On Mon, 2018-03-05 at 22:21 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote: > On 03/05/18 20:46, Eyal Lebedinsky wrote: > > On 05/03/18 23:35, Tim wrote: > > > On Mon, 2018-03-05 at 12:55 +1100, Eyal Lebedinsky wrote: > > > > While it mostly works, this specific command fails: > > > > > > > > $ dnf provides '*/Droid Sans*' > > > > > > Is that first asterisk slash sequence the right characters, in the > > > right order? > > > > Yes, the pattern is a standard wildcard syntax (not a regex). > > > Right. According to the dnf man page > > SPECIFYING PROVIDES > <provide-spec> in command descriptions means the command operates on > packages providing the given spec. This can either be an explicit pro‐ > vide, an implicit provide (i.e. name of the package) or a file provide. > The selection is case-sensitive and globbing is supported. > > So, since it is "globbing" one could have used as an alternative > > dnf provides '*/Droid?Sans*' > > The ? matching any single character, including <space>. > > or > > dnf provides '*/Droid*Sans*' > > With * matching any character including none. That works, but '*/Droid\ Sans*' (i.e. with a literal space) segfaults. poc _______________________________________________ users mailing list -- users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to users-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx