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Posted to commits@commons.apache.org by gg...@apache.org on 2024/01/16 18:59:29 UTC
(commons-compress) 08/09: Javadoc
This is an automated email from the ASF dual-hosted git repository.
ggregory pushed a commit to branch master
in repository https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf/commons-compress.git
commit ca4c8c83122e913160e6093fcb6af94c9718f605
Author: Gary Gregory <ga...@gmail.com>
AuthorDate: Tue Jan 16 10:32:49 2024 -0500
Javadoc
---
.../apache/commons/compress/archivers/ar/ArArchiveInputStream.java | 5 -----
1 file changed, 5 deletions(-)
diff --git a/src/main/java/org/apache/commons/compress/archivers/ar/ArArchiveInputStream.java b/src/main/java/org/apache/commons/compress/archivers/ar/ArArchiveInputStream.java
index ed1d8c3b8..270133adb 100644
--- a/src/main/java/org/apache/commons/compress/archivers/ar/ArArchiveInputStream.java
+++ b/src/main/java/org/apache/commons/compress/archivers/ar/ArArchiveInputStream.java
@@ -61,11 +61,9 @@ public class ArArchiveInputStream extends ArchiveInputStream<ArArchiveEntry> {
/**
* Does the name look like it is a long name (or a name containing spaces) as encoded by BSD ar?
- *
* <p>
* From the FreeBSD ar(5) man page:
* </p>
- *
* <pre>
* BSD In the BSD variant, names that are shorter than 16
* characters and without embedded spaces are stored
@@ -89,16 +87,13 @@ public class ArArchiveInputStream extends ArchiveInputStream<ArArchiveEntry> {
/**
* Is this the name of the "Archive String Table" as used by SVR4/GNU to store long file names?
- *
* <p>
* GNU ar stores multiple extended file names in the data section of a file with the name "//", this record is referred to by future headers.
* </p>
- *
* <p>
* A header references an extended file name by storing a "/" followed by a decimal offset to the start of the file name in the extended file name data
* section.
* </p>
- *
* <p>
* The format of the "//" file itself is simply a list of the long file names, each separated by one or more LF characters. Note that the decimal offsets
* are number of characters, not line or string number within the "//" file.