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authorB. Watson <yalhcru@gmail.com>2022-03-12 14:56:29 -0500
committerB. Watson <yalhcru@gmail.com>2022-03-12 14:56:29 -0500
commita54eb4ba59b90d05e95bbcad95432783c37f34a7 (patch)
tree300045d8cd6e19c4047ab746e8e5d3cee67ad5f4 /development/shc
parent498e995b6b0cc708e6220674360152207a8fb1af (diff)
development/shc: Wrap README at 72 columns.
Signed-off-by: B. Watson <yalhcru@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'development/shc')
-rw-r--r--development/shc/README24
1 files changed, 13 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/development/shc/README b/development/shc/README
index be04109cc4174..cfc1c6af02d8f 100644
--- a/development/shc/README
+++ b/development/shc/README
@@ -1,15 +1,17 @@
shc - Shell script compiler
-SHC is a generic shell script compiler. It takes a script, which is specified on
-the command line and produces C source code. The generated source code is then
-compiled and linked to produce a stripped binary.
+SHC is a generic shell script compiler. It takes a script, which
+is specified on the command line and produces C source code. The
+generated source code is then compiled and linked to produce a
+stripped binary.
-The compiled binary will still be dependent on the shell specified in the first
-line of the shell code (i.e shebang: #!/bin/sh or such), thus shc does not
-create completely independent binaries.
+The compiled binary will still be dependent on the shell specified
+in the first line of the shell code (i.e shebang: #!/bin/sh or such),
+thus shc does not create completely independent binaries.
-shc itself is not a compiler such as cc, it rather encodes and encrypts a shell
-script and generates C source code with the added expiration capability. It then
-uses the system compiler to compile a stripped binary which behaves exactly like
-the original script. Upon execution, the compiled binary will decrypt and
-execute the code with the shells' -c option.
+shc itself is not a compiler such as cc, it rather encodes and
+encrypts a shell script and generates C source code with the added
+expiration capability. It then uses the system compiler to compile a
+stripped binary which behaves exactly like the original script. Upon
+execution, the compiled binary will decrypt and execute the code with
+the shell's -c option.