Fixed a defect in iosrv.exe that caused a panic if a foreground read object was attached to a different end point.
This was due to the read object being notified of a change in foreground before its iEndPoint member was updated. This member is now updated before attempting the attach, and is set to NULL in the event of a leave (resulting in the read object being left in an unattached state).
Also tweaked ymodem.cif to make it more readable.
# cp.cif
#
# Copyright (c) 2010 Accenture. All rights reserved.
# This component and the accompanying materials are made available
# under the terms of the "Eclipse Public License v1.0"
# which accompanies this distribution, and is available
# at the URL "http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html".
#
# Initial Contributors:
# Accenture - Initial contribution
#
==name cp
==short-description
Copy one or more files or folders.
==long-description
If source is a directory and --recurse is used, destination is assumed to be a directory. If C<destination> exists, C<source> is copied into it, giving the directory structure C<destinationdir\sourcename\...>. This is in line with how posix cp behaves, but it is different to the default Symbian CFileMan behaviour, which would put the files in sourcedir directly into destinationdir without creating a directory called sourcename. In posix cp terms, CFileMan usually performs C<cp -r source\* destination\> instead of C<cp -r source destination>. If C<destination> does not exist, it is created, and posix cp and CFileMan behave the same in this case. It is considered preferable for fshell cp to behave the same as posix cp, rather than following CFileMan's behaviour.
Because of the above behavioural ambiguity (and other strangenesses in CFileMan) it is not recommended to copy a directory without specifying the --recurse option.
Note, also aliased to C<copy>.
==argument filename source
The name of the source file (may contain wild characters) or directory.
==argument filename destination
The name of the destination file or directory.
==option bool r recurse
Copy matching files in sub-directories. Creates any missing directories in the destination path.
==option bool o overwrite
Overwrite file at destination, if it exists.
==option bool f force
Forcibly copy, even if the file is in use. Note, this option can't be used with --recurse.
==copyright
Copyright (c) 2006-2010 Accenture. All rights reserved.