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1 | #!/usr/bin/perl | |
2 | # | |
3 | # This script must be ran from svn checkout and will produce the list of all | |
4 | # files using native svn:eol-style on output. It's used as a helper for | |
5 | # distribution creation as this is also the list of files which need to have | |
6 | # their line endings converted for the use on the platform other than the | |
7 | # current one. | |
8 | # | |
9 | # Notice that the script requires Perl 5.10 (which could be easily avoided but | |
10 | # as this is for my personal use mostly so far, I didn't bother) and Perl svn | |
11 | # bindings. | |
12 | use 5.10.0; | |
13 | use strict; | |
14 | use warnings; | |
15 | use SVN::Client; | |
16 | ||
17 | my $ctx = SVN::Client->new | |
18 | or die "Failed to create svn context, do you have svn auth stored?\n"; | |
19 | ||
20 | # For testing purposes a single parameter may be specified to restrict the list | |
21 | # of files with native EOLs to just this directory (recursively) or even a | |
22 | # single file. In normal use no parameters should be given. | |
23 | my $path = $ARGV[0] // ''; | |
24 | my $props = $ctx->proplist($path, undef, 1) | |
25 | or die "Failed to list properties for $path.\n"; | |
26 | ||
27 | foreach my $prop (@$props) { | |
28 | my $eol = ${$prop->prop_hash()}{'svn:eol-style'}; | |
29 | if ( defined $eol && ($eol eq 'native') ) { | |
30 | say $prop->node_name(); | |
31 | } | |
32 | } |