Date: Fri, 5 Mar 2021 23:42:52 -0600 From: Kyle Evans <kevans@freebsd.org> To: freebsd@dreamchaser.org Cc: FreeBSD Mailing List <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: sed -i empty argument compatibility issue Message-ID: <CACNAnaF0LpDKtct1WGNemodz-ycUvrdGNh1vburxKWU070D3bA@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <42cacf1d-88be-d8a2-9ff4-f82ce378adc7@dreamchaser.org> References: <9178f6c5-631a-c2c2-c6b1-8def94a3397b@dreamchaser.org> <CACNAnaGNj55KkSEZOoEqtMVOXtFpk5Ek9tEKJJYARWUGgpwCcw@mail.gmail.com> <f89c2931-ae39-37c4-9638-f0ab39884c3f@dreamchaser.org> <CACNAnaGhGpjO0BzFskJketcnvi5%2BsjOD9N-jTffK_Ejnpt%2BzXQ@mail.gmail.com> <42cacf1d-88be-d8a2-9ff4-f82ce378adc7@dreamchaser.org>
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Ie On Fri, Mar 5, 2021 at 11:30 PM Gary Aitken <freebsd@dreamchaser.org> wrote: > > On 3/5/21 10:15 PM, Kyle Evans wrote: > > On Fri, Mar 5, 2021 at 11:12 PM Gary Aitken <freebsd@dreamchaser.org> wrote: > >> > >> On 3/5/21 9:39 PM, Kyle Evans wrote: > >>> On Fri, Mar 5, 2021 at 3:03 PM Gary Aitken <freebsd@dreamchaser.org> wrote: > >>>> > >>>> I'm trying to come up with a fix for a script in a port which invokes sed. > >>>> The port comes from a linux environment, and the offending line looks like this: > >>>> (This is in a cMake file.) > >>>> > >>>> COMMAND sed -i "/^# /d" "${outfile}" > >>>> > >>>> The issue is that linux sed expects the -I or -i extension modifier to > >>>> immediately follow the -i. In the above line, the extension is deliberately > >>>> missing to provide in-place editing. > >>>> > >>>> fbsd expects the extension to be separated from the -i by whitespace, or > >>>> doesn't work properly when it is empty or immediately follows the -i: > >>>> > >>>> $ !ls > >>>> ls -lt temp.tmp* > >>>> -rw------- 1 garya garya 86 Mar 5 13:15 temp.tmp > >>>> -rw------- 1 garya garya 86 Mar 5 13:15 temp.tmp_org > >>>> $ sed -ifoo "/^# /d" temp.tmp (works on both fbsd & linux)) > >>>> $ !ls > >>>> ls -lt temp.tmp* > >>>> -rw------- 1 garya garya 30 Mar 5 13:48 temp.tmp > >>>> -rw------- 1 garya garya 86 Mar 5 13:15 temp.tmp_org > >>>> -rw------- 1 garya garya 86 Mar 5 13:15 temp.tmpfoo > >>>> $ cp -p temp.tmp_org temp.tmp > >>>> $ sed -i"" "/^# /d" temp.tmp (works on linux but not fbsd) > >>>> sed: 1: "temp.tmp": undefined label 'emp.tmp' > >>>> $ sed -i "" "/^# /d" temp.tmp (works on fbsd but not linux) > >>>> $ !ls > >>>> ls -lt temp.tmp* > >>>> -rw------- 1 garya garya 30 Mar 5 13:49 temp.tmp > >>>> -rw------- 1 garya garya 86 Mar 5 13:15 temp.tmp_org > >>>> -rw------- 1 garya garya 86 Mar 5 13:15 temp.tmpfoo > >>>> > >>>> So fbsd works with '-i ""' but linux requires '-i""' > >>>> > >>>> Does anyone know a work-around for this problem? > >>>> > >>> > >>> My personal favorite trick to bridge the gap here was, as I recall: > >>> > >>> sed -i'' '' 's/../.../' ${file} > >>> > >>> IIRC those sed's with an optional backup suffix (Linux, OpenBSD) will > >>> accept the immediately following empty string and accept the next > >>> empty word as an empty command, while our getopt will effectively > >>> ignore the rest of the -i word and use the following optarg as usual. > >> > >> Unfortunately, times appear to have changed, at least on ubuntu-18.04: > >> > >> $ sed -i'' '' "/^# /d" temp.tmp > >> sed: can't read /^# /d: No such file or directory > >> > > > > Oh, sorry. Try slapping with an -e: > > > > $ sed -i'' '' -e "/^# /d" temp.tmp > > nope: > > $ sed -i'' '' -e "/^# /d" temp.tmp > sed: can't read : No such file or directory > $ !ls > ls -lt temp.tmp* > -rw-rw-r-- 1 garya garya 86 Mar 6 05:29 temp.tmp > -rw-rw-r-- 1 garya garya 86 Mar 5 20:45 temp.tmp_org > > Gary Bah, ok, sorry for the noise- I thought I remembered there being some odd invocation that can be done to make it work out, but I clearly don't recall what that is now and trying to search my inbox for 'sed' is a total disaster. Is this used only at build-time, or at runtime? The former can just pull in gsed as a BUILD_DEPENDS and use a BINARY_ALIAS to stash it first. Autoconfig takes some more work; ac_cv_path_SED=${LOCALBASE}/bin/gsed instead, maybe. At runtime, your best option is to patch the script to use gsed and slap a RUN_DEPENDS on that bad boy. I've wanted to make our -i arg optional for a long time to match OpenBSD/Linux, but that's a POLA violation too far even for me to pursue. Thanks, Kyle Evans
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