A Readline Wrapper
rlwrap uses the GNU readline library to allow the editing of keyboard
input for any other command. The input history is remembered across
invocations, separately for each command;history completion and search
work as in bash and completion word lists can be specified on the
command line.
- Developed at Base:System
- Sources inherited from project openSUSE:Factory
-
2
derived packages
- Download package
-
Checkout Package
osc -A https://api.opensuse.org checkout openSUSE:Factory:zSystems/rlwrap && cd $_
- Create Badge
Refresh
Refresh
Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
rlwrap.changes | 0000008805 8.6 KB | |
rlwrap.spec | 0000001747 1.71 KB | |
v0.45.1.tar.gz | 0000181927 178 KB |
Revision 22 (latest revision is 25)
Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar_suse)
accepted
request 899914
from
Marcus Meissner (msmeissn)
(revision 22)
- switch to github release urls - Update to 0.45.1: * Bug fixes: - rlwrap would always open /tmp/rlwrap.debug after forking child command, preventing other users from running it. - Fix args to setitimer() call to prevent EINVAL error on return - advise about --always-readline if in direct mode at first user ENTER keystroke - check for I_SWROPT even if isastream() is present (compile would fail on Oracle linux) - Update to 0.45: * New features - --only-cook '!<regexp>' enables confident mode where every possible prompt that matches a regexp is cooked immediately (so that even prompts that get printed while handling a large paste are cooked). - --no-children (-N) now enables direct mode whenever the client switches to the alternate screen. This makes editors and pagers usable even when using --always-readline on non-linux systems - --always-echo echoes user input even when the client has switched off ECHO. filter makefilter to easily employ shell commands (like sed, or grep) as rlwrap filters filters can change (some) bindable and internal readline variables with a new RlwrapFilter method tweak_readline_oob() * Bug fixes - rlwrap now correctly handles bracketed paste --ansi-colour-aware (-A) didn't do anything at all. Now it - recognises colour codes as well as common control codes like window titles.
Comments 0