Searched hist:"3885812 c" (Results 1 – 5 of 5) sorted by relevance
/freebsd/bin/ls/ |
H A D | extern.h | 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616.
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H A D | ls.h | 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616.
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H A D | print.c | 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616.
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H A D | ls.1 | 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616.
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H A D | ls.c | 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616. 3885812c Fri Jun 02 14:53:42 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> Add colour support to /bin/ls (at a cost of 1056 bytes on my system).
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port. PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616.
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