On 30.01.2016 14:23, Stefan Tatschner wrote:
I am quite exited that pacman 5.0 has been removed and finally hooks are there. Good job folks!
But I am a bit confused about the new -F feature. What exactly are the advantages of e.g. -Fo over -Qo, or -Fl over -Ql? I don't understand what is the purpose of this duplication; furthermore the output is not consistent and even gives different results.
~ $ pacman -Fo /usr/bin/ls usr/bin/ls is owned by core/coreutils 8.24-1
~ $ pacman -Qo /usr/bin/ls /usr/bin/ls is owned by coreutils 8.25-1
~ $ pacman -Fl coreutils coreutils usr/ coreutils usr/bin/ coreutils usr/bin/[ coreutils usr/bin/base64 coreutils usr/bin/basename [...]
$ pacman -Ql coreutils coreutils /usr/ coreutils /usr/bin/ coreutils /usr/bin/[ coreutils /usr/bin/base32 <-- missing in -Fl coreutils /usr/bin/base64 coreutils /usr/bin/basename [...]
~ $ pacman -Fl coreutils | grep base coreutils usr/bin/base64 coreutils usr/bin/basename coreutils usr/share/man/man1/base64.1.gz coreutils usr/share/man/man1/basename.1.gz
~ $ pacman -Ql coreutils | grep base coreutils /usr/bin/base32 coreutils /usr/bin/base64 coreutils /usr/bin/basename coreutils /usr/share/man/man1/base32.1.gz coreutils /usr/share/man/man1/base64.1.gz coreutils /usr/share/man/man1/basename.1.gz
I would like to add, that -Fo does not follow symlinks; -Qo does: ~ $ pacman -Qo /bin/ls /usr/bin/ls is owned by coreutils 8.25-1 ~ $ pacman -Fo /bin/ls ~ $ ~ $ pacman -Fo /usr/bin/ls usr/bin/ls is owned by core/coreutils 8.24-1 Stefan