Displaying 3 results from an estimated 3 matches for "popt_arg_long".
2003 Jan 14
1
2.5.6pre1 bombs on Sunos4 in popthelp.c on use of sprintf
2.5.6pre1 bombs on Sunos4 gcc with these errors
popt/popthelp.c: In function `singleOptionDefaultValue':
popt/popthelp.c:137: invalid operands to binary +
popt/popthelp.c:141: invalid operands to binary +
popt/popthelp.c:145: invalid operands to binary +
popt/popthelp.c:149: invalid operands to binary +
because it's depending on sprintf to return the number of bytes
2008 Mar 23
1
[PATCH] allow to change the block size used to handle sparse files
...;sparse", 'S', POPT_ARG_VAL, &sparse_files, 1, 0, 0 },
{"no-sparse", 0, POPT_ARG_VAL, &sparse_files, 0, 0, 0 },
{"no-S", 0, POPT_ARG_VAL, &sparse_files, 0, 0, 0 },
+ {"sparse-block", 'U', POPT_ARG_LONG, &sparse_files_block_size, 0, 0, 0 },
{"inplace", 0, POPT_ARG_VAL, &inplace, 1, 0, 0 },
{"no-inplace", 0, POPT_ARG_VAL, &inplace, 0, 0, 0 },
{"append", 0, POPT_ARG_NONE, 0, OPT_APPEND, 0, 0 },
@@ -1875,6 +1878,...
2005 Apr 25
2
How about a --min-size option, next to --max-size
There's a rather old bug report in Debian's bug tracking system
(see http://bugs.debian.org/27126) about wanting to be able to specify
the maximum file size, as well as the minimum file size. Here's the
text:
Sometimes, it's useful to specify a file size range one is
interested in.
For example, I'd like to keep an up-to-date mirror of Debian, but I
currently