Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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- Return exit code, which makes xargs return 123 when any of the downloads
failed.
- Write errors to stderr.
- Write non-errors to stdout.
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This can be useful for scripts, for example the sfeed_update_xargs example
script in the README. This way the process can signal an error and xargs will
exit with the code 123:
"One or more invocations of utility returned a nonzero exit status."
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Set exit status non-zero if any of the feeds failed similar to what
sfeed_update also does now.
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In practise this may change the meaning of the examples:
sfeed_update && pkill -SIGHUP sfeed_curses
An alternative:
sfeed_update; pkill -SIGHUP sfeed_curses
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Tested with the scc compiler which is a pure c99 compiler.
sys/types.h is not needed here anymore (it was used for ssize_t).
Side-note: scc can now compile the sfeed parser program!
It requires these changes at the time of writing: Add a strcasecmp and
strncasecmp function and use getchar instead of getchar_unlocked.
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This will detect write errors sooner.
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First it expected a single digit number, but this way it makes it more easy and
logical to add Sun function keys: ESC [ num z
For archive/reference Sun function keys relevant to sfeed_curses:
num =
214: home
216: page up
220: end
222: page down
Noticed on OpenIndiana/Illumos.
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This stylesheet is for sfeed_frames and sfeed_html.
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This also makes the programs exit with a non-zero status when a read or write
error occurs.
This makes checking the exit status more reliable in scripts.
A simple example to simulate a disk with no space left:
curl -s 'https://codemadness.org/atom.xml' | sfeed > f
/mnt/test: write failed, file system is full
echo $?
0
Which now produces:
curl -s 'https://codemadness.org/atom.xml' | sfeed > f
/mnt/test: write failed, file system is full
write error: <stdout>
echo $?
1
Tested with a small mfs on OpenBSD, fstab entry:
swap /mnt/test mfs rw,nodev,nosuid,-s=1M 0 0
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This should also suppress a compiler warning of an unchecked write() return
value.
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Use errx, time(NULL) does not set errno. For sfeed_curses reset errno so it
doesn't print a random error if it failed.
POSIX recommends checking against (time_t)-1 on failure.
Note that some implementation, like the OpenBSD man page says time() cannot
fail.
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Maybe this is out-of-scope for the sfeed documentation though.
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Otherwise a character like \xa0 (160) would be negative and goto the event,
since a negative return value in readch() is used for errors or reserved for
signal handling.
Noticed while testing mouse X10 encoding with extended buttons, like button 7:
SFEED_AUTOCMD="l$(printf '\x1b[M\xa0!!')j" ./sfeed_curses ~/.sfeed/feeds/*
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On an unknown or invalid sequence just use the key handling like the other keys
do.
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When reading data from stdin and changing the URL file externally in some way
and then pressing 'R' would not redraw (and highlight/unhighlight) the marked
items.
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... if it is set of course.
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No functional difference intended.
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vdprintf() was changed back to vfprintf() in commit 06bb4583, but the write was
not changed.
Change it to be more consistent and use the stdio buffered functions/macro.
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Add autocmd comment.
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\x1b[1~ home (putty and some terminals).
\x1b[7~ urxvt home.
\x1b[8~ urxvt end.
Refactor repeated code also.
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Some curses implementations have tparm(char *) (BSD and older ncurses), some
have tparm(const char *).
The older POSIX specification had: tparm(char *):
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xcurses/term.h.html
Just cast it to char *. The terminfo variables are defined elsewhere so it
should be safe.
Also remove an unnecesary cast in minicurses.
Hopefully this satisfies all curses variants and versions now.
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In theory feed names can contain newlines, TABS, control-characters or start
with echo options like -n. This is not recommended and not checked.
URLs cannot have these characters: they should be percent-encoded.
echo is typically a shell built-in and fast, so this trade-off is done.
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Older POSIX standards also defined it as a char * parameter (not const char *)
for tparm().
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xcurses/term.h.html
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This makes atleast feeds with simple ASCII work.
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This fixes a compile error tested with HaikuOS 32-bit (gcc2h, based on gcc
2.95).
It also suppresses a false-positive warning of an unused forkexec function in
cppcheck.
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For feeds with lots of content data:
Small performance improvement (~2%) on systems that implement putchar as a
macro. On some systems using a function call for putchar it can be easier to
replace with putchar_unlocked.
(On an older MIPS32 VM changing putchar to putchar_unlocked makes writing 5x
faster).
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There is only one enclosure supported.
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Because the tty (/dev/tty). is reopened when reading feed data from stdin.
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This replaces the current J and K keybind, which was rarely useful.
Thanks to IanJ for the suggestion and feedback!
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This allows to parse the time as a number in the 64-bit range, even on 32-bit
platforms. Note that the sfeed formatting tools can still truncate/wrap the
value to time_t, which can be 32-bit.
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SIGTERM is the best way to quit the program, because SIGINT can cancel only the
line editor prompt when using it.
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