49 lines
1.8 KiB

# --- SDE-COPYRIGHT-NOTE-BEGIN ---
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# Filename: package/.../pdksh/sort-trap.patch
# Copyright (C) 2004 - 2006 The T2 SDE Project
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Hm. I find the resulting output a bit unlogic - but it is exactly the same
with the old options and an old sort. So this "chaotic" sort might have
been intended - or always been buggy ...
Also fixed the trap usage.
- Rene Rebe <rene@exactcode.de>
--- pdksh-5.2.14/siglist.sh.orig 1996-09-18 18:52:41.000000000 +0200
+++ pdksh-5.2.14/siglist.sh 2004-05-05 02:41:53.000000000 +0200
@@ -11,19 +11,19 @@
out=tmpo$$.c
ecode=1
trapsigs='0 1 2 13 15'
-trap 'rm -f $in $out; trap 0; exit $ecode' $trapsigs
+trap 'rm -f $in $out; trap - 0; exit $ecode' $trapsigs
CPP="${1-cc -E}"
# The trap here to make up for a bug in bash (1.14.3(1)) that calls the trap
-(trap $trapsigs;
+(trap - $trapsigs;
echo '#include "sh.h"';
echo ' { QwErTy SIGNALS , "DUMMY" , "hook for number of signals" },';
sed -e '/^[ ]*#/d' -e 's/^[ ]*\([^ ][^ ]*\)[ ][ ]*\(.*[^ ]\)[ ]*$/#ifdef SIG\1\
{ QwErTy SIG\1 , "\1", "\2" },\
#endif/') > $in
$CPP $in > $out
-sed -n 's/{ QwErTy/{/p' < $out | awk '{print NR, $0}' | sort +2n +0n |
+sed -n 's/{ QwErTy/{/p' < $out | awk '{print NR, $0}' | sort -n -k 2 |
sed 's/^[0-9]* //' |
awk 'BEGIN { last=0; nsigs=0; }
{