In the Linux man pages I write the scripts or commands run to produce
a scripted or semi-scripted patch, or when some important information
needed to write a patch was gotten from some script. See for example:
commit a1eaacb1a569cd492b09c04982cd40b4b733ba3c
Author: Alejandro Colomar
Hi Colin,
On 3/3/23 19:12, Colin Watson wrote:
> This isn't really analogous to your situation, though. git-dpm is more
> like a workflow tool (such as stgit) than it is like a program you use
> to generate one-off scripted patches. I don't think it would be
> appropriate or reasonable to try to
Marc wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 03, 2024 at 08:41:06PM +0100, Étienne Mollier wrote:
> > Marc Haber, on 2024-12-03:
> > > I'll probably deprecate --allow-bad-names in favor of something that
> > > doesn't use the word "bad" (suggestions appreciated). Otoh, adduser in
> > > the Red Hat World uses --badnam
Hi Marc,
> Homograph attacks would be best mitigated in software reading
> /etc/passwd, alerting in their output or logs that the user name they
> just printed was composed of strange alphabets.
Software that reads /etc/passwd or /etc/shadow is quite sensitive, and
should therefore be as simple a
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