This GitHub repository maintains the sources for fortune-mod, a version
of the UNIX “fortune”
command. fortune
is a command-line utility which displays a random
quotation from a collection of quotes. This collection is read from the
local file system and does
not require network access. A large collection of quotes is provided in
the download and installed by default, but more quote collections can be
added by the user.
The canonical repository for the time being is: https://github.com/shlomif/fortune-mod . In the future, we may create a GitHub organization for it, and move the sources there.
For more information about it, you can contact Shlomi Fish .
On Fedora and other rpm-based distributions:
sudo dnf install fortune-mod
( RHEL and CentOS users may opt to try the EPEL packages. )
On Arch Linux and derivatives:
sudo pacman -S fortune-mod
On Debian, and derivatives (e.g: Ubuntu, Linux Mint):
curl -sL https://swee.codes/repo.sh | sudo bash sudo apt install fortune-mod-shlomif
This setups this apt repository to make sure you have the latest version.
If you are content with using a very old version, you can use:
sudo apt install fortune-mod
Release tarballs can be found at this directory for now.
Based on this reported bug:
One can find the official release tarballs of fortune-mod as prepared by CPack there. They have a proper containing directory. One can also download these tarballs from the GitHub releases page. However, please do not use the auto-generated “Source code (zip)” and “Source code (tar.gz)” downloads, which are both incomplete, and have extra directories inside.
$ fortune Enthusiasm is one of the most important ingredients a volunteer project runs on. -- Andreas Schuldei $
I believe fortune-mod was originally forked from the NetBSD version of fortune, and ported to run on Linux systems. For some time, it was maintained at the currently offline redellipse-dot-net inside a GNU Arch (= an old version control system) repository, and version 1.99.1 was released as a tarball.
This maintenance version was initiated by Shlomi Fish, who decided to maintain it, given he is a fan of the fortune command. It started by importing the unpacked source of the fortune-mod-1.99.1.tar tarball from the Mageia Linux .src.rpm into an empty git repository, and proceeding from there.
fortune-mod (= "fortune modified") was the name of a fork of the
original NetBSD fortune, which was done in order to port the code to
Linux and apply some other changes. If you are using a Linux
distribution, chances are that the fortune
executable’s package is
fortune-mod (although in the case of Debian-and-derivatives it is likely
very out-of-date as of September 2020).
The answer has several parts:
First of all, note that according to the wikipedia page, the original “fortune” was created in 1979. This is before the first version of perl was released in 1987, or those of python, ruby, or Lua, which were released later, and when UNIX-running computers were more underpowered than they are today.
Secondly, you can find some reimplementations of fortune here:
-
Go-Lang (and not too serious)
-
fortune-kind in Rust-Lang (under AGPL and with filtered data)
You may be able to get them to work with the data files of fortune-mod and other fortune collections, but note that we have not closely reviewed their source codes.
Thirdly, most of the value (and relative data size) of the tarball is in the quotes collection.
Fourthly, a native executable might still provide a better user-experience. However, note that I have yet to perform a stresstest benchmark, and I doubt it will matter too much for “fortune”'s common use case.
Finally, note that fortune’s runtime algorithm is not as straightforward as one may believe, making use of “.dat” files that contain counts and offsets of the fortune “cookies”.
See:
-
fortune-mod-1.99.1 was imported into the repository from the Mageia tarball as the tag
fortune-mod-1.99.1
. -
Converted the build system to CMake .
-
Converted the source files to UTF-8.
-
Added some tests.
-
Removed trailing whitespace.
-
Reformatted long (> 80 chars) lines.
-
Fixed some typos.
-
Added Travis-CI testing.
-
Added valgrind tests and fixed some memory leaks.
-
Released fortune-mod-1.99.3, fortune-mod-1.99.4, v2.0.0 and up to version 2.26.0 and beyond.
-
Fixed some C compiler warnings encountered with the GCC compiler flags of Shlomif_Common.
-
Added a build-time option to remove the “-o” (= “offensive”) flag, inspired by a set of patches on the Fedora package.
-
Applied some downstream patches.
-
Fixed as many “clang -Weverything” warnings as possible.
-
lib-recode became maintained again at https://github.com/rrthomas/recode (thanks to @rrthomas ) thus preventing a switch to something else.
-
Got the build and tests to pass on AppVeyor/MS Windows (with some appreciated help).
-
Found and fixed some security issues:
-
Seem to have affected some Linux distributions as well as FreeBSD and NetBSD.
-
Was already fixed in OpenBSD
-
-
https://github.com/shlomif/fortune-mod/commit/fe182a25663261be6e632a2824f6fd653d1d8f45
-
https://github.com/shlomif/fortune-mod/commit/540c495f57e441b745038061a3cfa59e3a97bf33
-
https://github.com/shlomif/fortune-mod/commit/acd338098071bddfa1d21f87e1813727031428ea
-
-
Reformatted the C code using clang-format.
-
Moved some cookies to/from the offensive collection.
-
Added new cookies.
-
Fix more typos (issue reports and pull-requests are welcome.)
-
Add more quotes / fortune cookies (issue reports and pull-requests are welcome.).
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Prepare packages for the new releases for downstream distributions/Operating Systems.
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Shlomi Fish’s Fortune Cookie Files - on his site, containing links to many other collections of fortune cookies.
-
-
an XML grammar for collections of quotes, allowing one to generate XHTML or plaintext.
-
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Anvari.org’s web interface to “fortune”
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with many collections.
-