$ git grep -e 'This program is free software' -l |grep -v LICENSE | \
xargs perl -i -0pe 's/ \* This program.*?for more details.\s*\*\n( \* You should have.*licenses.>.\n)?//gms'
For some reason they were missed previously. All those files seem to
have proper SDPX tags.
Double newlines (i.e. one empty lines) are great to structure code. But
let's avoid triple newlines (i.e. two empty lines), quadruple newlines,
quintuple newlines, …, that's just spurious whitespace.
It's an easy way to drop 121 lines of code, and keeps the coding style
of our sources a bit tigther.
There are more than enough calls doing string manipulations to deserve
its own files, hence do something about it.
This patch also sorts the #include blocks of all files that needed to be
updated, according to the sorting suggestions from CODING_STYLE. Since
pretty much every file needs our string manipulation functions this
effectively means that most files have sorted #include blocks now.
Also touches a few unrelated include files.
If the format string contains %m, clearly errno must have a meaningful
value, so we might as well use log_*_errno to have ERRNO= logged.
Using:
find . -name '*.[ch]' | xargs sed -r -i -e \
's/log_(debug|info|notice|warning|error|emergency)\((".*%m.*")/log_\1_errno(errno, \2/'
Plus some whitespace, linewrap, and indent adjustments.
In trying to track down a stupid linker bug, I noticed a bunch of
memset() calls that should be using memzero() to make it more "obvious"
that the options are correct (i.e. 0 is not the length, but the data to
set). So fix up all current calls to memset(foo, 0, length) to
memzero(foo, length).
Do not forget the leading "S" when appending the serial number,
otherwise we chop the last character of the model name.
Addresses: https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=763397
Signed-off-by: Jean Delvare <jdelvare@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Petr Uzel <petr.uzel@suse.cz>