This is the default. + +`-P' +`--portability' + Use the POSIX output format. This is like the default format + except for the following: + + 1. The information about each file system is always printed on + exactly one line; a mount device is never put on a line by + itself. This means that if the mount device name is more + than 20 characters long (e.g., for some network mounts), the + columns are misaligned. + + 2. The labels in the header output line are changed to conform + to POSIX. + +`--si' + Append an SI-style abbreviation to each size, such as `MB' for + megabytes. Powers of 1000 are used, not 1024; `MB' stands for + 1,000,000 bytes. This option is equivalent to `--block-size=si'. + Use the `-h' or `--human-readable' option if you prefer powers of + 1024. + +`--sync' + Invoke the `sync' system call before getting any usage data. On + some systems (notably SunOS), doing this yields more up to date + results, but in general this option makes `df' much slower, + especially when there are many or very busy file systems. + +`-t FSTYPE' +`--type=FSTYPE' + Limit the listing to file systems of type FSTYPE. Multiple file + system types can be specified by giving multiple `-t' options. By + default, nothing is omitted. + +`-T' +`--print-type' + Print each file system's type. The types printed here are the + same ones you can include or exclude with `-t' and `-x'. The + particular types printed are whatever is supported by the system. + Here are some of the common names (this list is certainly not + exhaustive): + + `nfs' + An NFS file system, i.e., one mounted over a network from + another machine. This is the one type name which seems to be + used uniformly by all systems. + + `4.2, ufs, efs...' + A file system on a locally-mounted hard disk. (The system + might even support more than one type here; Linux does.) + + `hsfs, cdfs' + A file system on a CD-ROM drive. HP-UX uses `cdfs', most + other systems use `hsfs' (`hs' for "High Sierra"). + + `pcfs' + An MS-DOS file system, usually on a diskette. + + +`-x FSTYPE' +`--exclude-type=FSTYPE' + Limit the listing to file systems not of type FSTYPE. Multiple + file system types can be eliminated by giving multiple `-x' + options. By default, no file system types are omitted. + +`-v' + Ignored; for compatibility with System V versions of `df'. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: du invocation, Next: stat invocation, Prev: df invocation, Up: Disk usage + +14.2 `du': Estimate file space usage +==================================== + +`du' reports the amount of disk space used by the specified files and +for each subdirectory (of directory arguments). Synopsis: + + du [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + With no arguments, `du' reports the disk space for the current +directory. Normally the disk space is printed in units of 1024 bytes, +but this can be overridden (*note Block size::). Non-integer +quantities are rounded up to the next higher unit. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-a' +`--all' + Show counts for all files, not just directories. + +`--apparent-size' + Print apparent sizes, rather than disk usage. The apparent size + of a file is the number of bytes reported by `wc -c' on regular + files, or more generally, `ls -l --block-size=1' or `stat + --format=%s'. For example, a file containing the word `zoo' with + no newline would, of course, have an apparent size of 3. Such a + small file may require anywhere from 0 to 16 KiB or more of disk + space, depending on the type and configuration of the file system + on which the file resides. However, a sparse file created with + this command: + + dd bs=1 seek=2GiB if=/dev/null of=big + + has an apparent size of 2 GiB, yet on most modern systems, it + actually uses almost no disk space. + +`-b' +`--bytes' + Equivalent to `--apparent-size --block-size=1'. + +`-B SIZE' +`--block-size=SIZE' + Scale sizes by SIZE before printing them (*note Block size::). + For example, `-BG' prints sizes in units of 1,073,741,824 bytes. + +`-c' +`--total' + Print a grand total of all arguments after all arguments have been + processed. This can be used to find out the total disk usage of a + given set of files or directories. + +`-D' +`--dereference-args' + Dereference symbolic links that are command line arguments. Does + not affect other symbolic links. This is helpful for finding out + the disk usage of directories, such as `/usr/tmp', which are often + symbolic links. + +`--files0-from=FILE' + Rather than processing files named on the command line, process + those in the NUL-terminated list in file FILE. This is useful + with the `--total' (`-c') option when the list of file names is so + long that it may exceed a command line length limitation. In such + cases, running `du' via `xargs' is undesirable because it splits + the list into pieces and makes `du' print a total for each sublist + rather than for the entire list. One way to produce a list of + NUL-terminated file names is with GNU `find', using its `-print0' + predicate. Do not specify any FILE on the command line when using + this option. + +`-h' +`--human-readable' + Append a size letter to each size, such as `M' for mebibytes. + Powers of 1024 are used, not 1000; `M' stands for 1,048,576 bytes. + Use the `--si' option if you prefer powers of 1000. + +`-H' + Currently, `-H' is the same as `--si', except that `-H' evokes a + warning. This option will be changed to be equivalent to + `--dereference-args' (`-D'). + +`-k' + Print sizes in 1024-byte blocks, overriding the default block size + (*note Block size::). This option is equivalent to + `--block-size=1K'. + +`-l' +`--count-links' + Count the size of all files, even if they have appeared already + (as a hard link). + +`-L' +`--dereference' + Dereference symbolic links (show the disk space used by the file + or directory that the link points to instead of the space used by + the link). + +`-P' +`--no-dereference' + For each symbolic links encountered by `du', consider the disk + space used by the symbolic link. + +`--max-depth=DEPTH' + Show the total for each directory (and file if -all) that is at + most MAX_DEPTH levels down from the root of the hierarchy. The + root is at level 0, so `du --max-depth=0' is equivalent to `du -s'. + +`-0' +`--null' + Output the zero byte (NUL) at the end of each line, rather than a + newline. This option enables other programs to parse the output + of `du' even when that output would contain file names with + embedded newlines. + +`--si' + Append an SI-style abbreviation to each size, such as `MB' for + megabytes. Powers of 1000 are used, not 1024; `MB' stands for + 1,000,000 bytes. Use the `-h' or `--human-readable' option if you + prefer powers of 1024. + +`-s' +`--summarize' + Display only a total for each argument. + +`-S' +`--separate-dirs' + Report the size of each directory separately, not including the + sizes of subdirectories. + +`-x' +`--one-file-system' + Skip directories that are on different file systems from the one + that the argument being processed is on. + +`--exclude=PATTERN' + When recursing, skip subdirectories or files matching PATTERN. + For example, `du --exclude='*.o'' excludes files whose names end + in `.o'. + +`-X FILE' +`--exclude-from=FILE' + Like `--exclude', except take the patterns to exclude from FILE, + one per line. If FILE is `-', take the patterns from standard + input. + + + On BSD systems, `du' reports sizes that are half the correct values +for files that are NFS-mounted from HP-UX systems. On HP-UX systems, +it reports sizes that are twice the correct values for files that are +NFS-mounted from BSD systems. This is due to a flaw in HP-UX; it also +affects the HP-UX `du' program. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: stat invocation, Next: sync invocation, Prev: du invocation, Up: Disk usage + +14.3 `stat': Report file or file system status +============================================== + +`stat' displays information about the specified file(s). Synopsis: + + stat [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + With no option, `stat' reports all information about the given files. +But it also can be used to report the information of the file systems +the given files are located on. If the files are links, `stat' can +also give information about the files the links point to. + +`-f' +`--file-system' + Report information about the file systems where the given files + are located instead of information about the files themselves. + +`-L' +`--dereference' + Change how `stat' treats symbolic links. With this option, `stat' + acts on the file referenced by each symbolic link argument. + Without it, `stat' acts on any symbolic link argument directly. + +`-t' +`--terse' + Print the information in terse form, suitable for parsing by other + programs. + +`-c' +`--format=FORMAT' + Use FORMAT rather than the default format. + + Interpreted sequences for file stat are: + + * %a - Access rights in octal + + * %A - Access rights in human readable form + + * %b - Number of blocks allocated (see `%B') + + * %B - The size in bytes of each block reported by `%b' + + * %d - Device number in decimal + + * %D - Device number in hex + + * %f - raw mode in hex + + * %F - File type + + * %g - Group Id of owner + + * %G - Group name of owner + + * %h - Number of hard links + + * %i - Inode number + + * %n - File name + + * %N - Quoted File name with dereference if symbolic link + + * %o - I/O block size + + * %s - Total size, in bytes + + * %t - Major device type in hex + + * %T - Minor device type in hex + + * %u - User Id of owner + + * %U - User name of owner + + * %x - Time of last access + + * %X - Time of last access as seconds since Epoch + + * %y - Time of last modification + + * %Y - Time of last modification as seconds since Epoch + + * %z - Time of last change + + * %Z - Time of last change as seconds since Epoch + + Interpreted sequences for file system stat are: + + * %n - File name + + * %i - File System id in hex + + * %l - Maximum length of file names + + * %t - Type in hex + + * %T - Type in human readable form + + * %b - Total data blocks in file system + + * %f - Free blocks in file system + + * %a - Free blocks available to non-superuser + + * %s - Optimal transfer block size + + * %c - Total file nodes in file system + + Time stamps are listed according to the time zone rules specified + by the `TZ' environment variable, or by the system default rules if + `TZ' is not set. *Note Specifying the Time Zone with `TZ': + (libc)TZ Variable. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: sync invocation, Prev: stat invocation, Up: Disk usage + +14.4 `sync': Synchronize data on disk with memory +================================================= + +`sync' writes any data buffered in memory out to disk. This can +include (but is not limited to) modified superblocks, modified inodes, +and delayed reads and writes. This must be implemented by the kernel; +The `sync' program does nothing but exercise the `sync' system call. + + The kernel keeps data in memory to avoid doing (relatively slow) disk +reads and writes. This improves performance, but if the computer +crashes, data may be lost or the file system corrupted as a result. +The `sync' command ensures everything in memory is written to disk. + + Any arguments are ignored, except for a lone `--help' or `--version' +(*note Common options::). + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Printing text, Next: Conditions, Prev: Disk usage, Up: Top + +15 Printing text +**************** + +This section describes commands that display text strings. + +* Menu: + +* echo invocation:: Print a line of text. +* printf invocation:: Format and print data. +* yes invocation:: Print a string until interrupted. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: echo invocation, Next: printf invocation, Up: Printing text + +15.1 `echo': Print a line of text +================================= + +`echo' writes each given STRING to standard output, with a space +between each and a newline after the last one. Synopsis: + + echo [OPTION]... [STRING]... + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. Options must precede operands, and the normally-special +argument `--' has no special meaning and is treated like any other +STRING. + +`-n' + Do not output the trailing newline. + +`-e' + Enable interpretation of the following backslash-escaped + characters in each STRING: + + `\a' + alert (bell) + + `\b' + backspace + + `\c' + suppress trailing newline + + `\f' + form feed + + `\n' + new line + + `\r' + carriage return + + `\t' + horizontal tab + + `\v' + vertical tab + + `\\' + backslash + + `\0NNN' + the eight-bit value that is the octal number NNN (zero to + three octal digits) + + `\NNN' + the eight-bit value that is the octal number NNN (one to + three octal digits) + + `\xHH' + the eight-bit value that is the hexadecimal number HH (one or + two hexadecimal digits) + +`-E' + Disable interpretation of backslash escapes in each STRING. This + is the default. If `-e' and `-E' are both specified, the last one + given takes effect. + + + If the `POSIXLY_CORRECT' environment variable is set, then when +`echo''s first argument is not `-n' it outputs option-like arguments +instead of treating them as options. For example, `echo -ne hello' +outputs `-ne hello' instead of plain `hello'. + + POSIX does not require support for any options, and says that the +behavior of `echo' is implementation-defined if any STRING contains a +backslash or if the first argument is `-n'. Portable programs can use +the `printf' command if they need to omit trailing newlines or output +control characters or backslashes. *Note printf invocation::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: printf invocation, Next: yes invocation, Prev: echo invocation, Up: Printing text + +15.2 `printf': Format and print data +==================================== + +`printf' does formatted printing of text. Synopsis: + + printf FORMAT [ARGUMENT]... + + `printf' prints the FORMAT string, interpreting `%' directives and +`\' escapes to format numeric and string arguments in a way that is +mostly similar to the C `printf' function. The differences are as +follows: + + * The FORMAT argument is reused as necessary to convert all the + given ARGUMENTs. For example, the command `printf %s a b' outputs + `ab'. + + * Missing ARGUMENTs are treated as null strings or as zeros, + depending on whether the context expects a string or a number. For + example, the command `printf %sx%d' prints `x0'. + + * An additional escape, `\c', causes `printf' to produce no further + output. For example, the command `printf 'A%sC\cD%sF' B E' prints + `ABC'. + + * The hexadecimal escape sequence `\xHH' has at most two digits, as + opposed to C where it can have an unlimited number of digits. For + example, the command `printf '\x07e'' prints two bytes, whereas + the C statement `printf ("\x07e")' prints just one. + + * `printf' has an additional directive, `%b', which prints its + argument string with `\' escapes interpreted in the same way as in + the FORMAT string, except that octal escapes are of the form + `\0OOO' where OOO is 0 to 3 octal digits. If a precision is also + given, it limits the number of bytes printed from the converted + string. + + * Numeric arguments must be single C constants, possibly with leading + `+' or `-'. For example, `printf %.4d -3' outputs `-0003'. + + * If the leading character of a numeric argument is `"' or `'' then + its value is the numeric value of the immediately following + character. Any remaining characters are silently ignored if the + `POSIXLY_CORRECT' environment variable is set; otherwise, a + warning is printed. For example, `printf "%d" "'a"' outputs `97' + on hosts that use the ASCII character set, since `a' has the + numeric value 97 in ASCII. + + + A floating-point argument must use a period before any fractional +digits, but is printed according to the `LC_NUMERIC' category of the +current locale. For example, in a locale whose radix character is a +comma, the command `printf %g 3.14' outputs `3,14' whereas the command +`printf %g 3,14' is an error. + + `printf' interprets `\OOO' in FORMAT as an octal number (if OOO is 1 +to 3 octal digits) specifying a character to print, and `\xHH' as a +hexadecimal number (if HH is 1 to 2 hex digits) specifying a character +to print. + + `printf' interprets two character syntaxes introduced in ISO C 99: +`\u' for 16-bit Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) characters, specified as four +hexadecimal digits HHHH, and `\U' for 32-bit Unicode characters, +specified as eight hexadecimal digits HHHHHHHH. `printf' outputs the +Unicode characters according to the `LC_CTYPE' locale. + + The processing of `\u' and `\U' requires a full-featured `iconv' +facility. It is activated on systems with glibc 2.2 (or newer), or +when `libiconv' is installed prior to this package. Otherwise `\u' and +`\U' will print as-is. + + The only options are a lone `--help' or `--version'. *Note Common +options::. Options must precede operands. + + The Unicode character syntaxes are useful for writing strings in a +locale independent way. For example, a string containing the Euro +currency symbol + + $ /usr/local/bin/printf '\u20AC 14.95' + +will be output correctly in all locales supporting the Euro symbol +(ISO-8859-15, UTF-8, and others). Similarly, a Chinese string + + $ /usr/local/bin/printf '\u4e2d\u6587' + +will be output correctly in all Chinese locales (GB2312, BIG5, UTF-8, +etc). + + Note that in these examples, the full name of `printf' has been +given, to distinguish it from the GNU `bash' built-in function `printf'. + + For larger strings, you don't need to look up the hexadecimal code +values of each character one by one. ASCII characters mixed with \u +escape sequences is also known as the JAVA source file encoding. You +can use GNU recode 3.5c (or newer) to convert strings to this encoding. +Here is how to convert a piece of text into a shell script which will +output this text in a locale-independent way: + + $ LC_CTYPE=zh_CN.big5 /usr/local/bin/printf \ + '\u4e2d\u6587\n' > sample.txt + $ recode BIG5..JAVA < sample.txt \ + | sed -e "s|^|/usr/local/bin/printf '|" -e "s|$|\\\\n'|" \ + > sample.sh + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: yes invocation, Prev: printf invocation, Up: Printing text + +15.3 `yes': Print a string until interrupted +============================================ + +`yes' prints the command line arguments, separated by spaces and +followed by a newline, forever until it is killed. If no arguments are +given, it prints `y' followed by a newline forever until killed. + + Upon a write error, `yes' exits with status `1'. + + The only options are a lone `--help' or `--version'. To output an +argument that begins with `-', precede it with `--', e.g., `yes -- +--help'. *Note Common options::. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Conditions, Next: Redirection, Prev: Printing text, Up: Top + +16 Conditions +************* + +This section describes commands that are primarily useful for their exit +status, rather than their output. Thus, they are often used as the +condition of shell `if' statements, or as the last command in a +pipeline. + +* Menu: + +* false invocation:: Do nothing, unsuccessfully. +* true invocation:: Do nothing, successfully. +* test invocation:: Check file types and compare values. +* expr invocation:: Evaluate expressions. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: false invocation, Next: true invocation, Up: Conditions + +16.1 `false': Do nothing, unsuccessfully +======================================== + +`false' does nothing except return an exit status of 1, meaning +"failure". It can be used as a place holder in shell scripts where an +unsuccessful command is needed. + + `false' honors the `--help' and `--version' options. + + This version of `false' is implemented as a C program, and is thus +more secure and faster than a shell script implementation, and may +safely be used as a dummy shell for the purpose of disabling accounts. + + Note that `false' (unlike all other programs documented herein) +exits unsuccessfully, even when invoked with `--help' or `--version'. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: true invocation, Next: test invocation, Prev: false invocation, Up: Conditions + +16.2 `true': Do nothing, successfully +===================================== + +`true' does nothing except return an exit status of 0, meaning +"success". It can be used as a place holder in shell scripts where a +successful command is needed, although the shell built-in command `:' +(colon) may do the same thing faster. In most modern shells, `true' is +a built-in command, so when you use `true' in a script, you're probably +using the built-in command, not the one documented here. + + `true' honors the `--help' and `--version' options. + + Note, however, that it is possible to cause `true' to exit with +nonzero status: when invoked in non-POSIX mode, with the `--help' or +`--version' option, and with standard output already closed or +redirected to a file that evokes an I/O error. For example, using a +Bourne-compatible shell: + + $ ./true --version >&- + ./true: write error: Bad file number + $ ./true --version > /dev/full + ./true: write error: No space left on device + + This version of `true' is implemented as a C program, and is thus +more secure and faster than a shell script implementation, and may +safely be used as a dummy shell for the purpose of disabling accounts. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: test invocation, Next: expr invocation, Prev: true invocation, Up: Conditions + +16.3 `test': Check file types and compare values +================================================ + +`test' returns a status of 0 (true) or 1 (false) depending on the +evaluation of the conditional expression EXPR. Each part of the +expression must be a separate argument. + + `test' has file status checks, string operators, and numeric +comparison operators. + + `test' has an alternate form that uses opening and closing square +brackets instead a leading `test'. For example, instead of `test -d +/', you can write `[ -d / ]'. The square brackets must be separate +arguments; for example, `[-d /]' does not have the desired effect. +Since `test EXPR' and `[ EXPR ]' have the same meaning, only the former +form is discussed below. + + Synopses: + + test EXPRESSION + test + [ EXPRESSION ] + [ ] + [ OPTION + + Because most shells have a built-in `test' command, using an +unadorned `test' in a script or interactively may get you different +functionality than that described here. + + If EXPRESSION is omitted, `test' returns false. If EXPRESSION is a +single argument, `test' returns false if the argument is null and true +otherwise. The argument can be any string, including strings like +`-d', `-1', `--', `--help', and `--version' that most other programs +would treat as options. To get help and version information, invoke +the commands `[ --help' and `[ --version', without the usual closing +brackets. *Note Common options::. + + Exit status: + + 0 if the expression is true, + 1 if the expression is false, + 2 if an error occurred. + +* Menu: + +* File type tests:: -[bcdfhLpSt] +* Access permission tests:: -[gkruwxOG] +* File characteristic tests:: -e -s -nt -ot -ef +* String tests:: -z -n = != +* Numeric tests:: -eq -ne -lt -le -gt -ge +* Connectives for test:: ! -a -o + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: File type tests, Next: Access permission tests, Up: test invocation + +16.3.1 File type tests +---------------------- + +These options test for particular types of files. (Everything's a file, +but not all files are the same!) + +`-b FILE' + True if FILE exists and is a block special device. + +`-c FILE' + True if FILE exists and is a character special device. + +`-d FILE' + True if FILE exists and is a directory. + +`-f FILE' + True if FILE exists and is a regular file. + +`-h FILE' +`-L FILE' + True if FILE exists and is a symbolic link. Unlike all other + file-related tests, this test does not dereference FILE if it is a + symbolic link. + +`-p FILE' + True if FILE exists and is a named pipe. + +`-S FILE' + True if FILE exists and is a socket. + +`-t FD' + True if FD is a file descriptor that is associated with a terminal. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Access permission tests, Next: File characteristic tests, Prev: File type tests, Up: test invocation + +16.3.2 Access permission tests +------------------------------ + +These options test for particular access permissions. + +`-g FILE' + True if FILE exists and has its set-group-id bit set. + +`-k FILE' + True if FILE exists and has its "sticky" bit set. + +`-r FILE' + True if FILE exists and read permission is granted. + +`-u FILE' + True if FILE exists and has its set-user-id bit set. + +`-w FILE' + True if FILE exists and write permission is granted. + +`-x FILE' + True if FILE exists and execute permission is granted (or search + permission, if it is a directory). + +`-O FILE' + True if FILE exists and is owned by the current effective user id. + +`-G FILE' + True if FILE exists and is owned by the current effective group id. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: File characteristic tests, Next: String tests, Prev: Access permission tests, Up: test invocation + +16.3.3 File characteristic tests +-------------------------------- + +These options test other file characteristics. + +`-e FILE' + True if FILE exists. + +`-s FILE' + True if FILE exists and has a size greater than zero. + +`FILE1 -nt FILE2' + True if FILE1 is newer (according to modification date) than + FILE2, or if FILE1 exists and FILE2 does not. + +`FILE1 -ot FILE2' + True if FILE1 is older (according to modification date) than + FILE2, or if FILE2 exists and FILE1 does not. + +`FILE1 -ef FILE2' + True if FILE1 and FILE2 have the same device and inode numbers, + i.e., if they are hard links to each other. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: String tests, Next: Numeric tests, Prev: File characteristic tests, Up: test invocation + +16.3.4 String tests +------------------- + +These options test string characteristics. You may need to quote +STRING arguments for the shell. For example: + + test -n "$V" + + The quotes here prevent the wrong arguments from being passed to +`test' if `$V' is empty or contains special characters. + +`-z STRING' + True if the length of STRING is zero. + +`-n STRING' +`STRING' + True if the length of STRING is nonzero. + +`STRING1 = STRING2' + True if the strings are equal. + +`STRING1 != STRING2' + True if the strings are not equal. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Numeric tests, Next: Connectives for test, Prev: String tests, Up: test invocation + +16.3.5 Numeric tests +-------------------- + +Numeric relationals. The arguments must be entirely numeric (possibly +negative), or the special expression `-l STRING', which evaluates to +the length of STRING. + +`ARG1 -eq ARG2' +`ARG1 -ne ARG2' +`ARG1 -lt ARG2' +`ARG1 -le ARG2' +`ARG1 -gt ARG2' +`ARG1 -ge ARG2' + These arithmetic binary operators return true if ARG1 is equal, + not-equal, less-than, less-than-or-equal, greater-than, or + greater-than-or-equal than ARG2, respectively. + + + For example: + + test -1 -gt -2 && echo yes + => yes + test -l abc -gt 1 && echo yes + => yes + test 0x100 -eq 1 + error--> test: integer expression expected before -eq + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Connectives for test, Prev: Numeric tests, Up: test invocation + +16.3.6 Connectives for `test' +----------------------------- + +The usual logical connectives. + +`! EXPR' + True if EXPR is false. + +`EXPR1 -a EXPR2' + True if both EXPR1 and EXPR2 are true. + +`EXPR1 -o EXPR2' + True if either EXPR1 or EXPR2 is true. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: expr invocation, Prev: test invocation, Up: Conditions + +16.4 `expr': Evaluate expressions +================================= + +`expr' evaluates an expression and writes the result on standard +output. Each token of the expression must be a separate argument. + + Operands are either integers or strings. Integers consist of one or +more decimal digits, with an optional leading `-'. `expr' converts +anything appearing in an operand position to an integer or a string +depending on the operation being applied to it. + + Strings are not quoted for `expr' itself, though you may need to +quote them to protect characters with special meaning to the shell, +e.g., spaces. However, regardless of whether it is quoted, a string +operand should not be a parenthesis or any of `expr''s operators like +`+', so you cannot safely pass an arbitrary string `$str' to expr +merely by quoting it to the shell. One way to work around this is to +use the GNU extension `+', (e.g., `+ "$str" = foo'); a more portable +way is to use `" $str"' and to adjust the rest of the expression to take +the leading space into account (e.g., `" $str" = " foo"'). + + You should not pass a negative integer or a string with leading `-' +as `expr''s first argument, as it might be misinterpreted as an option; +this can be avoided by parenthesization. Also, portable scripts should +not use a string operand that happens to take the form of an integer; +this can be worked around by inserting leading spaces as mentioned +above. + + Operators may be given as infix symbols or prefix keywords. +Parentheses may be used for grouping in the usual manner. You must +quote parentheses and many operators to avoid the shell evaluating them, +however. + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. Options must precede operands. + + Exit status: + + 0 if the expression is neither null nor 0, + 1 if the expression is null or 0, + 2 if the expression is syntactically invalid, + 3 if an error occurred. + +* Menu: + +* String expressions:: + : match substr index length +* Numeric expressions:: + - * / % +* Relations for expr:: | & < <= = == != >= > +* Examples of expr:: Examples. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: String expressions, Next: Numeric expressions, Up: expr invocation + +16.4.1 String expressions +------------------------- + +`expr' supports pattern matching and other string operators. These +have lower precedence than both the numeric and relational operators (in +the next sections). + +`STRING : REGEX' + Perform pattern matching. The arguments are converted to strings + and the second is considered to be a (basic, a la GNU `grep') + regular expression, with a `^' implicitly prepended. The first + argument is then matched against this regular expression. + + If the match succeeds and REGEX uses `\(' and `\)', the `:' + expression returns the part of STRING that matched the + subexpression; otherwise, it returns the number of characters + matched. + + If the match fails, the `:' operator returns the null string if + `\(' and `\)' are used in REGEX, otherwise 0. + + Only the first `\( ... \)' pair is relevant to the return value; + additional pairs are meaningful only for grouping the regular + expression operators. + + In the regular expression, `\+', `\?', and `\|' are operators + which respectively match one or more, zero or one, or separate + alternatives. SunOS and other `expr''s treat these as regular + characters. (POSIX allows either behavior.) *Note Regular + Expression Library: (regex)Top, for details of regular expression + syntax. Some examples are in *Note Examples of expr::. + +`match STRING REGEX' + An alternative way to do pattern matching. This is the same as + `STRING : REGEX'. + +`substr STRING POSITION LENGTH' + Returns the substring of STRING beginning at POSITION with length + at most LENGTH. If either POSITION or LENGTH is negative, zero, + or non-numeric, returns the null string. + +`index STRING CHARSET' + Returns the first position in STRING where the first character in + CHARSET was found. If no character in CHARSET is found in STRING, + return 0. + +`length STRING' + Returns the length of STRING. + +`+ TOKEN' + Interpret TOKEN as a string, even if it is a keyword like MATCH or + an operator like `/'. This makes it possible to test `expr length + + "$x"' or `expr + "$x" : '.*/\(.\)'' and have it do the right + thing even if the value of $X happens to be (for example) `/' or + `index'. This operator is a GNU extension. Portable shell + scripts should use `" $token" : ' \(.*\)'' instead of `+ "$token"'. + + + To make `expr' interpret keywords as strings, you must use the +`quote' operator. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Numeric expressions, Next: Relations for expr, Prev: String expressions, Up: expr invocation + +16.4.2 Numeric expressions +-------------------------- + +`expr' supports the usual numeric operators, in order of increasing +precedence. The string operators (previous section) have lower +precedence, the connectives (next section) have higher. + +`+ -' + Addition and subtraction. Both arguments are converted to + integers; an error occurs if this cannot be done. + +`* / %' + Multiplication, division, remainder. Both arguments are converted + to integers; an error occurs if this cannot be done. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Relations for expr, Next: Examples of expr, Prev: Numeric expressions, Up: expr invocation + +16.4.3 Relations for `expr' +--------------------------- + +`expr' supports the usual logical connectives and relations. These are +higher precedence than either the string or numeric operators (previous +sections). Here is the list, lowest-precedence operator first. + +`|' + Returns its first argument if that is neither null nor zero, + otherwise its second argument if it is neither null nor zero, + otherwise 0. It does not evaluate its second argument if its + first argument is neither null nor zero. + +`&' + Return its first argument if neither argument is null or zero, + otherwise 0. It does not evaluate its second argument if its + first argument is null or zero. + +`< <= = == != >= >' + Compare the arguments and return 1 if the relation is true, 0 + otherwise. `==' is a synonym for `='. `expr' first tries to + convert both arguments to integers and do a numeric comparison; if + either conversion fails, it does a lexicographic comparison using + the character collating sequence specified by the `LC_COLLATE' + locale. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Examples of expr, Prev: Relations for expr, Up: expr invocation + +16.4.4 Examples of using `expr' +------------------------------- + +Here are a few examples, including quoting for shell metacharacters. + + To add 1 to the shell variable `foo', in Bourne-compatible shells: + + foo=`expr $foo + 1` + + To print the non-directory part of the file name stored in `$fname', +which need not contain a `/': + + expr $fname : '.*/\(.*\)' '|' $fname + + An example showing that `\+' is an operator: + + expr aaa : 'a\+' + => 3 + + expr abc : 'a\(.\)c' + => b + expr index abcdef cz + => 3 + expr index index a + error--> expr: syntax error + expr index quote index a + => 0 + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Redirection, Next: File name manipulation, Prev: Conditions, Up: Top + +17 Redirection +************** + +Unix shells commonly provide several forms of "redirection"--ways to +change the input source or output destination of a command. But one +useful redirection is performed by a separate command, not by the shell; +it's described here. + +* Menu: + +* tee invocation:: Redirect output to multiple files. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: tee invocation, Up: Redirection + +17.1 `tee': Redirect output to multiple files +============================================= + +The `tee' command copies standard input to standard output and also to +any files given as arguments. This is useful when you want not only to +send some data down a pipe, but also to save a copy. Synopsis: + + tee [OPTION]... [FILE]... + + If a file being written to does not already exist, it is created. +If a file being written to already exists, the data it previously +contained is overwritten unless the `-a' option is used. + + A FILE of `-' causes `tee' to send another copy of input to standard +output, but this is typically not that useful as the copies are +interleaved. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-a' +`--append' + Append standard input to the given files rather than overwriting + them. + +`-i' +`--ignore-interrupts' + Ignore interrupt signals. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: File name manipulation, Next: Working context, Prev: Redirection, Up: Top + +18 File name manipulation +************************* + +This section describes commands that manipulate file names. + +* Menu: + +* basename invocation:: Strip directory and suffix from a file name. +* dirname invocation:: Strip non-directory suffix from a file name. +* pathchk invocation:: Check file name portability. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: basename invocation, Next: dirname invocation, Up: File name manipulation + +18.1 `basename': Strip directory and suffix from a file name +============================================================ + +`basename' removes any leading directory components from NAME. +Synopsis: + + basename NAME [SUFFIX] + + If SUFFIX is specified and is identical to the end of NAME, it is +removed from NAME as well. `basename' prints the result on standard +output. + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. Options must precede operands. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: dirname invocation, Next: pathchk invocation, Prev: basename invocation, Up: File name manipulation + +18.2 `dirname': Strip non-directory suffix from a file name +=========================================================== + +`dirname' prints all but the final slash-delimited component of a +string (presumably a file name). Synopsis: + + dirname NAME + + If NAME is a single component, `dirname' prints `.' (meaning the +current directory). + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: pathchk invocation, Prev: dirname invocation, Up: File name manipulation + +18.3 `pathchk': Check file name portability +=========================================== + +`pathchk' checks portability of file names. Synopsis: + + pathchk [OPTION]... NAME... + + For each NAME, `pathchk' prints a message if any of these conditions +is true: + + 1. One of the existing directories in NAME does not have search + (execute) permission, + + 2. The length of NAME is larger than the maximum supported by the + operating system. + + 3. The length of one component of NAME is longer than its file + system's maximum. + + A nonexistent NAME is not an error, so long a file with that name +could be created under the above conditions. + + The program accepts the following option. Also see *Note Common +options::. Options must precede operands. + +`-p' +`--portability' + Do not perform checks based on the underlying file system. + Instead, check the length of each file name and its components + against the POSIX minimum limits for portability. Also check that + the file name contains only characters that are in the portable + file name character set, namely, the ASCII letters and digits, `-', + `.', `/', and `_'. + + + Exit status: + + 0 if all specified file names passed all checks, + 1 otherwise. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Working context, Next: User information, Prev: File name manipulation, Up: Top + +19 Working context +****************** + +This section describes commands that display or alter the context in +which you are working: the current directory, the terminal settings, and +so forth. See also the user-related commands in the next section. + +* Menu: + +* pwd invocation:: Print working directory. +* stty invocation:: Print or change terminal characteristics. +* printenv invocation:: Print environment variables. +* tty invocation:: Print file name of terminal on standard input. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: pwd invocation, Next: stty invocation, Up: Working context + +19.1 `pwd': Print working directory +=================================== + +`pwd' prints the fully resolved name of the current directory. That +is, all components of the printed name will be actual directory +names--none will be symbolic links. + + Because most shells have a built-in `pwd' command, using an +unadorned `pwd' in a script or interactively may get you different +functionality than that described here. + + The only options are a lone `--help' or `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: stty invocation, Next: printenv invocation, Prev: pwd invocation, Up: Working context + +19.2 `stty': Print or change terminal characteristics +===================================================== + +`stty' prints or changes terminal characteristics, such as baud rate. +Synopses: + + stty [OPTION] [SETTING]... + stty [OPTION] + + If given no line settings, `stty' prints the baud rate, line +discipline number (on systems that support it), and line settings that +have been changed from the values set by `stty sane'. By default, mode +reading and setting are performed on the tty line connected to standard +input, although this can be modified by the `--file' option. + + `stty' accepts many non-option arguments that change aspects of the +terminal line operation, as described below. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-a' +`--all' + Print all current settings in human-readable form. This option + may not be used in combination with any line settings. + +`-F DEVICE' +`--file=DEVICE' + Set the line opened by the file name specified in DEVICE instead of + the tty line connected to standard input. This option is necessary + because opening a POSIX tty requires use of the `O_NONDELAY' flag + to prevent a POSIX tty from blocking until the carrier detect line + is high if the `clocal' flag is not set. Hence, it is not always + possible to allow the shell to open the device in the traditional + manner. + +`-g' +`--save' + Print all current settings in a form that can be used as an + argument to another `stty' command to restore the current + settings. This option may not be used in combination with any + line settings. + + + Many settings can be turned off by preceding them with a `-'. Such +arguments are marked below with "May be negated" in their description. +The descriptions themselves refer to the positive case, that is, when +_not_ negated (unless stated otherwise, of course). + + Some settings are not available on all POSIX systems, since they use +extensions. Such arguments are marked below with "Non-POSIX" in their +description. On non-POSIX systems, those or other settings also may not +be available, but it's not feasible to document all the variations: just +try it and see. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + +* Menu: + +* Control:: Control settings +* Input:: Input settings +* Output:: Output settings +* Local:: Local settings +* Combination:: Combination settings +* Characters:: Special characters +* Special:: Special settings + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Control, Next: Input, Up: stty invocation + +19.2.1 Control settings +----------------------- + +Control settings: + +`parenb' + Generate parity bit in output and expect parity bit in input. May + be negated. + +`parodd' + Set odd parity (even if negated). May be negated. + +`cs5' +`cs6' +`cs7' +`cs8' + Set character size to 5, 6, 7, or 8 bits. + +`hup' +`hupcl' + Send a hangup signal when the last process closes the tty. May be + negated. + +`cstopb' + Use two stop bits per character (one if negated). May be negated. + +`cread' + Allow input to be received. May be negated. + +`clocal' + Disable modem control signals. May be negated. + +`crtscts' + Enable RTS/CTS flow control. Non-POSIX. May be negated. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Input, Next: Output, Prev: Control, Up: stty invocation + +19.2.2 Input settings +--------------------- + +`ignbrk' + Ignore break characters. May be negated. + +`brkint' + Make breaks cause an interrupt signal. May be negated. + +`ignpar' + Ignore characters with parity errors. May be negated. + +`parmrk' + Mark parity errors (with a 255-0-character sequence). May be + negated. + +`inpck' + Enable input parity checking. May be negated. + +`istrip' + Clear high (8th) bit of input characters. May be negated. + +`inlcr' + Translate newline to carriage return. May be negated. + +`igncr' + Ignore carriage return. May be negated. + +`icrnl' + Translate carriage return to newline. May be negated. + +`iutf8' + Assume input characters are UTF-8 encoded. May be negated. + +`ixon' + Enable XON/XOFF flow control (that is, `CTRL-S'/`CTRL-Q'). May be + negated. + +`ixoff' +`tandem' + Enable sending of `stop' character when the system input buffer is + almost full, and `start' character when it becomes almost empty + again. May be negated. + +`iuclc' + Translate uppercase characters to lowercase. Non-POSIX. May be + negated. + +`ixany' + Allow any character to restart output (only the start character if + negated). Non-POSIX. May be negated. + +`imaxbel' + Enable beeping and not flushing input buffer if a character arrives + when the input buffer is full. Non-POSIX. May be negated. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Output, Next: Local, Prev: Input, Up: stty invocation + +19.2.3 Output settings +---------------------- + +These arguments specify output-related operations. + +`opost' + Postprocess output. May be negated. + +`olcuc' + Translate lowercase characters to uppercase. Non-POSIX. May be + negated. + +`ocrnl' + Translate carriage return to newline. Non-POSIX. May be negated. + +`onlcr' + Translate newline to carriage return-newline. Non-POSIX. May be + negated. + +`onocr' + Do not print carriage returns in the first column. Non-POSIX. + May be negated. + +`onlret' + Newline performs a carriage return. Non-POSIX. May be negated. + +`ofill' + Use fill (padding) characters instead of timing for delays. + Non-POSIX. May be negated. + +`ofdel' + Use delete characters for fill instead of null characters. + Non-POSIX. May be negated. + +`nl1' +`nl0' + Newline delay style. Non-POSIX. + +`cr3' +`cr2' +`cr1' +`cr0' + Carriage return delay style. Non-POSIX. + +`tab3' +`tab2' +`tab1' +`tab0' + Horizontal tab delay style. Non-POSIX. + +`bs1' +`bs0' + Backspace delay style. Non-POSIX. + +`vt1' +`vt0' + Vertical tab delay style. Non-POSIX. + +`ff1' +`ff0' + Form feed delay style. Non-POSIX. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Local, Next: Combination, Prev: Output, Up: stty invocation + +19.2.4 Local settings +--------------------- + +`isig' + Enable `interrupt', `quit', and `suspend' special characters. May + be negated. + +`icanon' + Enable `erase', `kill', `werase', and `rprnt' special characters. + May be negated. + +`iexten' + Enable non-POSIX special characters. May be negated. + +`echo' + Echo input characters. May be negated. + +`echoe' +`crterase' + Echo `erase' characters as backspace-space-backspace. May be + negated. + +`echok' + Echo a newline after a `kill' character. May be negated. + +`echonl' + Echo newline even if not echoing other characters. May be negated. + +`noflsh' + Disable flushing after `interrupt' and `quit' special characters. + May be negated. + +`xcase' + Enable input and output of uppercase characters by preceding their + lowercase equivalents with `\', when `icanon' is set. Non-POSIX. + May be negated. + +`tostop' + Stop background jobs that try to write to the terminal. Non-POSIX. + May be negated. + +`echoprt' +`prterase' + Echo erased characters backward, between `\' and `/'. Non-POSIX. + May be negated. + +`echoctl' +`ctlecho' + Echo control characters in hat notation (`^C') instead of + literally. Non-POSIX. May be negated. + +`echoke' +`crtkill' + Echo the `kill' special character by erasing each character on the + line as indicated by the `echoprt' and `echoe' settings, instead + of by the `echoctl' and `echok' settings. Non-POSIX. May be + negated. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Combination, Next: Characters, Prev: Local, Up: stty invocation + +19.2.5 Combination settings +--------------------------- + +Combination settings: + +`evenp' +`parity' + Same as `parenb -parodd cs7'. May be negated. If negated, same + as `-parenb cs8'. + +`oddp' + Same as `parenb parodd cs7'. May be negated. If negated, same as + `-parenb cs8'. + +`nl' + Same as `-icrnl -onlcr'. May be negated. If negated, same as + `icrnl -inlcr -igncr onlcr -ocrnl -onlret'. + +`ek' + Reset the `erase' and `kill' special characters to their default + values. + +`sane' + Same as: + + cread -ignbrk brkint -inlcr -igncr icrnl -ixoff + -iuclc -ixany imaxbel opost -olcuc -ocrnl onlcr + -onocr -onlret -ofill -ofdel nl0 cr0 tab0 bs0 vt0 + ff0 isig icanon iexten echo echoe echok -echonl + -noflsh -xcase -tostop -echoprt echoctl echoke + + and also sets all special characters to their default values. + +`cooked' + Same as `brkint ignpar istrip icrnl ixon opost isig icanon', plus + sets the `eof' and `eol' characters to their default values if + they are the same as the `min' and `time' characters. May be + negated. If negated, same as `raw'. + +`raw' + Same as: + + -ignbrk -brkint -ignpar -parmrk -inpck -istrip + -inlcr -igncr -icrnl -ixon -ixoff -iuclc -ixany + -imaxbel -opost -isig -icanon -xcase min 1 time 0 + + May be negated. If negated, same as `cooked'. + +`cbreak' + Same as `-icanon'. May be negated. If negated, same as `icanon'. + +`pass8' + Same as `-parenb -istrip cs8'. May be negated. If negated, same + as `parenb istrip cs7'. + +`litout' + Same as `-parenb -istrip -opost cs8'. May be negated. If + negated, same as `parenb istrip opost cs7'. + +`decctlq' + Same as `-ixany'. Non-POSIX. May be negated. + +`tabs' + Same as `tab0'. Non-POSIX. May be negated. If negated, same as + `tab3'. + +`lcase' +`LCASE' + Same as `xcase iuclc olcuc'. Non-POSIX. May be negated. + +`crt' + Same as `echoe echoctl echoke'. + +`dec' + Same as `echoe echoctl echoke -ixany intr ^C erase ^? kill C-u'. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Characters, Next: Special, Prev: Combination, Up: stty invocation + +19.2.6 Special characters +------------------------- + +The special characters' default values vary from system to system. +They are set with the syntax `name value', where the names are listed +below and the value can be given either literally, in hat notation +(`^C'), or as an integer which may start with `0x' to indicate +hexadecimal, `0' to indicate octal, or any other digit to indicate +decimal. + + For GNU stty, giving a value of `^-' or `undef' disables that +special character. (This is incompatible with Ultrix `stty', which +uses a value of `u' to disable a special character. GNU `stty' treats +a value `u' like any other, namely to set that special character to +<U>.) + +`intr' + Send an interrupt signal. + +`quit' + Send a quit signal. + +`erase' + Erase the last character typed. + +`kill' + Erase the current line. + +`eof' + Send an end of file (terminate the input). + +`eol' + End the line. + +`eol2' + Alternate character to end the line. Non-POSIX. + +`swtch' + Switch to a different shell layer. Non-POSIX. + +`start' + Restart the output after stopping it. + +`stop' + Stop the output. + +`susp' + Send a terminal stop signal. + +`dsusp' + Send a terminal stop signal after flushing the input. Non-POSIX. + +`rprnt' + Redraw the current line. Non-POSIX. + +`werase' + Erase the last word typed. Non-POSIX. + +`lnext' + Enter the next character typed literally, even if it is a special + character. Non-POSIX. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Special, Prev: Characters, Up: stty invocation + +19.2.7 Special settings +----------------------- + +`min N' + Set the minimum number of characters that will satisfy a read until + the time value has expired, when `-icanon' is set. + +`time N' + Set the number of tenths of a second before reads time out if the + minimum number of characters have not been read, when `-icanon' is + set. + +`ispeed N' + Set the input speed to N. + +`ospeed N' + Set the output speed to N. + +`rows N' + Tell the tty kernel driver that the terminal has N rows. + Non-POSIX. + +`cols N' +`columns N' + Tell the kernel that the terminal has N columns. Non-POSIX. + +`size' + Print the number of rows and columns that the kernel thinks the + terminal has. (Systems that don't support rows and columns in the + kernel typically use the environment variables `LINES' and + `COLUMNS' instead; however, GNU `stty' does not know anything + about them.) Non-POSIX. + +`line N' + Use line discipline N. Non-POSIX. + +`speed' + Print the terminal speed. + +`N' + Set the input and output speeds to N. N can be one of: 0 50 75 + 110 134 134.5 150 200 300 600 1200 1800 2400 4800 9600 19200 38400 + `exta' `extb'. `exta' is the same as 19200; `extb' is the same as + 38400. 0 hangs up the line if `-clocal' is set. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: printenv invocation, Next: tty invocation, Prev: stty invocation, Up: Working context + +19.3 `printenv': Print all or some environment variables +======================================================== + +`printenv' prints environment variable values. Synopsis: + + printenv [OPTION] [VARIABLE]... + + If no VARIABLEs are specified, `printenv' prints the value of every +environment variable. Otherwise, it prints the value of each VARIABLE +that is set, and nothing for those that are not set. + + The only options are a lone `--help' or `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + Exit status: + + 0 if all variables specified were found + 1 if at least one specified variable was not found + 2 if a write error occurred + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: tty invocation, Prev: printenv invocation, Up: Working context + +19.4 `tty': Print file name of terminal on standard input +========================================================= + +`tty' prints the file name of the terminal connected to its standard +input. It prints `not a tty' if standard input is not a terminal. +Synopsis: + + tty [OPTION]... + + The program accepts the following option. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-s' +`--silent' +`--quiet' + Print nothing; only return an exit status. + + + Exit status: + + 0 if standard input is a terminal + 1 if standard input is not a terminal + 2 if given incorrect arguments + 3 if a write error occurs + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: User information, Next: System context, Prev: Working context, Up: Top + +20 User information +******************* + +This section describes commands that print user-related information: +logins, groups, and so forth. + +* Menu: + +* id invocation:: Print real and effective uid and gid. +* logname invocation:: Print current login name. +* whoami invocation:: Print effective user id. +* groups invocation:: Print group names a user is in. +* users invocation:: Print login names of users currently logged in. +* who invocation:: Print who is currently logged in. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: id invocation, Next: logname invocation, Up: User information + +20.1 `id': Print real and effective uid and gid +=============================================== + +`id' prints information about the given user, or the process running it +if no user is specified. Synopsis: + + id [OPTION]... [USERNAME] + + By default, it prints the real user id, real group id, effective +user id if different from the real user id, effective group id if +different from the real group id, and supplemental group ids. + + Each of these numeric values is preceded by an identifying string and +followed by the corresponding user or group name in parentheses. + + The options cause `id' to print only part of the above information. +Also see *Note Common options::. + +`-g' +`--group' + Print only the group id. + +`-G' +`--groups' + Print only the group id and the supplementary groups. + +`-n' +`--name' + Print the user or group name instead of the ID number. Requires + `-u', `-g', or `-G'. + +`-r' +`--real' + Print the real, instead of effective, user or group id. Requires + `-u', `-g', or `-G'. + +`-u' +`--user' + Print only the user id. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: logname invocation, Next: whoami invocation, Prev: id invocation, Up: User information + +20.2 `logname': Print current login name +======================================== + +`logname' prints the calling user's name, as found in a +system-maintained file (often `/var/run/utmp' or `/etc/utmp'), and +exits with a status of 0. If there is no entry for the calling +process, `logname' prints an error message and exits with a status of 1. + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: whoami invocation, Next: groups invocation, Prev: logname invocation, Up: User information + +20.3 `whoami': Print effective user id +====================================== + +`whoami' prints the user name associated with the current effective +user id. It is equivalent to the command `id -un'. + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: groups invocation, Next: users invocation, Prev: whoami invocation, Up: User information + +20.4 `groups': Print group names a user is in +============================================= + +`groups' prints the names of the primary and any supplementary groups +for each given USERNAME, or the current process if no names are given. +If names are given, the name of each user is printed before the list of +that user's groups. Synopsis: + + groups [USERNAME]... + + The group lists are equivalent to the output of the command `id -Gn'. + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: users invocation, Next: who invocation, Prev: groups invocation, Up: User information + +20.5 `users': Print login names of users currently logged in +============================================================ + +`users' prints on a single line a blank-separated list of user names of +users currently logged in to the current host. Each user name +corresponds to a login session, so if a user has more than one login +session, that user's name will appear the same number of times in the +output. Synopsis: + + users [FILE] + + With no FILE argument, `users' extracts its information from a +system-maintained file (often `/var/run/utmp' or `/etc/utmp'). If a +file argument is given, `users' uses that file instead. A common +choice is `/var/log/wtmp'. + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: who invocation, Prev: users invocation, Up: User information + +20.6 `who': Print who is currently logged in +============================================ + +`who' prints information about users who are currently logged on. +Synopsis: + + `who' [OPTION] [FILE] [am i] + + If given no non-option arguments, `who' prints the following +information for each user currently logged on: login name, terminal +line, login time, and remote hostname or X display. + + If given one non-option argument, `who' uses that instead of a +default system-maintained file (often `/var/run/utmp' or +`/etc/utmp') +as the name of the file containing the record of users logged on. +`/var/log/wtmp' is commonly given as an argument to `who' to look at +who has previously logged on. + + If given two non-option arguments, `who' prints only the entry for +the user running it (determined from its standard input), preceded by +the hostname. Traditionally, the two arguments given are `am i', as in +`who am i'. + + Time stamps are listed according to the time zone rules specified by +the `TZ' environment variable, or by the system default rules if `TZ' +is not set. *Note Specifying the Time Zone with `TZ': (libc)TZ +Variable. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-a' +`--all' + Same as `-b -d --login -p -r -t -T -u'. + +`-b' +`--boot' + Print the date and time of last system boot. + +`-d' +`--dead' + Print information corresponding to dead processes. + +`-H' +`--heading' + Print column headings. + +`-i' +`--idle' + Include idle time in HOURS:MINUTES, `.' (to indicate current + process), or `old'. + +`-m' + Same as `who am i'. + +`-q' +`--count' + Print only the login names and the number of users logged on. + Overrides all other options. + +`-s' + Ignored; for compatibility with other versions of `who'. + +`-i' +`-u' +`--idle' + After the login time, print the number of hours and minutes that + the user has been idle. `.' means the user was active in last + minute. `old' means the user was idle for more than 24 hours. + +`-l' +`--login' + List only the entries that correspond to processes via which the + system is waiting for a user to login. The user name is always + `LOGIN'. + +`--lookup' + Attempt to canonicalize hostnames found in utmp through a DNS + lookup. This is not the default because it can cause significant + delays on systems with automatic dial-up internet access. + +`-H' +`--heading' + Print a line of column headings. + +`-w' +`-T' +`--mesg' +`--message' +`--writable' + After each login name print a character indicating the user's + message status: + + `+' allowing `write' messages + `-' disallowing `write' messages + `?' cannot find terminal device + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: System context, Next: Modified command invocation, Prev: User information, Up: Top + +21 System context +***************** + +This section describes commands that print or change system-wide +information. + +* Menu: + +* date invocation:: Print or set system date and time. +* uname invocation:: Print system information. +* hostname invocation:: Print or set system name. +* hostid invocation:: Print numeric host identifier. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: date invocation, Next: uname invocation, Up: System context + +21.1 `date': Print or set system date and time +============================================== + +Synopses: + + date [OPTION]... [+FORMAT] + date [-u|--utc|--universal] [ MMDDhhmm[[CC]YY][.ss] ] + + Invoking `date' with no FORMAT argument is equivalent to invoking it +with a default format that depends on the `LC_TIME' locale category. +In the default C locale, this format is `'+%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Z %Y'', +so the output looks like `Fri Feb 27 13:47:51 PST 2004'. + + Normally, `date' uses the time zone rules indicated by the `TZ' +environment variable, or the system default rules if `TZ' is not set. +*Note Specifying the Time Zone with `TZ': (libc)TZ Variable. + + If given an argument that starts with a `+', `date' prints the +current time and date (or the time and date specified by the `--date' +option, see below) in the format defined by that argument, which is +similar to that of the `strftime' function. Except for directives, +which start with `%', characters in the format string are printed +unchanged. The directives are described below. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + +* Menu: + +* Time directives:: %[HIklMprsSTXzZ] +* Date directives:: %[aAbBcCdDhjmUwWxyY] +* Literal directives:: %[%nt] +* Padding:: Pad with zeroes, spaces (%_), or nothing (%-). +* Setting the time:: Changing the system clock. +* Options for date:: Instead of the current time. +* Examples of date:: Examples. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Time directives, Next: Date directives, Up: date invocation + +21.1.1 Time directives +---------------------- + +`date' directives related to times. + +`%H' + hour (00...23) + +`%I' + hour (01...12) + +`%k' + hour ( 0...23) + +`%l' + hour ( 1...12) + +`%M' + minute (00...59) + +`%N' + nanoseconds (000000000...999999999) + +`%p' + locale's upper case `AM' or `PM' (blank in many locales) + +`%P' + locale's lower case `am' or `pm' (blank in many locales) + +`%r' + time, 12-hour (hh:mm:ss [AP]M) + +`%R' + time, 24-hour (hh:mm). Same as `%H:%M'. + +`%s' + seconds since the epoch, i.e., 1 January 1970 00:00:00 UTC (a GNU + extension). For examples, *Note %s-examples::. + +`%S' + second (00...60). The range is [00...60], and not [00...59], in + order to accommodate the occasional positive leap second. + +`%T' + time, 24-hour (hh:mm:ss) + +`%X' + locale's time representation (%H:%M:%S) + +`%z' + RFC-2822 style numeric time zone (e.g., `-0600' or `+0100'), or + nothing if no time zone is determinable. This value reflects the + _current_ time zone. It isn't changed by the `--date' option. + +`%Z' + time zone (e.g., EDT), or nothing if no time zone is determinable. + Note that this value reflects the _current_ time zone. It isn't + changed by the `--date' option. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Date directives, Next: Literal directives, Prev: Time directives, Up: date invocation + +21.1.2 Date directives +---------------------- + +`date' directives related to dates. + +`%a' + locale's abbreviated weekday name (Sun...Sat) + +`%A' + locale's full weekday name, variable length (Sunday...Saturday) + +`%b' + locale's abbreviated month name (Jan...Dec) + +`%B' + locale's full month name, variable length (January...December) + +`%c' + locale's date and time (Sat Nov 04 12:02:33 EST 1989) + +`%C' + century (year divided by 100 and truncated to an integer) (00...99) + +`%d' + day of month (01...31) + +`%D' + date (mm/dd/yy) + +`%e' + blank-padded day of month (1...31) + +`%F' + the ISO 8601 standard date format: `%Y-%m-%d'. This is the + preferred form for all uses. + +`%g' + The year corresponding to the ISO week number, but without the + century (range `00' through `99'). This has the same format and + value as `%y', except that if the ISO week number (see `%V') + belongs to the previous or next year, that year is used instead. + +`%G' + The year corresponding to the ISO week number. This has the same + format and value as `%Y', except that if the ISO week number (see + `%V') belongs to the previous or next year, that year is used + instead. + +`%h' + same as %b + +`%j' + day of year (001...366) + +`%m' + month (01...12) + +`%u' + day of week (1...7) with 1 corresponding to Monday + +`%U' + week number of year with Sunday as first day of week (00...53). + Days in a new year preceding the first Sunday are in week zero. + +`%V' + week number of year with Monday as first day of the week as a + decimal (01...53). If the week containing January 1 has four or + more days in the new year, then it is considered week 1; + otherwise, it is week 53 of the previous year, and the next week + is week 1. (See the ISO 8601 standard.) + +`%w' + day of week (0...6) with 0 corresponding to Sunday + +`%W' + week number of year with Monday as first day of week (00...53). + Days in a new year preceding the first Monday are in week zero. + +`%x' + locale's date representation (mm/dd/yy) + +`%y' + last two digits of year (00...99) + +`%Y' + year (1970....) + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Literal directives, Next: Padding, Prev: Date directives, Up: date invocation + +21.1.3 Literal directives +------------------------- + +`date' directives that produce literal strings. + +`%%' + a literal % + +`%n' + a newline + +`%t' + a horizontal tab + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Padding, Next: Setting the time, Prev: Literal directives, Up: date invocation + +21.1.4 Padding +-------------- + +By default, `date' pads numeric fields with zeroes, so that, for +example, numeric months are always output as two digits. GNU `date' +recognizes the following numeric modifiers between the `%' and the +directive. + +`-' + (hyphen) do not pad the field; useful if the output is intended for + human consumption. + +`_' + (underscore) pad the field with spaces; useful if you need a fixed + number of characters in the output, but zeroes are too distracting. + +These are GNU extensions. + + Here is an example illustrating the differences: + + date +%d/%m -d "Feb 1" + => 01/02 + date +%-d/%-m -d "Feb 1" + => 1/2 + date +%_d/%_m -d "Feb 1" + => 1/ 2 + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Setting the time, Next: Options for date, Prev: Padding, Up: date invocation + +21.1.5 Setting the time +----------------------- + +If given an argument that does not start with `+', `date' sets the +system clock to the time and date specified by that argument (as +described below). You must have appropriate privileges to set the +system clock. The `--date' and `--set' options may not be used with +such an argument. The `--universal' option may be used with such an +argument to indicate that the specified time and date are relative to +Coordinated Universal Time rather than to the local time zone. + + The argument must consist entirely of digits, which have the +following meaning: + +`MM' + month + +`DD' + day within month + +`hh' + hour + +`mm' + minute + +`CC' + first two digits of year (optional) + +`YY' + last two digits of year (optional) + +`ss' + second (optional) + + The `--set' option also sets the system clock; see the next section. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Options for date, Next: Examples of date, Prev: Setting the time, Up: date invocation + +21.1.6 Options for `date' +------------------------- + +The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-d DATESTR' +`--date=DATESTR' + Display the time and date specified in DATESTR instead of the + current time and date. DATESTR can be in almost any common + format. It can contain month names, time zones, `am' and `pm', + `yesterday', etc. For example, `--date="2004-02-27 + 14:19:13.489392193 +0530"' specifies the instant of time that is + 489,392,193 nanoseconds after February 27, 2004 at 2:19:13 PM in a + time zone that is 5 hours and 30 minutes east of UTC. *Note Date + input formats::. + +`-f DATEFILE' +`--file=DATEFILE' + Parse each line in DATEFILE as with `-d' and display the resulting + time and date. If DATEFILE is `-', use standard input. This is + useful when you have many dates to process, because the system + overhead of starting up the `date' executable many times can be + considerable. + +`-I TIMESPEC' +`--iso-8601[=TIMESPEC]' + Display the date using the ISO 8601 format, `%Y-%m-%d'. + + The argument TIMESPEC specifies the number of additional terms of + the time to include. It can be one of the following: + `auto' + The default behavior: print just the date. + + `hours' + Append the hour of the day to the date. + + `minutes' + Append the hours and minutes. + + `seconds' + Append the hours, minutes, and seconds. + + `ns' + Append the hours, minutes, seconds, and nanoseconds. + + If showing any time terms, then include the time zone using the + format `%z'. + + If TIMESPEC is omitted with `--iso-8601', the default is `auto'. + On older systems, GNU `date' instead supports an obsolete option + `-I[TIMESPEC]', where TIMESPEC defaults to `auto'. POSIX + 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) does not allow `-I' + without an argument; use `--iso-8601' instead. + +`-R' +`--rfc-822' +`--rfc-2822' + Display the time and date using the format `%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S + %z', evaluated in the C locale so abbreviations are always in + English. For example: + + Fri, 1 Aug 2003 23:05:56 -0700 + + This format conforms to RFC 2822 + (ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2822.txt) and RFC 822 + (ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc822.txt), the current and + previous standards for Internet email. + +`-r FILE' +`--reference=FILE' + Display the time and date reference according to the last + modification time of FILE, instead of the current time and date. + +`-s DATESTR' +`--set=DATESTR' + Set the time and date to DATESTR. See `-d' above. + +`-u' +`--utc' +`--universal' + Use Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) by operating as if the `TZ' + environment variable were set to the string `UTC0'. Coordinated + Universal Time is often called "Greenwich Mean Time" (GMT) for + historical reasons. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Examples of date, Prev: Options for date, Up: date invocation + +21.1.7 Examples of `date' +------------------------- + +Here are a few examples. Also see the documentation for the `-d' +option in the previous section. + + * To print the date of the day before yesterday: + + date --date='2 days ago' + + * To print the date of the day three months and one day hence: + + date --date='3 months 1 day' + + * To print the day of year of Christmas in the current year: + + date --date='25 Dec' +%j + + * To print the current full month name and the day of the month: + + date '+%B %d' + + But this may not be what you want because for the first nine days + of the month, the `%d' expands to a zero-padded two-digit field, + for example `date -d 1may '+%B %d'' will print `May 01'. + + * To print a date without the leading zero for one-digit days of the + month, you can use the (GNU extension) `-' modifier to suppress + the padding altogether: + + date -d 1may '+%B %-d + + * To print the current date and time in the format required by many + non-GNU versions of `date' when setting the system clock: + + date +%m%d%H%M%Y.%S + + * To set the system clock forward by two minutes: + + date --set='+2 minutes' + + * To print the date in the format specified by RFC-2822, use `date + --rfc-2822'. I just did and saw this: + + Thu, 31 Jul 2003 13:13:05 -0700 + + * To convert a date string to the number of seconds since the epoch + (which is 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC), use the `--date' option with + the `%s' format. That can be useful in sorting and/or graphing + and/or comparing data by date. The following command outputs the + number of the seconds since the epoch for the time two minutes + after the epoch: + + date --date='1970-01-01 00:02:00 +0000' +%s + 120 + + If you do not specify time zone information in the date string, + `date' uses your computer's idea of the time zone when + interpreting the string. For example, if your computer's time + zone is that of Cambridge, Massachusetts, which was then 5 hours + (i.e., 18,000 seconds) behind UTC: + + # local time zone used + date --date='1970-01-01 00:02:00' +%s + 18120 + + * If you're sorting or graphing dated data, your raw date values may + be represented as seconds since the epoch. But few people can + look at the date `946684800' and casually note "Oh, that's the + first second of the year 2000 in Greenwich, England." + + date --date='2000-01-01 UTC' +%s + 946684800 + + An alternative is to use the `--utc' (`-u') option. Then you may + omit `UTC' from the date string. Although this produces the same + result for `%s' and many other format sequences, with a time zone + offset different from zero, it would give a different result for + zone-dependent formats like `%z'. + + date -u --date=2000-01-01 +%s + 946684800 + + To convert such an unwieldy number of seconds back to a more + readable form, use a command like this: + + # local time zone used + date -d '1970-01-01 UTC 946684800 seconds' +"%Y-%m-%d %T %z" + 1999-12-31 19:00:00 -0500 + + Often it is better to output UTC-relative date and time: + + date -u -d '1970-01-01 946684800 seconds' +"%Y-%m-%d %T %z" + 2000-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: uname invocation, Next: hostname invocation, Prev: date invocation, Up: System context + +21.2 `uname': Print system information +====================================== + +`uname' prints information about the machine and operating system it is +run on. If no options are given, `uname' acts as if the `-s' option +were given. Synopsis: + + uname [OPTION]... + + If multiple options or `-a' are given, the selected information is +printed in this order: + + KERNEL-NAME NODENAME KERNEL-RELEASE KERNEL-VERSION + MACHINE PROCESSOR HARDWARE-PLATFORM OPERATING-SYSTEM + + The information may contain internal spaces, so such output cannot be +parsed reliably. In the following example, RELEASE is +`2.2.18ss.e820-bda652a #4 SMP Tue Jun 5 11:24:08 PDT 2001': + + uname -a + => Linux dum 2.2.18 #4 SMP Tue Jun 5 11:24:08 PDT 2001 i686 unknown unknown GNU/Linux + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-a' +`--all' + Print all of the below information. + +`-i' +`--hardware-platform' + Print the hardware platform name (sometimes called the hardware + implementation). + +`-m' +`--machine' + Print the machine hardware name (sometimes called the hardware + class or hardware type). + +`-n' +`--nodename' + Print the network node hostname. + +`-p' +`--processor' + Print the processor type (sometimes called the instruction set + architecture or ISA). + +`-o' +`--operating-system' + Print the name of the operating system. + +`-r' +`--kernel-release' + Print the kernel release. + +`-s' +`--kernel-name' + Print the kernel name. POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards + conformance::) calls this "the implementation of the operating + system", because the POSIX specification itself has no notion of + "kernel". The kernel name might be the same as the operating + system name printed by the `-o' or `--operating-system' option, + but it might differ. Some operating systems (e.g., FreeBSD, + HP-UX) have the same name as their underlying kernels; others + (e.g., GNU/Linux, Solaris) do not. + +`-v' +`--kernel-version' + Print the kernel version. + + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: hostname invocation, Next: hostid invocation, Prev: uname invocation, Up: System context + +21.3 `hostname': Print or set system name +========================================= + +With no arguments, `hostname' prints the name of the current host +system. With one argument, it sets the current host name to the +specified string. You must have appropriate privileges to set the host +name. Synopsis: + + hostname [NAME] + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: hostid invocation, Prev: hostname invocation, Up: System context + +21.4 `hostid': Print numeric host identifier. +============================================= + +`hostid' prints the numeric identifier of the current host in +hexadecimal. This command accepts no arguments. The only options are +`--help' and `--version'. *Note Common options::. + + For example, here's what it prints on one system I use: + + $ hostid + 1bac013d + + On that system, the 32-bit quantity happens to be closely related to +the system's Internet address, but that isn't always the case. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Modified command invocation, Next: Process control, Prev: System context, Up: Top + +22 Modified command invocation +****************************** + +This section describes commands that run other commands in some context +different than the current one: a modified environment, as a different +user, etc. + +* Menu: + +* chroot invocation:: Modify the root directory. +* env invocation:: Modify environment variables. +* nice invocation:: Modify scheduling priority. +* nohup invocation:: Immunize to hangups. +* su invocation:: Modify user and group id. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: chroot invocation, Next: env invocation, Up: Modified command invocation + +22.1 `chroot': Run a command with a different root directory +============================================================ + +`chroot' runs a command with a specified root directory. On many +systems, only the super-user can do this. Synopses: + + chroot NEWROOT [COMMAND [ARGS]...] + chroot OPTION + + Ordinarily, file names are looked up starting at the root of the +directory structure, i.e., `/'. `chroot' changes the root to the +directory NEWROOT (which must exist) and then runs COMMAND with +optional ARGS. If COMMAND is not specified, the default is the value +of the `SHELL' environment variable or `/bin/sh' if not set, invoked +with the `-i' option. COMMAND must not be a special built-in utility +(*note Special built-in utilities::). + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. Options must precede operands. + + Here are a few tips to help avoid common problems in using chroot. +To start with a simple example, make COMMAND refer to a statically +linked binary. If you were to use a dynamically linked executable, then +you'd have to arrange to have the shared libraries in the right place +under your new root directory. + + For example, if you create a statically linked `ls' executable, and +put it in `/tmp/empty', you can run this command as root: + + $ chroot /tmp/empty /ls -Rl / + + Then you'll see output like this: + + /: + total 1023 + -rwxr-xr-x 1 0 0 1041745 Aug 16 11:17 ls + + If you want to use a dynamically linked executable, say `bash', then +first run `ldd bash' to see what shared objects it needs. Then, in +addition to copying the actual binary, also copy the listed files to +the required positions under your intended new root directory. +Finally, if the executable requires any other files (e.g., data, state, +device files), copy them into place, too. + + Exit status: + + 1 if `chroot' itself fails + 126 if COMMAND is found but cannot be invoked + 127 if COMMAND cannot be found + the exit status of COMMAND otherwise + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: env invocation, Next: nice invocation, Prev: chroot invocation, Up: Modified command invocation + +22.2 `env': Run a command in a modified environment +=================================================== + +`env' runs a command with a modified environment. Synopses: + + env [OPTION]... [NAME=VALUE]... [COMMAND [ARGS]...] + env + + Operands of the form `VARIABLE=VALUE' set the environment variable +VARIABLE to value VALUE. VALUE may be empty (`VARIABLE='). Setting a +variable to an empty value is different from unsetting it. These +operands are evaluated left-to-right, so if two operands mention the +same variable the earlier is ignored. + + Environment variable names can be empty, and can contain any +characters other than `=' and the null character (ASCII NUL). However, +it is wise to limit yourself to names that consist solely of +underscores, digits, and ASCII letters, and that begin with a +non-digit, as applications like the shell do not work well with other +names. + + The first operand that does not contain the character `=' specifies +the program to invoke; it is searched for according to the `PATH' +environment variable. Any remaining arguments are passed as arguments +to that program. The program should not be a special built-in utility +(*note Special built-in utilities::). + + If no command name is specified following the environment +specifications, the resulting environment is printed. This is like +specifying the `printenv' program. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. Options must precede operands. + +`-u NAME' +`--unset=NAME' + Remove variable NAME from the environment, if it was in the + environment. + +`-' +`-i' +`--ignore-environment' + Start with an empty environment, ignoring the inherited + environment. + + + Exit status: + + 0 if no COMMAND is specified and the environment is output + 1 if `env' itself fails + 126 if COMMAND is found but cannot be invoked + 127 if COMMAND cannot be found + the exit status of COMMAND otherwise + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: nice invocation, Next: nohup invocation, Prev: env invocation, Up: Modified command invocation + +22.3 `nice': Run a command with modified scheduling priority +============================================================ + +`nice' prints or modifies a process's "nice value", a parameter that +affects the process's scheduling priority. Synopsis: + + nice [OPTION]... [COMMAND [ARG]...] + + If no arguments are given, `nice' prints the current nice value, +which it inherited. Otherwise, `nice' runs the given COMMAND with its +nice value adjusted. By default, its nice value is incremented by 10. + + Nice values range at least from -20 (resulting in the most favorable +scheduling) through 19 (the least favorable). Some systems may have a +wider range of nice values; conversely, other systems may enforce more +restrictive limits. An attempt to set the nice value outside the +supported range is treated as an attempt to use the minimum or maximum +supported value. + + COMMAND must not be a special built-in utility (*note Special +built-in utilities::). + + Because many shells have a built-in `nice' command, using an +unadorned `nice' in a script or interactively may get you different +functionality than that described here. + + The program accepts the following option. Also see *Note Common +options::. Options must precede operands. + +`-n ADJUSTMENT' +`--adjustment=ADJUSTMENT' + Add ADJUSTMENT instead of 10 to the command's nice value. If + ADJUSTMENT is negative and you lack appropriate privileges, `nice' + issues a warning but otherwise acts as if you specified a zero + adjustment. + + On older systems, `nice' supports an obsolete option + `-ADJUSTMENT'. POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note Standards conformance::) + does not allow this; use `-n ADJUSTMENT' instead. + + + Exit status: + + 0 if no COMMAND is specified and the current priority is output + 1 if `nice' itself fails + 126 if COMMAND is found but cannot be invoked + 127 if COMMAND cannot be found + the exit status of COMMAND otherwise + + It is sometimes useful to run non-interactive programs with reduced +priority. + + $ nice factor 4611686018427387903 + + Since `nice' prints the current priority, you can invoke it through +itself to demonstrate how it works. + + The default behavior is to increase the nice value by `10': + + $ nice + 0 + $ nice nice + 10 + $ nice -n 10 nice + 10 + + The ADJUSTMENT is relative to the current nice value. In the next +example, the first `nice' invocation runs the second one with nice +value 10, and it in turn runs the final one with a nice value that is 3 +more: + + $ nice nice -n 3 nice + 13 + + Specifying a nice value larger than the supported range is the same +as specifying the maximum supported value: + + $ nice -n 10000000000 nice + 19 + + Only a privileged user may run a process with higher priority: + + $ nice -n -1 nice + nice: cannot set priority: Permission denied + 0 + $ sudo nice -n -1 nice + -1 + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: nohup invocation, Next: su invocation, Prev: nice invocation, Up: Modified command invocation + +22.4 `nohup': Run a command immune to hangups +============================================= + +`nohup' runs the given COMMAND with hangup signals ignored, so that the +command can continue running in the background after you log out. +Synopsis: + + nohup COMMAND [ARG]... + + If standard output is a terminal, it is redirected so that it is +appended to the file `nohup.out'; if that cannot be written to, it is +appended to the file `$HOME/nohup.out'. If that cannot be written to, +the command is not run. If standard output is not a terminal, then the +standard output of COMMAND will be the same as that of `nohup'. + + If `nohup' creates either `nohup.out' or `$HOME/nohup.out', it +creates it with no "group" or "other" access permissions. It does not +change the permissions if the output file already existed. + + If standard error is a terminal, it is redirected to the same file +descriptor as the standard output. + + `nohup' does not automatically put the command it runs in the +background; you must do that explicitly, by ending the command line +with an `&'. Also, `nohup' does not change the scheduling priority of +COMMAND; use `nice' for that, e.g., `nohup nice COMMAND'. + + COMMAND must not be a special built-in utility (*note Special +built-in utilities::). + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. Options must precede operands. + + Exit status: + + 126 if COMMAND is found but cannot be invoked + 127 if `nohup' itself fails or if COMMAND cannot be found + the exit status of COMMAND otherwise + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: su invocation, Prev: nohup invocation, Up: Modified command invocation + +22.5 `su': Run a command with substitute user and group id +========================================================== + +`su' allows one user to temporarily become another user. It runs a +command (often an interactive shell) with the real and effective user +id, group id, and supplemental groups of a given USER. Synopsis: + + su [OPTION]... [USER [ARG]...] + + If no USER is given, the default is `root', the super-user. The +shell to use is taken from USER's `passwd' entry, or `/bin/sh' if none +is specified there. If USER has a password, `su' prompts for the +password unless run by a user with effective user id of zero (the +super-user). + + By default, `su' does not change the current directory. It sets the +environment variables `HOME' and `SHELL' from the password entry for +USER, and if USER is not the super-user, sets `USER' and `LOGNAME' to +USER. By default, the shell is not a login shell. + + Any additional ARGs are passed as additional arguments to the shell. + + GNU `su' does not treat `/bin/sh' or any other shells specially +(e.g., by setting `argv[0]' to `-su', passing `-c' only to certain +shells, etc.). + + `su' can optionally be compiled to use `syslog' to report failed, +and optionally successful, `su' attempts. (If the system supports +`syslog'.) However, GNU `su' does not check if the user is a member of +the `wheel' group; see below. + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. + +`-c COMMAND' +`--command=COMMAND' + Pass COMMAND, a single command line to run, to the shell with a + `-c' option instead of starting an interactive shell. + +`-f' +`--fast' + Pass the `-f' option to the shell. This probably only makes sense + if the shell run is `csh' or `tcsh', for which the `-f' option + prevents reading the startup file (`.cshrc'). With Bourne-like + shells, the `-f' option disables file name pattern expansion + (globbing), which is not likely to be useful. + +`-' +`-l' +`--login' + Make the shell a login shell. This means the following. Unset all + environment variables except `TERM', `HOME', and `SHELL' (which + are set as described above), and `USER' and `LOGNAME' (which are + set, even for the super-user, as described above), and set `PATH' + to a compiled-in default value. Change to USER's home directory. + Prepend `-' to the shell's name, intended to make it read its + login startup file(s). + +`-m' +`-p' +`--preserve-environment' + Do not change the environment variables `HOME', `USER', `LOGNAME', + or `SHELL'. Run the shell given in the environment variable + `SHELL' instead of the shell from USER's passwd entry, unless the + user running `su' is not the superuser and USER's shell is + restricted. A "restricted shell" is one that is not listed in the + file `/etc/shells', or in a compiled-in list if that file does not + exist. Parts of what this option does can be overridden by + `--login' and `--shell'. + +`-s SHELL' +`--shell=SHELL' + Run SHELL instead of the shell from USER's passwd entry, unless + the user running `su' is not the superuser and USER's shell is + restricted (see `-m' just above). + + + Exit status: + + 1 if `su' itself fails + 126 if subshell is found but cannot be invoked + 127 if subshell cannot be found + the exit status of the subshell otherwise + +22.5.1 Why GNU `su' does not support the `wheel' group +------------------------------------------------------ + +(This section is by Richard Stallman.) + + Sometimes a few of the users try to hold total power over all the +rest. For example, in 1984, a few users at the MIT AI lab decided to +seize power by changing the operator password on the Twenex system and +keeping it secret from everyone else. (I was able to thwart this coup +and give power back to the users by patching the kernel, but I wouldn't +know how to do that in Unix.) + + However, occasionally the rulers do tell someone. Under the usual +`su' mechanism, once someone learns the root password who sympathizes +with the ordinary users, he or she can tell the rest. The "wheel +group" feature would make this impossible, and thus cement the power of +the rulers. + + I'm on the side of the masses, not that of the rulers. If you are +used to supporting the bosses and sysadmins in whatever they do, you +might find this idea strange at first. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Process control, Next: Delaying, Prev: Modified command invocation, Up: Top + +23 Process control +****************** + +* Menu: + +* kill invocation:: Sending a signal to processes. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: kill invocation, Up: Process control + +23.1 `kill': Send a signal to processes +======================================= + +The `kill' command sends a signal to processes, causing them to +terminate or otherwise act upon receiving the signal in some way. +Alternatively, it lists information about signals. Synopses: + + kill [-s SIGNAL | --signal SIGNAL | -SIGNAL] PID... + kill [-l | --list | -t | --table] [SIGNAL]... + + The first form of the `kill' command sends a signal to all PID +arguments. The default signal to send if none is specified is `TERM'. +The special signal number `0' does not denote a valid signal, but can +be used to test whether the PID arguments specify processes to which a +signal could be sent. + + If PID is positive, the signal is sent to the process with the +process id PID. If PID is zero, the signal is sent to all processes in +the process group of the current process. If PID is -1, the signal is +sent to all processes for which the user has permission to send a +signal. If PID is less than -1, the signal is sent to all processes in +the process group that equals the absolute value of PID. + + If PID is not positive, a system-dependent set of system processes +is excluded from the list of processes to which the signal is sent. + + If a negative PID argument is desired as the first one, it should be +preceded by `--'. However, as a common extension to POSIX, `--' is not +required with `kill -SIGNAL -PID'. The following commands are +equivalent: + + kill -15 -1 + kill -TERM -1 + kill -s TERM -- -1 + kill -- -1 + + The first form of the `kill' command succeeds if every PID argument +specifies at least one process that the signal was sent to. + + The second form of the `kill' command lists signal information. +Either the `-l' or `--list' option, or the `-t' or `--table' option +must be specified. Without any SIGNAL argument, all supported signals +are listed. The output of `-l' or `--list' is a list of the signal +names, one per line; if SIGNAL is already a name, the signal number is +printed instead. The output of `-t' or `--table' is a table of signal +numbers, names, and descriptions. This form of the `kill' command +succeeds if all SIGNAL arguments are valid and if there is no output +error. + + The `kill' command also supports the `--help' and `--version' +options. *Note Common options::. + + A SIGNAL may be a signal name like `HUP', or a signal number like +`1', or an exit status of a process terminated by the signal. A signal +name can be given in canonical form or prefixed by `SIG'. The case of +the letters is ignored, except for the `-SIGNAL' option which must use +upper case to avoid ambiguity with lower case option letters. The +following signal names and numbers are supported on all POSIX compliant +systems: + +`HUP' + 1. Hangup. + +`INT' + 2. Terminal interrupt. + +`QUIT' + 3. Terminal quit. + +`ABRT' + 6. Process abort. + +`KILL' + 9. Kill (cannot be caught or ignored). + +`ALRM' + 14. Alarm Clock. + +`TERM' + 15. Termination. + +Other supported signal names have system-dependent corresponding +numbers. All systems conforming to POSIX 1003.1-2001 also support the +following signals: + +`BUS' + Access to an undefined portion of a memory object. + +`CHLD' + Child process terminated, stopped, or continued. + +`CONT' + Continue executing, if stopped. + +`FPE' + Erroneous arithmetic operation. + +`ILL' + Illegal Instruction. + +`PIPE' + Write on a pipe with no one to read it. + +`SEGV' + Invalid memory reference. + +`STOP' + Stop executing (cannot be caught or ignored). + +`TSTP' + Terminal stop. + +`TTIN' + Background process attempting read. + +`TTOU' + Background process attempting write. + +`URG' + High bandwidth data is available at a socket. + +`USR1' + User-defined signal 1. + +`USR2' + User-defined signal 2. + +POSIX 1003.1-2001 systems that support the XSI extension also support +the following signals: + +`POLL' + Pollable event. + +`PROF' + Profiling timer expired. + +`SYS' + Bad system call. + +`TRAP' + Trace/breakpoint trap. + +`VTALRM' + Virtual timer expired. + +`XCPU' + CPU time limit exceeded. + +`XFSZ' + File size limit exceeded. + +POSIX 1003.1-2001 systems that support the XRT extension also support +at least eight real-time signals called `RTMIN', `RTMIN+1', ..., +`RTMAX-1', `RTMAX'. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Delaying, Next: Numeric operations, Prev: Process control, Up: Top + +24 Delaying +*********** + +* Menu: + +* sleep invocation:: Delay for a specified time. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: sleep invocation, Up: Delaying + +24.1 `sleep': Delay for a specified time +======================================== + +`sleep' pauses for an amount of time specified by the sum of the values +of the command line arguments. Synopsis: + + sleep NUMBER[smhd]... + + Each argument is a number followed by an optional unit; the default +is seconds. The units are: + +`s' + seconds + +`m' + minutes + +`h' + hours + +`d' + days + + Historical implementations of `sleep' have required that NUMBER be +an integer. However, GNU `sleep' accepts arbitrary floating point +numbers (using a period before any fractional digits). + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Numeric operations, Next: File permissions, Prev: Delaying, Up: Top + +25 Numeric operations +********************* + +These programs do numerically-related operations. + +* Menu: + +* factor invocation:: Show factors of numbers. +* seq invocation:: Print sequences of numbers. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: factor invocation, Next: seq invocation, Up: Numeric operations + +25.1 `factor': Print prime factors +================================== + +`factor' prints prime factors. Synopses: + + factor [NUMBER]... + factor OPTION + + If no NUMBER is specified on the command line, `factor' reads +numbers from standard input, delimited by newlines, tabs, or spaces. + + The only options are `--help' and `--version'. *Note Common +options::. + + The algorithm it uses is not very sophisticated, so for some inputs +`factor' runs for a long time. The hardest numbers to factor are the +products of large primes. Factoring the product of the two largest +32-bit prime numbers takes about 80 seconds of CPU time on a 1.6 GHz +Athlon. + + $ p=`echo '4294967279 * 4294967291'|bc` + $ factor $p + 18446743979220271189: 4294967279 4294967291 + + Similarly, it takes about 80 seconds for GNU factor (from +coreutils-5.1.2) to "factor" the largest 64-bit prime: + + $ factor 18446744073709551557 + 18446744073709551557: 18446744073709551557 + + In contrast, `factor' factors the largest 64-bit number in just over +a tenth of a second: + + $ factor `echo '2^64-1'|bc` + 18446744073709551615: 3 5 17 257 641 65537 6700417 + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: seq invocation, Prev: factor invocation, Up: Numeric operations + +25.2 `seq': Print numeric sequences +=================================== + +`seq' prints a sequence of numbers to standard output. Synopses: + + seq [OPTION]... LAST + seq [OPTION]... FIRST LAST + seq [OPTION]... FIRST INCREMENT LAST + + `seq' prints the numbers from FIRST to LAST by INCREMENT. By +default, each number is printed on a separate line. When INCREMENT is +not specified, it defaults to `1', even when FIRST is larger than LAST. +FIRST also defaults to `1'. So `seq 1' prints `1', but `seq 0' and +`seq 10 5' produce no output. Floating-point numbers may be specified +(using a period before any fractional digits). + + The program accepts the following options. Also see *Note Common +options::. Options must precede operands. + +`-f FORMAT' +`--format=FORMAT' + Print all numbers using FORMAT; default `%g'. FORMAT must contain + exactly one of the floating point output formats `%e', `%f', or + `%g'. + +`-s STRING' +`--separator=STRING' + Separate numbers with STRING; default is a newline. The output + always terminates with a newline. + +`-w' +`--equal-width' + Print all numbers with the same width, by padding with leading + zeroes. (To have other kinds of padding, use `--format'). + + + If you want to use `seq' to print sequences of large integer values, +don't use the default `%g' format since it can result in loss of +precision: + + $ seq 1000000 1000001 + 1e+06 + 1e+06 + + Instead, you can use the format, `%1.f', to print large decimal +numbers with no exponent and no decimal point. + + $ seq --format=%1.f 1000000 1000001 + 1000000 + 1000001 + + If you want hexadecimal output, you can use `printf' to perform the +conversion: + + $ printf %x'\n' `seq -f %1.f 1048575 1024 1050623` + fffff + 1003ff + 1007ff + + For very long lists of numbers, use xargs to avoid system +limitations on the length of an argument list: + + $ seq -f %1.f 1000000 | xargs printf %x'\n' | tail -n 3 + f423e + f423f + f4240 + + To generate octal output, use the printf `%o' format instead of +`%x'. Note however that using printf might not work for numbers +outside the usual 32-bit range: + + $ printf "%x\n" `seq -f %1.f 4294967295 4294967296` + ffffffff + bash: printf: 4294967296: Numerical result out of range + + On most systems, seq can produce whole-number output for values up to +`2^53', so here's a more general approach to base conversion that also +happens to be more robust for such large numbers. It works by using +`bc' and setting its output radix variable, OBASE, to `16' in this case +to produce hexadecimal output. + + $ (echo obase=16; seq -f %1.f 4294967295 4294967296)|bc + FFFFFFFF + 100000000 + + Be careful when using `seq' with a fractional INCREMENT, otherwise +you may see surprising results. Most people would expect to see `0.3' +printed as the last number in this example: + + $ seq -s ' ' 0 .1 .3 + 0 0.1 0.2 + + But that doesn't happen on most systems because `seq' is implemented +using binary floating point arithmetic (via the C `double' type)--which +means some decimal numbers like `.1' cannot be represented exactly. +That in turn means some nonintuitive conditions like `.1 * 3 > .3' will +end up being true. + + To work around that in the above example, use a slightly larger +number as the LAST value: + + $ seq -s ' ' 0 .1 .31 + 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 + + In general, when using an INCREMENT with a fractional part, where +(LAST - FIRST) / INCREMENT is (mathematically) a whole number, specify +a slightly larger (or smaller, if INCREMENT is negative) value for LAST +to ensure that LAST is the final value printed by seq. + + An exit status of zero indicates success, and a nonzero value +indicates failure. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: File permissions, Next: Date input formats, Prev: Numeric operations, Up: Top + +26 File permissions +******************* + +Each file has a set of "permissions" that control the kinds of access +that users have to that file. The permissions for a file are also +called its "access mode". They can be represented either in symbolic +form or as an octal number. + +* Menu: + +* Mode Structure:: Structure of file permissions. +* Symbolic Modes:: Mnemonic permissions representation. +* Numeric Modes:: Permissions as octal numbers. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Mode Structure, Next: Symbolic Modes, Up: File permissions + +26.1 Structure of File Permissions +================================== + +There are three kinds of permissions that a user can have for a file: + + 1. permission to read the file. For directories, this means + permission to list the contents of the directory. + + 2. permission to write to (change) the file. For directories, this + means permission to create and remove files in the directory. + + 3. permission to execute the file (run it as a program). For + directories, this means permission to access files in the + directory. + + There are three categories of users who may have different +permissions to perform any of the above operations on a file: + + 1. the file's owner; + + 2. other users who are in the file's group; + + 3. everyone else. + + Files are given an owner and group when they are created. Usually +the owner is the current user and the group is the group of the +directory the file is in, but this varies with the operating system, the +file system the file is created on, and the way the file is created. +You can change the owner and group of a file by using the `chown' and +`chgrp' commands. + + In addition to the three sets of three permissions listed above, a +file's permissions have three special components, which affect only +executable files (programs) and, on some systems, directories: + + 1. set the process's effective user ID to that of the file upon + execution (called the "setuid bit"). No effect on directories. + + 2. set the process's effective group ID to that of the file upon + execution (called the "setgid bit"). For directories on some + systems, put files created in the directory into the same group as + the directory, no matter what group the user who creates them is + in. + + 3. save the program's text image on the swap device so it will load + more quickly when run (called the "sticky bit"). For directories + on some systems, prevent users from removing or renaming a file in + a directory unless they own the file or the directory; this is + called the "restricted deletion flag" for the directory. + + In addition to the permissions listed above, there may be file +attributes specific to the file system, e.g: access control lists +(ACLs), whether a file is compressed, whether a file can be modified +(immutability), whether a file can be dumped. These are usually set +using programs specific to the file system. For example: + +ext2 + On GNU and Linux/GNU the file permissions ("attributes") specific + to the ext2 file system are set using `chattr'. + +FFS + On FreeBSD the file permissions ("flags") specific to the FFS file + system are set using `chrflags'. + + Although a file's permission "bits" allow an operation on that file, +that operation may still fail, because: + + * the file-system-specific permissions do not permit it; + + * the file system is mounted as read-only. + + For example, if the immutable attribute is set on a file, it cannot +be modified, regardless of the fact that you may have just run `chmod +a+w FILE'. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Symbolic Modes, Next: Numeric Modes, Prev: Mode Structure, Up: File permissions + +26.2 Symbolic Modes +=================== + +"Symbolic modes" represent changes to files' permissions as operations +on single-character symbols. They allow you to modify either all or +selected parts of files' permissions, optionally based on their +previous values, and perhaps on the current `umask' as well (*note +Umask and Protection::). + + The format of symbolic modes is: + + [ugoa...][[+-=][rwxXstugo...]...][,...] + + The following sections describe the operators and other details of +symbolic modes. + +* Menu: + +* Setting Permissions:: Basic operations on permissions. +* Copying Permissions:: Copying existing permissions. +* Changing Special Permissions:: Special permissions. +* Conditional Executability:: Conditionally affecting executability. +* Multiple Changes:: Making multiple changes. +* Umask and Protection:: The effect of the umask. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Setting Permissions, Next: Copying Permissions, Up: Symbolic Modes + +26.2.1 Setting Permissions +-------------------------- + +The basic symbolic operations on a file's permissions are adding, +removing, and setting the permission that certain users have to read, +write, and execute the file. These operations have the following +format: + + USERS OPERATION PERMISSIONS + +The spaces between the three parts above are shown for readability only; +symbolic modes cannot contain spaces. + + The USERS part tells which users' access to the file is changed. It +consists of one or more of the following letters (or it can be empty; +*note Umask and Protection::, for a description of what happens then). +When more than one of these letters is given, the order that they are +in does not matter. + +`u' + the user who owns the file; + +`g' + other users who are in the file's group; + +`o' + all other users; + +`a' + all users; the same as `ugo'. + + The OPERATION part tells how to change the affected users' access to +the file, and is one of the following symbols: + +`+' + to add the PERMISSIONS to whatever permissions the USERS already + have for the file; + +`-' + to remove the PERMISSIONS from whatever permissions the USERS + already have for the file; + +`=' + to make the PERMISSIONS the only permissions that the USERS have + for the file. + + The PERMISSIONS part tells what kind of access to the file should be +changed; it is zero or more of the following letters. As with the +USERS part, the order does not matter when more than one letter is +given. Omitting the PERMISSIONS part is useful only with the `=' +operation, where it gives the specified USERS no access at all to the +file. + +`r' + the permission the USERS have to read the file; + +`w' + the permission the USERS have to write to the file; + +`x' + the permission the USERS have to execute the file. + + For example, to give everyone permission to read and write a file, +but not to execute it, use: + + a=rw + + To remove write permission for from all users other than the file's +owner, use: + + go-w + +The above command does not affect the access that the owner of the file +has to it, nor does it affect whether other users can read or execute +the file. + + To give everyone except a file's owner no permission to do anything +with that file, use the mode below. Other users could still remove the +file, if they have write permission on the directory it is in. + + go= + +Another way to specify the same thing is: + + og-rxw + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Copying Permissions, Next: Changing Special Permissions, Prev: Setting Permissions, Up: Symbolic Modes + +26.2.2 Copying Existing Permissions +----------------------------------- + +You can base a file's permissions on its existing permissions. To do +this, instead of using `r', `w', or `x' after the operator, you use the +letter `u', `g', or `o'. For example, the mode + o+g + adds the permissions for users who are in a file's group to the +permissions that other users have for the file. Thus, if the file +started out as mode 664 (`rw-rw-r--'), the above mode would change it +to mode 666 (`rw-rw-rw-'). If the file had started out as mode 741 +(`rwxr----x'), the above mode would change it to mode 745 +(`rwxr--r-x'). The `-' and `=' operations work analogously. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Changing Special Permissions, Next: Conditional Executability, Prev: Copying Permissions, Up: Symbolic Modes + +26.2.3 Changing Special Permissions +----------------------------------- + +In addition to changing a file's read, write, and execute permissions, +you can change its special permissions. *Note Mode Structure::, for a +summary of these permissions. + + To change a file's permission to set the user ID on execution, use +`u' in the USERS part of the symbolic mode and `s' in the PERMISSIONS +part. + + To change a file's permission to set the group ID on execution, use +`g' in the USERS part of the symbolic mode and `s' in the PERMISSIONS +part. + + To change a file's permission to stay permanently on the swap device, +use `o' in the USERS part of the symbolic mode and `t' in the +PERMISSIONS part. + + For example, to add set user ID permission to a program, you can use +the mode: + + u+s + + To remove both set user ID and set group ID permission from it, you +can use the mode: + + ug-s + + To cause a program to be saved on the swap device, you can use the +mode: + + o+t + + Remember that the special permissions only affect files that are +executable, plus, on some systems, directories (on which they have +different meanings; *note Mode Structure::). Also, the combinations +`u+t', `g+t', and `o+s' have no effect. + + The `=' operator is not very useful with special permissions; for +example, the mode: + + o=t + +does cause the file to be saved on the swap device, but it also removes +all read, write, and execute permissions that users not in the file's +group might have had for it. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Conditional Executability, Next: Multiple Changes, Prev: Changing Special Permissions, Up: Symbolic Modes + +26.2.4 Conditional Executability +-------------------------------- + +There is one more special type of symbolic permission: if you use `X' +instead of `x', execute permission is affected only if the file already +had execute permission or is a directory. It affects directories' +execute permission even if they did not initially have any execute +permissions set. + + For example, this mode: + + a+X + +gives all users permission to execute files (or search directories) if +anyone could before. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Multiple Changes, Next: Umask and Protection, Prev: Conditional Executability, Up: Symbolic Modes + +26.2.5 Making Multiple Changes +------------------------------ + +The format of symbolic modes is actually more complex than described +above (*note Setting Permissions::). It provides two ways to make +multiple changes to files' permissions. + + The first way is to specify multiple OPERATION and PERMISSIONS parts +after a USERS part in the symbolic mode. + + For example, the mode: + + og+rX-w + +gives users other than the owner of the file read permission and, if it +is a directory or if someone already had execute permission to it, +gives them execute permission; and it also denies them write permission +to the file. It does not affect the permission that the owner of the +file has for it. The above mode is equivalent to the two modes: + + og+rX + og-w + + The second way to make multiple changes is to specify more than one +simple symbolic mode, separated by commas. For example, the mode: + + a+r,go-w + +gives everyone permission to read the file and removes write permission +on it for all users except its owner. Another example: + + u=rwx,g=rx,o= + +sets all of the non-special permissions for the file explicitly. (It +gives users who are not in the file's group no permission at all for +it.) + + The two methods can be combined. The mode: + + a+r,g+x-w + +gives all users permission to read the file, and gives users who are in +the file's group permission to execute it, as well, but not permission +to write to it. The above mode could be written in several different +ways; another is: + + u+r,g+rx,o+r,g-w + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Umask and Protection, Prev: Multiple Changes, Up: Symbolic Modes + +26.2.6 The Umask and Protection +------------------------------- + +If the USERS part of a symbolic mode is omitted, it defaults to `a' +(affect all users), except that any permissions that are _set_ in the +system variable `umask' are _not affected_. The value of `umask' can +be set using the `umask' command. Its default value varies from system +to system. + + Omitting the USERS part of a symbolic mode is generally not useful +with operations other than `+'. It is useful with `+' because it +allows you to use `umask' as an easily customizable protection against +giving away more permission to files than you intended to. + + As an example, if `umask' has the value 2, which removes write +permission for users who are not in the file's group, then the mode: + + +w + +adds permission to write to the file to its owner and to other users who +are in the file's group, but _not_ to other users. In contrast, the +mode: + + a+w + +ignores `umask', and _does_ give write permission for the file to all +users. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Numeric Modes, Prev: Symbolic Modes, Up: File permissions + +26.3 Numeric Modes +================== + +File permissions are stored internally as integers. As an alternative +to giving a symbolic mode, you can give an octal (base 8) number that +corresponds to the internal representation of the new mode. This +number is always interpreted in octal; you do not have to add a leading +0, as you do in C. Mode 0055 is the same as mode 55. + + A numeric mode is usually shorter than the corresponding symbolic +mode, but it is limited in that it cannot take into account a file's +previous permissions; it can only set them absolutely. + + On most systems, the permissions granted to the user, to other users +in the file's group, and to other users not in the file's group are +each stored as three bits, which are represented as one octal digit. +The three special permissions are also each stored as one bit, and they +are as a group represented as another octal digit. Here is how the +bits are arranged, starting with the lowest valued bit: + + Value in Corresponding + Mode Permission + + Other users not in the file's group: + 1 Execute + 2 Write + 4 Read + + Other users in the file's group: + 10 Execute + 20 Write + 40 Read + + The file's owner: + 100 Execute + 200 Write + 400 Read + + Special permissions: + 1000 Save text image on swap device + 2000 Set group ID on execution + 4000 Set user ID on execution + + For example, numeric mode 4755 corresponds to symbolic mode +`u=rwxs,go=rx', and numeric mode 664 corresponds to symbolic mode +`ug=rw,o=r'. Numeric mode 0 corresponds to symbolic mode `ugo='. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Date input formats, Next: Opening the software toolbox, Prev: File permissions, Up: Top + +27 Date input formats +********************* + +First, a quote: + + Our units of temporal measurement, from seconds on up to months, + are so complicated, asymmetrical and disjunctive so as to make + coherent mental reckoning in time all but impossible. Indeed, had + some tyrannical god contrived to enslave our minds to time, to + make it all but impossible for us to escape subjection to sodden + routines and unpleasant surprises, he could hardly have done + better than handing down our present system. It is like a set of + trapezoidal building blocks, with no vertical or horizontal + surfaces, like a language in which the simplest thought demands + ornate constructions, useless particles and lengthy + circumlocutions. Unlike the more successful patterns of language + and science, which enable us to face experience boldly or at least + level-headedly, our system of temporal calculation silently and + persistently encourages our terror of time. + + ... It is as though architects had to measure length in feet, + width in meters and height in ells; as though basic instruction + manuals demanded a knowledge of five different languages. It is + no wonder then that we often look into our own immediate past or + future, last Tuesday or a week from Sunday, with feelings of + helpless confusion. ... + + -- Robert Grudin, `Time and the Art of Living'. + + This section describes the textual date representations that GNU +programs accept. These are the strings you, as a user, can supply as +arguments to the various programs. The C interface (via the `get_date' +function) is not described here. + +* Menu: + +* General date syntax:: Common rules. +* Calendar date items:: 19 Dec 1994. +* Time of day items:: 9:20pm. +* Time zone items:: EST, PDT, GMT. +* Day of week items:: Monday and others. +* Relative items in date strings:: next tuesday, 2 years ago. +* Pure numbers in date strings:: 19931219, 1440. +* Seconds since the Epoch:: @1078100502. +* Specifying time zone rules:: TZ="America/New_York", TZ="UTC0". +* Authors of get_date:: Bellovin, Eggert, Salz, Berets, et al. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: General date syntax, Next: Calendar date items, Up: Date input formats + +27.1 General date syntax +======================== + +A "date" is a string, possibly empty, containing many items separated +by whitespace. The whitespace may be omitted when no ambiguity arises. +The empty string means the beginning of today (i.e., midnight). Order +of the items is immaterial. A date string may contain many flavors of +items: + + * calendar date items + + * time of day items + + * time zone items + + * day of the week items + + * relative items + + * pure numbers. + +We describe each of these item types in turn, below. + + A few ordinal numbers may be written out in words in some contexts. +This is most useful for specifying day of the week items or relative +items (see below). Among the most commonly used ordinal numbers, the +word `last' stands for -1, `this' stands for 0, and `first' and `next' +both stand for 1. Because the word `second' stands for the unit of +time there is no way to write the ordinal number 2, but for convenience +`third' stands for 3, `fourth' for 4, `fifth' for 5, `sixth' for 6, +`seventh' for 7, `eighth' for 8, `ninth' for 9, `tenth' for 10, +`eleventh' for 11 and `twelfth' for 12. + + When a month is written this way, it is still considered to be +written numerically, instead of being "spelled in full"; this changes +the allowed strings. + + In the current implementation, only English is supported for words +and abbreviations like `AM', `DST', `EST', `first', `January', +`Sunday', `tomorrow', and `year'. + + The output of the `date' command is not always acceptable as a date +string, not only because of the language problem, but also because +there is no standard meaning for time zone items like `IST'. When using +`date' to generate a date string intended to be parsed later, specify a +date format that is independent of language and that does not use time +zone items other than `UTC' and `Z'. Here are some ways to do this: + + $ LC_ALL=C TZ=UTC0 date + Mon Mar 1 00:21:42 UTC 2004 + $ TZ=UTC0 date +'%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%SZ' + 2004-03-01 00:21:42Z + $ date --iso-8601=ns # a GNU extension + 2004-02-29T16:21:42,692722128-0800 + $ date --rfc-2822 # a GNU extension + Sun, 29 Feb 2004 16:21:42 -0800 + $ date +'%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z' # %z is a GNU extension. + 2004-02-29 16:21:42 -0800 + $ date +'@%s.%N' # %s and %N are GNU extensions. + @1078100502.692722128 + + Alphabetic case is completely ignored in dates. Comments may be +introduced between round parentheses, as long as included parentheses +are properly nested. Hyphens not followed by a digit are currently +ignored. Leading zeros on numbers are ignored. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Calendar date items, Next: Time of day items, Prev: General date syntax, Up: Date input formats + +27.2 Calendar date items +======================== + +A "calendar date item" specifies a day of the year. It is specified +differently, depending on whether the month is specified numerically or +literally. All these strings specify the same calendar date: + + 1972-09-24 # ISO 8601. + 72-9-24 # Assume 19xx for 69 through 99, + # 20xx for 00 through 68. + 72-09-24 # Leading zeros are ignored. + 9/24/72 # Common U.S. writing. + 24 September 1972 + 24 Sept 72 # September has a special abbreviation. + 24 Sep 72 # Three-letter abbreviations always allowed. + Sep 24, 1972 + 24-sep-72 + 24sep72 + + The year can also be omitted. In this case, the last specified year +is used, or the current year if none. For example: + + 9/24 + sep 24 + + Here are the rules. + + For numeric months, the ISO 8601 format `YEAR-MONTH-DAY' is allowed, +where YEAR is any positive number, MONTH is a number between 01 and 12, +and DAY is a number between 01 and 31. A leading zero must be present +if a number is less than ten. If YEAR is 68 or smaller, then 2000 is +added to it; otherwise, if YEAR is less than 100, then 1900 is added to +it. The construct `MONTH/DAY/YEAR', popular in the United States, is +accepted. Also `MONTH/DAY', omitting the year. + + Literal months may be spelled out in full: `January', `February', +`March', `April', `May', `June', `July', `August', `September', +`October', `November' or `December'. Literal months may be abbreviated +to their first three letters, possibly followed by an abbreviating dot. +It is also permitted to write `Sept' instead of `September'. + + When months are written literally, the calendar date may be given as +any of the following: + + DAY MONTH YEAR + DAY MONTH + MONTH DAY YEAR + DAY-MONTH-YEAR + + Or, omitting the year: + + MONTH DAY + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Time of day items, Next: Time zone items, Prev: Calendar date items, Up: Date input formats + +27.3 Time of day items +====================== + +A "time of day item" in date strings specifies the time on a given day. +Here are some examples, all of which represent the same time: + + 20:02:00.000000 + 20:02 + 8:02pm + 20:02-0500 # In EST (U.S. Eastern Standard Time). + + More generally, the time of day may be given as +`HOUR:MINUTE:SECOND', where HOUR is a number between 0 and 23, MINUTE +is a number between 0 and 59, and SECOND is a number between 0 and 59 +possibly followed by `.' or `,' and a fraction containing one or more +digits. Alternatively, `:SECOND' can be omitted, in which case it is +taken to be zero. + + If the time is followed by `am' or `pm' (or `a.m.' or `p.m.'), HOUR +is restricted to run from 1 to 12, and `:MINUTE' may be omitted (taken +to be zero). `am' indicates the first half of the day, `pm' indicates +the second half of the day. In this notation, 12 is the predecessor of +1: midnight is `12am' while noon is `12pm'. (This is the zero-oriented +interpretation of `12am' and `12pm', as opposed to the old tradition +derived from Latin which uses `12m' for noon and `12pm' for midnight.) + + The time may alternatively be followed by a time zone correction, +expressed as `SHHMM', where S is `+' or `-', HH is a number of zone +hours and MM is a number of zone minutes. You can also separate HH +from MM with a colon. When a time zone correction is given this way, it +forces interpretation of the time relative to Coordinated Universal +Time (UTC), overriding any previous specification for the time zone or +the local time zone. For example, `+0530' and `+05:30' both stand for +the time zone 5.5 hours ahead of UTC (e.g., India). The MINUTE part of +the time of day may not be elided when a time zone correction is used. +This is the best way to specify a time zone correction by fractional +parts of an hour. + + Either `am'/`pm' or a time zone correction may be specified, but not +both. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Time zone items, Next: Day of week items, Prev: Time of day items, Up: Date input formats + +27.4 Time zone items +==================== + +A "time zone item" specifies an international time zone, indicated by a +small set of letters, e.g., `UTC' or `Z' for Coordinated Universal +Time. Any included periods are ignored. By following a +non-daylight-saving time zone by the string `DST' in a separate word +(that is, separated by some white space), the corresponding daylight +saving time zone may be specified. Alternatively, a +non-daylight-saving time zone can be followed by a time zone +correction, to add the two values. This is normally done only for +`UTC'; for example, `UTC+05:30' is equivalent to `+05:30'. + + Time zone items other than `UTC' and `Z' are obsolescent and are not +recommended, because they are ambiguous; for example, `EST' has a +different meaning in Australia than in the United States. Instead, +it's better to use unambiguous numeric time zone corrections like +`-0500', as described in the previous section. + + If neither a time zone item nor a time zone correction is supplied, +time stamps are interpreted using the rules of the default time zone +(*note Specifying time zone rules::). + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Day of week items, Next: Relative items in date strings, Prev: Time zone items, Up: Date input formats + +27.5 Day of week items +====================== + +The explicit mention of a day of the week will forward the date (only +if necessary) to reach that day of the week in the future. + + Days of the week may be spelled out in full: `Sunday', `Monday', +`Tuesday', `Wednesday', `Thursday', `Friday' or `Saturday'. Days may +be abbreviated to their first three letters, optionally followed by a +period. The special abbreviations `Tues' for `Tuesday', `Wednes' for +`Wednesday' and `Thur' or `Thurs' for `Thursday' are also allowed. + + A number may precede a day of the week item to move forward +supplementary weeks. It is best used in expression like `third +monday'. In this context, `last DAY' or `next DAY' is also acceptable; +they move one week before or after the day that DAY by itself would +represent. + + A comma following a day of the week item is ignored. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Relative items in date strings, Next: Pure numbers in date strings, Prev: Day of week items, Up: Date input formats + +27.6 Relative items in date strings +=================================== + +"Relative items" adjust a date (or the current date if none) forward or +backward. The effects of relative items accumulate. Here are some +examples: + + 1 year + 1 year ago + 3 years + 2 days + + The unit of time displacement may be selected by the string `year' +or `month' for moving by whole years or months. These are fuzzy units, +as years and months are not all of equal duration. More precise units +are `fortnight' which is worth 14 days, `week' worth 7 days, `day' +worth 24 hours, `hour' worth 60 minutes, `minute' or `min' worth 60 +seconds, and `second' or `sec' worth one second. An `s' suffix on +these units is accepted and ignored. + + The unit of time may be preceded by a multiplier, given as an +optionally signed number. Unsigned numbers are taken as positively +signed. No number at all implies 1 for a multiplier. Following a +relative item by the string `ago' is equivalent to preceding the unit +by a multiplier with value -1. + + The string `tomorrow' is worth one day in the future (equivalent to +`day'), the string `yesterday' is worth one day in the past (equivalent +to `day ago'). + + The strings `now' or `today' are relative items corresponding to +zero-valued time displacement, these strings come from the fact a +zero-valued time displacement represents the current time when not +otherwise changed by previous items. They may be used to stress other +items, like in `12:00 today'. The string `this' also has the meaning +of a zero-valued time displacement, but is preferred in date strings +like `this thursday'. + + When a relative item causes the resulting date to cross a boundary +where the clocks were adjusted, typically for daylight saving time, the +resulting date and time are adjusted accordingly. + + The fuzz in units can cause problems with relative items. For +example, `2003-07-31 -1 month' might evaluate to 2003-07-01, because +2003-06-31 is an invalid date. To determine the previous month more +reliably, you can ask for the month before the 15th of the current +month. For example: + + $ date -R + Thu, 31 Jul 2003 13:02:39 -0700 + $ date --date='-1 month' +'Last month was %B?' + Last month was July? + $ date --date="$(date +%Y-%m-15) -1 month" +'Last month was %B!' + Last month was June! + + Also, take care when manipulating dates around clock changes such as +daylight saving leaps. In a few cases these have added or subtracted +as much as 24 hours from the clock, so it is often wise to adopt +universal time by setting the `TZ' environment variable to `UTC0' +before embarking on calendrical calculations. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Pure numbers in date strings, Next: Seconds since the Epoch, Prev: Relative items in date strings, Up: Date input formats + +27.7 Pure numbers in date strings +================================= + +The precise interpretation of a pure decimal number depends on the +context in the date string. + + If the decimal number is of the form YYYYMMDD and no other calendar +date item (*note Calendar date items::) appears before it in the date +string, then YYYY is read as the year, MM as the month number and DD as +the day of the month, for the specified calendar date. + + If the decimal number is of the form HHMM and no other time of day +item appears before it in the date string, then HH is read as the hour +of the day and MM as the minute of the hour, for the specified time of +day. MM can also be omitted. + + If both a calendar date and a time of day appear to the left of a +number in the date string, but no relative item, then the number +overrides the year. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Seconds since the Epoch, Next: Specifying time zone rules, Prev: Pure numbers in date strings, Up: Date input formats + +27.8 Seconds since the Epoch +============================ + +If you precede a number with `@', it represents an internal time stamp +as a count of seconds. The number can contain an internal decimal +point (either `.' or `,'); any excess precision not supported by the +internal representation is truncated toward minus infinity. Such a +number cannot be combined with any other date item, as it specifies a +complete time stamp. + + Internally, computer times are represented as a count of seconds +since an epoch--a well-defined point of time. On GNU and POSIX +systems, the epoch is 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC, so `@0' represents this +time, `@1' represents 1970-01-01 00:00:01 UTC, and so forth. GNU and +most other POSIX-compliant systems support such times as an extension +to POSIX, using negative counts, so that `@-1' represents 1969-12-31 +23:59:59 UTC. + + Traditional Unix systems count seconds with 32-bit two's-complement +integers and can represent times from 1901-12-13 20:45:52 through +2038-01-19 03:14:07 UTC. More modern systems use 64-bit counts of +seconds with nanosecond subcounts, and can represent all the times in +the known lifetime of the universe to a resolution of 1 nanosecond. + + On most systems, these counts ignore the presence of leap seconds. +For example, on most systems `@915148799' represents 1998-12-31 +23:59:59 UTC, `@915148800' represents 1999-01-01 00:00:00 UTC, and +there is no way to represent the intervening leap second 1998-12-31 +23:59:60 UTC. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Specifying time zone rules, Next: Authors of get_date, Prev: Seconds since the Epoch, Up: Date input formats + +27.9 Specifying time zone rules +=============================== + +Normally, dates are interpreted using the rules of the current time +zone, which in turn are specified by the `TZ' environment variable, or +by a system default if `TZ' is not set. To specify a different set of +default time zone rules that apply just to one date, start the date +with a string of the form `TZ="RULE"'. The two quote characters (`"') +must be present in the date, and any quotes or backslashes within RULE +must be escaped by a backslash. + + For example, with the GNU `date' command you can answer the question +"What time is it in New York when a Paris clock shows 6:30am on October +31, 2004?" by using a date beginning with `TZ="Europe/Paris"' as shown +in the following shell transcript: + + $ export TZ="America/New_York" + $ date --date='TZ="Europe/Paris" 2004-10-31 06:30' + Sun Oct 31 01:30:00 EDT 2004 + + In this example, the `--date' operand begins with its own `TZ' +setting, so the rest of that operand is processed according to +`Europe/Paris' rules, treating the string `2004-10-31 06:30' as if it +were in Paris. However, since the output of the `date' command is +processed according to the overall time zone rules, it uses New York +time. (Paris was normally six hours ahead of New York in 2004, but +this example refers to a brief Halloween period when the gap was five +hours.) + + A `TZ' value is a rule that typically names a location in the `tz' +database (http://www.twinsun.com/tz/tz-link.htm). A recent catalog of +location names appears in the TWiki Date and Time Gateway +(http://twiki.org/cgi-bin/xtra/tzdate). A few non-GNU hosts require a +colon before a location name in a `TZ' setting, e.g., +`TZ=":America/New_York"'. + + The `tz' database includes a wide variety of locations ranging from +`Arctic/Longyearbyen' to `Antarctica/South_Pole', but if you are at sea +and have your own private time zone, or if you are using a non-GNU host +that does not support the `tz' database, you may need to use a POSIX +rule instead. Simple POSIX rules like `UTC0' specify a time zone +without daylight saving time; other rules can specify simple daylight +saving regimes. *Note Specifying the Time Zone with `TZ': (libc)TZ +Variable. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Authors of get_date, Prev: Specifying time zone rules, Up: Date input formats + +27.10 Authors of `get_date' +=========================== + +`get_date' was originally implemented by Steven M. Bellovin +(<smb@research.att.com>) while at the University of North Carolina at +Chapel Hill. The code was later tweaked by a couple of people on +Usenet, then completely overhauled by Rich $alz (<rsalz@bbn.com>) and +Jim Berets (<jberets@bbn.com>) in August, 1990. Various revisions for +the GNU system were made by David MacKenzie, Jim Meyering, Paul Eggert +and others. + + This chapter was originally produced by Franc,ois Pinard +(<pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>) from the `getdate.y' source code, and then +edited by K. Berry (<kb@cs.umb.edu>). + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Opening the software toolbox, Next: GNU Free Documentation License, Prev: Date input formats, Up: Top + +28 Opening the Software Toolbox +******************************* + +An earlier version of this chapter appeared in 2 (June 1994). It was +written by Arnold Robbins. + +* Menu: + +* Toolbox introduction:: Toolbox introduction +* I/O redirection:: I/O redirection +* The who command:: The `who' command +* The cut command:: The `cut' command +* The sort command:: The `sort' command +* The uniq command:: The `uniq' command +* Putting the tools together:: Putting the tools together + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Toolbox introduction, Next: I/O redirection, Up: Opening the software toolbox + +Toolbox Introduction +==================== + +This month's column is only peripherally related to the GNU Project, in +that it describes a number of the GNU tools on your GNU/Linux system +and how they might be used. What it's really about is the "Software +Tools" philosophy of program development and usage. + + The software tools philosophy was an important and integral concept +in the initial design and development of Unix (of which Linux and GNU +are essentially clones). Unfortunately, in the modern day press of +Internetworking and flashy GUIs, it seems to have fallen by the +wayside. This is a shame, since it provides a powerful mental model +for solving many kinds of problems. + + Many people carry a Swiss Army knife around in their pants pockets +(or purse). A Swiss Army knife is a handy tool to have: it has several +knife blades, a screwdriver, tweezers, toothpick, nail file, corkscrew, +and perhaps a number of other things on it. For the everyday, small +miscellaneous jobs where you need a simple, general purpose tool, it's +just the thing. + + On the other hand, an experienced carpenter doesn't build a house +using a Swiss Army knife. Instead, he has a toolbox chock full of +specialized tools--a saw, a hammer, a screwdriver, a plane, and so on. +And he knows exactly when and where to use each tool; you won't catch +him hammering nails with the handle of his screwdriver. + + The Unix developers at Bell Labs were all professional programmers +and trained computer scientists. They had found that while a +one-size-fits-all program might appeal to a user because there's only +one program to use, in practice such programs are + + a. difficult to write, + + b. difficult to maintain and debug, and + + c. difficult to extend to meet new situations. + + Instead, they felt that programs should be specialized tools. In +short, each program "should do one thing well." No more and no less. +Such programs are simpler to design, write, and get right--they only do +one thing. + + Furthermore, they found that with the right machinery for hooking +programs together, that the whole was greater than the sum of the +parts. By combining several special purpose programs, you could +accomplish a specific task that none of the programs was designed for, +and accomplish it much more quickly and easily than if you had to write +a special purpose program. We will see some (classic) examples of this +further on in the column. (An important additional point was that, if +necessary, take a detour and build any software tools you may need +first, if you don't already have something appropriate in the toolbox.) + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: I/O redirection, Next: The who command, Prev: Toolbox introduction, Up: Opening the software toolbox + +I/O Redirection +=============== + +Hopefully, you are familiar with the basics of I/O redirection in the +shell, in particular the concepts of "standard input," "standard +output," and "standard error". Briefly, "standard input" is a data +source, where data comes from. A program should not need to either +know or care if the data source is a disk file, a keyboard, a magnetic +tape, or even a punched card reader. Similarly, "standard output" is a +data sink, where data goes to. The program should neither know nor +care where this might be. Programs that only read their standard +input, do something to the data, and then send it on, are called +"filters", by analogy to filters in a water pipeline. + + With the Unix shell, it's very easy to set up data pipelines: + + program_to_create_data | filter1 | ... | filterN > final.pretty.data + + We start out by creating the raw data; each filter applies some +successive transformation to the data, until by the time it comes out +of the pipeline, it is in the desired form. + + This is fine and good for standard input and standard output. Where +does the standard error come in to play? Well, think about `filter1' in +the pipeline above. What happens if it encounters an error in the data +it sees? If it writes an error message to standard output, it will just +disappear down the pipeline into `filter2''s input, and the user will +probably never see it. So programs need a place where they can send +error messages so that the user will notice them. This is standard +error, and it is usually connected to your console or window, even if +you have redirected standard output of your program away from your +screen. + + For filter programs to work together, the format of the data has to +be agreed upon. The most straightforward and easiest format to use is +simply lines of text. Unix data files are generally just streams of +bytes, with lines delimited by the ASCII LF (Line Feed) character, +conventionally called a "newline" in the Unix literature. (This is +`'\n'' if you're a C programmer.) This is the format used by all the +traditional filtering programs. (Many earlier operating systems had +elaborate facilities and special purpose programs for managing binary +data. Unix has always shied away from such things, under the +philosophy that it's easiest to simply be able to view and edit your +data with a text editor.) + + OK, enough introduction. Let's take a look at some of the tools, +and then we'll see how to hook them together in interesting ways. In +the following discussion, we will only present those command line +options that interest us. As you should always do, double check your +system documentation for the full story. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: The who command, Next: The cut command, Prev: I/O redirection, Up: Opening the software toolbox + +The `who' Command +================= + +The first program is the `who' command. By itself, it generates a list +of the users who are currently logged in. Although I'm writing this on +a single-user system, we'll pretend that several people are logged in: + + $ who + -| arnold console Jan 22 19:57 + -| miriam ttyp0 Jan 23 14:19(:0.0) + -| bill ttyp1 Jan 21 09:32(:0.0) + -| arnold ttyp2 Jan 23 20:48(:0.0) + + Here, the `$' is the usual shell prompt, at which I typed `who'. +There are three people logged in, and I am logged in twice. On +traditional Unix systems, user names are never more than eight +characters long. This little bit of trivia will be useful later. The +output of `who' is nice, but the data is not all that exciting. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: The cut command, Next: The sort command, Prev: The who command, Up: Opening the software toolbox + +The `cut' Command +================= + +The next program we'll look at is the `cut' command. This program cuts +out columns or fields of input data. For example, we can tell it to +print just the login name and full name from the `/etc/passwd' file. +The `/etc/passwd' file has seven fields, separated by colons: + + arnold:xyzzy:2076:10:Arnold D. Robbins:/home/arnold:/bin/bash + + To get the first and fifth fields, we would use `cut' like this: + + $ cut -d: -f1,5 /etc/passwd + -| root:Operator + ... + -| arnold:Arnold D. Robbins + -| miriam:Miriam A. Robbins + ... + + With the `-c' option, `cut' will cut out specific characters (i.e., +columns) in the input lines. This is useful for input data that has +fixed width fields, and does not have a field separator. For example, +list the Monday dates for the current month: + + $ cal | cut -c 3-5 + -|Mo + -| + -| 6 + -| 13 + -| 20 + -| 27 + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: The sort command, Next: The uniq command, Prev: The cut command, Up: Opening the software toolbox + +The `sort' Command +================== + +Next we'll look at the `sort' command. This is one of the most +powerful commands on a Unix-style system; one that you will often find +yourself using when setting up fancy data plumbing. + + The `sort' command reads and sorts each file named on the command +line. It then merges the sorted data and writes it to standard output. +It will read standard input if no files are given on the command line +(thus making it into a filter). The sort is based on the character +collating sequence or based on user-supplied ordering criteria. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: The uniq command, Next: Putting the tools together, Prev: The sort command, Up: Opening the software toolbox + +The `uniq' Command +================== + +Finally (at least for now), we'll look at the `uniq' program. When +sorting data, you will often end up with duplicate lines, lines that +are identical. Usually, all you need is one instance of each line. +This is where `uniq' comes in. The `uniq' program reads its standard +input. It prints only one copy of each repeated line. It does have +several options. Later on, we'll use the `-c' option, which prints +each unique line, preceded by a count of the number of times that line +occurred in the input. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Putting the tools together, Prev: The uniq command, Up: Opening the software toolbox + +Putting the Tools Together +========================== + +Now, let's suppose this is a large ISP server system with dozens of +users logged in. The management wants the system administrator to +write a program that will generate a sorted list of logged in users. +Furthermore, even if a user is logged in multiple times, his or her +name should only show up in the output once. + + The administrator could sit down with the system documentation and +write a C program that did this. It would take perhaps a couple of +hundred lines of code and about two hours to write it, test it, and +debug it. However, knowing the software toolbox, the administrator can +instead start out by generating just a list of logged on users: + + $ who | cut -c1-8 + -| arnold + -| miriam + -| bill + -| arnold + + Next, sort the list: + + $ who | cut -c1-8 | sort + -| arnold + -| arnold + -| bill + -| miriam + + Finally, run the sorted list through `uniq', to weed out duplicates: + + $ who | cut -c1-8 | sort | uniq + -| arnold + -| bill + -| miriam + + The `sort' command actually has a `-u' option that does what `uniq' +does. However, `uniq' has other uses for which one cannot substitute +`sort -u'. + + The administrator puts this pipeline into a shell script, and makes +it available for all the users on the system (`#' is the system +administrator, or `root', prompt): + + # cat > /usr/local/bin/listusers + who | cut -c1-8 | sort | uniq + ^D + # chmod +x /usr/local/bin/listusers + + There are four major points to note here. First, with just four +programs, on one command line, the administrator was able to save about +two hours worth of work. Furthermore, the shell pipeline is just about +as efficient as the C program would be, and it is much more efficient in +terms of programmer time. People time is much more expensive than +computer time, and in our modern "there's never enough time to do +everything" society, saving two hours of programmer time is no mean +feat. + + Second, it is also important to emphasize that with the +_combination_ of the tools, it is possible to do a special purpose job +never imagined by the authors of the individual programs. + + Third, it is also valuable to build up your pipeline in stages, as +we did here. This allows you to view the data at each stage in the +pipeline, which helps you acquire the confidence that you are indeed +using these tools correctly. + + Finally, by bundling the pipeline in a shell script, other users can +use your command, without having to remember the fancy plumbing you set +up for them. In terms of how you run them, shell scripts and compiled +programs are indistinguishable. + + After the previous warm-up exercise, we'll look at two additional, +more complicated pipelines. For them, we need to introduce two more +tools. + + The first is the `tr' command, which stands for "transliterate." +The `tr' command works on a character-by-character basis, changing +characters. Normally it is used for things like mapping upper case to +lower case: + + $ echo ThIs ExAmPlE HaS MIXED case! | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' + -| this example has mixed case! + + There are several options of interest: + +`-c' + work on the complement of the listed characters, i.e., operations + apply to characters not in the given set + +`-d' + delete characters in the first set from the output + +`-s' + squeeze repeated characters in the output into just one character. + + We will be using all three options in a moment. + + The other command we'll look at is `comm'. The `comm' command takes +two sorted input files as input data, and prints out the files' lines +in three columns. The output columns are the data lines unique to the +first file, the data lines unique to the second file, and the data +lines that are common to both. The `-1', `-2', and `-3' command line +options _omit_ the respective columns. (This is non-intuitive and +takes a little getting used to.) For example: + + $ cat f1 + -| 11111 + -| 22222 + -| 33333 + -| 44444 + $ cat f2 + -| 00000 + -| 22222 + -| 33333 + -| 55555 + $ comm f1 f2 + -| 00000 + -| 11111 + -| 22222 + -| 33333 + -| 44444 + -| 55555 + + The file name `-' tells `comm' to read standard input instead of a +regular file. + + Now we're ready to build a fancy pipeline. The first application is +a word frequency counter. This helps an author determine if he or she +is over-using certain words. + + The first step is to change the case of all the letters in our input +file to one case. "The" and "the" are the same word when doing +counting. + + $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | ... + + The next step is to get rid of punctuation. Quoted words and +unquoted words should be treated identically; it's easiest to just get +the punctuation out of the way. + + $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' | ... + + The second `tr' command operates on the complement of the listed +characters, which are all the letters, the digits, the underscore, and +the blank. The `\n' represents the newline character; it has to be +left alone. (The ASCII tab character should also be included for good +measure in a production script.) + + At this point, we have data consisting of words separated by blank +space. The words only contain alphanumeric characters (and the +underscore). The next step is break the data apart so that we have one +word per line. This makes the counting operation much easier, as we +will see shortly. + + $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' | + > tr -s ' ' '\n' | ... + + This command turns blanks into newlines. The `-s' option squeezes +multiple newline characters in the output into just one. This helps us +avoid blank lines. (The `>' is the shell's "secondary prompt." This +is what the shell prints when it notices you haven't finished typing in +all of a command.) + + We now have data consisting of one word per line, no punctuation, +all one case. We're ready to count each word: + + $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' | + > tr -s ' ' '\n' | sort | uniq -c | ... + + At this point, the data might look something like this: + + 60 a + 2 able + 6 about + 1 above + 2 accomplish + 1 acquire + 1 actually + 2 additional + + The output is sorted by word, not by count! What we want is the most +frequently used words first. Fortunately, this is easy to accomplish, +with the help of two more `sort' options: + +`-n' + do a numeric sort, not a textual one + +`-r' + reverse the order of the sort + + The final pipeline looks like this: + + $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' | + > tr -s ' ' '\n' | sort | uniq -c | sort -n -r + -| 156 the + -| 60 a + -| 58 to + -| 51 of + -| 51 and + ... + + Whew! That's a lot to digest. Yet, the same principles apply. +With six commands, on two lines (really one long one split for +convenience), we've created a program that does something interesting +and useful, in much less time than we could have written a C program to +do the same thing. + + A minor modification to the above pipeline can give us a simple +spelling checker! To determine if you've spelled a word correctly, all +you have to do is look it up in a dictionary. If it is not there, then +chances are that your spelling is incorrect. So, we need a dictionary. +The conventional location for a dictionary is `/usr/dict/words'. On my +GNU/Linux system,(1) this is a is a sorted, 45,402 word dictionary. + + Now, how to compare our file with the dictionary? As before, we +generate a sorted list of words, one per line: + + $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' | + > tr -s ' ' '\n' | sort -u | ... + + Now, all we need is a list of words that are _not_ in the +dictionary. Here is where the `comm' command comes in. + + $ tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' < whats.gnu | tr -cd '[:alnum:]_ \n' | + > tr -s ' ' '\n' | sort -u | + > comm -23 - /usr/dict/words + + The `-2' and `-3' options eliminate lines that are only in the +dictionary (the second file), and lines that are in both files. Lines +only in the first file (standard input, our stream of words), are words +that are not in the dictionary. These are likely candidates for +spelling errors. This pipeline was the first cut at a production +spelling checker on Unix. + + There are some other tools that deserve brief mention. + +`grep' + search files for text that matches a regular expression + +`wc' + count lines, words, characters + +`tee' + a T-fitting for data pipes, copies data to files and to standard + output + +`sed' + the stream editor, an advanced tool + +`awk' + a data manipulation language, another advanced tool + + The software tools philosophy also espoused the following bit of +advice: "Let someone else do the hard part." This means, take +something that gives you most of what you need, and then massage it the +rest of the way until it's in the form that you want. + + To summarize: + + 1. Each program should do one thing well. No more, no less. + + 2. Combining programs with appropriate plumbing leads to results where + the whole is greater than the sum of the parts. It also leads to + novel uses of programs that the authors might never have imagined. + + 3. Programs should never print extraneous header or trailer data, + since these could get sent on down a pipeline. (A point we didn't + mention earlier.) + + 4. Let someone else do the hard part. + + 5. Know your toolbox! Use each program appropriately. If you don't + have an appropriate tool, build one. + + As of this writing, all the programs we've discussed are available +via anonymous `ftp' from: +`ftp://gnudist.gnu.org/textutils/textutils-1.22.tar.gz'. (There may be +more recent versions available now.) + + None of what I have presented in this column is new. The Software +Tools philosophy was first introduced in the book `Software Tools', by +Brian Kernighan and P.J. Plauger (Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-03669-X). +This book showed how to write and use software tools. It was written in +1976, using a preprocessor for FORTRAN named `ratfor' (RATional +FORtran). At the time, C was not as ubiquitous as it is now; FORTRAN +was. The last chapter presented a `ratfor' to FORTRAN processor, +written in `ratfor'. `ratfor' looks an awful lot like C; if you know +C, you won't have any problem following the code. + + In 1981, the book was updated and made available as `Software Tools +in Pascal' (Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-10342-7). Both books are still +in print and are well worth reading if you're a programmer. They +certainly made a major change in how I view programming. + + The programs in both books are available from Brian Kernighan's home +page (http://cm.bell-labs.com/who/bwk). For a number of years, there +was an active Software Tools Users Group, whose members had ported the +original `ratfor' programs to essentially every computer system with a +FORTRAN compiler. The popularity of the group waned in the middle 1980s +as Unix began to spread beyond universities. + + With the current proliferation of GNU code and other clones of Unix +programs, these programs now receive little attention; modern C +versions are much more efficient and do more than these programs do. +Nevertheless, as exposition of good programming style, and evangelism +for a still-valuable philosophy, these books are unparalleled, and I +recommend them highly. + + Acknowledgment: I would like to express my gratitude to Brian +Kernighan of Bell Labs, the original Software Toolsmith, for reviewing +this column. + + ---------- Footnotes ---------- + + (1) Redhat Linux 6.1, for the November 2000 revision of this article. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: GNU Free Documentation License, Next: Index, Prev: Opening the software toolbox, Up: Top + +Appendix A GNU Free Documentation License +***************************************** + + Version 1.1, March 2000 +* Menu: + +* How to use this License for your documents:: + + Copyright (C) 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA + + Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies + of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. + + 0. 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COMBINING DOCUMENTS + + You may combine the Document with other documents released under + this License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for + modified versions, provided that you include in the combination + all of the Invariant Sections of all of the original documents, + unmodified, and list them all as Invariant Sections of your + combined work in its license notice. + + The combined work need only contain one copy of this License, and + multiple identical Invariant Sections may be replaced with a single + copy. If there are multiple Invariant Sections with the same name + but different contents, make the title of each such section unique + by adding at the end of it, in parentheses, the name of the + original author or publisher of that section if known, or else a + unique number. Make the same adjustment to the section titles in + the list of Invariant Sections in the license notice of the + combined work. + + In the combination, you must combine any sections entitled + "History" in the various original documents, forming one section + entitled "History"; likewise combine any sections entitled + "Acknowledgements", and any sections entitled "Dedications". You + must delete all sections entitled "Endorsements." + + 6. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS + + You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other + documents released under this License, and replace the individual + copies of this License in the various documents with a single copy + that is included in the collection, provided that you follow the + rules of this License for verbatim copying of each of the + documents in all other respects. + + You may extract a single document from such a collection, and + distribute it individually under this License, provided you insert + a copy of this License into the extracted document, and follow + this License in all other respects regarding verbatim copying of + that document. + + 7. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS + + A compilation of the Document or its derivatives with other + separate and independent documents or works, in or on a volume of + a storage or distribution medium, does not as a whole count as a + Modified Version of the Document, provided no compilation + copyright is claimed for the compilation. Such a compilation is + called an "aggregate", and this License does not apply to the + other self-contained works thus compiled with the Document, on + account of their being thus compiled, if they are not themselves + derivative works of the Document. + + If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these + copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one + quarter of the entire aggregate, the Document's Cover Texts may be + placed on covers that surround only the Document within the + aggregate. Otherwise they must appear on covers around the whole + aggregate. + + 8. TRANSLATION + + Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may + distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section + 4. Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special + permission from their copyright holders, but you may include + translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the + original versions of these Invariant Sections. You may include a + translation of this License provided that you also include the + original English version of this License. In case of a + disagreement between the translation and the original English + version of this License, the original English version will prevail. + + 9. TERMINATION + + You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document + except as expressly provided for under this License. Any other + attempt to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Document is + void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this + License. However, parties who have received copies, or rights, + from you under this License will not have their licenses + terminated so long as such parties remain in full compliance. + + 10. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE + + The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions of + the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new + versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may + differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See + http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/. + + Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version + number. If the Document specifies that a particular numbered + version of this License "or any later version" applies to it, you + have the option of following the terms and conditions either of + that specified version or of any later version that has been + published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If + the Document does not specify a version number of this License, + you may choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the + Free Software Foundation. + + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: How to use this License for your documents, Up: GNU Free Documentation License + +ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents +==================================================== + +To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of +the License in the document and put the following copyright and license +notices just after the title page: + + + Copyright (C) YEAR YOUR NAME. + Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document + under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 + or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; + with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with the + Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts being LIST. + A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU + Free Documentation License''. +If you have no Invariant Sections, write "with no Invariant +Sections" instead of saying which ones are invariant. If you have no +Front-Cover Texts, write "no Front-Cover Texts" instead of "Front-Cover +Texts being LIST"; likewise for Back-Cover Texts. + + If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we +recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of +free software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to +permit their use in free software. + + +File: coreutils.info, Node: Index, Prev: GNU Free Documentation License, Up: Top + +Index +***** + + +* Menu: + +* !: Connectives for test. + (line 9) +* !=: String tests. (line 25) +* %: Numeric expressions. (line 15) +* %b: printf invocation. (line 32) +* &: Relations for expr. (line 17) +* *: Numeric expressions. (line 15) +* + <1>: Numeric expressions. (line 11) +* +: String expressions. (line 53) +* +PAGE_RANGE: pr invocation. (line 60) +* - <1>: su invocation. (line 53) +* - <2>: env invocation. (line 45) +* -: Numeric expressions. (line 11) +* - and Unix rm: rm invocation. (line 77) +* -, removing files beginning with: rm invocation. (line 65) +* --: Common options. (line 36) +* --across: pr invocation. (line 84) +* --address-radix: od invocation. (line 36) +* --adjustment: nice invocation. (line 34) +* --all <1>: uname invocation. (line 30) +* --all <2>: who invocation. (line 36) +* --all <3>: stty invocation. (line 26) +* --all <4>: du invocation. (line 21) +* --all <5>: df invocation. (line 32) +* --all <6>: Which files are listed. + (line 13) +* --all: unexpand invocation. (line 38) +* --all-repeated: uniq invocation. (line 67) +* --almost-all: Which files are listed. + (line 17) +* --apparent-size: du invocation. (line 24) +* --append: tee invocation. (line 25) +* --archive: cp invocation. (line 54) +* --author: What information is listed. + (line 10) +* --backup <1>: ln invocation. (line 55) +* --backup <2>: mv invocation. (line 50) +* --backup <3>: install invocation. (line 36) +* --backup <4>: cp invocation. (line 61) +* --backup: Backup options. (line 13) +* --before: tac invocation. (line 21) +* --binary <1>: md5sum invocation. (line 24) +* --binary: cat invocation. (line 20) +* --block-size <1>: du invocation. (line 45) +* --block-size <2>: df invocation. (line 40) +* --block-size: Block size. (line 138) +* --block-size=SIZE: Block size. (line 12) +* --body-numbering: nl invocation. (line 47) +* --boot: who invocation. (line 40) +* --bourne-shell: dircolors invocation. + (line 27) +* --buffer-size: sort invocation. (line 191) +* --bytes <1>: du invocation. (line 41) +* --bytes <2>: cut invocation. (line 26) +* --bytes <3>: wc invocation. (line 41) +* --bytes <4>: split invocation. (line 38) +* --bytes <5>: tail invocation. (line 36) +* --bytes <6>: head invocation. (line 24) +* --bytes: fold invocation. (line 23) +* --c-shell: dircolors invocation. + (line 33) +* --canonicalize: readlink invocation. (line 29) +* --canonicalize-existing: readlink invocation. (line 35) +* --canonicalize-missing: readlink invocation. (line 41) +* --changes <1>: chmod invocation. (line 28) +* --changes <2>: chgrp invocation. (line 17) +* --changes: chown invocation. (line 66) +* --characters: cut invocation. (line 34) +* --chars: wc invocation. (line 45) +* --check: sort invocation. (line 17) +* --check-chars: uniq invocation. (line 101) +* --classify: General output formatting. + (line 36) +* --color: General output formatting. + (line 21) +* --columns: pr invocation. (line 70) +* --command: su invocation. (line 39) +* --complement: cut invocation. (line 71) +* --count <1>: who invocation. (line 60) +* --count: uniq invocation. (line 53) +* --count-links: du invocation. (line 91) +* --crown-margin: fmt invocation. (line 34) +* --csh: dircolors invocation. + (line 33) +* --date <1>: Options for date. (line 11) +* --date: touch invocation. (line 62) +* --dead: who invocation. (line 44) +* --delimiter: cut invocation. (line 51) +* --delimiters: paste invocation. (line 43) +* --dereference <1>: stat invocation. (line 22) +* --dereference <2>: du invocation. (line 96) +* --dereference <3>: chgrp invocation. (line 27) +* --dereference <4>: chown invocation. (line 99) +* --dereference <5>: cp invocation. (line 121) +* --dereference: Which files are listed. + (line 77) +* --dereference-args: du invocation. (line 56) +* --dereference-command-line: Which files are listed. + (line 36) +* --dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir: Which files are listed. + (line 41) +* --dictionary-order: sort invocation. (line 75) +* --digits: csplit invocation. (line 80) +* --directory <1>: ln invocation. (line 61) +* --directory <2>: rm invocation. (line 25) +* --directory <3>: install invocation. (line 44) +* --directory: Which files are listed. + (line 28) +* --dired: What information is listed. + (line 16) +* --double-space: pr invocation. (line 96) +* --elide-empty-files: csplit invocation. (line 89) +* --escape: Formatting the file names. + (line 11) +* --exact: shred invocation. (line 119) +* --exclude-from=FILE: du invocation. (line 144) +* --exclude-type: df invocation. (line 134) +* --exclude=PATTERN: du invocation. (line 138) +* --expand-tabs: pr invocation. (line 120) +* --fast: su invocation. (line 44) +* --field-separator: sort invocation. (line 207) +* --fields: cut invocation. (line 44) +* --file <1>: Options for date. (line 22) +* --file: stty invocation. (line 31) +* --file-system: stat invocation. (line 17) +* --file-type: General output formatting. + (line 73) +* --files0-from=FILE: du invocation. (line 62) +* --first-line-number: pr invocation. (line 198) +* --follow: tail invocation. (line 41) +* --footer-numbering: nl invocation. (line 75) +* --force <1>: ln invocation. (line 67) +* --force <2>: shred invocation. (line 91) +* --force <3>: rm invocation. (line 37) +* --force <4>: mv invocation. (line 55) +* --force: cp invocation. (line 96) +* --form-feed: pr invocation. (line 128) +* --format <1>: General output formatting. + (line 10) +* --format <2>: What information is listed. + (line 130) +* --format: od invocation. (line 76) +* --format=FORMAT <1>: seq invocation. (line 24) +* --format=FORMAT: stat invocation. (line 33) +* --from: chown invocation. (line 76) +* --full-time: What information is listed. + (line 100) +* --general-numeric-sort: sort invocation. (line 87) +* --group <1>: id invocation. (line 23) +* --group: install invocation. (line 53) +* --groups: id invocation. (line 27) +* --hardware-platform: uname invocation. (line 34) +* --header: pr invocation. (line 134) +* --header-numbering: nl invocation. (line 79) +* --heading: who invocation. (line 48) +* --help: Common options. (line 29) +* --hide-control-chars: Formatting the file names. + (line 23) +* --hide=PATTERN: Which files are listed. + (line 50) +* --human-readable <1>: du invocation. (line 75) +* --human-readable <2>: df invocation. (line 45) +* --human-readable <3>: What information is listed. + (line 116) +* --human-readable: Block size. (line 138) +* --idle: who invocation. (line 52) +* --ignore-backups: Which files are listed. + (line 23) +* --ignore-case <1>: join invocation. (line 57) +* --ignore-case <2>: uniq invocation. (line 57) +* --ignore-case: sort invocation. (line 81) +* --ignore-environment: env invocation. (line 45) +* --ignore-fail-on-non-empty: rmdir invocation. (line 17) +* --ignore-interrupts: tee invocation. (line 30) +* --ignore-leading-blanks: sort invocation. (line 70) +* --ignore-nonprinting: sort invocation. (line 114) +* --ignore=PATTERN: Which files are listed. + (line 63) +* --indent: pr invocation. (line 204) +* --indicator-style: General output formatting. + (line 36) +* --initial: expand invocation. (line 35) +* --inode: What information is listed. + (line 122) +* --inodes: df invocation. (line 54) +* --interactive <1>: ln invocation. (line 71) +* --interactive <2>: rm invocation. (line 42) +* --interactive <3>: mv invocation. (line 59) +* --interactive: cp invocation. (line 113) +* --iso-8601[=TIMESPEC]: Options for date. (line 30) +* --iterations=NUMBER: shred invocation. (line 96) +* --join-blank-lines: nl invocation. (line 87) +* --join-lines: pr invocation. (line 147) +* --keep-files: csplit invocation. (line 85) +* --kernel-name: uname invocation. (line 61) +* --kernel-release: uname invocation. (line 57) +* --kernel-version: uname invocation. (line 72) +* --key: sort invocation. (line 163) +* --length: pr invocation. (line 156) +* --line-bytes: split invocation. (line 44) +* --lines <1>: wc invocation. (line 53) +* --lines <2>: split invocation. (line 30) +* --lines <3>: tail invocation. (line 129) +* --lines: head invocation. (line 30) +* --link: cp invocation. (line 117) +* --literal: Formatting the file names. + (line 17) +* --local: df invocation. (line 65) +* --login <1>: su invocation. (line 53) +* --login: who invocation. (line 75) +* --lookup: who invocation. (line 80) +* --machine: uname invocation. (line 39) +* --max-depth=DEPTH: du invocation. (line 106) +* --max-line-length: wc invocation. (line 57) +* --max-unchanged-stats: tail invocation. (line 117) +* --merge <1>: sort invocation. (line 23) +* --merge: pr invocation. (line 164) +* --mesg: who invocation. (line 93) +* --message: who invocation. (line 93) +* --mode <1>: mknod invocation. (line 43) +* --mode <2>: mkfifo invocation. (line 21) +* --mode <3>: mkdir invocation. (line 24) +* --mode: install invocation. (line 59) +* --month-sort: sort invocation. (line 120) +* --name: id invocation. (line 31) +* --no-create: touch invocation. (line 58) +* --no-dereference <1>: du invocation. (line 102) +* --no-dereference <2>: chgrp invocation. (line 32) +* --no-dereference <3>: chown invocation. (line 104) +* --no-dereference <4>: ln invocation. (line 75) +* --no-dereference: cp invocation. (line 125) +* --no-file-warnings: pr invocation. (line 211) +* --no-group: What information is listed. + (line 110) +* --no-newline: readlink invocation. (line 46) +* --no-preserve-root <1>: chmod invocation. (line 43) +* --no-preserve-root <2>: chgrp invocation. (line 45) +* --no-preserve-root <3>: chown invocation. (line 117) +* --no-preserve-root: rm invocation. (line 52) +* --no-renumber: nl invocation. (line 108) +* --no-sync: df invocation. (line 69) +* --no-target-directory <1>: ln invocation. (line 109) +* --no-target-directory <2>: mv invocation. (line 99) +* --no-target-directory <3>: install invocation. (line 97) +* --no-target-directory <4>: cp invocation. (line 260) +* --no-target-directory: Target directory. (line 15) +* --nodename: uname invocation. (line 44) +* --null: du invocation. (line 112) +* --number: cat invocation. (line 52) +* --number-format: nl invocation. (line 95) +* --number-lines: pr invocation. (line 177) +* --number-nonblank: cat invocation. (line 37) +* --number-separator: nl invocation. (line 112) +* --number-width: nl invocation. (line 122) +* --numeric-sort: sort invocation. (line 128) +* --numeric-suffixes: split invocation. (line 52) +* --numeric-uid-gid: What information is listed. + (line 179) +* --omit-header: pr invocation. (line 240) +* --omit-pagination: pr invocation. (line 251) +* --one-file-system <1>: du invocation. (line 134) +* --one-file-system: cp invocation. (line 285) +* --only-delimited: cut invocation. (line 59) +* --operating-system: uname invocation. (line 53) +* --output: sort invocation. (line 171) +* --output-delimiter: cut invocation. (line 64) +* --output-duplicates: od invocation. (line 145) +* --output-tabs: pr invocation. (line 140) +* --owner: install invocation. (line 68) +* --page-increment: nl invocation. (line 83) +* --page_width: pr invocation. (line 269) +* --pages=PAGE_RANGE: pr invocation. (line 60) +* --parents <1>: rmdir invocation. (line 22) +* --parents <2>: mkdir invocation. (line 31) +* --parents: cp invocation. (line 167) +* --pid: tail invocation. (line 97) +* --portability <1>: pathchk invocation. (line 30) +* --portability: df invocation. (line 76) +* --prefix: csplit invocation. (line 62) +* --preserve: cp invocation. (line 130) +* --preserve-environment: su invocation. (line 64) +* --preserve-root <1>: chmod invocation. (line 38) +* --preserve-root <2>: chgrp invocation. (line 40) +* --preserve-root <3>: chown invocation. (line 112) +* --preserve-root: rm invocation. (line 47) +* --preserve-timestamps: install invocation. (line 74) +* --print-database: dircolors invocation. + (line 38) +* --print-type: df invocation. (line 109) +* --processor: uname invocation. (line 48) +* --quiet <1>: tty invocation. (line 18) +* --quiet <2>: chmod invocation. (line 34) +* --quiet <3>: chgrp invocation. (line 23) +* --quiet <4>: chown invocation. (line 72) +* --quiet <5>: readlink invocation. (line 52) +* --quiet <6>: csplit invocation. (line 100) +* --quiet <7>: tail invocation. (line 134) +* --quiet: head invocation. (line 36) +* --quote-name: Formatting the file names. + (line 30) +* --quoting-style: Formatting the file names. + (line 11) +* --read-bytes: od invocation. (line 63) +* --real: id invocation. (line 36) +* --recursive <1>: chmod invocation. (line 58) +* --recursive <2>: chgrp invocation. (line 63) +* --recursive <3>: chown invocation. (line 136) +* --recursive <4>: rm invocation. (line 58) +* --recursive <5>: cp invocation. (line 189) +* --recursive: Which files are listed. + (line 84) +* --reference <1>: Options for date. (line 74) +* --reference <2>: touch invocation. (line 81) +* --reference <3>: chmod invocation. (line 51) +* --reference <4>: chgrp invocation. (line 49) +* --reference: chown invocation. (line 121) +* --regex: tac invocation. (line 26) +* --remove: shred invocation. (line 109) +* --remove-destination: cp invocation. (line 201) +* --repeated: uniq invocation. (line 61) +* --reply <1>: mv invocation. (line 64) +* --reply: cp invocation. (line 178) +* --retry: tail invocation. (line 83) +* --reverse <1>: Sorting the output. (line 28) +* --reverse: sort invocation. (line 155) +* --rfc-2822: Options for date. (line 61) +* --rfc-822: Options for date. (line 61) +* --save: stty invocation. (line 41) +* --section-delimiter: nl invocation. (line 68) +* --sep-string: pr invocation. (line 225) +* --separate-dirs: du invocation. (line 129) +* --separator <1>: pr invocation. (line 216) +* --separator: tac invocation. (line 33) +* --serial: paste invocation. (line 34) +* --set: Options for date. (line 79) +* --sh: dircolors invocation. + (line 27) +* --shell: su invocation. (line 75) +* --show-all: cat invocation. (line 16) +* --show-control-chars <1>: Formatting the file names. + (line 77) +* --show-control-chars: pr invocation. (line 90) +* --show-ends: cat invocation. (line 46) +* --show-nonprinting <1>: pr invocation. (line 256) +* --show-nonprinting: cat invocation. (line 74) +* --show-tabs: cat invocation. (line 67) +* --si <1>: du invocation. (line 118) +* --si <2>: df invocation. (line 89) +* --si <3>: What information is listed. + (line 205) +* --si: Block size. (line 138) +* --silent <1>: tty invocation. (line 18) +* --silent <2>: chmod invocation. (line 34) +* --silent <3>: chgrp invocation. (line 23) +* --silent <4>: chown invocation. (line 72) +* --silent <5>: readlink invocation. (line 52) +* --silent <6>: csplit invocation. (line 100) +* --silent <7>: tail invocation. (line 134) +* --silent: head invocation. (line 36) +* --size: What information is listed. + (line 189) +* --size=BYTES: shred invocation. (line 103) +* --skip-bytes: od invocation. (line 55) +* --skip-chars: uniq invocation. (line 42) +* --skip-fields: uniq invocation. (line 31) +* --sleep-interval: tail invocation. (line 89) +* --sort: Sorting the output. (line 33) +* --spaces: fold invocation. (line 29) +* --sparse=WHEN: cp invocation. (line 205) +* --split-only: fmt invocation. (line 47) +* --squeeze-blank: cat invocation. (line 58) +* --stable: sort invocation. (line 185) +* --starting-line-number: nl invocation. (line 117) +* --status: md5sum invocation. (line 53) +* --strings: od invocation. (line 68) +* --strip: install invocation. (line 84) +* --strip-trailing-slashes <1>: mv invocation. (line 85) +* --strip-trailing-slashes: cp invocation. (line 238) +* --suffix <1>: ln invocation. (line 100) +* --suffix <2>: mv invocation. (line 90) +* --suffix <3>: install invocation. (line 88) +* --suffix <4>: cp invocation. (line 251) +* --suffix <5>: csplit invocation. (line 66) +* --suffix: Backup options. (line 50) +* --suffix-length: split invocation. (line 26) +* --summarize: du invocation. (line 125) +* --symbolic: ln invocation. (line 94) +* --symbolic-link: cp invocation. (line 243) +* --sync: df invocation. (line 96) +* --sysv: sum invocation. (line 31) +* --tabs <1>: unexpand invocation. (line 24) +* --tabs: expand invocation. (line 22) +* --tabsize: General output formatting. + (line 83) +* --tagged-paragraph: fmt invocation. (line 40) +* --target-directory <1>: ln invocation. (line 105) +* --target-directory <2>: mv invocation. (line 95) +* --target-directory <3>: install invocation. (line 93) +* --target-directory <4>: cp invocation. (line 256) +* --target-directory: Target directory. (line 31) +* --temporary-directory: sort invocation. (line 224) +* --terse: stat invocation. (line 28) +* --text: md5sum invocation. (line 63) +* --time <1>: touch invocation. (line 54) +* --time: Sorting the output. (line 14) +* --time-style: Formatting file timestamps. + (line 26) +* --total: du invocation. (line 50) +* --traditional: od invocation. (line 199) +* --type: df invocation. (line 103) +* --uniform-spacing: fmt invocation. (line 53) +* --unique <1>: uniq invocation. (line 96) +* --unique: sort invocation. (line 233) +* --universal: Options for date. (line 84) +* --unset: env invocation. (line 39) +* --update <1>: mv invocation. (line 72) +* --update: cp invocation. (line 265) +* --user: id invocation. (line 41) +* --utc: Options for date. (line 84) +* --verbose <1>: chmod invocation. (line 48) +* --verbose <2>: chgrp invocation. (line 55) +* --verbose <3>: chown invocation. (line 128) +* --verbose <4>: rmdir invocation. (line 32) +* --verbose <5>: readlink invocation. (line 56) +* --verbose <6>: mkdir invocation. (line 38) +* --verbose <7>: ln invocation. (line 114) +* --verbose <8>: shred invocation. (line 115) +* --verbose <9>: rm invocation. (line 62) +* --verbose <10>: mv invocation. (line 82) +* --verbose <11>: install invocation. (line 102) +* --verbose <12>: cp invocation. (line 275) +* --verbose <13>: split invocation. (line 55) +* --verbose <14>: tail invocation. (line 138) +* --verbose: head invocation. (line 40) +* --version: Common options. (line 33) +* --version-control <1>: ln invocation. (line 118) +* --version-control <2>: mv invocation. (line 104) +* --version-control <3>: install invocation. (line 106) +* --version-control <4>: cp invocation. (line 279) +* --version-control: Backup options. (line 56) +* --warn: md5sum invocation. (line 68) +* --width <1>: General output formatting. + (line 89) +* --width <2>: fold invocation. (line 35) +* --width <3>: pr invocation. (line 260) +* --width <4>: fmt invocation. (line 59) +* --width: od invocation. (line 152) +* --words: wc invocation. (line 49) +* --writable: who invocation. (line 93) +* --zero: shred invocation. (line 129) +* --zero-terminated: sort invocation. (line 247) +* -0: du invocation. (line 111) +* -1 <1>: General output formatting. + (line 10) +* -1 <2>: join invocation. (line 62) +* -1: comm invocation. (line 23) +* -2 <1>: join invocation. (line 65) +* -2: comm invocation. (line 23) +* -3: comm invocation. (line 23) +* -a <1>: uname invocation. (line 30) +* -a <2>: who invocation. (line 36) +* -a <3>: stty invocation. (line 26) +* -a <4>: tee invocation. (line 25) +* -a <5>: Connectives for test. + (line 12) +* -a <6>: du invocation. (line 21) +* -a <7>: df invocation. (line 32) +* -a <8>: touch invocation. (line 54) +* -a: cp invocation. (line 54) +* -A: Which files are listed. + (line 17) +* -a <1>: Which files are listed. + (line 13) +* -a <2>: unexpand invocation. (line 38) +* -a <3>: join invocation. (line 48) +* -a <4>: split invocation. (line 26) +* -a <5>: pr invocation. (line 84) +* -a: od invocation. (line 168) +* -A <1>: od invocation. (line 36) +* -A: cat invocation. (line 16) +* -b <1>: who invocation. (line 40) +* -b: File type tests. (line 10) +* -B: du invocation. (line 45) +* -b: du invocation. (line 41) +* -B: df invocation. (line 40) +* -b <1>: ln invocation. (line 55) +* -b <2>: mv invocation. (line 50) +* -b <3>: install invocation. (line 36) +* -b <4>: cp invocation. (line 61) +* -b <5>: dircolors invocation. + (line 27) +* -b: Formatting the file names. + (line 11) +* -B: Which files are listed. + (line 23) +* -b <1>: cut invocation. (line 26) +* -b <2>: sort invocation. (line 70) +* -b <3>: md5sum invocation. (line 24) +* -b <4>: csplit invocation. (line 66) +* -b <5>: split invocation. (line 38) +* -b <6>: fold invocation. (line 23) +* -b <7>: od invocation. (line 171) +* -b <8>: nl invocation. (line 47) +* -b <9>: tac invocation. (line 21) +* -b: cat invocation. (line 37) +* -B: cat invocation. (line 20) +* -b: Backup options. (line 13) +* -c <1>: su invocation. (line 39) +* -c <2>: File type tests. (line 13) +* -c <3>: stat invocation. (line 33) +* -c <4>: du invocation. (line 50) +* -c <5>: touch invocation. (line 58) +* -c <6>: chmod invocation. (line 28) +* -c <7>: chgrp invocation. (line 17) +* -c <8>: chown invocation. (line 66) +* -c <9>: install invocation. (line 40) +* -c: dircolors invocation. + (line 33) +* -C: General output formatting. + (line 15) +* -c <1>: Sorting the output. (line 14) +* -c <2>: cut invocation. (line 34) +* -c <3>: uniq invocation. (line 53) +* -c <4>: sort invocation. (line 17) +* -c: wc invocation. (line 41) +* -C: split invocation. (line 44) +* -c <1>: tail invocation. (line 36) +* -c <2>: head invocation. (line 24) +* -c <3>: pr invocation. (line 90) +* -c <4>: fmt invocation. (line 34) +* -c: od invocation. (line 174) +* -COLUMN: pr invocation. (line 70) +* -d <1>: Options for date. (line 11) +* -d <2>: who invocation. (line 44) +* -d: File type tests. (line 16) +* -D: du invocation. (line 56) +* -d <1>: touch invocation. (line 62) +* -d <2>: ln invocation. (line 61) +* -d <3>: rm invocation. (line 25) +* -d <4>: install invocation. (line 44) +* -d: cp invocation. (line 89) +* -D: What information is listed. + (line 16) +* -d <1>: Which files are listed. + (line 28) +* -d <2>: paste invocation. (line 43) +* -d: cut invocation. (line 51) +* -D: uniq invocation. (line 67) +* -d <1>: uniq invocation. (line 61) +* -d <2>: sort invocation. (line 75) +* -d <3>: split invocation. (line 52) +* -d <4>: pr invocation. (line 96) +* -d <5>: od invocation. (line 178) +* -d: nl invocation. (line 68) +* -e: File characteristic tests. + (line 9) +* -E: echo invocation. (line 63) +* -e <1>: echo invocation. (line 20) +* -e <2>: readlink invocation. (line 35) +* -e <3>: join invocation. (line 52) +* -e: pr invocation. (line 120) +* -E: cat invocation. (line 46) +* -e: cat invocation. (line 42) +* -ef: File characteristic tests. + (line 23) +* -eq: Numeric tests. (line 16) +* -f <1>: su invocation. (line 44) +* -f: Options for date. (line 22) +* -F: stty invocation. (line 31) +* -f <1>: File type tests. (line 19) +* -f <2>: stat invocation. (line 17) +* -f <3>: touch invocation. (line 72) +* -f <4>: chmod invocation. (line 34) +* -f <5>: chgrp invocation. (line 23) +* -f <6>: chown invocation. (line 72) +* -f <7>: readlink invocation. (line 29) +* -f: ln invocation. (line 67) +* -F: ln invocation. (line 61) +* -f <1>: shred invocation. (line 91) +* -f <2>: rm invocation. (line 37) +* -f <3>: mv invocation. (line 55) +* -f: cp invocation. (line 96) +* -F: General output formatting. + (line 36) +* -f <1>: Sorting the output. (line 21) +* -f <2>: cut invocation. (line 44) +* -f <3>: uniq invocation. (line 31) +* -f <4>: sort invocation. (line 81) +* -f: csplit invocation. (line 62) +* -F: tail invocation. (line 78) +* -f <1>: tail invocation. (line 41) +* -f: pr invocation. (line 128) +* -F: pr invocation. (line 128) +* -f <1>: od invocation. (line 181) +* -f: nl invocation. (line 75) +* -f FORMAT: seq invocation. (line 24) +* -G: id invocation. (line 27) +* -g <1>: id invocation. (line 23) +* -g: stty invocation. (line 41) +* -G: Access permission tests. + (line 31) +* -g <1>: Access permission tests. + (line 9) +* -g: install invocation. (line 53) +* -G: What information is listed. + (line 110) +* -g <1>: What information is listed. + (line 105) +* -g: sort invocation. (line 87) +* -ge: Numeric tests. (line 16) +* -gt: Numeric tests. (line 16) +* -H: who invocation. (line 48) +* -h: File type tests. (line 23) +* -H: du invocation. (line 80) +* -h: du invocation. (line 75) +* -H: df invocation. (line 50) +* -h: df invocation. (line 45) +* -H: chgrp invocation. (line 67) +* -h: chgrp invocation. (line 32) +* -H: chown invocation. (line 139) +* -h: chown invocation. (line 104) +* -H: cp invocation. (line 106) +* -h: What information is listed. + (line 116) +* -H: Which files are listed. + (line 36) +* -h <1>: pr invocation. (line 134) +* -h: nl invocation. (line 79) +* -H: Traversing symlinks. (line 18) +* -h: Block size. (line 138) +* -i <1>: env invocation. (line 45) +* -i <2>: uname invocation. (line 34) +* -i <3>: who invocation. (line 52) +* -i <4>: tee invocation. (line 30) +* -i <5>: df invocation. (line 54) +* -i <6>: ln invocation. (line 71) +* -i <7>: rm invocation. (line 42) +* -i <8>: mv invocation. (line 59) +* -i <9>: cp invocation. (line 113) +* -i: What information is listed. + (line 122) +* -I: Which files are listed. + (line 63) +* -i <1>: expand invocation. (line 35) +* -i <2>: join invocation. (line 57) +* -i <3>: uniq invocation. (line 57) +* -i <4>: sort invocation. (line 114) +* -i <5>: pr invocation. (line 140) +* -i <6>: od invocation. (line 184) +* -i: nl invocation. (line 83) +* -I TIMESPEC: Options for date. (line 30) +* -J: pr invocation. (line 147) +* -j: od invocation. (line 55) +* -k <1>: Access permission tests. + (line 12) +* -k <2>: du invocation. (line 85) +* -k <3>: df invocation. (line 59) +* -k <4>: General output formatting. + (line 61) +* -k <5>: sort invocation. (line 163) +* -k <6>: csplit invocation. (line 85) +* -k: Block size. (line 138) +* -l <1>: su invocation. (line 53) +* -l: who invocation. (line 75) +* -L <1>: File type tests. (line 23) +* -L <2>: stat invocation. (line 22) +* -L: du invocation. (line 96) +* -l <1>: du invocation. (line 91) +* -l: df invocation. (line 65) +* -L <1>: chgrp invocation. (line 72) +* -L <2>: chown invocation. (line 144) +* -L: cp invocation. (line 121) +* -l <1>: cp invocation. (line 117) +* -l: What information is listed. + (line 130) +* -L <1>: Which files are listed. + (line 77) +* -L: wc invocation. (line 57) +* -l <1>: wc invocation. (line 53) +* -l <2>: split invocation. (line 30) +* -l <3>: pr invocation. (line 156) +* -l <4>: od invocation. (line 187) +* -l: nl invocation. (line 87) +* -L: Traversing symlinks. (line 22) +* -le: Numeric tests. (line 16) +* -lt: Numeric tests. (line 16) +* -m <1>: su invocation. (line 64) +* -m <2>: uname invocation. (line 39) +* -m <3>: who invocation. (line 56) +* -m <4>: touch invocation. (line 77) +* -m <5>: readlink invocation. (line 41) +* -m <6>: mknod invocation. (line 43) +* -m <7>: mkfifo invocation. (line 21) +* -m <8>: mkdir invocation. (line 24) +* -m <9>: install invocation. (line 59) +* -m: General output formatting. + (line 67) +* -M: sort invocation. (line 120) +* -m <1>: sort invocation. (line 23) +* -m <2>: wc invocation. (line 45) +* -m: pr invocation. (line 164) +* -n <1>: nice invocation. (line 34) +* -n <2>: uname invocation. (line 44) +* -n <3>: id invocation. (line 31) +* -n <4>: String tests. (line 19) +* -n <5>: echo invocation. (line 17) +* -n <6>: readlink invocation. (line 46) +* -n: ln invocation. (line 75) +* -N: Formatting the file names. + (line 17) +* -n <1>: What information is listed. + (line 179) +* -n <2>: cut invocation. (line 55) +* -n <3>: sort invocation. (line 128) +* -n <4>: csplit invocation. (line 80) +* -n <5>: tail invocation. (line 129) +* -n: head invocation. (line 30) +* -N: pr invocation. (line 198) +* -n: pr invocation. (line 177) +* -N: od invocation. (line 63) +* -n <1>: nl invocation. (line 95) +* -n: cat invocation. (line 52) +* -n NUMBER: shred invocation. (line 96) +* -ne: Numeric tests. (line 16) +* -nt: File characteristic tests. + (line 15) +* -o <1>: uname invocation. (line 53) +* -o: Connectives for test. + (line 15) +* -O: Access permission tests. + (line 28) +* -o <1>: install invocation. (line 68) +* -o <2>: What information is listed. + (line 183) +* -o <3>: sort invocation. (line 171) +* -o <4>: pr invocation. (line 204) +* -o: od invocation. (line 190) +* -ot: File characteristic tests. + (line 19) +* -p <1>: su invocation. (line 64) +* -p <2>: uname invocation. (line 48) +* -p <3>: pathchk invocation. (line 30) +* -p: File type tests. (line 28) +* -P <1>: du invocation. (line 102) +* -P <2>: df invocation. (line 76) +* -P <3>: chgrp invocation. (line 76) +* -P: chown invocation. (line 148) +* -p <1>: rmdir invocation. (line 22) +* -p <2>: mkdir invocation. (line 31) +* -p <3>: install invocation. (line 74) +* -p: cp invocation. (line 130) +* -P: cp invocation. (line 125) +* -p <1>: dircolors invocation. + (line 38) +* -p: nl invocation. (line 108) +* -P: Traversing symlinks. (line 26) +* -q <1>: who invocation. (line 60) +* -q: readlink invocation. (line 52) +* -Q: Formatting the file names. + (line 30) +* -q <1>: Formatting the file names. + (line 23) +* -q <2>: csplit invocation. (line 100) +* -q <3>: tail invocation. (line 134) +* -q: head invocation. (line 36) +* -r <1>: uname invocation. (line 57) +* -r: Options for date. (line 74) +* -R: Options for date. (line 61) +* -r <1>: id invocation. (line 36) +* -r <2>: Access permission tests. + (line 15) +* -r: touch invocation. (line 81) +* -R <1>: chmod invocation. (line 58) +* -R <2>: chgrp invocation. (line 63) +* -R <3>: chown invocation. (line 136) +* -R: rm invocation. (line 58) +* -r <1>: rm invocation. (line 58) +* -r: cp invocation. (line 189) +* -R: cp invocation. (line 189) +* -r: Sorting the output. (line 28) +* -R: Which files are listed. + (line 84) +* -r <1>: sort invocation. (line 155) +* -r <2>: sum invocation. (line 25) +* -r <3>: pr invocation. (line 211) +* -r: tac invocation. (line 26) +* -s <1>: su invocation. (line 75) +* -s <2>: uname invocation. (line 61) +* -s <3>: Options for date. (line 79) +* -s <4>: who invocation. (line 64) +* -s <5>: tty invocation. (line 18) +* -s: File characteristic tests. + (line 12) +* -S <1>: File type tests. (line 31) +* -S: du invocation. (line 129) +* -s <1>: du invocation. (line 125) +* -s: readlink invocation. (line 52) +* -S: ln invocation. (line 100) +* -s: ln invocation. (line 94) +* -S <1>: mv invocation. (line 90) +* -S: install invocation. (line 88) +* -s: install invocation. (line 84) +* -S: cp invocation. (line 251) +* -s: cp invocation. (line 243) +* -S: Sorting the output. (line 33) +* -s <1>: What information is listed. + (line 189) +* -s <2>: paste invocation. (line 34) +* -s <3>: cut invocation. (line 59) +* -s: uniq invocation. (line 42) +* -S: sort invocation. (line 191) +* -s <1>: sort invocation. (line 185) +* -s <2>: sum invocation. (line 31) +* -s <3>: csplit invocation. (line 100) +* -s: fold invocation. (line 29) +* -S: pr invocation. (line 225) +* -s <1>: pr invocation. (line 216) +* -s <2>: fmt invocation. (line 47) +* -s: od invocation. (line 193) +* -S: od invocation. (line 68) +* -s <1>: nl invocation. (line 112) +* -s <2>: tac invocation. (line 33) +* -s: cat invocation. (line 58) +* -S: Backup options. (line 50) +* -s BYTES: shred invocation. (line 103) +* -su: su invocation. (line 25) +* -T: who invocation. (line 93) +* -t <1>: File type tests. (line 34) +* -t: stat invocation. (line 28) +* -T: df invocation. (line 109) +* -t: df invocation. (line 103) +* -T: ln invocation. (line 109) +* -t: ln invocation. (line 105) +* -T: mv invocation. (line 99) +* -t: mv invocation. (line 95) +* -T: install invocation. (line 97) +* -t: install invocation. (line 93) +* -T: cp invocation. (line 260) +* -t: cp invocation. (line 256) +* -T: General output formatting. + (line 83) +* -t <1>: Sorting the output. (line 37) +* -t <2>: unexpand invocation. (line 24) +* -t: expand invocation. (line 22) +* -T: sort invocation. (line 224) +* -t <1>: sort invocation. (line 207) +* -t: md5sum invocation. (line 63) +* -T: pr invocation. (line 251) +* -t <1>: pr invocation. (line 240) +* -t <2>: fmt invocation. (line 40) +* -t: od invocation. (line 76) +* -T: cat invocation. (line 67) +* -t: cat invocation. (line 63) +* -u <1>: env invocation. (line 39) +* -u <2>: Options for date. (line 84) +* -u <3>: who invocation. (line 69) +* -u <4>: id invocation. (line 41) +* -u <5>: Access permission tests. + (line 18) +* -u <6>: shred invocation. (line 109) +* -u <7>: mv invocation. (line 72) +* -u: cp invocation. (line 265) +* -U: Sorting the output. (line 49) +* -u <1>: Sorting the output. (line 42) +* -u <2>: uniq invocation. (line 96) +* -u <3>: sort invocation. (line 233) +* -u <4>: fmt invocation. (line 53) +* -u: cat invocation. (line 70) +* -v <1>: uname invocation. (line 72) +* -v <2>: chmod invocation. (line 48) +* -v <3>: chgrp invocation. (line 55) +* -v <4>: chown invocation. (line 128) +* -v <5>: rmdir invocation. (line 32) +* -v <6>: readlink invocation. (line 56) +* -v: mkdir invocation. (line 38) +* -V: ln invocation. (line 118) +* -v <1>: ln invocation. (line 114) +* -v <2>: shred invocation. (line 115) +* -v: rm invocation. (line 62) +* -V: mv invocation. (line 104) +* -v: mv invocation. (line 82) +* -V: install invocation. (line 106) +* -v: install invocation. (line 102) +* -V: cp invocation. (line 279) +* -v <1>: cp invocation. (line 275) +* -v <2>: Sorting the output. (line 56) +* -v <3>: tail invocation. (line 138) +* -v <4>: head invocation. (line 40) +* -v <5>: pr invocation. (line 256) +* -v <6>: od invocation. (line 145) +* -v <7>: nl invocation. (line 117) +* -v: cat invocation. (line 74) +* -w <1>: who invocation. (line 93) +* -w <2>: Access permission tests. + (line 21) +* -w <3>: General output formatting. + (line 89) +* -w <4>: uniq invocation. (line 101) +* -w <5>: md5sum invocation. (line 68) +* -w <6>: wc invocation. (line 49) +* -w: fold invocation. (line 35) +* -W: pr invocation. (line 269) +* -w <1>: pr invocation. (line 260) +* -w <2>: fmt invocation. (line 59) +* -w <3>: od invocation. (line 152) +* -w: nl invocation. (line 122) +* -WIDTH: fmt invocation. (line 59) +* -x <1>: Access permission tests. + (line 24) +* -x <2>: du invocation. (line 134) +* -x <3>: df invocation. (line 134) +* -x <4>: shred invocation. (line 119) +* -x <5>: cp invocation. (line 285) +* -x: General output formatting. + (line 79) +* -X: Sorting the output. (line 63) +* -x: od invocation. (line 196) +* -X FILE: du invocation. (line 144) +* -z <1>: String tests. (line 15) +* -z <2>: shred invocation. (line 129) +* -z <3>: sort invocation. (line 247) +* -z: csplit invocation. (line 89) +* .cshrc: su invocation. (line 44) +* /: Numeric expressions. (line 15) +* /bin/sh: su invocation. (line 12) +* /etc/passwd: su invocation. (line 12) +* /etc/shells: su invocation. (line 64) +* 128-bit checksum: md5sum invocation. (line 6) +* 16-bit checksum: sum invocation. (line 6) +* 4.2 file system type: df invocation. (line 121) +* <: Relations for expr. (line 22) +* <=: Relations for expr. (line 22) +* = <1>: Relations for expr. (line 22) +* =: String tests. (line 22) +* ==: Relations for expr. (line 22) +* >: Relations for expr. (line 22) +* >=: Relations for expr. (line 22) +* \( regexp operator: String expressions. (line 24) +* \+ regexp operator: String expressions. (line 28) +* \? regexp operator: String expressions. (line 28) +* \c: printf invocation. (line 23) +* \OOO: printf invocation. (line 57) +* \uhhhh: printf invocation. (line 62) +* \Uhhhhhhhh: printf invocation. (line 62) +* \xHH: printf invocation. (line 57) +* \| regexp operator: String expressions. (line 28) +* _POSIX2_VERSION: Standards conformance. + (line 19) +* abbreviations for months: Calendar date items. (line 38) +* access permission tests: Access permission tests. + (line 6) +* access permissions, changing: chmod invocation. (line 6) +* access time, changing: touch invocation. (line 54) +* access time, printing or sorting files by: Sorting the output. + (line 42) +* across columns: pr invocation. (line 84) +* across, listing files: General output formatting. + (line 79) +* adding permissions: Setting Permissions. (line 38) +* addition: Numeric expressions. (line 11) +* ago in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 23) +* all repeated lines, outputting: uniq invocation. (line 67) +* alnum: Character sets. (line 87) +* alpha: Character sets. (line 90) +* alternate ebcdic, converting to: dd invocation. (line 62) +* always color option: General output formatting. + (line 27) +* am i: who invocation. (line 21) +* am in date strings: Time of day items. (line 21) +* and operator <1>: Relations for expr. (line 17) +* and operator: Connectives for test. + (line 12) +* append: dd invocation. (line 135) +* appending to the output file: dd invocation. (line 135) +* appropriate privileges <1>: nice invocation. (line 6) +* appropriate privileges <2>: hostname invocation. (line 6) +* appropriate privileges <3>: Setting the time. (line 6) +* appropriate privileges: install invocation. (line 68) +* arbitrary date strings, parsing: Options for date. (line 11) +* arbitrary text, displaying: echo invocation. (line 6) +* arithmetic tests: Numeric tests. (line 6) +* ASCII dump of files: od invocation. (line 6) +* ascii, converting to: dd invocation. (line 54) +* atime, changing: touch invocation. (line 54) +* atime, printing or sorting files by: Sorting the output. (line 42) +* attributes, file: Changing file attributes. + (line 6) +* authors of get_date: Authors of get_date. (line 6) +* auto color option: General output formatting. + (line 25) +* automounter file systems: df invocation. (line 32) +* b for block special file: mknod invocation. (line 26) +* background jobs, stopping at terminal write: Local. (line 41) +* backslash escapes <1>: echo invocation. (line 20) +* backslash escapes: Character sets. (line 14) +* backslash sequences for file names: Formatting the file names. + (line 11) +* backup files, ignoring: Which files are listed. + (line 23) +* backup options: Backup options. (line 6) +* backup suffix: Backup options. (line 50) +* backups, making <1>: ln invocation. (line 55) +* backups, making <2>: mv invocation. (line 50) +* backups, making <3>: install invocation. (line 36) +* backups, making <4>: cp invocation. (line 61) +* backups, making: Backup options. (line 13) +* backups, making only: cp invocation. (line 42) +* basename: basename invocation. (line 6) +* baud rate, setting: Special. (line 43) +* beeping at input buffer full: Input. (line 56) +* beginning of time: Time directives. (line 39) +* beginning of time, for POSIX: Seconds since the Epoch. + (line 13) +* Bellovin, Steven M.: Authors of get_date. (line 6) +* Berets, Jim: Authors of get_date. (line 6) +* Berry, K. <1>: Authors of get_date. (line 14) +* Berry, K.: Introduction. (line 19) +* binary and text I/O in cat: cat invocation. (line 20) +* binary input files: md5sum invocation. (line 24) +* blank: Character sets. (line 93) +* blank lines, numbering: nl invocation. (line 87) +* blanks, ignoring leading: sort invocation. (line 70) +* block (space-padding): dd invocation. (line 71) +* block size <1>: dd invocation. (line 31) +* block size: Block size. (line 6) +* block size of conversion: dd invocation. (line 35) +* block size of input: dd invocation. (line 25) +* block size of output: dd invocation. (line 28) +* block special check: File type tests. (line 10) +* block special files: mknod invocation. (line 11) +* block special files, creating: mknod invocation. (line 6) +* BLOCK_SIZE: Block size. (line 12) +* BLOCKSIZE: Block size. (line 12) +* body, numbering: nl invocation. (line 17) +* Bourne shell syntax for color setup: dircolors invocation. + (line 27) +* breaks, cause interrupts: Input. (line 10) +* breaks, ignoring: Input. (line 7) +* brkint: Input. (line 10) +* bs: dd invocation. (line 31) +* BSD sum: sum invocation. (line 25) +* BSD tail: tail invocation. (line 19) +* BSD touch compatibility: touch invocation. (line 72) +* bsN: Output. (line 55) +* bugs, reporting: Introduction. (line 12) +* built-in shell commands, conflicts with <1>: nice invocation. + (line 25) +* built-in shell commands, conflicts with <2>: pwd invocation. + (line 10) +* built-in shell commands, conflicts with: test invocation. (line 28) +* byte count: wc invocation. (line 6) +* byte-swapping: dd invocation. (line 90) +* c for character special file: mknod invocation. (line 29) +* C shell syntax for color setup: dircolors invocation. + (line 33) +* C-s/C-q flow control: Input. (line 38) +* calendar date item: Calendar date items. (line 6) +* case folding: sort invocation. (line 81) +* case translation: Local. (line 36) +* case, ignored in dates: General date syntax. (line 64) +* cat: cat invocation. (line 6) +* cbreak: Combination. (line 52) +* cbs: dd invocation. (line 35) +* CD-ROM file system type: df invocation. (line 125) +* cdfs file system type: df invocation. (line 125) +* change or print terminal settings: stty invocation. (line 6) +* changed files, verbosely describing: chgrp invocation. (line 17) +* changed owners, verbosely describing: chown invocation. (line 66) +* changing access permissions: chmod invocation. (line 6) +* changing file attributes: Changing file attributes. + (line 6) +* changing file ownership: chown invocation. (line 6) +* changing file timestamps: touch invocation. (line 6) +* changing group ownership <1>: chgrp invocation. (line 6) +* changing group ownership: chown invocation. (line 6) +* changing special permissions: Changing Special Permissions. + (line 6) +* character classes: Character sets. (line 74) +* character count: wc invocation. (line 6) +* character size: Control. (line 19) +* character special check: File type tests. (line 13) +* character special files: mknod invocation. (line 11) +* character special files, creating: mknod invocation. (line 6) +* characters, special: Characters. (line 6) +* check file types: test invocation. (line 6) +* checking for sortedness: sort invocation. (line 17) +* checksum, 128-bit: md5sum invocation. (line 6) +* checksum, 16-bit: sum invocation. (line 6) +* chgrp: chgrp invocation. (line 6) +* chmod: chmod invocation. (line 6) +* chown: chown invocation. (line 6) +* chroot: chroot invocation. (line 6) +* cksum: cksum invocation. (line 6) +* clocal: Control. (line 33) +* cntrl: Character sets. (line 96) +* color database, printing: dircolors invocation. + (line 38) +* color setup: dircolors invocation. + (line 6) +* color, distinguishing file types with: General output formatting. + (line 21) +* cols: Special. (line 27) +* COLUMNS: Special. (line 30) +* columns: Special. (line 27) +* COLUMNS: General output formatting. + (line 89) +* combination settings: Combination. (line 6) +* comm: comm invocation. (line 6) +* commands for controlling processes: Process control. (line 6) +* commands for delaying: Delaying. (line 6) +* commands for exit status: Conditions. (line 6) +* commands for file name manipulation: File name manipulation. + (line 6) +* commands for invoking other commands: Modified command invocation. + (line 6) +* commands for printing text: Printing text. (line 6) +* commands for printing the working context: Working context. (line 6) +* commands for printing user information: User information. (line 6) +* commands for redirection: Redirection. (line 6) +* commands for system context: System context. (line 6) +* commas, outputting between files: General output formatting. + (line 67) +* comments, in dates: General date syntax. (line 64) +* common field, joining on: join invocation. (line 6) +* common lines: comm invocation. (line 18) +* common options: Common options. (line 6) +* compare values: test invocation. (line 6) +* comparing sorted files: comm invocation. (line 6) +* comparison operators: Relations for expr. (line 22) +* concatenate and write files: cat invocation. (line 6) +* conditional executability: Conditional Executability. + (line 6) +* conditions: Conditions. (line 6) +* conflicts with shell built-ins <1>: nice invocation. (line 25) +* conflicts with shell built-ins <2>: pwd invocation. (line 10) +* conflicts with shell built-ins: test invocation. (line 28) +* connectives, logical <1>: Relations for expr. (line 6) +* connectives, logical: Connectives for test. + (line 6) +* context splitting: csplit invocation. (line 6) +* context, system: System context. (line 6) +* control characters, using ^C: Local. (line 51) +* control settings: Control. (line 6) +* controlling terminal: dd invocation. (line 161) +* conv: dd invocation. (line 48) +* conversion block size: dd invocation. (line 35) +* converting tabs to spaces: expand invocation. (line 6) +* converting while copying a file: dd invocation. (line 6) +* cooked: Combination. (line 37) +* Coordinated Universal Time: Options for date. (line 84) +* copying directories recursively: cp invocation. (line 76) +* copying existing permissions: Copying Permissions. (line 6) +* copying files: cat invocation. (line 6) +* copying files and directories: cp invocation. (line 6) +* copying files and setting attributes: install invocation. (line 6) +* core utilities: Top. (line 19) +* count: dd invocation. (line 44) +* cp: cp invocation. (line 6) +* crashes and corruption: sync invocation. (line 11) +* CRC checksum: cksum invocation. (line 6) +* cread: Control. (line 30) +* creating directories: mkdir invocation. (line 6) +* creating FIFOs (named pipes): mkfifo invocation. (line 6) +* creating links (hard only): link invocation. (line 6) +* creating links (hard or soft): ln invocation. (line 6) +* creating output file, avoiding: dd invocation. (line 98) +* creating output file, requiring: dd invocation. (line 102) +* crN: Output. (line 45) +* crown margin: fmt invocation. (line 34) +* crt: Combination. (line 74) +* crterase: Local. (line 22) +* crtkill: Local. (line 56) +* crtscts: Control. (line 36) +* csh syntax for color setup: dircolors invocation. + (line 33) +* csN: Control. (line 19) +* csplit: csplit invocation. (line 6) +* cstopb: Control. (line 27) +* ctime, printing or sorting by: Sorting the output. (line 14) +* ctlecho: Local. (line 51) +* current working directory, printing: pwd invocation. (line 6) +* cut: cut invocation. (line 6) +* cyclic redundancy check: cksum invocation. (line 6) +* data, erasing: shred invocation. (line 6) +* database for color setup, printing: dircolors invocation. + (line 38) +* date: date invocation. (line 6) +* date directives: Date directives. (line 6) +* date format, ISO 8601: Calendar date items. (line 30) +* date input formats: Date input formats. (line 6) +* date options: Options for date. (line 6) +* date strings, parsing: Options for date. (line 11) +* day in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 15) +* day of week item: Day of week items. (line 6) +* dd: dd invocation. (line 6) +* dec: Combination. (line 77) +* decctlq: Combination. (line 63) +* delay for a specified time: sleep invocation. (line 6) +* delaying commands: Delaying. (line 6) +* deleting characters: Squeezing. (line 6) +* dereferencing symbolic links: ln invocation. (line 40) +* descriptor follow option: tail invocation. (line 41) +* destination directory <1>: ln invocation. (line 105) +* destination directory <2>: mv invocation. (line 95) +* destination directory <3>: install invocation. (line 93) +* destination directory <4>: cp invocation. (line 256) +* destination directory: Target directory. (line 15) +* destinations, multiple output: tee invocation. (line 6) +* device file, disk: df invocation. (line 19) +* df: df invocation. (line 6) +* DF_BLOCK_SIZE: Block size. (line 12) +* dictionary order: sort invocation. (line 75) +* differing lines: comm invocation. (line 18) +* digit: Character sets. (line 99) +* dir: dir invocation. (line 6) +* dircolors: dircolors invocation. + (line 6) +* direct: dd invocation. (line 141) +* direct I/O: dd invocation. (line 141) +* directives, date: Date directives. (line 6) +* directives, literal: Literal directives. (line 6) +* directives, time: Time directives. (line 6) +* directories, copying: cp invocation. (line 6) +* directories, copying recursively: cp invocation. (line 76) +* directories, creating: mkdir invocation. (line 6) +* directories, creating with given attributes: install invocation. + (line 44) +* directories, removing (recursively): rm invocation. (line 58) +* directories, removing empty: rmdir invocation. (line 6) +* directories, removing with unlink: rm invocation. (line 25) +* directory check: File type tests. (line 16) +* directory components, printing: dirname invocation. (line 6) +* directory deletion, ignoring failures: rmdir invocation. (line 17) +* directory deletion, reporting: rmdir invocation. (line 32) +* directory listing: ls invocation. (line 6) +* directory listing, brief: dir invocation. (line 6) +* directory listing, recursive: Which files are listed. + (line 84) +* directory listing, verbose: vdir invocation. (line 6) +* directory order, listing by: Sorting the output. (line 21) +* directory, stripping from file names: basename invocation. (line 6) +* dired Emacs mode support: What information is listed. + (line 16) +* dirname: dirname invocation. (line 6) +* disabling special characters: Characters. (line 13) +* disk allocation: What information is listed. + (line 189) +* disk device file: df invocation. (line 19) +* disk usage: Disk usage. (line 6) +* disk usage by file system: df invocation. (line 6) +* disk usage for files: du invocation. (line 6) +* diskette file system: df invocation. (line 129) +* displacement of dates: Relative items in date strings. + (line 6) +* displaying text: echo invocation. (line 6) +* displaying value of a symbolic link: readlink invocation. (line 6) +* division: Numeric expressions. (line 15) +* do nothing, successfully: true invocation. (line 6) +* do nothing, unsuccessfully: false invocation. (line 6) +* DOS file system: df invocation. (line 129) +* double spacing: pr invocation. (line 96) +* down columns: pr invocation. (line 70) +* dsusp: Characters. (line 53) +* dsync: dd invocation. (line 144) +* du: du invocation. (line 6) +* DU_BLOCK_SIZE: Block size. (line 12) +* ebcdic, converting to: dd invocation. (line 58) +* echo <1>: Local. (line 18) +* echo: echo invocation. (line 6) +* echoctl: Local. (line 51) +* echoe: Local. (line 22) +* echok: Local. (line 26) +* echoke: Local. (line 56) +* echonl: Local. (line 29) +* echoprt: Local. (line 46) +* effective uid and gid, printing: id invocation. (line 6) +* effective UID, printing: whoami invocation. (line 6) +* efs file system type: df invocation. (line 121) +* Eggert, Paul: Authors of get_date. (line 6) +* eight-bit characters <1>: Combination. (line 55) +* eight-bit characters: Control. (line 19) +* eight-bit input: Input. (line 23) +* ek: Combination. (line 22) +* empty files, creating: touch invocation. (line 18) +* empty lines, numbering: nl invocation. (line 87) +* entire files, output of: Output of entire files. + (line 6) +* env: env invocation. (line 6) +* environment variables, printing: printenv invocation. (line 6) +* environment, preserving: su invocation. (line 64) +* environment, printing: env invocation. (line 30) +* environment, running a program in a modified: env invocation. + (line 6) +* eof: Characters. (line 32) +* eol: Characters. (line 35) +* eol2: Characters. (line 38) +* epoch, for POSIX: Seconds since the Epoch. + (line 13) +* epoch, seconds since: Time directives. (line 39) +* equal string check: String tests. (line 22) +* equivalence classes: Character sets. (line 123) +* erase: Characters. (line 26) +* erasing data: shred invocation. (line 6) +* error messages, omitting <1>: chmod invocation. (line 34) +* error messages, omitting <2>: chgrp invocation. (line 23) +* error messages, omitting: chown invocation. (line 72) +* evaluation of expressions: expr invocation. (line 6) +* even parity: Control. (line 13) +* evenp: Combination. (line 9) +* exabyte, definition of: Block size. (line 116) +* examples of date: Examples of date. (line 6) +* examples of expr: Examples of expr. (line 6) +* exbibyte, definition of: Block size. (line 120) +* excl: dd invocation. (line 102) +* excluding files from du: du invocation. (line 138) +* executable file check: Access permission tests. + (line 24) +* executables and file type, marking: General output formatting. + (line 36) +* execute permission: Mode Structure. (line 14) +* execute permission, symbolic: Setting Permissions. (line 63) +* existence-of-file check: File characteristic tests. + (line 9) +* existing backup method: Backup options. (line 39) +* exit status commands: Conditions. (line 6) +* exit status of chroot: chroot invocation. (line 47) +* exit status of env: env invocation. (line 49) +* exit status of expr: expr invocation. (line 39) +* exit status of false: false invocation. (line 6) +* exit status of ls: ls invocation. (line 29) +* exit status of nice: nice invocation. (line 44) +* exit status of nohup: nohup invocation. (line 36) +* exit status of pathchk: pathchk invocation. (line 38) +* exit status of printenv: printenv invocation. (line 17) +* exit status of sort: sort invocation. (line 49) +* exit status of su: su invocation. (line 80) +* exit status of test: test invocation. (line 40) +* exit status of true: true invocation. (line 6) +* exit status of tty: tty invocation. (line 21) +* expand: expand invocation. (line 6) +* expr: expr invocation. (line 6) +* expression evaluation <1>: expr invocation. (line 6) +* expression evaluation: test invocation. (line 6) +* expressions, numeric: Numeric expressions. (line 6) +* expressions, string: String expressions. (line 6) +* extension, sorting files by: Sorting the output. (line 63) +* factor: factor invocation. (line 6) +* failure exit status: false invocation. (line 6) +* false: false invocation. (line 6) +* fascism: su invocation. (line 87) +* fdatasync: dd invocation. (line 116) +* ffN: Output. (line 63) +* field separator character: sort invocation. (line 207) +* fields, padding numeric: Padding. (line 6) +* FIFOs, creating: mkfifo invocation. (line 6) +* file attributes, changing: Changing file attributes. + (line 6) +* file characteristic tests: File characteristic tests. + (line 6) +* file contents, dumping unambiguously: od invocation. (line 6) +* file information, preserving: cp invocation. (line 130) +* file name manipulation: File name manipulation. + (line 6) +* file name pattern expansion, disabled: su invocation. (line 44) +* file names, checking validity and portability: pathchk invocation. + (line 6) +* file names, stripping directory and suffix: basename invocation. + (line 6) +* file offset radix: od invocation. (line 36) +* file ownership, changing: chown invocation. (line 6) +* file permissions, numeric: Numeric Modes. (line 6) +* file sizes: du invocation. (line 45) +* file space usage: du invocation. (line 6) +* file status: stat invocation. (line 6) +* file system disk usage: df invocation. (line 6) +* file system sizes: df invocation. (line 40) +* file system space, retrieving current data more slowly: df invocation. + (line 96) +* file system space, retrieving old data more quickly: df invocation. + (line 69) +* file system status: stat invocation. (line 6) +* file system types, limiting output to certain: df invocation. + (line 65) +* file system types, printing: df invocation. (line 109) +* file systems: stat invocation. (line 17) +* file systems and hard links: ln invocation. (line 6) +* file systems, omitting copying to different: cp invocation. (line 285) +* file timestamps, changing: touch invocation. (line 6) +* file type and executables, marking: General output formatting. + (line 36) +* file type tests: File type tests. (line 6) +* file type, marking: General output formatting. + (line 73) +* file types: Special file types. (line 9) +* file types, special: Special file types. (line 6) +* file utilities: Top. (line 19) +* files beginning with -, removing: rm invocation. (line 65) +* files, copying: cp invocation. (line 6) +* fingerprint, 128-bit: md5sum invocation. (line 6) +* first in date strings: General date syntax. (line 26) +* first part of files, outputting: head invocation. (line 6) +* flow control, hardware: Control. (line 36) +* flow control, software: Input. (line 43) +* flushing, disabling: Local. (line 32) +* fmt: fmt invocation. (line 6) +* fold: fold invocation. (line 6) +* folding long input lines: fold invocation. (line 6) +* footers, numbering: nl invocation. (line 17) +* force deletion: shred invocation. (line 91) +* formatting file contents: Formatting file contents. + (line 6) +* formatting of numbers in seq: seq invocation. (line 24) +* formatting times <1>: date invocation. (line 20) +* formatting times: pr invocation. (line 100) +* fortnight in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 15) +* fsck: rm invocation. (line 25) +* fsync: dd invocation. (line 120) +* general date syntax: General date syntax. (line 6) +* general numeric sort: sort invocation. (line 87) +* get_date: Date input formats. (line 6) +* gibibyte, definition of: Block size. (line 99) +* gigabyte, definition of: Block size. (line 95) +* giving away permissions: Umask and Protection. + (line 12) +* globbing, disabled: su invocation. (line 44) +* GMT: Options for date. (line 84) +* grand total of disk space: du invocation. (line 50) +* graph: Character sets. (line 102) +* Greenwich Mean Time: Options for date. (line 84) +* group owner, default: Mode Structure. (line 27) +* group ownership of installed files, setting: install invocation. + (line 53) +* group ownership, changing <1>: chgrp invocation. (line 6) +* group ownership, changing: chown invocation. (line 6) +* group wheel, not supported: su invocation. (line 87) +* group, permissions for: Setting Permissions. (line 26) +* groups: groups invocation. (line 6) +* growing files: tail invocation. (line 41) +* hangups, immunity to: nohup invocation. (line 6) +* hard link check: File characteristic tests. + (line 23) +* hard link, defined: ln invocation. (line 32) +* hard links to directories: ln invocation. (line 61) +* hard links, counting in du: du invocation. (line 91) +* hard links, creating <1>: ln invocation. (line 6) +* hard links, creating: link invocation. (line 6) +* hard links, preserving: cp invocation. (line 89) +* hardware class: uname invocation. (line 39) +* hardware flow control: Control. (line 36) +* hardware platform: uname invocation. (line 34) +* hardware type: uname invocation. (line 39) +* hat notation for control characters: Local. (line 51) +* head: head invocation. (line 6) +* headers, numbering: nl invocation. (line 17) +* help, online: Common options. (line 29) +* hex dump of files: od invocation. (line 6) +* High Sierra file system: df invocation. (line 125) +* holes, copying files with: cp invocation. (line 205) +* HOME: su invocation. (line 18) +* horizontal, listing files: General output formatting. + (line 79) +* host processor type: uname invocation. (line 48) +* hostid: hostid invocation. (line 6) +* hostname <1>: hostname invocation. (line 6) +* hostname: uname invocation. (line 44) +* hour in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 15) +* hsfs file system type: df invocation. (line 125) +* human-readable output <1>: du invocation. (line 75) +* human-readable output <2>: df invocation. (line 45) +* human-readable output <3>: What information is listed. + (line 116) +* human-readable output: Block size. (line 43) +* hup[cl]: Control. (line 23) +* hurd, author, printing: What information is listed. + (line 10) +* ibs: dd invocation. (line 25) +* icanon: Local. (line 11) +* icrnl: Input. (line 32) +* id: id invocation. (line 6) +* idle time: who invocation. (line 69) +* iexten: Local. (line 15) +* if: dd invocation. (line 17) +* iflag: dd invocation. (line 125) +* ignbrk: Input. (line 7) +* igncr: Input. (line 29) +* ignore file systems: df invocation. (line 32) +* ignoring case: sort invocation. (line 81) +* ignpar: Input. (line 13) +* imaxbel: Input. (line 56) +* immunity to hangups: nohup invocation. (line 6) +* implementation, hardware: uname invocation. (line 34) +* including files from du: du invocation. (line 62) +* indenting lines: pr invocation. (line 204) +* index: String expressions. (line 45) +* information, about current users: who invocation. (line 6) +* initial part of files, outputting: head invocation. (line 6) +* initial tabs, converting: expand invocation. (line 35) +* inlcr: Input. (line 26) +* inode number, printing: What information is listed. + (line 122) +* inode usage: df invocation. (line 54) +* inode, and hard links: ln invocation. (line 32) +* inodes, written buffered: sync invocation. (line 6) +* inpck: Input. (line 20) +* input block size: dd invocation. (line 25) +* input encoding, UTF-8: Input. (line 35) +* input settings: Input. (line 6) +* input tabs: pr invocation. (line 120) +* install: install invocation. (line 6) +* interactivity <1>: mv invocation. (line 64) +* interactivity: cp invocation. (line 178) +* intr: Characters. (line 20) +* invocation of commands, modified: Modified command invocation. + (line 6) +* isig: Local. (line 7) +* ISO 8601 date format: Calendar date items. (line 30) +* ISO/IEC 10646: printf invocation. (line 62) +* ispeed: Special. (line 16) +* istrip: Input. (line 23) +* items in date strings: General date syntax. (line 6) +* iterations, selecting the number of: shred invocation. (line 96) +* iuclc: Input. (line 48) +* iutf8: Input. (line 35) +* ixany: Input. (line 52) +* ixoff: Input. (line 43) +* ixon: Input. (line 38) +* join: join invocation. (line 6) +* kernel name: uname invocation. (line 61) +* kernel release: uname invocation. (line 57) +* kernel version: uname invocation. (line 72) +* kibibyte, definition of: Block size. (line 83) +* kibibytes for file sizes: du invocation. (line 85) +* kibibytes for file system sizes: df invocation. (line 59) +* kill <1>: kill invocation. (line 6) +* kill: Characters. (line 29) +* kilobyte, definition of: Block size. (line 78) +* Knuth, Donald E.: fmt invocation. (line 19) +* language, in dates: General date syntax. (line 40) +* last DAY <1>: Day of week items. (line 15) +* last DAY: Options for date. (line 11) +* last in date strings: General date syntax. (line 26) +* last part of files, outputting: tail invocation. (line 6) +* LC_ALL <1>: ls invocation. (line 17) +* LC_ALL: sort invocation. (line 40) +* LC_COLLATE <1>: Relations for expr. (line 22) +* LC_COLLATE <2>: join invocation. (line 11) +* LC_COLLATE <3>: comm invocation. (line 12) +* LC_COLLATE <4>: uniq invocation. (line 21) +* LC_COLLATE: sort invocation. (line 40) +* LC_CTYPE <1>: printf invocation. (line 62) +* LC_CTYPE: sort invocation. (line 70) +* LC_MESSAGES: pr invocation. (line 13) +* LC_NUMERIC <1>: printf invocation. (line 51) +* LC_NUMERIC <2>: sort invocation. (line 87) +* LC_NUMERIC: Block size. (line 57) +* LC_TIME <1>: date invocation. (line 11) +* LC_TIME <2>: Formatting file timestamps. + (line 30) +* LC_TIME <3>: sort invocation. (line 120) +* LC_TIME: pr invocation. (line 107) +* LCASE: Combination. (line 71) +* lcase: Combination. (line 71) +* lcase, converting to: dd invocation. (line 82) +* lchown <1>: chgrp invocation. (line 27) +* lchown: chown invocation. (line 99) +* leading directories, creating missing: install invocation. (line 44) +* leading directory components, stripping: basename invocation. + (line 6) +* left margin: pr invocation. (line 204) +* length: String expressions. (line 50) +* limiting output of du: du invocation. (line 106) +* line: Special. (line 37) +* line count: wc invocation. (line 6) +* line numbering: nl invocation. (line 6) +* line settings of terminal: stty invocation. (line 6) +* line-breaking: fmt invocation. (line 19) +* line-by-line comparison: comm invocation. (line 6) +* LINES: Special. (line 30) +* link: link invocation. (line 6) +* links, creating <1>: ln invocation. (line 6) +* links, creating: link invocation. (line 6) +* Linux file system types: df invocation. (line 121) +* literal directives: Literal directives. (line 6) +* litout: Combination. (line 59) +* ln: ln invocation. (line 6) +* ln format for nl: nl invocation. (line 98) +* lnext: Characters. (line 62) +* local file system types: df invocation. (line 121) +* local settings: Local. (line 6) +* logging out and continuing to run: nohup invocation. (line 6) +* logical and operator <1>: Relations for expr. (line 17) +* logical and operator: Connectives for test. + (line 12) +* logical connectives <1>: Relations for expr. (line 6) +* logical connectives: Connectives for test. + (line 6) +* logical or operator <1>: Relations for expr. (line 11) +* logical or operator: Connectives for test. + (line 15) +* logical pages, numbering on: nl invocation. (line 12) +* login name, printing: logname invocation. (line 6) +* login sessions, printing users with: users invocation. (line 6) +* login shell: su invocation. (line 18) +* login shell, creating: su invocation. (line 53) +* login time: who invocation. (line 11) +* LOGNAME: su invocation. (line 18) +* logname: logname invocation. (line 6) +* long ls format: What information is listed. + (line 130) +* lower: Character sets. (line 105) +* lowercase, translating to output: Output. (line 12) +* ls: ls invocation. (line 6) +* LS_BLOCK_SIZE: Block size. (line 12) +* LS_COLORS: dircolors invocation. + (line 16) +* machine type: uname invocation. (line 39) +* machine-readable stty output: stty invocation. (line 41) +* MacKenzie, D.: Introduction. (line 19) +* MacKenzie, David: Authors of get_date. (line 6) +* Makefiles, installing programs in: install invocation. (line 26) +* manipulating files: Basic operations. (line 6) +* manipulation of file names: File name manipulation. + (line 6) +* match: String expressions. (line 36) +* matching patterns: String expressions. (line 11) +* md5sum: md5sum invocation. (line 6) +* mebibyte, definition of: Block size. (line 92) +* megabyte, definition of: Block size. (line 88) +* merging files: paste invocation. (line 6) +* merging files in parallel: pr invocation. (line 6) +* merging sorted files: sort invocation. (line 23) +* message status: who invocation. (line 93) +* message-digest, 128-bit: md5sum invocation. (line 6) +* Meyering, J.: Introduction. (line 19) +* Meyering, Jim: Authors of get_date. (line 6) +* midnight in date strings: Time of day items. (line 21) +* min: Special. (line 7) +* minute in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 15) +* minutes, time zone correction by: Time of day items. (line 29) +* MIT AI lab: su invocation. (line 92) +* mkdir: mkdir invocation. (line 6) +* mkfifo: mkfifo invocation. (line 6) +* mknod: mknod invocation. (line 6) +* modem control: Control. (line 33) +* modes and umask: Umask and Protection. + (line 6) +* modes of created directories, setting: mkdir invocation. (line 24) +* modes of created FIFOs, setting: mkfifo invocation. (line 21) +* modification time, sorting files by: Sorting the output. (line 37) +* modified command invocation: Modified command invocation. + (line 6) +* modified environment, running a program in a: env invocation. + (line 6) +* modify time, changing: touch invocation. (line 77) +* modifying scheduling priority: nice invocation. (line 6) +* month in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 15) +* month names in date strings: Calendar date items. (line 38) +* months, sorting by: sort invocation. (line 120) +* months, written-out: General date syntax. (line 36) +* MS-DOS file system: df invocation. (line 129) +* mtime, changing: touch invocation. (line 77) +* multicolumn output, generating: pr invocation. (line 6) +* multiple changes to permissions: Multiple Changes. (line 6) +* multiplication: Numeric expressions. (line 15) +* multipliers after numbers: dd invocation. (line 175) +* mv: mv invocation. (line 6) +* name follow option: tail invocation. (line 41) +* name of kernel: uname invocation. (line 61) +* named pipe check: File type tests. (line 28) +* named pipes, creating: mkfifo invocation. (line 6) +* network node name: uname invocation. (line 44) +* newer files, copying only: cp invocation. (line 265) +* newer files, moving only: mv invocation. (line 72) +* newer-than file check: File characteristic tests. + (line 15) +* newline echoing after kill: Local. (line 26) +* newline, echoing: Local. (line 29) +* newline, translating to crlf: Output. (line 19) +* newline, translating to return: Input. (line 26) +* next DAY <1>: Day of week items. (line 15) +* next DAY: Options for date. (line 11) +* next in date strings: General date syntax. (line 26) +* NFS file system type: df invocation. (line 116) +* NFS mounts from BSD to HP-UX <1>: du invocation. (line 149) +* NFS mounts from BSD to HP-UX: What information is listed. + (line 197) +* nice: nice invocation. (line 6) +* nice value: nice invocation. (line 6) +* nl <1>: Combination. (line 18) +* nl: nl invocation. (line 6) +* nlN: Output. (line 39) +* no-op: true invocation. (line 6) +* nocreat: dd invocation. (line 98) +* noctty: dd invocation. (line 161) +* node name: uname invocation. (line 44) +* noerror: dd invocation. (line 95) +* noflsh: Local. (line 32) +* nofollow: dd invocation. (line 158) +* nohup: nohup invocation. (line 6) +* nohup.out: nohup invocation. (line 6) +* non-directories, copying as special files: cp invocation. (line 76) +* non-directory suffix, stripping: dirname invocation. (line 6) +* nonblock: dd invocation. (line 155) +* nonblocking I/O: dd invocation. (line 155) +* none backup method: Backup options. (line 31) +* none color option: General output formatting. + (line 23) +* none, sorting option for ls: Sorting the output. (line 49) +* nonempty file check: File characteristic tests. + (line 12) +* nonprinting characters, ignoring: sort invocation. (line 114) +* nonzero-length string check: String tests. (line 19) +* noon in date strings: Time of day items. (line 21) +* not-equal string check: String tests. (line 25) +* notrunc: dd invocation. (line 108) +* now in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 33) +* numbered backup method: Backup options. (line 35) +* numbering lines: nl invocation. (line 6) +* numbers, written-out: General date syntax. (line 26) +* numeric expressions: Numeric expressions. (line 6) +* numeric field padding: Padding. (line 6) +* numeric modes: Numeric Modes. (line 6) +* numeric operations: Numeric operations. (line 6) +* numeric sequences: seq invocation. (line 6) +* numeric sort: sort invocation. (line 128) +* numeric tests: Numeric tests. (line 6) +* numeric uid and gid: What information is listed. + (line 179) +* obs: dd invocation. (line 28) +* ocrnl: Output. (line 16) +* octal dump of files: od invocation. (line 6) +* octal numbers for file modes: Numeric Modes. (line 6) +* od: od invocation. (line 6) +* odd parity: Control. (line 13) +* oddp: Combination. (line 14) +* of: dd invocation. (line 20) +* ofdel: Output. (line 34) +* ofill: Output. (line 30) +* oflag: dd invocation. (line 129) +* olcuc: Output. (line 12) +* older-than file check: File characteristic tests. + (line 19) +* one file system, restricting du to: du invocation. (line 134) +* one-line output format: df invocation. (line 76) +* onlcr: Output. (line 19) +* onlret: Output. (line 27) +* onocr: Output. (line 23) +* operating on characters: Operating on characters. + (line 6) +* operating on sorted files: Operating on sorted files. + (line 6) +* operating system name: uname invocation. (line 53) +* opost: Output. (line 9) +* option delimiter: Common options. (line 36) +* options for date: Options for date. (line 6) +* or operator <1>: Relations for expr. (line 11) +* or operator: Connectives for test. + (line 15) +* ordinal numbers: General date syntax. (line 26) +* ospeed: Special. (line 19) +* other permissions: Setting Permissions. (line 29) +* output block size: dd invocation. (line 28) +* output file name prefix <1>: csplit invocation. (line 62) +* output file name prefix: split invocation. (line 14) +* output file name suffix: csplit invocation. (line 66) +* output format: stat invocation. (line 33) +* output format, portable: df invocation. (line 76) +* output NUL-terminated lines: du invocation. (line 112) +* output of entire files: Output of entire files. + (line 6) +* output of parts of files: Output of parts of files. + (line 6) +* output settings: Output. (line 6) +* output tabs: pr invocation. (line 140) +* overwriting of input, allowed: sort invocation. (line 171) +* owned by effective gid check: Access permission tests. + (line 31) +* owned by effective uid check: Access permission tests. + (line 28) +* owner of file, permissions for: Setting Permissions. (line 23) +* owner, default: Mode Structure. (line 27) +* ownership of installed files, setting: install invocation. (line 68) +* p for FIFO file: mknod invocation. (line 23) +* pad character: Output. (line 34) +* pad instead of timing for delaying: Output. (line 30) +* padding of numeric fields: Padding. (line 6) +* paragraphs, reformatting: fmt invocation. (line 6) +* parenb: Control. (line 9) +* parent directories and cp: cp invocation. (line 167) +* parent directories, creating: mkdir invocation. (line 31) +* parent directories, creating missing: install invocation. (line 44) +* parent directories, removing: rmdir invocation. (line 22) +* parentheses for grouping: expr invocation. (line 31) +* parity: Combination. (line 10) +* parity errors, marking: Input. (line 16) +* parity, ignoring: Input. (line 13) +* parmrk: Input. (line 16) +* parodd: Control. (line 13) +* parsing date strings: Options for date. (line 11) +* parts of files, output of: Output of parts of files. + (line 6) +* pass8: Combination. (line 55) +* passwd entry, and su shell: su invocation. (line 12) +* paste: paste invocation. (line 6) +* Paterson, R.: Introduction. (line 19) +* PATH <1>: su invocation. (line 53) +* PATH: env invocation. (line 24) +* pathchk: pathchk invocation. (line 6) +* pattern matching: String expressions. (line 11) +* PC file system: df invocation. (line 129) +* pcfs: df invocation. (line 129) +* pebibyte, definition of: Block size. (line 113) +* permission tests: Access permission tests. + (line 6) +* permissions of installed files, setting: install invocation. + (line 59) +* permissions, changing access: chmod invocation. (line 6) +* permissions, copying existing: Copying Permissions. (line 6) +* permissions, for changing file timestamps: touch invocation. + (line 20) +* permissions, output by ls: What information is listed. + (line 148) +* petabyte, definition of: Block size. (line 109) +* phone directory order: sort invocation. (line 75) +* pieces, splitting a file into: split invocation. (line 6) +* Pinard, F. <1>: Authors of get_date. (line 14) +* Pinard, F.: Introduction. (line 19) +* pipe fitting: tee invocation. (line 6) +* Plass, Michael F.: fmt invocation. (line 19) +* platform, hardware: uname invocation. (line 34) +* pm in date strings: Time of day items. (line 21) +* portable file names, checking for: pathchk invocation. (line 6) +* portable output format: df invocation. (line 76) +* POSIX: Introduction. (line 11) +* POSIX output format: df invocation. (line 76) +* POSIXLY_CORRECT <1>: printf invocation. (line 42) +* POSIXLY_CORRECT <2>: echo invocation. (line 68) +* POSIXLY_CORRECT <3>: sort invocation. (line 179) +* POSIXLY_CORRECT <4>: pr invocation. (line 107) +* POSIXLY_CORRECT <5>: Standards conformance. + (line 6) +* POSIXLY_CORRECT: Common options. (line 11) +* POSIXLY_CORRECT, and block size: Block size. (line 12) +* pr: pr invocation. (line 6) +* prime factors: factor invocation. (line 6) +* print: Character sets. (line 108) +* print name of current directory: pwd invocation. (line 6) +* print system information: uname invocation. (line 6) +* print terminal file name: tty invocation. (line 6) +* printenv: printenv invocation. (line 6) +* printf: printf invocation. (line 6) +* printing all or some environment variables: printenv invocation. + (line 6) +* printing color database: dircolors invocation. + (line 38) +* printing current user information: who invocation. (line 6) +* printing current usernames: users invocation. (line 6) +* printing groups a user is in: groups invocation. (line 6) +* printing real and effective uid and gid: id invocation. (line 6) +* printing text: echo invocation. (line 6) +* printing text, commands for: Printing text. (line 6) +* printing the current time: date invocation. (line 6) +* printing the effective UID: whoami invocation. (line 6) +* printing the host identifier: hostid invocation. (line 6) +* printing the hostname: hostname invocation. (line 6) +* printing user's login name: logname invocation. (line 6) +* printing, preparing files for: pr invocation. (line 6) +* priority, modifying: nice invocation. (line 6) +* processes, commands for controlling: Process control. (line 6) +* prompting, and ln: ln invocation. (line 71) +* prompting, and mv: mv invocation. (line 34) +* prompting, and rm: rm invocation. (line 11) +* prompts, forcing: mv invocation. (line 59) +* prompts, omitting: mv invocation. (line 55) +* prterase: Local. (line 46) +* ptx: ptx invocation. (line 6) +* punct: Character sets. (line 111) +* pure numbers in date strings: Pure numbers in date strings. + (line 6) +* pwd: pwd invocation. (line 6) +* quit: Characters. (line 23) +* quoting style: Formatting the file names. + (line 34) +* radix for file offsets: od invocation. (line 36) +* ranges: Character sets. (line 46) +* raw: Combination. (line 43) +* read errors, ignoring: dd invocation. (line 95) +* read from stdin and write to stdout and files: tee invocation. + (line 6) +* read permission: Mode Structure. (line 8) +* read permission, symbolic: Setting Permissions. (line 57) +* read system call, and holes: cp invocation. (line 205) +* readable file check: Access permission tests. + (line 15) +* readlink: readlink invocation. (line 6) +* real uid and gid, printing: id invocation. (line 6) +* recursive directory listing: Which files are listed. + (line 84) +* recursively changing access permissions: chmod invocation. (line 58) +* recursively changing file ownership: chown invocation. (line 136) +* recursively changing group ownership: chgrp invocation. (line 63) +* recursively copying directories: cp invocation. (line 76) +* redirection: Redirection. (line 6) +* reformatting paragraph text: fmt invocation. (line 6) +* regular expression matching: String expressions. (line 11) +* regular file check: File type tests. (line 19) +* relations, numeric or string: Relations for expr. (line 6) +* relative items in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 6) +* release of kernel: uname invocation. (line 57) +* remainder: Numeric expressions. (line 15) +* remote hostname: who invocation. (line 11) +* removing empty directories: rmdir invocation. (line 6) +* removing files after shredding: shred invocation. (line 109) +* removing files or directories: rm invocation. (line 6) +* removing files or directories (via the unlink syscall): unlink invocation. + (line 6) +* removing permissions: Setting Permissions. (line 42) +* repeated characters: Character sets. (line 67) +* repeated lines, outputting: uniq invocation. (line 61) +* repeated output of a string: yes invocation. (line 6) +* restricted deletion flag: Mode Structure. (line 47) +* restricted shell: su invocation. (line 64) +* return, ignoring: Input. (line 29) +* return, translating to newline <1>: Output. (line 16) +* return, translating to newline: Input. (line 32) +* reverse sorting <1>: Sorting the output. (line 28) +* reverse sorting: sort invocation. (line 155) +* reversing files: tac invocation. (line 6) +* rm: rm invocation. (line 6) +* rmdir: rmdir invocation. (line 6) +* rn format for nl: nl invocation. (line 101) +* root as default owner: install invocation. (line 68) +* root directory, allow recursive destruction: rm invocation. (line 52) +* root directory, allow recursive modification <1>: chmod invocation. + (line 43) +* root directory, allow recursive modification <2>: chgrp invocation. + (line 45) +* root directory, allow recursive modification: chown invocation. + (line 117) +* root directory, disallow recursive destruction: rm invocation. + (line 47) +* root directory, disallow recursive modification <1>: chmod invocation. + (line 38) +* root directory, disallow recursive modification <2>: chgrp invocation. + (line 40) +* root directory, disallow recursive modification: chown invocation. + (line 112) +* root directory, running a program in a specified: chroot invocation. + (line 6) +* root, becoming: su invocation. (line 6) +* rows: Special. (line 22) +* rprnt: Characters. (line 56) +* RTS/CTS flow control: Control. (line 36) +* running a program in a modified environment: env invocation. + (line 6) +* running a program in a specified root directory: chroot invocation. + (line 6) +* rz format for nl: nl invocation. (line 104) +* Salz, Rich: Authors of get_date. (line 6) +* same file check: File characteristic tests. + (line 23) +* sane: Combination. (line 26) +* scheduling priority, modifying: nice invocation. (line 6) +* screen columns: fold invocation. (line 14) +* seconds since the epoch: Time directives. (line 39) +* section delimiters of pages: nl invocation. (line 68) +* seek: dd invocation. (line 41) +* self-backups: cp invocation. (line 42) +* send a signal to processes: kill invocation. (line 6) +* sentences and line-breaking: fmt invocation. (line 19) +* separator for numbers in seq: seq invocation. (line 30) +* seq: seq invocation. (line 6) +* sequence of numbers: seq invocation. (line 6) +* set-group-id check: Access permission tests. + (line 9) +* set-user-id check: Access permission tests. + (line 18) +* setgid: Mode Structure. (line 41) +* setting permissions: Setting Permissions. (line 46) +* setting the hostname: hostname invocation. (line 6) +* setting the time: Setting the time. (line 6) +* setuid: Mode Structure. (line 38) +* setup for color: dircolors invocation. + (line 6) +* sh syntax for color setup: dircolors invocation. + (line 27) +* SHELL: su invocation. (line 18) +* SHELL environment variable, and color: dircolors invocation. + (line 16) +* shell utilities: Top. (line 19) +* shred: shred invocation. (line 6) +* SI output <1>: du invocation. (line 118) +* SI output <2>: df invocation. (line 89) +* SI output <3>: What information is listed. + (line 205) +* SI output: Block size. (line 43) +* simple backup method: Backup options. (line 44) +* SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX: Backup options. (line 50) +* single-column output of files: General output formatting. + (line 10) +* size: Special. (line 30) +* size for main memory sorting: sort invocation. (line 191) +* size of file to shred: shred invocation. (line 103) +* size of files, reporting: What information is listed. + (line 189) +* size of files, sorting files by: Sorting the output. (line 33) +* skip: dd invocation. (line 38) +* sleep: sleep invocation. (line 6) +* socket check: File type tests. (line 31) +* software flow control: Input. (line 43) +* sort: sort invocation. (line 6) +* sort field: sort invocation. (line 163) +* sort stability: sort invocation. (line 29) +* sort zero-terminated lines: sort invocation. (line 247) +* sort's last-resort comparison: sort invocation. (line 29) +* sorted files, operations on: Operating on sorted files. + (line 6) +* sorting files: sort invocation. (line 6) +* sorting ls output: Sorting the output. (line 6) +* space: Character sets. (line 114) +* sparse files, copying: cp invocation. (line 205) +* special characters: Characters. (line 6) +* special file types: Special file types. (line 6) +* special files: mknod invocation. (line 11) +* special settings: Special. (line 6) +* specifying sets of characters: Character sets. (line 6) +* speed: Special. (line 40) +* split: split invocation. (line 6) +* splitting a file into pieces: split invocation. (line 6) +* splitting a file into pieces by context: csplit invocation. (line 6) +* squeezing blank lines: cat invocation. (line 58) +* squeezing repeat characters: Squeezing. (line 6) +* Stallman, R.: Introduction. (line 19) +* standard input: Common options. (line 41) +* standard output: Common options. (line 41) +* start: Characters. (line 44) +* stat: stat invocation. (line 6) +* status time, printing or sorting by: Sorting the output. (line 14) +* sticky: Mode Structure. (line 47) +* sticky bit check: Access permission tests. + (line 12) +* stop: Characters. (line 47) +* stop bits: Control. (line 27) +* strftime and date: date invocation. (line 20) +* string constants, outputting: od invocation. (line 68) +* string expressions: String expressions. (line 6) +* string tests: String tests. (line 6) +* strip directory and suffix from file names: basename invocation. + (line 6) +* stripping non-directory suffix: dirname invocation. (line 6) +* stripping symbol table information: install invocation. (line 84) +* stripping trailing slashes <1>: mv invocation. (line 85) +* stripping trailing slashes: cp invocation. (line 238) +* stty: stty invocation. (line 6) +* su: su invocation. (line 6) +* substitute user and group ids: su invocation. (line 6) +* substr: String expressions. (line 40) +* subtracting permissions: Setting Permissions. (line 42) +* subtraction: Numeric expressions. (line 11) +* successful exit: true invocation. (line 6) +* suffix, stripping from file names: basename invocation. (line 6) +* sum: sum invocation. (line 6) +* summarizing files: Summarizing files. (line 6) +* super-user, becoming: su invocation. (line 6) +* superblock, writing: sync invocation. (line 6) +* supplementary groups, printing: groups invocation. (line 6) +* susp: Characters. (line 50) +* swab (byte-swapping): dd invocation. (line 90) +* swap space, saving text image in: Mode Structure. (line 47) +* swtch: Characters. (line 41) +* symbol table information, stripping: install invocation. (line 84) +* symbolic (soft) links, creating: ln invocation. (line 6) +* symbolic link check: File type tests. (line 23) +* symbolic link to directory, controlling traversal of: Traversing symlinks. + (line 6) +* symbolic link to directory, never traverse <1>: chgrp invocation. + (line 76) +* symbolic link to directory, never traverse <2>: chown invocation. + (line 148) +* symbolic link to directory, never traverse: Traversing symlinks. + (line 26) +* symbolic link to directory, traverse each that is encountered <1>: chgrp invocation. + (line 72) +* symbolic link to directory, traverse each that is encountered <2>: chown invocation. + (line 144) +* symbolic link to directory, traverse each that is encountered: Traversing symlinks. + (line 22) +* symbolic link to directory, traverse each that is specified on the command line <1>: chgrp invocation. + (line 67) +* symbolic link to directory, traverse each that is specified on the command line <2>: chown invocation. + (line 139) +* symbolic link to directory, traverse each that is specified on the command line: Traversing symlinks. + (line 18) +* symbolic link, defined: ln invocation. (line 40) +* symbolic links and pwd: pwd invocation. (line 6) +* symbolic links, changing group: chgrp invocation. (line 32) +* symbolic links, changing owner <1>: chgrp invocation. (line 27) +* symbolic links, changing owner: chown invocation. (line 76) +* symbolic links, copying: cp invocation. (line 89) +* symbolic links, copying with: cp invocation. (line 243) +* symbolic links, dereferencing: Which files are listed. + (line 36) +* symbolic links, dereferencing in du: du invocation. (line 96) +* symbolic links, dereferencing in stat: stat invocation. (line 22) +* symbolic links, following: dd invocation. (line 158) +* symbolic links, permissions of: chmod invocation. (line 10) +* symbolic modes: Symbolic Modes. (line 6) +* sync <1>: sync invocation. (line 6) +* sync: dd invocation. (line 152) +* sync (padding with nulls): dd invocation. (line 111) +* synchronize disk and memory: sync invocation. (line 6) +* synchronized data and metadata I/O: dd invocation. (line 152) +* synchronized data and metadata writes, before finishing: dd invocation. + (line 120) +* synchronized data reads: dd invocation. (line 144) +* synchronized data writes, before finishing: dd invocation. (line 116) +* syslog: su invocation. (line 29) +* system context: System context. (line 6) +* system information, printing: uname invocation. (line 6) +* system name, printing: hostname invocation. (line 6) +* System V sum: sum invocation. (line 31) +* tab stops, setting: expand invocation. (line 22) +* tabN: Output. (line 51) +* tabs: Combination. (line 66) +* tabs to spaces, converting: expand invocation. (line 6) +* tac: tac invocation. (line 6) +* tagged paragraphs: fmt invocation. (line 40) +* tail: tail invocation. (line 6) +* tandem: Input. (line 43) +* target directory <1>: ln invocation. (line 105) +* target directory <2>: mv invocation. (line 95) +* target directory <3>: install invocation. (line 93) +* target directory <4>: cp invocation. (line 256) +* target directory: Target directory. (line 6) +* tebibyte, definition of: Block size. (line 106) +* tee: tee invocation. (line 6) +* telephone directory order: sort invocation. (line 75) +* temporary directory: sort invocation. (line 224) +* terabyte, definition of: Block size. (line 102) +* TERM: su invocation. (line 53) +* terminal check: File type tests. (line 34) +* terminal file name, printing: tty invocation. (line 6) +* terminal lines, currently used: who invocation. (line 11) +* terminal settings: stty invocation. (line 6) +* terminal, using color iff: General output formatting. + (line 25) +* terse output: stat invocation. (line 28) +* test: test invocation. (line 6) +* text image, saving in swap space: Mode Structure. (line 47) +* text input files: md5sum invocation. (line 63) +* text utilities: Top. (line 19) +* text, displaying: echo invocation. (line 6) +* text, reformatting: fmt invocation. (line 6) +* this in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 33) +* time <1>: Special. (line 11) +* time: touch invocation. (line 62) +* time directives: Time directives. (line 6) +* time formats <1>: date invocation. (line 20) +* time formats: pr invocation. (line 100) +* time of day item: Time of day items. (line 6) +* time setting: Setting the time. (line 6) +* time style: Formatting file timestamps. + (line 26) +* time units: sleep invocation. (line 11) +* time zone correction: Time of day items. (line 29) +* time zone item <1>: Time zone items. (line 6) +* time zone item: General date syntax. (line 44) +* time, printing or setting: date invocation. (line 6) +* TIME_STYLE: Formatting file timestamps. + (line 106) +* timestamps of installed files, preserving: install invocation. + (line 74) +* timestamps, changing file: touch invocation. (line 6) +* TMPDIR: sort invocation. (line 55) +* today in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 33) +* tomorrow: Options for date. (line 11) +* tomorrow in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 29) +* topological sort: tsort invocation. (line 6) +* tostop: Local. (line 41) +* total counts: wc invocation. (line 12) +* touch: touch invocation. (line 6) +* tr: tr invocation. (line 6) +* trailing slashes: Trailing slashes. (line 6) +* translating characters: Translating. (line 6) +* true: true invocation. (line 6) +* truncating output file, avoiding: dd invocation. (line 108) +* tsort: tsort invocation. (line 6) +* tty: tty invocation. (line 6) +* Twenex: su invocation. (line 92) +* two-way parity: Control. (line 9) +* type size: od invocation. (line 112) +* TZ <1>: Specifying time zone rules. + (line 6) +* TZ <2>: Options for date. (line 84) +* TZ <3>: date invocation. (line 16) +* TZ <4>: who invocation. (line 26) +* TZ <5>: stat invocation. (line 111) +* TZ <6>: touch invocation. (line 41) +* TZ <7>: Formatting file timestamps. + (line 18) +* TZ: pr invocation. (line 113) +* u, and disabling special characters: Characters. (line 13) +* ucase, converting to: dd invocation. (line 85) +* ufs file system type: df invocation. (line 121) +* umask and modes: Umask and Protection. + (line 6) +* uname: uname invocation. (line 6) +* unblock: dd invocation. (line 76) +* unexpand: unexpand invocation. (line 6) +* Unicode: printf invocation. (line 62) +* uniq: uniq invocation. (line 6) +* unique lines, outputting: uniq invocation. (line 96) +* uniquify files: uniq invocation. (line 6) +* uniquifying output: sort invocation. (line 233) +* unlink <1>: unlink invocation. (line 6) +* unlink: rm invocation. (line 25) +* unprintable characters, ignoring: sort invocation. (line 114) +* unsorted directory listing: Sorting the output. (line 21) +* upper: Character sets. (line 117) +* uppercase, translating to lowercase: Input. (line 48) +* use time, changing: touch invocation. (line 54) +* use time, printing or sorting files by: Sorting the output. (line 14) +* USER: su invocation. (line 18) +* user id, switching: su invocation. (line 6) +* user information, commands for: User information. (line 6) +* user name, printing: logname invocation. (line 6) +* usernames, printing current: users invocation. (line 6) +* users: users invocation. (line 6) +* UTC: Options for date. (line 84) +* utmp <1>: who invocation. (line 15) +* utmp <2>: users invocation. (line 14) +* utmp: logname invocation. (line 6) +* valid file names, checking for: pathchk invocation. (line 6) +* vdir: vdir invocation. (line 6) +* verbose ls format: What information is listed. + (line 130) +* verifying MD5 checksums: md5sum invocation. (line 53) +* version number, finding: Common options. (line 33) +* version of kernel: uname invocation. (line 72) +* version, sorting option for ls: Sorting the output. (line 56) +* version-control Emacs variable: Backup options. (line 24) +* VERSION_CONTROL <1>: ln invocation. (line 55) +* VERSION_CONTROL <2>: mv invocation. (line 50) +* VERSION_CONTROL <3>: install invocation. (line 36) +* VERSION_CONTROL <4>: cp invocation. (line 61) +* VERSION_CONTROL: Backup options. (line 13) +* vertical sorted files in columns: General output formatting. + (line 15) +* vtN: Output. (line 59) +* wc: wc invocation. (line 6) +* week in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 15) +* werase: Characters. (line 59) +* wheel group, not supported: su invocation. (line 87) +* who: who invocation. (line 6) +* who am i: who invocation. (line 21) +* whoami: whoami invocation. (line 6) +* word count: wc invocation. (line 6) +* working context: Working context. (line 6) +* working directory, printing: pwd invocation. (line 6) +* wrapping long input lines: fold invocation. (line 6) +* writable file check: Access permission tests. + (line 21) +* write permission: Mode Structure. (line 11) +* write permission, symbolic: Setting Permissions. (line 60) +* write, allowed: who invocation. (line 93) +* wtmp <1>: who invocation. (line 15) +* wtmp: users invocation. (line 14) +* xcase: Local. (line 36) +* xdigit: Character sets. (line 120) +* XON/XOFF flow control: Input. (line 38) +* year in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 15) +* yes: yes invocation. (line 6) +* yesterday: Options for date. (line 11) +* yesterday in date strings: Relative items in date strings. + (line 29) +* yottabyte, definition of: Block size. (line 131) +* Youmans, B.: Introduction. (line 19) +* zero-length string check: String tests. (line 15) +* zettabyte, definition of: Block size. (line 123) +* |: Relations for expr. (line 11) + + + +Tag Table: +Node: Top7431 +Node: Introduction20029 +Node: Common options21588 +Node: Exit status24237 +Node: Backup options24967 +Node: Block size27032 +Node: Target directory31936 +Node: Trailing slashes35417 +Node: Traversing symlinks36438 +Node: Treating / specially37509 +Ref: Treating / specially-Footnote-138775 +Node: Special built-in utilities38844 +Node: Standards conformance39977 +Node: Output of entire files41486 +Node: cat invocation42019 +Node: tac invocation44722 +Node: nl invocation45984 +Node: od invocation49863 +Node: Formatting file contents56327 +Node: fmt invocation56778 +Node: pr invocation59591 +Node: fold invocation72682 +Node: Output of parts of files74191 +Node: head invocation74699 +Node: tail invocation76268 +Node: split invocation83175 +Node: csplit invocation85305 +Node: Summarizing files89417 +Node: wc invocation89945 +Node: sum invocation91947 +Node: cksum invocation93352 +Node: md5sum invocation94492 +Node: Operating on sorted files97839 +Node: sort invocation98443 +Ref: sort invocation-Footnote-1115516 +Node: uniq invocation116068 +Node: comm invocation119969 +Node: tsort invocation121297 +Node: tsort background124331 +Node: ptx invocation126094 +Node: General options in ptx128898 +Node: Charset selection in ptx129610 +Node: Input processing in ptx130512 +Node: Output formatting in ptx136206 +Node: Compatibility in ptx142772 +Node: Operating on fields within a line146000 +Node: cut invocation146404 +Node: paste invocation149730 +Node: join invocation151058 +Node: Operating on characters154957 +Node: tr invocation155393 +Node: Character sets157111 +Node: Translating161339 +Node: Squeezing163430 +Node: expand invocation166497 +Node: unexpand invocation168070 +Node: Directory listing169932 +Node: ls invocation170418 +Ref: ls invocation-Footnote-1172232 +Node: Which files are listed172454 +Node: What information is listed175819 +Node: Sorting the output183659 +Node: More details about version sort185979 +Node: General output formatting187478 +Node: Formatting file timestamps190887 +Node: Formatting the file names196117 +Node: dir invocation199032 +Node: vdir invocation199467 +Node: dircolors invocation199869 +Node: Basic operations201349 +Node: cp invocation201969 +Node: dd invocation213682 +Node: install invocation220670 +Node: mv invocation224764 +Node: rm invocation229008 +Node: shred invocation231845 +Node: Special file types238658 +Node: link invocation240154 +Node: ln invocation241160 +Node: mkdir invocation246082 +Node: mkfifo invocation247662 +Node: mknod invocation248651 +Node: readlink invocation250394 +Node: rmdir invocation252135 +Node: unlink invocation253409 +Node: Changing file attributes254368 +Node: chown invocation255181 +Node: chgrp invocation260951 +Node: chmod invocation263705 +Node: touch invocation265879 +Node: Disk usage269992 +Node: df invocation270684 +Node: du invocation275981 +Node: stat invocation281634 +Node: sync invocation284705 +Node: Printing text285632 +Node: echo invocation286006 +Node: printf invocation288183 +Node: yes invocation292890 +Node: Conditions293502 +Node: false invocation294093 +Node: true invocation294838 +Node: test invocation296149 +Node: File type tests298109 +Node: Access permission tests298991 +Node: File characteristic tests299876 +Node: String tests300641 +Node: Numeric tests301306 +Node: Connectives for test302103 +Node: expr invocation302456 +Node: String expressions304694 +Node: Numeric expressions307277 +Node: Relations for expr307915 +Node: Examples of expr309115 +Node: Redirection309843 +Node: tee invocation310288 +Node: File name manipulation311353 +Node: basename invocation311801 +Node: dirname invocation312475 +Node: pathchk invocation313111 +Node: Working context314464 +Node: pwd invocation315108 +Node: stty invocation315782 +Node: Control318542 +Node: Input319302 +Node: Output320778 +Node: Local322034 +Node: Combination323616 +Node: Characters325778 +Node: Special327332 +Node: printenv invocation328698 +Node: tty invocation329461 +Node: User information330167 +Node: id invocation330819 +Node: logname invocation332069 +Node: whoami invocation332696 +Node: groups invocation333183 +Node: users invocation333907 +Node: who invocation334854 +Node: System context337735 +Node: date invocation338225 +Node: Time directives339849 +Node: Date directives341191 +Node: Literal directives343462 +Node: Padding343749 +Node: Setting the time344568 +Node: Options for date345558 +Node: Examples of date348596 +Ref: %s-examples350056 +Node: uname invocation352043 +Node: hostname invocation354283 +Node: hostid invocation354896 +Node: Modified command invocation355583 +Node: chroot invocation356220 +Node: env invocation358340 +Node: nice invocation360419 +Node: nohup invocation363457 +Node: su invocation365140 +Node: Process control369611 +Node: kill invocation369834 +Node: Delaying374200 +Node: sleep invocation374397 +Node: Numeric operations375208 +Node: factor invocation375540 +Node: seq invocation376878 +Node: File permissions380699 +Node: Mode Structure381293 +Node: Symbolic Modes384427 +Node: Setting Permissions385436 +Node: Copying Permissions387987 +Node: Changing Special Permissions388789 +Node: Conditional Executability390425 +Node: Multiple Changes391058 +Node: Umask and Protection392722 +Node: Numeric Modes393827 +Node: Date input formats395636 +Node: General date syntax397989 +Node: Calendar date items400702 +Node: Time of day items402707 +Node: Time zone items404767 +Node: Day of week items406009 +Node: Relative items in date strings407006 +Node: Pure numbers in date strings409816 +Node: Seconds since the Epoch410805 +Node: Specifying time zone rules412438 +Node: Authors of get_date414810 +Node: Opening the software toolbox415570 +Node: Toolbox introduction416242 +Node: I/O redirection418965 +Node: The who command421799 +Node: The cut command422696 +Node: The sort command423759 +Node: The uniq command424463 +Node: Putting the tools together425153 +Ref: Putting the tools together-Footnote-1437110 +Node: GNU Free Documentation License437184 +Node: How to use this License for your documents455693 +Node: Index457100 + +End Tag Table |