# Each directory to survive it's way into a release will need a file # like this one called "./.Sanitize". All keyword lines must exist, # and must exist in the order specified by this file. Each directory # in the tree will be processed, top down, in the following order. # Hash started lines like this one are comments and will be deleted # before anything else is done. Blank lines will also be squashed # out. # The lines between the "Do-first:" line and the "Things-to-keep:" # line are executed as a /bin/sh shell script before anything else is # done in this Do-first: # All files listed between the "Things-to-keep:" line and the # "Files-to-sed:" line will be kept. All other files will be removed. # Directories listed in this section will have their own Sanitize # called. Directories not listed will be removed in their entirety # with rm -rf. Things-to-keep: hppabsd.mh hppabsd.mt hppahpux.mh hppahpux.mt hppaosf.mt hppapro.mt nm-hppab.h nm-hppah.h tm-hppa.h tm-hppab.h tm-hppah.h tm-hppao.h xm-hppab.h xm-hppah.h xm-pa.h Things-to-lose: Do-last: echo Removing traces of \"hpread\"... # Don't try to clean directories here, as the 'mv' command will fail. # Also, grep fails on NFS mounted directories. if ( echo $* | grep keep\-hpread > /dev/null ) ; then for i in * ; do if test ! -d $i && (grep sanitize-hpread $i > /dev/null) ; then echo Keeping hpread stuff in $i fi done else for i in * ; do if test ! -d $i && (grep sanitize-hpread $i > /dev/null) ; then echo Removing traces of \"hpread\" out of $i... cp $i new sed '/start\-sanitize\-hpread/,/end-\sanitize\-hpread/d' < $i > new if [ -n "${safe}" -a ! -f .Recover/$i ] ; then echo Caching $i in .Recover... mv $i .Recover fi mv new $i fi done fi # End of file.