At 2023-11-10T10:54:52-0800, Eric Pruitt wrote: > On Fri, Nov 10, 2023 at 01:22:54PM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote: > > It most definitely is *not* everywhere. It's part of GNU coreutils, > > and is generally not present on any system that does't use those > > (BSDs and commercial Unixes for example). > > From _seq(1)_ on FreeBSD: > > > The seq command first appeared in Version 8 AT&T UNIX. A seq command > > appeared in NetBSD 3.0, and was ported to FreeBSD 9.0. This command > > was based on the command of the same name in Plan 9 from Bell Labs > > and the GNU core utilities. The GNU seq command first appeared in > > the 1.13 shell utilities release. > > From _seq(1)_ on OpenBsd: > > > A seq command appeared in Version 8 AT&T UNIX. This version of seq > > appeared in NetBSD 3.0 and was ported to OpenBSD 7.1.
That leaves NetBSD (data point requested), and I stumbled into seq's absence when building groff 1.23.0 release candidates for Solaris 10 (maybe 11 too). https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/groff.git/tree/HACKING?h=1.23.0#n98 Regards, Branden
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