See the "fifth iteration" done in assembly.
This can be extended to any input given to the program, since yes is defined to take an argument from the command line to print out instead of "y". See https://www.reddit.com/r/unix/comments/6gxduc/how_is_gnu_yes...
From the OP: >OS X just uses an old NetBSD version similar to OpenBSD's >NetBSD's is 139MiB/s, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, DragonFlyBSD have very similar code as NetBSD and are probably identical, It really depends on how fast…
See the "fifth iteration" done in assembly.
This can be extended to any input given to the program, since yes is defined to take an argument from the command line to print out instead of "y". See https://www.reddit.com/r/unix/comments/6gxduc/how_is_gnu_yes...
From the OP: >OS X just uses an old NetBSD version similar to OpenBSD's >NetBSD's is 139MiB/s, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, DragonFlyBSD have very similar code as NetBSD and are probably identical, It really depends on how fast…