Current File : //bin/grep-changelog
#! /usr/bin/perl

# Copyright (C) 1999-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
#
# This file is part of GNU Emacs.

# GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.

# GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.

# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with GNU Emacs.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.


# Extract entries from ChangeLogs matching specified criteria.
# Optionally format the resulting output to a form suitable for RCS
# logs, like they are used in Emacs, for example.  In this format,
# author lines, leading spaces, and file names are removed.

require 5;
use strict;

# Parse command line options.

use vars qw($author $regexp $exclude $from_date $to_date
            $rcs_log $with_date $version $help $reverse
            @entries);

use Getopt::Long;

my $result;

if (@ARGV == 0) {

    # No arguments cannot possibly mean "show everything"!!
    $result = 0;

} else {

    $result = GetOptions ("author=s" => \$author,
                          "text=s"  => \$regexp,
                          "exclude=s"  => \$exclude,
                          "from-date=s" => \$from_date,
                          "to-date=s" => \$to_date,
                          "rcs-log" => \$rcs_log,
                          "with-date" => \$with_date,
                          "reverse!" => \$reverse,
                          "version" => \$version,
                          "help"    => \$help);

    # If date options are specified, check that they have the format
    # YYYY-MM-DD.

    $result = 0 if $from_date && $from_date !~ /^\d\d\d\d-\d\d-\d\d$/;
    $result = 0 if $to_date && $to_date !~ /^\d\d\d\d-\d\d-\d\d$/;
}

# Print usage information and exit when necessary.

if ($result == 0 || $help) {
    print <<USAGE;

Usage: $0 [options] [CHANGELOG...]

Print entries in ChangeLogs matching various criteria.
Valid options are:

  --author=AUTHOR         Match entries whose author line matches
			  regular expression AUTHOR
  --text=TEXT             Match entries whose text matches regular
			  expression TEXT
  --exclude=TEXT	  Exclude entries matching TEXT
  --from-date=YYYY-MM-DD  Match entries not older than given date
  --to-date=YYYY-MM-DD    Match entries not younger than given date
  --rcs-log		  Format output suitable for RCS log entries
  --with-date		  Print short date line in RCS log
  --reverse               Show entries in reverse (chronological) order
  --version		  Print version info
  --help		  Print this help

If no CHANGELOG is specified scan the files "ChangeLog" and
"ChangeLog.N+" in the current directory.  Old-style dates in ChangeLogs
are not recognized.
USAGE
    exit !$help;
}

# Print version info and exit if `--version' was specified.

if ($version) {
    print "0.3\n";
    exit 0;
}


# Value is non-zero if HEADER matches according to command line
# options specified, i.e. it matches $author, and its date is in
# the range $from_date <= date <= $to_date.

sub header_match_p {
    my $header = shift;

    return 0 unless $header;

    # No match if AUTHOR-regexp specified and doesn't match.
    return 0 if $author && $header !~ /$author/;

    # Check that the date of the entry matches if date options
    # `--from-date' and/or `--to-date' were specified .  Old-style
    # dates in ChangeLogs are not recognized, and never match.
    if ($from_date || $to_date) {
	if ($header =~ /^(\d\d\d\d-\d\d-\d\d)/) {
	    my $date = $1;
	    return 0 if $from_date && $date lt $from_date;
	    return 0 if $to_date && $date gt $to_date;
	} else {
	    # Don't bother recognizing old-style dates.
	    return 0;
	}
    }

    return 1;
}


# Value is non-zero if ENTRY matches the criteria specified on the
# command line, i.e. it matches $regexp, and it doesn't match
# $exclude.

sub entry_match_p {
    my $entry = shift;

    return 0 unless $entry;

    if ($regexp) {
	return 1 if ($entry =~ /$regexp/
		     && (!$exclude || $entry !~ $exclude));
    } else {
	return 1 if !$exclude || $entry !~ $exclude;
    }

    return 0;
}


# Print HEADER and/or ENTRY in a format suitable for what was
# specified on the command line.  If $rcs_log is specified, author
# lines are not printed, and leading spaces and file names are removed
# from ChangeLog entries.

sub print_log {
    my ($header, $entry) = @_;
    my $output = '';

    if ($rcs_log) {
	# Remove leading whitespace from entry.
	$entry =~ s/^\s+//mg;
	# Remove file name parts.
	$entry =~ s/^\*.*\(/(/mg;
	# Remove file name parts, 2.
	$entry =~ s/^\*.*://mg;
        if ($with_date) {
	    $header =~ /(\d\d\d\d-\d\d-\d\d)/;
	    $output = "!changelog-date $1\n";
	}
	$output .= $entry;
    } else {
	$output .= $header . $entry;
    }

    if ($reverse) {
        push @entries, $output;
    } else {
        print $output;
    }
}

# Scan LOG for matching entries, and print them to standard output.

sub parse_changelog {
    my $log = shift;
    my $entry = undef;
    my $header = undef;

    @entries = () if $reverse;

    # Open the ChangeLog.
    open (IN, "< $log") || die "Cannot open $log: $!";

    while (defined(my $line = <IN>)) {
	if ($line =~ /^\S/) {
	    # Line is an author-line.  Print previous entry if
	    # it matches.
	    print_log ($header, $entry)
		if header_match_p ($header) && entry_match_p ($entry);

	    $entry = "";
  	    $header = $line;

	    # Add empty lines below the header.
	    while (defined($line = <IN>) && $line =~ /^\s*$/) {
	        $header = "$header$line";
	    }
        }

        last unless defined $line;

	if ($line =~ /^\s*\*/) {
	    # LINE is the first line of a ChangeLog entry.  Print
	    # previous entry if it matches.
	    print_log ($header, $entry)
		if header_match_p ($header) && entry_match_p ($entry);
	    $entry = $line;
	} else {
	    # Add LINE to the current entry.
	    $entry = "$entry$line";
	}
    }

    # Print last entry if it matches.
    print_log ($header, $entry)
	if header_match_p ($header) && entry_match_p ($entry);

    close IN;

    if ($reverse) {
        for (my $entry = @entries; $entry; $entry--) {
            print $entries[$entry-1];
        }
    }
}


# Main program.  Process ChangeLogs.

# If files were specified on the command line, parse those files in the
# order supplied by the user; otherwise parse default files ChangeLog and
# ChangeLog.NNN according to $reverse.
unless (@ARGV > 0) {
    @ARGV = ("ChangeLog");

    push @ARGV,
      map {"ChangeLog.$_"}
        sort {$b <=> $a}
          map {/\.(\d+)$/; $1}
            do {
                opendir D, '.';
                grep /^ChangeLog\.\d+$/, readdir D;
            };

    @ARGV = reverse @ARGV if $reverse;
}

while (defined (my $log = shift @ARGV)) {
    parse_changelog ($log) if -f $log;
}


# grep-changelog ends here.
Seguro Celular
Home business sonyw300 6 de febrero de 2020
SEGURO PARA CUALQUIER MOMENTO
Evita cualquier situación con nuestro seguro para celular.

Contar con un seguro para celular te brinda una protección integral contra situaciones comunes como robo, accidentes y pérdida. No solo te ahorrará dinero en reparaciones o reemplazos, sino que también te proporcionará la tranquilidad de saber que estás respaldado en caso de cualquier eventualidad. Es una inversión inteligente para salvaguardar tu dispositivo, tus datos y tu tranquilidad.

De viaje
Protegido siempre ante cualquier imprevisto
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Robo
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Accidentes
No pases un mal momento, protege tu dispositivo
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Previous slide
Next slide
¿Porqué seguro celular es para ti?
Nos comprometemos en brindarte la mejor protección para tu dispositivo
Cobertura mundial

Sea cual sea el problema estamos aquí para proteger tu inversión y brindarte la tranquilidad que necesitas.

Proceso de reclamación fácil y rápido

Sabemos que necesitas una solución rápida en caso de cualquier incidente.

Opciones personalizadas:

Ofrecemos opciones flexibles que se adaptan a tus requisitos individuales.

Atención al cliente excepcional

Estamos disponible para responder y brindarte asistencia personalizada en todo momento.

Tu tranquilidad está a
solo un clic de distancia

Protege tu dispositivo de cualquier imprevisto
TESTIMONIOS
¿Qué dicen nuestros
valiosos clientes?
"¡Increíble servicio de seguro para celular! Rápido, eficiente y confiable. Mi reclamo fue procesado sin problemas y recibí un reemplazo de mi teléfono en tiempo récord. ¡Gracias por brindar una excelente protección para mis dispositivos!"
male1085054890319
Herman Miller
"Me encanta la tranquilidad que me brinda su servicio de seguro para celular. Sé que mi dispositivo está protegido contra cualquier daño accidental o robo. Además, el proceso de reclamación es sencillo. Super recomendado!
female1021755931884
Sofia Millan
"Me ha salvado en más de una ocasión. El personal siempre está dispuesto a ayudar y resolver cualquier problema que surja. Gracias a su servicio, puedo disfrutar de mi teléfono sin preocupaciones.
male20131085934506012
Alexander Rodriguez