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diff --git a/upstream/mageia-cauldron/man1p/diff.1p b/upstream/mageia-cauldron/man1p/diff.1p new file mode 100644 index 00000000..d6262aea --- /dev/null +++ b/upstream/mageia-cauldron/man1p/diff.1p @@ -0,0 +1,1013 @@ +'\" et +.TH DIFF "1P" 2017 "IEEE/The Open Group" "POSIX Programmer's Manual" +.\" +.SH PROLOG +This manual page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual. +The Linux implementation of this interface may differ (consult +the corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior), +or the interface may not be implemented on Linux. +.\" +.SH NAME +diff +\(em compare two files +.SH SYNOPSIS +.LP +.nf +diff \fB[\fR-c|-e|-f|-u|-C \fIn\fR|-U \fIn\fB] [\fR-br\fB] \fIfile1 file2\fR +.fi +.SH DESCRIPTION +The +.IR diff +utility shall compare the contents of +.IR file1 +and +.IR file2 +and write to standard output a list of changes necessary to convert +.IR file1 +into +.IR file2 . +This list should be minimal. No output shall be produced if the files +are identical. +.SH OPTIONS +The +.IR diff +utility shall conform to the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1\(hy2017, +.IR "Section 12.2" ", " "Utility Syntax Guidelines". +.P +The following options shall be supported: +.IP "\fB\-b\fP" 10 +Cause any amount of white space at the end of a line to be treated as a +single +<newline> +(that is, the white-space characters preceding the +<newline> +are ignored) and other strings of white-space characters, not including +<newline> +characters, to compare equal. +.IP "\fB\-c\fP" 10 +Produce output in a form that provides three lines of copied context. +.IP "\fB\-C\ \fIn\fR" 10 +Produce output in a form that provides +.IR n +lines of copied context (where +.IR n +shall be interpreted as a positive decimal integer). +.IP "\fB\-e\fP" 10 +Produce output in a form suitable as input for the +.IR ed +utility, which can then be used to convert +.IR file1 +into +.IR file2 . +.IP "\fB\-f\fP" 10 +Produce output in an alternative form, similar in format to +.BR \-e , +but not intended to be suitable as input for the +.IR ed +utility, and in the opposite order. +.IP "\fB\-r\fP" 10 +Apply +.IR diff +recursively to files and directories of the same name when +.IR file1 +and +.IR file2 +are both directories. +.RS 10 +.P +The +.IR diff +utility shall detect infinite loops; that is, entering a previously +visited directory that is an ancestor of the last file encountered. +When it detects an infinite loop, +.IR diff +shall write a diagnostic message to standard error and shall either +recover its position in the hierarchy or terminate. +.RE +.IP "\fB\-u\fP" 10 +Produce output in a form that provides three lines of unified context. +.IP "\fB\-U\ \fIn\fR" 10 +Produce output in a form that provides +.IR n +lines of unified context (where +.IR n +shall be interpreted as a non-negative decimal integer). +.SH OPERANDS +The following operands shall be supported: +.IP "\fIfile1\fR,\ \fIfile2\fR" 10 +A pathname of a file to be compared. If either the +.IR file1 +or +.IR file2 +operand is +.BR '\-' , +the standard input shall be used in its place. +.P +If both +.IR file1 +and +.IR file2 +are directories, +.IR diff +shall not compare block special files, character special files, or FIFO +special files to any files and shall not compare regular files to +directories. +Further details are as specified in +.IR "Diff Directory Comparison Format". +The behavior of +.IR diff +on other file types is implementation-defined when found in directories. +.P +If only one of +.IR file1 +and +.IR file2 +is a directory, +.IR diff +shall be applied to the non-directory file and the file contained in +the directory file with a filename that is the same as the last +component of the non-directory file. +.SH STDIN +The standard input shall be used only if one of the +.IR file1 +or +.IR file2 +operands references standard input. See the INPUT FILES section. +.SH "INPUT FILES" +The input files may be of any type. +.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" +The following environment variables shall affect the execution of +.IR diff : +.IP "\fILANG\fP" 10 +Provide a default value for the internationalization variables that are +unset or null. (See the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1\(hy2017, +.IR "Section 8.2" ", " "Internationalization Variables" +for the precedence of internationalization variables used to determine +the values of locale categories.) +.IP "\fILC_ALL\fP" 10 +If set to a non-empty string value, override the values of all the +other internationalization variables. +.IP "\fILC_CTYPE\fP" 10 +Determine the locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes of +text data as characters (for example, single-byte as opposed to +multi-byte characters in arguments and input files). +.IP "\fILC_MESSAGES\fP" 10 +.br +Determine the locale that should be used to affect the format and +contents of diagnostic messages written to standard error and +informative messages written to standard output. +.IP "\fILC_TIME\fP" 10 +Determine the locale for affecting the format of file timestamps +written with the +.BR \-C +and +.BR \-c +options. +.IP "\fINLSPATH\fP" 10 +Determine the location of message catalogs for the processing of +.IR LC_MESSAGES . +.IP "\fITZ\fP" 10 +Determine the timezone used for calculating file timestamps written +with a context format. If +.IR TZ +is unset or null, an unspecified default timezone shall be used. +.SH "ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS" +Default. +.SH STDOUT +.SS "Diff Directory Comparison Format" +.P +If both +.IR file1 +and +.IR file2 +are directories, the following output formats shall be used. +.P +In the POSIX locale, each file that is present in only one directory +shall be reported using the following format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"Only in %s: %s\en", <\fIdirectory pathname\fP>, <\fIfilename\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +In the POSIX locale, subdirectories that are common to the two +directories may be reported with the following format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"Common subdirectories: %s and %s\en", <\fIdirectory1 pathname\fR>, + <\fIdirectory2 pathname\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +For each file common to the two directories, if the two files are not to +be compared: if the two files have the same device ID and file +serial number, or are both block special files that refer to the +same device, or are both character special files that refer to the +same device, in the POSIX locale the output format is unspecified. +Otherwise, in the POSIX locale an unspecified format shall be used +that contains the pathnames of the two files. +.P +For each file common to the two directories, if the files are +compared and are identical, no output shall be written. If the two +files differ, the following format is written: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"diff %s %s %s\en", <\fIdiff_options\fR>, <\fIfilename1\fR>, <\fIfilename2\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +where <\fIdiff_options\fP> are the options as specified on the command +line. +.P +All directory pathnames listed in this section shall be relative to the +original command line arguments. All other names of files listed in +this section shall be filenames (pathname components). +.SS "Diff Binary Output Format" +.P +In the POSIX locale, if one or both of the files being compared are not +text files, it is implementation-defined whether +.IR diff +uses the binary file output format or the other formats as specified +below. The binary file output format shall contain the pathnames of +two files being compared and the string +.BR \(dqdiffer\(dq . +.P +If both files being compared are text files, depending on the options +specified, one of the following formats shall be used to write the +differences. +.SS "Diff Default Output Format" +.P +The default (without +.BR \-e , +.BR \-f , +.BR \-c , +.BR \-C , +.BR \-u , +or +.BR \-U +options) +.IR diff +utility output shall contain lines of these forms: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"%da%d\en", <\fInum1\fR>, <\fInum2\fR> +.P +"%da%d,%d\en", <\fInum1\fR>, <\fInum2\fR>, <\fInum3\fR> +.P +"%dd%d\en", <\fInum1\fR>, <\fInum2\fR> +.P +"%d,%dd%d\en", <\fInum1\fR>, <\fInum2\fR>, <\fInum3\fR> +.P +"%dc%d\en", <\fInum1\fR>, <\fInum2\fR> +.P +"%d,%dc%d\en", <\fInum1\fR>, <\fInum2\fR>, <\fInum3\fR> +.P +"%dc%d,%d\en", <\fInum1\fR>, <\fInum2\fR>, <\fInum3\fR> +.P +"%d,%dc%d,%d\en", <\fInum1\fR>, <\fInum2\fR>, <\fInum3\fR>, <\fInum4\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +These lines resemble +.IR ed +subcommands to convert +.IR file1 +into +.IR file2 . +The line numbers before the action letters shall pertain to +.IR file1 ; +those after shall pertain to +.IR file2 . +Thus, by exchanging +.IR a +for +.IR d +and reading the line in reverse order, one can also determine how to +convert +.IR file2 +into +.IR file1 . +As in +.IR ed , +identical pairs (where +.IR num1 = +.IR num2 ) +are abbreviated as a single number. +.P +Following each of these lines, +.IR diff +shall write to standard output all lines affected in the first +file using the format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"< %s", <\fIline\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +and all lines affected in the second file using the format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"> %s", <\fIline\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +If there are lines affected in both +.IR file1 +and +.IR file2 +(as with the +.BR c +subcommand), the changes are separated with a line consisting of three +<hyphen-minus> +characters: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"---\en" +.fi +.P +.RE +.SS "Diff \-e Output Format" +.P +With the +.BR \-e +option, a script shall be produced that shall, when provided as input +to +.IR ed , +along with an appended +.BR w +(write) command, convert +.IR file1 +into +.IR file2 . +Only the +.BR a +(append), +.BR c +(change), +.BR d +(delete), +.BR i +(insert), and +.BR s +(substitute) commands of +.IR ed +shall be used in this script. Text lines, except those consisting of +the single character +<period> +(\c +.BR '.' ), +shall be output as they appear in the file. +.SS "Diff \-f Output Format" +.P +With the +.BR \-f +option, an alternative format of script shall be produced. It is +similar to that produced by +.BR \-e , +with the following differences: +.IP " 1." 4 +It is expressed in reverse sequence; the output of +.BR \-e +orders changes from the end of the file to the beginning; the +.BR \-f +from beginning to end. +.IP " 2." 4 +The command form <\fIlines\fP> <\fIcommand-letter\fR> used by +.BR \-e +is reversed. For example, 10\fIc\fP with +.BR \-e +would be +.IR c 10 +with +.BR \-f . +.IP " 3." 4 +The form used for ranges of line numbers is +<space>-separated, +rather than +<comma>-separated. +.SS "Diff \-c or \-C Output Format" +.P +With the +.BR \-c +or +.BR \-C +option, the output format shall consist of affected lines along with +surrounding lines of context. The affected lines shall show which ones +need to be deleted or changed in +.IR file1 , +and those added from +.IR file2 . +With the +.BR \-c +option, three lines of context, if available, shall be written before +and after the affected lines. With the +.BR \-C +option, the user can specify how many lines of context are written. +The exact format follows. +.P +The name and last modification time of each file shall be output in the +following format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"*** %s %s\en", \fIfile1\fR, <\fIfile1 timestamp\fR> +"--- %s %s\en", \fIfile2\fR, <\fIfile2 timestamp\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +Each <\fIfile\fP> field shall be the pathname of the corresponding +file being compared. The pathname written for standard input is +unspecified. +.P +In the POSIX locale, each <\fItimestamp\fP> field shall be equivalent +to the output from the following command: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +date "+%a %b %e %T %Y" +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +without the trailing +<newline>, +executed at the time of last modification of the corresponding file (or +the current time, if the file is standard input). +.P +Then, the following output formats shall be applied for every set of +changes. +.P +First, a line shall be written in the following format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"***************\en" +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +Next, the range of lines in +.IR file1 +shall be written in the following format if the range contains +two or more lines: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"*** %d,%d ****\en", <\fIbeginning line number\fR>, <\fIending line number\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +and the following format otherwise: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"*** %d ****\en", <\fIending line number\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +The ending line number of an empty range shall be the number of the +preceding line, or 0 if the range is at the start of the file. +.P +Next, the affected lines along with lines of context (unaffected lines) +shall be written. Unaffected lines shall be written in the following +format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +" %s", <\fIunaffected_line\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +Deleted lines shall be written as: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"- %s", <\fIdeleted_line\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +Changed lines shall be written as: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"! %s", <\fIchanged_line\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +Next, the range of lines in +.IR file2 +shall be written in the following format if the range contains two +or more lines: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"--- %d,%d ----\en", <\fIbeginning line number\fR>, <\fIending line number\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +and the following format otherwise: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"--- %d ----\en", <\fIending line number\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +Then, lines of context and changed lines shall be written as described in +the previous formats. Lines added from +.IR file2 +shall be written in the following format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"+ %s", <\fIadded_line\fR> +.fi +.P +.RE +.SS "Diff \-u or \-U Output Format" +.P +The +.BR \-u +or +.BR \-U +options behave like the +.BR \-c +or +.BR \-C +options, except that the context lines are not repeated; instead, +the context, deleted, and added lines are shown together, interleaved. +The exact format follows. +.P +The name and last modification time of each file shall be output +in the following format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"--- %s\et%s%s %s\en", file1, <file1 timestamp>, <file1 frac>, <file1 zone> +"+++ %s\et%s%s %s\en", file2, <file2 timestamp>, <file2 frac>, <file2 zone> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +Each <\fIfile\fR> field shall be the pathname of the corresponding file +being compared, or the single character +.BR '\-' +if standard input is being compared. However, if the pathname contains +a +<tab> +or a +<newline>, +or if it does not consist entirely of characters taken +from the portable character set, the behavior is implementation-defined. +.P +Each <\fItimestamp\fR> field shall be equivalent to the output from the +following command: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +date \(aq+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S\(aq +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +without the trailing +<newline>, +executed at the time of last modification of the corresponding file +(or the current time, if the file is standard input). +.P +Each <\fIfrac\fR> field shall be either empty, or a decimal point +followed by at least one decimal digit, indicating the +fractional-seconds part (if any) of the file timestamp. The +number of fractional digits shall be at least the number needed to +represent the file's timestamp without loss of information. +.P +Each <\fIzone\fR> field shall be of the form +.BR \(dqshhmm\(dq , +where +.BR \(dqshh\(dq +is a signed two-digit decimal number in the range \-24 through +25, and +.BR \(dqmm\(dq +is an unsigned two-digit decimal number in the range 00 through 59. +It represents the timezone of the timestamp as the number of hours +(hh) and minutes (mm) east (+) or west (\-) of UTC for the timestamp. +If the hours and minutes are both zero, the sign shall be +.BR '+' . +However, if the timezone is not an integral number of minutes away +from UTC, the <\fIzone\fR> field is implementation-defined. +.P +Then, the following output formats shall be applied for every set +of changes. +.P +First, the range of lines in each file shall be written in the +following format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"@@ -%s +%s @@", <file1 range>, <file2 range> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +Each <\fIrange\fR> field shall be of the form: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"%1d", <beginning line number> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +or: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"%1d,1", <beginning line number> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +if the range contains exactly one line, and: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"%1d,%1d", <beginning line number>, <number of lines> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +otherwise. If a range is empty, its beginning line number shall be +the number of the line just before the range, or 0 if the empty +range starts the file. +.P +Next, the affected lines along with lines of context shall be written. +Each non-empty unaffected line shall be written in the following format: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +" %s", <unaffected_line> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +where the contents of the unaffected line shall be taken from +.IR file1 . +It is implementation-defined whether an empty unaffected line is written +as an empty line or a line containing a single +<space> +character. This line also represents the same line of +.IR file2 , +even though +.IR file2 's +line may contain different contents due to the +.BR \-b . +Deleted lines shall be written as: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"-%s", <deleted_line> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +Added lines shall be written as: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"+%s", <added_line> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +The order of lines written shall be the same as that of the +corresponding file. A deleted line shall never be written +immediately after an added line. +.P +If +.BR \-U +.IR n +is specified, the output shall contain no more than 2\c +.IR n +consecutive unaffected lines; and if the output contains an +affected line and this line is adjacent to up to +.IR n +consecutive unaffected lines in the corresponding file, the output shall +contain these unaffected lines. +.BR \-u +shall act like +.BR \-U 3. +.SH STDERR +The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages. +.SH "OUTPUT FILES" +None. +.SH "EXTENDED DESCRIPTION" +None. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +The following exit values shall be returned: +.IP "\00" 6 +No differences were found. +.IP "\01" 6 +Differences were found. +.IP >1 6 +An error occurred. +.SH "CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS" +Default. +.LP +.IR "The following sections are informative." +.SH "APPLICATION USAGE" +If lines at the end of a file are changed and other lines are added, +.IR diff +output may show this as a delete and add, as a change, or as a change +and add; +.IR diff +is not expected to know which happened and users should not care about +the difference in output as long as it clearly shows the differences +between the files. +.SH EXAMPLES +If +.BR dir1 +is a directory containing a directory named +.BR x , +.BR dir2 +is a directory containing a directory named +.BR x , +.BR dir1/x +and +.BR dir2/x +both contain files named +.BR date.out , +and +.BR dir2/x +contains a file named +.BR y , +the command: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +diff -r dir1 dir2 +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +could produce output similar to: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +Common subdirectories: dir1/x and dir2/x +Only in dir2/x: y +diff -r dir1/x/date.out dir2/x/date.out +1c1 +< Mon Jul 2 13:12:16 PDT 1990 +--- +> Tue Jun 19 21:41:39 PDT 1990 +.fi +.P +.RE +.SH RATIONALE +The +.BR \-h +option was omitted because it was insufficiently specified and does not +add to applications portability. +.P +Historical implementations employ algorithms that do not always produce +a minimum list of differences; the current language about making every +effort is the best this volume of POSIX.1\(hy2017 can do, as there is no metric that could be +employed to judge the quality of implementations against any and all +file contents. The statement ``This list should be minimal'' clearly +implies that implementations are not expected to provide the following +output when comparing two 100-line files that differ in only one +character on a single line: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +1,100c1,100 +all 100 lines from file1 preceded with "< " +--- +all 100 lines from file2 preceded with "> " +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +The ``Only in'' messages required when the +.BR \-r +option is specified are not used by most historical implementations if +the +.BR \-e +option is also specified. It is required here because it provides +useful information that must be provided to update a target directory +hierarchy to match a source hierarchy. The ``Common subdirectories'' +messages are written by System V and 4.3 BSD when the +.BR \-r +option is specified. They are allowed here but are not required because +they are reporting on something that is the same, not reporting a +difference, and are not needed to update a target hierarchy. +.P +The +.BR \-c +option, which writes output in a format using lines of context, has +been included. The format is useful for a variety of reasons, among +them being much improved readability and the ability to understand +difference changes when the target file has line numbers that differ +from another similar, but slightly different, copy. The +.IR patch +utility is most valuable when working with difference listings using +a context format. The BSD version of +.BR \-c +takes an optional argument specifying the amount of context. Rather +than overloading +.BR \-c +and breaking the Utility Syntax Guidelines for +.IR diff , +the standard developers decided to add a separate option for specifying +a context diff with a specified amount of context (\c +.BR \-C ). +Also, the format for context +.IR diff s +was extended slightly in 4.3 BSD to allow multiple changes that are +within context lines from each other to be merged together. The output +format contains an additional four +<asterisk> +characters after the range of affected lines in the first filename. This +was to provide a flag for old programs (like old versions of +.IR patch ) +that only understand the old context format. The version of context +described here does not require that multiple changes within context +lines be merged, but it does not prohibit it either. The extension is +upwards-compatible, so any vendors that wish to retain the old version +of +.IR diff +can do so by adding the extra four +<asterisk> +characters (that is, utilities that currently use +.IR diff +and understand the new merged format will also understand the old +unmerged format, but not \fIvice versa\fP). +.P +The +.BR \-u +and +.BR \-U +options of GNU +.IR diff +have been included. Their output format, designed by Wayne Davison, +takes up less space than +.BR \-c +and +.BR \-C +format, and in many cases is easier to read. The format's timestamps +do not vary by locale, so +.IR LC_TIME +does not affect it. The format's line numbers are rendered with the +.BR %1d +format, not +.BR %d , +because the file format notation rules would allow extra +<blank> +characters to appear around the numbers. +.P +The substitute command was added as an additional format for the +.BR \-e +option. This was added to provide implementations with a way to fix the +classic ``dot alone on a line'' bug present in many versions of +.IR diff . +Since many implementations have fixed this bug, the standard developers +decided not to standardize broken behavior, but rather to provide the +necessary tool for fixing the bug. One way to fix this bug is to output +two periods whenever a lone period is needed, then terminate the append +command with a period, and then use the substitute command to convert +the two periods into one period. +.P +The BSD-derived +.BR \-r +option was added to provide a mechanism for using +.IR diff +to compare two file system trees. This behavior is useful, is standard +practice on all BSD-derived systems, and is not easily reproducible +with the +.IR find +utility. +.P +The requirement that +.IR diff +not compare files in some circumstances, even though they have the same +name, is based on the actual output of historical implementations. +The specified behavior precludes the problems arising from running +into FIFOs and other files that would cause +.IR diff +to hang waiting for input with no indication to the user that +.IR diff +was hung. An earlier version of this standard specified the output +format more precisely, but in practice this requirement was widely +ignored and the benefit of standardization seemed small, so it is now +unspecified. In most common usage, +.IR diff +.BR \-r +should indicate differences in the file hierarchies, not the difference +of contents of devices pointed to by the hierarchies. +.P +Many early implementations of +.IR diff +require seekable files. Since the System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1\(hy2017 supports named pipes, the +standard developers decided that such a restriction was unreasonable. +Note also that the allowed filename +.BR \- +almost always refers to a pipe. +.P +No directory search order is specified for +.IR diff . +The historical ordering is, in fact, not optimal, in that it prints out +all of the differences at the current level, including the statements +about all common subdirectories before recursing into those +subdirectories. +.P +The message: +.sp +.RS 4 +.nf + +"diff %s %s %s\en", <\fIdiff_options\fP>, <\fIfilename1\fP>, <\fIfilename2\fP> +.fi +.P +.RE +.P +does not vary by locale because it is the representation of a command, +not an English sentence. +.SH "FUTURE DIRECTIONS" +None. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IR "\fIcmp\fR\^", +.IR "\fIcomm\fR\^", +.IR "\fIed\fR\^", +.IR "\fIfind\fR\^" +.P +The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1\(hy2017, +.IR "Chapter 8" ", " "Environment Variables", +.IR "Section 12.2" ", " "Utility Syntax Guidelines" +.\" +.SH COPYRIGHT +Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form +from IEEE Std 1003.1-2017, Standard for Information Technology +-- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base +Specifications Issue 7, 2018 Edition, +Copyright (C) 2018 by the Institute of +Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. +In the event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and +The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard +is the referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online at +http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html . +.PP +Any typographical or formatting errors that appear +in this page are most likely +to have been introduced during the conversion of the source files to +man page format. To report such errors, see +https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html . |