| 1 | * ABOUT BUGS | 
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| 2 |  | 
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| 3 | Before reporting a bug, please check the list of known bugs | 
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| 4 | and the list of oft-reported non-bugs (below). | 
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| 5 |  | 
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| 6 | Bugs and comments may be sent to bonzini@gnu.org; please | 
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| 7 | include in the Subject: header the first line of the output of | 
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| 8 | ``sed --version''. | 
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| 9 |  | 
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| 10 | Please do not send a bug report like this: | 
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| 11 |  | 
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| 12 | [while building frobme-1.3.4] | 
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| 13 | $ configure | 
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| 14 | sed: file sedscr line 1: Unknown option to 's' | 
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| 15 |  | 
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| 16 | If sed doesn't configure your favorite package, take a few extra | 
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| 17 | minutes to identify the specific problem and make a stand-alone test | 
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| 18 | case. | 
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| 19 |  | 
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| 20 | A stand-alone test case includes all the data necessary to perform the | 
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| 21 | test, and the specific invocation of sed that causes the problem.  The | 
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| 22 | smaller a stand-alone test case is, the better.  A test case should | 
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| 23 | not involve something as far removed from sed as ``try to configure | 
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| 24 | frobme-1.3.4''.  Yes, that is in principle enough information to look | 
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| 25 | for the bug, but that is not a very practical prospect. | 
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| 26 |  | 
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| 27 |  | 
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| 28 |  | 
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| 29 | * NON-BUGS | 
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| 30 |  | 
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| 31 | `N' command on the last line | 
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| 32 |  | 
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| 33 | Most versions of sed exit without printing anything when the `N' | 
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| 34 | command is issued on the last line of a file.  GNU sed instead | 
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| 35 | prints pattern space before exiting unless of course the `-n' | 
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| 36 | command switch has been specified.  More information on the reason | 
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| 37 | behind this choice can be found in the Info manual. | 
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| 38 |  | 
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| 39 |  | 
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| 40 | regex syntax clashes (problems with backslashes) | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | sed uses the Posix basic regular expression syntax.  According to | 
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| 43 | the standard, the meaning of some escape sequences is undefined in | 
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| 44 | this syntax;  notable in the case of GNU sed are `\|', `\+', `\?', | 
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| 45 | `\`', `\'', `\<', `\>', `\b', `\B', `\w', and `\W'. | 
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| 46 |  | 
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| 47 | As in all GNU programs that use Posix basic regular expressions, sed | 
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| 48 | interprets these escape sequences as meta-characters.  So, `x\+' | 
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| 49 | matches one or more occurrences of `x'.   `abc\|def' matches either | 
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| 50 | `abc' or `def'. | 
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| 51 |  | 
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| 52 | This syntax may cause problems when running scripts written for other | 
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| 53 | seds.  Some sed programs have been written with the assumption that | 
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| 54 | `\|' and `\+' match the literal characters `|' and `+'.  Such scripts | 
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| 55 | must be modified by removing the spurious backslashes if they are to | 
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| 56 | be used with recent versions of sed (not only GNU sed). | 
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| 57 |  | 
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| 58 | On the other hand, some scripts use `s|abc\|def||g' to remove occurrences | 
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| 59 | of _either_ `abc' or `def'.  While this worked until sed 4.0.x, newer | 
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| 60 | versions interpret this as removing the string `abc|def'.  This is | 
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| 61 | again undefined behavior according to POSIX, but this interpretation | 
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| 62 | is arguably more robust: the older one, for example, required that | 
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| 63 | the regex matcher parsed `\/' as `/' in the common case of escaping | 
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| 64 | a slash, which is again undefined behavior; the new behavior avoids | 
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| 65 | this, and this is good because the regex matcher is only partially | 
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| 66 | under our control. | 
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| 67 |  | 
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| 68 | In addition, GNU sed supports several escape characters (some of | 
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| 69 | which are multi-character) to insert non-printable characters | 
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| 70 | in scripts (`\a', `\c', `\d', `\o', `\r', `\t', `\v', `\x').  These | 
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| 71 | can cause similar problems with scripts written for other seds. | 
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| 72 |  | 
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| 73 |  | 
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| 74 | -i clobbers read-only files | 
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| 75 |  | 
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| 76 | In short, `sed d -i' will let one delete the contents of | 
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| 77 | a read-only file, and in general the `-i' option will let | 
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| 78 | one clobber protected files.  This is not a bug, but rather a | 
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| 79 | consequence of how the Unix filesystem works. | 
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| 80 |  | 
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| 81 | The permissions on a file say what can happen to the data | 
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| 82 | in that file, while the permissions on a directory say what can | 
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| 83 | happen to the list of files in that directory.  `sed -i' | 
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| 84 | will not ever open for writing  a file that is already on disk, | 
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| 85 | rather, it will work on a temporary file that is finally renamed | 
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| 86 | to the original name: if you rename or delete files, you're actually | 
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| 87 | modifying the contents of the directory, so the operation depends on | 
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| 88 | the permissions of the directory, not of the file).  For this same | 
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| 89 | reason, sed will not let one use `-i' on a writeable file in a | 
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| 90 | read-only directory (but unbelievably nobody reports that as a | 
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| 91 | bug...). | 
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| 92 |  | 
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| 93 |  | 
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| 94 | `0a' does not work (gives an error) | 
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| 95 |  | 
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| 96 | There is no line 0.  0 is a special address that is only used to treat | 
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| 97 | addresses like `0,/RE/' as active when the script starts: if you | 
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| 98 | write `1,/abc/d' and the first line includes the word `abc', then | 
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| 99 | that match would be ignored because address ranges must span at least | 
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| 100 | two lines (barring the end of the file); but what you probably wanted is | 
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| 101 | to delete every line up to the first one including `abc', and this | 
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| 102 | is obtained with `0,/abc/d'. | 
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| 103 |  | 
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| 104 |  | 
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| 105 | `[a-z]' is case insensitive | 
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| 106 |  | 
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| 107 | You are encountering problems with locales.  POSIX mandates that `[a-z]' | 
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| 108 | uses the current locale's collation order -- in C parlance, that means | 
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| 109 | strcoll(3) instead of strcmp(3).  Some locales have a case insensitive | 
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| 110 | strcoll, others don't: one of those that have problems is Estonian. | 
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| 111 |  | 
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| 112 | Another problem is that [a-z] tries to use collation symbols.  This | 
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| 113 | only happens if you are on the GNU system, using GNU libc's regular | 
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| 114 | expression matcher instead of compiling the one supplied with GNU sed. | 
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| 115 | In a Danish locale, for example, the regular expression `^[a-z]$' | 
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| 116 | matches the string `aa', because aa is a single collating symbol that | 
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| 117 | comes after `a' and before `b'; `ll' behaves similarly in Spanish | 
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| 118 | locales, or `ij' in Dutch locales. | 
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| 119 |  | 
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| 120 | To work around these problems, which may cause bugs in shell scripts, | 
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| 121 | set the LC_ALL environment variable to `C', or set the locale on a | 
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| 122 | more fine-grained basis with the other LC_* environment variables. | 
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