#!/bin/sh # Show fts fails on old-fashioned systems. # Copyright (C) 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc. # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA # 02110-1301, USA. # Show that fts (hence du, chmod, chgrp, chown) fails when all of the # following are true: # - `.' is not readable # - operating on a hierarchy containing a relative name longer than PATH_MAX # - run on a system where gnulib's openat emulation must resort to using # save_cwd and restore_cwd (which fail if `.' is not readable). # Thus, the following du invocation should succeed on newer Linux and # Solaris systems, yet it must fail on systems lacking both openat and # /proc support. However, before coreutils-6.0 this test would fail even # on Linux+PROC_FS systems because its fts implementation would revert # unnecessarily to using FTS_NOCHDIR mode in this corner case. if test "$VERBOSE" = yes; then set -x du --version fi . $srcdir/../envvar-check proc_file=/proc/self/fd if test ! -d $proc_file; then cat <&2 $0: Skipping this test. It would fail, since your system lacks /proc support. EOF (exit 77); exit 77 fi pwd=`pwd` t0=`echo "$0"|sed 's,.*/,,'`.tmp; tmp=$t0/$$ trap 'status=$?; cd $pwd; chmod -R u+rwx $t0; rm -rf $t0 && exit $status' 0 trap '(exit $?); exit $?' 1 2 13 15 framework_failure=0 mkdir -p $tmp || framework_failure=1 cd $tmp || framework_failure=1 dir=`printf '%200s\n' ' '|tr ' ' x` # Construct a hierarchy containing a relative file with a name # longer than PATH_MAX. # for i in `seq 52`; do # mkdir $dir || framework_failure=1 # cd $dir || framework_failure=1 # done # cd $tmp || framework_failure=1 # Sheesh. Bash 3.1.5 can't create this hierarchy. I get # cd: error retrieving current directory: getcwd: cannot access parent directories: # Use perl instead: : ${PERL=perl} $PERL \ -e 'my $d = '$dir'; foreach my $i (1..52)' \ -e ' { mkdir ($d, 0700) && chdir $d or die "$!" }' \ || framework_failure=1 mkdir inaccessible || framework_failure=1 cd inaccessible || framework_failure=1 chmod 0 . || framework_failure=1 if test $framework_failure = 1; then echo "$0: failure in testing framework" 1>&2 (exit 1); exit 1 fi fail=0 du -s $pwd/$tmp/$dir > /dev/null || fail=1 (exit $fail); exit $fail