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grep-3.1-150000.4.6.1 RPM for x86_64

From OpenSuSE Leap 15.5 for x86_64

Name: grep Distribution: SUSE Linux Enterprise 15
Version: 3.1 Vendor: SUSE LLC <https://www.suse.com/>
Release: 150000.4.6.1 Build date: Wed Apr 6 09:25:06 2022
Group: Productivity/Text/Utilities Build host: sheep13
Size: 894546 Source RPM: grep-3.1-150000.4.6.1.src.rpm
Packager: https://www.suse.com/
Url: https://www.gnu.org/software/grep/
Summary: Print lines matching a pattern
The grep command searches one or more input files for lines containing a
match to a specified pattern.  By default, grep prints the matching lines.

Provides

Requires

License

GPL-3.0+

Changelog

* Thu Mar 17 2022 [email protected]
  - Make profiling deterministic (bsc#1040589, SLE-24115)
* Thu Dec 19 2019 [email protected]
  - Update testsuite expectations, no functional changes (bsc#1155271)
* Thu Feb 22 2018 [email protected]
  - Use %license (boo#1082318)
* Mon Jul 03 2017 [email protected]
  - Update to grep 3.1
    * grep '[0-9]' is now just as fast as grep '[[:digit:]]' when run
      in a multi-byte locale
    * Context no longer excludes selected lines omitted because of -m
* Thu Jun 01 2017 [email protected]
  - Use https url's
  - Drop no longer needed explicit pie
  - Enable profiled build
* Sat Feb 11 2017 [email protected]
  - Update to version 3.0:
    * grep without -F no longer goes awry when given two or more
      patterns that contain no special characters other than '\' and
      also contain a subpattern like '\.' that escapes a character to
      make it ordinary.
    * grep no longer fails to build on PCRE versions before 8.20.
  - Cleanup spec file:
    * Drop support for old distributions
    * Create lang subpackage
    * Use fdupes to replace duplicate files with symlinks
* Wed Feb 08 2017 [email protected]
  - Update to version 2.28:
    * Improve performance for -E or -G pattern lists that are easily
      converted to -F format.
    * Fix performance regression with multiple patterns.
    * When standard output is /dev/null, grep no longer fails when
      standard input is a file in the Linux /proc file system, or when
      standard input is a pipe and standard output is in append mode.
    * When grep -Fo finds matches of differing length, it could
      mistakenly print a shorter one.  Now it prints a longest one.
  - Drop upstreamed proc-lseek-glitch.patch
* Mon Dec 12 2016 [email protected]
  - testsuite.patch: remove
  - proc-lseek-glitch.patch: work around proc lseek glitch
* Wed Dec 07 2016 [email protected]
  - Update to grep 2.27
    * grep no longer reports a false match in a multibyte, non-UTF8 locale
      like zh_CN.gb18030, with a regular expression like ".*7" that just
      happens to match the 4-byte representation of gb18030's \uC9, the
      final byte of which is the digit "7".
    * grep by default now reads all of standard input if it is a pipe,
      even if this cannot affect grep's output or exit status.
    * grep no longer mishandles ranges in nontrivial unibyte locales.
    * grep -P no longer attempts multiline matches.
    * grep -m0 -L PAT FILE now outputs "FILE".
    * To output ':' and tab-align the following character C, grep -T no
      longer outputs tab-backspace-':'-C, an approach that has problems if
      run inside an Emacs shell window.
    * grep -T now uses worst-case widths of line numbers and byte offsets
      instead of guessing widths that might not work with larger files.
    * grep no longer reads the input in a few more cases when it is easy to
      see that matching cannot succeed, e.g., 'grep -f /dev/null'.
* Fri Oct 28 2016 [email protected]
  - grep 2.26:
    * no longer omit output merely because it follows an output line
      suppressed due to encoding errors
    * In the Shift_JIS locale, no longer mistakenly match in the
      middle of a multibyte character
    * grep can be much faster now when standard output is /dev/null.
    * grep -F is now typically much faster when many patterns are
      given, as it now uses the Aho-Corasick algorithm instead of
      the Commentz-Walter algorithm in that case.
    * grep -iF is typically much faster in a multibyte locale, if
      the pattern and its case counterparts contain only single byte
      characters.
    * grep with complicated expressions (e.g., back-references) and
      without -i now uses the regex fastmap for better performance.
    * In multibyte locales, grep now handles leading "." in patterns
      more efficiently.
    * grep now prints a "FILENAME:LINENO: " prefix when diagnosing
      an invalid regular expression that was read from an
    '-f'-specified file.
* Fri Apr 22 2016 [email protected]
  - grep 2.25:
    * In the C or POSIX locale, grep now treats all bytes as valid
      characters even if the C runtime library says otherwise.
      ( Fixes yast2-users and other build failures - boo#966780 )
    * grep -oz now uses null bytes, not newlines, to terminate output
      lines.
    * grep now outputs details more consistently when reporting a
      write error.
* Fri Mar 11 2016 [email protected]
  - Update to 2.24
    * grep -z would match strings it should not.  To trigger the bug,
      you'd have to use a regular expression including an anchor
      (^ or $) and a feature like a range or a backreference, causing
      grep to forego its DFA matcher and resort to using re_search.
      With a multibyte locale, that matcher could mistakenly match a
      string containing a newline. For example, this command:
      printf 'a\nb\0' | LC_ALL=en_US.utf-8 grep -z '^[a-b]*b'
      would mistakenly match and print all four input bytes.  After
      the fix, there is no match, as expected.
      [bug introduced in grep-2.7]
    * grep -Pz now diagnoses attempts to use patterns containing ^
      and $, instead of mishandling these patterns.  This problem
      seems to be inherent to the PCRE API; removing this limitation
      is on PCRE's maint/README wish list.  Patterns can continue to
      match literal ^ and $ by escaping them with \ (now needed even
      inside [...]). [bug introduced in grep-2.5]
* Fri Feb 05 2016 [email protected]
  - Update to 2.23
    * Binary files are now less likely to generate diagnostics and
      more likely to yield text matches.  grep now reports "Binary
      file FOO matches" and suppresses further output instead of
      outputting a line containing an encoding error; hence grep can
      now report matching text before a later binary match.
      Formerly, grep reported FOO to be binary when it found an
      encoding error in FOO before generating output for FOO, which
      meant it never reported both matching text and matching binary
      data; this was less useful for searching text containing
      encoding errors in non-matching lines. [bug introduced in
      grep-2.21]
    * grep -c no longer stops counting when finding binary data.
      [bug introduced in grep-2.21]
    * grep no longer outputs encoding errors in unibyte locales. For
      example, if the byte '\x81' is not a valid character in a
      unibyte locale, grep treats the byte as binary data. [bug
      introduced in grep-2.21]
    * grep -oP is no longer susceptible to an infinite loop when
      processing invalid UTF8 just before a match. [bug introduced in
      grep-2.22]
    * --exclude and related options are now matched against trailing
      parts of command-line arguments, not against the entire
      arguments. This partly reverts the --exclude-related change
      in 2.22. [bug introduced in grep-2.22]
    * --line-buffer is no longer ineffective when combined with -l.
      [bug introduced in grep-2.5]
    * -xw is now equivalent to -x more consistently, with -P and
      with backrefs.  [bug only partially fixed in grep-2.19]
  - Update info handling scriplets
    * move from postun to preun
    * add dependeny for preun
  - Refresh partially upstreamed patch
    * testsuite.patch
* Thu Nov 26 2015 [email protected]
  - testsuite.patch: also disable long-pattern-perf test
* Tue Nov 03 2015 [email protected]
  - testsuite.patch: disable unreliable test mb-non-UTF8-performance
* Mon Nov 02 2015 [email protected]
  - GNU grep 2.22:
    * Improve performance for patterns containing very long strings
    * Output and pattern matching bug fixes
  - drop add gnulib-perl522.patch, changed upstream
  - drop grep-F-heap-overrun.patch, included upstream
* Mon Jul 06 2015 [email protected]
  - add gnulib-perl522.patch from gnulib.bugs
* Mon Jan 26 2015 [email protected]
  - grep-F-heap-overrun.patch: fix heap overrun with grep -F (CVE-2015-1345,
    bsc#914695)
* Mon Jan 12 2015 [email protected]
  - Fix last change
* Tue Dec 30 2014 [email protected]
  - build with PIE enabled
* Fri Nov 28 2014 [email protected]
  - GNU grep 2.21
  - Improvements:
    * performance improved for searching files containing holes, on
      platforms where lseek's SEEK_DATA flag works efficiently.
    * performance improved for rejecting data that cannot match even
      the first part of a nontrivial pattern.
    * performance improved for very long strings in patterns.
    * If a file contains data improperly encoded for the current
      locale, and this is discovered before any of the file's contents
      are output, grep now treats the file as binary.
    * -P no longer reports an error and exits when given invalid UTF-8
      data. Instead, it considers the data to be non-matching.
  - Bug fixes:
    * fix issues in multibyte locales
    * grep -F -x -o no longer prints an extra newline for each match.
    * grep in a non-UTF8 multibyte locale could mistakenly match in
      the middle of a multibyte character when using a '^'-anchored
      alternate in a pattern, leading it to print non-matching lines.
    * grep -F Y no longer fails to match in non-UTF8 multibyte locales
    * grep -E rejected unmatched ')', instead of treating it like '\)'.
  - Changes in behavior:
    * The GREP_OPTIONS environment variable is now obsolescent
    * In locales with multibyte character encodings other than UTF-8,
      grep -P now reports an error and exits instead of misbehaving.
    * When searching binary data, grep now may treat non-text bytes as
      line terminators.  This can boost performance significantly.
    * grep -z no longer automatically treats the byte '\200' as
      binary data.

Files

/bin/egrep
/bin/fgrep
/bin/grep
/usr/bin/egrep
/usr/bin/fgrep
/usr/bin/grep
/usr/share/doc/packages/grep
/usr/share/doc/packages/grep/AUTHORS
/usr/share/doc/packages/grep/ChangeLog
/usr/share/doc/packages/grep/ChangeLog-2009
/usr/share/doc/packages/grep/NEWS
/usr/share/doc/packages/grep/README
/usr/share/doc/packages/grep/THANKS
/usr/share/doc/packages/grep/TODO
/usr/share/info/grep.info.gz
/usr/share/licenses/grep
/usr/share/licenses/grep/COPYING
/usr/share/man/man1/egrep.1.gz
/usr/share/man/man1/fgrep.1.gz
/usr/share/man/man1/grep.1.gz


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Fabrice Bellet, Tue Jul 9 18:11:13 2024