Compare, given:
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
int compar(const char **l, const char **r) {
return strverscmp(*l, *r);
}
int main(int argc, char ** argv) {
qsort(argv + 1, argc - 1, sizeof(*argv), compar);
for(int i = 1; i < argc; ++i)
puts(argv[i]);
}
yields:
$ /bin/ls -v1 a* # coreutils ls
a-1.0a
a-1.0.1a
$ ../vers a* # as above
a-1.0.1a
a-1.0a
$ ls -v1 a* # voreutils ls @
5781698 with strverscmp()-equivalent sorting
a-1.0.1a
a-1.0a
compare also the results for real data like
netstat-nat-1.{0,1{,.1},2,3.1,4{,.{1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10}}}.tar.gz
Thus, coreutils ls -v (and sort -V) does NOT use strverscmp(3);
it uses a modified Debian version comparison algorithm with additional
suffix processing and `ls -v`-specific exceptions.
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Message-Id: <myuppkwnltqtxduoop7g7wfuyou5cdo6sotocrvyztmqnazvph@tarta.nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@kernel.org>
.BI "int strverscmp(const char *" s1 ", const char *" s2 );
.fi
.SH DESCRIPTION
-Often one has files
+For a dataset like
.IR jan1 ", " jan2 ", ..., " jan9 ", " jan10 ", ..."
-and it feels wrong when
-.BR ls (1)
-orders them
+sorting it lexicographically yields
.IR jan1 ", " jan10 ", ..., " jan2 ", ..., " jan9 .
.\" classical solution: "rename jan jan0 jan?"
-In order to rectify this, GNU introduced the
-.I \-v
-option to
-.BR ls (1),
-which is implemented using
-.BR versionsort (3),
-which again uses
-.BR strverscmp ().
-.P
-Thus, the task of
+The task of
.BR strverscmp ()
-is to compare two strings and find the "right" order, while
+is to compare two strings yielding the former order, while
.BR strcmp (3)
finds only the lexicographic order.
This function does not use
.BR LC_COLLATE ,
so is meant mostly for situations
where the strings are expected to be in ASCII.
+This is different from the ordering produced by
+.BR sort (1)
+.BR -V .
+.\" sort -V sorts a-1.0a < a-1.0.1a; strverscmp() does not
.P
What this function does is the following.
If both strings are equal, return 0.