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       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of
       this interface may differ (consult the corresponding Linux  manual  page  for  details  of
       Linux behavior), or the interface may not be implemented on Linux.

NAME

       ls — list directory contents

SYNOPSIS

       ls [-ikqrs] [-glno] [-A|-a] [-C|-m|-x|-1] \
           [-F|-p] [-H|-L] [-R|-d] [-S|-f|-t] [-c|-u] [file...]

DESCRIPTION

       For  each  operand  that names a file of a type other than directory or symbolic link to a
       directory, ls shall write the name of the  file  as  well  as  any  requested,  associated
       information.  For  each  operand  that  names a file of type directory, ls shall write the
       names of files contained within  the  directory  as  well  as  any  requested,  associated
       information.  Filenames  beginning  with  a <period> ('.')  and any associated information
       shall not be written out unless explicitly referenced, the -A or -a option is supplied, or
       an  implementation-defined  condition causes them to be written. If one or more of the -d,
       -F, or -l options are specified, and neither the -H nor the -L option  is  specified,  for
       each  operand  that  names a file of type symbolic link to a directory, ls shall write the
       name of the file as well as any requested, associated information. If none of the -d,  -F,
       or  -l options are specified, or the -H or -L options are specified, for each operand that
       names a file of type symbolic link to a directory, ls  shall  write  the  names  of  files
       contained  within  the directory as well as any requested, associated information. In each
       case where the names of files contained within a directory are written, if  the  directory
       contains  any  symbolic links then ls shall evaluate the file information and file type to
       be those of the symbolic link itself, unless the -L option is specified.

       If no operands are specified, ls shall behave as if a single operand  of  dot  ('.')   had
       been  specified.  If  more  than  one  operand  is specified, ls shall write non-directory
       operands first; it shall sort directory and non-directory operands separately according to
       the collating sequence in the current locale.

       Whenever  ls  sorts  filenames  or  pathnames  according  to the collating sequence in the
       current locale, if this  collating  sequence  does  not  have  a  total  ordering  of  all
       characters  (see  the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, Section 7.3.2, LC_COLLATE),
       then any filenames or pathnames that collate equally should be further  compared  byte-by-
       byte using the collating sequence for the POSIX locale.

       The  ls  utility  shall  detect  infinite  loops;  that  is, entering a previously visited
       directory that is an ancestor of the last file encountered.  When it detects  an  infinite
       loop,  ls  shall write a diagnostic message to standard error and shall either recover its
       position in the hierarchy or terminate.

OPTIONS

       The ls utility shall conform to the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, Section 12.2,
       Utility Syntax Guidelines.

       The following options shall be supported:

       -A        Write  out  all  directory  entries,  including  those  whose names begin with a
                 <period> ('.')  but excluding the entries dot and dot-dot (if they exist).

       -C        Write multi-text-column output with entries sorted down the  columns,  according
                 to  the  collating sequence. The number of text columns and the column separator
                 characters are unspecified, but should be adapted to the nature  of  the  output
                 device. This option disables long format output.

       -F        Do  not  follow symbolic links named as operands unless the -H or -L options are
                 specified. Write a <slash> ('/') immediately  after  each  pathname  that  is  a
                 directory,  an <asterisk> ('*') after each that is executable, a <vertical-line>
                 ('|') after each that is a FIFO, and an at-sign  ('@')  after  each  that  is  a
                 symbolic link. For other file types, other symbols may be written.

       -H        Evaluate  the file information and file type for symbolic links specified on the
                 command line to be those of the file referenced by the link, and  not  the  link
                 itself;  however,  ls  shall  write the name of the link itself and not the file
                 referenced by the link.

       -L        Evaluate the file information and file type  for  all  symbolic  links  (whether
                 named on the command line or encountered in a file hierarchy) to be those of the
                 file referenced by the link, and not the link itself; however,  ls  shall  write
                 the  name of the link itself and not the file referenced by the link. When -L is
                 used with -l, write the contents of symbolic links in the long format  (see  the
                 STDOUT section).

       -R        Recursively list subdirectories encountered. When a symbolic link to a directory
                 is encountered, the directory shall not be  recursively  listed  unless  the  -L
                 option is specified.  The use of -R with -d or -f produces unspecified results.

       -S        Sort  with  the  primary  key  being  file  size  (in  decreasing order) and the
                 secondary key being filename in the collating sequence (in increasing order).

       -a        Write out all directory entries,  including  those  whose  names  begin  with  a
                 <period> ('.').

       -c        Use  time  of  last  modification  of  the file status information (see the Base
                 Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, <sys_stat.h>) instead of  last  modification
                 of the file itself for sorting (-t) or writing (-l).

       -d        Do  not  follow symbolic links named as operands unless the -H or -L options are
                 specified. Do not treat directories differently than other types of  files.  The
                 use of -d with -R or -f produces unspecified results.

       -f        List  the  entries  in  directory  operands  in  the  order  they  appear in the
                 directory. The behavior for non-directory operands is unspecified.  This  option
                 shall  turn  on -a.  When -f is specified, any occurrences of the -r, -S, and -t
                 options shall be ignored and any occurrences of the -A, -g, -l, -n, -o,  and  -s
                 options  may  be  ignored.  The  use  of  -f  with -R or -d produces unspecified
                 results.

       -g        Turn on the -l (ell) option, but  disable  writing  the  file's  owner  name  or
                 number.  Disable the -C, -m, and -x options.

       -i        For  each  file,  write  the file's file serial number (see stat() in the System
                 Interfaces volume of POSIX.1‐2017).

       -k        Set the block size for the -s option and the per-directory block  count  written
                 for the -l, -n, -s, -g, and -o options (see the STDOUT section) to 1024 bytes.

       -l        (The  letter  ell.) Do not follow symbolic links named as operands unless the -H
                 or -L options are specified. Write out in long format (see the STDOUT  section).
                 Disable the -C, -m, and -x options.

       -m        Stream  output  format;  list  pathnames across the page, separated by a <comma>
                 character followed by a <space> character. Use a <newline> character as the list
                 terminator and after the separator sequence when there is not room on a line for
                 the next list entry. This option disables long format output.

       -n        Turn on the -l (ell) option, but when writing the file's owner or  group,  write
                 the  file's numeric UID or GID rather than the user or group name, respectively.
                 Disable the -C, -m, and -x options.

       -o        Turn on the -l (ell) option, but  disable  writing  the  file's  group  name  or
                 number.  Disable the -C, -m, and -x options.

       -p        Write a <slash> ('/') after each filename if that file is a directory.

       -q        Force each instance of non-printable filename characters and <tab> characters to
                 be written as the <question-mark> ('?')  character. Implementations may  provide
                 this option by default if the output is to a terminal device.

       -r        Reverse the order of the sort to get reverse collating sequence oldest first, or
                 smallest file size first depending on the other options given.

       -s        Indicate the total number of file system blocks consumed by each file displayed.
                 If  the  -k  option  is  also  specified,  the  block  size shall be 1024 bytes;
                 otherwise, the block size is implementation-defined.

       -t        Sort with the primary key being time modified (most recently modified first) and
                 the  secondary  key  being  filename  in the collating sequence.  For a symbolic
                 link, the time used as the sort key is that of the symbolic link itself,  unless
                 ls  is  evaluating its file information to be that of the file referenced by the
                 link (see the -H and -L options).

       -u        Use time of last access  (see  the  Base  Definitions  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2017,
                 <sys_stat.h>)  instead  of  last  modification  of  the file for sorting (-t) or
                 writing (-l).

       -x        The same as -C, except  that  the  multi-text-column  output  is  produced  with
                 entries  sorted across, rather than down, the columns. This option disables long
                 format output.

       -1        (The numeric digit one.) Force output to be one entry  per  line.   This  option
                 does  not  disable  long format output. (Long format output is enabled by -g, -l
                 (ell), -n, and -o; and disabled by -C, -m, and -x.)

       If an option that enables long format output (-g, -l (ell), -n, and -o is  given  with  an
       option  that disables long format output (-C, -m, and -x), this shall not be considered an
       error. The last of these options specified shall determine whether long format  output  is
       written.

       If -R, -d, or -f are specified, the results of specifying these mutually-exclusive options
       are specified by the descriptions of these options above. If more than one of any  of  the
       other  options  shown  in  the SYNOPSIS section in mutually-exclusive sets are given, this
       shall not be considered an error; the last option specified in each  set  shall  determine
       the output.

       Note  that  if -t is specified, -c and -u are not only mutually-exclusive with each other,
       they are also mutually-exclusive with -S when determining sort order. But even  if  -S  is
       specified after all occurrences of -c, -t, and -u, the last use of -c or -u determines the
       timestamp printed when producing long format output.

OPERANDS

       The following operand shall be supported:

       file      A pathname of a file to be written. If  the  file  specified  is  not  found,  a
                 diagnostic message shall be output on standard error.

STDIN

       Not used.

INPUT FILES

       None.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       The following environment variables shall affect the execution of ls:

       COLUMNS   Determine  the user's preferred column position width for writing multiple text-
                 column output. If  this  variable  contains  a  string  representing  a  decimal
                 integer,  the ls utility shall calculate how many pathname text columns to write
                 (see -C) based on the width provided. If COLUMNS  is  not  set  or  invalid,  an
                 implementation-defined number of column positions shall be assumed, based on the
                 implementation's knowledge of the output device.  The  column  width  chosen  to
                 write  the  names  of  files in any given directory shall be constant. Filenames
                 shall not be truncated to fit into the multiple text-column output.

       LANG      Provide a default value for the internationalization variables that are unset or
                 null.   (See   the   Base  Definitions  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2017,  Section  8.2,
                 Internationalization  Variables  for  the  precedence  of   internationalization
                 variables used to determine the values of locale categories.)

       LC_ALL    If  set  to  a  non-empty  string  value,  override  the values of all the other
                 internationalization variables.

       LC_COLLATE
                 Determine the locale for character  collation  information  in  determining  the
                 pathname collation sequence.

       LC_CTYPE  Determine  the  locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes of text data
                 as characters (for example, single-byte as opposed to multi-byte  characters  in
                 arguments)  and  which  characters  are  defined  as  printable (character class
                 print).

       LC_MESSAGES
                 Determine the locale that should be used to affect the format  and  contents  of
                 diagnostic messages written to standard error.

       LC_TIME   Determine the format and contents for date and time strings written by ls.

       NLSPATH   Determine the location of message catalogs for the processing of LC_MESSAGES.

       TZ        Determine  the timezone for date and time strings written by ls.  If TZ is unset
                 or null, an unspecified default timezone shall be used.

ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS

       Default.

STDOUT

       The default format shall be to list one entry per line to standard output; the  exceptions
       are  to  terminals or when one of the -C, -m, or -x options is specified. If the output is
       to a terminal, the format is implementation-defined.

       When -m is specified, the format used for the last element of the list shall be:

           "%s\n", <filename>

       The format used for each other element of the list shall be:

           "%s,%s", <filename>, <separator>

       where, if there is not room for the next element of the list to  fit  within  the  current
       line  length,  <separator>  is  a  string  containing  an optional <space> character and a
       mandatory <newline> character; otherwise it is a single <space> character.

       If the -i option is specified, the file's file serial number  (see  the  Base  Definitions
       volume  of POSIX.1‐2017, <sys_stat.h>) shall be written in the following format before any
       other output for the corresponding entry:

           %u ", <file serial number>

       If the -l option is specified, the following information shall be written for files  other
       than character special and block special files:

           "%s %u %s %s %u %s %s\n", <file mode>, <number of links>,
               <owner name>, <group name>, <size>, <date and time>,
               <pathname>

       If  the  -l  option is specified, the following information shall be written for character
       special and block special files:

           "%s %u %s %s %s %s %s\n", <file mode>, <number of links>,
               <owner name>, <group name>, <device info>, <date and time>,
               <pathname>

       In both cases if the file is a symbolic link and the -L option  is  also  specified,  this
       information  shall  be  for  the  file  resolved  from  the symbolic link, except that the
       <pathname> field shall contain the pathname of the symbolic link itself. If the file is  a
       symbolic link and the -L option is not specified, this information shall be about the link
       itself and the <pathname> field shall be of the form:

           "%s -> %s", <pathname of link>, <contents of link>

       The -n, -g, and -o options use the same format as -l, but with  omitted  items  and  their
       associated <blank> characters. See the OPTIONS section.

       In  both  the preceding -l forms, if <owner name> or <group name> cannot be determined, or
       if -n is given, they shall be replaced with their  associated  numeric  values  using  the
       format %u.

       The  <size>  field  shall  contain  the  value  that would be returned for the file in the
       st_size  field  of  struct  stat  (see  the  Base  Definitions  volume  of   POSIX.1‐2017,
       <sys_stat.h>).  Note that for some file types this value is unspecified.

       The  <device info>  field shall contain implementation-defined information associated with
       the device in question.

       The <date and time> field shall contain the appropriate date and  timestamp  of  when  the
       file  was  last  modified.  In  the POSIX locale, the field shall be the equivalent of the
       output of the following date command:

           date "+%b %e %H:%M"

       if the file has been modified in the last six months, or:

           date "+%b %e %Y"

       (where two <space> characters are used between %e  and  %Y)  if  the  file  has  not  been
       modified in the last six months or if the modification date is in the future, except that,
       in both cases, the final <newline> produced by date shall not be included and  the  output
       shall be as if the date command were executed at the time of the last modification date of
       the file rather than the current time. When the LC_TIME locale category is not set to  the
       POSIX locale, a different format and order of presentation of this field may be used.

       If the pathname was specified as a file operand, it shall be written as specified.

       The  file mode written under the -l, -n, -g, and -o options shall consist of the following
       format:

           "%c%s%s%s%s", <entry type>, <owner permissions>,
               <group permissions>, <other permissions>,
               <optional alternate access method flag>

       The <optional alternate access method flag> shall be the  empty  string  if  there  is  no
       alternate  or  additional  access  control  method associated with the file; otherwise, it
       shall be a string containing a single printable character that is not a <blank>.

       The <entry type> character shall describe the type of file, as follows:

       d       Directory.

       b       Block special file.

       c       Character special file.

       l (ell) Symbolic link.

       p       FIFO.

       -       Regular file.

       Implementations may add other characters to this list to represent  other  implementation-
       defined file types.

       The next three fields shall be three characters each:

       <owner permissions>
             Permissions   for  the  file  owner  class  (see  the  Base  Definitions  volume  of
             POSIX.1‐2017, Section 4.5, File Access Permissions).

       <group permissions>
             Permissions for the file group class.

       <other permissions>
             Permissions for the file other class.

       Each field shall have three character positions:

        1. If 'r', the file is readable; if '-', the file is not readable.

        2. If 'w', the file is writable; if '-', the file is not writable.

        3. The first of the following that applies:

           S     If in <owner permissions>, the file is not executable and  set-user-ID  mode  is
                 set. If in <group permissions>, the file is not executable and set-group-ID mode
                 is set.

           s     If in <owner permissions>, the file is executable and set-user-ID mode  is  set.
                 If in <group permissions>, the file is executable and set-group-ID mode is set.

           T     If  in <other permissions> and the file is a directory, search permission is not
                 granted to others, and the restricted deletion flag is set.

           t     If in <other permissions> and the file is  a  directory,  search  permission  is
                 granted to others, and the restricted deletion flag is set.

           x     The file is executable or the directory is searchable.

           -     None of the attributes of 'S', 's', 'T', 't', or 'x' applies.

           Implementations  may  add  other  characters  to  this  list  for  the third character
           position. Such additions shall, however, be  written  in  lowercase  if  the  file  is
           executable or searchable, and in uppercase if it is not.

       If  any  of  the -l, -n, -s, -g, or -o options is specified, each list of files within the
       directory shall be preceded by a status line indicating the number of file  system  blocks
       occupied by files in the directory in 512-byte units if the -k option is not specified, or
       1024-byte units if the -k option is specified, rounded up to the next integral  number  of
       units, if necessary. In the POSIX locale, the format shall be:

           "total %u\n", <number of units in the directory>

       If  more  than  one directory, or a combination of non-directory files and directories are
       written, either as a result of specifying multiple operands, or the -R option,  each  list
       of files within a directory shall be preceded by:

           "\n%s:\n", <directory name>

       If this string is the first thing to be written, the first <newline> shall not be written.
       This output shall precede the number of units in the directory.

       If the -s option is given, each file shall be written with the number of  blocks  used  by
       the  file.  Along  with  -C,  -1,  -m,  or  -x, the number and a <space> shall precede the
       filename; with -l, -n, -g, or -o, they shall precede each line describing a file.

STDERR

       The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages.

OUTPUT FILES

       None.

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION

       None.

EXIT STATUS

       The following exit values shall be returned:

        0    Successful completion.

       >0    An error occurred.

CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS

       Default.

       The following sections are informative.

APPLICATION USAGE

       Many implementations use the <equals-sign> ('=') to  denote  sockets  bound  to  the  file
       system for the -F option. Similarly, many historical implementations use the 's' character
       to denote sockets as the entry type characters for the -l option.

       It is difficult for an application to use every part of the file modes field of ls -l in a
       portable  manner.  Certain file types and executable bits are not guaranteed to be exactly
       as shown, as implementations may have extensions. Applications can use this field to  pass
       directly  to a user printout or prompt, but actions based on its contents should generally
       be deferred, instead, to the test utility.

       The output of ls (with the -l and related options)  contains  information  that  logically
       could  be  used  by  utilities  such as chmod and touch to restore files to a known state.
       However, this information is presented in a format that cannot be used directly  by  those
       utilities  or  be  easily  translated into a format that can be used. A character has been
       added to the end of  the  permissions  string  so  that  applications  at  least  have  an
       indication  that they may be working in an area they do not understand instead of assuming
       that they can translate the permissions string into something that  can  be  used.  Future
       versions  or related documents may define one or more specific characters to be used based
       on different standard additional or alternative access control mechanisms.

       As with many of the utilities that deal with filenames, the  output  of  ls  for  multiple
       files  or  in  one  of  the  long  listing formats must be used carefully on systems where
       filenames can contain embedded white  space.  Systems  and  system  administrators  should
       institute policies and user training to limit the use of such filenames.

       The  number  of  disk  blocks  occupied  by  the  file that it reports varies depending on
       underlying file system type, block size units reported, and the method of calculating  the
       number  of  blocks.  On  some file system types, the number is the actual number of blocks
       occupied by the file (counting indirect blocks and ignoring holes in the file); on  others
       it  is calculated based on the file size (usually making an allowance for indirect blocks,
       but ignoring holes).

EXAMPLES

       An example of a small directory tree being fully listed  with  ls  -laRF a  in  the  POSIX
       locale:

           total 11
           drwxr-xr-x   3 fox      prog          64 Jul  4 12:07 ./
           drwxrwxrwx   4 fox      prog        3264 Jul  4 12:09 ../
           drwxr-xr-x   2 fox      prog          48 Jul  4 12:07 b/
           -rwxr--r--   1 fox      prog         572 Jul  4 12:07 foo*

           a/b:
           total 4
           drwxr-xr-x   2 fox      prog          48 Jul  4 12:07 ./
           drwxr-xr-x   3 fox      prog          64 Jul  4 12:07 ../
           -rw-r--r--   1 fox      prog         700 Jul  4 12:07 bar

RATIONALE

       Some  historical  implementations of the ls utility show all entries in a directory except
       dot and dot-dot when a superuser  invokes  ls  without  specifying  the  -a  option.  When
       ``normal''  users  invoke  ls without specifying -a, they should not see information about
       any files with names beginning with a <period> unless they were named as file operands.

       Implementations are expected to traverse arbitrary depths when processing the  -R  option.
       The  only  limitation  on  depth  should  be  based on running out of physical storage for
       keeping track of untraversed directories.

       The -1 (one) option was historically found in BSD and BSD-derived implementations only. It
       is  required  in  this volume of POSIX.1‐2017 so that conforming applications might ensure
       that output is one entry per line, even if the output is to a terminal.

       The -S option was added in Issue 7, but had been provided by several  implementations  for
       many  years.  The  description given in the standard documents historic practice, but does
       not match much of the documentation that described its behavior. Historical  documentation
       typically described it as something like:

       -S        Sort  by size (largest size first) instead of by name. Special character devices
                 (listed last) are sorted by name.

       even though the file type was never considered when sorting the output.  Character special
       files  do  typically  sort  close  to  the end of the list because their file size on most
       implementations is zero. But they are sorted alphabetically  with  any  other  files  that
       happen to have the same file size (zero), not sorted separately and added to the end.

       This  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2017  is  frequently  silent  about  what happens when mutually-
       exclusive options are specified. Except for -R, -d, and -f, the ls utility is required  to
       accept  multiple  options from each mutually-exclusive option set without treating them as
       errors and to use the behavior specified by  the  last  option  given  in  each  mutually-
       exclusive  set.  Since  ls  is  one of the most aliased commands, it is important that the
       implementation perform intuitively. For example, if the alias were:

           alias ls="ls -C"

       and the user typed ls -1 (one), single-text-column output should result, not an error.

       The -g, -l (ell), -n, and -o options are not mutually-exclusive options. They  all  enable
       long  format  output.  They work together to determine whether the file's owner is written
       (no if -g is present), file's group is written (no if -o is present), and  if  the  file's
       group  or  owner  is  written  whether  it  is  written  as the name (default) or a string
       representation of the UID or GID number (if -n is present). The -C, -m, -x, and  -1  (one)
       are  mutually-exclusive  options  and the first three of these disable long format output.
       The -1 (one) option does not directly change whether or not long format output is enabled,
       but  by  overriding  -C,  -m,  and  -x,  it can re-enable long format output that had been
       disabled by one of these options.

       Earlier versions of this standard did not describe the BSD -A option (like -a, but dot and
       dot-dot are not written out). It has been added due to widespread implementation.

       Implementations  may  make -q the default for terminals to prevent trojan horse attacks on
       terminals with special escape sequences.  This is not required because:

        *  Some control characters may be useful on some terminals; for example, a  system  might
           write them as "\001" or "^A".

        *  Special behavior for terminals is not relevant to applications portability.

       An early proposal specified that the <optional alternate access method flag> had to be '+'
       if there was an alternate access method used on the file or <space> if there was not. This
       was  changed  to  be <space> if there is not and a single printable character if there is.
       This was done for three reasons:

        1. There are historical implementations using characters other than '+'.

        2. There  are  implementations  that  vary  this  character  used  in  that  position  to
           distinguish between various alternate access methods in use.

        3. The standard developers did not want to preclude future specifications that might need
           a way to specify more than one alternate access method.

       Nonetheless, implementations providing a single alternate access method are encouraged  to
       use '+'.

       Earlier  versions  of  this  standard  did not have the -k option, which meant that the -s
       option could not be used portably as its block size was  implementation-defined,  and  the
       units  used  to  specify the number of blocks occupied by files in a directory in an ls -l
       listing were fixed as 512-byte units. The -k option has been added to provide  a  way  for
       the  -s option to be used portably, and for consistency it also changes the aforementioned
       units from 512-byte to 1024-byte.

       The <date and time> field in the -l format is specified only  for  the  POSIX  locale.  As
       noted,  the  format  can  be different in other locales. No mechanism for defining this is
       present in this volume of POSIX.1‐2017, as the appropriate vehicle is a messaging  system;
       that is, the format should be specified as a ``message''.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       Allowing  -f  to  ignore the -A, -g, -l, -n, -o, and -s options may be removed in a future
       version.

       A future version of this standard may require that  if  the  collating  sequence  for  the
       current  locale  does  not  have  a  total  ordering  of  all characters, any filenames or
       pathnames that collate equally are  further  compared  byte-by-byte  using  the  collating
       sequence for the POSIX locale.

SEE ALSO

       chmod, find

       The  Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, Section 7.3.2, LC_COLLATE, Section 4.5, File
       Access Permissions,  Chapter  8,  Environment  Variables,  Section  12.2,  Utility  Syntax
       Guidelines, <sys_stat.h>

       The System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1‐2017, fstatat()

COPYRIGHT

       Portions  of  this  text  are  reprinted  and  reproduced in electronic form from IEEE Std
       1003.1-2017, Standard for Information Technology -- Portable  Operating  System  Interface
       (POSIX),  The  Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, 2018 Edition, Copyright (C) 2018 by
       the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The  Open  Group.   In  the
       event  of  any  discrepancy  between this version and the original IEEE and The Open Group
       Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group  Standard  is  the  referee  document.  The
       original Standard can be obtained online at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .

       Any  typographical  or  formatting errors that appear in this page are most likely to have
       been introduced during the conversion of the source files to man page  format.  To  report
       such errors, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .