cpio-2.11/0000755000175000017500000000000012513574366012017 5ustar wookeywookeycpio-2.11/COPYING0000644000175000017500000010437411145605126013050 0ustar wookeywookey GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 3, 29 June 2007 Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. Preamble The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for software and other kinds of works. The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed to take away your freedom to share and change the works. By contrast, the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change all versions of a program--to make sure it remains free software for all its users. We, the Free Software Foundation, use the GNU General Public License for most of our software; it applies also to any other work released this way by its authors. You can apply it to your programs, too. When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for them if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs, and that you know you can do these things. To protect your rights, we need to prevent others from denying you these rights or asking you to surrender the rights. Therefore, you have certain responsibilities if you distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it: responsibilities to respect the freedom of others. For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether gratis or for a fee, you must pass on to the recipients the same freedoms that you received. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their rights. Developers that use the GNU GPL protect your rights with two steps: (1) assert copyright on the software, and (2) offer you this License giving you legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify it. For the developers' and authors' protection, the GPL clearly explains that there is no warranty for this free software. For both users' and authors' sake, the GPL requires that modified versions be marked as changed, so that their problems will not be attributed erroneously to authors of previous versions. Some devices are designed to deny users access to install or run modified versions of the software inside them, although the manufacturer can do so. This is fundamentally incompatible with the aim of protecting users' freedom to change the software. The systematic pattern of such abuse occurs in the area of products for individuals to use, which is precisely where it is most unacceptable. Therefore, we have designed this version of the GPL to prohibit the practice for those products. If such problems arise substantially in other domains, we stand ready to extend this provision to those domains in future versions of the GPL, as needed to protect the freedom of users. Finally, every program is threatened constantly by software patents. States should not allow patents to restrict development and use of software on general-purpose computers, but in those that do, we wish to avoid the special danger that patents applied to a free program could make it effectively proprietary. To prevent this, the GPL assures that patents cannot be used to render the program non-free. The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and modification follow. TERMS AND CONDITIONS 0. Definitions. "This License" refers to version 3 of the GNU General Public License. "Copyright" also means copyright-like laws that apply to other kinds of works, such as semiconductor masks. "The Program" refers to any copyrightable work licensed under this License. Each licensee is addressed as "you". "Licensees" and "recipients" may be individuals or organizations. To "modify" a work means to copy from or adapt all or part of the work in a fashion requiring copyright permission, other than the making of an exact copy. The resulting work is called a "modified version" of the earlier work or a work "based on" the earlier work. A "covered work" means either the unmodified Program or a work based on the Program. To "propagate" a work means to do anything with it that, without permission, would make you directly or secondarily liable for infringement under applicable copyright law, except executing it on a computer or modifying a private copy. Propagation includes copying, distribution (with or without modification), making available to the public, and in some countries other activities as well. To "convey" a work means any kind of propagation that enables other parties to make or receive copies. Mere interaction with a user through a computer network, with no transfer of a copy, is not conveying. An interactive user interface displays "Appropriate Legal Notices" to the extent that it includes a convenient and prominently visible feature that (1) displays an appropriate copyright notice, and (2) tells the user that there is no warranty for the work (except to the extent that warranties are provided), that licensees may convey the work under this License, and how to view a copy of this License. If the interface presents a list of user commands or options, such as a menu, a prominent item in the list meets this criterion. 1. Source Code. The "source code" for a work means the preferred form of the work for making modifications to it. "Object code" means any non-source form of a work. A "Standard Interface" means an interface that either is an official standard defined by a recognized standards body, or, in the case of interfaces specified for a particular programming language, one that is widely used among developers working in that language. The "System Libraries" of an executable work include anything, other than the work as a whole, that (a) is included in the normal form of packaging a Major Component, but which is not part of that Major Component, and (b) serves only to enable use of the work with that Major Component, or to implement a Standard Interface for which an implementation is available to the public in source code form. A "Major Component", in this context, means a major essential component (kernel, window system, and so on) of the specific operating system (if any) on which the executable work runs, or a compiler used to produce the work, or an object code interpreter used to run it. The "Corresponding Source" for a work in object code form means all the source code needed to generate, install, and (for an executable work) run the object code and to modify the work, including scripts to control those activities. However, it does not include the work's System Libraries, or general-purpose tools or generally available free programs which are used unmodified in performing those activities but which are not part of the work. For example, Corresponding Source includes interface definition files associated with source files for the work, and the source code for shared libraries and dynamically linked subprograms that the work is specifically designed to require, such as by intimate data communication or control flow between those subprograms and other parts of the work. The Corresponding Source need not include anything that users can regenerate automatically from other parts of the Corresponding Source. The Corresponding Source for a work in source code form is that same work. 2. Basic Permissions. All rights granted under this License are granted for the term of copyright on the Program, and are irrevocable provided the stated conditions are met. This License explicitly affirms your unlimited permission to run the unmodified Program. The output from running a covered work is covered by this License only if the output, given its content, constitutes a covered work. This License acknowledges your rights of fair use or other equivalent, as provided by copyright law. You may make, run and propagate covered works that you do not convey, without conditions so long as your license otherwise remains in force. You may convey covered works to others for the sole purpose of having them make modifications exclusively for you, or provide you with facilities for running those works, provided that you comply with the terms of this License in conveying all material for which you do not control copyright. Those thus making or running the covered works for you must do so exclusively on your behalf, under your direction and control, on terms that prohibit them from making any copies of your copyrighted material outside their relationship with you. Conveying under any other circumstances is permitted solely under the conditions stated below. Sublicensing is not allowed; section 10 makes it unnecessary. 3. Protecting Users' Legal Rights From Anti-Circumvention Law. No covered work shall be deemed part of an effective technological measure under any applicable law fulfilling obligations under article 11 of the WIPO copyright treaty adopted on 20 December 1996, or similar laws prohibiting or restricting circumvention of such measures. When you convey a covered work, you waive any legal power to forbid circumvention of technological measures to the extent such circumvention is effected by exercising rights under this License with respect to the covered work, and you disclaim any intention to limit operation or modification of the work as a means of enforcing, against the work's users, your or third parties' legal rights to forbid circumvention of technological measures. 4. Conveying Verbatim Copies. You may convey verbatim copies of the Program's source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice; keep intact all notices stating that this License and any non-permissive terms added in accord with section 7 apply to the code; keep intact all notices of the absence of any warranty; and give all recipients a copy of this License along with the Program. You may charge any price or no price for each copy that you convey, and you may offer support or warranty protection for a fee. 5. Conveying Modified Source Versions. You may convey a work based on the Program, or the modifications to produce it from the Program, in the form of source code under the terms of section 4, provided that you also meet all of these conditions: a) The work must carry prominent notices stating that you modified it, and giving a relevant date. b) The work must carry prominent notices stating that it is released under this License and any conditions added under section 7. This requirement modifies the requirement in section 4 to "keep intact all notices". c) You must license the entire work, as a whole, under this License to anyone who comes into possession of a copy. This License will therefore apply, along with any applicable section 7 additional terms, to the whole of the work, and all its parts, regardless of how they are packaged. This License gives no permission to license the work in any other way, but it does not invalidate such permission if you have separately received it. d) If the work has interactive user interfaces, each must display Appropriate Legal Notices; however, if the Program has interactive interfaces that do not display Appropriate Legal Notices, your work need not make them do so. A compilation of a covered work with other separate and independent works, which are not by their nature extensions of the covered work, and which are not combined with it such as to form a larger program, in or on a volume of a storage or distribution medium, is called an "aggregate" if the compilation and its resulting copyright are not used to limit the access or legal rights of the compilation's users beyond what the individual works permit. Inclusion of a covered work in an aggregate does not cause this License to apply to the other parts of the aggregate. 6. Conveying Non-Source Forms. You may convey a covered work in object code form under the terms of sections 4 and 5, provided that you also convey the machine-readable Corresponding Source under the terms of this License, in one of these ways: a) Convey the object code in, or embodied in, a physical product (including a physical distribution medium), accompanied by the Corresponding Source fixed on a durable physical medium customarily used for software interchange. b) Convey the object code in, or embodied in, a physical product (including a physical distribution medium), accompanied by a written offer, valid for at least three years and valid for as long as you offer spare parts or customer support for that product model, to give anyone who possesses the object code either (1) a copy of the Corresponding Source for all the software in the product that is covered by this License, on a durable physical medium customarily used for software interchange, for a price no more than your reasonable cost of physically performing this conveying of source, or (2) access to copy the Corresponding Source from a network server at no charge. c) Convey individual copies of the object code with a copy of the written offer to provide the Corresponding Source. This alternative is allowed only occasionally and noncommercially, and only if you received the object code with such an offer, in accord with subsection 6b. d) Convey the object code by offering access from a designated place (gratis or for a charge), and offer equivalent access to the Corresponding Source in the same way through the same place at no further charge. You need not require recipients to copy the Corresponding Source along with the object code. If the place to copy the object code is a network server, the Corresponding Source may be on a different server (operated by you or a third party) that supports equivalent copying facilities, provided you maintain clear directions next to the object code saying where to find the Corresponding Source. Regardless of what server hosts the Corresponding Source, you remain obligated to ensure that it is available for as long as needed to satisfy these requirements. e) Convey the object code using peer-to-peer transmission, provided you inform other peers where the object code and Corresponding Source of the work are being offered to the general public at no charge under subsection 6d. A separable portion of the object code, whose source code is excluded from the Corresponding Source as a System Library, need not be included in conveying the object code work. A "User Product" is either (1) a "consumer product", which means any tangible personal property which is normally used for personal, family, or household purposes, or (2) anything designed or sold for incorporation into a dwelling. In determining whether a product is a consumer product, doubtful cases shall be resolved in favor of coverage. For a particular product received by a particular user, "normally used" refers to a typical or common use of that class of product, regardless of the status of the particular user or of the way in which the particular user actually uses, or expects or is expected to use, the product. A product is a consumer product regardless of whether the product has substantial commercial, industrial or non-consumer uses, unless such uses represent the only significant mode of use of the product. "Installation Information" for a User Product means any methods, procedures, authorization keys, or other information required to install and execute modified versions of a covered work in that User Product from a modified version of its Corresponding Source. The information must suffice to ensure that the continued functioning of the modified object code is in no case prevented or interfered with solely because modification has been made. If you convey an object code work under this section in, or with, or specifically for use in, a User Product, and the conveying occurs as part of a transaction in which the right of possession and use of the User Product is transferred to the recipient in perpetuity or for a fixed term (regardless of how the transaction is characterized), the Corresponding Source conveyed under this section must be accompanied by the Installation Information. But this requirement does not apply if neither you nor any third party retains the ability to install modified object code on the User Product (for example, the work has been installed in ROM). The requirement to provide Installation Information does not include a requirement to continue to provide support service, warranty, or updates for a work that has been modified or installed by the recipient, or for the User Product in which it has been modified or installed. Access to a network may be denied when the modification itself materially and adversely affects the operation of the network or violates the rules and protocols for communication across the network. Corresponding Source conveyed, and Installation Information provided, in accord with this section must be in a format that is publicly documented (and with an implementation available to the public in source code form), and must require no special password or key for unpacking, reading or copying. 7. Additional Terms. "Additional permissions" are terms that supplement the terms of this License by making exceptions from one or more of its conditions. Additional permissions that are applicable to the entire Program shall be treated as though they were included in this License, to the extent that they are valid under applicable law. If additional permissions apply only to part of the Program, that part may be used separately under those permissions, but the entire Program remains governed by this License without regard to the additional permissions. When you convey a copy of a covered work, you may at your option remove any additional permissions from that copy, or from any part of it. (Additional permissions may be written to require their own removal in certain cases when you modify the work.) You may place additional permissions on material, added by you to a covered work, for which you have or can give appropriate copyright permission. Notwithstanding any other provision of this License, for material you add to a covered work, you may (if authorized by the copyright holders of that material) supplement the terms of this License with terms: a) Disclaiming warranty or limiting liability differently from the terms of sections 15 and 16 of this License; or b) Requiring preservation of specified reasonable legal notices or author attributions in that material or in the Appropriate Legal Notices displayed by works containing it; or c) Prohibiting misrepresentation of the origin of that material, or requiring that modified versions of such material be marked in reasonable ways as different from the original version; or d) Limiting the use for publicity purposes of names of licensors or authors of the material; or e) Declining to grant rights under trademark law for use of some trade names, trademarks, or service marks; or f) Requiring indemnification of licensors and authors of that material by anyone who conveys the material (or modified versions of it) with contractual assumptions of liability to the recipient, for any liability that these contractual assumptions directly impose on those licensors and authors. All other non-permissive additional terms are considered "further restrictions" within the meaning of section 10. If the Program as you received it, or any part of it, contains a notice stating that it is governed by this License along with a term that is a further restriction, you may remove that term. If a license document contains a further restriction but permits relicensing or conveying under this License, you may add to a covered work material governed by the terms of that license document, provided that the further restriction does not survive such relicensing or conveying. If you add terms to a covered work in accord with this section, you must place, in the relevant source files, a statement of the additional terms that apply to those files, or a notice indicating where to find the applicable terms. Additional terms, permissive or non-permissive, may be stated in the form of a separately written license, or stated as exceptions; the above requirements apply either way. 8. Termination. You may not propagate or modify a covered work except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt otherwise to propagate or modify it is void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License (including any patent licenses granted under the third paragraph of section 11). However, if you cease all violation of this License, then your license from a particular copyright holder is reinstated (a) provisionally, unless and until the copyright holder explicitly and finally terminates your license, and (b) permanently, if the copyright holder fails to notify you of the violation by some reasonable means prior to 60 days after the cessation. Moreover, your license from a particular copyright holder is reinstated permanently if the copyright holder notifies you of the violation by some reasonable means, this is the first time you have received notice of violation of this License (for any work) from that copyright holder, and you cure the violation prior to 30 days after your receipt of the notice. Termination of your rights under this section does not terminate the licenses of parties who have received copies or rights from you under this License. If your rights have been terminated and not permanently reinstated, you do not qualify to receive new licenses for the same material under section 10. 9. Acceptance Not Required for Having Copies. You are not required to accept this License in order to receive or run a copy of the Program. Ancillary propagation of a covered work occurring solely as a consequence of using peer-to-peer transmission to receive a copy likewise does not require acceptance. However, nothing other than this License grants you permission to propagate or modify any covered work. These actions infringe copyright if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by modifying or propagating a covered work, you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so. 10. Automatic Licensing of Downstream Recipients. Each time you convey a covered work, the recipient automatically receives a license from the original licensors, to run, modify and propagate that work, subject to this License. You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties with this License. An "entity transaction" is a transaction transferring control of an organization, or substantially all assets of one, or subdividing an organization, or merging organizations. If propagation of a covered work results from an entity transaction, each party to that transaction who receives a copy of the work also receives whatever licenses to the work the party's predecessor in interest had or could give under the previous paragraph, plus a right to possession of the Corresponding Source of the work from the predecessor in interest, if the predecessor has it or can get it with reasonable efforts. You may not impose any further restrictions on the exercise of the rights granted or affirmed under this License. For example, you may not impose a license fee, royalty, or other charge for exercise of rights granted under this License, and you may not initiate litigation (including a cross-claim or counterclaim in a lawsuit) alleging that any patent claim is infringed by making, using, selling, offering for sale, or importing the Program or any portion of it. 11. Patents. A "contributor" is a copyright holder who authorizes use under this License of the Program or a work on which the Program is based. The work thus licensed is called the contributor's "contributor version". A contributor's "essential patent claims" are all patent claims owned or controlled by the contributor, whether already acquired or hereafter acquired, that would be infringed by some manner, permitted by this License, of making, using, or selling its contributor version, but do not include claims that would be infringed only as a consequence of further modification of the contributor version. For purposes of this definition, "control" includes the right to grant patent sublicenses in a manner consistent with the requirements of this License. Each contributor grants you a non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free patent license under the contributor's essential patent claims, to make, use, sell, offer for sale, import and otherwise run, modify and propagate the contents of its contributor version. In the following three paragraphs, a "patent license" is any express agreement or commitment, however denominated, not to enforce a patent (such as an express permission to practice a patent or covenant not to sue for patent infringement). To "grant" such a patent license to a party means to make such an agreement or commitment not to enforce a patent against the party. If you convey a covered work, knowingly relying on a patent license, and the Corresponding Source of the work is not available for anyone to copy, free of charge and under the terms of this License, through a publicly available network server or other readily accessible means, then you must either (1) cause the Corresponding Source to be so available, or (2) arrange to deprive yourself of the benefit of the patent license for this particular work, or (3) arrange, in a manner consistent with the requirements of this License, to extend the patent license to downstream recipients. "Knowingly relying" means you have actual knowledge that, but for the patent license, your conveying the covered work in a country, or your recipient's use of the covered work in a country, would infringe one or more identifiable patents in that country that you have reason to believe are valid. If, pursuant to or in connection with a single transaction or arrangement, you convey, or propagate by procuring conveyance of, a covered work, and grant a patent license to some of the parties receiving the covered work authorizing them to use, propagate, modify or convey a specific copy of the covered work, then the patent license you grant is automatically extended to all recipients of the covered work and works based on it. A patent license is "discriminatory" if it does not include within the scope of its coverage, prohibits the exercise of, or is conditioned on the non-exercise of one or more of the rights that are specifically granted under this License. You may not convey a covered work if you are a party to an arrangement with a third party that is in the business of distributing software, under which you make payment to the third party based on the extent of your activity of conveying the work, and under which the third party grants, to any of the parties who would receive the covered work from you, a discriminatory patent license (a) in connection with copies of the covered work conveyed by you (or copies made from those copies), or (b) primarily for and in connection with specific products or compilations that contain the covered work, unless you entered into that arrangement, or that patent license was granted, prior to 28 March 2007. Nothing in this License shall be construed as excluding or limiting any implied license or other defenses to infringement that may otherwise be available to you under applicable patent law. 12. No Surrender of Others' Freedom. If conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot convey a covered work so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not convey it at all. For example, if you agree to terms that obligate you to collect a royalty for further conveying from those to whom you convey the Program, the only way you could satisfy both those terms and this License would be to refrain entirely from conveying the Program. 13. Use with the GNU Affero General Public License. Notwithstanding any other provision of this License, you have permission to link or combine any covered work with a work licensed under version 3 of the GNU Affero General Public License into a single combined work, and to convey the resulting work. The terms of this License will continue to apply to the part which is the covered work, but the special requirements of the GNU Affero General Public License, section 13, concerning interaction through a network will apply to the combination as such. 14. Revised Versions of this License. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of the GNU General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program specifies that a certain numbered version of the GNU General Public License "or any later version" applies to it, you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that numbered version or of any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of the GNU General Public License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Program specifies that a proxy can decide which future versions of the GNU General Public License can be used, that proxy's public statement of acceptance of a version permanently authorizes you to choose that version for the Program. Later license versions may give you additional or different permissions. However, no additional obligations are imposed on any author or copyright holder as a result of your choosing to follow a later version. 15. Disclaimer of Warranty. THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION. 16. Limitation of Liability. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MODIFIES AND/OR CONVEYS THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. 17. Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16. If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided above cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms, reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection with the Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a copy of the Program in return for a fee. END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms. To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. Copyright (C) This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode: Copyright (C) This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box". You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see . The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this License. But first, please read . cpio-2.11/doc/0000755000175000017500000000000012510744565012561 5ustar wookeywookeycpio-2.11/doc/Makefile.am0000644000175000017500000000176611335225453014621 0ustar wookeywookey# This file is part of GNU cpio # Copyright (C) 2004, 2007, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) # any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA # 02110-1301 USA. info_TEXINFOS = cpio.texi man_MANS = cpio.1 mt.1 EXTRA_DIST = $(man_MANS) gendocs_template # Make sure you set TEXINPUT manual: TEXINPUTS=$(srcdir):$(top_srcdir)/scripts:$$TEXINPUTS \ gendocs.sh cpio 'GNU cpio manual' cpio-2.11/doc/stamp-vti0000644000175000017500000000014311345714077014426 0ustar wookeywookey@set UPDATED 12 February 2010 @set UPDATED-MONTH February 2010 @set EDITION 2.11 @set VERSION 2.11 cpio-2.11/doc/Makefile.in0000644000175000017500000013513711345713763014641 0ustar wookeywookey# Makefile.in generated by automake 1.11.1 from Makefile.am. # @configure_input@ # Copyright (C) 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, # 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, # Inc. # This Makefile.in is free software; the Free Software Foundation # gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, # with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law; without # even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A # PARTICULAR PURPOSE. @SET_MAKE@ # This file is part of GNU cpio # Copyright (C) 2004, 2007, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) # any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA # 02110-1301 USA. VPATH = @srcdir@ pkgdatadir = $(datadir)/@PACKAGE@ pkgincludedir = $(includedir)/@PACKAGE@ pkglibdir = $(libdir)/@PACKAGE@ pkglibexecdir = $(libexecdir)/@PACKAGE@ am__cd = CDPATH="$${ZSH_VERSION+.}$(PATH_SEPARATOR)" && cd install_sh_DATA = $(install_sh) -c -m 644 install_sh_PROGRAM = $(install_sh) -c install_sh_SCRIPT = $(install_sh) -c INSTALL_HEADER = $(INSTALL_DATA) transform = $(program_transform_name) NORMAL_INSTALL = : PRE_INSTALL = : POST_INSTALL = : NORMAL_UNINSTALL = : PRE_UNINSTALL = : POST_UNINSTALL = : build_triplet = @build@ host_triplet = @host@ subdir = doc DIST_COMMON = $(srcdir)/Makefile.am $(srcdir)/Makefile.in \ $(srcdir)/stamp-vti $(srcdir)/version.texi ACLOCAL_M4 = $(top_srcdir)/aclocal.m4 am__aclocal_m4_deps = $(top_srcdir)/am/flushleft.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/am/pack.m4 $(top_srcdir)/am/sysdep.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/00gnulib.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/alloca.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/argmatch.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/argp.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/bison.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/chdir-long.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/chown.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/clock_time.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/close-stream.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/close.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/closeout.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/codeset.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/d-ino.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/dirent-safer.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/dirent_h.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/dirfd.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/dirname.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/dos.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/double-slash-root.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/dup2.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/eealloc.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/environ.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/errno_h.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/error.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/extensions.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/fchdir.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/fclose.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/fcntl-o.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/fcntl.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/fcntl_h.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/fdopendir.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/fileblocks.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/float_h.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/fnmatch.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/fpending.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/fseeko.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/getcwd-abort-bug.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/getcwd-path-max.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/getcwd.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/getdate.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/getdtablesize.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/getopt.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/gettext.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/gettime.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/gettimeofday.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/glibc21.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/gnulib-common.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/gnulib-comp.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/hash.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/iconv.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/include_next.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/inline.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/intlmacosx.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/intmax_t.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/inttostr.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/inttypes-pri.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/inttypes.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/inttypes_h.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/lchown.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/lib-ld.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/lib-link.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/lib-prefix.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/localcharset.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/locale-fr.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/locale-ja.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/locale-zh.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/longlong.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/lseek.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/lstat.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/malloc.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/malloca.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/mbrtowc.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/mbsinit.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/mbsrtowcs.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/mbstate_t.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/memchr.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/mempcpy.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/memrchr.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/mkdir.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/mktime.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/mmap-anon.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/mode_t.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/multiarch.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/nls.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/open.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/openat.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/paxutils.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/po.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/printf.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/progtest.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/quote.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/quotearg.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/rawmemchr.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/realloc.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/rmdir.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/rmt.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/rtapelib.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/safe-read.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/safe-write.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/save-cwd.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/savedir.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/setenv.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/size_max.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/sleep.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/ssize_t.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/stat-time.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/stat.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/stdarg.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/stdbool.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/stddef_h.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/stdint.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/stdint_h.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/stdio_h.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/stdlib_h.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/stpcpy.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/strcase.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/strchrnul.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/strdup.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/strerror.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/string_h.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/strings_h.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/strndup.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/strnlen.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/strtol.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/sys_stat_h.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/sys_time_h.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/sysexits.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/system.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/time_h.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/time_r.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/timespec.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/tm_gmtoff.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/unistd-safer.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/unistd_h.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/unlink.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/unlocked-io.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/utimbuf.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/utimens.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/utimes.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/vasnprintf.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/version-etc.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/vsnprintf.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/warn-on-use.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/wchar_h.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/wchar_t.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/wctype_h.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/wint_t.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/write.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/xalloc.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/xgetcwd.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/m4/xsize.m4 $(top_srcdir)/m4/xstrndup.m4 \ $(top_srcdir)/configure.ac am__configure_deps = $(am__aclocal_m4_deps) $(CONFIGURE_DEPENDENCIES) \ $(ACLOCAL_M4) mkinstalldirs = $(install_sh) -d CONFIG_HEADER = $(top_builddir)/config.h CONFIG_CLEAN_FILES = CONFIG_CLEAN_VPATH_FILES = AM_V_GEN = $(am__v_GEN_$(V)) am__v_GEN_ = $(am__v_GEN_$(AM_DEFAULT_VERBOSITY)) am__v_GEN_0 = @echo " GEN " $@; AM_V_at = $(am__v_at_$(V)) am__v_at_ = $(am__v_at_$(AM_DEFAULT_VERBOSITY)) am__v_at_0 = @ SOURCES = DIST_SOURCES = INFO_DEPS = $(srcdir)/cpio.info TEXINFO_TEX = $(top_srcdir)/build-aux/texinfo.tex am__TEXINFO_TEX_DIR = $(top_srcdir)/build-aux DVIS = cpio.dvi PDFS = cpio.pdf PSS = cpio.ps HTMLS = cpio.html TEXINFOS = cpio.texi TEXI2DVI = texi2dvi TEXI2PDF = $(TEXI2DVI) --pdf --batch MAKEINFOHTML = $(MAKEINFO) --html AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS = $(AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS) DVIPS = dvips am__installdirs = "$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)" "$(DESTDIR)$(man1dir)" am__vpath_adj_setup = srcdirstrip=`echo "$(srcdir)" | sed 's|.|.|g'`; am__vpath_adj = case $$p in \ $(srcdir)/*) f=`echo "$$p" | sed "s|^$$srcdirstrip/||"`;; \ *) f=$$p;; \ esac; am__strip_dir = f=`echo $$p | sed -e 's|^.*/||'`; am__install_max = 40 am__nobase_strip_setup = \ srcdirstrip=`echo "$(srcdir)" | sed 's/[].[^$$\\*|]/\\\\&/g'` am__nobase_strip = \ for p in $$list; do echo "$$p"; done | sed -e "s|$$srcdirstrip/||" am__nobase_list = $(am__nobase_strip_setup); \ for p in $$list; do echo "$$p $$p"; done | \ sed "s| $$srcdirstrip/| |;"' / .*\//!s/ .*/ ./; s,\( .*\)/[^/]*$$,\1,' | \ $(AWK) 'BEGIN { files["."] = "" } { files[$$2] = files[$$2] " " $$1; \ if (++n[$$2] == $(am__install_max)) \ { print $$2, files[$$2]; n[$$2] = 0; files[$$2] = "" } } \ END { for (dir in files) print dir, files[dir] }' am__base_list = \ sed '$$!N;$$!N;$$!N;$$!N;$$!N;$$!N;$$!N;s/\n/ /g' | \ sed '$$!N;$$!N;$$!N;$$!N;s/\n/ /g' man1dir = $(mandir)/man1 NROFF = nroff MANS = $(man_MANS) DISTFILES = $(DIST_COMMON) $(DIST_SOURCES) $(TEXINFOS) $(EXTRA_DIST) ACLOCAL = @ACLOCAL@ ALLOCA = @ALLOCA@ ALLOCA_H = @ALLOCA_H@ AMTAR = @AMTAR@ AM_DEFAULT_VERBOSITY = @AM_DEFAULT_VERBOSITY@ APPLE_UNIVERSAL_BUILD = @APPLE_UNIVERSAL_BUILD@ AUTOCONF = @AUTOCONF@ AUTOHEADER = @AUTOHEADER@ AUTOM4TE = @AUTOM4TE@ AUTOMAKE = @AUTOMAKE@ AWK = @AWK@ BITSIZEOF_PTRDIFF_T = @BITSIZEOF_PTRDIFF_T@ BITSIZEOF_SIG_ATOMIC_T = @BITSIZEOF_SIG_ATOMIC_T@ BITSIZEOF_SIZE_T = @BITSIZEOF_SIZE_T@ BITSIZEOF_WCHAR_T = @BITSIZEOF_WCHAR_T@ BITSIZEOF_WINT_T = @BITSIZEOF_WINT_T@ CC = @CC@ CCDEPMODE = @CCDEPMODE@ CFLAGS = @CFLAGS@ CPIO_MT_PROG = @CPIO_MT_PROG@ CPP = @CPP@ CPPFLAGS = @CPPFLAGS@ CYGPATH_W = @CYGPATH_W@ DEFAULT_RMT_COMMAND = @DEFAULT_RMT_COMMAND@ DEFAULT_RMT_DIR = @DEFAULT_RMT_DIR@ DEFS = @DEFS@ DEPDIR = @DEPDIR@ ECHO_C = @ECHO_C@ ECHO_N = @ECHO_N@ ECHO_T = @ECHO_T@ EGREP = @EGREP@ EMULTIHOP_HIDDEN = @EMULTIHOP_HIDDEN@ EMULTIHOP_VALUE = @EMULTIHOP_VALUE@ ENOLINK_HIDDEN = @ENOLINK_HIDDEN@ ENOLINK_VALUE = @ENOLINK_VALUE@ EOVERFLOW_HIDDEN = @EOVERFLOW_HIDDEN@ EOVERFLOW_VALUE = @EOVERFLOW_VALUE@ ERRNO_H = @ERRNO_H@ EXEEXT = @EXEEXT@ FLOAT_H = @FLOAT_H@ FNMATCH_H = @FNMATCH_H@ GETOPT_H = @GETOPT_H@ GETTEXT_MACRO_VERSION = @GETTEXT_MACRO_VERSION@ GLIBC21 = @GLIBC21@ GMSGFMT = @GMSGFMT@ GMSGFMT_015 = @GMSGFMT_015@ GNULIB_ALPHASORT = @GNULIB_ALPHASORT@ GNULIB_ATOLL = @GNULIB_ATOLL@ GNULIB_BTOWC = @GNULIB_BTOWC@ GNULIB_CALLOC_POSIX = @GNULIB_CALLOC_POSIX@ GNULIB_CANONICALIZE_FILE_NAME = @GNULIB_CANONICALIZE_FILE_NAME@ GNULIB_CHOWN = @GNULIB_CHOWN@ GNULIB_CLOSE = @GNULIB_CLOSE@ GNULIB_DIRFD = @GNULIB_DIRFD@ GNULIB_DPRINTF = @GNULIB_DPRINTF@ GNULIB_DUP2 = @GNULIB_DUP2@ GNULIB_DUP3 = @GNULIB_DUP3@ GNULIB_ENVIRON = @GNULIB_ENVIRON@ GNULIB_EUIDACCESS = @GNULIB_EUIDACCESS@ GNULIB_FACCESSAT = @GNULIB_FACCESSAT@ GNULIB_FCHDIR = @GNULIB_FCHDIR@ GNULIB_FCHMODAT = @GNULIB_FCHMODAT@ GNULIB_FCHOWNAT = @GNULIB_FCHOWNAT@ GNULIB_FCLOSE = @GNULIB_FCLOSE@ GNULIB_FCNTL = @GNULIB_FCNTL@ GNULIB_FDOPENDIR = @GNULIB_FDOPENDIR@ GNULIB_FFLUSH = @GNULIB_FFLUSH@ GNULIB_FOPEN = @GNULIB_FOPEN@ GNULIB_FPRINTF = @GNULIB_FPRINTF@ GNULIB_FPRINTF_POSIX = @GNULIB_FPRINTF_POSIX@ GNULIB_FPURGE = @GNULIB_FPURGE@ GNULIB_FPUTC = @GNULIB_FPUTC@ GNULIB_FPUTS = @GNULIB_FPUTS@ GNULIB_FREOPEN = @GNULIB_FREOPEN@ GNULIB_FSEEK = @GNULIB_FSEEK@ GNULIB_FSEEKO = @GNULIB_FSEEKO@ GNULIB_FSTATAT = @GNULIB_FSTATAT@ GNULIB_FSYNC = @GNULIB_FSYNC@ GNULIB_FTELL = @GNULIB_FTELL@ GNULIB_FTELLO = @GNULIB_FTELLO@ GNULIB_FTRUNCATE = @GNULIB_FTRUNCATE@ GNULIB_FUTIMENS = @GNULIB_FUTIMENS@ GNULIB_FWRITE = @GNULIB_FWRITE@ GNULIB_GETCWD = @GNULIB_GETCWD@ GNULIB_GETDELIM = @GNULIB_GETDELIM@ GNULIB_GETDOMAINNAME = @GNULIB_GETDOMAINNAME@ GNULIB_GETDTABLESIZE = @GNULIB_GETDTABLESIZE@ GNULIB_GETGROUPS = @GNULIB_GETGROUPS@ GNULIB_GETHOSTNAME = @GNULIB_GETHOSTNAME@ GNULIB_GETLINE = @GNULIB_GETLINE@ GNULIB_GETLOADAVG = @GNULIB_GETLOADAVG@ GNULIB_GETLOGIN = @GNULIB_GETLOGIN@ GNULIB_GETLOGIN_R = @GNULIB_GETLOGIN_R@ GNULIB_GETPAGESIZE = @GNULIB_GETPAGESIZE@ GNULIB_GETSUBOPT = @GNULIB_GETSUBOPT@ GNULIB_GETTIMEOFDAY = @GNULIB_GETTIMEOFDAY@ GNULIB_GETUSERSHELL = @GNULIB_GETUSERSHELL@ GNULIB_IMAXABS = @GNULIB_IMAXABS@ GNULIB_IMAXDIV = @GNULIB_IMAXDIV@ GNULIB_LCHMOD = @GNULIB_LCHMOD@ GNULIB_LCHOWN = @GNULIB_LCHOWN@ GNULIB_LINK = @GNULIB_LINK@ GNULIB_LINKAT = @GNULIB_LINKAT@ GNULIB_LSEEK = @GNULIB_LSEEK@ GNULIB_LSTAT = @GNULIB_LSTAT@ GNULIB_MALLOC_POSIX = @GNULIB_MALLOC_POSIX@ GNULIB_MBRLEN = @GNULIB_MBRLEN@ GNULIB_MBRTOWC = @GNULIB_MBRTOWC@ GNULIB_MBSCASECMP = @GNULIB_MBSCASECMP@ GNULIB_MBSCASESTR = @GNULIB_MBSCASESTR@ GNULIB_MBSCHR = @GNULIB_MBSCHR@ GNULIB_MBSCSPN = @GNULIB_MBSCSPN@ GNULIB_MBSINIT = @GNULIB_MBSINIT@ GNULIB_MBSLEN = @GNULIB_MBSLEN@ GNULIB_MBSNCASECMP = @GNULIB_MBSNCASECMP@ GNULIB_MBSNLEN = @GNULIB_MBSNLEN@ GNULIB_MBSNRTOWCS = @GNULIB_MBSNRTOWCS@ GNULIB_MBSPBRK = @GNULIB_MBSPBRK@ GNULIB_MBSPCASECMP = @GNULIB_MBSPCASECMP@ GNULIB_MBSRCHR = @GNULIB_MBSRCHR@ GNULIB_MBSRTOWCS = @GNULIB_MBSRTOWCS@ GNULIB_MBSSEP = @GNULIB_MBSSEP@ GNULIB_MBSSPN = @GNULIB_MBSSPN@ GNULIB_MBSSTR = @GNULIB_MBSSTR@ GNULIB_MBSTOK_R = @GNULIB_MBSTOK_R@ GNULIB_MEMCHR = @GNULIB_MEMCHR@ GNULIB_MEMMEM = @GNULIB_MEMMEM@ GNULIB_MEMPCPY = @GNULIB_MEMPCPY@ GNULIB_MEMRCHR = @GNULIB_MEMRCHR@ GNULIB_MKDIRAT = @GNULIB_MKDIRAT@ GNULIB_MKDTEMP = @GNULIB_MKDTEMP@ GNULIB_MKFIFO = @GNULIB_MKFIFO@ GNULIB_MKFIFOAT = @GNULIB_MKFIFOAT@ GNULIB_MKNOD = @GNULIB_MKNOD@ GNULIB_MKNODAT = @GNULIB_MKNODAT@ GNULIB_MKOSTEMP = @GNULIB_MKOSTEMP@ GNULIB_MKOSTEMPS = @GNULIB_MKOSTEMPS@ GNULIB_MKSTEMP = @GNULIB_MKSTEMP@ GNULIB_MKSTEMPS = @GNULIB_MKSTEMPS@ GNULIB_MKTIME = @GNULIB_MKTIME@ GNULIB_NANOSLEEP = @GNULIB_NANOSLEEP@ GNULIB_OBSTACK_PRINTF = @GNULIB_OBSTACK_PRINTF@ GNULIB_OBSTACK_PRINTF_POSIX = @GNULIB_OBSTACK_PRINTF_POSIX@ GNULIB_OPEN = @GNULIB_OPEN@ GNULIB_OPENAT = @GNULIB_OPENAT@ GNULIB_PERROR = @GNULIB_PERROR@ GNULIB_PIPE2 = @GNULIB_PIPE2@ GNULIB_POPEN = @GNULIB_POPEN@ GNULIB_PREAD = @GNULIB_PREAD@ GNULIB_PRINTF = @GNULIB_PRINTF@ GNULIB_PRINTF_POSIX = @GNULIB_PRINTF_POSIX@ GNULIB_PUTC = @GNULIB_PUTC@ GNULIB_PUTCHAR = @GNULIB_PUTCHAR@ GNULIB_PUTENV = @GNULIB_PUTENV@ GNULIB_PUTS = @GNULIB_PUTS@ GNULIB_RANDOM_R = @GNULIB_RANDOM_R@ GNULIB_RAWMEMCHR = @GNULIB_RAWMEMCHR@ GNULIB_READLINK = @GNULIB_READLINK@ GNULIB_READLINKAT = @GNULIB_READLINKAT@ GNULIB_REALLOC_POSIX = @GNULIB_REALLOC_POSIX@ GNULIB_REALPATH = @GNULIB_REALPATH@ GNULIB_REMOVE = @GNULIB_REMOVE@ GNULIB_RENAME = @GNULIB_RENAME@ GNULIB_RENAMEAT = @GNULIB_RENAMEAT@ GNULIB_RMDIR = @GNULIB_RMDIR@ GNULIB_RPMATCH = @GNULIB_RPMATCH@ GNULIB_SCANDIR = @GNULIB_SCANDIR@ GNULIB_SETENV = @GNULIB_SETENV@ GNULIB_SLEEP = @GNULIB_SLEEP@ GNULIB_SNPRINTF = @GNULIB_SNPRINTF@ GNULIB_SPRINTF_POSIX = @GNULIB_SPRINTF_POSIX@ GNULIB_STAT = @GNULIB_STAT@ GNULIB_STDIO_H_SIGPIPE = @GNULIB_STDIO_H_SIGPIPE@ GNULIB_STPCPY = @GNULIB_STPCPY@ GNULIB_STPNCPY = @GNULIB_STPNCPY@ GNULIB_STRCASESTR = @GNULIB_STRCASESTR@ GNULIB_STRCHRNUL = @GNULIB_STRCHRNUL@ GNULIB_STRDUP = @GNULIB_STRDUP@ GNULIB_STRERROR = @GNULIB_STRERROR@ GNULIB_STRNDUP = @GNULIB_STRNDUP@ GNULIB_STRNLEN = @GNULIB_STRNLEN@ GNULIB_STRPBRK = @GNULIB_STRPBRK@ GNULIB_STRPTIME = @GNULIB_STRPTIME@ GNULIB_STRSEP = @GNULIB_STRSEP@ GNULIB_STRSIGNAL = @GNULIB_STRSIGNAL@ GNULIB_STRSTR = @GNULIB_STRSTR@ GNULIB_STRTOD = @GNULIB_STRTOD@ GNULIB_STRTOIMAX = @GNULIB_STRTOIMAX@ GNULIB_STRTOK_R = @GNULIB_STRTOK_R@ GNULIB_STRTOLL = @GNULIB_STRTOLL@ GNULIB_STRTOULL = @GNULIB_STRTOULL@ GNULIB_STRTOUMAX = @GNULIB_STRTOUMAX@ GNULIB_STRVERSCMP = @GNULIB_STRVERSCMP@ GNULIB_SYMLINK = @GNULIB_SYMLINK@ GNULIB_SYMLINKAT = @GNULIB_SYMLINKAT@ GNULIB_TIMEGM = @GNULIB_TIMEGM@ GNULIB_UNISTD_H_GETOPT = @GNULIB_UNISTD_H_GETOPT@ GNULIB_UNISTD_H_SIGPIPE = @GNULIB_UNISTD_H_SIGPIPE@ GNULIB_UNLINK = @GNULIB_UNLINK@ GNULIB_UNLINKAT = @GNULIB_UNLINKAT@ GNULIB_UNSETENV = @GNULIB_UNSETENV@ GNULIB_USLEEP = @GNULIB_USLEEP@ GNULIB_UTIMENSAT = @GNULIB_UTIMENSAT@ GNULIB_VASPRINTF = @GNULIB_VASPRINTF@ GNULIB_VDPRINTF = @GNULIB_VDPRINTF@ GNULIB_VFPRINTF = @GNULIB_VFPRINTF@ GNULIB_VFPRINTF_POSIX = @GNULIB_VFPRINTF_POSIX@ GNULIB_VPRINTF = @GNULIB_VPRINTF@ GNULIB_VPRINTF_POSIX = @GNULIB_VPRINTF_POSIX@ GNULIB_VSNPRINTF = @GNULIB_VSNPRINTF@ GNULIB_VSPRINTF_POSIX = @GNULIB_VSPRINTF_POSIX@ GNULIB_WCRTOMB = @GNULIB_WCRTOMB@ GNULIB_WCSNRTOMBS = @GNULIB_WCSNRTOMBS@ GNULIB_WCSRTOMBS = @GNULIB_WCSRTOMBS@ GNULIB_WCTOB = @GNULIB_WCTOB@ GNULIB_WCWIDTH = @GNULIB_WCWIDTH@ GNULIB_WRITE = @GNULIB_WRITE@ GREP = @GREP@ HAVE_ALPHASORT = @HAVE_ALPHASORT@ HAVE_ATOLL = @HAVE_ATOLL@ HAVE_BTOWC = @HAVE_BTOWC@ HAVE_CALLOC_POSIX = @HAVE_CALLOC_POSIX@ HAVE_CANONICALIZE_FILE_NAME = @HAVE_CANONICALIZE_FILE_NAME@ HAVE_CHOWN = @HAVE_CHOWN@ HAVE_DECL_DIRFD = @HAVE_DECL_DIRFD@ HAVE_DECL_ENVIRON = @HAVE_DECL_ENVIRON@ HAVE_DECL_FPURGE = @HAVE_DECL_FPURGE@ HAVE_DECL_GETDELIM = @HAVE_DECL_GETDELIM@ HAVE_DECL_GETLINE = @HAVE_DECL_GETLINE@ HAVE_DECL_GETLOADAVG = @HAVE_DECL_GETLOADAVG@ HAVE_DECL_GETLOGIN_R = @HAVE_DECL_GETLOGIN_R@ HAVE_DECL_IMAXABS = @HAVE_DECL_IMAXABS@ HAVE_DECL_IMAXDIV = @HAVE_DECL_IMAXDIV@ HAVE_DECL_MEMMEM = @HAVE_DECL_MEMMEM@ HAVE_DECL_MEMRCHR = @HAVE_DECL_MEMRCHR@ HAVE_DECL_OBSTACK_PRINTF = @HAVE_DECL_OBSTACK_PRINTF@ HAVE_DECL_SNPRINTF = @HAVE_DECL_SNPRINTF@ HAVE_DECL_STRDUP = @HAVE_DECL_STRDUP@ HAVE_DECL_STRERROR = @HAVE_DECL_STRERROR@ HAVE_DECL_STRNCASECMP = @HAVE_DECL_STRNCASECMP@ HAVE_DECL_STRNDUP = @HAVE_DECL_STRNDUP@ HAVE_DECL_STRNLEN = @HAVE_DECL_STRNLEN@ HAVE_DECL_STRSIGNAL = @HAVE_DECL_STRSIGNAL@ HAVE_DECL_STRTOIMAX = @HAVE_DECL_STRTOIMAX@ HAVE_DECL_STRTOK_R = @HAVE_DECL_STRTOK_R@ HAVE_DECL_STRTOUMAX = @HAVE_DECL_STRTOUMAX@ HAVE_DECL_VSNPRINTF = @HAVE_DECL_VSNPRINTF@ HAVE_DECL_WCTOB = @HAVE_DECL_WCTOB@ HAVE_DECL_WCWIDTH = @HAVE_DECL_WCWIDTH@ HAVE_DPRINTF = @HAVE_DPRINTF@ HAVE_DUP2 = @HAVE_DUP2@ HAVE_DUP3 = @HAVE_DUP3@ HAVE_EUIDACCESS = @HAVE_EUIDACCESS@ HAVE_FACCESSAT = @HAVE_FACCESSAT@ HAVE_FCHMODAT = @HAVE_FCHMODAT@ HAVE_FCHOWNAT = @HAVE_FCHOWNAT@ HAVE_FCNTL = @HAVE_FCNTL@ HAVE_FDOPENDIR = @HAVE_FDOPENDIR@ HAVE_FSTATAT = @HAVE_FSTATAT@ HAVE_FSYNC = @HAVE_FSYNC@ HAVE_FTRUNCATE = @HAVE_FTRUNCATE@ HAVE_FUTIMENS = @HAVE_FUTIMENS@ HAVE_GETDOMAINNAME = @HAVE_GETDOMAINNAME@ HAVE_GETDTABLESIZE = @HAVE_GETDTABLESIZE@ HAVE_GETGROUPS = @HAVE_GETGROUPS@ HAVE_GETHOSTNAME = @HAVE_GETHOSTNAME@ HAVE_GETLOGIN = @HAVE_GETLOGIN@ HAVE_GETOPT_H = @HAVE_GETOPT_H@ HAVE_GETPAGESIZE = @HAVE_GETPAGESIZE@ HAVE_GETSUBOPT = @HAVE_GETSUBOPT@ HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY = @HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY@ HAVE_GETUSERSHELL = @HAVE_GETUSERSHELL@ HAVE_INTTYPES_H = @HAVE_INTTYPES_H@ HAVE_ISWCNTRL = @HAVE_ISWCNTRL@ HAVE_LCHMOD = @HAVE_LCHMOD@ HAVE_LCHOWN = @HAVE_LCHOWN@ HAVE_LINK = @HAVE_LINK@ HAVE_LINKAT = @HAVE_LINKAT@ HAVE_LONG_LONG_INT = @HAVE_LONG_LONG_INT@ HAVE_LSTAT = @HAVE_LSTAT@ HAVE_MALLOC_POSIX = @HAVE_MALLOC_POSIX@ HAVE_MBRLEN = @HAVE_MBRLEN@ HAVE_MBRTOWC = @HAVE_MBRTOWC@ HAVE_MBSINIT = @HAVE_MBSINIT@ HAVE_MBSLEN = @HAVE_MBSLEN@ HAVE_MBSNRTOWCS = @HAVE_MBSNRTOWCS@ HAVE_MBSRTOWCS = @HAVE_MBSRTOWCS@ HAVE_MEMPCPY = @HAVE_MEMPCPY@ HAVE_MKDIRAT = @HAVE_MKDIRAT@ HAVE_MKDTEMP = @HAVE_MKDTEMP@ HAVE_MKFIFO = @HAVE_MKFIFO@ HAVE_MKFIFOAT = @HAVE_MKFIFOAT@ HAVE_MKNOD = @HAVE_MKNOD@ HAVE_MKNODAT = @HAVE_MKNODAT@ HAVE_MKOSTEMP = @HAVE_MKOSTEMP@ HAVE_MKOSTEMPS = @HAVE_MKOSTEMPS@ HAVE_MKSTEMPS = @HAVE_MKSTEMPS@ HAVE_OPENAT = @HAVE_OPENAT@ HAVE_OS_H = @HAVE_OS_H@ HAVE_PIPE2 = @HAVE_PIPE2@ HAVE_PREAD = @HAVE_PREAD@ HAVE_RANDOM_H = @HAVE_RANDOM_H@ HAVE_RANDOM_R = @HAVE_RANDOM_R@ HAVE_RAWMEMCHR = @HAVE_RAWMEMCHR@ HAVE_READLINK = @HAVE_READLINK@ HAVE_READLINKAT = @HAVE_READLINKAT@ HAVE_REALLOC_POSIX = @HAVE_REALLOC_POSIX@ HAVE_REALPATH = @HAVE_REALPATH@ HAVE_RENAMEAT = @HAVE_RENAMEAT@ HAVE_RPMATCH = @HAVE_RPMATCH@ HAVE_SCANDIR = @HAVE_SCANDIR@ HAVE_SETENV = @HAVE_SETENV@ HAVE_SIGNED_SIG_ATOMIC_T = @HAVE_SIGNED_SIG_ATOMIC_T@ HAVE_SIGNED_WCHAR_T = @HAVE_SIGNED_WCHAR_T@ HAVE_SIGNED_WINT_T = @HAVE_SIGNED_WINT_T@ HAVE_SLEEP = @HAVE_SLEEP@ HAVE_STDINT_H = @HAVE_STDINT_H@ HAVE_STPCPY = @HAVE_STPCPY@ HAVE_STPNCPY = @HAVE_STPNCPY@ HAVE_STRCASECMP = @HAVE_STRCASECMP@ HAVE_STRCASESTR = @HAVE_STRCASESTR@ HAVE_STRCHRNUL = @HAVE_STRCHRNUL@ HAVE_STRPBRK = @HAVE_STRPBRK@ HAVE_STRSEP = @HAVE_STRSEP@ HAVE_STRTOD = @HAVE_STRTOD@ HAVE_STRTOLL = @HAVE_STRTOLL@ HAVE_STRTOULL = @HAVE_STRTOULL@ HAVE_STRUCT_RANDOM_DATA = @HAVE_STRUCT_RANDOM_DATA@ HAVE_STRUCT_TIMEVAL = @HAVE_STRUCT_TIMEVAL@ HAVE_STRVERSCMP = @HAVE_STRVERSCMP@ HAVE_SYMLINK = @HAVE_SYMLINK@ HAVE_SYMLINKAT = @HAVE_SYMLINKAT@ HAVE_SYSEXITS_H = @HAVE_SYSEXITS_H@ HAVE_SYS_BITYPES_H = @HAVE_SYS_BITYPES_H@ HAVE_SYS_INTTYPES_H = @HAVE_SYS_INTTYPES_H@ HAVE_SYS_LOADAVG_H = @HAVE_SYS_LOADAVG_H@ HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H = @HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H@ HAVE_SYS_TIME_H = @HAVE_SYS_TIME_H@ HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H = @HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H@ HAVE_UNISTD_H = @HAVE_UNISTD_H@ HAVE_UNLINKAT = @HAVE_UNLINKAT@ HAVE_UNSETENV = @HAVE_UNSETENV@ HAVE_UNSIGNED_LONG_LONG_INT = @HAVE_UNSIGNED_LONG_LONG_INT@ HAVE_USLEEP = @HAVE_USLEEP@ HAVE_UTIMENSAT = @HAVE_UTIMENSAT@ HAVE_VASPRINTF = @HAVE_VASPRINTF@ HAVE_VDPRINTF = @HAVE_VDPRINTF@ HAVE_WCHAR_H = @HAVE_WCHAR_H@ HAVE_WCHAR_T = @HAVE_WCHAR_T@ HAVE_WCRTOMB = @HAVE_WCRTOMB@ HAVE_WCSNRTOMBS = @HAVE_WCSNRTOMBS@ HAVE_WCSRTOMBS = @HAVE_WCSRTOMBS@ HAVE_WCTYPE_H = @HAVE_WCTYPE_H@ HAVE_WINT_T = @HAVE_WINT_T@ HAVE__BOOL = @HAVE__BOOL@ INCLUDE_NEXT = @INCLUDE_NEXT@ INCLUDE_NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE = @INCLUDE_NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE@ INSTALL = @INSTALL@ INSTALL_DATA = @INSTALL_DATA@ INSTALL_PROGRAM = @INSTALL_PROGRAM@ INSTALL_SCRIPT = @INSTALL_SCRIPT@ INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM = @INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM@ INT32_MAX_LT_INTMAX_MAX = @INT32_MAX_LT_INTMAX_MAX@ INT64_MAX_EQ_LONG_MAX = @INT64_MAX_EQ_LONG_MAX@ INTLLIBS = @INTLLIBS@ INTL_MACOSX_LIBS = @INTL_MACOSX_LIBS@ LDFLAGS = @LDFLAGS@ LIBGNU_LIBDEPS = @LIBGNU_LIBDEPS@ LIBGNU_LTLIBDEPS = @LIBGNU_LTLIBDEPS@ LIBICONV = @LIBICONV@ LIBINTL = @LIBINTL@ LIBOBJS = @LIBOBJS@ LIBS = @LIBS@ LIB_CLOCK_GETTIME = @LIB_CLOCK_GETTIME@ LIB_SETSOCKOPT = @LIB_SETSOCKOPT@ LOCALCHARSET_TESTS_ENVIRONMENT = @LOCALCHARSET_TESTS_ENVIRONMENT@ LOCALE_FR_UTF8 = @LOCALE_FR_UTF8@ LOCALE_JA = @LOCALE_JA@ LOCALE_ZH_CN = @LOCALE_ZH_CN@ LTLIBICONV = @LTLIBICONV@ LTLIBINTL = @LTLIBINTL@ LTLIBOBJS = @LTLIBOBJS@ MAKEINFO = @MAKEINFO@ MKDIR_P = @MKDIR_P@ MSGFMT = @MSGFMT@ MSGFMT_015 = @MSGFMT_015@ MSGMERGE = @MSGMERGE@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_DIRENT_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_DIRENT_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_ERRNO_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_ERRNO_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_FCNTL_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_FCNTL_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_FLOAT_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_FLOAT_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_GETOPT_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_GETOPT_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_INTTYPES_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_INTTYPES_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STDARG_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STDARG_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STDDEF_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STDDEF_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STDINT_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STDINT_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STDIO_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STDIO_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STDLIB_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STDLIB_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STRINGS_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STRINGS_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STRING_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_STRING_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_SYSEXITS_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_SYSEXITS_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_SYS_STAT_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_SYS_STAT_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_SYS_TIME_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_SYS_TIME_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_TIME_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_TIME_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_UNISTD_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_UNISTD_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_WCHAR_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_WCHAR_H@ NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_WCTYPE_H = @NEXT_AS_FIRST_DIRECTIVE_WCTYPE_H@ NEXT_DIRENT_H = @NEXT_DIRENT_H@ NEXT_ERRNO_H = @NEXT_ERRNO_H@ NEXT_FCNTL_H = @NEXT_FCNTL_H@ NEXT_FLOAT_H = @NEXT_FLOAT_H@ NEXT_GETOPT_H = @NEXT_GETOPT_H@ NEXT_INTTYPES_H = @NEXT_INTTYPES_H@ NEXT_STDARG_H = @NEXT_STDARG_H@ NEXT_STDDEF_H = @NEXT_STDDEF_H@ NEXT_STDINT_H = @NEXT_STDINT_H@ NEXT_STDIO_H = @NEXT_STDIO_H@ NEXT_STDLIB_H = @NEXT_STDLIB_H@ NEXT_STRINGS_H = @NEXT_STRINGS_H@ NEXT_STRING_H = @NEXT_STRING_H@ NEXT_SYSEXITS_H = @NEXT_SYSEXITS_H@ NEXT_SYS_STAT_H = @NEXT_SYS_STAT_H@ NEXT_SYS_TIME_H = @NEXT_SYS_TIME_H@ NEXT_TIME_H = @NEXT_TIME_H@ NEXT_UNISTD_H = @NEXT_UNISTD_H@ NEXT_WCHAR_H = @NEXT_WCHAR_H@ NEXT_WCTYPE_H = @NEXT_WCTYPE_H@ OBJEXT = @OBJEXT@ PACKAGE = @PACKAGE@ PACKAGE_BUGREPORT = @PACKAGE_BUGREPORT@ PACKAGE_NAME = @PACKAGE_NAME@ PACKAGE_STRING = @PACKAGE_STRING@ PACKAGE_TARNAME = @PACKAGE_TARNAME@ PACKAGE_VERSION = @PACKAGE_VERSION@ PATH_SEPARATOR = @PATH_SEPARATOR@ POSUB = @POSUB@ PRAGMA_SYSTEM_HEADER = @PRAGMA_SYSTEM_HEADER@ PRIPTR_PREFIX = @PRIPTR_PREFIX@ PRI_MACROS_BROKEN = @PRI_MACROS_BROKEN@ PTRDIFF_T_SUFFIX = @PTRDIFF_T_SUFFIX@ PU_RMT_PROG = @PU_RMT_PROG@ RANLIB = @RANLIB@ REPLACE_BTOWC = @REPLACE_BTOWC@ REPLACE_CANONICALIZE_FILE_NAME = @REPLACE_CANONICALIZE_FILE_NAME@ REPLACE_CHOWN = @REPLACE_CHOWN@ REPLACE_CLOSE = @REPLACE_CLOSE@ REPLACE_CLOSEDIR = @REPLACE_CLOSEDIR@ REPLACE_DPRINTF = @REPLACE_DPRINTF@ REPLACE_DUP = @REPLACE_DUP@ REPLACE_DUP2 = @REPLACE_DUP2@ REPLACE_FCHDIR = @REPLACE_FCHDIR@ REPLACE_FCHOWNAT = @REPLACE_FCHOWNAT@ REPLACE_FCLOSE = @REPLACE_FCLOSE@ REPLACE_FCNTL = @REPLACE_FCNTL@ REPLACE_FDOPENDIR = @REPLACE_FDOPENDIR@ REPLACE_FFLUSH = @REPLACE_FFLUSH@ REPLACE_FOPEN = @REPLACE_FOPEN@ REPLACE_FPRINTF = @REPLACE_FPRINTF@ REPLACE_FPURGE = @REPLACE_FPURGE@ REPLACE_FREOPEN = @REPLACE_FREOPEN@ REPLACE_FSEEK = @REPLACE_FSEEK@ REPLACE_FSEEKO = @REPLACE_FSEEKO@ REPLACE_FSTAT = @REPLACE_FSTAT@ REPLACE_FSTATAT = @REPLACE_FSTATAT@ REPLACE_FTELL = @REPLACE_FTELL@ REPLACE_FTELLO = @REPLACE_FTELLO@ REPLACE_FUTIMENS = @REPLACE_FUTIMENS@ REPLACE_GETCWD = @REPLACE_GETCWD@ REPLACE_GETDELIM = @REPLACE_GETDELIM@ REPLACE_GETGROUPS = @REPLACE_GETGROUPS@ REPLACE_GETLINE = @REPLACE_GETLINE@ REPLACE_GETPAGESIZE = @REPLACE_GETPAGESIZE@ REPLACE_GETTIMEOFDAY = @REPLACE_GETTIMEOFDAY@ REPLACE_ISWCNTRL = @REPLACE_ISWCNTRL@ REPLACE_LCHOWN = @REPLACE_LCHOWN@ REPLACE_LINK = @REPLACE_LINK@ REPLACE_LINKAT = @REPLACE_LINKAT@ REPLACE_LOCALTIME_R = @REPLACE_LOCALTIME_R@ REPLACE_LSEEK = @REPLACE_LSEEK@ REPLACE_LSTAT = @REPLACE_LSTAT@ REPLACE_MBRLEN = @REPLACE_MBRLEN@ REPLACE_MBRTOWC = @REPLACE_MBRTOWC@ REPLACE_MBSINIT = @REPLACE_MBSINIT@ REPLACE_MBSNRTOWCS = @REPLACE_MBSNRTOWCS@ REPLACE_MBSRTOWCS = @REPLACE_MBSRTOWCS@ REPLACE_MBSTATE_T = @REPLACE_MBSTATE_T@ REPLACE_MEMCHR = @REPLACE_MEMCHR@ REPLACE_MEMMEM = @REPLACE_MEMMEM@ REPLACE_MKDIR = @REPLACE_MKDIR@ REPLACE_MKFIFO = @REPLACE_MKFIFO@ REPLACE_MKNOD = @REPLACE_MKNOD@ REPLACE_MKSTEMP = @REPLACE_MKSTEMP@ REPLACE_MKTIME = @REPLACE_MKTIME@ REPLACE_NANOSLEEP = @REPLACE_NANOSLEEP@ REPLACE_NULL = @REPLACE_NULL@ REPLACE_OBSTACK_PRINTF = @REPLACE_OBSTACK_PRINTF@ REPLACE_OPEN = @REPLACE_OPEN@ REPLACE_OPENAT = @REPLACE_OPENAT@ REPLACE_OPENDIR = @REPLACE_OPENDIR@ REPLACE_PERROR = @REPLACE_PERROR@ REPLACE_POPEN = @REPLACE_POPEN@ REPLACE_PREAD = @REPLACE_PREAD@ REPLACE_PRINTF = @REPLACE_PRINTF@ REPLACE_PUTENV = @REPLACE_PUTENV@ REPLACE_READLINK = @REPLACE_READLINK@ REPLACE_REALPATH = @REPLACE_REALPATH@ REPLACE_REMOVE = @REPLACE_REMOVE@ REPLACE_RENAME = @REPLACE_RENAME@ REPLACE_RENAMEAT = @REPLACE_RENAMEAT@ REPLACE_RMDIR = @REPLACE_RMDIR@ REPLACE_SETENV = @REPLACE_SETENV@ REPLACE_SLEEP = @REPLACE_SLEEP@ REPLACE_SNPRINTF = @REPLACE_SNPRINTF@ REPLACE_SPRINTF = @REPLACE_SPRINTF@ REPLACE_STAT = @REPLACE_STAT@ REPLACE_STDIO_WRITE_FUNCS = @REPLACE_STDIO_WRITE_FUNCS@ REPLACE_STRCASESTR = @REPLACE_STRCASESTR@ REPLACE_STRDUP = @REPLACE_STRDUP@ REPLACE_STRERROR = @REPLACE_STRERROR@ REPLACE_STRNDUP = @REPLACE_STRNDUP@ REPLACE_STRPTIME = @REPLACE_STRPTIME@ REPLACE_STRSIGNAL = @REPLACE_STRSIGNAL@ REPLACE_STRSTR = @REPLACE_STRSTR@ REPLACE_STRTOD = @REPLACE_STRTOD@ REPLACE_STRTOK_R = @REPLACE_STRTOK_R@ REPLACE_SYMLINK = @REPLACE_SYMLINK@ REPLACE_TIMEGM = @REPLACE_TIMEGM@ REPLACE_UNLINK = @REPLACE_UNLINK@ REPLACE_UNLINKAT = @REPLACE_UNLINKAT@ REPLACE_UNSETENV = @REPLACE_UNSETENV@ REPLACE_USLEEP = @REPLACE_USLEEP@ REPLACE_UTIMENSAT = @REPLACE_UTIMENSAT@ REPLACE_VASPRINTF = @REPLACE_VASPRINTF@ REPLACE_VDPRINTF = @REPLACE_VDPRINTF@ REPLACE_VFPRINTF = @REPLACE_VFPRINTF@ REPLACE_VPRINTF = @REPLACE_VPRINTF@ REPLACE_VSNPRINTF = @REPLACE_VSNPRINTF@ REPLACE_VSPRINTF = @REPLACE_VSPRINTF@ REPLACE_WCRTOMB = @REPLACE_WCRTOMB@ REPLACE_WCSNRTOMBS = @REPLACE_WCSNRTOMBS@ REPLACE_WCSRTOMBS = @REPLACE_WCSRTOMBS@ REPLACE_WCTOB = @REPLACE_WCTOB@ REPLACE_WCWIDTH = @REPLACE_WCWIDTH@ REPLACE_WRITE = @REPLACE_WRITE@ SET_MAKE = @SET_MAKE@ SHELL = @SHELL@ SIG_ATOMIC_T_SUFFIX = @SIG_ATOMIC_T_SUFFIX@ SIZE_T_SUFFIX = @SIZE_T_SUFFIX@ STDARG_H = @STDARG_H@ STDBOOL_H = @STDBOOL_H@ STDDEF_H = @STDDEF_H@ STDINT_H = @STDINT_H@ STRIP = @STRIP@ SYSEXITS_H = @SYSEXITS_H@ SYS_TIME_H_DEFINES_STRUCT_TIMESPEC = @SYS_TIME_H_DEFINES_STRUCT_TIMESPEC@ TIME_H_DEFINES_STRUCT_TIMESPEC = @TIME_H_DEFINES_STRUCT_TIMESPEC@ UINT32_MAX_LT_UINTMAX_MAX = @UINT32_MAX_LT_UINTMAX_MAX@ UINT64_MAX_EQ_ULONG_MAX = @UINT64_MAX_EQ_ULONG_MAX@ UNDEFINE_STRTOK_R = @UNDEFINE_STRTOK_R@ UNISTD_H_HAVE_WINSOCK2_H = @UNISTD_H_HAVE_WINSOCK2_H@ UNISTD_H_HAVE_WINSOCK2_H_AND_USE_SOCKETS = @UNISTD_H_HAVE_WINSOCK2_H_AND_USE_SOCKETS@ USE_NLS = @USE_NLS@ VERSION = @VERSION@ WCHAR_T_SUFFIX = @WCHAR_T_SUFFIX@ WINT_T_SUFFIX = @WINT_T_SUFFIX@ XGETTEXT = @XGETTEXT@ XGETTEXT_015 = @XGETTEXT_015@ XGETTEXT_EXTRA_OPTIONS = @XGETTEXT_EXTRA_OPTIONS@ YACC = @YACC@ YFLAGS = @YFLAGS@ abs_builddir = @abs_builddir@ abs_srcdir = @abs_srcdir@ abs_top_builddir = @abs_top_builddir@ abs_top_srcdir = @abs_top_srcdir@ ac_ct_CC = @ac_ct_CC@ am__include = @am__include@ am__leading_dot = @am__leading_dot@ am__quote = @am__quote@ am__tar = @am__tar@ am__untar = @am__untar@ bindir = @bindir@ build = @build@ build_alias = @build_alias@ build_cpu = @build_cpu@ build_os = @build_os@ build_vendor = @build_vendor@ builddir = @builddir@ datadir = @datadir@ datarootdir = @datarootdir@ docdir = @docdir@ dvidir = @dvidir@ exec_prefix = @exec_prefix@ gl_LIBOBJS = @gl_LIBOBJS@ gl_LTLIBOBJS = @gl_LTLIBOBJS@ gltests_LIBOBJS = @gltests_LIBOBJS@ gltests_LTLIBOBJS = @gltests_LTLIBOBJS@ host = @host@ host_alias = @host_alias@ host_cpu = @host_cpu@ host_os = @host_os@ host_vendor = @host_vendor@ htmldir = @htmldir@ includedir = @includedir@ infodir = @infodir@ install_sh = @install_sh@ libdir = @libdir@ libexecdir = @libexecdir@ localedir = @localedir@ localstatedir = @localstatedir@ mandir = @mandir@ mkdir_p = @mkdir_p@ oldincludedir = @oldincludedir@ pdfdir = @pdfdir@ prefix = @prefix@ program_transform_name = @program_transform_name@ psdir = @psdir@ sbindir = @sbindir@ sharedstatedir = @sharedstatedir@ srcdir = @srcdir@ sysconfdir = @sysconfdir@ target_alias = @target_alias@ top_build_prefix = @top_build_prefix@ top_builddir = @top_builddir@ top_srcdir = @top_srcdir@ info_TEXINFOS = cpio.texi man_MANS = cpio.1 mt.1 EXTRA_DIST = $(man_MANS) gendocs_template all: all-am .SUFFIXES: .SUFFIXES: .dvi .html .info .pdf .ps .texi $(srcdir)/Makefile.in: $(srcdir)/Makefile.am $(am__configure_deps) @for dep in $?; do \ case '$(am__configure_deps)' in \ *$$dep*) \ ( cd $(top_builddir) && $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) am--refresh ) \ && { if test -f $@; then exit 0; else break; fi; }; \ exit 1;; \ esac; \ done; \ echo ' cd $(top_srcdir) && $(AUTOMAKE) --gnits doc/Makefile'; \ $(am__cd) $(top_srcdir) && \ $(AUTOMAKE) --gnits doc/Makefile .PRECIOUS: Makefile Makefile: $(srcdir)/Makefile.in $(top_builddir)/config.status @case '$?' in \ *config.status*) \ cd $(top_builddir) && $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) am--refresh;; \ *) \ echo ' cd $(top_builddir) && $(SHELL) ./config.status $(subdir)/$@ $(am__depfiles_maybe)'; \ cd $(top_builddir) && $(SHELL) ./config.status $(subdir)/$@ $(am__depfiles_maybe);; \ esac; $(top_builddir)/config.status: $(top_srcdir)/configure $(CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES) cd $(top_builddir) && $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) am--refresh $(top_srcdir)/configure: $(am__configure_deps) cd $(top_builddir) && $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) am--refresh $(ACLOCAL_M4): $(am__aclocal_m4_deps) cd $(top_builddir) && $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) am--refresh $(am__aclocal_m4_deps): .texi.info: restore=: && backupdir="$(am__leading_dot)am$$$$" && \ am__cwd=`pwd` && $(am__cd) $(srcdir) && \ rm -rf $$backupdir && mkdir $$backupdir && \ if ($(MAKEINFO) --version) >/dev/null 2>&1; then \ for f in $@ $@-[0-9] $@-[0-9][0-9] $(@:.info=).i[0-9] $(@:.info=).i[0-9][0-9]; do \ if test -f $$f; then mv $$f $$backupdir; restore=mv; else :; fi; \ done; \ else :; fi && \ cd "$$am__cwd"; \ if $(MAKEINFO) $(AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS) $(MAKEINFOFLAGS) -I $(srcdir) \ -o $@ $<; \ then \ rc=0; \ $(am__cd) $(srcdir); \ else \ rc=$$?; \ $(am__cd) $(srcdir) && \ $$restore $$backupdir/* `echo "./$@" | sed 's|[^/]*$$||'`; \ fi; \ rm -rf $$backupdir; exit $$rc .texi.dvi: TEXINPUTS="$(am__TEXINFO_TEX_DIR)$(PATH_SEPARATOR)$$TEXINPUTS" \ MAKEINFO='$(MAKEINFO) $(AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS) $(MAKEINFOFLAGS) -I $(srcdir)' \ $(TEXI2DVI) $< .texi.pdf: TEXINPUTS="$(am__TEXINFO_TEX_DIR)$(PATH_SEPARATOR)$$TEXINPUTS" \ MAKEINFO='$(MAKEINFO) $(AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS) $(MAKEINFOFLAGS) -I $(srcdir)' \ $(TEXI2PDF) $< .texi.html: rm -rf $(@:.html=.htp) if $(MAKEINFOHTML) $(AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS) $(MAKEINFOFLAGS) -I $(srcdir) \ -o $(@:.html=.htp) $<; \ then \ rm -rf $@; \ if test ! -d $(@:.html=.htp) && test -d $(@:.html=); then \ mv $(@:.html=) $@; else mv $(@:.html=.htp) $@; fi; \ else \ if test ! -d $(@:.html=.htp) && test -d $(@:.html=); then \ rm -rf $(@:.html=); else rm -Rf $(@:.html=.htp) $@; fi; \ exit 1; \ fi $(srcdir)/cpio.info: cpio.texi $(srcdir)/version.texi cpio.dvi: cpio.texi $(srcdir)/version.texi cpio.pdf: cpio.texi $(srcdir)/version.texi cpio.html: cpio.texi $(srcdir)/version.texi $(srcdir)/version.texi: $(srcdir)/stamp-vti $(srcdir)/stamp-vti: cpio.texi $(top_srcdir)/configure @(dir=.; test -f ./cpio.texi || dir=$(srcdir); \ set `$(SHELL) $(top_srcdir)/build-aux/mdate-sh $$dir/cpio.texi`; \ echo "@set UPDATED $$1 $$2 $$3"; \ echo "@set UPDATED-MONTH $$2 $$3"; \ echo "@set EDITION $(VERSION)"; \ echo "@set VERSION $(VERSION)") > vti.tmp @cmp -s vti.tmp $(srcdir)/version.texi \ || (echo "Updating $(srcdir)/version.texi"; \ cp vti.tmp $(srcdir)/version.texi) -@rm -f vti.tmp @cp $(srcdir)/version.texi $@ mostlyclean-vti: -rm -f vti.tmp maintainer-clean-vti: -rm -f $(srcdir)/stamp-vti $(srcdir)/version.texi .dvi.ps: TEXINPUTS="$(am__TEXINFO_TEX_DIR)$(PATH_SEPARATOR)$$TEXINPUTS" \ $(DVIPS) -o $@ $< uninstall-dvi-am: @$(NORMAL_UNINSTALL) @list='$(DVIS)'; test -n "$(dvidir)" || list=; \ for p in $$list; do \ $(am__strip_dir) \ echo " rm -f '$(DESTDIR)$(dvidir)/$$f'"; \ rm -f "$(DESTDIR)$(dvidir)/$$f"; \ done uninstall-html-am: @$(NORMAL_UNINSTALL) @list='$(HTMLS)'; test -n "$(htmldir)" || list=; \ for p in $$list; do \ $(am__strip_dir) \ echo " rm -rf '$(DESTDIR)$(htmldir)/$$f'"; \ rm -rf "$(DESTDIR)$(htmldir)/$$f"; \ done uninstall-info-am: @$(PRE_UNINSTALL) @if test -d '$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)' && \ (install-info --version && \ install-info --version 2>&1 | sed 1q | grep -i -v debian) >/dev/null 2>&1; then \ list='$(INFO_DEPS)'; \ for file in $$list; do \ relfile=`echo "$$file" | sed 's|^.*/||'`; \ echo " install-info --info-dir='$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)' --remove '$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/$$relfile'"; \ if install-info --info-dir="$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)" --remove "$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/$$relfile"; \ then :; else test ! -f "$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/$$relfile" || exit 1; fi; \ done; \ else :; fi @$(NORMAL_UNINSTALL) @list='$(INFO_DEPS)'; \ for file in $$list; do \ relfile=`echo "$$file" | sed 's|^.*/||'`; \ relfile_i=`echo "$$relfile" | sed 's|\.info$$||;s|$$|.i|'`; \ (if test -d "$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)" && cd "$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)"; then \ echo " cd '$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)' && rm -f $$relfile $$relfile-[0-9] $$relfile-[0-9][0-9] $$relfile_i[0-9] $$relfile_i[0-9][0-9]"; \ rm -f $$relfile $$relfile-[0-9] $$relfile-[0-9][0-9] $$relfile_i[0-9] $$relfile_i[0-9][0-9]; \ else :; fi); \ done uninstall-pdf-am: @$(NORMAL_UNINSTALL) @list='$(PDFS)'; test -n "$(pdfdir)" || list=; \ for p in $$list; do \ $(am__strip_dir) \ echo " rm -f '$(DESTDIR)$(pdfdir)/$$f'"; \ rm -f "$(DESTDIR)$(pdfdir)/$$f"; \ done uninstall-ps-am: @$(NORMAL_UNINSTALL) @list='$(PSS)'; test -n "$(psdir)" || list=; \ for p in $$list; do \ $(am__strip_dir) \ echo " rm -f '$(DESTDIR)$(psdir)/$$f'"; \ rm -f "$(DESTDIR)$(psdir)/$$f"; \ done dist-info: $(INFO_DEPS) @srcdirstrip=`echo "$(srcdir)" | sed 's|.|.|g'`; \ list='$(INFO_DEPS)'; \ for base in $$list; do \ case $$base in \ $(srcdir)/*) base=`echo "$$base" | sed "s|^$$srcdirstrip/||"`;; \ esac; \ if test -f $$base; then d=.; else d=$(srcdir); fi; \ base_i=`echo "$$base" | sed 's|\.info$$||;s|$$|.i|'`; \ for file in $$d/$$base $$d/$$base-[0-9] $$d/$$base-[0-9][0-9] $$d/$$base_i[0-9] $$d/$$base_i[0-9][0-9]; do \ if test -f $$file; then \ relfile=`expr "$$file" : "$$d/\(.*\)"`; \ test -f "$(distdir)/$$relfile" || \ cp -p $$file "$(distdir)/$$relfile"; \ else :; fi; \ done; \ done mostlyclean-aminfo: -rm -rf cpio.aux cpio.cp cpio.cps cpio.fn cpio.fns cpio.ky cpio.kys \ cpio.log cpio.pg cpio.pgs cpio.tmp cpio.toc cpio.tp cpio.tps \ cpio.vr cpio.vrs clean-aminfo: -test -z "cpio.dvi cpio.pdf cpio.ps cpio.html" \ || rm -rf cpio.dvi cpio.pdf cpio.ps cpio.html maintainer-clean-aminfo: @list='$(INFO_DEPS)'; for i in $$list; do \ i_i=`echo "$$i" | sed 's|\.info$$||;s|$$|.i|'`; \ echo " rm -f $$i $$i-[0-9] $$i-[0-9][0-9] $$i_i[0-9] $$i_i[0-9][0-9]"; \ rm -f $$i $$i-[0-9] $$i-[0-9][0-9] $$i_i[0-9] $$i_i[0-9][0-9]; \ done install-man1: $(man_MANS) @$(NORMAL_INSTALL) test -z "$(man1dir)" || $(MKDIR_P) "$(DESTDIR)$(man1dir)" @list=''; test -n "$(man1dir)" || exit 0; \ { for i in $$list; do echo "$$i"; done; \ l2='$(man_MANS)'; for i in $$l2; do echo "$$i"; done | \ sed -n '/\.1[a-z]*$$/p'; \ } | while read p; do \ if test -f $$p; then d=; else d="$(srcdir)/"; fi; \ echo "$$d$$p"; echo "$$p"; \ done | \ sed -e 'n;s,.*/,,;p;h;s,.*\.,,;s,^[^1][0-9a-z]*$$,1,;x' \ -e 's,\.[0-9a-z]*$$,,;$(transform);G;s,\n,.,' | \ sed 'N;N;s,\n, ,g' | { \ list=; while read file base inst; do \ if test "$$base" = "$$inst"; then list="$$list $$file"; else \ echo " $(INSTALL_DATA) '$$file' '$(DESTDIR)$(man1dir)/$$inst'"; \ $(INSTALL_DATA) "$$file" "$(DESTDIR)$(man1dir)/$$inst" || exit $$?; \ fi; \ done; \ for i in $$list; do echo "$$i"; done | $(am__base_list) | \ while read files; do \ test -z "$$files" || { \ echo " $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files '$(DESTDIR)$(man1dir)'"; \ $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files "$(DESTDIR)$(man1dir)" || exit $$?; }; \ done; } uninstall-man1: @$(NORMAL_UNINSTALL) @list=''; test -n "$(man1dir)" || exit 0; \ files=`{ for i in $$list; do echo "$$i"; done; \ l2='$(man_MANS)'; for i in $$l2; do echo "$$i"; done | \ sed -n '/\.1[a-z]*$$/p'; \ } | sed -e 's,.*/,,;h;s,.*\.,,;s,^[^1][0-9a-z]*$$,1,;x' \ -e 's,\.[0-9a-z]*$$,,;$(transform);G;s,\n,.,'`; \ test -z "$$files" || { \ echo " ( cd '$(DESTDIR)$(man1dir)' && rm -f" $$files ")"; \ cd "$(DESTDIR)$(man1dir)" && rm -f $$files; } tags: TAGS TAGS: ctags: CTAGS CTAGS: distdir: $(DISTFILES) @list='$(MANS)'; if test -n "$$list"; then \ list=`for p in $$list; do \ if test -f $$p; then d=; else d="$(srcdir)/"; fi; \ if test -f "$$d$$p"; then echo "$$d$$p"; else :; fi; done`; \ if test -n "$$list" && \ grep 'ab help2man is required to generate this page' $$list >/dev/null; then \ echo "error: found man pages containing the \`missing help2man' replacement text:" >&2; \ grep -l 'ab help2man is required to generate this page' $$list | sed 's/^/ /' >&2; \ echo " to fix them, install help2man, remove and regenerate the man pages;" >&2; \ echo " typically \`make maintainer-clean' will remove them" >&2; \ exit 1; \ else :; fi; \ else :; fi @srcdirstrip=`echo "$(srcdir)" | sed 's/[].[^$$\\*]/\\\\&/g'`; \ topsrcdirstrip=`echo "$(top_srcdir)" | sed 's/[].[^$$\\*]/\\\\&/g'`; \ list='$(DISTFILES)'; \ dist_files=`for file in $$list; do echo $$file; done | \ sed -e "s|^$$srcdirstrip/||;t" \ -e "s|^$$topsrcdirstrip/|$(top_builddir)/|;t"`; \ case $$dist_files in \ */*) $(MKDIR_P) `echo "$$dist_files" | \ sed '/\//!d;s|^|$(distdir)/|;s,/[^/]*$$,,' | \ sort -u` ;; \ esac; \ for file in $$dist_files; do \ if test -f $$file || test -d $$file; then d=.; else d=$(srcdir); fi; \ if test -d $$d/$$file; then \ dir=`echo "/$$file" | sed -e 's,/[^/]*$$,,'`; \ if test -d "$(distdir)/$$file"; then \ find "$(distdir)/$$file" -type d ! -perm -700 -exec chmod u+rwx {} \;; \ fi; \ if test -d $(srcdir)/$$file && test $$d != $(srcdir); then \ cp -fpR $(srcdir)/$$file "$(distdir)$$dir" || exit 1; \ find "$(distdir)/$$file" -type d ! -perm -700 -exec chmod u+rwx {} \;; \ fi; \ cp -fpR $$d/$$file "$(distdir)$$dir" || exit 1; \ else \ test -f "$(distdir)/$$file" \ || cp -p $$d/$$file "$(distdir)/$$file" \ || exit 1; \ fi; \ done $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) \ top_distdir="$(top_distdir)" distdir="$(distdir)" \ dist-info check-am: all-am check: check-am all-am: Makefile $(INFO_DEPS) $(MANS) installdirs: for dir in "$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)" "$(DESTDIR)$(man1dir)"; do \ test -z "$$dir" || $(MKDIR_P) "$$dir"; \ done install: install-am install-exec: install-exec-am install-data: install-data-am uninstall: uninstall-am install-am: all-am @$(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) install-exec-am install-data-am installcheck: installcheck-am install-strip: $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) INSTALL_PROGRAM="$(INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM)" \ install_sh_PROGRAM="$(INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM)" INSTALL_STRIP_FLAG=-s \ `test -z '$(STRIP)' || \ echo "INSTALL_PROGRAM_ENV=STRIPPROG='$(STRIP)'"` install mostlyclean-generic: clean-generic: distclean-generic: -test -z "$(CONFIG_CLEAN_FILES)" || rm -f $(CONFIG_CLEAN_FILES) -test . = "$(srcdir)" || test -z "$(CONFIG_CLEAN_VPATH_FILES)" || rm -f $(CONFIG_CLEAN_VPATH_FILES) maintainer-clean-generic: @echo "This command is intended for maintainers to use" @echo "it deletes files that may require special tools to rebuild." clean: clean-am clean-am: clean-aminfo clean-generic mostlyclean-am distclean: distclean-am -rm -f Makefile distclean-am: clean-am distclean-generic dvi: dvi-am dvi-am: $(DVIS) html: html-am html-am: $(HTMLS) info: info-am info-am: $(INFO_DEPS) install-data-am: install-info-am install-man install-dvi: install-dvi-am install-dvi-am: $(DVIS) @$(NORMAL_INSTALL) test -z "$(dvidir)" || $(MKDIR_P) "$(DESTDIR)$(dvidir)" @list='$(DVIS)'; test -n "$(dvidir)" || list=; \ for p in $$list; do \ if test -f "$$p"; then d=; else d="$(srcdir)/"; fi; \ echo "$$d$$p"; \ done | $(am__base_list) | \ while read files; do \ echo " $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files '$(DESTDIR)$(dvidir)'"; \ $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files "$(DESTDIR)$(dvidir)" || exit $$?; \ done install-exec-am: install-html: install-html-am install-html-am: $(HTMLS) @$(NORMAL_INSTALL) test -z "$(htmldir)" || $(MKDIR_P) "$(DESTDIR)$(htmldir)" @list='$(HTMLS)'; list2=; test -n "$(htmldir)" || list=; \ for p in $$list; do \ if test -f "$$p" || test -d "$$p"; then d=; else d="$(srcdir)/"; fi; \ $(am__strip_dir) \ if test -d "$$d$$p"; then \ echo " $(MKDIR_P) '$(DESTDIR)$(htmldir)/$$f'"; \ $(MKDIR_P) "$(DESTDIR)$(htmldir)/$$f" || exit 1; \ echo " $(INSTALL_DATA) '$$d$$p'/* '$(DESTDIR)$(htmldir)/$$f'"; \ $(INSTALL_DATA) "$$d$$p"/* "$(DESTDIR)$(htmldir)/$$f" || exit $$?; \ else \ list2="$$list2 $$d$$p"; \ fi; \ done; \ test -z "$$list2" || { echo "$$list2" | $(am__base_list) | \ while read files; do \ echo " $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files '$(DESTDIR)$(htmldir)'"; \ $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files "$(DESTDIR)$(htmldir)" || exit $$?; \ done; } install-info: install-info-am install-info-am: $(INFO_DEPS) @$(NORMAL_INSTALL) test -z "$(infodir)" || $(MKDIR_P) "$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)" @srcdirstrip=`echo "$(srcdir)" | sed 's|.|.|g'`; \ list='$(INFO_DEPS)'; test -n "$(infodir)" || list=; \ for file in $$list; do \ case $$file in \ $(srcdir)/*) file=`echo "$$file" | sed "s|^$$srcdirstrip/||"`;; \ esac; \ if test -f $$file; then d=.; else d=$(srcdir); fi; \ file_i=`echo "$$file" | sed 's|\.info$$||;s|$$|.i|'`; \ for ifile in $$d/$$file $$d/$$file-[0-9] $$d/$$file-[0-9][0-9] \ $$d/$$file_i[0-9] $$d/$$file_i[0-9][0-9] ; do \ if test -f $$ifile; then \ echo "$$ifile"; \ else : ; fi; \ done; \ done | $(am__base_list) | \ while read files; do \ echo " $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files '$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)'"; \ $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files "$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)" || exit $$?; done @$(POST_INSTALL) @if (install-info --version && \ install-info --version 2>&1 | sed 1q | grep -i -v debian) >/dev/null 2>&1; then \ list='$(INFO_DEPS)'; test -n "$(infodir)" || list=; \ for file in $$list; do \ relfile=`echo "$$file" | sed 's|^.*/||'`; \ echo " install-info --info-dir='$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)' '$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/$$relfile'";\ install-info --info-dir="$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)" "$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/$$relfile" || :;\ done; \ else : ; fi install-man: install-man1 install-pdf: install-pdf-am install-pdf-am: $(PDFS) @$(NORMAL_INSTALL) test -z "$(pdfdir)" || $(MKDIR_P) "$(DESTDIR)$(pdfdir)" @list='$(PDFS)'; test -n "$(pdfdir)" || list=; \ for p in $$list; do \ if test -f "$$p"; then d=; else d="$(srcdir)/"; fi; \ echo "$$d$$p"; \ done | $(am__base_list) | \ while read files; do \ echo " $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files '$(DESTDIR)$(pdfdir)'"; \ $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files "$(DESTDIR)$(pdfdir)" || exit $$?; done install-ps: install-ps-am install-ps-am: $(PSS) @$(NORMAL_INSTALL) test -z "$(psdir)" || $(MKDIR_P) "$(DESTDIR)$(psdir)" @list='$(PSS)'; test -n "$(psdir)" || list=; \ for p in $$list; do \ if test -f "$$p"; then d=; else d="$(srcdir)/"; fi; \ echo "$$d$$p"; \ done | $(am__base_list) | \ while read files; do \ echo " $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files '$(DESTDIR)$(psdir)'"; \ $(INSTALL_DATA) $$files "$(DESTDIR)$(psdir)" || exit $$?; done installcheck-am: maintainer-clean: maintainer-clean-am -rm -f Makefile maintainer-clean-am: distclean-am maintainer-clean-aminfo \ maintainer-clean-generic maintainer-clean-vti mostlyclean: mostlyclean-am mostlyclean-am: mostlyclean-aminfo mostlyclean-generic mostlyclean-vti pdf: pdf-am pdf-am: $(PDFS) ps: ps-am ps-am: $(PSS) uninstall-am: uninstall-dvi-am uninstall-html-am uninstall-info-am \ uninstall-man uninstall-pdf-am uninstall-ps-am uninstall-man: uninstall-man1 .MAKE: install-am install-strip .PHONY: all all-am check check-am clean clean-aminfo clean-generic \ dist-info distclean distclean-generic distdir dvi dvi-am html \ html-am info info-am install install-am install-data \ install-data-am install-dvi install-dvi-am install-exec \ install-exec-am install-html install-html-am install-info \ install-info-am install-man install-man1 install-pdf \ install-pdf-am install-ps install-ps-am install-strip \ installcheck installcheck-am installdirs maintainer-clean \ maintainer-clean-aminfo maintainer-clean-generic \ maintainer-clean-vti mostlyclean mostlyclean-aminfo \ mostlyclean-generic mostlyclean-vti pdf pdf-am ps ps-am \ uninstall uninstall-am uninstall-dvi-am uninstall-html-am \ uninstall-info-am uninstall-man uninstall-man1 \ uninstall-pdf-am uninstall-ps-am # Make sure you set TEXINPUT manual: TEXINPUTS=$(srcdir):$(top_srcdir)/scripts:$$TEXINPUTS \ gendocs.sh cpio 'GNU cpio manual' # Tell versions [3.59,3.63) of GNU make to not export all variables. # Otherwise a system limit (for SysV at least) may be exceeded. .NOEXPORT: cpio-2.11/doc/gendocs_template0000755000175000017500000000667711335225453016036 0ustar wookeywookey %%TITLE%% - GNU Project - Free Software Foundation (FSF)

%%TITLE%%

Free Software Foundation
last updated %%DATE%%

 [image of the head of a GNU] (no gifs due to patent problems)


The manual for %%PACKAGE%% is available in the following formats:

(This page generated by the %%SCRIPTNAME%% script.)

Valid XHTML 1.0!

cpio-2.11/doc/mt.10000644000175000017500000000612511145605126013257 0ustar wookeywookey.TH MT 1L \" -*- nroff -*- .SH NAME mt \- control magnetic tape drive operation .SH SYNOPSIS .B mt [\-V] [\-f device] [\-\-file=device] [\-\-rsh-command=command] [\-\-version] operation [count] .SH DESCRIPTION This manual page documents the GNU version of .BR mt . .B mt performs the given .IR operation , which must be one of the tape operations listed below, on a tape drive. .PP The default tape device to operate on is taken from the file .I /usr/include/sys/mtio.h when .B mt is compiled. It can be overridden by giving a device file name in the environment variable .BR TAPE or by a command line option (see below), which also overrides the environment variable. .PP The device must be either a character special file or a remote tape drive. To use a tape drive on another machine as the archive, use a filename that starts with `HOSTNAME:'. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an `@' to access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have permission to do so (typically an entry in that user's `~/.rhosts' file). .PP The available operations are listed below. Unique abbreviations are accepted. Not all operations are available on all systems, or work on all types of tape drives. Some operations optionally take a repeat count, which can be given after the operation name and defaults to 1. .IP "eof, weof" Write .I count EOF marks at current position. .IP fsf Forward space .I count files. The tape is positioned on the first block of the next file. .IP bsf Backward space .I count files. The tape is positioned on the first block of the next file. .IP fsr Forward space .I count records. .IP bsr Backward space .I count records. .IP bsfm Backward space .I count file marks. The tape is positioned on the beginning-of-the-tape side of the file mark. .IP fsfm Forward space .I count file marks. The tape is positioned on the beginning-of-the-tape side of the file mark. .IP asf Absolute space to file number .IR count . Equivalent to rewind followed by fsf .IR count . .IP seek Seek to block number .IR count . .IP eom Space to the end of the recorded media on the tape (for appending files onto tapes). .IP rewind Rewind the tape. .IP "offline, rewoffl" Rewind the tape and, if applicable, unload the tape. .IP status Print status information about the tape unit. .IP retension Rewind the tape, then wind it to the end of the reel, then rewind it again. .IP erase Erase the tape. .PP .B mt exits with a status of 0 if the operation succeeded, 1 if the operation or device name given was invalid, or 2 if the operation failed. .SS OPTIONS .TP .I "\-f, \-\-file=device" Use .I device as the file name of the tape drive to operate on. To use a tape drive on another machine, use a filename that starts with `HOSTNAME:'. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an `@' to access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have permission to do so (typically an entry in that user's `~/.rhosts' file). .TP .I "\-\-rsh-command=command" Notifies .B mt that it should use .I command to communicate with remote devices instead of .I /usr/bin/ssh or .IR /usr/bin/rsh . .TP .I "\-V, \-\-version" Print the version number of .BR mt . cpio-2.11/doc/cpio.texi0000644000175000017500000004771311335225453014414 0ustar wookeywookey\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- @c %**start of header @setfilename cpio.info @settitle cpio @setchapternewpage off @c %**end of header @dircategory Archiving @direntry * Cpio: (cpio). Copy-in-copy-out archiver to tape or disk. @end direntry @include version.texi @copying This manual documents GNU cpio (version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}). Copyright @copyright{} 1995, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. @sp 1 @quotation Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU Manual'', and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.'' @end quotation @end copying @titlepage @title GNU CPIO @subtitle @value{VERSION} @value{UPDATED} @author by Robert Carleton @c copyright page @page @vskip 0pt plus 1filll @insertcopying @sp 2 Published by the Free Software Foundation @* 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, @* Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA @* @end titlepage @node Top, Introduction, (dir), (dir) @comment node-name, next, previous, up @ifinfo @top GNU cpio is a tool for creating and extracting archives, or copying files from one place to another. It handles a number of cpio formats as well as reading and writing tar files. This is the first edition of the GNU cpio documentation and is consistent with @value{VERSION}. @end ifinfo @menu * Introduction:: * Tutorial:: Getting started. * Invoking cpio:: How to invoke @command{cpio}. * Media:: Using tapes and other archive media. * Reports:: Reporting bugs or suggestions * Concept Index:: Concept index. @detailmenu --- The Detailed Node Listing --- Invoking cpio * Copy-out mode:: * Copy-in mode:: * Copy-pass mode:: * Options:: @end detailmenu @end menu @node Introduction, Tutorial, Top, Top @comment node-name, next, previous, up @chapter Introduction GNU cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive, The archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe. GNU cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII, new ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar, and POSIX.1 tar. The tar format is provided for compatibility with the tar program. By default, cpio creates binary format archives, for compatibility with older cpio programs. When extracting from archives, cpio automatically recognizes which kind of archive it is reading and can read archives created on machines with a different byte-order. @node Tutorial, Invoking cpio, Introduction, Top @comment node-name, next, previous, up @chapter Tutorial @cindex creating a cpio archive @cindex extracting a cpio archive @cindex copying directory structures @cindex passing directory structures GNU cpio performs three primary functions. Copying files to an archive, Extracting files from an archive, and passing files to another directory tree. An archive can be a file on disk, one or more floppy disks, or one or more tapes. When creating an archive, cpio takes the list of files to be processed from the standard input, and then sends the archive to the standard output, or to the device defined by the @option{-F} option. @xref{Copy-out mode}. Usually find or ls is used to provide this list to the standard input. In the following example you can see the possibilities for archiving the contents of a single directory. @example @cartouche % ls | cpio -ov > directory.cpio @end cartouche @end example The @option{-o} option creates the archive, and the @option{-v} option prints the names of the files archived as they are added. Notice that the options can be put together after a single @option{-} or can be placed separately on the command line. The @samp{>} redirects the cpio output to the file @samp{directory.cpio}. If you wanted to archive an entire directory tree, the find command can provide the file list to cpio: @example @cartouche % find . -print -depth | cpio -ov > tree.cpio @end cartouche @end example This will take all the files in the current directory, the directories below and place them in the archive tree.cpio. Again the @option{-o} creates an archive, and the @option{-v} option shows you the name of the files as they are archived. @xref{Copy-out mode}. Using the @samp{.} in the find statement will give you more flexibility when doing restores, as it will save file names with a relative path vice a hard wired, absolute path. The @option{-depth} option forces @samp{find} to print of the entries in a directory before printing the directory itself. This limits the effects of restrictive directory permissions by printing the directory entries in a directory before the directory name itself. Extracting an archive requires a bit more thought because cpio will not create directories by default. Another characteristic, is it will not overwrite existing files unless you tell it to. @example @cartouche % cpio -iv < directory.cpio @end cartouche @end example This will retrieve the files archived in the file directory.cpio and place them in the present directory. The @option{-i} option extracts the archive and the @option{-v} shows the file names as they are extracted. If you are dealing with an archived directory tree, you need to use the @option{-d} option to create directories as necessary, something like: @example @cartouche % cpio -idv < tree.cpio @end cartouche @end example This will take the contents of the archive tree.cpio and extract it to the current directory. If you try to extract the files on top of files of the same name that already exist (and have the same or later modification time) cpio will not extract the file unless told to do so by the -u option. @xref{Copy-in mode}. In copy-pass mode, cpio copies files from one directory tree to another, combining the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually using an archive. It reads the list of files to copy from the standard input; the directory into which it will copy them is given as a non-option argument. @xref{Copy-pass mode}. @example @cartouche % find . -depth -print0 | cpio --null -pvd new-dir @end cartouche @end example The example shows copying the files of the present directory, and sub-directories to a new directory called new-dir. Some new options are the @option{-print0} available with GNU find, combined with the @option{--null} option of cpio. These two options act together to send file names between find and cpio, even if special characters are embedded in the file names. Another is @option{-p}, which tells cpio to pass the files it finds to the directory @samp{new-dir}. @node Invoking cpio, Media, Tutorial, Top @comment node-name, next, previous, up @chapter Invoking cpio @cindex invoking cpio @cindex command line options @menu * Copy-out mode:: * Copy-in mode:: * Copy-pass mode:: * Options:: @end menu @node Copy-out mode, Copy-in mode, Invoking cpio, Invoking cpio @comment node-name, next, previous, up @section Copy-out mode In copy-out mode, cpio copies files into an archive. It reads a list of filenames, one per line, on the standard input, and writes the archive onto the standard output. A typical way to generate the list of filenames is with the find command; you should give find the -depth option to minimize problems with permissions on directories that are unreadable. @xref{Options}. @example cpio @{-o|--create@} [-0acvABLV] [-C bytes] [-H format] [-M message] [-O [[user@@]host:]archive] [-F [[user@@]host:]archive] [--file=[[user@@]host:]archive] [--format=format] [--message=message] [--null] [--reset-access-time] [--verbose] [--dot] [--append] [--block-size=blocks] [--dereference] [--io-size=bytes] [--rsh-command=command] [--help] [--version] < name-list [> archive] @end example @node Copy-in mode, Copy-pass mode, Copy-out mode, Invoking cpio @comment node-name, next, previous, up @section Copy-in mode In copy-in mode, cpio copies files out of an archive or lists the archive contents. It reads the archive from the standard input. Any non-option command line arguments are shell globbing patterns; only files in the archive whose names match one or more of those patterns are copied from the archive. Unlike in the shell, an initial @samp{.} in a filename does match a wildcard at the start of a pattern, and a @samp{/} in a filename can match wildcards. If no patterns are given, all files are extracted. @xref{Options}. @example cpio @{-i|--extract@} [-bcdfmnrtsuvBSV] [-C bytes] [-E file] [-H format] [-M message] [-R [user][:.][group]] [-I [[user@@]host:]archive] [-F [[user@@]host:]archive] [--file=[[user@@]host:]archive] [--make-directories] [--nonmatching] [--preserve-modification-time] [--numeric-uid-gid] [--rename] [--list] [--swap-bytes] [--swap] [--dot] [--unconditional] [--verbose] [--block-size=blocks] [--swap-halfwords] [--io-size=bytes] [--pattern-file=file] [--format=format] [--owner=[user][:.][group]] [--no-preserve-owner] [--message=message] [--help] [--version] [--no-absolute-filenames] [--sparse] [-only-verify-crc] [--to-stdout] [-quiet] [--rsh-command=command] [pattern...] [< archive] @end example @node Copy-pass mode, Options, Copy-in mode, Invoking cpio @comment node-name, next, previous, up @section Copy-pass mode In copy-pass mode, cpio copies files from one directory tree to another, combining the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually using an archive. It reads the list of files to copy from the standard input; the directory into which it will copy them is given as a non-option argument. @xref{Options}. @example cpio @{-p|--pass-through@} [-0adlmuvLV] [-R [user][:.][group]] [--null] [--reset-access-time] [--make-directories] [--link] [--preserve-modification-time] [--unconditional] [--verbose] [--dot] [--dereference] [--owner=[user][:.][group]] [--sparse] [--no-preserve-owner] [--help] [--version] destination-directory < name-list @end example @node Options, , Copy-pass mode, Invoking cpio @comment node-name, next, previous, up @section Options @table @code @item -0 @itemx --null Read a list of filenames terminated by a null character, instead of a newline, so that files whose names contain newlines can be archived. GNU find is one way to produce a list of null-terminated filenames. This option may be used in copy-out and copy-pass modes. @item -a @itemx --reset-access-time Reset the access times of files after reading them, so that it does not look like they have just been read. @item -A @itemx --append Append to an existing archive. Only works in copy-out mode. The archive must be a disk file specified with the @option{-O} or @option{-F} (@option{--file}) option. @item -b @itemx --swap Swap both halfwords of words and bytes of halfwords in the data. Equivalent to -sS. This option may be used in copy-in mode. Use this option to convert 32-bit integers between big-endian and little-endian machines. @item -B Set the I/O block size to 5120 bytes. Initially the block size is 512 bytes. @item --block-size=@var{block-size} Set the I/O block size to @var{block-size} * 512 bytes. @item -c Use the old portable (ASCII) archive format. @item -C @var{io-size} @itemx --io-size=@var{io-size} Set the I/O block size to @var{io-size} bytes. @item -d @itemx --make-directories Create leading directories where needed. @item -E @var{file} @itemx --pattern-file=@var{file} Read additional patterns specifying filenames to extract or list from @var{file}. The lines of @var{file} are treated as if they had been non-option arguments to cpio. This option is used in copy-in mode, @item -f @itemx --nonmatching Only copy files that do not match any of the given patterns. @item -F @var{archive} @itemx --file=@var{archive} Archive filename to use instead of standard input or output. To use a tape drive on another machine as the archive, use a filename that starts with @samp{@var{hostname}:}, where @var{hostname} is the name or IP address of the machine. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an @samp{@@} to access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have permission to do so (typically an entry in that user's @file{~/.rhosts} file). @item --force-local With @option{-F}, @option{-I}, or @option{-O}, take the archive file name to be a local file even if it contains a colon, which would ordinarily indicate a remote host name. @item -H @var{format} @itemx --format=@var{format} Use archive format @var{format}. The valid formats are listed below with file size limits for individual files in parentheses; the same names are also recognized in all-caps. The default in copy-in mode is to automatically detect the archive format, and in copy-out mode is @samp{bin}. @table @samp @item bin The obsolete binary format. (2147483647 bytes) @item odc The old (POSIX.1) portable format. (8589934591 bytes) @item newc The new (SVR4) portable format, which supports file systems having more than 65536 i-nodes. (4294967295 bytes) @item crc The new (SVR4) portable format with a checksum added. @item tar The old tar format. (8589934591 bytes) @item ustar The POSIX.1 tar format. Also recognizes GNU tar archives, which are similar but not identical. (8589934591 bytes) @item hpbin The obsolete binary format used by HPUX's cpio (which stores device files differently). @item hpodc The portable format used by HPUX's cpio (which stores device files differently). @end table @item -i @itemx --extract Run in copy-in mode. @xref{Copy-in mode}. @item -I @var{archive} Archive filename to use instead of standard input. To use a tape drive on another machine as the archive, use a filename that starts with @samp{@var{hostname}:}, where @var{hostname} is the name or IP address of the remote host. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an @samp{@@} to access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have permission to do so (typically an entry in that user's @file{~/.rhosts} file). @item -k Ignored; for compatibility with other versions of cpio. @item -l @itemx --link Link files instead of copying them, when possible. @item -L @itemx --dereference Copy the file that a symbolic link points to, rather than the symbolic link itself. @item -m @itemx --preserve-modification-time Retain previous file modification times when creating files. @item -M @var{message} @itemx --message=@var{message} Print @var{message} when the end of a volume of the backup media (such as a tape or a floppy disk) is reached, to prompt the user to insert a new volume. If @var{message} contains the string @samp{%d}, it is replaced by the current volume number (starting at 1). @item -n @itemx --numeric-uid-gid Show numeric UID and GID instead of translating them into names when using the @option{--verbose} option. @item --no-absolute-filenames Create all files relative to the current directory in copy-in mode, even if they have an absolute file name in the archive. @item --no-preserve-owner Do not change the ownership of the files; leave them owned by the user extracting them. This is the default for non-root users, so that users on System V don't inadvertantly give away files. This option can be used in copy-in mode and copy-pass mode @item -o @itemx --create Run in copy-out mode. @xref{Copy-out mode}. @item -O @var{archive} Archive filename to use instead of standard output. To use a tape drive on another machine as the archive, use a filename that starts with @samp{@var{hostname}:}, where @var{hostname} is the name or IP address of the machine. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an @samp{@@} to access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have permission to do so (typically an entry in that user's @file{~/.rhosts} file). @item --only-verify-crc Verify the CRC's of each file in the archive, when reading a CRC format archive. Don't actually extract the files. @item -p @itemx --pass-through Run in copy-pass mode. @xref{Copy-pass mode}. @item --quiet Do not print the number of blocks copied. @item -r @itemx --rename Interactively rename files. @item -R @var{owner} @itemx --owner @var{owner} In copy-in and copy-pass mode, set the ownership of all files created to the specified @var{owner} (this operation is allowed only for the super-user). In copy-out mode, store the supplied owner information in the archive. The argument can be either the user name or the user name and group name, separated by a dot or a colon, or the group name, preceeded by a dot or a colon, as shown in the examples below: @smallexample @group cpio --owner smith cpio --owner smith: cpio --owner smith:users cpio --owner :users @end group @end smallexample @noindent If the group is omitted but the @samp{:} or @samp{.} separator is given, as in the second example. the given user's login group will be used. @item --rsh-command=@var{command} Notifies cpio that is should use @var{command} to communicate with remote devices. @item -s @itemx --swap-bytes Swap the bytes of each halfword (pair of bytes) in the files. This option can be used in copy-in mode. @item -S @itemx --swap-halfwords Swap the halfwords of each word (4 bytes) in the files. This option may be used in copy-in mode. @item --sparse Write files with large blocks of zeros as sparse files. This option is used in copy-in and copy-pass modes. @item -t @itemx --list Print a table of contents of the input. @item --to-stdout Extract files to standard output. This option may be used in copy-in mode. @item -u @itemx --unconditional Replace all files, without asking whether to replace existing newer files with older files. @item -v @itemx --verbose List the files processed, or with @option{-t}, give an @samp{ls -l} style table of contents listing. In a verbose table of contents of a ustar archive, user and group names in the archive that do not exist on the local system are replaced by the names that correspond locally to the numeric UID and GID stored in the archive. @item -V @itemx --dot Print a @samp{.} for each file processed. @item --version Print the cpio program version number and exit. @end table @node Media, Reports, Invoking cpio, Top @comment node-name, next, previous, up @chapter Magnetic Media @cindex magnetic media Archives are usually written on removable media--tape cartridges, mag tapes, or floppy disks. The amount of data a tape or disk holds depends not only on its size, but also on how it is formatted. A 2400 foot long reel of mag tape holds 40 megabytes of data when formated at 1600 bits per inch. The physically smaller EXABYTE tape cartridge holds 2.3 gigabytes. Magnetic media are re-usable--once the archive on a tape is no longer needed, the archive can be erased and the tape or disk used over. Media quality does deteriorate with use, however. Most tapes or disks should be disgarded when they begin to produce data errors. Magnetic media are written and erased using magnetic fields, and should be protected from such fields to avoid damage to stored data. Sticking a floppy disk to a filing cabinet using a magnet is probably not a good idea. @node Reports, Concept Index, Media, Top @chapter Reporting bugs or suggestions It is possible you will encounter a bug in @command{cpio}. If this happens, we would like to hear about it. As the purpose of bug reporting is to improve software, please be sure to include maximum information when reporting a bug. The information needed is: @itemize @bullet @item Version of the package you are using. @item Compilation options used when configuring the package. @item Conditions under which the bug appears. @end itemize Send your report to . Allow us a couple of days to answer. @node Concept Index, , Reports, Top @comment node-name, next, previous, up @unnumbered Concept Index @printindex cp @contents @bye cpio-2.11/doc/cpio.info0000644000175000017500000004725611345714127014402 0ustar wookeywookeyThis is cpio.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.13 from cpio.texi. INFO-DIR-SECTION Archiving START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY * Cpio: (cpio). Copy-in-copy-out archiver to tape or disk. END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY This manual documents GNU cpio (version 2.11, 12 February 2010). Copyright (C) 1995, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being "A GNU Manual", and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: "You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development."  File: cpio.info, Node: Top, Next: Introduction, Prev: (dir), Up: (dir) cpio **** GNU cpio is a tool for creating and extracting archives, or copying files from one place to another. It handles a number of cpio formats as well as reading and writing tar files. This is the first edition of the GNU cpio documentation and is consistent with 2.11. * Menu: * Introduction:: * Tutorial:: Getting started. * Invoking cpio:: How to invoke `cpio'. * Media:: Using tapes and other archive media. * Reports:: Reporting bugs or suggestions * Concept Index:: Concept index. --- The Detailed Node Listing --- Invoking cpio * Copy-out mode:: * Copy-in mode:: * Copy-pass mode:: * Options::  File: cpio.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Tutorial, Prev: Top, Up: Top 1 Introduction ************** GNU cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive, The archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe. GNU cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII, new ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar, and POSIX.1 tar. The tar format is provided for compatibility with the tar program. By default, cpio creates binary format archives, for compatibility with older cpio programs. When extracting from archives, cpio automatically recognizes which kind of archive it is reading and can read archives created on machines with a different byte-order.  File: cpio.info, Node: Tutorial, Next: Invoking cpio, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top 2 Tutorial ********** GNU cpio performs three primary functions. Copying files to an archive, Extracting files from an archive, and passing files to another directory tree. An archive can be a file on disk, one or more floppy disks, or one or more tapes. When creating an archive, cpio takes the list of files to be processed from the standard input, and then sends the archive to the standard output, or to the device defined by the `-F' option. *Note Copy-out mode::. Usually find or ls is used to provide this list to the standard input. In the following example you can see the possibilities for archiving the contents of a single directory. % ls | cpio -ov > directory.cpio The `-o' option creates the archive, and the `-v' option prints the names of the files archived as they are added. Notice that the options can be put together after a single `-' or can be placed separately on the command line. The `>' redirects the cpio output to the file `directory.cpio'. If you wanted to archive an entire directory tree, the find command can provide the file list to cpio: % find . -print -depth | cpio -ov > tree.cpio This will take all the files in the current directory, the directories below and place them in the archive tree.cpio. Again the `-o' creates an archive, and the `-v' option shows you the name of the files as they are archived. *Note Copy-out mode::. Using the `.' in the find statement will give you more flexibility when doing restores, as it will save file names with a relative path vice a hard wired, absolute path. The `-depth' option forces `find' to print of the entries in a directory before printing the directory itself. This limits the effects of restrictive directory permissions by printing the directory entries in a directory before the directory name itself. Extracting an archive requires a bit more thought because cpio will not create directories by default. Another characteristic, is it will not overwrite existing files unless you tell it to. % cpio -iv < directory.cpio This will retrieve the files archived in the file directory.cpio and place them in the present directory. The `-i' option extracts the archive and the `-v' shows the file names as they are extracted. If you are dealing with an archived directory tree, you need to use the `-d' option to create directories as necessary, something like: % cpio -idv < tree.cpio This will take the contents of the archive tree.cpio and extract it to the current directory. If you try to extract the files on top of files of the same name that already exist (and have the same or later modification time) cpio will not extract the file unless told to do so by the -u option. *Note Copy-in mode::. In copy-pass mode, cpio copies files from one directory tree to another, combining the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually using an archive. It reads the list of files to copy from the standard input; the directory into which it will copy them is given as a non-option argument. *Note Copy-pass mode::. % find . -depth -print0 | cpio --null -pvd new-dir The example shows copying the files of the present directory, and sub-directories to a new directory called new-dir. Some new options are the `-print0' available with GNU find, combined with the `--null' option of cpio. These two options act together to send file names between find and cpio, even if special characters are embedded in the file names. Another is `-p', which tells cpio to pass the files it finds to the directory `new-dir'.  File: cpio.info, Node: Invoking cpio, Next: Media, Prev: Tutorial, Up: Top 3 Invoking cpio *************** * Menu: * Copy-out mode:: * Copy-in mode:: * Copy-pass mode:: * Options::  File: cpio.info, Node: Copy-out mode, Next: Copy-in mode, Prev: Invoking cpio, Up: Invoking cpio 3.1 Copy-out mode ================= In copy-out mode, cpio copies files into an archive. It reads a list of filenames, one per line, on the standard input, and writes the archive onto the standard output. A typical way to generate the list of filenames is with the find command; you should give find the -depth option to minimize problems with permissions on directories that are unreadable. *Note Options::. cpio {-o|--create} [-0acvABLV] [-C bytes] [-H format] [-M message] [-O [[user@]host:]archive] [-F [[user@]host:]archive] [--file=[[user@]host:]archive] [--format=format] [--message=message] [--null] [--reset-access-time] [--verbose] [--dot] [--append] [--block-size=blocks] [--dereference] [--io-size=bytes] [--rsh-command=command] [--help] [--version] < name-list [> archive]  File: cpio.info, Node: Copy-in mode, Next: Copy-pass mode, Prev: Copy-out mode, Up: Invoking cpio 3.2 Copy-in mode ================ In copy-in mode, cpio copies files out of an archive or lists the archive contents. It reads the archive from the standard input. Any non-option command line arguments are shell globbing patterns; only files in the archive whose names match one or more of those patterns are copied from the archive. Unlike in the shell, an initial `.' in a filename does match a wildcard at the start of a pattern, and a `/' in a filename can match wildcards. If no patterns are given, all files are extracted. *Note Options::. cpio {-i|--extract} [-bcdfmnrtsuvBSV] [-C bytes] [-E file] [-H format] [-M message] [-R [user][:.][group]] [-I [[user@]host:]archive] [-F [[user@]host:]archive] [--file=[[user@]host:]archive] [--make-directories] [--nonmatching] [--preserve-modification-time] [--numeric-uid-gid] [--rename] [--list] [--swap-bytes] [--swap] [--dot] [--unconditional] [--verbose] [--block-size=blocks] [--swap-halfwords] [--io-size=bytes] [--pattern-file=file] [--format=format] [--owner=[user][:.][group]] [--no-preserve-owner] [--message=message] [--help] [--version] [--no-absolute-filenames] [--sparse] [-only-verify-crc] [--to-stdout] [-quiet] [--rsh-command=command] [pattern...] [< archive]  File: cpio.info, Node: Copy-pass mode, Next: Options, Prev: Copy-in mode, Up: Invoking cpio 3.3 Copy-pass mode ================== In copy-pass mode, cpio copies files from one directory tree to another, combining the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually using an archive. It reads the list of files to copy from the standard input; the directory into which it will copy them is given as a non-option argument. *Note Options::. cpio {-p|--pass-through} [-0adlmuvLV] [-R [user][:.][group]] [--null] [--reset-access-time] [--make-directories] [--link] [--preserve-modification-time] [--unconditional] [--verbose] [--dot] [--dereference] [--owner=[user][:.][group]] [--sparse] [--no-preserve-owner] [--help] [--version] destination-directory < name-list  File: cpio.info, Node: Options, Prev: Copy-pass mode, Up: Invoking cpio 3.4 Options =========== `-0' `--null' Read a list of filenames terminated by a null character, instead of a newline, so that files whose names contain newlines can be archived. GNU find is one way to produce a list of null-terminated filenames. This option may be used in copy-out and copy-pass modes. `-a' `--reset-access-time' Reset the access times of files after reading them, so that it does not look like they have just been read. `-A' `--append' Append to an existing archive. Only works in copy-out mode. The archive must be a disk file specified with the `-O' or `-F' (`--file') option. `-b' `--swap' Swap both halfwords of words and bytes of halfwords in the data. Equivalent to -sS. This option may be used in copy-in mode. Use this option to convert 32-bit integers between big-endian and little-endian machines. `-B' Set the I/O block size to 5120 bytes. Initially the block size is 512 bytes. `--block-size=BLOCK-SIZE' Set the I/O block size to BLOCK-SIZE * 512 bytes. `-c' Use the old portable (ASCII) archive format. `-C IO-SIZE' `--io-size=IO-SIZE' Set the I/O block size to IO-SIZE bytes. `-d' `--make-directories' Create leading directories where needed. `-E FILE' `--pattern-file=FILE' Read additional patterns specifying filenames to extract or list from FILE. The lines of FILE are treated as if they had been non-option arguments to cpio. This option is used in copy-in mode, `-f' `--nonmatching' Only copy files that do not match any of the given patterns. `-F ARCHIVE' `--file=ARCHIVE' Archive filename to use instead of standard input or output. To use a tape drive on another machine as the archive, use a filename that starts with `HOSTNAME:', where HOSTNAME is the name or IP address of the machine. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an `@' to access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have permission to do so (typically an entry in that user's `~/.rhosts' file). `--force-local' With `-F', `-I', or `-O', take the archive file name to be a local file even if it contains a colon, which would ordinarily indicate a remote host name. `-H FORMAT' `--format=FORMAT' Use archive format FORMAT. The valid formats are listed below with file size limits for individual files in parentheses; the same names are also recognized in all-caps. The default in copy-in mode is to automatically detect the archive format, and in copy-out mode is `bin'. `bin' The obsolete binary format. (2147483647 bytes) `odc' The old (POSIX.1) portable format. (8589934591 bytes) `newc' The new (SVR4) portable format, which supports file systems having more than 65536 i-nodes. (4294967295 bytes) `crc' The new (SVR4) portable format with a checksum added. `tar' The old tar format. (8589934591 bytes) `ustar' The POSIX.1 tar format. Also recognizes GNU tar archives, which are similar but not identical. (8589934591 bytes) `hpbin' The obsolete binary format used by HPUX's cpio (which stores device files differently). `hpodc' The portable format used by HPUX's cpio (which stores device files differently). `-i' `--extract' Run in copy-in mode. *Note Copy-in mode::. `-I ARCHIVE' Archive filename to use instead of standard input. To use a tape drive on another machine as the archive, use a filename that starts with `HOSTNAME:', where HOSTNAME is the name or IP address of the remote host. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an `@' to access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have permission to do so (typically an entry in that user's `~/.rhosts' file). `-k' Ignored; for compatibility with other versions of cpio. `-l' `--link' Link files instead of copying them, when possible. `-L' `--dereference' Copy the file that a symbolic link points to, rather than the symbolic link itself. `-m' `--preserve-modification-time' Retain previous file modification times when creating files. `-M MESSAGE' `--message=MESSAGE' Print MESSAGE when the end of a volume of the backup media (such as a tape or a floppy disk) is reached, to prompt the user to insert a new volume. If MESSAGE contains the string `%d', it is replaced by the current volume number (starting at 1). `-n' `--numeric-uid-gid' Show numeric UID and GID instead of translating them into names when using the `--verbose' option. `--no-absolute-filenames' Create all files relative to the current directory in copy-in mode, even if they have an absolute file name in the archive. `--no-preserve-owner' Do not change the ownership of the files; leave them owned by the user extracting them. This is the default for non-root users, so that users on System V don't inadvertantly give away files. This option can be used in copy-in mode and copy-pass mode `-o' `--create' Run in copy-out mode. *Note Copy-out mode::. `-O ARCHIVE' Archive filename to use instead of standard output. To use a tape drive on another machine as the archive, use a filename that starts with `HOSTNAME:', where HOSTNAME is the name or IP address of the machine. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an `@' to access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have permission to do so (typically an entry in that user's `~/.rhosts' file). `--only-verify-crc' Verify the CRC's of each file in the archive, when reading a CRC format archive. Don't actually extract the files. `-p' `--pass-through' Run in copy-pass mode. *Note Copy-pass mode::. `--quiet' Do not print the number of blocks copied. `-r' `--rename' Interactively rename files. `-R OWNER' `--owner OWNER' In copy-in and copy-pass mode, set the ownership of all files created to the specified OWNER (this operation is allowed only for the super-user). In copy-out mode, store the supplied owner information in the archive. The argument can be either the user name or the user name and group name, separated by a dot or a colon, or the group name, preceeded by a dot or a colon, as shown in the examples below: cpio --owner smith cpio --owner smith: cpio --owner smith:users cpio --owner :users If the group is omitted but the `:' or `.' separator is given, as in the second example. the given user's login group will be used. `--rsh-command=COMMAND' Notifies cpio that is should use COMMAND to communicate with remote devices. `-s' `--swap-bytes' Swap the bytes of each halfword (pair of bytes) in the files. This option can be used in copy-in mode. `-S' `--swap-halfwords' Swap the halfwords of each word (4 bytes) in the files. This option may be used in copy-in mode. `--sparse' Write files with large blocks of zeros as sparse files. This option is used in copy-in and copy-pass modes. `-t' `--list' Print a table of contents of the input. `--to-stdout' Extract files to standard output. This option may be used in copy-in mode. `-u' `--unconditional' Replace all files, without asking whether to replace existing newer files with older files. `-v' `--verbose' List the files processed, or with `-t', give an `ls -l' style table of contents listing. In a verbose table of contents of a ustar archive, user and group names in the archive that do not exist on the local system are replaced by the names that correspond locally to the numeric UID and GID stored in the archive. `-V' `--dot' Print a `.' for each file processed. `--version' Print the cpio program version number and exit.  File: cpio.info, Node: Media, Next: Reports, Prev: Invoking cpio, Up: Top 4 Magnetic Media **************** Archives are usually written on removable media-tape cartridges, mag tapes, or floppy disks. The amount of data a tape or disk holds depends not only on its size, but also on how it is formatted. A 2400 foot long reel of mag tape holds 40 megabytes of data when formated at 1600 bits per inch. The physically smaller EXABYTE tape cartridge holds 2.3 gigabytes. Magnetic media are re-usable-once the archive on a tape is no longer needed, the archive can be erased and the tape or disk used over. Media quality does deteriorate with use, however. Most tapes or disks should be disgarded when they begin to produce data errors. Magnetic media are written and erased using magnetic fields, and should be protected from such fields to avoid damage to stored data. Sticking a floppy disk to a filing cabinet using a magnet is probably not a good idea.  File: cpio.info, Node: Reports, Next: Concept Index, Prev: Media, Up: Top 5 Reporting bugs or suggestions ******************************* It is possible you will encounter a bug in `cpio'. If this happens, we would like to hear about it. As the purpose of bug reporting is to improve software, please be sure to include maximum information when reporting a bug. The information needed is: * Version of the package you are using. * Compilation options used when configuring the package. * Conditions under which the bug appears. Send your report to . Allow us a couple of days to answer.  File: cpio.info, Node: Concept Index, Prev: Reports, Up: Top Concept Index ************* [index] * Menu: * command line options: Invoking cpio. (line 6) * copying directory structures: Tutorial. (line 6) * creating a cpio archive: Tutorial. (line 6) * extracting a cpio archive: Tutorial. (line 6) * invoking cpio: Invoking cpio. (line 6) * magnetic media: Media. (line 6) * passing directory structures: Tutorial. (line 6)  Tag Table: Node: Top1021 Node: Introduction1803 Node: Tutorial2519 Node: Invoking cpio6190 Node: Copy-out mode6381 Node: Copy-in mode7312 Node: Copy-pass mode8711 Node: Options9510 Node: Media17631 Node: Reports18610 Node: Concept Index19241  End Tag Table cpio-2.11/doc/version.texi0000644000175000017500000000014311345714077015137 0ustar wookeywookey@set UPDATED 12 February 2010 @set UPDATED-MONTH February 2010 @set EDITION 2.11 @set VERSION 2.11 cpio-2.11/doc/cpio.10000644000175000017500000000364411145605126013574 0ustar wookeywookey.TH CPIO 1L \" -*- nroff -*- .SH NAME cpio \- copy files to and from archives .SH SYNOPSIS .B cpio {\-o|\-\-create} [\-0acvABLV] [\-C bytes] [\-H format] [\-M message] [\-O [[user@]host:]archive] [\-F [[user@]host:]archive] [\-\-file=[[user@]host:]archive] [\-\-format=format] [\-\-message=message] [\-\-null] [\-\-reset-access-time] [\-\-verbose] [\-\-dot] [\-\-append] [\-\-block-size=blocks] [\-\-dereference] [\-\-io-size=bytes] [\-\-quiet] [\-\-force\-local] [\-\-rsh-command=command] [\-\-help] [\-\-version] < name-list [> archive] .B cpio {\-i|\-\-extract} [\-bcdfmnrtsuvBSV] [\-C bytes] [\-E file] [\-H format] [\-M message] [\-R [user][:.][group]] [\-I [[user@]host:]archive] [\-F [[user@]host:]archive] [\-\-file=[[user@]host:]archive] [\-\-make-directories] [\-\-nonmatching] [\-\-preserve-modification-time] [\-\-numeric-uid-gid] [\-\-rename] [\-t|\-\-list] [\-\-swap-bytes] [\-\-swap] [\-\-dot] [\-\-unconditional] [\-\-verbose] [\-\-block-size=blocks] [\-\-swap-halfwords] [\-\-io-size=bytes] [\-\-pattern-file=file] [\-\-format=format] [\-\-owner=[user][:.][group]] [\-\-no-preserve-owner] [\-\-message=message] [\-\-force\-local] [\-\-no\-absolute\-filenames] [\-\-sparse] [\-\-only\-verify\-crc] [\-\-to\-stdout] [\-\-quiet] [\-\-rsh-command=command] [\-\-help] [\-\-version] [pattern...] [< archive] .B cpio {\-p|\-\-pass-through} [\-0adlmuvLV] [\-R [user][:.][group]] [\-\-null] [\-\-reset-access-time] [\-\-make-directories] [\-\-link] [\-\-quiet] [\-\-preserve-modification-time] [\-\-unconditional] [\-\-verbose] [\-\-dot] [\-\-dereference] [\-\-owner=[user][:.][group]] [\-\-no-preserve-owner] [\-\-sparse] [\-\-help] [\-\-version] destination-directory < name-list .SH DESCRIPTION GNU cpio is fully documented in the texinfo documentation. To access the help from your command line, type .PP \fBinfo cpio .PP The online copy of the documentation is available at the following address: .PP http://www.gnu.org/software/cpio/manual