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uutils coreutils

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uutils is an attempt at writing universal (as in cross-platform) CLI utils in Rust. This repo is to aggregate the GNU coreutils rewrites.

Why?

Many GNU, Linux and other utils are pretty awesome, and obviously some effort has been spent in the past to port them to Windows. However, those projects are either old, abandoned, hosted on CVS, written in platform-specific C, etc.

Rust provides a good, platform-agnostic way of writing systems utils that are easy to compile anywhere, and this is as good a way as any to try and learn it.

Requirements

  • Rust (cargo, rustc)
  • GNU Make (required to build documentation)
  • CMake (Unix; used by Oniguruma, which is required for expr)
  • NMake (Windows; used by Oniguruma, which is required for expr)
  • Sphinx (for documentation)
  • gzip (for installing documentation)

Rust Version

uutils follows Rust's release channels and is tested against stable, beta and nightly. The current oldest supported version of the Rust compiler is 1.22.0, but 1.20.0 is known to work as well (test failures when compiling with 1.20.0 are due to the tests themselves being broken by a change in the compiler).

On both Windows and Redox, only the nightly version is tested currently.

Build Instructions

There are currently two methods to build uutils: GNU Make and Cargo. However, while there may be two methods, both systems are required to build on Unix (only Cargo is required on Windows).

First, for both methods, we need to fetch the repository:

$ git clone https://github.com/uutils/coreutils
$ cd coreutils

Cargo

Building uutils using Cargo is easy because the process is the same as for every other Rust program:

# to keep debug information, compile without --release
$ cargo build --release

If you don't want to build every utility available on your platform into the multicall binary (the Busybox-esque binary), you can also specify which ones you want to build manually. For example:

$ cargo build --features "base32 cat echo rm" --no-default-features

If you don't even want to build the multicall binary and would prefer to just build the utilities as individual binaries, that is possible too. For example:

$ cargo build -p base32 -p cat -p echo -p rm

GNU Make

Building using make is a simple process as well.

To simply build all available utilities:

$ make

To build all but a few of the available utilities:

$ make SKIP_UTILS='UTILITY_1 UTILITY_2'

To build only a few of the available utilities:

$ make UTILS='UTILITY_1 UTILITY_2'

Installation Instructions

Cargo

Likewise, installing can simply be done using:

$ cargo install

This command will install uutils into Cargo's bin folder (e.g. $HOME/.cargo/bin).

GNU Make

To install all available utilities:

$ make install

To install all but a few of the available utilities:

$ make SKIP_UTILS='UTILITY_1 UTILITY_2' install

To install only a few of the available utilities:

$ make UTILS='UTILITY_1 UTILITY_2' install

To install every program with a prefix (e.g. uu-echo uu-cat):

$ make PROG_PREFIX=PREFIX_GOES_HERE install

To install the multicall binary:

$ make MULTICALL=y install

Set install parent directory (default value is /usr/local):

# DESTDIR is also supported
$ make PREFIX=/my/path install

NixOS

The standard package set of NixOS provides this package out of the box since 18.03:

nix-env -iA nixos.uutils-coreutils

Uninstallation Instructions

Uninstallation differs depending on how you have installed uutils. If you used Cargo to install, use Cargo to uninstall. If you used GNU Make to install, use Make to uninstall.

Cargo

To uninstall uutils:

$ cargo uninstall uutils

GNU Make

To uninstall all utilities:

$ make uninstall

To uninstall every program with a set prefix:

$ make PROG_PREFIX=PREFIX_GOES_HERE uninstall

To uninstall the multicall binary:

$ make MULTICALL=y uninstall

To uninstall from a custom parent directory:

# DESTDIR is also supported
$ make PREFIX=/my/path uninstall

Test Instructions

Testing can be done using either Cargo or make.

Cargo

Just like with building, we follow the standard procedure for testing using Cargo:

$ cargo test

If you would prefer to test a select few utilities:

$ cargo test --features "chmod mv tail" --no-default-features

GNU Make

To simply test all available utilities:

$ make test

To test all but a few of the available utilities:

$ make SKIP_UTILS='UTILITY_1 UTILITY_2' test

To test only a few of the available utilities:

$ make UTILS='UTILITY_1 UTILITY_2' test

To include tests for unimplemented behavior:

$ make UTILS='UTILITY_1 UTILITY_2' SPEC=y test

Run Busybox Tests

This testing functionality is only available on *nix operating systems and requires make.

To run busybox's tests for all utilities for which busybox has tests

$ make busytest

To run busybox's tests for a few of the available utilities

$ make UTILS='UTILITY_1 UTILITY_2' busytest

To pass an argument like "-v" to the busybox test runtime

$ make UTILS='UTILITY_1 UTILITY_2' RUNTEST_ARGS='-v' busytest

Contribute

To contribute to uutils, please see CONTRIBUTING.

Utilities

Done Semi-Done To Do
arch cp chcon
base32 expr csplit
base64 install dd
basename ls df
cat more numfmt
chgrp od (--strings and 128-bit data types missing) pr
chmod printf runcon
chown sort stty
chroot split
cksum tail
comm test
cut date
dircolors join
dirname
du
echo
env
expand
factor
false
fmt
fold
groups
hashsum
head
hostid
hostname
id
kill
link
ln
logname
md5sum (replaced by hashsum)
sha1sum (replaced by hashsum)
sha224sum (replaced by hashsum)
sha256sum (replaced by hashsum)
sha384sum (replaced by hashsum)
sha512sum (replaced by hashsum)
mkdir
mkfifo
mknod
mktemp
mv
nice
nl
nohup
nproc
paste
pathchk
pinky
printenv
ptx
pwd
readlink
realpath
relpath
rm
rmdir
seq
shred
shuf
sleep
stat
stdbuf
sum
sync
tac
tee
timeout
touch
tr
true
truncate
tsort
tty
uname
unexpand
uniq
unlink
uptime
users
wc
who
whoami
yes

License

uutils is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details