Coreutils version 6.1 has been released. If you haven't heard about the GNU coreutils, the FAQ is a good place to start: http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/faq/ This is a bug-fix and portability-f
Coreutils version 6.0 has been released. If you haven't heard about the GNU coreutils, the FAQ is a good place to start: http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/faq/ Coreutils development branched afte
This is a stable release. Two points are worth special mention. I built it using autoconf tools from cvs of June 23. Normally, I would not use development infrastructure to create a stable coreutils
The GNU coreutils package contains the following programs: [ basename cat chgrp chmod chown chroot cksum comm cp csplit cut date dd df dir dircolors dirname du echo env expand expr factor false fmt f
The GNU coreutils package contains the following programs: [ basename cat chgrp chmod chown chroot cksum comm cp csplit cut date dd df dir dircolors dirname du echo env expand expr factor false fmt f
The GNU coreutils package contains the following programs: [ basename cat chgrp chmod chown chroot cksum comm cp csplit cut date dd df dir dircolors dirname du echo env expand expr factor false fmt f
This is a stable, bug-fix-only release. Most of the changes since 5.92 are summarized below. Development will continue on the trunk (6.x), probably with an eventual bug-fix release or two from the 5.
The GNU coreutils package contains the following programs: [ basename cat chgrp chmod chown chroot cksum comm cp csplit cut date dd df dir dircolors dirname du echo env expand expr factor false fmt f
This is a bug-fix-only release, and I think it deserves to be called a stable release, but will wait another week or so before making that classification official. The GNU coreutils package contains
The GNU coreutils package contains the following programs: [ basename cat chgrp chmod chown chroot cksum comm cp csplit cut date dd df dir dircolors dirname du echo env expand expr factor false fmt f
I am happy to announce a test release of the GNU coreutils. The GNU coreutils package is the combination of and replacement for the fileutils, sh-utils, and textutils packages. This package contains
I am happy to announce a stable release of the GNU coreutils. The GNU coreutils package is the combination of and replacement for the fileutils, sh-utils, and textutils packages. This package contain
The coreutils repository mirror on savannah.gnu.org is once again up to date, and should be updated daily from now on. Since the savannah security breach uncovered last year, I had been unable to upd
[ Here's an improved announcement, this time with a blurb about what `coreutils' is, no MIME, and a list of the changes rather than a link. ] I am happy to announce a stable release of the GNU coreut
There have been only minor (documentation and test-suite-related) changes since coreutils-5.1.3, and no one has reported significant problems or bugs, so I'm calling this a `stable' release. [ so the
This is a bug-fix-only release. I hope to make a stable 5.2.0 release very similar to this one. Please test (build and make check) on as many different systems as you can, and report any problems to
This is a bug-fix-only release. I hope to make a `stable' release pretty soon, so if you know of any outstanding bugs, please report (or re-report) them ASAP. Here are the compressed sources: ftp://a
Happy new year! Maybe the changes in 5.1.0 weren't so destabilizing after all. There have been no bug reports against chmod, chgrp, chown, du, [*] or the underlying code in fts.c. Or maybe it's just
It's been over 3 months since the last test release, and there have been pretty many changes, so expect some instability. Finally, here's a test release with improved file system traversal code for d
Here's an entry that didn't make it into NEWS: tail's long-undocumented (since 1999) --allow-missing option still works but now elicits a warning: $ tail --f=name --allow-missing tail: the --allow-mi