Al Viro wrote: > On Wed, Dec 16, 2009 at 10:43:47PM -0500, Masami Hiramatsu wrote: >> Al Viro wrote: >>> On Wed, Dec 16, 2009 at 03:56:17PM -0800, Andrew Isaacson wrote: >>>> With CONFIG_KPROBES=y on Ubuntu 9.10 x86_64 default install, I get the >>>> following: >>>> >>>> Error: Your awk doesn't support charactor-class. >>>> Please try to use gawk. >>> >>> Aside of the incorrect suggestion (you need not just gawk, you need that >>> thing installed as awk), the use of GNUisms in there is actually pointless >>> since encoding is bloody fixed. >> >> Hmm, maybe "POSIX awk" will be a better suggestion, isn't it? > > Not really. > > Note that meaning of [:alpha:] depends on locale, and you are working > with fixed input, in fixed encoding. So you *already* have a dependency > on locale and it's no better or worse way to express the set than A-Za-z > is. With LANG=C both describe the set you are after; in other locales > neither is guaranteed to. And having it set by caller of your script > is trivial. > > IOW, you are actually misusing the language feature and while it's easy > to fix, the same fix will remove any benefits compared to universally > available alternative language feature. Ah, I see:) I think that this is not so big issue as making new language in the kernel. (wow, if someone wants to do that, I don't dare to stop him :) ) If just typing less than 100 characters can fix it, I'd like to do it; e.g. Ualpha = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" Lalpha = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" alpha = Ualpha Lalpha digit = "0123456789" alnum = alpha digit and replace character classes with it. ("[[:alpha:]]"->"[" alpha "]") That's so easy, isn't that? :-) Thank you, -- Masami Hiramatsu Software Engineer Hitachi Computer Products (America), Inc. Software Solutions Division e-mail: mhiramat@xxxxxxxxxx -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kbuild" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html