1 GNU coreutils NEWS -*- outline -*-
3 * Noteworthy changes in release ?.? (????-??-??) [?]
7 df now accepts the --output[=FIELD_LIST] option to define the list of columns
8 to include in the output, or all available columns if the FIELD_LIST is
9 omitted. Note this enables df to output both block and inode fields together.
11 du now accepts the --threshold=SIZE option to restrict the output to entries
12 with such a minimum SIZE (or a maximum SIZE if it is negative).
13 du recognizes -t SIZE as equivalent, for compatibility with FreeBSD.
17 cp --no-preserve=mode now no longer exits non-zero.
18 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.20]
20 cut with a range like "N-" no longer allocates N/8 bytes. That buffer
21 would never be used, and allocation failure could cause cut to fail.
22 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.10]
24 cut no longer accepts the invalid range 0-, which made it print empty lines.
25 Instead, cut now fails and emits an appropriate diagnostic.
26 [This bug was present in "the beginning".]
28 cut now handles overlapping to-EOL ranges properly. Before, it would
29 interpret "-b2-,3-" like "-b3-". Now it's treated like "-b2-".
30 [This bug was present in "the beginning".]
32 cut no longer prints extraneous delimiters when a to-EOL range subsumes
33 another range. Before, "echo 123|cut --output-delim=: -b2-,3" would print
34 "2:3". Now it prints "23". [bug introduced in 5.3.0]
36 factor no longer loops infinitely on 32 bit powerpc or sparc systems.
37 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.20]
39 install -m M SOURCE DEST no longer has a race condition where DEST's
40 permissions are temporarily derived from SOURCE instead of from M.
42 pr -n no longer crashes when passed values >= 32. Also, line numbers are
43 consistently padded with spaces, rather than with zeros for certain widths.
44 [bug introduced in TEXTUTILS-1_22i]
46 seq -w ensures that for numbers input in scientific notation,
47 the output numbers are properly aligned and of the correct width.
48 [This bug was present in "the beginning".]
50 seq -s no longer prints an erroneous newline after the first number, and
51 outputs a newline after the last number rather than a trailing separator.
52 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.20]
54 ** Changes in behavior
56 df --total now prints '-' into the target column (mount point) of the
57 summary line, accommodating the --output option where the target field
58 can be in any column. If there is no source column, then df prints
59 'total' in the target column.
61 df now properly outputs file system information with bind mounts present on
62 the system by skipping duplicate entries (identified by the device number).
64 df now elides any entry with the early-boot pseudo file system type
65 "rootfs" unless either the -a option or "-t rootfs" is specified.
67 nl no longer supports the --page-increment option, which has been
68 deprecated since coreutils-7.5. Use --line-increment instead.
72 readlink now supports multiple arguments, and a complementary
73 -z, --zero option to delimit output items with the NUL character.
75 stat and tail now know about CEPH. stat -f --format=%T now reports the file
76 system type, and tail -f uses polling for files on CEPH file systems.
81 Perl is now more of a prerequisite. It has long been required in order
82 to run (not skip) a significant percentage of the tests. Now, it is
83 also required in order to generate proper man pages, via help2man. The
84 generated man/*.1 man pages are no longer distributed. Building without
85 perl, you would create stub man pages. Thus, while perl is not an
86 official prerequisite (build and "make check" will still succeed), any
87 resulting man pages would be inferior. In addition, this fixes a bug
88 in distributed (not from clone) Makefile.in that could cause parallel
89 build failure when building from modified sources, as is common practice
90 for a patched distribution package.
92 factor now builds on x86_64 with x32 ABI, 32 bit MIPS, and all HPPA systems,
93 by avoiding incompatible asm. [bug introduced in coreutils-8.20]
95 A root-only test predicate would always fail. Its job was to determine
96 whether our dummy user, $NON_ROOT_USERNAME, was able to run binaries from
97 the build directory. As a result, all dependent tests were always skipped.
98 Now, those tests may be run once again. [bug introduced in coreutils-8.20]
101 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.20 (2012-10-23) [stable]
105 dd now accepts 'status=none' to suppress all informational output.
107 md5sum now accepts the --tag option to print BSD-style output with GNU
108 file name escaping. This also affects sha1sum, sha224sum, sha256sum,
109 sha384sum and sha512sum.
113 cp could read from freed memory and could even make corrupt copies.
114 This could happen with a very fragmented and sparse input file,
115 on GNU/Linux file systems supporting fiemap extent scanning.
116 This bug also affects mv when it resorts to copying, and install.
117 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.11]
119 cp --no-preserve=mode now no longer preserves the original file's
120 permissions but correctly sets mode specified by 0666 & ~umask
122 du no longer emits a "disk-corrupted"-style diagnostic when it detects
123 a directory cycle that is due to a bind-mounted directory. Instead,
124 it detects this precise type of cycle, diagnoses it as such and
125 eventually exits nonzero.
127 factor (when using gmp) would mistakenly declare some composite numbers
128 to be prime, e.g., 465658903, 2242724851, 6635692801 and many more.
129 The fix makes factor somewhat slower (~25%) for ranges of consecutive
130 numbers, and up to 8 times slower for some worst-case individual numbers.
131 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.0, with GNU MP support]
133 ls now correctly colors dangling symlinks when listing their containing
134 directories, with orphaned symlink coloring disabled in LS_COLORS.
135 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.14]
137 rm -i -d now prompts the user then removes an empty directory, rather
138 than ignoring the -d option and failing with an 'Is a directory' error.
139 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.19, with the addition of --dir (-d)]
141 rm -r S/ (where S is a symlink-to-directory) no longer gives the invalid
142 "Too many levels of symbolic links" diagnostic.
143 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.6]
145 seq now handles arbitrarily long non-negative whole numbers when the
146 increment is 1 and when no format-changing option is specified.
147 Before, this would infloop:
148 b=100000000000000000000; seq $b $b
149 [the bug dates back to the initial implementation]
151 ** Changes in behavior
153 nproc now diagnoses with an error, non option command line parameters.
157 factor's core has been rewritten for speed and increased range.
158 It can now factor numbers up to 2^128, even without GMP support.
159 Its speed is from a few times better (for small numbers) to over
160 10,000 times better (just below 2^64). The new code also runs a
161 deterministic primality test for each prime factor, not just a
164 seq is now up to 70 times faster than it was in coreutils-8.19 and prior,
165 but only with non-negative whole numbers, an increment of 1, and no
166 format-changing options.
168 stat and tail know about ZFS, VZFS and VMHGFS. stat -f --format=%T now
169 reports the file system type, and tail -f now uses inotify for files on
170 ZFS and VZFS file systems, rather than the default (for unknown file
171 system types) of issuing a warning and reverting to polling. tail -f
172 still uses polling for files on VMHGFS file systems.
176 root-only tests now check for permissions of our dummy user,
177 $NON_ROOT_USERNAME, before trying to run binaries from the build directory.
178 Before, we would get hard-to-diagnose reports of failing root-only tests.
179 Now, those tests are skipped with a useful diagnostic when the root tests
180 are run without following the instructions in README.
182 We now build most directories using non-recursive make rules. I.e.,
183 rather than running make in man/, lib/, src/, tests/, instead, the top
184 level Makefile.am includes a $dir/local.mk that describes how to build
185 the targets in the corresponding directory. Two directories remain
186 unconverted: po/, gnulib-tests/. One nice side-effect is that the more
187 accurate dependencies have eliminated a nagging occasional failure that
188 was seen when running parallel "make syntax-check".
191 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.19 (2012-08-20) [stable]
195 df now fails when the list of mounted file systems (/etc/mtab) cannot
196 be read, yet the file system type information is needed to process
197 certain options like -a, -l, -t and -x.
198 [This bug was present in "the beginning".]
200 sort -u could fail to output one or more result lines.
201 For example, this command would fail to print "1":
202 (yes 7 | head -11; echo 1) | sort --p=1 -S32b -u
203 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.6]
205 sort -u could read freed memory.
206 For example, this evokes a read from freed memory:
207 perl -le 'print "a\n"."0"x900'|valgrind sort --p=1 -S32b -u>/dev/null
208 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.6]
212 rm now accepts the --dir (-d) option which makes it remove empty directories.
213 Since removing empty directories is relatively safe, this option can be
214 used as a part of the alias rm='rm --dir'. This improves compatibility
215 with Mac OS X and BSD systems which also honor the -d option.
218 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.18 (2012-08-12) [stable]
222 cksum now prints checksums atomically so that concurrent
223 processes will not intersperse their output.
224 [the bug dates back to the initial implementation]
226 date -d "$(printf '\xb0')" would print 00:00:00 with today's date
227 rather than diagnosing the invalid input. Now it reports this:
228 date: invalid date '\260'
229 [This bug was present in "the beginning".]
231 df no longer outputs control characters present in the mount point name.
232 Such characters are replaced with '?', so for example, scripts consuming
233 lines output by df, can work reliably.
234 [This bug was present in "the beginning".]
236 df --total now exits with an appropriate diagnostic and error code, when
237 file system --type options do not lead to a processed file system.
238 [This bug dates back to when --total was added in coreutils-7.0]
240 head --lines=-N (-n-N) now resets the read pointer of a seekable input file.
241 This means that "head -n-3" no longer consumes all of its input, and lines
242 not output by head may be processed by other programs. For example, this
243 command now prints the final line, 2, while before it would print nothing:
244 seq 2 > k; (head -n-1 > /dev/null; cat) < k
245 [This bug was present in "the beginning".]
247 ls --color would mis-color relative-named symlinks in /
248 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.17]
250 split now ensures it doesn't overwrite the input file with generated output.
251 [the bug dates back to the initial implementation]
253 stat and df now report the correct file system usage,
254 in all situations on GNU/Linux, by correctly determining the block size.
255 [df bug since coreutils-5.0.91, stat bug since the initial implementation]
257 tail -f no longer tries to use inotify on AUFS or PanFS file systems
258 [you might say this was introduced in coreutils-7.5, along with inotify
259 support, but even now, its magic number isn't in the usual place.]
263 stat -f recognizes the new remote file system types: aufs, panfs.
265 ** Changes in behavior
267 su: this program has been removed. We stopped installing "su" by
268 default with the release of coreutils-6.9.90 on 2007-12-01. Now,
269 that the util-linux package has the union of the Suse and Fedora
270 patches as well as enough support to build on the Hurd, we no longer
271 have any reason to include it here.
275 sort avoids redundant processing in the presence of inaccessible inputs,
276 or unwritable output. Sort now diagnoses certain errors at start-up,
277 rather than after potentially expensive processing.
279 sort now allocates no more than 75% of physical memory by default,
280 to better share system resources, and thus operate more efficiently.
281 [The default max memory usage changed from 50% to 100% in coreutils-8.16]
284 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.17 (2012-05-10) [stable]
288 id and groups, when invoked with no user name argument, would print
289 the default group ID listed in the password database, and sometimes
290 that ID would be neither real nor effective. For example, when run
291 set-GID, or in a session for which the default group has just been
292 changed, the new group ID would be listed, even though it is not
293 yet effective. [bug introduced in coreutils-8.1]
295 cp S D is no longer subject to a race: if an existing D were removed
296 between the initial stat and subsequent open-without-O_CREATE, cp would
297 fail with a confusing diagnostic saying that the destination, D, was not
298 found. Now, in this unusual case, it retries the open (but with O_CREATE),
299 and hence usually succeeds. With NFS attribute caching, the condition
300 was particularly easy to trigger, since there, the removal of D could
301 precede the initial stat. [This bug was present in "the beginning".]
303 split --number=C /dev/null no longer appears to infloop on GNU/Hurd
304 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.8]
306 stat no longer reports a negative file size as a huge positive number.
307 [bug present since 'stat' was introduced in fileutils-4.1.9]
311 split and truncate now allow any seekable files in situations where
312 the file size is needed, instead of insisting on regular files.
314 fmt now accepts the --goal=WIDTH (-g) option.
316 stat -f recognizes new file system types: bdevfs, inodefs, qnx6
318 ** Changes in behavior
320 cp,mv,install,cat,split: now read and write a minimum of 64KiB at a time.
321 This was previously 32KiB and increasing to 64KiB was seen to increase
322 throughput by about 10% when reading cached files on 64 bit GNU/Linux.
324 cp --attributes-only no longer truncates any existing destination file,
325 allowing for more general copying of attributes from one file to another.
328 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.16 (2012-03-26) [stable]
332 As a GNU extension, 'chmod', 'mkdir', and 'install' now accept operators
333 '-', '+', '=' followed by octal modes; for example, 'chmod +40 FOO' enables
334 and 'chmod -40 FOO' disables FOO's group-read permissions. Operator
335 numeric modes can be combined with symbolic modes by separating them with
336 commas; for example, =0,u+r clears all permissions except for enabling
337 user-read permissions. Unlike ordinary numeric modes, operator numeric
338 modes do not preserve directory setuid and setgid bits; for example,
339 'chmod =0 FOO' clears all of FOO's permissions, including setuid and setgid.
341 Also, ordinary numeric modes with five or more digits no longer preserve
342 setuid and setgid bits, so that 'chmod 00755 FOO' now clears FOO's setuid
343 and setgid bits. This allows scripts to be portable to other systems which
344 lack the GNU extension mentioned previously, and where ordinary numeric
345 modes do not preserve directory setuid and setgid bits.
347 dd now accepts the count_bytes, skip_bytes iflags and the seek_bytes
348 oflag, to more easily allow processing portions of a file.
350 dd now accepts the conv=sparse flag to attempt to create sparse
351 output, by seeking rather than writing to the output file.
353 ln now accepts the --relative option, to generate a relative
354 symbolic link to a target, irrespective of how the target is specified.
356 split now accepts an optional "from" argument to --numeric-suffixes,
357 which changes the start number from the default of 0.
359 split now accepts the --additional-suffix option, to append an
360 additional static suffix to output file names.
362 basename now supports the -a and -s options, which allow processing
363 of more than one argument at a time. Also the complementary
364 -z option was added to delimit output items with the NUL character.
366 dirname now supports more than one argument. Also the complementary
367 -z option was added to delimit output items with the NUL character.
371 du --one-file-system (-x) would ignore any non-directory specified on
372 the command line. For example, "touch f; du -x f" would print nothing.
373 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.15]
375 mv now lets you move a symlink onto a same-inode destination file that
376 has two or more hard links. Before, it would reject that, saying that
377 they are the same, implicitly warning you that the move would result in
378 data loss. In this unusual case, when not moving the symlink onto its
379 referent, there is no risk of data loss, since the symlink will
380 typically still point to one of the hard links.
382 "mv A B" could succeed, yet A would remain. This would happen only when
383 both A and B were hard links to the same symlink, and with a kernel for
384 which rename("A","B") does nothing and returns 0 (POSIX mandates this
385 surprising rename no-op behavior). Now, mv handles this case by skipping
386 the usually-useless rename and simply unlinking A.
388 realpath no longer mishandles a root directory. This was most
389 noticeable on platforms where // is a different directory than /,
390 but could also be observed with --relative-base=/ or
391 --relative-to=/. [bug since the beginning, in 8.15]
395 ls can be much more efficient, especially with large directories on file
396 systems for which getfilecon-, ACL-check- and XATTR-check-induced syscalls
397 fail with ENOTSUP or similar.
399 'realpath --relative-base=dir' in isolation now implies '--relative-to=dir'
400 instead of causing a usage failure.
402 split now supports an unlimited number of split files as default behavior.
405 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.15 (2012-01-06) [stable]
409 realpath: print resolved file names.
413 du -x no longer counts root directories of other file systems.
414 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.1.0]
416 ls --color many-entry-directory was uninterruptible for too long
417 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.2.1]
419 ls's -k option no longer affects how ls -l outputs file sizes.
420 It now affects only the per-directory block counts written by -l,
421 and the sizes written by -s. This is for compatibility with BSD
422 and with POSIX 2008. Because -k is no longer equivalent to
423 --block-size=1KiB, a new long option --kibibyte stands for -k.
424 [bug introduced in coreutils-4.5.4]
426 ls -l would leak a little memory (security context string) for each
427 nonempty directory listed on the command line, when using SELinux.
428 [bug probably introduced in coreutils-6.10 with SELinux support]
430 rm -rf DIR would fail with "Device or resource busy" on Cygwin with NWFS
431 and NcFsd file systems. This did not affect Unix/Linux-based kernels.
432 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.0, when rm began using fts]
434 split -n 1/2 FILE no longer fails when operating on a growing file, or
435 (on some systems) when operating on a non-regular file like /dev/zero.
436 It would report "/dev/zero: No such file or directory" even though
437 the file obviously exists. Same for -n l/2.
438 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.8, with the addition of the -n option]
440 stat -f now recognizes the FhGFS and PipeFS file system types.
442 tac no longer fails to handle two or more non-seekable inputs
443 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.3.0]
445 tail -f no longer tries to use inotify on GPFS or FhGFS file systems
446 [you might say this was introduced in coreutils-7.5, along with inotify
447 support, but the new magic numbers weren't in the usual places then.]
449 ** Changes in behavior
451 df avoids long UUID-including file system names in the default listing.
452 With recent enough kernel/tools, these long names would be used, pushing
453 second and subsequent columns far to the right. Now, when a long name
454 refers to a symlink, and no file systems are specified, df prints the
455 usually-short referent instead.
457 tail -f now uses polling (not inotify) when any of its file arguments
458 resides on a file system of unknown type. In addition, for each such
459 argument, tail -f prints a warning with the FS type magic number and a
460 request to report it to the bug-reporting address.
463 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.14 (2011-10-12) [stable]
467 ls --dereference no longer outputs erroneous "argetm" strings for
468 dangling symlinks when an 'ln=target' entry is in $LS_COLORS.
469 [bug introduced in fileutils-4.0]
471 ls -lL symlink once again properly prints "+" when the referent has an ACL.
472 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.13]
474 sort -g no longer infloops for certain inputs containing NaNs
475 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.5]
479 md5sum --check now supports the -r format from the corresponding BSD tool.
480 This also affects sha1sum, sha224sum, sha384sum and sha512sum.
482 pwd now works also on systems without openat. On such systems, pwd
483 would fail when run from a directory whose absolute name contained
484 more than PATH_MAX / 3 components. The df, stat and readlink programs
485 are also affected due to their use of the canonicalize_* functions.
487 ** Changes in behavior
489 timeout now only processes the first signal received from the set
490 it is handling (SIGTERM, SIGINT, ...). This is to support systems that
491 implicitly create threads for some timer functions (like GNU/kFreeBSD).
495 "make dist" no longer builds .tar.gz files.
496 xz is portable enough and in wide-enough use that distributing
497 only .tar.xz files is enough.
500 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.13 (2011-09-08) [stable]
504 chown and chgrp with the -v --from= options, now output the correct owner.
505 I.E. for skipped files, the original ownership is output, not the new one.
506 [bug introduced in sh-utils-2.0g]
508 cp -r could mistakenly change the permissions of an existing destination
509 directory. [bug introduced in coreutils-6.8]
511 cp -u -p would fail to preserve one hard link for each up-to-date copy
512 of a src-hard-linked name in the destination tree. I.e., if s/a and s/b
513 are hard-linked and dst/s/a is up to date, "cp -up s dst" would copy s/b
514 to dst/s/b rather than simply linking dst/s/b to dst/s/a.
515 [This bug appears to have been present in "the beginning".]
517 fts-using tools (rm, du, chmod, chgrp, chown, chcon) no longer use memory
518 proportional to the number of entries in each directory they process.
519 Before, rm -rf 4-million-entry-directory would consume about 1GiB of memory.
520 Now, it uses less than 30MB, no matter how many entries there are.
521 [this bug was inherent in the use of fts: thus, for rm the bug was
522 introduced in coreutils-8.0. The prior implementation of rm did not use
523 as much memory. du, chmod, chgrp and chown started using fts in 6.0.
524 chcon was added in coreutils-6.9.91 with fts support. ]
526 pr -T no longer ignores a specified LAST_PAGE to stop at.
527 [bug introduced in textutils-1.19q]
529 printf '%d' '"' no longer accesses out-of-bounds memory in the diagnostic.
530 [bug introduced in sh-utils-1.16]
532 split --number l/... no longer creates extraneous files in certain cases.
533 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.8]
535 timeout now sends signals to commands that create their own process group.
536 timeout is no longer confused when starting off with a child process.
537 [bugs introduced in coreutils-7.0]
539 unexpand -a now aligns correctly when there are spaces spanning a tabstop,
540 followed by a tab. In that case a space was dropped, causing misalignment.
541 We also now ensure that a space never precedes a tab.
542 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.3.0]
544 ** Changes in behavior
546 chmod, chown and chgrp now output the original attributes in messages,
547 when -v or -c specified.
549 cp -au (where --preserve=links is implicit) may now replace newer
550 files in the destination, to mirror hard links from the source.
554 date now accepts ISO 8601 date-time strings with "T" as the
555 separator. It has long parsed dates like "2004-02-29 16:21:42"
556 with a space between the date and time strings. Now it also parses
557 "2004-02-29T16:21:42" and fractional-second and time-zone-annotated
558 variants like "2004-02-29T16:21:42.333-07:00"
560 md5sum accepts the new --strict option. With --check, it makes the
561 tool exit non-zero for any invalid input line, rather than just warning.
562 This also affects sha1sum, sha224sum, sha384sum and sha512sum.
564 split accepts a new --filter=CMD option. With it, split filters output
565 through CMD. CMD may use the $FILE environment variable, which is set to
566 the nominal output file name for each invocation of CMD. For example, to
567 split a file into 3 approximately equal parts, which are then compressed:
568 split -n3 --filter='xz > $FILE.xz' big
569 Note the use of single quotes, not double quotes.
570 That creates files named xaa.xz, xab.xz and xac.xz.
572 timeout accepts a new --foreground option, to support commands not started
573 directly from a shell prompt, where the command is interactive or needs to
574 receive signals initiated from the terminal.
578 cp -p now copies trivial NSFv4 ACLs on Solaris 10. Before, it would
579 mistakenly apply a non-trivial ACL to the destination file.
581 cp and ls now support HP-UX 11.11's ACLs, thanks to improved support
584 df now supports disk partitions larger than 4 TiB on MacOS X 10.5
585 or newer and on AIX 5.2 or newer.
587 join --check-order now prints "join: FILE:LINE_NUMBER: bad_line" for an
588 unsorted input, rather than e.g., "join: file 1 is not in sorted order".
590 shuf outputs small subsets of large permutations much more efficiently.
591 For example 'shuf -i1-$((2**32-1)) -n2' no longer exhausts memory.
593 stat -f now recognizes the GPFS, MQUEUE and PSTOREFS file system types.
595 timeout now supports sub-second timeouts.
599 Changes inherited from gnulib address a build failure on HP-UX 11.11
600 when using /opt/ansic/bin/cc.
602 Numerous portability and build improvements inherited via gnulib.
605 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.12 (2011-04-26) [stable]
609 tail's --follow=name option no longer implies --retry on systems
610 with inotify support. [bug introduced in coreutils-7.5]
612 ** Changes in behavior
614 cp's extent-based (FIEMAP) copying code is more reliable in the face
615 of varying and undocumented file system semantics:
616 - it no longer treats unwritten extents specially
617 - a FIEMAP-based extent copy always uses the FIEMAP_FLAG_SYNC flag.
618 Before, it would incur the performance penalty of that sync only
619 for 2.6.38 and older kernels. We thought all problems would be
621 - it now attempts a FIEMAP copy only on a file that appears sparse.
622 Sparse files are relatively unusual, and the copying code incurs
623 the performance penalty of the now-mandatory sync only for them.
627 dd once again compiles on AIX 5.1 and 5.2
630 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.11 (2011-04-13) [stable]
634 cp -a --link would not create a hardlink to a symlink, instead
635 copying the symlink and then not preserving its timestamp.
636 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.0]
638 cp now avoids FIEMAP issues with BTRFS before Linux 2.6.38,
639 which could result in corrupt copies of sparse files.
640 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.10]
642 cut could segfault when invoked with a user-specified output
643 delimiter and an unbounded range like "-f1234567890-".
644 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.3.0]
646 du would infloop when given --files0-from=DIR
647 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.1]
649 sort no longer spawns 7 worker threads to sort 16 lines
650 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.6]
652 touch built on Solaris 9 would segfault when run on Solaris 10
653 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.8]
655 wc would dereference a NULL pointer upon an early out-of-memory error
656 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.1]
660 dd now accepts the 'nocache' flag to the iflag and oflag options,
661 which will discard any cache associated with the files, or
662 processed portion thereof.
664 dd now warns that 'iflag=fullblock' should be used,
665 in various cases where partial reads can cause issues.
667 ** Changes in behavior
669 cp now avoids syncing files when possible, when doing a FIEMAP copy.
670 The sync is only needed on Linux kernels before 2.6.39.
671 [The sync was introduced in coreutils-8.10]
673 cp now copies empty extents efficiently, when doing a FIEMAP copy.
674 It no longer reads the zero bytes from the input, and also can efficiently
675 create a hole in the output file when --sparse=always is specified.
677 df now aligns columns consistently, and no longer wraps entries
678 with longer device identifiers, over two lines.
680 install now rejects its long-deprecated --preserve_context option.
681 Use --preserve-context instead.
683 test now accepts "==" as a synonym for "="
686 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.10 (2011-02-04) [stable]
690 du would abort with a failed assertion when two conditions are met:
691 part of the hierarchy being traversed is moved to a higher level in the
692 directory tree, and there is at least one more command line directory
693 argument following the one containing the moved sub-tree.
694 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.1.0]
696 join --header now skips the ordering check for the first line
697 even if the other file is empty. [bug introduced in coreutils-8.5]
699 join -v2 now ensures the default output format prints the match field
700 at the start of the line when it is different to the match field for
701 the first file. [bug present in "the beginning".]
703 rm -f no longer fails for EINVAL or EILSEQ on file systems that
704 reject file names invalid for that file system.
706 uniq -f NUM no longer tries to process fields after end of line.
707 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.0]
711 cp now copies sparse files efficiently on file systems with FIEMAP
712 support (ext4, btrfs, xfs, ocfs2). Before, it had to read 2^20 bytes
713 when copying a 1MiB sparse file. Now, it copies bytes only for the
714 non-sparse sections of a file. Similarly, to induce a hole in the
715 output file, it had to detect a long sequence of zero bytes. Now,
716 it knows precisely where each hole in an input file is, and can
717 reproduce them efficiently in the output file. mv also benefits
718 when it resorts to copying, e.g., between file systems.
720 join now supports -o 'auto' which will automatically infer the
721 output format from the first line in each file, to ensure
722 the same number of fields are output for each line.
724 ** Changes in behavior
726 join no longer reports disorder when one of the files is empty.
727 This allows one to use join as a field extractor like:
728 join -a1 -o 1.3,1.1 - /dev/null
731 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.9 (2011-01-04) [stable]
735 split no longer creates files with a suffix length that
736 is dependent on the number of bytes or lines per file.
737 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.8]
740 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.8 (2010-12-22) [stable]
744 cp -u no longer does unnecessary copying merely because the source
745 has finer-grained time stamps than the destination.
747 od now prints floating-point numbers without losing information, and
748 it no longer omits spaces between floating-point columns in some cases.
750 sort -u with at least two threads could attempt to read through a
751 corrupted pointer. [bug introduced in coreutils-8.6]
753 sort with at least two threads and with blocked output would busy-loop
754 (spinlock) all threads, often using 100% of available CPU cycles to
755 do no work. I.e., "sort < big-file | less" could waste a lot of power.
756 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.6]
758 sort with at least two threads no longer segfaults due to use of pointers
759 into the stack of an expired thread. [bug introduced in coreutils-8.6]
761 sort --compress no longer mishandles subprocesses' exit statuses,
762 no longer hangs indefinitely due to a bug in waiting for subprocesses,
763 and no longer generates many more than NMERGE subprocesses.
765 sort -m -o f f ... f no longer dumps core when file descriptors are limited.
767 ** Changes in behavior
769 sort will not create more than 8 threads by default due to diminishing
770 performance gains. Also the --parallel option is no longer restricted
771 to the number of available processors.
775 split accepts the --number option to generate a specific number of files.
778 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.7 (2010-11-13) [stable]
782 cp, install, mv, and touch no longer crash when setting file times
783 on Solaris 10 Update 9 [Solaris PatchID 144488 and newer expose a
784 latent bug introduced in coreutils 8.1, and possibly a second latent
785 bug going at least as far back as coreutils 5.97]
787 csplit no longer corrupts heap when writing more than 999 files,
788 nor does it leak memory for every chunk of input processed
789 [the bugs were present in the initial implementation]
791 tail -F once again notices changes in a currently unavailable
792 remote directory [bug introduced in coreutils-7.5]
794 ** Changes in behavior
796 cp --attributes-only now completely overrides --reflink.
797 Previously a reflink was needlessly attempted.
799 stat's %X, %Y, and %Z directives once again print only the integer
800 part of seconds since the epoch. This reverts a change from
801 coreutils-8.6, that was deemed unnecessarily disruptive.
802 To obtain a nanosecond-precision time stamp for %X use %.X;
803 if you want (say) just 3 fractional digits, use %.3X.
804 Likewise for %Y and %Z.
806 stat's new %W format directive would print floating point seconds.
807 However, with the above change to %X, %Y and %Z, we've made %W work
808 the same way as the others.
811 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.6 (2010-10-15) [stable]
815 du no longer multiply counts a file that is a directory or whose
816 link count is 1, even if the file is reached multiple times by
817 following symlinks or via multiple arguments.
819 du -H and -L now consistently count pointed-to files instead of
820 symbolic links, and correctly diagnose dangling symlinks.
822 du --ignore=D now ignores directory D even when that directory is
823 found to be part of a directory cycle. Before, du would issue a
824 "NOTIFY YOUR SYSTEM MANAGER" diagnostic and fail.
826 split now diagnoses read errors rather than silently exiting.
827 [bug introduced in coreutils-4.5.8]
829 tac would perform a double-free when given an input line longer than 16KiB.
830 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.3]
832 tail -F once again notices changes in a currently unavailable directory,
833 and works around a Linux kernel bug where inotify runs out of resources.
834 [bugs introduced in coreutils-7.5]
836 tr now consistently handles case conversion character classes.
837 In some locales, valid conversion specifications caused tr to abort,
838 while in all locales, some invalid specifications were undiagnosed.
839 [bugs introduced in coreutils 6.9.90 and 6.9.92]
843 cp now accepts the --attributes-only option to not copy file data,
844 which is useful for efficiently modifying files.
846 du recognizes -d N as equivalent to --max-depth=N, for compatibility
849 sort now accepts the --debug option, to highlight the part of the
850 line significant in the sort, and warn about questionable options.
852 sort now supports -d, -f, -i, -R, and -V in any combination.
854 stat now accepts the %m format directive to output the mount point
855 for a file. It also accepts the %w and %W format directives for
856 outputting the birth time of a file, if one is available.
858 ** Changes in behavior
860 df now consistently prints the device name for a bind mounted file,
861 rather than its aliased target.
863 du now uses less than half as much memory when operating on trees
864 with many hard-linked files. With --count-links (-l), or when
865 operating on trees with no hard-linked files, there is no change.
867 ls -l now uses the traditional three field time style rather than
868 the wider two field numeric ISO style, in locales where a style has
869 not been specified. The new approach has nicer behavior in some
870 locales, including English, which was judged to outweigh the disadvantage
871 of generating less-predictable and often worse output in poorly-configured
872 locales where there is an onus to specify appropriate non-default styles.
873 [The old behavior was introduced in coreutils-6.0 and had been removed
874 for English only using a different method since coreutils-8.1]
876 rm's -d now evokes an error; before, it was silently ignored.
878 sort -g now uses long doubles for greater range and precision.
880 sort -h no longer rejects numbers with leading or trailing ".", and
881 no longer accepts numbers with multiple ".". It now considers all
884 sort now uses the number of available processors to parallelize
885 the sorting operation. The number of sorts run concurrently can be
886 limited with the --parallel option or with external process
887 control like taskset for example.
889 stat now provides translated output when no format is specified.
891 stat no longer accepts the --context (-Z) option. Initially it was
892 merely accepted and ignored, for compatibility. Starting two years
893 ago, with coreutils-7.0, its use evoked a warning. Printing the
894 SELinux context of a file can be done with the %C format directive,
895 and the default output when no format is specified now automatically
896 includes %C when context information is available.
898 stat no longer accepts the %C directive when the --file-system
899 option is in effect, since security context is a file attribute
900 rather than a file system attribute.
902 stat now outputs the full sub-second resolution for the atime,
903 mtime, and ctime values since the Epoch, when using the %X, %Y, and
904 %Z directives of the --format option. This matches the fact that
905 %x, %y, and %z were already doing so for the human-readable variant.
907 touch's --file option is no longer recognized. Use --reference=F (-r)
908 instead. --file has not been documented for 15 years, and its use has
909 elicited a warning since coreutils-7.1.
911 truncate now supports setting file sizes relative to a reference file.
912 Also errors are no longer suppressed for unsupported file types, and
913 relative sizes are restricted to supported file types.
916 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.5 (2010-04-23) [stable]
920 cp and mv once again support preserving extended attributes.
921 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.4]
923 cp now preserves "capabilities" when also preserving file ownership.
925 ls --color once again honors the 'NORMAL' dircolors directive.
926 [bug introduced in coreutils-6.11]
928 sort -M now handles abbreviated months that are aligned using blanks
929 in the locale database. Also locales with 8 bit characters are
930 handled correctly, including multi byte locales with the caveat
931 that multi byte characters are matched case sensitively.
933 sort again handles obsolescent key formats (+POS -POS) correctly.
934 Previously if -POS was specified, 1 field too many was used in the sort.
935 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.2]
939 join now accepts the --header option, to treat the first line of each
940 file as a header line to be joined and printed unconditionally.
942 timeout now accepts the --kill-after option which sends a kill
943 signal to the monitored command if it's still running the specified
944 duration after the initial signal was sent.
946 who: the "+/-" --mesg (-T) indicator of whether a user/tty is accepting
947 messages could be incorrectly listed as "+", when in fact, the user was
948 not accepting messages (mesg no). Before, who would examine only the
949 permission bits, and not consider the group of the TTY device file.
950 Thus, if a login tty's group would change somehow e.g., to "root",
951 that would make it unwritable (via write(1)) by normal users, in spite
952 of whatever the permission bits might imply. Now, when configured
953 using the --with-tty-group[=NAME] option, who also compares the group
954 of the TTY device with NAME (or "tty" if no group name is specified).
956 ** Changes in behavior
958 ls --color no longer emits the final 3-byte color-resetting escape
959 sequence when it would be a no-op.
961 join -t '' no longer emits an error and instead operates on
962 each line as a whole (even if they contain NUL characters).
965 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.4 (2010-01-13) [stable]
969 nproc --all is now guaranteed to be as large as the count
970 of available processors, which may not have been the case
971 on GNU/Linux systems with neither /proc nor /sys available.
972 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.1]
976 Work around a build failure when using buggy <sys/capability.h>.
977 Alternatively, configure with --disable-libcap.
979 Compilation would fail on systems using glibc-2.7..2.9 due to changes in
980 gnulib's wchar.h that tickled a bug in at least those versions of glibc's
981 own <wchar.h> header. Now, gnulib works around the bug in those older
982 glibc <wchar.h> headers.
984 Building would fail with a link error (cp/copy.o) when XATTR headers
985 were installed without the corresponding library. Now, configure
986 detects that and disables xattr support, as one would expect.
989 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.3 (2010-01-07) [stable]
993 cp -p, install -p, mv, and touch -c could trigger a spurious error
994 message when using new glibc coupled with an old kernel.
995 [bug introduced in coreutils-6.12].
997 ls -l --color no longer prints "argetm" in front of dangling
998 symlinks when the 'LINK target' directive was given to dircolors.
999 [bug introduced in fileutils-4.0]
1001 pr's page header was improperly formatted for long file names.
1002 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.2]
1004 rm -r --one-file-system works once again.
1005 The rewrite to make rm use fts introduced a regression whereby
1006 a commmand of the above form would fail for all subdirectories.
1007 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.0]
1009 stat -f recognizes more file system types: k-afs, fuseblk, gfs/gfs2, ocfs2,
1010 and rpc_pipefs. Also Minix V3 is displayed correctly as minix3, not minux3.
1011 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.1]
1013 tail -f (inotify-enabled) once again works with remote files.
1014 The use of inotify with remote files meant that any changes to those
1015 files that was not done from the local system would go unnoticed.
1016 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.5]
1018 tail -F (inotify-enabled) would abort when a tailed file is repeatedly
1019 renamed-aside and then recreated.
1020 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.5]
1022 tail -F (inotify-enabled) could fail to follow renamed files.
1023 E.g., given a "tail -F a b" process, running "mv a b" would
1024 make tail stop tracking additions to "b".
1025 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.5]
1027 touch -a and touch -m could trigger bugs in some file systems, such
1028 as xfs or ntfs-3g, and fail to update timestamps.
1029 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.1]
1031 wc now prints counts atomically so that concurrent
1032 processes will not intersperse their output.
1033 [the issue dates back to the initial implementation]
1036 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.2 (2009-12-11) [stable]
1040 id's use of mgetgroups no longer writes beyond the end of a malloc'd buffer
1041 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.1]
1043 id no longer crashes on systems without supplementary group support.
1044 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.1]
1046 rm once again handles zero-length arguments properly.
1047 The rewrite to make rm use fts introduced a regression whereby
1048 a command like "rm a '' b" would fail to remove "a" and "b", due to
1049 the presence of the empty string argument.
1050 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.0]
1052 sort is now immune to the signal handling of its parent.
1053 Specifically sort now doesn't exit with an error message
1054 if it uses helper processes for compression and its parent
1055 ignores CHLD signals. [bug introduced in coreutils-6.9]
1057 tail without -f no longer accesses uninitialized memory
1058 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.6]
1060 timeout is now immune to the signal handling of its parent.
1061 Specifically timeout now doesn't exit with an error message
1062 if its parent ignores CHLD signals. [bug introduced in coreutils-7.6]
1064 a user running "make distcheck" in the coreutils source directory,
1065 with TMPDIR unset or set to the name of a world-writable directory,
1066 and with a malicious user on the same system
1067 was vulnerable to arbitrary code execution
1068 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.0]
1071 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.1 (2009-11-18) [stable]
1075 chcon no longer exits immediately just because SELinux is disabled.
1076 Even then, chcon may still be useful.
1077 [bug introduced in coreutils-8.0]
1079 chcon, chgrp, chmod, chown and du now diagnose an ostensible directory cycle
1080 and arrange to exit nonzero. Before, they would silently ignore the
1081 offending directory and all "contents."
1083 env -u A=B now fails, rather than silently adding A to the
1084 environment. Likewise, printenv A=B silently ignores the invalid
1085 name. [the bugs date back to the initial implementation]
1087 ls --color now handles files with capabilities correctly. Previously
1088 files with capabilities were often not colored, and also sometimes, files
1089 without capabilites were colored in error. [bug introduced in coreutils-7.0]
1091 md5sum now prints checksums atomically so that concurrent
1092 processes will not intersperse their output.
1093 This also affected sum, sha1sum, sha224sum, sha384sum and sha512sum.
1094 [the bug dates back to the initial implementation]
1096 mktemp no longer leaves a temporary file behind if it was unable to
1097 output the name of the file to stdout.
1098 [the bug dates back to the initial implementation]
1100 nice -n -1 PROGRAM now runs PROGRAM even when its internal setpriority
1101 call fails with errno == EACCES.
1102 [the bug dates back to the initial implementation]
1104 nice, nohup, and su now refuse to execute the subsidiary program if
1105 they detect write failure in printing an otherwise non-fatal warning
1108 stat -f recognizes more file system types: afs, cifs, anon-inode FS,
1109 btrfs, cgroupfs, cramfs-wend, debugfs, futexfs, hfs, inotifyfs, minux3,
1110 nilfs, securityfs, selinux, xenfs
1112 tail -f (inotify-enabled) now avoids a race condition.
1113 Before, any data appended in the tiny interval between the initial
1114 read-to-EOF and the inotify watch initialization would be ignored
1115 initially (until more data was appended), or forever, if the file
1116 were first renamed or unlinked or never modified.
1117 [The race was introduced in coreutils-7.5]
1119 tail -F (inotify-enabled) now consistently tails a file that has been
1120 replaced via renaming. That operation provokes either of two sequences
1121 of inotify events. The less common sequence is now handled as well.
1122 [The bug came with the implementation change in coreutils-7.5]
1124 timeout now doesn't exit unless the command it is monitoring does,
1125 for any specified signal. [bug introduced in coreutils-7.0].
1127 ** Changes in behavior
1129 chroot, env, nice, and su fail with status 125, rather than 1, on
1130 internal error such as failure to parse command line arguments; this
1131 is for consistency with stdbuf and timeout, and avoids ambiguity
1132 with the invoked command failing with status 1. Likewise, nohup
1133 fails with status 125 instead of 127.
1135 du (due to a change in gnulib's fts) can now traverse NFSv4 automounted
1136 directories in which the stat'd device number of the mount point differs
1137 during a traversal. Before, it would fail, because such a mismatch would
1138 usually represent a serious error or a subversion attempt.
1140 echo and printf now interpret \e as the Escape character (0x1B).
1142 rm -f /read-only-fs/nonexistent now succeeds and prints no diagnostic
1143 on systems with an unlinkat syscall that sets errno to EROFS in that case.
1144 Before, it would fail with a "Read-only file system" diagnostic.
1145 Also, "rm /read-only-fs/nonexistent" now reports "file not found" rather
1146 than the less precise "Read-only file system" error.
1150 nproc: Print the number of processing units available to a process.
1154 env and printenv now accept the option --null (-0), as a means to
1155 avoid ambiguity with newlines embedded in the environment.
1157 md5sum --check now also accepts openssl-style checksums.
1158 So do sha1sum, sha224sum, sha384sum and sha512sum.
1160 mktemp now accepts the option --suffix to provide a known suffix
1161 after the substitution in the template. Additionally, uses such as
1162 "mktemp fileXXXXXX.txt" are able to infer an appropriate --suffix.
1164 touch now accepts the option --no-dereference (-h), as a means to
1165 change symlink timestamps on platforms with enough support.
1168 * Noteworthy changes in release 8.0 (2009-10-06) [beta]
1172 cp --preserve=xattr and --archive now preserve extended attributes even
1173 when the source file doesn't have write access.
1174 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.1]
1176 touch -t [[CC]YY]MMDDhhmm[.ss] now accepts a timestamp string ending in .60,
1177 to accommodate leap seconds.
1178 [the bug dates back to the initial implementation]
1180 ls --color now reverts to the color of a base file type consistently
1181 when the color of a more specific type is disabled.
1182 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.90]
1184 ls -LR exits with status 2, not 0, when it encounters a cycle
1186 "ls -is" is now consistent with ls -lis in ignoring values returned
1187 from a failed stat/lstat. For example ls -Lis now prints "?", not "0",
1188 for the inode number and allocated size of a dereferenced dangling symlink.
1190 tail --follow --pid now avoids a race condition where data written
1191 just before the process dies might not have been output by tail.
1192 Also, tail no longer delays at all when the specified pid is not live.
1193 [The race was introduced in coreutils-7.5,
1194 and the unnecessary delay was present since textutils-1.22o]
1198 On Solaris 9, many commands would mistakenly treat file/ the same as
1199 file. Now, even on such a system, path resolution obeys the POSIX
1200 rules that a trailing slash ensures that the preceding name is a
1201 directory or a symlink to a directory.
1203 ** Changes in behavior
1205 id no longer prints SELinux " context=..." when the POSIXLY_CORRECT
1206 environment variable is set.
1208 readlink -f now ignores a trailing slash when deciding if the
1209 last component (possibly via a dangling symlink) can be created,
1210 since mkdir will succeed in that case.
1214 ln now accepts the options --logical (-L) and --physical (-P),
1215 added by POSIX 2008. The default behavior is -P on systems like
1216 GNU/Linux where link(2) creates hard links to symlinks, and -L on
1217 BSD systems where link(2) follows symlinks.
1219 stat: without -f, a command-line argument of "-" now means standard input.
1220 With --file-system (-f), an argument of "-" is now rejected.
1221 If you really must operate on a file named "-", specify it as
1222 "./-" or use "--" to separate options from arguments.
1226 rm: rewrite to use gnulib's fts
1227 This makes rm -rf significantly faster (400-500%) in some pathological
1228 cases, and slightly slower (20%) in at least one pathological case.
1230 rm -r deletes deep hierarchies more efficiently. Before, execution time
1231 was quadratic in the depth of the hierarchy, now it is merely linear.
1232 However, this improvement is not as pronounced as might be expected for
1233 very deep trees, because prior to this change, for any relative name
1234 length longer than 8KiB, rm -r would sacrifice official conformance to
1235 avoid the disproportionate quadratic performance penalty. Leading to
1236 another improvement:
1238 rm -r is now slightly more standards-conformant when operating on
1239 write-protected files with relative names longer than 8KiB.
1242 * Noteworthy changes in release 7.6 (2009-09-11) [stable]
1246 cp, mv now ignore failure to preserve a symlink time stamp, when it is
1247 due to their running on a kernel older than what was implied by headers
1248 and libraries tested at configure time.
1249 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.5]
1251 cp --reflink --preserve now preserves attributes when cloning a file.
1252 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.5]
1254 cp --preserve=xattr no longer leaks resources on each preservation failure.
1255 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.1]
1257 dd now exits with non-zero status when it encounters a write error while
1258 printing a summary to stderr.
1259 [bug introduced in coreutils-6.11]
1261 dd cbs=N conv=unblock would fail to print a final newline when the size
1262 of the input was not a multiple of N bytes.
1263 [the non-conforming behavior dates back to the initial implementation]
1265 df no longer requires that each command-line argument be readable
1266 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.3]
1268 ls -i now prints consistent inode numbers also for mount points.
1269 This makes ls -i DIR less efficient on systems with dysfunctional readdir,
1270 because ls must stat every file in order to obtain a guaranteed-valid
1271 inode number. [bug introduced in coreutils-6.0]
1273 tail -f (inotify-enabled) now flushes any initial output before blocking.
1274 Before, this would print nothing and wait: stdbuf -o 4K tail -f /etc/passwd
1275 Note that this bug affects tail -f only when its standard output is buffered,
1276 which is relatively unusual.
1277 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.5]
1279 tail -f once again works with standard input. inotify-enabled tail -f
1280 would fail when operating on a nameless stdin. I.e., tail -f < /etc/passwd
1281 would say "tail: cannot watch `-': No such file or directory", yet the
1282 relatively baroque tail -f /dev/stdin < /etc/passwd would work. Now, the
1283 offending usage causes tail to revert to its conventional sleep-based
1284 (i.e., not inotify-based) implementation.
1285 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.5]
1289 ln, link: link f z/ would mistakenly succeed on Solaris 10, given an
1290 existing file, f, and nothing named "z". ln -T f z/ has the same problem.
1291 Each would mistakenly create "z" as a link to "f". Now, even on such a
1292 system, each command reports the error, e.g.,
1293 link: cannot create link `z/' to `f': Not a directory
1297 cp --reflink accepts a new "auto" parameter which falls back to
1298 a standard copy if creating a copy-on-write clone is not possible.
1300 ** Changes in behavior
1302 tail -f now ignores "-" when stdin is a pipe or FIFO.
1303 tail-with-no-args now ignores -f unconditionally when stdin is a pipe or FIFO.
1304 Before, it would ignore -f only when no file argument was specified,
1305 and then only when POSIXLY_CORRECT was set. Now, :|tail -f - terminates
1306 immediately. Before, it would block indefinitely.
1309 * Noteworthy changes in release 7.5 (2009-08-20) [stable]
1313 dd's oflag=direct option now works even when the size of the input
1314 is not a multiple of e.g., 512 bytes.
1316 dd now handles signals consistently even when they're received
1317 before data copying has started.
1319 install runs faster again with SELinux enabled
1320 [introduced in coreutils-7.0]
1322 ls -1U (with two or more arguments, at least one a nonempty directory)
1323 would print entry names *before* the name of the containing directory.
1324 Also fixed incorrect output of ls -1RU and ls -1sU.
1325 [introduced in coreutils-7.0]
1327 sort now correctly ignores fields whose ending position is specified
1328 before the start position. Previously in numeric mode the remaining
1329 part of the line after the start position was used as the sort key.
1330 [This bug appears to have been present in "the beginning".]
1332 truncate -s failed to skip all whitespace in the option argument in
1337 stdbuf: A new program to run a command with modified stdio buffering
1338 for its standard streams.
1340 ** Changes in behavior
1342 ls --color: files with multiple hard links are no longer colored differently
1343 by default. That can be enabled by changing the LS_COLORS environment
1344 variable. You can control that using the MULTIHARDLINK dircolors input
1345 variable which corresponds to the 'mh' LS_COLORS item. Note these variables
1346 were renamed from 'HARDLINK' and 'hl' which were available since
1347 coreutils-7.1 when this feature was introduced.
1349 ** Deprecated options
1351 nl --page-increment: deprecated in favor of --line-increment, the new option
1352 maintains the previous semantics and the same short option, -i.
1356 chroot now accepts the options --userspec and --groups.
1358 cp accepts a new option, --reflink: create a lightweight copy
1359 using copy-on-write (COW). This is currently only supported within
1360 a btrfs file system.
1362 cp now preserves time stamps on symbolic links, when possible
1364 sort accepts a new option, --human-numeric-sort (-h): sort numbers
1365 while honoring human readable suffixes like KiB and MB etc.
1367 tail --follow now uses inotify when possible, to be more responsive
1368 to file changes and more efficient when monitoring many files.
1371 * Noteworthy changes in release 7.4 (2009-05-07) [stable]
1375 date -d 'next mon', when run on a Monday, now prints the date
1376 7 days in the future rather than the current day. Same for any other
1377 day-of-the-week name, when run on that same day of the week.
1378 [This bug appears to have been present in "the beginning". ]
1380 date -d tuesday, when run on a Tuesday -- using date built from the 7.3
1381 release tarball, not from git -- would print the date 7 days in the future.
1382 Now, it works properly and prints the current date. That was due to
1383 human error (including not-committed changes in a release tarball)
1384 and the fact that there is no check to detect when the gnulib/ git
1389 make check: two tests have been corrected
1393 There have been some ACL-related portability fixes for *BSD,
1394 inherited from gnulib.
1397 * Noteworthy changes in release 7.3 (2009-05-01) [stable]
1401 cp now diagnoses failure to preserve selinux/xattr attributes when
1402 --preserve=context,xattr is specified in combination with -a.
1403 Also, cp no longer suppresses attribute-preservation diagnostics
1404 when preserving SELinux context was explicitly requested.
1406 ls now aligns output correctly in the presence of abbreviated month
1407 names from the locale database that have differing widths.
1409 ls -v and sort -V now order names like "#.b#" properly
1411 mv: do not print diagnostics when failing to preserve xattr's on file
1412 systems without xattr support.
1414 sort -m no longer segfaults when its output file is also an input file.
1415 E.g., with this, touch 1; sort -m -o 1 1, sort would segfault.
1416 [introduced in coreutils-7.2]
1418 ** Changes in behavior
1420 shred, sort, shuf: now use an internal pseudorandom generator by default.
1421 This is mainly noticeable in shred where the 3 random passes it does by
1422 default should proceed at the speed of the disk. Previously /dev/urandom
1423 was used if available, which is relatively slow on GNU/Linux systems.
1425 ** Improved robustness
1427 cp would exit successfully after copying less than the full contents
1428 of a file larger than ~4000 bytes from a linux-/proc file system to a
1429 destination file system with a fundamental block size of 4KiB or greater.
1430 Reading into a 4KiB-or-larger buffer, cp's "read" syscall would return
1431 a value smaller than 4096, and cp would interpret that as EOF (POSIX
1432 allows this). This optimization, now removed, saved 50% of cp's read
1433 syscalls when copying small files. Affected linux kernels: at least
1434 2.6.9 through 2.6.29.
1435 [the optimization was introduced in coreutils-6.0]
1439 df now pre-mounts automountable directories even with automounters for
1440 which stat-like syscalls no longer provoke mounting. Now, df uses open.
1442 'id -G $USER' now works correctly even on Darwin and NetBSD. Previously it
1443 would either truncate the group list to 10, or go into an infinite loop,
1444 due to their non-standard getgrouplist implementations.
1445 [truncation introduced in coreutils-6.11]
1446 [infinite loop introduced in coreutils-7.1]
1449 * Noteworthy changes in release 7.2 (2009-03-31) [stable]
1453 pwd now accepts the options --logical (-L) and --physical (-P). For
1454 compatibility with existing scripts, -P is the default behavior
1455 unless POSIXLY_CORRECT is requested.
1459 cat once again immediately outputs data it has processed.
1460 Previously it would have been buffered and only output if enough
1461 data was read, or on process exit.
1462 [bug introduced in coreutils-6.0]
1464 comm's new --check-order option would fail to detect disorder on any pair
1465 of lines where one was a prefix of the other. For example, this would
1466 fail to report the disorder: printf 'Xb\nX\n'>k; comm --check-order k k
1467 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.0]
1469 cp once again diagnoses the invalid "cp -rl dir dir" right away,
1470 rather than after creating a very deep dir/dir/dir/... hierarchy.
1471 The bug strikes only with both --recursive (-r, -R) and --link (-l).
1472 [bug introduced in coreutils-7.1]
1474 ls --sort=version (-v) sorted names beginning with "." inconsistently.
1475 Now, names that start with "." are always listed before those that don't.
1477 pr: fix the bug whereby --indent=N (-o) did not indent header lines
1478 [bug introduced in coreutils-6.9.90]
1480 sort now handles specified key ends correctly.
1481 Previously -k1,1b would have caused leading space from field 2 to be
1482 included in the sort while -k2,3.0 would have not included field 3.
1484 ** Changes in behavior
1486 cat,cp,install,mv,split: these programs now read and write a minimum
1487 of 32KiB at a time. This was seen to double throughput when reading
1488 cached files on GNU/Linux-based systems.
1490 cp -a now tries to preserve extended attributes (xattr), but does not
1491 diagnose xattr-preservation failure. However, cp --preserve=all still does.
1493 ls --color: hard link highlighting can be now disabled by changing the
1494 LS_COLORS environment variable. To disable it you can add something like
1495 this to your profile: eval `dircolors | sed s/hl=[^:]*:/hl=:/`
1498 * Noteworthy changes in release 7.1 (2009-02-21) [stable]
1502 Add extended attribute support available on certain filesystems like ext2
1504 cp: Tries to copy xattrs when --preserve=xattr or --preserve=all specified
1505 mv: Always tries to copy xattrs
1506 install: Never copies xattrs
1508 cp and mv accept a new option, --no-clobber (-n): silently refrain
1509 from overwriting any existing destination file
1511 dd accepts iflag=cio and oflag=cio to open the file in CIO (concurrent I/O)
1512 mode where this feature is available.
1514 install accepts a new option, --compare (-C): compare each pair of source
1515 and destination files, and if the destination has identical content and
1516 any specified owner, group, permissions, and possibly SELinux context, then
1517 do not modify the destination at all.
1519 ls --color now highlights hard linked files, too
1521 stat -f recognizes the Lustre file system type
1525 chgrp, chmod, chown --silent (--quiet, -f) no longer print some diagnostics
1526 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.1]
1528 cp uses much less memory in some situations
1530 cp -a now correctly tries to preserve SELinux context (announced in 6.9.90),
1531 doesn't inform about failure, unlike with --preserve=all
1533 du --files0-from=FILE no longer reads all of FILE into RAM before
1534 processing the first file name
1536 seq 9223372036854775807 9223372036854775808 now prints only two numbers
1537 on systems with extended long double support and good library support.
1538 Even with this patch, on some systems, it still produces invalid output,
1539 from 3 to at least 1026 lines long. [bug introduced in coreutils-6.11]
1541 seq -w now accounts for a decimal point added to the last number
1542 to correctly print all numbers to the same width.
1544 wc --files0-from=FILE no longer reads all of FILE into RAM, before
1545 processing the first file name, unless the list of names is known
1548 ** Changes in behavior
1550 cp and mv: the --reply={yes,no,query} option has been removed.
1551 Using it has elicited a warning for the last three years.
1553 dd: user specified offsets that are too big are handled better.
1554 Previously, erroneous parameters to skip and seek could result
1555 in redundant reading of the file with no warnings or errors.
1557 du: -H (initially equivalent to --si) is now equivalent to
1558 --dereference-args, and thus works as POSIX requires
1560 shred: now does 3 overwrite passes by default rather than 25.
1562 ls -l now marks SELinux-only files with the less obtrusive '.',
1563 rather than '+'. A file with any other combination of MAC and ACL
1564 is still marked with a '+'.
1567 * Noteworthy changes in release 7.0 (2008-10-05) [beta]
1571 timeout: Run a command with bounded time.
1572 truncate: Set the size of a file to a specified size.
1576 chgrp, chmod, chown, chcon, du, rm: now all display linear performance,
1577 even when operating on million-entry directories on ext3 and ext4 file
1578 systems. Before, they would exhibit O(N^2) performance, due to linear
1579 per-entry seek time cost when operating on entries in readdir order.
1580 Rm was improved directly, while the others inherit the improvement
1581 from the newer version of fts in gnulib.
1583 comm now verifies that the inputs are in sorted order. This check can
1584 be turned off with the --nocheck-order option.
1586 comm accepts new option, --output-delimiter=STR, that allows specification
1587 of an output delimiter other than the default single TAB.
1589 cp and mv: the deprecated --reply=X option is now also undocumented.
1591 dd accepts iflag=fullblock to make it accumulate full input blocks.
1592 With this new option, after a short read, dd repeatedly calls read,
1593 until it fills the incomplete block, reaches EOF, or encounters an error.
1595 df accepts a new option --total, which produces a grand total of all
1596 arguments after all arguments have been processed.
1598 If the GNU MP library is available at configure time, factor and
1599 expr support arbitrarily large numbers. Pollard's rho algorithm is
1600 used to factor large numbers.
1602 install accepts a new option --strip-program to specify the program used to
1605 ls now colorizes files with capabilities if libcap is available
1607 ls -v now uses filevercmp function as sort predicate (instead of strverscmp)
1609 md5sum now accepts the new option, --quiet, to suppress the printing of
1610 'OK' messages. sha1sum, sha224sum, sha384sum, and sha512sum accept it, too.
1612 sort accepts a new option, --files0-from=F, that specifies a file
1613 containing a null-separated list of files to sort. This list is used
1614 instead of filenames passed on the command-line to avoid problems with
1615 maximum command-line (argv) length.
1617 sort accepts a new option --batch-size=NMERGE, where NMERGE
1618 represents the maximum number of inputs that will be merged at once.
1619 When processing more than NMERGE inputs, sort uses temporary files.
1621 sort accepts a new option --version-sort (-V, --sort=version),
1622 specifying that ordering is to be based on filevercmp.
1626 chcon --verbose now prints a newline after each message
1628 od no longer suffers from platform bugs in printf(3). This is
1629 probably most noticeable when using 'od -tfL' to print long doubles.
1631 seq -0.1 0.1 2 now prints 2,0 when locale's decimal point is ",".
1632 Before, it would mistakenly omit the final number in that example.
1634 shuf honors the --zero-terminated (-z) option, even with --input-range=LO-HI
1636 shuf --head-count is now correctly documented. The documentation
1637 previously claimed it was called --head-lines.
1641 Improved support for access control lists (ACLs): On MacOS X, Solaris 7..10,
1642 HP-UX 11, Tru64, AIX, IRIX 6.5, and Cygwin, "ls -l" now displays the presence
1643 of an ACL on a file via a '+' sign after the mode, and "cp -p" copies ACLs.
1645 join has significantly better performance due to better memory management
1647 ls now uses constant memory when not sorting and using one_per_line format,
1648 no matter how many files are in a given directory. I.e., to list a directory
1649 with very many files, ls -1U is much more efficient.
1651 od now aligns fields across lines when printing multiple -t
1652 specifiers, and no longer prints fields that resulted entirely from
1653 padding the input out to the least common multiple width.
1655 ** Changes in behavior
1657 stat's --context (-Z) option has always been a no-op.
1658 Now it evokes a warning that it is obsolete and will be removed.
1661 * Noteworthy changes in release 6.12 (2008-05-31) [stable]
1665 cp, install, mv, and touch now preserve nanosecond resolution on
1666 file timestamps, on platforms that have the 'utimensat' and
1667 'futimens' system calls.
1671 chcon, runcon: --help output now includes the bug-reporting address
1673 cp -p copies permissions more portably. For example, on MacOS X 10.5,
1674 "cp -p some-fifo some-file" no longer fails while trying to copy the
1675 permissions from the some-fifo argument.
1677 id with no options now prints the SELinux context only when invoked
1678 with no USERNAME argument.
1680 id and groups once again print the AFS-specific nameless group-ID (PAG).
1681 Printing of such large-numbered, kernel-only (not in /etc/group) group-IDs
1682 was suppressed in 6.11 due to ignorance that they are useful.
1684 uniq: avoid subtle field-skipping malfunction due to isblank misuse.
1685 In some locales on some systems, isblank(240) (aka  ) is nonzero.
1686 On such systems, uniq --skip-fields=N would fail to skip the proper
1687 number of fields for some inputs.
1689 tac: avoid segfault with --regex (-r) and multiple files, e.g.,
1690 "echo > x; tac -r x x". [bug present at least in textutils-1.8b, from 1992]
1692 ** Changes in behavior
1694 install once again sets SELinux context, when possible
1695 [it was deliberately disabled in 6.9.90]
1698 * Noteworthy changes in release 6.11 (2008-04-19) [stable]
1702 configure --enable-no-install-program=groups now works.
1704 "cp -fR fifo E" now succeeds with an existing E. Before this fix, using
1705 -fR to copy a fifo or "special" file onto an existing file would fail
1706 with EEXIST. Now, it once again unlinks the destination before trying
1707 to create the destination file. [bug introduced in coreutils-5.90]
1709 dd once again works with unnecessary options like if=/dev/stdin and
1710 of=/dev/stdout. [bug introduced in fileutils-4.0h]
1712 id now uses getgrouplist, when possible. This results in
1713 much better performance when there are many users and/or groups.
1715 ls no longer segfaults on files in /proc when linked with an older version
1716 of libselinux. E.g., ls -l /proc/sys would dereference a NULL pointer.
1718 md5sum would segfault for invalid BSD-style input, e.g.,
1719 echo 'MD5 (' | md5sum -c - Now, md5sum ignores that line.
1720 sha1sum, sha224sum, sha384sum, and sha512sum are affected, too.
1721 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.1.0]
1723 md5sum -c would accept a NUL-containing checksum string like "abcd\0..."
1724 and would unnecessarily read and compute the checksum of the named file,
1725 and then compare that checksum to the invalid one: guaranteed to fail.
1726 Now, it recognizes that the line is not valid and skips it.
1727 sha1sum, sha224sum, sha384sum, and sha512sum are affected, too.
1728 [bug present in the original version, in coreutils-4.5.1, 1995]
1730 "mkdir -Z x dir" no longer segfaults when diagnosing invalid context "x"
1731 mkfifo and mknod would fail similarly. Now they're fixed.
1733 mv would mistakenly unlink a destination file before calling rename,
1734 when the destination had two or more hard links. It no longer does that.
1735 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.3.0]
1737 "paste -d'\' file" no longer overruns memory (heap since coreutils-5.1.2,
1738 stack before then) [bug present in the original version, in 1992]
1740 "pr -e" with a mix of backspaces and TABs no longer corrupts the heap
1741 [bug present in the original version, in 1992]
1743 "ptx -F'\' long-file-name" would overrun a malloc'd buffer and corrupt
1744 the heap. That was triggered by a lone backslash (or odd number of them)
1745 at the end of the option argument to --flag-truncation=STRING (-F),
1746 --word-regexp=REGEXP (-W), or --sentence-regexp=REGEXP (-S).
1748 "rm -r DIR" would mistakenly declare to be "write protected" -- and
1749 prompt about -- full DIR-relative names longer than MIN (PATH_MAX, 8192).
1751 "rmdir --ignore-fail-on-non-empty" detects and ignores the failure
1752 in more cases when a directory is empty.
1754 "seq -f % 1" would issue the erroneous diagnostic "seq: memory exhausted"
1755 rather than reporting the invalid string format.
1756 [bug introduced in coreutils-6.0]
1760 join now verifies that the inputs are in sorted order. This check can
1761 be turned off with the --nocheck-order option.
1763 sort accepts the new option --sort=WORD, where WORD can be one of
1764 general-numeric, month, numeric or random. These are equivalent to the
1765 options --general-numeric-sort/-g, --month-sort/-M, --numeric-sort/-n
1766 and --random-sort/-R, resp.
1770 id and groups work around an AFS-related bug whereby those programs
1771 would print an invalid group number, when given no user-name argument.
1773 ls --color no longer outputs unnecessary escape sequences
1775 seq gives better diagnostics for invalid formats.
1779 rm now works properly even on systems like BeOS and Haiku,
1780 which have negative errno values.
1784 install, mkdir, rmdir and split now write --verbose output to stdout,
1788 * Noteworthy changes in release 6.10 (2008-01-22) [stable]
1792 Fix a non-portable use of sed in configure.ac.
1793 [bug introduced in coreutils-6.9.92]
1796 * Noteworthy changes in release 6.9.92 (2008-01-12) [beta]
1800 cp --parents no longer uses uninitialized memory when restoring the
1801 permissions of a just-created destination directory.
1802 [bug introduced in coreutils-6.9.90]
1804 tr's case conversion would fail in a locale with differing numbers
1805 of lower case and upper case characters. E.g., this would fail:
1806 env LC_CTYPE=en_US.ISO-8859-1 tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]'
1807 [bug introduced in coreutils-6.9.90]
1811 "touch -d now writable-but-owned-by-someone-else" now succeeds
1812 whenever that same command would succeed without "-d now".
1813 Before, it would work fine with no -d option, yet it would
1814 fail with the ostensibly-equivalent "-d now".
1817 * Noteworthy changes in release 6.9.91 (2007-12-15) [beta]
1821 "ls -l" would not output "+" on SELinux hosts unless -Z was also given.
1823 "rm" would fail to unlink a non-directory when run in an environment
1824 in which the user running rm is capable of unlinking a directory.
1825 [bug introduced in coreutils-6.9]
1828 * Noteworthy changes in release 6.9.90 (2007-12-01) [beta]
1832 arch: equivalent to uname -m, not installed by default
1833 But don't install this program on Solaris systems.
1835 chcon: change the SELinux security context of a file
1837 mktemp: create a temporary file or directory (or names)
1839 runcon: run a program in a different SELinux security context
1841 ** Programs no longer installed by default
1845 ** Changes in behavior
1847 cp, by default, refuses to copy through a dangling destination symlink
1848 Set POSIXLY_CORRECT if you require the old, risk-prone behavior.
1850 pr -F no longer suppresses the footer or the first two blank lines in
1851 the header. This is for compatibility with BSD and POSIX.
1853 tr now warns about an unescaped backslash at end of string.
1854 The tr from coreutils-5.2.1 and earlier would fail for such usage,
1855 and Solaris' tr ignores that final byte.
1859 Add SELinux support, based on the patch from Fedora:
1860 * cp accepts new --preserve=context option.
1861 * "cp -a" works with SELinux:
1862 Now, cp -a attempts to preserve context, but failure to do so does
1863 not change cp's exit status. However "cp --preserve=context" is
1864 similar, but failure *does* cause cp to exit with nonzero status.
1865 * install accepts new "-Z, --context=C" option.
1866 * id accepts new "-Z" option.
1867 * stat honors the new %C format directive: SELinux security context string
1868 * ls accepts a slightly modified -Z option.
1869 * ls: contrary to Fedora version, does not accept --lcontext and --scontext
1871 The following commands and options now support the standard size
1872 suffixes kB, M, MB, G, GB, and so on for T, P, Y, Z, and Y:
1873 head -c, head -n, od -j, od -N, od -S, split -b, split -C,
1876 cp -p tries to preserve the GID of a file even if preserving the UID
1879 uniq accepts a new option: --zero-terminated (-z). As with the sort
1880 option of the same name, this makes uniq consume and produce
1881 NUL-terminated lines rather than newline-terminated lines.
1883 wc no longer warns about character decoding errors in multibyte locales.
1884 This means for example that "wc /bin/sh" now produces normal output
1885 (though the word count will have no real meaning) rather than many
1888 ** New build options
1890 By default, "make install" no longer attempts to install (or even build) su.
1891 To change that, use ./configure --enable-install-program=su.
1892 If you also want to install the new "arch" program, do this:
1893 ./configure --enable-install-program=arch,su.
1895 You can inhibit the compilation and installation of selected programs
1896 at configure time. For example, to avoid installing "hostname" and
1897 "uptime", use ./configure --enable-no-install-program=hostname,uptime
1898 Note: currently, "make check" passes, even when arch and su are not
1899 built (that's the new default). However, if you inhibit the building
1900 and installation of other programs, don't be surprised if some parts
1901 of "make check" fail.
1903 ** Remove deprecated options
1905 df no longer accepts the --kilobytes option.
1906 du no longer accepts the --kilobytes or --megabytes options.
1907 ls no longer accepts the --kilobytes option.
1908 ptx longer accepts the --copyright option.
1909 who no longer accepts -i or --idle.
1911 ** Improved robustness
1913 ln -f can no longer silently clobber a just-created hard link.
1914 In some cases, ln could be seen as being responsible for data loss.
1915 For example, given directories a, b, c, and files a/f and b/f, we
1916 should be able to do this safely: ln -f a/f b/f c && rm -f a/f b/f
1917 However, before this change, ln would succeed, and thus cause the
1918 loss of the contents of a/f.
1920 stty no longer silently accepts certain invalid hex values
1921 in its 35-colon command-line argument
1925 chmod no longer ignores a dangling symlink. Now, chmod fails
1926 with a diagnostic saying that it cannot operate on such a file.
1927 [bug introduced in coreutils-5.1.0]
1929 cp attempts to read a regular file, even if stat says it is empty.
1930 Before, "cp /proc/cpuinfo c" would create an empty file when the kernel
1931 reports stat.st_size == 0, while "cat /proc/cpuinfo > c" would "work",
1932 and create a nonempty one. [bug introduced in coreutils-6.0]
1934 cp --parents no longer mishandles symlinks to directories in file
1935 name components in the source, e.g., "cp --parents symlink/a/b d"
1936 no longer fails. Also, 'cp' no longer considers a destination
1937 symlink to be the same as the referenced file when copying links
1938 or making backups. For example, if SYM is a symlink to FILE,
1939 "cp -l FILE SYM" now reports an error instead of silently doing
1940 nothing. The behavior of 'cp' is now better documented when the
1941 destination is a symlink.
1943 "cp -i --update older newer" no longer prompts; same for mv
1945 "cp -i" now detects read errors on standard input, and no longer consumes
1946 too much seekable input; same for ln, install, mv, and rm.
1948 cut now diagnoses a range starting with zero (e.g., -f 0-2) as invalid;
1949 before, it would treat it as if it started with 1 (-f 1-2).
1951 "cut -f 2-0" now fails; before, it was equivalent to "cut -f 2-"
1953 cut now diagnoses the '-' in "cut -f -" as an invalid range, rather
1954 than interpreting it as the unlimited range, "1-".
1956 date -d now accepts strings of the form e.g., 'YYYYMMDD +N days',
1957 in addition to the usual 'YYYYMMDD N days'.
1959 du -s now includes the size of any stat'able-but-inaccessible directory
1962 du (without -s) prints whatever it knows of the size of an inaccessible
1963 directory. Before, du would print nothing for such a directory.
1965 ls -x DIR would sometimes output the wrong string in place of the
1966 first entry. [introduced in coreutils-6.8]
1968 ls --color would mistakenly color a dangling symlink as if it were
1969 a regular symlink. This would happen only when the dangling symlink
1970 was not a command-line argument and in a directory with d_type support.
1971 [introduced in coreutils-6.0]
1973 ls --color, (with a custom LS_COLORS envvar value including the
1974 ln=target attribute) would mistakenly output the string "target"
1975 before the name of each symlink. [introduced in coreutils-6.0]
1977 od's --skip (-j) option now works even when the kernel says that a
1978 nonempty regular file has stat.st_size = 0. This happens at least
1979 with files in /proc and linux-2.6.22.
1981 "od -j L FILE" had a bug: when the number of bytes to skip, L, is exactly
1982 the same as the length of FILE, od would skip *no* bytes. When the number
1983 of bytes to skip is exactly the sum of the lengths of the first N files,
1984 od would skip only the first N-1 files. [introduced in textutils-2.0.9]
1986 ./printf %.10000000f 1 could get an internal ENOMEM error and generate
1987 no output, yet erroneously exit with status 0. Now it diagnoses the error
1988 and exits with nonzero status. [present in initial implementation]
1990 seq no longer mishandles obvious cases like "seq 0 0.000001 0.000003",
1991 so workarounds like "seq 0 0.000001 0.0000031" are no longer needed.
1993 seq would mistakenly reject some valid format strings containing %%,
1994 and would mistakenly accept some invalid ones. e.g., %g%% and %%g, resp.
1996 "seq .1 .1" would mistakenly generate no output on some systems
1998 Obsolete sort usage with an invalid ordering-option character, e.g.,
1999 "env _POSIX2_VERSION=199209 sort +1x" no longer makes sort free an
2000 invalid pointer [introduced in coreutils-6.5]
2002 sorting very long lines (relative to the amount of available memory)
2003 no longer provokes unaligned memory access
2005 split --line-bytes=N (-C N) no longer creates an empty file
2006 [this bug is present at least as far back as textutils-1.22 (Jan, 1997)]
2008 tr -c no longer aborts when translating with Set2 larger than the
2009 complement of Set1. [present in the original version, in 1992]
2011 tr no longer rejects an unmatched [:lower:] or [:upper:] in SET1.
2012 [present in the original version]
2015 * Noteworthy changes in release 6.9 (2007-03-22) [stable]
2019 cp -x (--one-file-system) would fail to set mount point permissions
2021 The default block size and output format for df -P are now unaffected by
2022 the DF_BLOCK_SIZE, BLOCK_SIZE, and BLOCKSIZE environment variables. It
2023 is still affected by POSIXLY_CORRECT, though.
2025 Using pr -m -s (i.e. merging files, with TAB as the output separator)
2026 no longer inserts extraneous spaces between output columns.
2028 * Noteworthy changes in release 6.8 (2007-02-24) [not-unstable]
2032 chgrp, chmod, and chown now honor the --preserve-root option.
2033 Before, they would warn, yet continuing traversing and operating on /.
2035 chmod no longer fails in an environment (e.g., a chroot) with openat
2036 support but with insufficient /proc support.
2038 "cp --parents F/G D" no longer creates a directory D/F when F is not
2039 a directory (and F/G is therefore invalid).
2041 "cp --preserve=mode" would create directories that briefly had
2042 too-generous permissions in some cases. For example, when copying a
2043 directory with permissions 777 the destination directory might
2044 temporarily be setgid on some file systems, which would allow other
2045 users to create subfiles with the same group as the directory. Fix
2046 similar problems with 'install' and 'mv'.
2048 cut no longer dumps core for usage like "cut -f2- f1 f2" with two or
2049 more file arguments. This was due to a double-free bug, introduced
2052 dd bs= operands now silently override any later ibs= and obs=
2053 operands, as POSIX and tradition require.
2055 "ls -FRL" always follows symbolic links on Linux. Introduced in
2058 A cross-partition "mv /etc/passwd ~" (by non-root) now prints
2059 a reasonable diagnostic. Before, it would print this:
2060 "mv: cannot remove `/etc/passwd': Not a directory".
2062 pwd and "readlink -e ." no longer fail unnecessarily when a parent
2063 directory is unreadable.
2065 rm (without -f) could prompt when it shouldn't, or fail to prompt
2066 when it should, when operating on a full name longer than 511 bytes
2067 and getting an ENOMEM error while trying to form the long name.
2069 rm could mistakenly traverse into the wrong directory under unusual
2070 conditions: when a full name longer than 511 bytes specifies a search-only
2071 directory, and when forming that name fails with ENOMEM, rm would attempt
2072 to open a truncated-to-511-byte name with the first five bytes replaced
2073 with "[...]". If such a directory were to actually exist, rm would attempt
2076 "rm -rf /etc/passwd" (run by non-root) now prints a diagnostic.
2077 Before it would print nothing.
2079 "rm --interactive=never F" no longer prompts for an unwritable F
2081 "rm -rf D" would emit a misleading diagnostic when failing to
2082 remove a symbolic link within the unwritable directory, D.
2083 Introduced in coreutils-6.0. Similarly, when a cross-partition
2084 "mv" fails because the source directory is unwritable, it now gives
2085 a reasonable diagnostic. Before, this would print
2086 $ mkdir /tmp/x; touch /tmp/x/y; chmod -w /tmp/x;
2087 $ test $(stat -c %d /tmp/x) -ne $(stat -c %d .) && mv /tmp/x/y .
2088 mv: cannot remove `/tmp/x/y': Not a directory
2090 mv: cannot remove `/tmp/x/y': Permission denied.
2094 sort's new --compress-program=PROG option specifies a compression
2095 program to use when writing and reading temporary files.
2096 This can help save both time and disk space when sorting large inputs.
2098 sort accepts the new option -C, which acts like -c except no diagnostic
2099 is printed. Its --check option now accepts an optional argument, and
2100 --check=quiet and --check=silent are now aliases for -C, while
2101 --check=diagnose-first is an alias for -c or plain --check.
2104 * Noteworthy changes in release 6.7 (2006-12-08) [stable]
2108 When cp -p copied a file with special mode bits set, the same bits
2109 were set on the copy even when ownership could not be preserved.
2110 This could result in files that were setuid to the wrong user.
2111 To fix this, special mode bits are now set in the copy only if its
2112 ownership is successfully preserved. Similar problems were fixed
2113 with mv when copying across file system boundaries. This problem
2114 affects all versions of coreutils through 6.6.
2116 cp --preserve=ownership would create output files that temporarily
2117 had too-generous permissions in some cases. For example, when
2118 copying a file with group A and mode 644 into a group-B sticky
2119 directory, the output file was briefly readable by group B.
2120 Fix similar problems with cp options like -p that imply
2121 --preserve=ownership, with install -d when combined with either -o
2122 or -g, and with mv when copying across file system boundaries.
2123 This bug affects all versions of coreutils through 6.6.
2125 du --one-file-system (-x) would skip subdirectories of any directory
2126 listed as second or subsequent command line argument. This bug affects
2127 coreutils-6.4, 6.5 and 6.6.
2130 * Noteworthy changes in release 6.6 (2006-11-22) [stable]
2134 ls would segfault (dereference a NULL pointer) for a file with a
2135 nameless group or owner. This bug was introduced in coreutils-6.5.
2137 A bug in the latest official m4/gettext.m4 (from gettext-0.15)
2138 made configure fail to detect gettext support, due to the unusual
2139 way in which coreutils uses AM_GNU_GETTEXT.
2141 ** Improved robustness
2143 Now, du (and the other fts clients: chmod, chgrp, chown) honor a
2144 trailing slash in the name of a symlink-to-directory even on
2145 Solaris 9, by working around its buggy fstatat implementation.
2148 * Major changes in release 6.5 (2006-11-19) [stable]
2152 du (and the other fts clients: chmod, chgrp, chown) would exit early
2153 when encountering an inaccessible directory on a system with native
2154 openat support (i.e., linux-2.6.16 or newer along with glibc-2.4
2155 or newer). This bug was introduced with the switch to gnulib's
2156 openat-based variant of fts, for coreutils-6.0.
2158 "ln --backup f f" now produces a sensible diagnostic
2162 rm accepts a new option: --one-file-system
2165 * Major changes in release 6.4 (2006-10-22) [stable]
2169 chgrp and chown would malfunction when invoked with both -R and -H and
2170 with one or more of the following: --preserve-root, --verbose, --changes,
2171 --from=o:g (chown only). This bug was introduced with the switch to
2172 gnulib's openat-based variant of fts, for coreutils-6.0.
2174 cp --backup dir1 dir2, would rename an existing dir2/dir1 to dir2/dir1~.
2175 This bug was introduced in coreutils-6.0.
2177 With --force (-f), rm no longer fails for ENOTDIR.
2178 For example, "rm -f existing-non-directory/anything" now exits
2179 successfully, ignoring the error about a nonexistent file.
2182 * Major changes in release 6.3 (2006-09-30) [stable]
2184 ** Improved robustness
2186 pinky no longer segfaults on Darwin 7.9.0 (MacOS X 10.3.9) due to a
2187 buggy native getaddrinfo function.
2189 rm works around a bug in Darwin 7.9.0 (MacOS X 10.3.9) that would
2190 sometimes keep it from removing all entries in a directory on an HFS+
2191 or NFS-mounted partition.
2193 sort would fail to handle very large input (around 40GB) on systems with a
2194 mkstemp function that returns a file descriptor limited to 32-bit offsets.
2198 chmod would fail unnecessarily in an unusual case: when an initially-
2199 inaccessible argument is rendered accessible by chmod's action on a
2200 preceding command line argument. This bug also affects chgrp, but
2201 it is harder to demonstrate. It does not affect chown. The bug was
2202 introduced with the switch from explicit recursion to the use of fts
2203 in coreutils-5.1.0 (2003-10-15).
2205 cp -i and mv -i occasionally neglected to prompt when the copy or move
2206 action was bound to fail. This bug dates back to before fileutils-4.0.
2208 With --verbose (-v), cp and mv would sometimes generate no output,
2209 or neglect to report file removal.
2211 For the "groups" command:
2213 "groups" no longer prefixes the output with "user :" unless more
2214 than one user is specified; this is for compatibility with BSD.
2216 "groups user" now exits nonzero when it gets a write error.
2218 "groups" now processes options like --help more compatibly.
2220 shuf would infloop, given 8KB or more of piped input
2224 Versions of chmod, chown, chgrp, du, and rm (tools that use openat etc.)
2225 compiled for Solaris 8 now also work when run on Solaris 10.
2228 * Major changes in release 6.2 (2006-09-18) [stable candidate]
2230 ** Changes in behavior
2232 mkdir -p and install -d (or -D) now use a method that forks a child
2233 process if the working directory is unreadable and a later argument
2234 uses a relative file name. This avoids some race conditions, but it
2235 means you may need to kill two processes to stop these programs.
2237 rm now rejects attempts to remove the root directory, e.g., 'rm -fr /'
2238 now fails without removing anything. Likewise for any file name with
2239 a final './' or '../' component.
2241 tail now ignores the -f option if POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, no file
2242 operand is given, and standard input is any FIFO; formerly it did
2243 this only for pipes.
2245 ** Infrastructure changes
2247 Coreutils now uses gnulib via the gnulib-tool script.
2248 If you check the source out from CVS, then follow the instructions
2249 in README-cvs. Although this represents a large change to the
2250 infrastructure, it should cause no change in how the tools work.
2254 cp --backup no longer fails when the last component of a source file
2255 name is "." or "..".
2257 "ls --color" would highlight other-writable and sticky directories
2258 no differently than regular directories on a file system with
2259 dirent.d_type support.
2261 "mv -T --verbose --backup=t A B" now prints the " (backup: B.~1~)"
2262 suffix when A and B are directories as well as when they are not.
2264 mv and "cp -r" no longer fail when invoked with two arguments
2265 where the first one names a directory and the second name ends in
2266 a slash and doesn't exist. E.g., "mv dir B/", for nonexistent B,
2267 now succeeds, once more. This bug was introduced in coreutils-5.3.0.
2270 * Major changes in release 6.1 (2006-08-19) [unstable]
2272 ** Changes in behavior
2274 df now considers BSD "kernfs" file systems to be dummies
2278 printf now supports the 'I' flag on hosts whose underlying printf
2279 implementations support 'I', e.g., "printf %Id 2".
2283 cp --sparse preserves sparseness at the end of a file, even when
2284 the file's apparent size is not a multiple of its block size.
2285 [introduced with the original design, in fileutils-4.0r, 2000-04-29]
2287 df (with a command line argument) once again prints its header
2288 [introduced in coreutils-6.0]
2290 ls -CF would misalign columns in some cases involving non-stat'able files
2291 [introduced in coreutils-6.0]
2293 * Major changes in release 6.0 (2006-08-15) [unstable]
2295 ** Improved robustness
2297 df: if the file system claims to have more available than total blocks,
2298 report the number of used blocks as being "total - available"
2299 (a negative number) rather than as garbage.
2301 dircolors: a new autoconf run-test for AIX's buggy strndup function
2302 prevents malfunction on that system; may also affect cut, expand,
2305 fts no longer changes the current working directory, so its clients
2306 (chmod, chown, chgrp, du) no longer malfunction under extreme conditions.
2308 pwd and other programs using lib/getcwd.c work even on file systems
2309 where dirent.d_ino values are inconsistent with those from stat.st_ino.
2311 rm's core is now reentrant: rm --recursive (-r) now processes
2312 hierarchies without changing the working directory at all.
2314 ** Changes in behavior
2316 basename and dirname now treat // as different from / on platforms
2317 where the two are distinct.
2319 chmod, install, and mkdir now preserve a directory's set-user-ID and
2320 set-group-ID bits unless you explicitly request otherwise. E.g.,
2321 'chmod 755 DIR' and 'chmod u=rwx,go=rx DIR' now preserve DIR's
2322 set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits instead of clearing them, and
2323 similarly for 'mkdir -m 755 DIR' and 'mkdir -m u=rwx,go=rx DIR'. To
2324 clear the bits, mention them explicitly in a symbolic mode, e.g.,
2325 'mkdir -m u=rwx,go=rx,-s DIR'. To set them, mention them explicitly
2326 in either a symbolic or a numeric mode, e.g., 'mkdir -m 2755 DIR',
2327 'mkdir -m u=rwx,go=rx,g+s' DIR. This change is for convenience on
2328 systems where these bits inherit from parents. Unfortunately other
2329 operating systems are not consistent here, and portable scripts
2330 cannot assume the bits are set, cleared, or preserved, even when the
2331 bits are explicitly mentioned. For example, OpenBSD 3.9 'mkdir -m
2332 777 D' preserves D's setgid bit but 'chmod 777 D' clears it.
2333 Conversely, Solaris 10 'mkdir -m 777 D', 'mkdir -m g-s D', and
2334 'chmod 0777 D' all preserve D's setgid bit, and you must use
2335 something like 'chmod g-s D' to clear it.
2337 'cp --link --no-dereference' now works also on systems where the
2338 link system call cannot create a hard link to a symbolic link.
2339 This change has no effect on systems with a Linux-based kernel.
2341 csplit and nl now use POSIX syntax for regular expressions, not
2342 Emacs syntax. As a result, character classes like [[:print:]] and
2343 interval expressions like A\{1,9\} now have their usual meaning,
2344 . no longer matches the null character, and \ must precede the + and
2347 date: a command like date -d '2006-04-23 21 days ago' would print
2348 the wrong date in some time zones. (see the test for an example)
2352 df now considers "none" and "proc" file systems to be dummies and
2353 therefore does not normally display them. Also, inaccessible file
2354 systems (which can be caused by shadowed mount points or by
2355 chrooted bind mounts) are now dummies, too.
2357 df now fails if it generates no output, so you can inspect the
2358 exit status of a command like "df -t ext3 -t reiserfs DIR" to test
2359 whether DIR is on a file system of type "ext3" or "reiserfs".
2361 expr no longer complains about leading ^ in a regular expression
2362 (the anchor is ignored), or about regular expressions like A** (the
2363 second "*" is ignored). expr now exits with status 2 (not 3) for
2364 errors it detects in the expression's values; exit status 3 is now
2365 used only for internal errors (such as integer overflow, which expr
2368 install and mkdir now implement the X permission symbol correctly,
2369 e.g., 'mkdir -m a+X dir'; previously the X was ignored.
2371 install now creates parent directories with mode u=rwx,go=rx (755)
2372 instead of using the mode specified by the -m option; and it does
2373 not change the owner or group of parent directories. This is for
2374 compatibility with BSD and closes some race conditions.
2376 ln now uses different (and we hope clearer) diagnostics when it fails.
2377 ln -v now acts more like FreeBSD, so it generates output only when
2378 successful and the output is easier to parse.
2380 ls now defaults to --time-style='locale', not --time-style='posix-long-iso'.
2381 However, the 'locale' time style now behaves like 'posix-long-iso'
2382 if your locale settings appear to be messed up. This change
2383 attempts to have the default be the best of both worlds.
2385 mkfifo and mknod no longer set special mode bits (setuid, setgid,
2386 and sticky) with the -m option.
2388 nohup's usual diagnostic now more precisely specifies the I/O
2389 redirections, e.g., "ignoring input and appending output to
2390 nohup.out". Also, nohup now redirects stderr to nohup.out (or
2391 $HOME/nohup.out) if stdout is closed and stderr is a tty; this is in
2392 response to Open Group XCU ERN 71.
2394 rm --interactive now takes an optional argument, although the
2395 default of using no argument still acts like -i.
2397 rm no longer fails to remove an empty, unreadable directory
2401 seq defaults to a minimal fixed point format that does not lose
2402 information if seq's operands are all fixed point decimal numbers.
2403 You no longer need the '-f%.f' in 'seq -f%.f 1048575 1024 1050623',
2404 for example, since the default format now has the same effect.
2406 seq now lets you use %a, %A, %E, %F, and %G formats.
2408 seq now uses long double internally rather than double.
2410 sort now reports incompatible options (e.g., -i and -n) rather than
2411 silently ignoring one of them.
2413 stat's --format=FMT option now works the way it did before 5.3.0:
2414 FMT is automatically newline terminated. The first stable release
2415 containing this change was 5.92.
2417 stat accepts the new option --printf=FMT, where FMT is *not*
2418 automatically newline terminated.
2420 stat: backslash escapes are interpreted in a format string specified
2421 via --printf=FMT, but not one specified via --format=FMT. That includes
2422 octal (\ooo, at most three octal digits), hexadecimal (\xhh, one or
2423 two hex digits), and the standard sequences (\a, \b, \f, \n, \r, \t,
2426 With no operand, 'tail -f' now silently ignores the '-f' only if
2427 standard input is a FIFO or pipe and POSIXLY_CORRECT is set.
2428 Formerly, it ignored the '-f' when standard input was a FIFO, pipe,
2431 ** Scheduled for removal
2433 ptx's --copyright (-C) option is scheduled for removal in 2007, and
2434 now evokes a warning. Use --version instead.
2436 rm's --directory (-d) option is scheduled for removal in 2006. This
2437 option has been silently ignored since coreutils 5.0. On systems
2438 that support unlinking of directories, you can use the "unlink"
2439 command to unlink a directory.
2441 Similarly, we are considering the removal of ln's --directory (-d,
2442 -F) option in 2006. Please write to <bug-coreutils@gnu.org> if this
2443 would cause a problem for you. On systems that support hard links
2444 to directories, you can use the "link" command to create one.
2448 base64: base64 encoding and decoding (RFC 3548) functionality.
2449 sha224sum: print or check a SHA224 (224-bit) checksum
2450 sha256sum: print or check a SHA256 (256-bit) checksum
2451 sha384sum: print or check a SHA384 (384-bit) checksum
2452 sha512sum: print or check a SHA512 (512-bit) checksum
2453 shuf: Shuffle lines of text.
2457 chgrp now supports --preserve-root, --no-preserve-root (default),
2458 as it was documented to do, and just as chmod, chown, and rm do.
2460 New dd iflag= and oflag= flags:
2462 'directory' causes dd to fail unless the file is a directory, on
2463 hosts that support this (e.g., Linux kernels, version 2.1.126 and
2464 later). This has limited utility but is present for completeness.
2466 'noatime' causes dd to read a file without updating its access
2467 time, on hosts that support this (e.g., Linux kernels, version
2470 'nolinks' causes dd to fail if the file has multiple hard links,
2471 on hosts that support this (e.g., Solaris 10 and later).
2473 ls accepts the new option --group-directories-first, to make it
2474 list directories before files.
2476 rm now accepts the -I (--interactive=once) option. This new option
2477 prompts once if rm is invoked recursively or if more than three
2478 files are being deleted, which is less intrusive than -i prompting
2479 for every file, but provides almost the same level of protection
2482 shred and sort now accept the --random-source option.
2484 sort now accepts the --random-sort (-R) option and 'R' ordering option.
2486 sort now supports obsolete usages like "sort +1 -2" unless
2487 POSIXLY_CORRECT is set. However, when conforming to POSIX
2488 1003.1-2001 "sort +1" still sorts the file named "+1".
2490 wc accepts a new option --files0-from=FILE, where FILE contains a
2491 list of NUL-terminated file names.
2495 cat with any of the options, -A -v -e -E -T, when applied to a
2496 file in /proc or /sys (linux-specific), would truncate its output,
2497 usually printing nothing.
2499 cp -p would fail in a /proc-less chroot, on some systems
2501 When 'cp -RL' encounters the same directory more than once in the
2502 hierarchy beneath a single command-line argument, it no longer confuses
2503 them with hard-linked directories.
2505 fts-using tools (chmod, chown, chgrp, du) no longer fail due to
2506 a double-free bug -- it could be triggered by making a directory
2507 inaccessible while e.g., du is traversing the hierarchy under it.
2509 fts-using tools (chmod, chown, chgrp, du) no longer misinterpret
2510 a very long symlink chain as a dangling symlink. Before, such a
2511 misinterpretation would cause these tools not to diagnose an ELOOP error.
2513 ls --indicator-style=file-type would sometimes stat a symlink
2516 ls --file-type worked like --indicator-style=slash (-p),
2517 rather than like --indicator-style=file-type.
2519 mv: moving a symlink into the place of an existing non-directory is
2520 now done atomically; before, mv would first unlink the destination.
2522 mv -T DIR EMPTY_DIR no longer fails unconditionally. Also, mv can
2523 now remove an empty destination directory: mkdir -p a b/a; mv a b
2525 rm (on systems with openat) can no longer exit before processing
2526 all command-line arguments.
2528 rm is no longer susceptible to a few low-probability memory leaks.
2530 rm -r no longer fails to remove an inaccessible and empty directory
2532 rm -r's cycle detection code can no longer be tricked into reporting
2533 a false positive (introduced in fileutils-4.1.9).
2535 shred --remove FILE no longer segfaults on Gentoo systems
2537 sort would fail for large inputs (~50MB) on systems with a buggy
2538 mkstemp function. sort and tac now use the replacement mkstemp
2539 function, and hence are no longer subject to limitations (of 26 or 32,
2540 on the maximum number of files from a given template) on HP-UX 10.20,
2541 SunOS 4.1.4, Solaris 2.5.1 and OSF1/Tru64 V4.0F&V5.1.
2543 tail -f once again works on a file with the append-only
2544 attribute (affects at least Linux ext2, ext3, xfs file systems)
2546 * Major changes in release 5.97 (2006-06-24) [stable]
2547 * Major changes in release 5.96 (2006-05-22) [stable]
2548 * Major changes in release 5.95 (2006-05-12) [stable]
2549 * Major changes in release 5.94 (2006-02-13) [stable]
2551 [see the b5_9x branch for details]
2553 * Major changes in release 5.93 (2005-11-06) [stable]
2557 dircolors no longer segfaults upon an attempt to use the new
2558 STICKY_OTHER_WRITABLE (OWT) attribute.
2560 du no longer overflows a counter when processing a file larger than
2561 2^31-1 on some 32-bit systems (at least some AIX 5.1 configurations).
2563 md5sum once again defaults to using the ' ' non-binary marker
2564 (rather than the '*' binary marker) by default on Unix-like systems.
2566 mkdir -p and install -d no longer exit nonzero when asked to create
2567 a directory like 'nonexistent/.'
2569 rm emits a better diagnostic when (without -r) it fails to remove
2570 a directory on e.g., Solaris 9/10 systems.
2572 tac now works when stdin is a tty, even on non-Linux systems.
2574 "tail -c 2 FILE" and "touch 0101000000" now operate as POSIX
2575 1003.1-2001 requires, even when coreutils is conforming to older
2576 POSIX standards, as the newly-required behavior is upward-compatible
2579 The documentation no longer mentions rm's --directory (-d) option.
2581 ** Build-related bug fixes
2583 installing .mo files would fail
2586 * Major changes in release 5.92 (2005-10-22) [stable]
2590 chmod now diagnoses an invalid mode string starting with an octal digit
2592 dircolors now properly quotes single-quote characters
2595 * Major changes in release 5.91 (2005-10-17) [stable candidate]
2599 "mkdir -p /a/b/c" no longer fails merely because a leading prefix
2600 directory (e.g., /a or /a/b) exists on a read-only file system.
2604 tail's --allow-missing option has been removed. Use --retry instead.
2606 stat's --link and -l options have been removed.
2607 Use --dereference (-L) instead.
2609 ** Deprecated options
2611 Using ls, du, or df with the --kilobytes option now evokes a warning
2612 that the long-named option is deprecated. Use '-k' instead.
2614 du's long-named --megabytes option now evokes a warning.
2618 * Major changes in release 5.90 (2005-09-29) [unstable]
2620 ** Bring back support for 'head -NUM', 'tail -NUM', etc. even when
2621 conforming to POSIX 1003.1-2001. The following changes apply only
2622 when conforming to POSIX 1003.1-2001; there is no effect when
2623 conforming to older POSIX versions.
2625 The following usages now behave just as when conforming to older POSIX:
2628 expand -TAB1[,TAB2,...]
2634 join -o FIELD_NAME1 FIELD_NAME2...
2639 tail -[NUM][bcl][f] [FILE]
2641 The following usages no longer work, due to the above changes:
2643 date -I TIMESPEC (use 'date -ITIMESPEC' instead)
2644 od -w WIDTH (use 'od -wWIDTH' instead)
2645 pr -S STRING (use 'pr -SSTRING' instead)
2647 A few usages still have behavior that depends on which POSIX standard is
2648 being conformed to, and portable applications should beware these
2649 problematic usages. These include:
2651 Problematic Standard-conforming replacement, depending on
2652 usage whether you prefer the behavior of:
2653 POSIX 1003.2-1992 POSIX 1003.1-2001
2654 sort +4 sort -k 5 sort ./+4
2655 tail +4 tail -n +4 tail ./+4
2656 tail - f tail f [see (*) below]
2657 tail -c 4 tail -c 10 ./4 tail -c4
2658 touch 12312359 f touch -t 12312359 f touch ./12312359 f
2659 uniq +4 uniq -s 4 uniq ./+4
2661 (*) "tail - f" does not conform to POSIX 1003.1-2001; to read
2662 standard input and then "f", use the command "tail -- - f".
2664 These changes are in response to decisions taken in the January 2005
2665 Austin Group standardization meeting. For more details, please see
2666 "Utility Syntax Guidelines" in the Minutes of the January 2005
2667 Meeting <http://www.opengroup.org/austin/docs/austin_239.html>.
2669 ** Binary input and output are now implemented more consistently.
2670 These changes affect only platforms like MS-DOS that distinguish
2671 between binary and text files.
2673 The following programs now always use text input/output:
2677 The following programs now always use binary input/output to copy data:
2681 The following programs now always use binary input/output to copy
2682 data, except for stdin and stdout when it is a terminal.
2684 head tac tail tee tr
2685 (cat behaves similarly, unless one of the options -bensAE is used.)
2687 cat's --binary or -B option has been removed. It existed only on
2688 MS-DOS-like platforms, and didn't work as documented there.
2690 md5sum and sha1sum now obey the -b or --binary option, even if
2691 standard input is a terminal, and they no longer report files to be
2692 binary if they actually read them in text mode.
2694 ** Changes for better conformance to POSIX
2696 cp, ln, mv, rm changes:
2698 Leading white space is now significant in responses to yes-or-no questions.
2699 For example, if "rm" asks "remove regular file `foo'?" and you respond
2700 with " y" (i.e., space before "y"), it counts as "no".
2704 On a QUIT or PIPE signal, dd now exits without printing statistics.
2706 On hosts lacking the INFO signal, dd no longer treats the USR1
2707 signal as if it were INFO when POSIXLY_CORRECT is set.
2709 If the file F is non-seekable and contains fewer than N blocks,
2710 then before copying "dd seek=N of=F" now extends F with zeroed
2711 blocks until F contains N blocks.
2715 When POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, "fold file -3" is now equivalent to
2716 "fold file ./-3", not the obviously-erroneous "fold file ./-w3".
2720 -p now marks only directories; it is equivalent to the new option
2721 --indicator-style=slash. Use --file-type or
2722 --indicator-style=file-type to get -p's old behavior.
2726 Documentation and diagnostics now refer to "nicenesses" (commonly
2727 in the range -20...19) rather than "nice values" (commonly 0...39).
2731 nohup now ignores the umask when creating nohup.out.
2733 nohup now closes stderr if it is a terminal and stdout is closed.
2735 nohup now exits with status 127 (not 1) when given an invalid option.
2739 It now rejects the empty name in the normal case. That is,
2740 "pathchk -p ''" now fails, and "pathchk ''" fails unless the
2741 current host (contra POSIX) allows empty file names.
2743 The new -P option checks whether a file name component has leading "-",
2744 as suggested in interpretation "Austin-039:XCU:pathchk:pathchk -p"
2745 <http://www.opengroup.org/austin/interps/doc.tpl?gdid=6232>.
2746 It also rejects the empty name even if the current host accepts it; see
2747 <http://www.opengroup.org/austin/interps/doc.tpl?gdid=6233>.
2749 The --portability option is now equivalent to -p -P.
2753 chmod, mkdir, mkfifo, and mknod formerly mishandled rarely-used symbolic
2754 permissions like =xX and =u, and did not properly diagnose some invalid
2755 strings like g+gr, ug,+x, and +1. These bugs have been fixed.
2757 csplit could produce corrupt output, given input lines longer than 8KB
2759 dd now computes statistics using a realtime clock (if available)
2760 rather than the time-of-day clock, to avoid glitches if the
2761 time-of-day is changed while dd is running. Also, it avoids
2762 using unsafe code in signal handlers; this fixes some core dumps.
2764 expr and test now correctly compare integers of unlimited magnitude.
2766 expr now detects integer overflow when converting strings to integers,
2767 rather than silently wrapping around.
2769 ls now refuses to generate time stamps containing more than 1000 bytes, to
2770 foil potential denial-of-service attacks on hosts with very large stacks.
2772 "mkdir -m =+x dir" no longer ignores the umask when evaluating "+x",
2773 and similarly for mkfifo and mknod.
2775 "mkdir -p /tmp/a/b dir" no longer attempts to create the '.'-relative
2776 directory, dir (in /tmp/a), when, after creating /tmp/a/b, it is unable
2777 to return to its initial working directory. Similarly for "install -D
2778 file /tmp/a/b/file".
2780 "pr -D FORMAT" now accepts the same formats that "date +FORMAT" does.
2782 stat now exits nonzero if a file operand does not exist
2784 ** Improved robustness
2786 Date no longer needs to allocate virtual memory to do its job,
2787 so it can no longer fail due to an out-of-memory condition,
2788 no matter how large the result.
2790 ** Improved portability
2792 hostid now prints exactly 8 hexadecimal digits, possibly with leading zeros,
2793 and without any spurious leading "fff..." on 64-bit hosts.
2795 nice now works on Darwin 7.7.0 in spite of its invalid definition of NZERO.
2797 'rm -r' can remove all entries in a directory even when it is on a
2798 file system for which readdir is buggy and that was not checked by
2799 coreutils' old configure-time run-test.
2801 sleep no longer fails when resumed after being suspended on linux-2.6.8.1,
2802 in spite of that kernel's buggy nanosleep implementation.
2806 chmod -w now complains if its behavior differs from what chmod a-w
2807 would do, and similarly for chmod -r, chmod -x, etc.
2809 cp and mv: the --reply=X option is deprecated
2811 date accepts the new option --rfc-3339=TIMESPEC. The old --iso-8601 (-I)
2812 option is deprecated; it still works, but new applications should avoid it.
2813 date, du, ls, and pr's time formats now support new %:z, %::z, %:::z
2814 specifiers for numeric time zone offsets like -07:00, -07:00:00, and -07.
2816 dd has new iflag= and oflag= flags "binary" and "text", which have an
2817 effect only on nonstandard platforms that distinguish text from binary I/O.
2819 dircolors now supports SETUID, SETGID, STICKY_OTHER_WRITABLE,
2820 OTHER_WRITABLE, and STICKY, with ls providing default colors for these
2821 categories if not specified by dircolors.
2823 du accepts new options: --time[=TYPE] and --time-style=STYLE
2825 join now supports a NUL field separator, e.g., "join -t '\0'".
2826 join now detects and reports incompatible options, e.g., "join -t x -t y",
2828 ls no longer outputs an extra space between the mode and the link count
2829 when none of the listed files has an ACL.
2831 md5sum --check now accepts multiple input files, and similarly for sha1sum.
2833 If stdin is a terminal, nohup now redirects it from /dev/null to
2834 prevent the command from tying up an OpenSSH session after you logout.
2836 "rm -FOO" now suggests "rm ./-FOO" if the file "-FOO" exists and
2837 "-FOO" is not a valid option.
2839 stat -f -c %S outputs the fundamental block size (used for block counts).
2840 stat -f's default output format has been changed to output this size as well.
2841 stat -f recognizes file systems of type XFS and JFS
2843 "touch -" now touches standard output, not a file named "-".
2845 uname -a no longer generates the -p and -i outputs if they are unknown.
2847 * Major changes in release 5.3.0 (2005-01-08) [unstable]
2851 Several fixes to chgrp and chown for compatibility with POSIX and BSD:
2853 Do not affect symbolic links by default.
2854 Now, operate on whatever a symbolic link points to, instead.
2855 To get the old behavior, use --no-dereference (-h).
2857 --dereference now works, even when the specified owner
2858 and/or group match those of an affected symlink.
2860 Check for incompatible options. When -R and --dereference are
2861 both used, then either -H or -L must also be used. When -R and -h
2862 are both used, then -P must be in effect.
2864 -H, -L, and -P have no effect unless -R is also specified.
2865 If -P and -R are both specified, -h is assumed.
2867 Do not optimize away the chown() system call when the file's owner
2868 and group already have the desired value. This optimization was
2869 incorrect, as it failed to update the last-changed time and reset
2870 special permission bits, as POSIX requires.
2872 "chown : file", "chown '' file", and "chgrp '' file" now succeed
2873 without changing the uid or gid, instead of reporting an error.
2875 Do not report an error if the owner or group of a
2876 recursively-encountered symbolic link cannot be updated because
2877 the file system does not support it.
2879 chmod now accepts multiple mode-like options, e.g., "chmod -r -w f".
2881 chown is no longer subject to a race condition vulnerability, when
2882 used with --from=O:G and without the (-h) --no-dereference option.
2884 cut's --output-delimiter=D option works with abutting byte ranges.
2886 dircolors's documentation now recommends that shell scripts eval
2887 "`dircolors`" rather than `dircolors`, to avoid shell expansion pitfalls.
2889 du no longer segfaults when a subdirectory of an operand
2890 directory is removed while du is traversing that subdirectory.
2891 Since the bug was in the underlying fts.c module, it also affected
2892 chown, chmod, and chgrp.
2894 du's --exclude-from=FILE and --exclude=P options now compare patterns
2895 against the entire name of each file, rather than against just the
2898 echo now conforms to POSIX better. It supports the \0ooo syntax for
2899 octal escapes, and \c now terminates printing immediately. If
2900 POSIXLY_CORRECT is set and the first argument is not "-n", echo now
2901 outputs all option-like arguments instead of treating them as options.
2903 expand and unexpand now conform to POSIX better. They check for
2904 blanks (which can include characters other than space and tab in
2905 non-POSIX locales) instead of spaces and tabs. Unexpand now
2906 preserves some blanks instead of converting them to tabs or spaces.
2908 "ln x d/" now reports an error if d/x is a directory and x a file,
2909 instead of incorrectly creating a link to d/x/x.
2911 ls no longer segfaults on systems for which SIZE_MAX != (size_t) -1.
2913 md5sum and sha1sum now report an error when given so many input
2914 lines that their line counter overflows, instead of silently
2915 reporting incorrect results.
2919 If it fails to lower the niceness due to lack of permissions,
2920 it goes ahead and runs the command anyway, as POSIX requires.
2922 It no longer incorrectly reports an error if the current niceness
2925 It no longer assumes that nicenesses range from -20 through 19.
2927 It now consistently adjusts out-of-range nicenesses to the
2928 closest values in range; formerly it sometimes reported an error.
2930 pathchk no longer accepts trailing options, e.g., "pathchk -p foo -b"
2931 now treats -b as a file name to check, not as an invalid option.
2933 'pr --columns=N' was not equivalent to 'pr -N' when also using
2936 pr now supports page numbers up to 2**64 on most hosts, and it
2937 detects page number overflow instead of silently wrapping around.
2938 pr now accepts file names that begin with "+" so long as the rest of
2939 the file name does not look like a page range.
2941 printf has several changes:
2943 It now uses 'intmax_t' (not 'long int') to format integers, so it
2944 can now format 64-bit integers on most modern hosts.
2946 On modern hosts it now supports the C99-inspired %a, %A, %F conversion
2947 specs, the "'" and "0" flags, and the ll, j, t, and z length modifiers
2948 (this is compatible with recent Bash versions).
2950 The printf command now rejects invalid conversion specifications
2951 like %#d, instead of relying on undefined behavior in the underlying
2954 ptx now diagnoses invalid values for its --width=N (-w)
2955 and --gap-size=N (-g) options.
2957 mv (when moving between partitions) no longer fails when
2958 operating on too many command-line-specified nonempty directories.
2960 "readlink -f" is more compatible with prior implementations
2962 rm (without -f) no longer hangs when attempting to remove a symlink
2963 to a file on an off-line NFS-mounted partition.
2965 rm no longer gets a failed assertion under some unusual conditions.
2967 rm no longer requires read access to the current directory.
2969 "rm -r" would mistakenly fail to remove files under a directory
2970 for some types of errors (e.g., read-only file system, I/O error)
2971 when first encountering the directory.
2975 "sort -o -" now writes to a file named "-" instead of to standard
2976 output; POSIX requires this.
2978 An unlikely race condition has been fixed where "sort" could have
2979 mistakenly removed a temporary file belonging to some other process.
2981 "sort" no longer has O(N**2) behavior when it creates many temporary files.
2983 tac can now handle regular, nonseekable files like Linux's
2984 /proc/modules. Before, it would produce no output for such a file.
2986 tac would exit immediately upon I/O or temp-file creation failure.
2987 Now it continues on, processing any remaining command line arguments.
2989 "tail -f" no longer mishandles pipes and fifos. With no operands,
2990 tail now ignores -f if standard input is a pipe, as POSIX requires.
2991 When conforming to POSIX 1003.2-1992, tail now supports the SUSv2 b
2992 modifier (e.g., "tail -10b file") and it handles some obscure cases
2993 more correctly, e.g., "tail +cl" now reads the file "+cl" rather
2994 than reporting an error, "tail -c file" no longer reports an error,
2995 and "tail - file" no longer reads standard input.
2997 tee now exits when it gets a SIGPIPE signal, as POSIX requires.
2998 To get tee's old behavior, use the shell command "(trap '' PIPE; tee)".
2999 Also, "tee -" now writes to standard output instead of to a file named "-".
3001 "touch -- MMDDhhmm[yy] file" is now equivalent to
3002 "touch MMDDhhmm[yy] file" even when conforming to pre-2001 POSIX.
3004 tr no longer mishandles a second operand with leading "-".
3006 who now prints user names in full instead of truncating them after 8 bytes.
3008 The following commands now reject unknown options instead of
3009 accepting them as operands, so that users are properly warned that
3010 options may be added later. Formerly they accepted unknown options
3011 as operands; e.g., "basename -a a" acted like "basename -- -a a".
3013 basename dirname factor hostname link nohup sync unlink yes
3017 For efficiency, 'sort -m' no longer copies input to a temporary file
3018 merely because the input happens to come from a pipe. As a result,
3019 some relatively-contrived examples like 'cat F | sort -m -o F - G'
3020 are no longer safe, as 'sort' might start writing F before 'cat' is
3021 done reading it. This problem cannot occur unless '-m' is used.
3023 When outside the default POSIX locale, the 'who' and 'pinky'
3024 commands now output time stamps like "2004-06-21 13:09" instead of
3025 the traditional "Jun 21 13:09".
3027 pwd now works even when run from a working directory whose name
3028 is longer than PATH_MAX.
3030 cp, install, ln, and mv have a new --no-target-directory (-T) option,
3031 and -t is now a short name for their --target-directory option.
3033 cp -pu and mv -u (when copying) now don't bother to update the
3034 destination if the resulting time stamp would be no newer than the
3035 preexisting time stamp. This saves work in the common case when
3036 copying or moving multiple times to the same destination in a file
3037 system with a coarse time stamp resolution.
3039 cut accepts a new option, --complement, to complement the set of
3040 selected bytes, characters, or fields.
3042 dd now also prints the number of bytes transferred, the time, and the
3043 transfer rate. The new "status=noxfer" operand suppresses this change.
3045 dd has new conversions for the conv= option:
3047 nocreat do not create the output file
3048 excl fail if the output file already exists
3049 fdatasync physically write output file data before finishing
3050 fsync likewise, but also write metadata
3052 dd has new iflag= and oflag= options with the following flags:
3054 append append mode (makes sense for output file only)
3055 direct use direct I/O for data
3056 dsync use synchronized I/O for data
3057 sync likewise, but also for metadata
3058 nonblock use non-blocking I/O
3059 nofollow do not follow symlinks
3060 noctty do not assign controlling terminal from file
3062 stty now provides support (iutf8) for setting UTF-8 input mode.
3064 With stat, a specified format is no longer automatically newline terminated.
3065 If you want a newline at the end of your output, append '\n' to the format
3068 'df', 'du', and 'ls' now take the default block size from the
3069 BLOCKSIZE environment variable if the BLOCK_SIZE, DF_BLOCK_SIZE,
3070 DU_BLOCK_SIZE, and LS_BLOCK_SIZE environment variables are not set.
3071 Unlike the other variables, though, BLOCKSIZE does not affect
3072 values like 'ls -l' sizes that are normally displayed as bytes.
3073 This new behavior is for compatibility with BSD.
3075 du accepts a new option --files0-from=FILE, where FILE contains a
3076 list of NUL-terminated file names.
3078 Date syntax as used by date -d, date -f, and touch -d has been
3081 Dates like 'January 32' with out-of-range components are now rejected.
3083 Dates can have fractional time stamps like 2004-02-27 14:19:13.489392193.
3085 Dates can be entered via integer counts of seconds since 1970 when
3086 prefixed by '@'. For example, '@321' represents 1970-01-01 00:05:21 UTC.
3088 Time zone corrections can now separate hours and minutes with a colon,
3089 and can follow standard abbreviations like "UTC". For example,
3090 "UTC +0530" and "+05:30" are supported, and are both equivalent to "+0530".
3092 Date values can now have leading TZ="..." assignments that override
3093 the environment only while that date is being processed. For example,
3094 the following shell command converts from Paris to New York time:
3096 TZ="America/New_York" date --date='TZ="Europe/Paris" 2004-10-31 06:30'
3098 'date' has a new option --iso-8601=ns that outputs
3099 nanosecond-resolution time stamps.
3101 echo -e '\xHH' now outputs a byte whose hexadecimal value is HH,
3102 for compatibility with bash.
3104 ls now exits with status 1 on minor problems, 2 if serious trouble.
3106 ls has a new --hide=PATTERN option that behaves like
3107 --ignore=PATTERN, except that it is overridden by -a or -A.
3108 This can be useful for aliases, e.g., if lh is an alias for
3109 "ls --hide='*~'", then "lh -A" lists the file "README~".
3111 In the following cases POSIX allows the default GNU behavior,
3112 so when POSIXLY_CORRECT is set:
3114 false, printf, true, unlink, and yes all support --help and --option.
3115 ls supports TABSIZE.
3116 pr no longer depends on LC_TIME for the date format in non-POSIX locales.
3117 printf supports \u, \U, \x.
3118 tail supports two or more files when using the obsolete option syntax.
3120 The usual '--' operand is now supported by chroot, hostid, hostname,
3123 'od' now conforms to POSIX better, and is more compatible with BSD:
3125 The older syntax "od [-abcdfilosx]... [FILE] [[+]OFFSET[.][b]]" now works
3126 even without --traditional. This is a change in behavior if there
3127 are one or two operands and the last one begins with +, or if
3128 there are two operands and the latter one begins with a digit.
3129 For example, "od foo 10" and "od +10" now treat the last operand as
3130 an offset, not as a file name.
3132 -h is no longer documented, and may be withdrawn in future versions.
3133 Use -x or -t x2 instead.
3135 -i is now equivalent to -t dI (not -t d2), and
3136 -l is now equivalent to -t dL (not -t d4).
3138 -s is now equivalent to -t d2. The old "-s[NUM]" or "-s NUM"
3139 option has been renamed to "-S NUM".
3141 The default output format is now -t oS, not -t o2, i.e., short int
3142 rather than two-byte int. This makes a difference only on hosts like
3143 Cray systems where the C short int type requires more than two bytes.
3145 readlink accepts new options: --canonicalize-existing (-e)
3146 and --canonicalize-missing (-m).
3148 The stat option --filesystem has been renamed to --file-system, for
3149 consistency with POSIX "file system" and with cp and du --one-file-system.
3153 md5sum and sha1sum's undocumented --string option has been removed.
3155 tail's undocumented --max-consecutive-size-changes option has been removed.
3157 * Major changes in release 5.2.1 (2004-03-12) [stable]
3161 mv could mistakenly fail to preserve hard links when moving two
3162 or more arguments between partitions.
3164 'cp --sparse=always F /dev/hdx' no longer tries to use lseek to create
3165 holes in the destination.
3167 nohup now sets the close-on-exec flag for its copy of the stderr file
3168 descriptor. This avoids some nohup-induced hangs. For example, before
3169 this change, if you ran 'ssh localhost', then 'nohup sleep 600 </dev/null &',
3170 and then exited that remote shell, the ssh session would hang until the
3171 10-minute sleep terminated. With the fixed nohup, the ssh session
3172 terminates immediately.
3174 'expr' now conforms to POSIX better:
3176 Integers like -0 and 00 are now treated as zero.
3178 The '|' operator now returns 0, not its first argument, if both
3179 arguments are null or zero. E.g., 'expr "" \| ""' now returns 0,
3180 not the empty string.
3182 The '|' and '&' operators now use short-circuit evaluation, e.g.,
3183 'expr 1 \| 1 / 0' no longer reports a division by zero.
3187 'chown user.group file' now has its traditional meaning even when
3188 conforming to POSIX 1003.1-2001, so long as no user has a name
3189 containing '.' that happens to equal 'user.group'.
3192 * Major changes in release 5.2.0 (2004-02-19) [stable]
3199 * Major changes in release 5.1.3 (2004-02-08): candidate to become stable 5.2.0
3203 'cp -d' now works as required even on systems like OSF V5.1 that
3204 declare stat and lstat as 'static inline' functions.
3206 time stamps output by stat now include actual fractional seconds,
3207 when available -- or .0000000 for files without that information.
3209 seq no longer infloops when printing 2^31 or more numbers.
3210 For reference, seq `echo 2^31|bc` > /dev/null takes about one hour
3211 on a 1.6 GHz Athlon 2000 XP. Now it can output 2^53-1 numbers before
3214 * Major changes in release 5.1.2 (2004-01-25):
3218 rmdir -p exits with status 1 on error; formerly it sometimes exited
3219 with status 0 when given more than one argument.
3221 nohup now always exits with status 127 when it finds an error,
3222 as POSIX requires; formerly it sometimes exited with status 1.
3224 Several programs (including cut, date, dd, env, hostname, nl, pr,
3225 stty, and tr) now always exit with status 1 when they find an error;
3226 formerly they sometimes exited with status 2.
3228 factor no longer reports a usage error if stdin has the wrong format.
3230 paste no longer infloops on ppc systems (bug introduced in 5.1.1)
3233 * Major changes in release 5.1.1 (2004-01-17):
3235 ** Configuration option
3237 You can select the default level of POSIX conformance at configure-time,
3238 e.g., by ./configure DEFAULT_POSIX2_VERSION=199209
3242 fold -s works once again on systems with differing sizes for int
3243 and size_t (bug introduced in 5.1.0)
3247 touch -r now specifies the origin for any relative times in the -d
3248 operand, if both options are given. For example, "touch -r FOO -d
3249 '-5 seconds' BAR" sets BAR's modification time to be five seconds
3252 join: The obsolete options "-j1 FIELD", "-j2 FIELD", and
3253 "-o LIST1 LIST2..." are no longer supported on POSIX 1003.1-2001 systems.
3254 Portable scripts should use "-1 FIELD", "-2 FIELD", and
3255 "-o LIST1,LIST2..." respectively. If join was compiled on a
3256 POSIX 1003.1-2001 system, you may enable the old behavior
3257 by setting _POSIX2_VERSION=199209 in your environment.
3258 [This change was reverted in coreutils 5.3.1.]
3261 * Major changes in release 5.1.0 (2003-12-21):
3265 chgrp, chmod, and chown can now process (with -R) hierarchies of virtually
3266 unlimited depth. Before, they would fail to operate on any file they
3267 encountered with a relative name of length PATH_MAX (often 4096) or longer.
3269 chgrp, chmod, chown, and rm accept the new options:
3270 --preserve-root, --no-preserve-root (default)
3272 chgrp and chown now accept POSIX-mandated -L, -H, and -P options
3274 du can now process hierarchies of virtually unlimited depth.
3275 Before, du was limited by the user's stack size and it would get a
3276 stack overflow error (often a segmentation fault) when applied to
3277 a hierarchy of depth around 30,000 or larger.
3279 du works even when run from an inaccessible directory
3281 du -D now dereferences all symlinks specified on the command line,
3282 not just the ones that reference directories
3284 du now accepts -P (--no-dereference), for compatibility with du
3285 of NetBSD and for consistency with e.g., chown and chgrp
3287 du's -H option will soon have the meaning required by POSIX
3288 (--dereference-args, aka -D) rather then the current meaning of --si.
3289 Now, using -H elicits a warning to that effect.
3291 When given -l and similar options, ls now adjusts the output column
3292 widths to fit the data, so that output lines are shorter and have
3293 columns that line up better. This may adversely affect shell
3294 scripts that expect fixed-width columns, but such shell scripts were
3295 not portable anyway, even with old GNU ls where the columns became
3296 ragged when a datum was too wide.
3298 du accepts a new option, -0/--null, to make it produce NUL-terminated
3303 printf, seq, tail, and sleep now parse floating-point operands
3304 and options in the C locale. POSIX requires this for printf.
3306 od -c -w9999999 no longer segfaults
3308 csplit no longer reads from freed memory (dumping core on some systems)
3310 csplit would mistakenly exhaust virtual memory in some cases
3312 ls --width=N (for very large N) is no longer subject to an address
3313 arithmetic bug that could result in bounds violations.
3315 ls --width=N (with -x or -C) no longer allocates more space
3316 (potentially much more) than necessary for a given directory.
3318 dd 'unblock' and 'sync' may now be combined (e.g., dd conv=unblock,sync)
3320 * Major changes in release 5.0.91 (2003-09-08):
3324 date accepts a new option --rfc-2822, an alias for --rfc-822.
3326 split accepts a new option -d or --numeric-suffixes.
3328 cp, install, mv, and touch now preserve microsecond resolution on
3329 file timestamps, on platforms that have the 'utimes' system call.
3330 Unfortunately there is no system call yet to preserve file
3331 timestamps to their full nanosecond resolution; microsecond
3332 resolution is the best we can do right now.
3334 sort now supports the zero byte (NUL) as a field separator; use -t '\0'.
3335 The -t '' option, which formerly had no effect, is now an error.
3337 sort option order no longer matters for the options -S, -d, -i, -o, and -t.
3338 Stronger options override weaker, and incompatible options are diagnosed.
3340 'sha1sum --check' now accepts the BSD format for SHA1 message digests
3341 in addition to the BSD format for MD5 ones.
3343 who -l now means 'who --login', not 'who --lookup', per POSIX.
3344 who's -l option has been eliciting an unconditional warning about
3345 this impending change since sh-utils-2.0.12 (April 2002).
3349 Mistakenly renaming a file onto itself, e.g., via 'mv B b' when 'B' is
3350 the same directory entry as 'b' no longer destroys the directory entry
3351 referenced by both 'b' and 'B'. Note that this would happen only on
3352 file systems like VFAT where two different names may refer to the same
3353 directory entry, usually due to lower->upper case mapping of file names.
3354 Now, the above can happen only on file systems that perform name mapping and
3355 that support hard links (stat.st_nlink > 1). This mitigates the problem
3356 in two ways: few file systems appear to be affected (hpfs and ntfs are),
3357 when the bug is triggered, mv no longer removes the last hard link to a file.
3358 *** ATTENTION ***: if you know how to distinguish the following two cases
3359 without writing to the file system in question, please let me know:
3360 1) B and b refer to the same directory entry on a file system like NTFS
3361 (B may well have a link count larger than 1)
3362 2) B and b are hard links to the same file
3364 stat no longer overruns a buffer for format strings ending in '%'
3366 fold -s -wN would infloop for N < 8 with TABs in the input.
3367 E.g., this would not terminate: printf 'a\t' | fold -w2 -s
3369 'split -a0', although of questionable utility, is accepted once again.
3371 'df DIR' used to hang under some conditions on OSF/1 5.1. Now it doesn't.
3373 seq's --width (-w) option now works properly even when the endpoint
3374 requiring the larger width is negative and smaller than the other endpoint.
3376 seq's default step is 1, even if LAST < FIRST.
3378 paste no longer mistakenly outputs 0xFF bytes for a nonempty input file
3379 without a trailing newline.
3381 'tail -n0 -f FILE' and 'tail -c0 -f FILE' no longer perform what amounted
3382 to a busy wait, rather than sleeping between iterations.
3384 tail's long-undocumented --allow-missing option now elicits a warning
3387 * Major changes in release 5.0.90 (2003-07-29):
3391 sort is now up to 30% more CPU-efficient in some cases
3393 'test' is now more compatible with Bash and POSIX:
3395 'test -t', 'test --help', and 'test --version' now silently exit
3396 with status 0. To test whether standard output is a terminal, use
3397 'test -t 1'. To get help and version info for 'test', use
3398 '[ --help' and '[ --version'.
3400 'test' now exits with status 2 (not 1) if there is an error.
3402 wc count field widths now are heuristically adjusted depending on the input
3403 size, if known. If only one count is printed, it is guaranteed to
3404 be printed without leading spaces.
3406 Previously, wc did not align the count fields if POSIXLY_CORRECT was set,
3407 but POSIX did not actually require this undesirable behavior, so it
3412 kill no longer tries to operate on argv[0] (introduced in 5.0.1)
3413 Why wasn't this noticed? Although many tests use kill, none of
3414 them made an effort to avoid using the shell's built-in kill.
3416 '[' invoked with no arguments no longer evokes a segfault
3418 rm without --recursive (aka -r or -R) no longer prompts regarding
3419 unwritable directories, as required by POSIX.
3421 uniq -c now uses a SPACE, not a TAB between the count and the
3422 corresponding line, as required by POSIX.
3424 expr now exits with status 2 if the expression is syntactically valid,
3425 and with status 3 if an error occurred. POSIX requires this.
3427 expr now reports trouble if string comparison fails due to a collation error.
3429 split now generates suffixes properly on EBCDIC hosts.
3431 split -a0 now works, as POSIX requires.
3433 'sort --version' and 'sort --help' fail, as they should
3434 when their output is redirected to /dev/full.
3436 'su --version > /dev/full' now fails, as it should.
3438 ** Fewer arbitrary limitations
3440 cut requires 97% less memory when very large field numbers or
3441 byte offsets are specified.
3444 * Major changes in release 5.0.1 (2003-07-15):
3447 - new program: '[' (much like 'test')
3450 - head now accepts --lines=-N (--bytes=-N) to print all but the
3451 N lines (bytes) at the end of the file
3452 - md5sum --check now accepts the output of the BSD md5sum program, e.g.,
3453 MD5 (f) = d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e
3454 - date -d DATE can now parse a DATE string like May-23-2003
3455 - chown: '.' is no longer recognized as a separator in the OWNER:GROUP
3456 specifier on POSIX 1003.1-2001 systems. If chown *was not* compiled
3457 on such a system, then it still accepts '.', by default. If chown
3458 was compiled on a POSIX 1003.1-2001 system, then you may enable the
3459 old behavior by setting _POSIX2_VERSION=199209 in your environment.
3460 - chown no longer tries to preserve set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits;
3461 on some systems, the chown syscall resets those bits, and previous
3462 versions of the chown command would call chmod to restore the original,
3463 pre-chown(2) settings, but that behavior is problematic.
3464 1) There was a window whereby a malicious user, M, could subvert a
3465 chown command run by some other user and operating on files in a
3466 directory where M has write access.
3467 2) Before (and even now, on systems with chown(2) that doesn't reset
3468 those bits), an unwary admin. could use chown unwittingly to create e.g.,
3469 a set-user-ID root copy of /bin/sh.
3472 - chown --dereference no longer leaks a file descriptor per symlink processed
3473 - 'du /' once again prints the '/' on the last line
3474 - split's --verbose option works once again [broken in 4.5.10 and 5.0]
3475 - tail -f is no longer subject to a race condition that could make it
3476 delay displaying the last part of a file that had stopped growing. That
3477 bug could also make tail -f give an unwarranted 'file truncated' warning.
3478 - du no longer runs out of file descriptors unnecessarily
3479 - df and 'readlink --canonicalize' no longer corrupt the heap on
3480 non-glibc, non-solaris systems
3481 - 'env -u UNSET_VARIABLE' no longer dumps core on non-glibc systems
3482 - readlink's --canonicalize option now works on systems like Solaris that
3483 lack the canonicalize_file_name function but do have resolvepath.
3484 - mv now removes 'a' in this example on all systems: touch a; ln a b; mv a b
3485 This behavior is contrary to POSIX (which requires that the mv command do
3486 nothing and exit successfully), but I suspect POSIX will change.
3487 - date's %r format directive now honors locale settings
3488 - date's '-' (no-pad) format flag now affects the space-padded-by-default
3489 conversion specifiers, %e, %k, %l
3490 - fmt now diagnoses invalid obsolescent width specifications like '-72x'
3491 - fmt now exits nonzero when unable to open an input file
3492 - tsort now fails when given an odd number of input tokens,
3493 as required by POSIX. Before, it would act as if the final token
3494 appeared one additional time.
3496 ** Fewer arbitrary limitations
3497 - tail's byte and line counts are no longer limited to OFF_T_MAX.
3498 Now the limit is UINTMAX_MAX (usually 2^64).
3499 - split can now handle --bytes=N and --lines=N with N=2^31 or more.
3502 - 'kill -t' now prints signal descriptions (rather than '?') on systems
3503 like Tru64 with __sys_siglist but no strsignal function.
3504 - stat.c now compiles on Ultrix systems
3505 - sleep now works on AIX systems that lack support for clock_gettime
3506 - rm now works around Darwin6.5's broken readdir function
3507 Before 'rm -rf DIR' would fail to remove all files in DIR
3508 if there were more than 338.
3510 * Major changes in release 5.0 (2003-04-02):
3511 - false --help now exits nonzero
3514 * printf no longer treats \x specially when POSIXLY_CORRECT is set
3515 * printf avoids buffer overrun with format ending in a backslash and
3516 * printf avoids buffer overrun with incomplete conversion specifier
3517 * printf accepts multiple flags in a single conversion specifier
3520 * seq no longer requires that a field width be specified
3521 * seq no longer fails when given a field width of '0'
3522 * seq now accepts " " and "'" as valid format flag characters
3523 * df now shows a HOSTNAME: prefix for each remote-mounted file system on AIX 5.1
3524 * portability tweaks for HP-UX, AIX 5.1, DJGPP
3527 * printf no longer segfaults for a negative field width or precision
3528 * shred now always enables --exact for non-regular files
3529 * du no longer lists hard-linked files more than once
3530 * du no longer dumps core on some systems due to "infinite" recursion
3531 via nftw's use of the buggy replacement function in getcwd.c
3532 * portability patches for a few vendor compilers and 64-bit systems
3533 * du -S *really* now works like it did before the change in 4.5.5
3536 * du no longer truncates file sizes or sums to fit in 32-bit size_t
3537 * work around Linux kernel bug in getcwd (fixed in 2.4.21-pre4), so that pwd
3538 now fails if the name of the working directory is so long that getcwd
3539 truncates it. Before it would print the truncated name and exit successfully.
3540 * 'df /some/mount-point' no longer hangs on a GNU libc system when another
3541 hard-mounted NFS file system (preceding /some/mount-point in /proc/mounts)
3543 * rm -rf now gives an accurate diagnostic when failing to remove a file
3544 under certain unusual conditions
3545 * mv and 'cp --preserve=links' now preserve multiple hard links even under
3546 certain unusual conditions where they used to fail
3549 * du -S once again works like it did before the change in 4.5.5
3550 * stat accepts a new file format, %B, for the size of each block reported by %b
3551 * du accepts new option: --apparent-size
3552 * du --bytes (-b) works the same way it did in fileutils-3.16 and before
3553 * du reports proper sizes for directories (not zero) (broken in 4.5.6 or 4.5.7)
3554 * df now always displays under 'Filesystem', the device file name
3555 corresponding to the listed mount point. Before, for a block- or character-
3556 special file command line argument, df would display that argument. E.g.,
3557 'df /dev/hda' would list '/dev/hda' as the 'Filesystem', rather than say
3558 /dev/hda3 (the device on which '/' is mounted), as it does now.
3559 * test now works properly when invoked from a set user ID or set group ID
3560 context and when testing access to files subject to alternate protection
3561 mechanisms. For example, without this change, a set-UID program that invoked
3562 'test -w F' (to see if F is writable) could mistakenly report that it *was*
3563 writable, even though F was on a read-only file system, or F had an ACL
3564 prohibiting write access, or F was marked as immutable.
3567 * du would fail with more than one DIR argument when any but the last did not
3568 contain a slash (due to a bug in ftw.c)
3571 * du no longer segfaults on Solaris systems (fixed heap-corrupting bug in ftw.c)
3572 * du --exclude=FILE works once again (this was broken by the rewrite for 4.5.5)
3573 * du no longer gets a failed assertion for certain hierarchy lay-outs
3574 involving hard-linked directories
3575 * 'who -r' no longer segfaults when using non-C-locale messages
3576 * df now displays a mount point (usually '/') for non-mounted
3577 character-special and block files
3580 * ls --dired produces correct byte offset for file names containing
3581 nonprintable characters in a multibyte locale
3582 * du has been rewritten to use a variant of GNU libc's ftw.c
3583 * du now counts the space associated with a directory's directory entry,
3584 even if it cannot list or chdir into that subdirectory.
3585 * du -S now includes the st_size of each entry corresponding to a subdirectory
3586 * rm on FreeBSD can once again remove directories from NFS-mounted file systems
3587 * ls has a new option --dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir, which
3588 corresponds to the new default behavior when none of -d, -l -F, -H, -L
3590 * ls dangling-symlink now prints 'dangling-symlink'.
3591 Before, it would fail with 'no such file or directory'.
3592 * ls -s symlink-to-non-dir and ls -i symlink-to-non-dir now print
3593 attributes of 'symlink', rather than attributes of their referents.
3594 * Fix a bug introduced in 4.5.4 that made it so that ls --color would no
3595 longer highlight the names of files with the execute bit set when not
3596 specified on the command line.
3597 * shred's --zero (-z) option no longer gobbles up any following argument.
3598 Before, 'shred --zero file' would produce 'shred: missing file argument',
3599 and worse, 'shred --zero f1 f2 ...' would appear to work, but would leave
3600 the first file untouched.
3601 * readlink: new program
3602 * cut: new feature: when used to select ranges of byte offsets (as opposed
3603 to ranges of fields) and when --output-delimiter=STRING is specified,
3604 output STRING between ranges of selected bytes.
3605 * rm -r can no longer be tricked into mistakenly reporting a cycle.
3606 * when rm detects a directory cycle, it no longer aborts the entire command,
3607 but rather merely stops processing the affected command line argument.
3610 * cp no longer fails to parse options like this: --preserve=mode,ownership
3611 * 'ls --color -F symlink-to-dir' works properly
3612 * ls is much more efficient on directories with valid dirent.d_type.
3613 * stty supports all baud rates defined in linux-2.4.19.
3614 * 'du symlink-to-dir/' would improperly remove the trailing slash
3615 * 'du ""' would evoke a bounds violation.
3616 * In the unlikely event that running 'du /' resulted in 'stat ("/", ...)'
3617 failing, du would give a diagnostic about '' (empty string) rather than '/'.
3618 * printf: a hexadecimal escape sequence has at most two hex. digits, not three.
3619 * The following features have been added to the --block-size option
3620 and similar environment variables of df, du, and ls.
3621 - A leading "'" generates numbers with thousands separators.
3623 $ ls -l --block-size="'1" file
3624 -rw-rw-r-- 1 eggert src 47,483,707 Sep 24 23:40 file
3625 - A size suffix without a leading integer generates a suffix in the output.
3627 $ ls -l --block-size="K"
3628 -rw-rw-r-- 1 eggert src 46371K Sep 24 23:40 file
3629 * ls's --block-size option now affects file sizes in all cases, not
3630 just for --block-size=human-readable and --block-size=si. Fractional
3631 sizes are now always rounded up, for consistency with df and du.
3632 * df now displays the block size using powers of 1000 if the requested
3633 block size seems to be a multiple of a power of 1000.
3634 * nl no longer gets a segfault when run like this 'yes|nl -s%n'
3637 * du --dereference-args (-D) no longer fails in certain cases
3638 * 'ln --target-dir=DIR' no longer fails when given a single argument
3641 * 'rm -i dir' (without --recursive (-r)) no longer recurses into dir
3642 * 'tail -c N FILE' now works with files of size >= 4GB
3643 * 'mkdir -p' can now create very deep (e.g. 40,000-component) directories
3644 * rmdir -p dir-with-trailing-slash/ no longer fails
3645 * printf now honors the '--' command line delimiter
3646 * od's 8-byte formats x8, o8, and u8 now work
3647 * tail now accepts fractional seconds for its --sleep-interval=S (-s) option
3650 * du and ls now report sizes of symbolic links (before they'd always report 0)
3651 * uniq now obeys the LC_COLLATE locale, as per POSIX 1003.1-2001 TC1.
3653 ========================================================================
3654 Here are the NEWS entries made from fileutils-4.1 until the
3655 point at which the packages merged to form the coreutils:
3658 * 'rm symlink-to-unwritable' doesn't prompt [introduced in 4.1.10]
3660 * rm once again gives a reasonable diagnostic when failing to remove a file
3661 owned by someone else in a sticky directory [introduced in 4.1.9]
3662 * df now rounds all quantities up, as per POSIX.
3663 * New ls time style: long-iso, which generates YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM.
3664 * Any time style can be preceded by "posix-"; this causes "ls" to
3665 use traditional timestamp format when in the POSIX locale.
3666 * The default time style is now posix-long-iso instead of posix-iso.
3667 Set TIME_STYLE="posix-iso" to revert to the behavior of 4.1.1 through 4.1.9.
3668 * 'rm dangling-symlink' doesn't prompt [introduced in 4.1.9]
3669 * stat: remove support for --secure/-s option and related %S and %C format specs
3670 * stat: rename --link/-l to --dereference/-L.
3671 The old options will continue to work for a while.
3673 * rm can now remove very deep hierarchies, in spite of any limit on stack size
3674 * new programs: link, unlink, and stat
3675 * New ls option: --author (for the Hurd).
3676 * 'touch -c no-such-file' no longer fails, per POSIX
3678 * mv no longer mistakenly creates links to preexisting destination files
3681 * rm: close a hole that would allow a running rm process to be subverted
3683 * New cp option: --copy-contents.
3684 * cp -r is now equivalent to cp -R. Use cp -R -L --copy-contents to get the
3685 traditional (and rarely desirable) cp -r behavior.
3686 * ls now accepts --time-style=+FORMAT, where +FORMAT works like date's format
3687 * The obsolete usage 'touch [-acm] MMDDhhmm[YY] FILE...' is no longer
3688 supported on systems conforming to POSIX 1003.1-2001. Use touch -t instead.
3689 * cp and inter-partition mv no longer give a misleading diagnostic in some
3692 * cp -r no longer preserves symlinks
3693 * The block size notation is now compatible with SI and with IEC 60027-2.
3694 For example, --block-size=1MB now means --block-size=1000000,
3695 whereas --block-size=1MiB now means --block-size=1048576.
3696 A missing 'B' (e.g. '1M') has the same meaning as before.
3697 A trailing 'B' now means decimal, not binary; this is a silent change.
3698 The nonstandard 'D' suffix (e.g. '1MD') is now obsolescent.
3699 * -H or --si now outputs the trailing 'B', for consistency with the above.
3700 * Programs now output trailing 'K' (not 'k') to mean 1024, as per IEC 60027-2.
3701 * New df, du short option -B is short for --block-size.
3702 * You can omit an integer '1' before a block size suffix,
3703 e.g. 'df -BG' is equivalent to 'df -B 1G' and to 'df --block-size=1G'.
3704 * The following options are now obsolescent, as their names are
3705 incompatible with IEC 60027-2:
3706 df, du: -m or --megabytes (use -BM or --block-size=1M)
3707 df, du, ls: --kilobytes (use --block-size=1K)
3709 * df --local no longer lists smbfs file systems whose name starts with //
3710 * dd now detects the Linux/tape/lseek bug at run time and warns about it.
3712 * ls -R once again outputs a blank line between per-directory groups of files.
3713 This was broken by the cycle-detection change in 4.1.1.
3714 * dd once again uses 'lseek' on character devices like /dev/mem and /dev/kmem.
3715 On systems with the linux kernel (at least up to 2.4.16), dd must still
3716 resort to emulating 'skip=N' behavior using reads on tape devices, because
3717 lseek has no effect, yet appears to succeed. This may be a kernel bug.
3719 * cp no longer fails when two or more source files are the same;
3720 now it just gives a warning and doesn't copy the file the second time.
3721 E.g., cp a a d/ produces this:
3722 cp: warning: source file `a' specified more than once
3723 * chmod would set the wrong bit when given symbolic mode strings like
3724 these: g=o, o=g, o=u. E.g., 'chmod a=,o=w,ug=o f' would give a mode
3725 of --w-r---w- rather than --w--w--w-.
3727 * mv (likewise for cp), now fails rather than silently clobbering one of
3728 the source files in the following example:
3729 rm -rf a b c; mkdir a b c; touch a/f b/f; mv a/f b/f c
3730 * ls -R detects directory cycles, per POSIX. It warns and doesn't infloop.
3731 * cp's -P option now means the same as --no-dereference, per POSIX.
3732 Use --parents to get the old meaning.
3733 * When copying with the -H and -L options, cp can preserve logical
3734 links between source files with --preserve=links
3735 * cp accepts new options:
3736 --preserve[={mode,ownership,timestamps,links,all}]
3737 --no-preserve={mode,ownership,timestamps,links,all}
3738 * cp's -p and --preserve options remain unchanged and are equivalent
3739 to '--preserve=mode,ownership,timestamps'
3740 * mv and cp accept a new option: --reply={yes,no,query}; provides a consistent
3741 mechanism to control whether one is prompted about certain existing
3742 destination files. Note that cp's and mv's -f options don't have the
3743 same meaning: cp's -f option no longer merely turns off '-i'.
3744 * remove portability limitations (e.g., PATH_MAX on the Hurd, fixes for
3746 * mv now prompts before overwriting an existing, unwritable destination file
3747 when stdin is a tty, unless --force (-f) is specified, as per POSIX.
3748 * mv: fix the bug whereby 'mv -uf source dest' would delete source,
3749 even though it's older than dest.
3750 * chown's --from=CURRENT_OWNER:CURRENT_GROUP option now works
3751 * cp now ensures that the set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits are cleared for
3752 the destination file when when copying and not preserving permissions.
3753 * 'ln -f --backup k k' gives a clearer diagnostic
3754 * ls no longer truncates user names or group names that are longer
3756 * ls's new --dereference-command-line option causes it to dereference
3757 symbolic links on the command-line only. It is the default unless
3758 one of the -d, -F, or -l options are given.
3759 * ls -H now means the same as ls --dereference-command-line, as per POSIX.
3760 * ls -g now acts like ls -l, except it does not display owner, as per POSIX.
3761 * ls -n now implies -l, as per POSIX.
3762 * ls can now display dates and times in one of four time styles:
3764 - The 'full-iso' time style gives full ISO-style time stamps like
3765 '2001-05-14 23:45:56.477817180 -0700'.
3766 - The 'iso' time style gives ISO-style time stamps like '2001-05-14 '
3768 - The 'locale' time style gives locale-dependent time stamps like
3769 'touko 14 2001' and 'touko 14 23:45' (in a Finnish locale).
3770 - The 'posix-iso' time style gives traditional POSIX-locale
3771 time stamps like 'May 14 2001' and 'May 14 23:45' unless the user
3772 specifies a non-POSIX locale, in which case it uses ISO-style dates.
3773 This is the default.
3775 You can specify a time style with an option like --time-style='iso'
3776 or with an environment variable like TIME_STYLE='iso'. GNU Emacs 21
3777 and later can parse ISO dates, but older Emacs versions cannot, so
3778 if you are using an older version of Emacs outside the default POSIX
3779 locale, you may need to set TIME_STYLE="locale".
3781 * --full-time is now an alias for "-l --time-style=full-iso".
3784 ========================================================================
3785 Here are the NEWS entries made from sh-utils-2.0 until the
3786 point at which the packages merged to form the coreutils:
3789 * date no longer accepts e.g., September 31 in the MMDDhhmm syntax
3790 * fix a bug in this package's .m4 files and in configure.ac
3792 * nohup's behavior is changed as follows, to conform to POSIX 1003.1-2001:
3793 - nohup no longer adjusts scheduling priority; use "nice" for that.
3794 - nohup now redirects stderr to stdout, if stderr is not a terminal.
3795 - nohup exit status is now 126 if command was found but not invoked,
3796 127 if nohup failed or if command was not found.
3798 * uname and uptime work better on *BSD systems
3799 * pathchk now exits nonzero for a path with a directory component
3800 that specifies a non-directory
3803 * who accepts new options: --all (-a), --boot (-b), --dead (-d), --login,
3804 --process (-p), --runlevel (-r), --short (-s), --time (-t), --users (-u).
3805 The -u option now produces POSIX-specified results and is the same as
3806 the long option '--users'. --idle is no longer the same as -u.
3807 * The following changes apply on systems conforming to POSIX 1003.1-2001:
3808 - 'date -I' is no longer supported. Instead, use 'date --iso-8601'.
3809 - 'nice -NUM' is no longer supported. Instead, use 'nice -n NUM'.
3810 [This change was reverted in coreutils 5.3.1.]
3811 * New 'uname' options -i or --hardware-platform, and -o or --operating-system.
3812 'uname -a' now outputs -i and -o information at the end.
3813 New uname option --kernel-version is an alias for -v.
3814 Uname option --release has been renamed to --kernel-release,
3815 and --sysname has been renamed to --kernel-name;
3816 the old options will work for a while, but are no longer documented.
3817 * 'expr' now uses the LC_COLLATE locale for string comparison, as per POSIX.
3818 * 'expr' now requires '+' rather than 'quote' to quote tokens;
3819 this removes an incompatibility with POSIX.
3820 * date -d 'last friday' would print a date/time that was one hour off
3821 (e.g., 23:00 on *thursday* rather than 00:00 of the preceding friday)
3822 when run such that the current time and the target date/time fall on
3823 opposite sides of a daylight savings time transition.
3824 This problem arose only with relative date strings like 'last monday'.
3825 It was not a problem with strings that include absolute dates.
3826 * factor is twice as fast, for large numbers
3828 * setting the date now works properly, even when using -u
3829 * 'date -f - < /dev/null' no longer dumps core
3830 * some DOS/Windows portability changes
3832 * 'date -d DATE' now parses certain relative DATEs correctly
3834 * fixed a bug introduced in 2.0h that made many programs fail with a
3835 'write error' when invoked with the --version option
3837 * all programs fail when printing --help or --version output to a full device
3838 * printf exits nonzero upon write failure
3839 * yes now detects and terminates upon write failure
3840 * date --rfc-822 now always emits day and month names from the 'C' locale
3841 * portability tweaks for Solaris8, Ultrix, and DOS
3843 * date now handles two-digit years with leading zeros correctly.
3844 * printf interprets unicode, \uNNNN \UNNNNNNNN, on systems with the
3845 required support; from Bruno Haible.
3846 * stty's rprnt attribute now works on HPUX 10.20
3847 * seq's --equal-width option works more portably
3849 * fix build problems with ut_name vs. ut_user
3851 * stty: fix long-standing bug that caused test failures on at least HPUX
3852 systems when COLUMNS was set to zero
3853 * still more portability fixes
3854 * unified lib/: now that directory and most of the configuration framework
3855 is common between fileutils, textutils, and sh-utils
3857 * fix portability problem with sleep vs lib/strtod.c's requirement for -lm
3859 * fix portability problems with nanosleep.c and with the new code in sleep.c
3861 * Regenerate lib/Makefile.in so that nanosleep.c is distributed.
3863 * sleep accepts floating point arguments on command line
3864 * sleep's clock continues counting down when sleep is suspended
3865 * when a suspended sleep process is resumed, it continues sleeping if
3866 there is any time remaining
3867 * who once again prints whatever host information it has, even without --lookup
3869 ========================================================================
3870 For older NEWS entries for the fileutils, textutils, and sh-utils
3871 packages, see ./old/*/NEWS.
3873 This package began as the union of the following:
3874 textutils-2.1, fileutils-4.1.11, sh-utils-2.0.15.
3876 ========================================================================
3878 Copyright (C) 2001-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3880 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
3881 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
3882 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
3883 Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover
3884 Texts. A copy of the license is included in the "GNU Free
3885 Documentation License" file as part of this distribution.