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ssed 3.62-8.1
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Sed 3.62 (aligned with GNU sed CVS at 2005-02-10)
  
* added a note to BUGS and the manual about changed interpretation
  of `s|abc\|def||', and about localization issues.

* fixed --disable-nls build problems on Solaris.

* fixed `make check' in non-English locales.
  
* implemented [[.a.]] and [[=a=]] where the collating symbol can only
  include a single character, and that will be the only matched character
  independent of the locale.

* output the result of commands a, r, R when a q command is found.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.61a

* sed 3.61 had GNU sed 4.1's toplevel Makefile by mistake.  Fixed.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.61 (aligned with GNU sed 4.1)

* 0 address behaves correctly in single-file (-i and -s) mode.

* // matches the last regular expression even in POSIXLY_CORRECT mode.

* added parameter to `v' for the version of sed that is expected.
  Also, `v' disables POSIXLY_CORRECT behavior.

* change the way we treat lines which are not terminated by a newline.
  Such lines are printed without the terminating newline (as before)
  but as soon as more text is sent to the same output stream, the
  missing newline is printed, so that the two lines don't concatenate.
  The behavior is now independent from POSIXLY_CORRECT because POSIX
  actually has undefined behavior in this case, and the new implementation
  arguably gives the ``least expected surprise''.  Thanks to Stepan
  Kasal for discussing the issue and providing the implementation.

* documentation improvements, with updated references to the POSIX.2
  specification

* error messages on I/O errors are better, and -i does not leave temporary
  files around (e.g. when running ``sed -i'' on a directory).

* escapes are accepted in the y command (for example: y/o/\n/ transforms
  o's into newlines)

* fix for -i under Cygwin; also, the -i option tries to set the owner
  and group to the same as the input file

* improvements to some error messages (e.g. y/abc/defg/ incorrectly said
  `excess characters after command' instead of `y arguments have
  different lengths')

* line number addresses are processed differently -- this is supposedly
  conformant to POSIX and surely more idiot-proof.  Line number addresses
  are not affected by jumping around them: they are activated and
  deactivated exactly where the script says, while previously
    5,8b
    1,5d
  would actually delete lines 1,2,3,4 and 9 (!).

* more translations

* multibyte characters are taken in consideration to compute the
  operands of s and y, provided you set LC_CTYPE correctly.  However,
  the regular expression matcher does not support them yet.

* new option --posix, disables all extensions.  POSIXLY_CORRECT only
  disables extensions that violate the POSIX standard.

* options -h and -V are not supported anymore, use --help and --version.

* Perl's \G escape is supported both in Perl and POSIX regexps (not in
  GNU sed).

* portability fixes

* support for [[:blank:]] character class

* the -i option tries to set the owner and group to the same as the input
  file

* the `L' command is deprecated and will be removed as soon as GNU sed
  removes it.

* the `N' command's feature that is detailed in the BUGS file is disabled
  if POSIXLY_CORRECT behavior is requested.

* the special address 0 can only be used in 0,/RE/ or 0~STEP addresses;
  other cases give an error (you are hindering portability for no reason
  if specifying 0,N and you are giving a dead command if specifying 0
  alone).

* `a', `i', `l', `L', `r' accept two addresses except in POSIXLY_CORRECT
  mode.  Only `q' and `Q' do not accept two addresses in standard mode.

* when a \ is used to escape the character that would terminate an operand
  of the s or y commands, the character loses any meaning as a metacharacter.
  This is left undefined by POSIX; this behavior makes `s+x\+++g' remove
  occurrences of `x+', consistently with `s/x\///g'.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.60 (aligned with GNU sed 4.0)

* Maintainance release with no visible changes except more translations
  were added.  Limits differences in source code between GNU sed 4.x
  and ssed.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.59

* `R' command reads a single line from a file.

* CR-LF pairs are always ignored under Windows, even if (under Cygwin)
  a disk is mounted as binary.

* Fixed bug in the numeric parameter to `s'.  The replacement flag
  was set on the first match of the regular expression, not on the Nth.

* Fixed bug in /.{1,64}/

* More attention to errors on stdout

* New `W' command to write first line of pattern space to a file

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.58

* Can customize line wrap width on single `l' commands

* `L' command formats and reflows paragraphs like `fmt' does.

* Upgraded to autoconf 2.53

* When running a script with in-place editing, command ranges such as
  /abc/,/def/, line numbers, and the special $ address are reset for
  each file.  The same can be done with the new `-s' option when in-
  place editing is off.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.57

* Fixed problems with `-i' when /tmp was on a different volume

* Fixed problems in \[lLuUE] (due to a construct with undefined
  behavior which some newer compilers optimized away)

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.56

* Added another "heavy-weight" test (like dc.sed) to the testsuite.

* Bug fix: after using the D command, the first line could have been
considered valid by a subsequent [GH] command.

* Prune impossible backtracking paths (e.g. b*c does not backtrack
on b).

* The test suite makefiles are better organized (this change is
transparent however).

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.55

* Bug fix: Inside a character class, an unrecognized escape sequence
is interpreted as two separate characters: for example [\g] is a
character class made of a backslash and a `g'.  I thought I had
fixed this in 3.49, but that fix was not enough.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.54

* Bug fix: s/^xxxxx//p did not print (related to the optimization
introduced by Sed 3.53).  This broke Automake 1.5's dependency
tracking, so if you installed Sed 3.53 as the system sed you should
configure with --disable-dependency-tracking.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.53

* Bug fix: The meanings \` and \' were swapped.

* Compiles and bootstraps out-of-the-box under MinGW32 and Cygwin.

* Faster on most regular expression because it uses the Boyer-Moore
algorithm to process initial fixed-length strings.  The "set of
possible first characters" algorithm is used as a fallback there
is no such string (e.g. when a regex starts with a star or question
mark pattern: [0-9]*).

* Has a comprehensive test suite for both Posix and PERL regular
expressions.

* Optimizes cases when pattern space is truncated at its start or at
its end by `D' or by a substitution command with an empty RHS.
For example scripts like this,

    seq 1 10000 | tr \\n \  | ./sed ':a; s/^[0-9][0-9]* //; ta'

whose behavior was quadratic with previous versions of sed, have
now linear behavior.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.52

* Merged with PCRE 3.7:
 
** pcre_exec() was referring to its "code" argument before testing
that argument for NULL (and giving an error if it was NULL).
 
** The limit of 200 on non-capturing parentheses is a _nesting_ limit,
not an absolute limit. Changed the text of the error message to make
this clear, and likewise updated the man page.
 
** The limit of 99 on the number of capturing subpatterns has been 
removed.
 
* New command `e' to pipe the output of a command into the output
of sed.

* New option `e' to pass the output of the `s' command through the
Bourne shell and get the result into pattern space.

* Simple minded optimization in the matcher: if the regexp is
anchored to the end of the pattern, and the regexp cannot match
more than some number of characters, leap to the end of pattern
space minus that number of characters.  For example, abc[def]$
will start matching four characters before the end of pattern
space.

* Switched to obstacks in the parser -- less memory-related bugs
(there were none AFAIK but you never know) and less memory usage.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.51

* Bug fix: behavior of undefined regular expressions (such as a single
star `*') is more consistent with GNU sed and does not issue
internal errors anymore.

* Bug fix: fixed internal error when backslashed expressions appeared
inside character classes (e.g. [\X]).  This broke autoconf 2.50 or
later.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.50

* Updated to latest autoconf and automake.

* New option -i, to support in-place editing a la Perl.  Usually one
had to use ed or, for more complex tasks, resort to Perl; this is
not necessary anymore.

* Dumped buffering code.  The performance loss is 10%, but it caused
bugs in systems with CRLF termination.  The current solution is
not definitive, though.

* Bug fix: Made the behavior of s/A*/x/g (i.e. `s' command with a
possibly empty LHS) more consistent:

       pattern            3.49 or GNU sed       3.50
        B                      xBx               xBx
        BC                     xBxCx             xBxCx
        BAC                    xBxxCx            xBxCx
        BAAC                   xBxxCx            xBxCx

Earlier versions matched a spurious empty string after the sequence
of A's.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.49

* Bug fix: Inside a character class, an unrecognized escape sequence
is interpreted as two separate characters: for example [\g] is a
character class made of a backslash and a `g'.  This change is
needed for compatibility with autoconf 2.50.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.48

* Bug fix: on the RHS of the `s' command, the syntax of the octal
constants is the same as for Perl.  Note that it is not possible
yet to specify more than 9 backreferences on the RHS of the `s'
command.

* Bug fix: \c is parsed on the RHS of the `s' command.

* Bug fix: the q and Q commands could be misinterpreted, leading to
spurious syntax errors in the following command

* Bug fix: the // empty regular expressions now refers to the last
regular expression that was matched, rather than to the last
regular expression that was compiled.  This richer behavior seems
to be the correct one (albeit neither one is POSIXLY_CORRECT).

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.47

* This version adds a check for invalid backreferences in the
RHS of the `s' command (e.g. s/1234/\1/) and support for
\[lLuUE] in the RHS of the `s' command like in Perl.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.46

* This version is not an official GNU release, hence it is dubbed
`super-sed' and uses a strange version number unlikely to clash
with GNU sed's numbering.  It is my hope to merge super-sed's
changes with GNU sed one day, but at the moment they should be
considered separate programs at all effects.

* It uses a different regular expression matcher which is much more
faster (6x to 20x), especially on backreferences.

* Bug fix: if a file was redirected to be stdin, sed did not consume
it.  So
      (sed d; sed G) < TESTFILE

double-spaced TESTFILE, while the equivalent `useless use of cat'
      cat TESTFILE | (sed d; sed G)

printed nothing (which is the correct behavior).  A test for this
bug was added to the test suite.

* A bug in the test suite (the khadafy test was run with BREs instead
of EREs) has been corrected.

* The documentation is now much better, with a few examples provided,
and a thorough description of regular expressions.  The manual often
refers to "GNU extensions", but if they are described here they are
specific to this version.

* Added new command-line options:
  -r, --regexp-extended
    Use extended regexps -- e.g. (abc+) instead of \(abc\+\)
  -R, --regexp-perl
    Use Perl regexps (\l, \L, \u, \U, \E not supported)

* Added feature to the `w' command and to the `w' option of the `s'
command: if the file name is /dev/stderr, it means the standard
error (inspired by awk).  This is disabled if POSIXLY_CORRECT is
set.

* Added `m' and `M' modifiers to `s' command for multi-line
matching (Perl-style); in addresses, only `M' works.

* Added `Q' command for `silent quit'; added ability to pass
an exit code from a sed script to the caller.

* Added `T' command for `branch if failed'.

* Added `v' command, which is a do-nothing intended to fail on
seds that do not support super-sed's extensions.

* Bootstrapping was tested and is known to work.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.02.80

* Started new version nomenclature for pre-3.03 releases.  (I'm being
pessimistic in assuming that .90 won't give me enough breathing room.)

* Bug fixes: the regncomp()/regnexec() interfaces proved to be inadequate to
properly handle expressions such as "s/\</#/g".  Re-abstracted the regex
code in the sed/ tree, and now use the re_search_2() interface to the GNU
regex routines.  This change also fixed a bug where /./ did not match the
NUL character.  Had the glibc folk fix a bug in lib/regex.c where
's/0*\([0-9][0-9]\)/X\1X/' failed to match on input "002".

* Added new command-line options:
  -u, --unbuffered
    Do not attempt to read-ahead more than required; do not buffer stdout.
  -l N, --line-length=N
    Specify the desired line-wrap length for the `l' command.
    A length of "0" means "never wrap".

* New internationalization translations added: fr ru de it el sk pt_BR sv
(plus nl from 3.02a).

* The s/// command now understands the following escapes
(in both halves):
	\a	an "alert" (BEL)
	\f	a form-feed
	\n	a newline
	\r	a carriage-return
	\t	a horizontal tab
	\v	a vertical tab
	\oNNN	a character with the octal value NNN
	\dNNN	a character with the decimal value NNN
	\xNN	a character with the hexadecimal value NN
This behavior is disabled if POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, at least for the
time being (until I can be convinced that this behavior does not violate
the POSIX standard).  (Incidentally, \b (backspace) was omitted because
of the conflict with the existing "word boundary" meaning. \ooo octal
format was omitted because of the conflict with backreference syntax.)

* If POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, the empty RE // now is the null match
instead of "repeat the last REmatch".  As far as I can tell
this behavior is mandated by POSIX, but it would break too many
legacy sed scripts to blithely change GNU sed's default behavior.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.02a

* Added internationalization support, and an initial (already out of date)
set of Dutch message translations (both provided by Erick Branderhorst).

* Added support for scripts like:
 sed -e 1ifoo -e '$abar'
(note no need for \ <newline> after a, i, and c commands).
Also, conditionally (on NO_INPUT_INDENT) added
experimental support for skipping leading whitespace on
each {a,i,c} input line.

* Added addressing of the form:
 /foo/,+5 p (print from foo to 5th line following)
 /foo/,~5 p (print from foo to next line whose line number is a multiple of 5)
The first address of these can be any of the previously existing
addressing types; the +N and ~N forms are only allowed as the
second address of a range.

* Added support for pseudo-address "0" as the first address in an
address-range, simplifying scripts which happen to match the end
address on the first line of input.  For example, a script
which deletes all lines from the beginning of the file to the
first line which contains "foo" is now simply "sed 0,/foo/d",
whereas before one had to go through contortions to deal with
the possibility that "foo" might appear on the first line of
the input.

* Made NUL characters in regexps work "correctly" --- i.e., a NUL
in a RE matches a NUL; it does not prematurely terminate the RE.
(This only works in -f scripts, as the POSIX.1 exec*() interface
only passes NUL-terminated strings, and so sed will only be able
to see up to the first NUL in any -e scriptlet.)

* Wherever a `;' is accepted as a command terminator, also allow a `}'
or a `#' to appear.  (This allows for less cluttered-looking scripts.)

* Lots of internal changes that are only relevant to source junkies
and development testing.  Some of which might cause imperceptible
performance improvements.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.02

* Fixed a bug in the parsing of character classes (e.g., /[[:space:]]/).
Corrected an omission in djgpp/Makefile.am and an improper dependency
in testsuite/Makefile.am.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.01

* This version of sed mainly contains bug fixes and portability
enhancements, plus performance enhancements related to sed's handling
of input files.  Due to excess performance penalties, I have reverted
(relative to 3.00) to using regex.c instead of the rx package for
regular expression handling, at the expense of losing true POSIX.2
BRE compatibility.  However, performance related to regular expression
handling *still* needs a fair bit of work.

* One new feature has been added: regular expressions may be followed
with an "I" directive ("i" was taken [the "i"nsert command]) to
indicate that the regexp should be matched in a case-insensitive
manner.  Also of note are a new organization to the source code,
new documentation, and a new maintainer.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sed 3.0

* This version of sed passes the new test-suite donated by
Jason Molenda.

* Overall performance has been improved in the following sense: Sed 3.0
is often slightly slower than sed 2.05.  On a few scripts, though, sed
2.05 was so slow as to be nearly useless or to use up unreasonable
amounts of memory.  These problems have been fixed and in such cases,
sed 3.0 should have acceptable performance.