Yes, it worked. doing 'which' ,i found that the ls was from /usr/local/bin, i replaced this ls from the /usr/bin ls. Thankyou for the help.
On Tue, Jan 7, 2020 at 11:26 AM Kaz Kylheku (Coreutils) < 962-396-1...@kylheku.com> wrote: > On 2020-01-06 11:53, Sandeep Kumar Sah wrote: > > previously i edited ls.c to print "Hello World" before listing content > > in a > > directory. > > Now i have deleted the coreutils folder and everything underneath it. > > I want to get the original version of ls command for which i am unable > > to > > build the source file, it tells me that > > "checking for a BSD-compatible install... /usr/local/bin/install -c > > checking whether build environment is sane... configure: error: ls -t > > appears to fail. Make sure there is not a broken > > alias in your environment > > configure: error: newly created file is older than distributed files! > > Did you install this modified ls into your /bin? > > Or is it in some non-system location that happens to be listed in your > PATH? > > If you didn't clobber your system ls, so this is just a PATH issue, > either > edit PATH, or find out where this modified ls is and remove/rename it. > > If you clobbered your /bin/ls, you may be able to use your GNU/Linux > distro's packaging system to refresh the installation. > > Assuming you added something like: > > printf("Hello, World\n"); > > to the code, then you can edit /bin/ls with a binary editor, such as, > oh, "vim -b /bin/ls". Find the "Hello World" string, and overwrite > the "H" with a null byte to reduce it to zero length. Save the > executable > and try it. If it's something like > > puts("Hello, World"); > > where the newline is implicit in the function behavior, you may have > to find the instructions which make this call and overwrite them with > NOP (byte value 0x90 on Intel x86, IIRC). > > Other ideas/hacks: > > - Copy a working /bin/ls from another system that is identical or > similar to yours. > E.g. say you're on 64 bit Ubuntu 18. If you happen to have 64 bit > Ubuntu 16, > that system's /bin/ls should work. > > - Go into the Coreutils configure system and try to > defeat the test for a working "ls -t". Maybe the result of the test > is not needed for the sake of building a working ls. > > - Rename the funny ls binary to ls-funny, and write a /bin/ls shell > script wrapper which calls ls-funny "$@", and filters out the Hello, > World > first line of output, as in something like: > > #!/bin/sh > /bin/ls-funny "$@" | sed -n -e '2,$p' > > - Absolute last resort of the utter coward: Boot some rescue DVD-ROM. > Mount > your install partition and copy the live system's /bin/ls into your > install > partition's /bin/ls. > > > > >