Searched hist:180990 (Results 1 - 20 of 20) sorted by relevance
/freebsd-11-stable/contrib/netbsd-tests/usr.bin/grep/ | ||
H A D | d_color_a.out | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_color_a.in | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_color_c.out | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_color_b.in | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_f_file_empty.in | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_color_b.out | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_escmap.in | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_oflag_zerolen_a.in | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_oflag_zerolen_b.in | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_oflag_zerolen_a.out | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_oflag_zerolen_b.out | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_oflag_zerolen_c.out | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_oflag_zerolen_e.in | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_oflag_zerolen_c.in | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_oflag_zerolen_d.in | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | d_oflag_zerolen_e.out | 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
H A D | t_grep.sh | diff 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
/freebsd-11-stable/usr.bin/grep/tests/ | ||
H A D | Makefile | diff 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
/freebsd-11-stable/usr.bin/grep/ | ||
H A D | util.c | diff 322555 Wed Aug 16 00:23:59 MDT 2017 kevans bsdgrep: Fix matching behavior and add regression tests MFC r316477: bsdgrep: fix matching behaviour - Set REG_NOTBOL if we've already matched beginning of line and we're examining later parts - For each pattern we examine, apply it to the remaining bits of the line rather than (potentially) smaller subsets - Check for REG_NOSUB after we've looked at all patterns initially matching the line - Keep track of the last match we made to later determine if we're simply not matching any longer or if we need to proceed another byte because we hit a zero-length match - Match the earliest and longest bit of each line before moving the beginning of what we match to further in the line, past the end of the longest match; this generally matches how gnugrep(1) seems to behave, and seems like pretty good behavior to me - Finally, bail out of printing any matches if we were set to print all (empty pattern) but -o (output matches) was set MFC r316489: bsdgrep: Initialize vars to avoid a false positive GCC warning MFC r316491: bsdgrep: revert color changes from r316477 r316477 changed the color output to match exactly the in-tree GNU grep, but introduces unnecessary escape sequences. MFC r316536: bsdgrep: create additional tests for coverage on recent fixes Create additional tests to cover regressions that were discovered by PRs linked to reviews D10098, D10102, and D10104. It is worth noting that neither bsdgrep(1) nor gnugrep(1) in the base system currently pass all of these tests, and gnugrep(1) not quite being up to snuff was also noted in at least one of the PRs. MFC r317052: bsdgrep: fix zero-length matches without the -o flag r316477 broke zero-length matches when not using the -o flag, by skipping over them entirely. Add a regression test so that it doesn't break again in the future. PR: 175314, 180990, 181263, 195763, 197531, 197555, 202022, 209116 Approved by: emaste (mentor, blanket MFC) Relnotes: yes |
/freebsd-11-stable/sys/netinet6/ | ||
H A D | raw_ip6.c | diff 180990 Wed Jul 30 07:27:15 MDT 2008 rwatson Adopt the slightly weaker consistency locking approach used in IPv4 raw sockets for IPv6 raw sockets: separately lock the inpcb for determining the destination address for a connect()'d raw socket at the rip6_send() layer, and then re-acquire the inpcb lock in the rip6_output() layer to query other options on the socket. Previously, the global raw IP socket lock was used, which while correct and marginally more consistent, could add significantly to global raw IP socket lock contention. MFC after: 1 week |
Completed in 228 milliseconds