Subject: Re: Humanization of ls(1)
To: David P. Reese Jr. <daver@gomerbud.com>
From: Bruce J.A. Nourish <bjan+tech-userlevel@bjan.net>
List: tech-userlevel
Date: 12/28/2003 11:03:52
On Sun, Dec 28, 2003 at 01:22:28AM -0800, David P. Reese Jr. wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 27, 2003 at 05:25:25PM -0700, Bruce J.A. Nourish wrote:
> > On Sun, Dec 28, 2003 at 01:02:58AM +0100, mouss wrote:
> > > >On Sat, 20 Dec 2003, David P. Reese Jr. wrote:
> > > >
> > > > >  When using '-sh', should the file sizes be printed in bytes or
> > > > >  blocks?
> > >
> > > '-s' is for number of blocks, so it should print number of blocks
> > > (in 512 bytes by default, but since -h is an addition, 1024 may be an 
> > 
> > GNU ls prints human readable sizes when -s and -h are on the same command
> > line. That may be wrong, but if we did it, at least we'd be compatible 
> > with someone.
> 
> SUSv3 says that '-s' is non portable and may be removed from the standard
> in the future.  I'm not very excited about reading file sizes in gigablocks.

"-s" is already in NetBSD. The question is how "-h" interacts with it.

-- 
Bruce J.A. Nourish <bjan+public@bjan.net> http://bjan.freeshell.org