* Adjust all __future__ imports:
for i in $(grep -REl "__future__.*absolute_import" plugins/ tests/); do
sed -e 's/from __future__ import .*/from __future__ import annotations/g' -i $i;
done
* Remove all UTF-8 encoding specifications for Python source files:
for i in $(grep -REl '[-][*]- coding: utf-8 -[*]-' plugins/ tests/); do
sed -e '/^# -\*- coding: utf-8 -\*-/d' -i $i;
done
* Remove __metaclass__ = type:
for i in $(grep -REl '__metaclass__ = type' plugins/ tests/); do
sed -e '/^__metaclass__ = type/d' -i $i;
done
When setting allow permissions for particular users or groups
there will be circumstances when that user is not known to the
host system.
In that case the output of `zfs allow <pool/dataset>`
looks similar to this:
$ sudo zfs allow tank/test
---- Permissions on tank/test ---------------------------------------
Local+Descendent permissions:
user (unknown: 1002) hold
user zfsuser receive
The fix in this commit removes ' (unknown: '+')' from the output
leaving only the uid/gid.
This allows the current parser to continue even if the uid/gid
is not known.
This situation occurs most often when moving a zpool from one system
to another that may not have the same users/groups. Simply adding
permissions to a user/group and then deleting the user/group
from the system will cause this situation to occur.