Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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(card_of_complement): Use cleaner `sizeof in_set'
rather than `N_CHARS * sizeof(in_set[0])'. Using HPUX's /bin/cc
(aC++/ANSI C B3910B A.05.55 [Dec 04 2003]) on an ia64-hp-hpux11.22
system, those two expressions are not the same (256 vs. 1024).
The effect of this problem was that `tr -c x y' would fail:
tr: when not truncating set1, string2 must be non-empty
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fdatasync reports EBADF when syncing (unwritable) directories.
Problem reported by Albert Chin-A-Young in:
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-coreutils/2004-05/msg00165.html
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directory and with two or more command line arguments including an
absolute-named directory followed by a relative-named directory.
(struct cwd_state): Define.
(AD_pop_and_chdir): Redesign interface so that a restore_cwd failure
can be detected by the caller. Instead of returning a malloc'd
directory name, communicate it to caller via a new parameter, and
return an indication of whether restore_cwd failed. Update caller.
Eliminate an unnecessary call to AC_stack_top.
(remove_dir): Change type of cwd_state parameter to `struct cwd_state'
so we can now communicate to caller whether/how functions like
restore_cwd have failed. Update caller.
(rm_1): Fail if we've failed to restore the working directory
and the name of the next file to remove is `.'-relative.
(rm): Fail if the require_restore_cwd flag is true and we've
failed to restore the working directory.
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(remove_dir): Use xmalloc, not XMALLOC.
(ds_init): Likewise.
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change "%s: remove" to _("%s: failed to remove") and
change "%s: close" to _("%s: failed to close").
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".". But continue to omit +, =, %, @, #, as they're either
shell metacharacters (for some shells) or are not in some
character sets, or (in the case of '%') must be a
metacharacter somewhere.
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(usage): Update to reflect this.
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symlink matched the desired owner/group. Reported by David Malone.
Also reported in 1999 as http://bugs.debian.org/39642.
(change_file_owner): When --dereference has
been specified, and when processing a symlink, stat it to get the
owner and group of the referent.
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fdatasync fails with errno==EINVAL, it means this implementation
does not support synchronized I/O for this file. Do not report
this as an error, as (for example) AIX 5.2 fdatasync reports it
for raw disk devices. Problem reported by Albert Chin in
<http://mail.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnu-utils/2004-05/msg00028.html>.
Check for write errors, though: the old code ignored them.
Improve error checking in a few other cases, too (e.g., close of a
directory).
Also, change several 'int' values to 'bool', so that the error
checking is a bit clearer. Similarly, change unsigned values
to size_t where appropriate.
* src/shred.c: Include "dirname.h".
(datasync) [!HAVE_FDATASYNC]: Remove.
(dosync): New function.
(dopass): Use it. Return 1 on write error, -1 on other error.
All callers changed. Report write error if dosync does.
(do_wipefd, wipefd, wipename, wipefile): Return bool (true/false),
not int (0/-1). All callers changed. Return false if there's a
write error.
(incname): Return bool (true/false), not int (0/1). Accept
size_t length, not unsigned. All callers changed. Do not
bother checking for non-digits; it can't happen. Replace
recursion with iteration.
(wipename): Use dir_name, base_name, etc. instead of assuming
Unix file names. Use size_t for length, not unsigned.
Report error if unlink or close fails.
(wipename, main): Use bool for booleans.
(names): Use only digits and uppercase letters, for greater
portability.
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making some contrived examples unsafe. POSIX allows this
optimization. Performance problem reported by Jonathan Baker in
<http://mail.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-coreutils/2004-05/msg00071.html>.
(first_same_file): Do not treat input pipes
differently from other files.
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for portability to EBCDIC hosts.
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for portability to EBCDIC hosts.
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'\007', for portability to EBCDIC hosts.
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(all_programs.list): New rule, copied from
man/Makefile.am and tests/Makefile.am, except that we use the
system tr rather than ./tr and we don't use tr -s.
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where the result is used. This avoids one unnecessary lstat call
per command line argument.
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a loop initializing the just-allocated memory to zero.
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<http://mail.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-coreutils/2004-05/msg00013.html>.
(remove_entry): Check for errno values like ENOENT
that show the file cannot be directory, instead of for errno
values like EPERM that show the file might be a directory. This
is necessary because, when a single unlink() call has multiple
reasons to fail, it can set errno to any of those reasons; it's
only the rare errno value like ENOENT that excludes all the other
possible reasons to fail even when the file is a directory.
(remove_cwd_entries): Don't attempt chdir if the file is known
to not be a directory.
(remove_dir): Use the same method that remove_cwd_entries uses
(for some reason they differed). Don't assert that saved_errno
must be EPERM; it might be just about anything.
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size for xnmalloc.
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Don't add `1' to the buffer size (it was to protect against malloc
implementations that fail to allocate a buffer of size zero).
That is no longer necessary, since we use a malloc wrapper
on such systems.
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mounted on the same mount point, prefer the last one, not the first.
Problem reported by Christian Jones in
<http://mail.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-coreutils/2004-04/msg00200.html>.
(show_disk): Remove unused statp arg. Return bool, not int.
(show_point): Rewrite to avoid gotos. Use the same algorithm
for lofs and dummies for each pass through the mount table,
rather than subtly different algorithms (which are probably
inadvertent).
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use the chown(2) function, if possible.
(change_file_owner): Don't hard-code the
open/fchown/close kludge here. Use `chown' instead.
The chown function works just fine on conforming systems.
Other systems now go through the new chown wrapper that
resorts to the old kludge.
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variables (they were exposed by the above change).
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