Shell Utilities
Welcome to the Skunkware shell utilities section. This section contains a set of useful programs which can be used to enhance shell scripts, or
are full shell interpreters themselves.
Package List
Name |
Description |
Version |
OSR5 |
UnixWare |
gawk |
GNU Awk |
3.0.3 |
Yes |
Yes |
mawk |
Pattern scanning and text processing language |
1.3.3 |
Yes |
Yes |
bzip2 |
block-sorting file compressor |
0.9.5d |
Yes |
Yes |
gzip |
GNU file compression utilities |
1.2.4 |
Yes |
Yes |
idutils |
identifier database utilities |
3.2 |
No |
Yes |
infozip |
PK-Zip compatible tools |
5.32 |
Yes |
Yes |
less |
less - the opposite of more |
3.3.2 |
Yes |
Yes |
shutil |
sh-utils - GNU shell utilities |
2.0 |
Yes |
Yes |
GNU Awk
This is GNU's replacement AWK. GAWK contains all of the features found
in nawk, and is completely compatible with all other versions of AWK.
GAWK is also considerably faster than the standard awk.
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/uw7/shellutil/
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/osr5/shellutil/gawk/
ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/
Pattern scanning and text processing language
Mawk is an interpreter for the AWK Programming Language. The AWK language
is useful for manipulation of data files, text retrieval and processing,
and for prototyping and experimenting with algorithms. mawk is a new
awk meaning it implements the AWK language as defined in Aho, Kernighan
and Weinberger, The AWK Programming Language, Addison-Wesley Publishing,
1988. (Hereafter referred to as the AWK book.)
mawk conforms to the Posix 1003.2 (draft 11.3) definition of the AWK
language which contains a few features not described in the AWK book,
and mawk provides a small number of exten- sions.
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/uw7/shellutil/
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/osr5/shellutil/mawk/
ftp://ftp.whidbey.net/pub/brennan/
block-sorting file compressor
Bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block-sorting text
compression algorithm, and Huffman coding. Compression is generally
considerably better than that achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based
compressors, and approaches the performance of the PPM family of statistical
compressors.
The command-line options are deliberately very similar to those of
GNU Gzip, but they are not identical.
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/uw7/shellutil/bzip2/
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/osr5/shellutil/bzip2/
http://www.muraroa.demon.co.uk/
http://www.muraroa.demon.co.uk/
GNU File Compression Utilities
GZIP is fast becoming the de-facto standard for file compression under
UNIX. Many programs can handle gzip'ed files, and most source code distributions
come with the tar files compressed with gzip. gzip can produce files
very much smaller than the standard compress utility, and you can control
the level of compression you desire. The more you compress, the slower
the compression (although decompression is very quick). No system is
complete without this package.
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/uw7/shellutil/gzip/
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/osr5/shellutil/gzip/
ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/
Identifier database utilities
uw7/shellutil/idutils/
ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/gnu/id-utils/
An "ID database" is a binary file containing a list of file names,
a list of tokens, and a sparse matrix indicating which tokens appear
in which files.
With this database and some tools to query it, many text-searching
tasks become simpler and faster. For example, you can list all files
that reference a particular #include file throughout a huge source hierarchy,
search for all the memos containing references to a project, or automatically
invoke an editor on all files containing references to some function
or variable. Anyone with a large software project to maintain, or a
large set of text files to organize, can benefit from the ID utilities.
Although the name ID is short for identifier, the ID utilities handle
more than just identifiers; they also treat other kinds of tokens, most
notably numeric constants, and the contents of certain character strings.
There are several programs in the ID utilities family:
- mkid
- scans files for tokens and builds the ID database file.
- lid
- queries the ID database for tokens, then reports matching file
names or matching lines.
- fid
- lists all tokens recorded in the database for given files, or tokens
common to two files.
- fnid
- matches the file names in the database, rather than the tokens.
- xtokid
- extracts raw tokens--helps with testing of new mkid scanners.
In addition, the ID utilities have historically provided several query
programs which are specializations of lid:
- gid
- (alias for lid -R grep) lists all lines containing the requested
pattern.
- eid
- (alias for lid -R edit) invokes an editor on all files containing
the requested pattern, and if possible, initiates a text search for
that pattern.
- aid
- (alias for lid -ils) treats the requested pattern as a case-insensitive
literal substring.
Info-Zip .zip file archiver
Info-ZIP is a set of tools designed to be compatible with PK-ZIP(tm).
There are two parts to this package: one for creating zip files and
another for extracting them.
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/osr5/shellutil/infozip/
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/uw7/shellutil/
http://www.cdrom.com/pub/infozip/src/
http://www.cdrom.com/pub/infozip/
less - the opposite of more
less is a replacement pager for more. It allows for scrolling backwards,
full regular expression searches, customizable key commands, and many
other useful things. It can intelligently display control characters,
and is highly recommended.
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/osr5/shellutil/less/
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/uw7/shellutil/less/
ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/
GNU Shell Utilities
This package contains the GNU replacement for various shell utilities.
The GNU versions of these utilities are typically faster than the standard
system utilities, and are more portable. The utilities included in this
package are: basename, chroot, date, dirname, echo, env, expr, factor,
false, groups, hostname, id, logname, nice, nohup, pathchk, printenv,
printf, pwd, sed, seq, sleep, stty, tee, test, true, tty, uname, uptime,
users, who, whoami, yes.
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/osr5/shellutil/sh-utils/
http://www.sco.com/skunkware/uw7/shellutil/shutils/
http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html
http://www.gnu.org/
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