Date: Tue, 1 May 2001 07:44:08 +1200 From: "Juha Saarinen" <juha@saarinen.org> To: "Donn Miller" <dmmiller@cvzoom.net> Cc: <stable@FreeBSD.ORG> Subject: RE: tail Message-ID: <KPECIILENDDLPCNIMLOFEEPDCCAA.juha@saarinen.org> In-Reply-To: <3AED6781.8746018D@cvzoom.net>
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I was going to let this one go, but... :: Like so many people before you already explained, doing tail on a :: directory IS useful in some rare situations, like for example, using :: tar, and certain other things. Note the "rare situations" -- it's not useful when you make a typo, or a mistake. :: Remember, a directory is treated as a :: regular file on unix filesystems. Not sure about this; if you e.g. vi a directory, it will warn you that it isn't a "regular file". :: I see no reason to correct tail's :: behavior. If you sit there and do `tail' on a directory all day long, :: then you've got problems. Surely, you might want to modifiy cat's :: behavior, because some poor unsuspecting user might get some ugly :: garbage printed to his terminal when he does 'cat' on a disk device. So the best thing to do is to keep the current behaviour for tail et al, but make it accessible through a flag. Most of the time, that behaviour isn't desirable, hence it should only be invoked if you really need it. -- Juha To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-stable" in the body of the message
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