* tests/df/no-mtab-status: Include <mntent.h> in test program, so
that the getmntent hack compilation fails on Solaris, as it
should, since it's not compatible with Solaris. Reported by
Stefano Lattarini in <http://bugs.gnu.org/12225>.
* tests/split/filter: Use xz -1 when compressing, to minimize
memory usage. Otherwise, xz could fail due to insufficient
virtual memory on a system with very little free memory.
This also fixes a free-memory-read (FMR) bug: when fillbuf's realloc
of buf->buf frees the buffer into which saved_line.text points,
the processing of that just-read longer line includes comparison
against the saved line in freed memory.
* src/sort.c (overlap): Remove.
(fillbuf): Do not try to copy saved lines, as that is too risky
in the presence of parallelism, reallocated buffers, etc.
(sort): Invalidate any saved line before sorting a new batch.
sort -u could omit one or more lines of expected output.
This bug arose because sort recorded the most recently printed line via
reference, and if you were unlucky, the storage for that line would be
reused (overwritten) as additional input was read into memory. If you
were doubly unlucky, the new value of the "saved" line would not only
match the very next line, but if that next line were also the first in
a series of identical, not-yet-printed lines, then the corrupted "saved"
line value would result in the omission of all matching lines.
* src/sort.c (saved_line): New static/global, renamed and moved from...
(write_unique): ...here. Old name was "saved", which was too generic
for its new role as file-scoped global.
(fillbuf): With --unique, when we're about to read into a buffer that
overlaps the saved "preceding" line (saved_line), copy the line's .text
member to a realloc'd-as-needed temporary buffer and adjust the line's
key-defining members if they're set.
(overlap): New function.
* tests/misc/sort: New tests.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* THANKS.in: Update.
Bug introduced via commit v8.5-89-g9face83.
Reported by Rasmus Borup Hansen in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/23173/focus=24647
* tests/Coreutils.pm (_compare_files): Reverse diff arguments so
that we invoke diff -c $expected $actual, which is consistent with
how init.sh-using tests invoke "compare exp out".
Add new option to rm (-d/--dir), which allows removal of
empty directories, while still safely disallowing removal
of non-empty ones.
This improves compatibility with Mac OS X and BSD systems,
which honor the -d option.
* src/remove.c (rm_fts): Remove empty directories when requested.
* src/remove.h (rm_options) [remove_empty_directories]: New member.
* src/rm.c (long_opts, usage, main): Update usage and option parsing.
(rm_option_init): Initialize the new member.
* src/mv.c (rm_option_init): Initialize the new member.
* tests/rm/d-1: New test case - successfully delete empty dir.
* tests/rm/d-2: New test case - refuse to delete nonempty dir.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add them.
* src/df.c (main): Add conditions to fail when the mount list cannot
be read: this includes the cases when a file name argument is given
and any of -a, -l, -t or -x is used.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Document the additional error conditions.
* tests/df/no-mtab-status: Add a new test.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* tests/init.cfg (require_mount_list_): A new function
to ensure we can read the list of file systems.
(require_local_dir_): Call the above function, as otherwise
the check is invalid.
* tests/df/total-unprocessed: Ensure df can read the
list of mounted file systems so that --local can be honored.
* src/Makefile.am (sort_LDADD): Sort uses euidaccess, which may require
whatever library configure deemed necessary to resolve the eaccess
function, but no one told sort to link with that library.
(sort_LDADD): Add $(LIB_EACCESS).
When the combination of the file system options with given files or
devices does not lead to output, "df --total" would exit successfully
although it should not.
Examples:
$ df --total --type=xfs / # when / is not an XFS file system
$ df --total --local -t nfs DIR # nfs is remote per se ...
$ df --total -t qwerty /dev/sdb5 # typo in file system type
Furthermore, "df --total" would not print the error message "no file
systems processed" when the file argument does not exist or is otherwise
not accessible.
Example:
$ df --total __not_exist__
These 2 bugs are present since --total was added by commit
v6.12-166-gea2887b.
* src/df.c (get_dev): Do not set file_systems_processed to true when
force_fsu is true, i.e. when the row for the "total" line is processed.
(main): Don't print totals unless we've processed a file system.
Also only print the "no FS processed" message if there was no
preceding diagnostic.
* tests/df/total-unprocessed: Add a new test.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Improved-by: Jim Meyering
* src/truncate.c (main): For a user who makes the mistake of
using a non-seekable file as a reference for the desired length,
truncate would open that file, attempt to seek to its end, but
upon seek failure would neglect to close the file descriptor.
Close the file descriptor even when lseek fails.
In addition, ignore failure to close that reference FD, since as
long as the lseek succeeds, a close failure doesn't matter.
Coverity spotted the potential FD leak.
Improved-by: Pádraig Brady.
* tests/init.cfg (require_ulimit_): Raise VM limit from 10MiB to
20MiB, to accommodate overhead of a valgrind-wrapped date program.
Also declare this function's local variables "local".
* src/split.c (lines_rr) [IF_LINT]: Plug a harmless leak.
(main) [IF_LINT]: Free a usually-small (~70KB) buffer
just before exit, mainly to take this off the radar of
leak-detecting tools.
Improved-by: Pádraig Brady.
We carry local adjustments for a few gnulib modules via the
patches in gl/. Nearly all of those patches had become stale
due to evolution of the originals in gnulib.
To refresh them, first make sure you have no local changes in gl/
or in the gnulib submodule, then run "make refresh-gnulib-patches".
* src/tail.c (check_fspec): Save fstat-induced errno *before*
calling close_fd, not after. Otherwise, the close could well
clobber the global errno, making tail print an invalid diagnostic.
This could happen only with tail -f, and even then, only when
a valid file descriptor were to provoke fstat failure.
Add a test and NEWS entry for a bug inadvertently fixed in
a refactoring in commit v8.9-32-gd4db0cb
* tests/misc/join (v2-format): Add a new test.
* THANKS.in: Add the reporter.
* NEWS: Mention the old bug.
* cfg.mk (old_NEWS_hash): Update.
Reported-by: Jean-Pierre Tosoni
* cfg.mk (exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_file_system): Sync this
exemption regexp to match renamed tests/df/df-P. This avoids
a "make syntax-check" failure.
* src/remove.c (cache_statted, is_dir_lstat): Remove unused
static-inlined functions.
* THANKS.in: Remove my name from this list, now that (with this
commit) it is included automatically.
Copyright-paperwork-exempt: Yes
* tests/cp/fiemap-perf: Skip the test on ext2 file systems,
as we do for ext3. Also skip the test if we can't create
a 1TiB file, which might not be supported on certain file systems.
Signed-off-by: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>
It's awkward to read and problematic for scripts when
control characters like '\n' are output.
Note other fields are already handled with mbsalign,
which converts non printable chars to the replacement char.
A caveat to note with that, is the replacement char takes
a place in the field and so possibly truncates the field
if it was the widest field in the records.
Note a more general replacement function, that
handles all printable, or non white space characters,
would require more sophisticated support for various
encodings, and the complexity vs benefit was not
deemed beneficial enough at present.
Perhaps in future a more general replacement function
could be shared between the various utilities.
Note <space> is unaffected in any field,
which could impact scripts processing the output.
However any of the number fields at least could have
spaces considering `LANG=fr_FR df -B\'1`, so it's
probably best to leave spaces, which also allows
scripts to handle mount points with spaces without change.
* src/df.c (hide_problematic_chars): Replace control chars with '?'.
* tests/df/problematic-chars: Add a new root only test.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* src/system.h (stzncpy): New function.
* src/pinky.c (print_entry): Use stzncpy, not stpncpy.
The latter does not NUL-terminate. I assumed that strncpy was
the only function with such a horrible API. Today I learned that
stpncpy also may not NUL-terminate its result.
The bugs were introduced in commit v8.17-48-gf79263d.
* src/who.c (print_user): Likewise.
Thanks to Erik Auerswald for spotting my error.
Or rather, with the development version 4.13.90, which will eventually
become Texinfo 5.0.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Use '@item' instead of '@itemx' in several places,
as Texinfo 5 refuses to process an '@itemx' that is not preceded by an
'@item'. Ensure that node extended names in menus and sectioning are
consistent, and that ordering and presence of nodes in menus and in the
actual text are consistent as well.
Fixes http://bugs.gnu.org/11828
* src/df.c (MEGABYTES_OPTION): Add enum and mark it for removal
in August 2013.
(long_options): Use MEGABYTES_OPTION for --megabytes option.
(main): Add a case for it and issue a deprecation warning if
the long form is used. Document the short -m option to
exist only for BSD compatibility.
* doc/coreutils.texi (touch invocation, Time conversion specifiers)
(Options for date, Examples of date): Index "leap seconds" and
improve their documentation a bit.
date -d "$(printf '\xb0')" would print 00:00:00 with today's date
rather than diagnosing the invalid input. Now it reports this:
date: invalid date '\260'
* gnulib: Update submodule to latest for fixed parse-datetime.y.
* tests/misc/date [invalid-high-bit-set]: New test.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* bootstrap, tests/init.sh: Also update to latest.
Reported by Peter Evans in http://bugs.gnu.org/11843
* cfg.mk (sc_some_programs_must_avoid_exit_failure): New rule,
to help us avoid using EXIT_FAILURE in programs like sort, ls, nohup,
timeout, env, etc. that use different exit codes in many cases.
* src/sort.c (outfd): Remove. All uses replaced by STDOUT_FILENO.
(stream_open): When writing, use stdout rather than fdopen.
(move_fd_or_die): Renamed from dup2_or_die, with the added functionality
of closing its first argument. All uses changed.
(avoid_trashing_input): Special case for !outfile no longer needed.
(check_output): Arrange for standard output to go to the file,
rather than storing the fd in outfd.
* src/sort.c (check_inputs): A new function to verify all inputs
are accessible before further processing.
(check_output): A new function to open or create a specified
output file, before futher processing.
(stream_open): Adjust to truncating the previously opened
output file rather than opening directly.
(avoid_trashing_input): Optimize to stat the output file
descriptor, rather than the file name.
(main): Call the new functions to check accessibility of
inputs and output, before processing starts.
* tests/misc/sort: Adjust to the changed error message.
* tests/misc/sort-merge-fdlimit: Account for the earlier opened
file descriptor of the specified output file.
* tests/misc/sort-exit-early: A new test to exercise the improvements.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the improvement.
Suggested-by: Bernhard Voelker
* src/stty.c (main): Mark speed_was_set as possibly unused,
as is the case when CIBAUD is undefined (on ppc64 GNU/Linux
for example).
Reported-by: Stefano Lattarini
* src/stat.c (human_fstype) [__linux__]: Add a 'case' for the new
remote file system type: aufs (0x61756673).
* NEWS (New features): Mention stat -f.
(Bug fixes): Mention it for tail -f.
Reported by Michael Mol in http://bugs.gnu.org/11823
* doc/coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Make the backup script exit
with an accurate reflection of any failure.
Also, add --preserve=all.
Improved-by: Bernhard Voelker
The Canalyze static code analyzer correctly surmised
that there is a use-after-free bug in free_buffer()
at the line "struct line *n = l->next", if that
function is called multiple times.
This is not a runtime issue since a list of lines
will not be present in the !lines_found case.
* src/csplit.c (free_buffer): Set list head to NULL so
that this function can be called multiple times.
(load_buffer): Remove a redundant call to free_buffer().
Reported-by: Xu Zhongxing
* src/split.c (create): Check if output file is the
same inode as the input file.
* tests/split/guard-input: New test case.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference new test case.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Improved-by: Jim Meyering
Reported-by: François Pinard
* src/stty.c (main): Declare locals "mode" and "new_mode" to be static
to ensure that each is initialized to zero, *including* all padding.
While gcc clears padding of a local automatic initialized to "{ 0, }",
CIL does not, and the C99 standard is not clear on this issue.
Reported by Edward Schwartz. See http://bugs.gnu.org/11675 for details.
* src/head.c (elide_tail_lines_seekable): Reset file pointer
after printing up to an end-relative line-counted offset.
Anoop Sharma reported the problem and suggested the fix.
* tests/misc/head-pos: Add coverage via a very similar, existing test.
Also add coverage for a previously untested block of code.
* tests/misc/head-elide-tail ($READ_BUFSIZE): Update to 8192, to
match the value of BUFSIZ I see today on Fedora 17/x86_64 (unrelated
to this fix).
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Improved-by: Pádraig Brady
* src/stat.c (human_fstype) [__linux__]: Add a 'case' for the new
remote file system type: panfs (0xAAD7AAEA).
* NEWS (New features): Mention stat -f.
(Bug fixes): Mention it for tail -f.
Reported by Travis Gummels in http://bugzilla.redhat.com/827199
This utility was inadvertently omitted from commit v8.0-34-g710fe41
* src/cksum.c (main): Set stdout to line buffered mode, to ensure
parallel running instances don't intersperse their output.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* THANKS.in: Add Anoop.
Reported by Anoop Sharma.
* src/mktemp.c (main): Don't suggest to remove support for -V, an
undocumented alias for --version, since that would introduce a
gratuitous incompatibility with the original mktemp program.
* src/id.c (gidtostr, uidtostr): Define macros.
(gidtostr_ptr, uidtostr_ptr): Define safer functions.
Use gidtostr and uidtostr to print GID and UID without
need/risk of casts.
* src/group-list.c: Likewise.
* src/fmt.c (usage): Add a comment to tell
xgettext that the "% o" in fputs argument string of "...93% of..."
is not a C format string. Reported by Toomas Soome, Göran Uddeborg,
Petr Pisar, Primoz PETERLIN and Chusslove Illich via
http://bugs.gnu.org/11470
A static analysis tool (http://labs.oracle.com/projects/parfait/)
produced some false positive diagnostics. Add assertions to help
it understand that the code is correct.
* src/stty.c: Include <assert.h>.
(display_changed): Add an assertion to placate parfait.
(display_all): Likewise.
* src/sort.c: Include <assert.h>.
(main): Add an assertion to placate parfait.
* src/fmt.c: Include <assert.h>.
(get_paragraph): Add an assertion to placate parfait.
struct statfs has the f_frsize member since Linux 2.6,
so use that rather than f_bsize which can be different.
Note the related df change mentioned in NEWS is handled
in gnulib by using statvfs() rather than statfs()
on Linux > 2.6.36 (where statvfs doesn't hang) and the
same method as stat for Linux 2.6 kernels earlier than that.
stat(1) doesn't use statvfs() on GNU/Linux as the f_type
member isn't available there.
Note the change to not use statvfs() on GNU/Linux was introduced
in gnulib commit eda39b8 16-08-2003.
* m4/stat-prog.m4 (cu_PREREQ_STAT_PROG): Check for the f_frsize
member in the statfs structure.
* src/stat.c: Use (struct statfs).f_frsize if available.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention this stat fix, and the related df fix
coming in the next gnulib update.
* THANKS.in: Add Nikolaus.
Reported and Tested by Nikolaus Rath
In order for ls --color to color each symlink, it must form the name
of each referent and then stat it to see if the link is dangling, to
a directory, to a file, etc. When the symlink is to a relative name,
ls must concatenate the starting directory name and that relative name.
When, in addition, the starting directory was "/" or "/some-name",
the result was ill-formed, and the subsequent stat would usually fail,
making the caller color it as a dangling symlink.
* src/ls.c (make_link_name): Don't botch the case in which
dir_name(NAME) == "/" and LINKNAME is relative.
* tests/ls/root-rel-symlink-color: New file. Test for the above.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported by Mike Frysinger in http://bugs.gnu.org/11453
Bug introduced by commit v8.16-23-gbcb9078.
* tests/misc/tty-eof: Increase timeout from 1s to 10s, to avoid
unwarranted failure under heavy load.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Move misc/tty-eof "up" to nearer the
beginning of the list (from near the middle) so that it is started
earlier in parallel test runs. Otherwise, it would frequently be
among the last two tests to complete.
* src/stat.c (human_fstype) [__linux__]: Add 'case's for these local
file system types: bdevfs (0x62646576), inodefs (0x42494E4D),
qnx6 (0x68191122).
Now that the kernel has a name for S_MAGIC_BINFMTFS, use
theirs in place of our S_MAGIC_BINFMT_MISC.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
Problem reported by Samuel Thibault in <http://bugs.gnu.org/11424>.
* NEWS: Document this.
* src/dd.c (skip): Handle skipping past EOF on shared or typed
memory objects the same way as with regular files.
(dd_copy): It's OK to truncate shared memory objects.
* src/du.c (duinfo_add): Check for overflow.
(print_only_size): Report overflow.
(process_file): Ignore negative file sizes in the --apparent-size case.
* src/od.c (skip): Fix comment about st_size.
* src/split.c (main):
* src/truncate.c (do_ftruncate, main):
On files where st_size is not portable, fall back on using lseek
with SEEK_END to determine the size. Although strictly speaking
POSIX says the behavior is implementation-defined, in practice
if lseek returns a nonnegative value it's a reasonable one to
use for the file size.
* src/system.h (usable_st_size): Symlinks have reliable st_size too.
* tests/misc/truncate-dir-fail: Don't assume that getting the size
of a dir is not allowed, as it's now allowed on many platforms,
e.g., GNU/Linux.
* src/split.c (main): Use stat.st_size only for regular files.
Samuel Thibault reported in http://bugs.gnu.org/11424 that the
/dev/zero-splitting tests would appear to infloop on GNU/Hurd,
because /dev/zero's st_size is LONG_MAX. It was only a problem
when using the --number (-n) option.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
This bug was introduced with the --number option, via
commit v8.7-25-gbe10739
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): In a narrow race (stat sees dest, yet
open-without-O_CREAT fails with ENOENT), retry the open with O_CREAT.
* tests/cp/nfs-removal-race: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported by Philipp Thomas and Neil F. Brown in
http://bugs.gnu.org/11100
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add sys_resource.
* src/sort.c: Remove #if HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H guard around inclusion
of <sys/resource.h> and move the inclusion "up" into the alphabetized
list of its peers. This also avoids a failure of the
sc_prohibit_always_true_header_tests syntax-check rule.
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (gl_CHECK_ALL_HEADERS): Remove sys/resource.h.
This was inadvertently omitted from v8.5-104-g47076e3,
and gives the same 5% speedup when copying from an SSD.
* src/copy.c (copy_internal): Apply the FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL hint.
Many coding standards, including GNU's, advocate that when
splitting a line near a binary operator, one should put the
operator at the beginning of the continued line, rather than
at the end of the preceding one. This is for readability:
such operators are relatively important to readability, and
they are more apparent at the beginning of a line than
at the varying-column end of line,
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_operator_at_end_of_line): New rule.
Exempt test.c and head.c.
* src/ls.c (print_long_format): Reformat comment to avoid "=="
at end of line.
Also, "sortkey" is not a word: s/sortkey/sort key/.
* src/ioblksize.h: Likewise, for "|" from a shell snippet.
* src/runcon.c: Likewise, for "|" in grammar-like usage.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Split an expression before a binary operator,
not after it.
* src/cut.c (set_fields): Likewise.
* src/id.c (main): Likewise.
* src/install.c (setdefaultfilecon): Likewise.
* src/join.c (ignore_case): Likewise.
* src/pr.c (cols_ready_to_print, init_parameters, print_page): Likewise.
* src/stty.c (set_window_size): Likewise.
* src/wc.c (SUPPORT_OLD_MBRTOWC): Likewise.
* src/who.c (scan_entries): Likewise.
* src/test.c (binary_operator): Join a split line.
* src/extent-scan.c (extent_scan_read): Move an ">" from end of line
to beginning of the following.
Likewise for two other expressions.
* src/id.c (main): Using -Z with -r or -n would fail with "id: cannot
print only names or real IDs in default format", in spite of that "-Z",
which specifies a non-default format. Now, it succeeds and ignores
the -n or -r option. The error was that the test for default_format
was not updated when I added the new --context (-Z) option in
commit v6.9-33-g5320d0f.
* src/id.c (main): Invocations like "id" and "id -G" would call getcon
to determine the current security context even though that result would
not be used. Similarly, when POSIXLY_CORRECT is set. Rearrange
conditionals and hoist the POSIXLY_CORRECT test so that we call
getcon only when necessary.
... i.e., don't use the getpw* functions.
Before this change, running groups or id with no user name argument
would include a group name or ID from /etc/passwd. Thus, under unusual
circumstances (default group is changed, but has not taken effect for a
given session), those programs could print a name or ID that is neither
real nor effective.
To demonstrate, run this:
echo 'for i in 1 2; do id -G; sleep 1.5; done' \
|su -s /bin/sh ftp - &
sleep 1; perl -pi -e 's/^(ftp❌\d+):(\d+)/$1:9876/' /etc/passwd
Those id -G commands printed the following:
50
50 9876
With this change, they print this:
50
50
Similarly, running those programs set-GID could make them
print one ID too many.
* src/group-list.c (print_group_list): When username is NULL, pass
egid, not getpwuid(ruid)->pw_gid), to xgetgroups, per the API
requirements of xgetgroups callee, mgetgroups.
When not using the password database, don't call getpwuid.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* tests/misc/id-setgid: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
(root_tests): It's a root-only test, so add it here, too.
Originally reported by Brynnen Owen as http://bugs.gnu.org/7320.
Raised again by Marc Mengel in http://bugzilla.redhat.com/816708.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/stty-pairs.
* tests/init.cfg (stty_reversible_init_): New function.
(stty_reversible_query_): New function.
* tests/misc/stty: Factor out expensive "pairs" code into new test.
Use new stty_reversible_* functions instead of evaluating static
REV_* variables.
* tests/misc/stty-pairs: Add new test. Code added from misc/stty.
Mark this as an expensive test. Skip 'parenb' and 'cread' options,
as these tests are known to fail. Like in misc/stty, also use
the new stty_reversible_* functions.
* src/ls.c (gobble_file): Move a decl "down".
(make_link_name): Do not hard-code '/'. Use IS_ABSOLUTE_FILE_NAME
and dir_len instead.
Use stpcpy/stpncpy in place of strncpy/strcpy.
* src/ls.c (make_link_name): Adjust comment style to refer to VARIABLE
names, not 'variable'.
Move each of two declarations "down" to first use.
Compare pointer to NULL, not to 0.
Don't reuse local, "linkbuf" for a different purpose.
Accept -g for BSD/Plan9 compatibility.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* tests/fmt/goal-option: New test.
* tests/fmt/long-line: Rename from tests/fmt-long-line.
* tests/fmt/base: Rename from tests/misc/fmt.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Document it.
* src/fmt.c (main): Accept the new option
(check_for_goals): new function to implement the operands
Based on BSD's and Plan-9's fmt programs.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Don't truncate an existing file,
to support copying attributes between existing files.
The original use case only considered creating new files,
and it would be a very unusual use case to be relying
on the truncating behavior.
* doc/coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Mention the non
truncating behavior.
* tests/cp/attr-existing: A new test to ensure O_TRUNC skipped.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
* tests/misc/sort-discrim: Correct reversed args to "compare".
This nit was masked by a bug in maint.mk that effectively disabled
many of the syntax-check rules.
Exempt init.sh because it runs before we're assured to have a
shell that groks $(...). Exempt *.mk because "$" would have to
be doubled, and besides, any `...` expression in a .mk file is
almost certainly evaluated before init.sh is run. Finally, also
exempt the perl-based tests, because perl's `...` cannot be
converted to $(...). Do that by running this command:
git grep -l '`.*`' tests \
| grep -Ev 'init\.sh|\.mk$' | xargs grep -Lw perl \
| xargs perl -pi -e 's/`(.*?)`/\$($1)/g'
One minor fix-up change was required after that, due to how
quoting differs:
diff --git a/tests/chmod/equals b/tests/chmod/equals
- expected_perms=$(eval 'echo \$expected_'$dest)
+ expected_perms=$(eval 'echo $expected_'$dest)
Another was to make these required quoting adjustments:
diff --git a/tests/misc/stty b/tests/misc/stty
...
- rev=$(eval echo "\\\$REV_$opt")
+ rev=$(eval echo "\$REV_$opt")
...
- rev1=$(eval echo "\\\$REV_$opt1")
- rev2=$(eval echo "\\\$REV_$opt2")
+ rev1=$(eval echo "\$REV_$opt1")
+ rev2=$(eval echo "\$REV_$opt2")
Also, transform two files that were needlessly excluded above:
(both use perl, but are mostly bourne shell)
perl -pi -e 's/`(.*?)`/\$($1)/g' \
tests/du/long-from-unreadable tests/init.cfg
* HACKING (Commit log requirements): Describe our policy: when you
fix a bug, put the "git describe" string of the bug-introducing commit
in your commit log and put the "fixed-in-release version number"
in the NEWS blurb.
* doc/coreutils.texi (dircolors invocation, Examples of expr):
(shred invocation, seq invocation): Use $(...), not `...`.
* src/mv.c (do_move): Likewise, in a comment.
* tests/dd/sparse: The last two parts of this test would fail due to
the underlying file system at least on Solaris 10 with NFS. That file
system would report that a 3MiB file was occupying <= 1KiB of space
for nearly 50 seconds after creation.
Improved-by: Bernhard Voelker
With the "--relative --symbolic" options, ln computes the relative
symbolic link for the user.
So, ln works just as cp, but creates relative symbolic links instead
of copying the file.
I miss this feature since the beginning of using ln.
$ tree ./
/
`-- usr
|-- bin
`-- lib
`-- foo
`-- foo
4 directories, 1 file
$ ln -s -v --relative usr/lib/foo/foo usr/bin/foo
‘usr/bin/foo’ -> ‘../lib/foo/foo’
$ tree ./
/
`-- usr
|-- bin
| `-- foo -> ../lib/foo/foo
`-- lib
`-- foo
`-- foo
4 directories, 2 files
$ ln -s -v --relative usr/bin/foo usr/lib/foo/link-to-foo
‘usr/lib/foo/link-to-foo’ -> ‘foo’
$ tree ./
/
`-- usr
|-- bin
| `-- foo -> ../lib/foo/foo
`-- lib
`-- foo
|-- link-to-foo -> foo
`-- foo
4 directories, 3 files
* src/Makefile.am: Reference the relpath module.
* src/ln.c (usage): Mention the new option.
(do_link): Call the relative conversion if specified.
(convert_abs_rel): Perform the relative conversion
using the relpath module.
* tests/ln/relative: Add a new test.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Document the new feature.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* src/relpath.c: Refactored from realpath.c and adjusted
to support returning the relative path rather than just
printing to stdout.
* src/relpath.h: Export the relpath function.
* src/Makefile.am: Reference the refactored relpath module.
* po/POTFILES.in: Likewise.
* src/realpath.c: Adjust to the refactored relpath module.
This reverts part of commit v8.12-103-g54cbe6e.
* src/system.h: Include gnulib's pathmax.h to honor
system specific limits, and then we set PATH_MAX only if needed.
Note pathmax.h no longer uses pathconf ("/", _PC_PATH_MAX).
Note I didn't reinstate the comments about limits.h inclusion
order, because pathmax.h includes limits.h anyway.
* src/tac.c (temp_stream): Use fseeko, not fseek, on principle:
use the more modern interface. In general it is better to avoid
fseek due to its ABI-imposed 4GiB limit on the "offset", here its
use was fine because the offset was always 0. Using fseeko also
has the advantage of not triggering a GNULIB_POSIXCHECK warning.
Reported by Eric Blake in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.general/2426/focus=2489
Since most users won't be building with GNULIB_POSIXCHECK defined in
CFLAGS, and since we can make ./configure 10% (several seconds!) faster
by omitting the framework for a posix check, this patch makes it so
that the framework is omitted by default, while still giving
instructions for maintainers to re-enable it.
It's been a while since we've used GNULIB_POSIXCHECK; see this email:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/coreutils/2012-03/msg00126.html
Some of those failures are because we are intentionally avoiding
specific gnulib modules (that is, we have chosen not to use things
like fprintf-posix), but until we work with gnulib to avoid particular
warnings, wiring up an automatic GNULIB_POSIXCHECK to happen during
'make my-distcheck' is not feasible.
* configure.ac (gl_ASSERT_NO_GNULIB_POSIXCHECK): Conditionally
define, according to whether $GNULIB_POSIXCHECK is in environment.
* dist-check.mk (coreutils-path-check): Now that we set PATH in
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT, it seems like overkill to make "distcheck"
rerun all tests just to check this.
(my-distcheck): Remove sole use.
For compatibility with MacOS relpath(1), as seen here:
http://opensource.apple.com/source/bootstrap_cmds/\
bootstrap_cmds-79/relpath.tproj/relpath.c
we implemented 'realpath --relative-base=dir1 --relative-to=dir2 file'
in the same way as 'relpath -d dir1 dir2 file'. This can result
in --relative-base rendering --relative-to as a no-op if dir1 is a
child of dir2. Document this.
* doc/coreutils.texi (realpath invocation): Mention restriction.
There is no need to recompute for every path being visited whether
the base is a prefix of the relative location.
* src/realpath.c (relpath): Hoist base check...
(main): ...here.
Based on a suggestion by Pádraig Brady.
Most of the time, if someone wants to filter which paths are
relative while leaving all others absolute, they also want to
to the filtering based on the same --relative-to directory.
Make this easier to specify.
* src/realpath.c (main): Convert error to default.
* doc/coreutils.texi (realpath invocation): Document this.
* tests/misc/realpath: Adjust test to match.
* NEWS: Document it.
'realpath --relative-base --relative-to' is identical to
--relative-base=--relative-to, so the test wasn't covering what
it claimed. Expose recent fixes for handling of // on systems
where // is distinct, and for --relative-base=/. Add test that
exposes our design decision that --relative-base that is not a
prefix of --relative-to is a no-op (if we later change behavior,
we will also have to change that part of the test).
* tests/misc/realpath: Fix typo. Add some tests.
When --relative-base is /, all other paths should be treated as
relative (except for // where it matters).
Also, on platforms like Cygwin where / and // are distinct, realpath
was incorrectly collapsing // into /. http://debbugs.gnu.org/10472.
* src/realpath.c (path_prefix, path_common_prefix): Treat /
and // as having no common match.
(relpath): Allow for no match even without --relative-base.
* NEWS: Document this.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2012-02/msg00038.html
detailed a couple of bugs in gnulib's canonicalize that were visible
through coreutils' readlink, but only on systems where // is distinct
from /. This particular test assumes the POSIX fix which requires
canonicalization of a symlink containing just slashes to behave as
if slashes separating the symlink from the rest of the name are
elided (see http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=541), as that is
the only useful (and current) behavior on Cygwin. That is,
ln -s / root
ls root/dev
must list the contents of /dev, not //dev.
* tests/misc/readlink-root: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Run it.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/sort-discrim.
* tests/misc/sort-discrim: New file, which tests a discriminator-based
implementation of 'sort'. Coreutils doesn't use this implementation
yet, but the test is useful anyway.
Co-authored-by: Drew Kutilek <dkutilek@ucla.edu>
Co-authored-by: James Wendt <jwendt@cs.ucla.edu>
* src/dirname.c (main): Handle new -z option and manage more than one
argument.
* doc/coreutils.texi (dirname invocation): Mention it.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* tests/misc/dirname: Add a two arguments test.
* src/split.c (next_file_name): If `suffix_auto' is true and the first
suffix character is 'z', generate a new file file name adding `z' to
the prefix and increasing the suffix length by one.
(set_suffix_length): Disable auto suffix width in various cases.
* tests/split/suffix-auto-length: Test it.
* doc/coreutils.texi (split invocation): Mention it.
* NEWS (Improvements): Likewise.
* NEWS: Document this.
* doc/perm.texi (Operator Numeric Modes): New section.
(Numeric Modes, Directory Setuid and Setgid): Document new behavior.
* src/chmod.c (usage): Document new behavior.
(main): Support new options -0, -1, etc.
* tests/chmod/setgid: Test these new features.
Surprise! "du -x non-DIR" would print nothing.
Note that the problem arises only when processing a non-directory
specified on the command line. Not surprisingly, "du -x" still
works as expected for any directory argument.
When performing its same-file-system check, du may skip an entry
only if it is at fts_level 1 or greater. Command-line arguments
are at fts_level == 0 (FTS_ROOTLEVEL).
* src/du.c (process_file): Don't use the top-level FTS->fts_dev
when testing for --one-file-system (-x). It happens to be valid
for directories, but it is always 0 for a non-directory.
* tests/du/one-file-system: Add tests for this.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported by Daniel Stavrovski in http://bugs.gnu.org/10967.
Introduced by commit v8.14-95-gcfe1040.
* cfg.mk: Set XZ_OPT = -8e (determined empirically).
This sacrifices 8 KiB of compressed tarball size for a 32-MiB
decrease in the memory required during decompression. I.e.,
using -9e would shave off only 8 KiB from the tar.xz file, yet
would force every decompression process to use 32 MiB more memory.
* src/basename.c (perform_basename): New function refactored from
main() that performs the basename work on a STRING, optionally
removes a trailing SUFFIX and outputs the result.
(main): Handle new options.
* doc/coreutils.texi (basename invocation): Mention new options.
* test/misc/basename: Add new options test cases.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
Prompted by the continuous integration build failure at:
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/2188210 (which uses XFS).
* tests/dd/sparse (alloc_equal): Add a block allocation
comparison function that accounts for variations due
to alignment.
* src/timeout.c (usage): Document the exit status for this case,
in --help and thus in the man page. Word so that it covers
both the -s9 and -k options.
* doc/coreutils.texi (timeout invocation): Document the exit
status for this case.
* tests/ls/getxattr-speedup: Compile and link in one step with $CC.
If the shared object file is created by ld (binutils), then the
destructor print_call_count() may not run (seen on OpenSuSE 12.1).
See http://lists.opensuse.org/opensuse/2012-02/msg01342.html
Thanks to Cristian Rodríguez.
Notes:
Small seeks are not coalesced to larger ones,
like is done in cache_round() for example.
conv= is used rather then oflag= for FreeBSD compatibility.
* src/dd.c (final_op_was_seek): A new global boolean to flag
whether the final "write" was converted to a seek.
(usage): Describe the new conf=sparse option.
(iwrite): Convert a write of a NUL block to a seek if requested.
(do_copy): Initialize the output buffer to have a sentinel,
to allow for efficient testing for NUL output blocks.
If the last block in the file was converted to a seek,
then convert back to a write so the size is updated.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* tests/dd/sparse: A new test for the feature.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* src/sort.c (default_sort_size): Don't divide advice by 2.
Just divide the hard limits by 2. This matches the comments.
Reported by Rogier Wolff in http://bugs.gnu.org/10877
Add the --additional-suffix option, to append an
additional static suffix to output file names.
* src/split.c (next_file_name): Append suffix to output file names.
(main): Handle new --additional-suffix option.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* doc/coreutils.texi (split invocation): Mention it.
* tests/split/additional-suffix: New file. Test --additional-suffix.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
Requested by Peng Yu, in bug 6554
* src/ls.c (errno_unsupported): Remove EBUSY, as this caters for
the case where ACLs can't be accessed because the _file_ is locked.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-coreutils/2005-06/msg00191.html
Also ENOENT is not safe to include as you get that if the _file_
is removed between the stat() and subsequent querying of xattrs.
Modern <stdio.h> provides ssize_t, but the one from Debian's
libc6-dev 2.11.2-10 apparently does not.
* tests/ls/getxattr-speedup: Also include <sys/types.h>.
Like the optimization to avoid always-failing getfilecon calls,
this change avoids always-failing queries for whether a file has
a nontrivial ACL and for whether a file has certain "capabilities".
When such a query fails for one file (indicating no support), we know it
will always fail that way for the affected device. With this change, we
have thus eliminated nearly all failing-unsupported getxattr syscalls.
* src/ls.c (has_capability) [!HAVE_CAP]: Set errno to ENOTSUP.
(errno_unsupported): Expand the list of E* errno values to match
that of lib/acl-internal.h's ACL_NOT_WELL_SUPPORTED macro.
(file_has_acl_cache, has_capability_cache): New functions.
(gobble_file): Use them in place of non-caching ones.
* NEWS (Improvements): Mention it.
Suggested by Sven Breuner in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.general/2187
While eliminating most getfilecon calls saved about 33%,
eliminating these other calls can save almost all of the
remaining ~67% cost, on some remote file systems.
On systems or file systems without SELinux support, all getfilecon
and lgetfilecon calls would fail due to lack of support. We can non-
invasively cache such failure (on most recently accessed device) and
avoid the vast majority of the failing underlying getxattr syscalls.
* src/ls.c (errno_unsupported): New function.
(selinux_challenged_device): New file-scoped global.
(getfilecon_cache, lgetfilecon_cache): New error-caching wrapper
functions.
(gobble_file): Use the caching wrappers, for when many *getfilecon
calls would fail with ENOTSUP or EOPNOTSUPP.
Suggested by Sven Breuner in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.general/2187
Improved-by: Pádraig Brady.
Allow changing the --numeric-suffixes start number
from the default of 0.
* src/split.c (next_file_name): Initialize the suffix index
and the output filename according to start value.
(main): Check that the suffix length is large enough for the
numerical suffix start value.
* doc/coreutils.texi (split invocation): Mention it.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* tests/split/numeric: New file. Test --numeric-suffixes[=FROM].
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Reference the new test.
* doc/coreutils.texi (rm invocation): Mention that the -f option also
silences the message for missing operands, which is useful in scripts
e.g., for "rm -f $file_list" when $file_list is empty.
* src/rm.c (usage): Likewise.
Reported by Jérémy Magrin in http://bugs.gnu.org/10819
These edge cases were missed in the previous commit 140eca15c.
* src/dd.c (main): Include the bytes slop when truncating
without further I/O. Don't invalidate the whole file cache
in the case where 0 < count < ibs.
* tests/dd/bytes: Change to using the independent truncate
command to generate the file for comparison. Remove a redundant
test case and replace with one testing the truncation only logic.
dd now accepts the count_bytes and skip_bytes input flag and the
seek_bytes output flag, to more easily allow processing portions of a
file.
* src/dd.c (scanargs): Compute skip_records and skip_bytes when
'skip_bytes' iflag is used. Compute max_records and max_bytes when
'count_bytes' iflag is used. Compute seek_records and seek_bytes
when 'seek_bytes' oflag is used.
(skip_via_lseek): Use new 'bytes' parameter and handle potential
'records' equals to zero. Update the bytes parameter when called with
'fdesc' equal to STDOUT_FILENO. Update the header comments.
(dd_copy): Skip accordingly to skip_records AND skip_bytes. Count
accordingly to max_records AND max_bytes. Seek on output accordingly
to seek_records AND seek_bytes.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* doc/coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Detail new flags and behaviors.
* tests/dd/bytes: New file. Tests for these new flags.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
But only when both A and B were hard links to the same symlink.
* src/copy.c (same_file_ok): Handle another special case: the one
in which we are moving a symlink onto a hard link to itself.
In this case, we must explicitly tell the caller to unlink the
source file. Otherwise, at least the linux-3.x kernel rename
function would do nothing, as mandated by POSIX 2008.
* tests/mv/symlink-onto-hardlink-to-self: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported by Bernhard Voelker in http://bugs.gnu.org/10686
* src/pr.c (usage): Fix the -S description to indicate
that the argument is optional for the short option.
* doc/coreutils.texi (pr invocation): Likewise.
* src/od.c (usage): Fix the -S description to indicate
that the argument is required for the short option.
Clarify -w takes an argument and that it is optional.
Normally, mv detects a few subtle cases in which proceeding with a
same-file rename would, with very high probability, cause data loss.
Here, we have found a corner case in which one of these same-inode
tests makes mv refuse to perform a useful operation. Permit that
corner case.
* src/copy.c (same_file_ok): Detect/exempt this case.
* tests/mv/symlink-onto-hardlink: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Initially reported by: Matt McCutchen in http://bugs.gnu.org/6960.
Raised again by Anders Kaseorg due to http://bugs.debian.org/654596.
Improved-by: Paul Eggert.
* cfg.mk (update-copyright-env): Add UPDATE_COPYRIGHT_FORCE=1
to rejoin some split lines, and UPDATE_COPYRIGHT_USE_INTERVALS=2
to make update-copyright use only one year range.
* gnulib: Update to latest, for newer update-copyright script.
* src/realpath.c (path_common_prefix): Be consistent and
always include a leading '/' in the count returned.
(relpath): Account for the change in path_common_prefix()
and avoid outputting extra '/' chars in relative paths that
span the root dir.
* tests/misc/realpath: Add the two reported cases.
Reported by Mike Frysinger
Before init.sh and similar, we would set test=test_name, and then
construct temporary file names using $test. Now that each
init.sh-using test is in its own directory, that practice is unwelcome.
Remove bad examples.
* tests/rm/f-1: Per above.
* tests/rm/i-1: Likewise.
* tests/rm/interactive-always: Likewise.
* tests/rm/interactive-once: Likewise.
* tests/rm/ir-1: Likewise.
* tests/rm/r-1: Likewise.
* src/stat.c (usage): Indicate this is a transfer size
suggestion, rather than some persistent block size.
* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Likewise.
* doc/coreutils.texi (Opening the software toolbox): Remove commas
from @uref argument, so the alternate text renders properly in info.
Reported by Reuben Thomas.
The previous commit introduced a couple of spacing issues,
luckily one of which caused a test to fail.
* src/stat.c (default_format): Add a space so times are aligned.
* src/tr.c (string2_extentd): Remove an extraneous space.
Add a rule to ding any source file that has a continued string
with a word in the first column of the following line.
Those tend to trigger malfunction in tools that try to map an
arbitrary line number to an enclosing function name. Of course,
very many strings do precisely this, *when they are part of the
usage function*. So we exempt the body of each usage function.
* src/dircolors.c (main): Separate a long, continued string
into two separately-quoted parts.
* src/od.c (decode_one_format): Likewise.
(decode_one_format, main): Move a space from end of
preceding line to the beginning of the continued line.
* src/tr.c (unquote, string2_extend, validate): Likewise.
* src/seq.c (main): Split in two and use string concatenation.
* src/stat.c (default_format): Use a mix of techniques.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_continued_string_alpha_in_column_1): New rule.
Exempt three files in src: system.h, od.c, printf.c.
The preceding commands ignored .[ch] files in lib/ and gl/.
This is what I should have been doing from the start:
git grep -l '`.*'\' $(g ls-files |grep '\.[ch]$') \
| xargs perl -pi -e 's/`(.+?'\'')/'\''$1/'
All affected lines end with \ or \n\, so run this command
until it produces no new changes (4 times):
git grep -E -l '`[^ ]+'\''.*\\' src \
|xargs perl -pi -e 's/`([^ ]+'\''.*\\)/'\''$1/'
Relax initial regexp to match more instances, but add a
filter to avoid some invalid conversions. Run this:
git grep -l "\`[^']*'" tests | xargs perl -pi -e '$q=q"'\''";' \
-e '$q="$q\\$q$q"; /(= ?\`|\`expr|\`echo|\Q$q\E)/ and next;' \
-e ' s/\`([^'\''"]*?'\'')/'\''$1/g'
The last disjunct in the above (...) filter is to exempt
any line that contains this string: '\''
With quoting like that, converting a ` to ' is likely to cause trouble,
so we'll handle those manually. Here are three examples where
the exemption is required:
*': `link-to-dir/'\'': hard link not allowed for directory'*) ;;
printf 'creating file `%s'\''\n' $f
'mv: inter-device move failed: `%s'\'' to `%s'\'';'\
Exempt lines with '$' or '=', since those are prone to improper
conversion. Run this:
git grep -l "\`[^']*'" tests \
|xargs perl -pi -e '/[=\$]/ and next;s/\`([^'\''"]*?'\'')/'\''$1/g'
* src/chroot.c (usage): Change ``...'' to '...', and describe the
default more accurately (also adding quotes): s,/bin/sh,'/bin/sh -i',
* src/join.c (usage): Change ` ...'' ' to "...''".
* src/fmt.c (isopen): Change `' to '` in list of bytes, so that
a subsequent change can safely perform the `...' to '...' conversion.
* src/truncate.c (main): Tweak quoting in comments to use '...',
not `...`, for consistency with the rest of comments in coreutils.
Automatically adjust both the source (now in only one place)
and all tests that expect the resulting output via this:
git grep -l 'Try.*--help' src/system.h tests \
| xargs perl -pi -e 's/Try \\?`(\S+ --help)/Try '\''$1/'
* scripts/git-hooks/commit-msg: Do not reject the commit log
message generated by our automated release-and-tag process.
(bad_first_line): New function, extracted from...
(check_msg): ... here. Use it.
* tests/misc/xstrtol: Use '...' to match new quoting in most places.
However, leave `9x' to match the sole comparison against output
from the quote function, which still uses `...'.
* tests/misc/sort-merge: Likewise, though here I had to leave
`...'-quoted output to match output from four tests.
* tests/pr/pr-tests: Convert a single `...' to '...'.
* gnulib: Update submodule to latest.
* tests/misc/timeout-parameters: Verify that the timer doesn't
fire immediately in the problematic range, and avoid overflow
checks in that case.
* man/timeout.x: Mention the possible bug.
Reported by Bruno Haible
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_short_facl_mode_spec): New rule.
* tests/cp/acl: Extend setfacl mode spec to have length 3.
* tests/ls/slink-acl: Likewise.
* tests/mv/acl: Likewise.
Report and analysis by Bruno Haible.
* src/split.c (lines_chunk_split): Fix logic bug that led to
unwarranted failure of "split -n l/2 /dev/zero" on NetBSD 5.1.
The same would happen when splitting a growing file, where
open/lseek-end gives one size, but by the time we read, there
is more data available.
(bytes_chunk_extract): Likewise.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention this.
* tests/split/l-chunk: The latter case was not exercised.
Add code to do that.
Bug introduced with the chunk-selecting feature in v8.7-25-gbe10739.
Co-authored-by: Jim Meyering <meyering@redhat.com>
On systems with recent kernel/tools, a symlink from /etc/mtab to
/proc/mounts, and a by-UUID mount (i.e., soon, nearly everyone),
you will see something like the following when running "df -hT":
(this has been truncated to fit in a width-limited ChangeLog file)
Filesystem Type Siz...
rootfs rootfs 11G
udev devtmpfs 3.8G
tmpfs tmpfs 774M
/dev/disk/by-uuid/828fc648-9f30-43d8-a0b1-f7096a2edb66 ext4 11G
tmpfs tmpfs 1.6G
/dev/sda2 ext3 494M
/dev/sda5 ext4 12G
/dev/sda6 ext4 9.9G
Contrast that with what we're used to seeing (modulo the
two entries mounted on "/", which is a separate problem):
Filesystem Type Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
rootfs rootfs 11G 1.9G 8.0G 19% /
udev devtmpfs 3.8G 0 3.8G 0% /dev
tmpfs tmpfs 774M 376K 774M 1% /run
/dev/sda3 ext4 11G 1.9G 8.0G 19% /
tmpfs tmpfs 1.6G 8.0K 1.6G 1% /run/shm
/dev/sda2 ext3 494M 78M 392M 17% /boot
/dev/sda5 ext4 12G 7.6G 3.7G 68% /usr
/dev/sda6 ext4 9.9G 6.6G 2.8G 71% /var
When that long /dev/disk/by-uuid/... name is merely a symlink
to a much shorter (and often more useful) device name like
"/dev/sda3", and when it's part of a listing of all file systems,
I would much prefer to see only the latter. Similarly, when using
an encrypted root file system, you would see a name like
/dev/mapper/luks-828fc648-9f30-43d8-a0b1-f7196a2edb66 pointing
to say, /dev/dm-0, I prefer the shorter name.
I.e., if I explicitly run
"df -hT /dev/disk/by-uuid/828fc648-9f30-43d8-a0b1-f7096a2edb66",
then, it's fine -- and expected -- to print to the long name.
It was explicitly given. However, with no non-option argument,
df should print the shorter name. Note that performing this
translation at a lower level (via a change to gnulib's mountlist.c)
would make it impossible to distinguish those two cases.
* src/df.c: Include "canonicalize.h".
(get_dev): Add a parameter, telling when we're in process-all-
mount-points mode; update all callers. When true, resolve
UUID-suffixed symlinks.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
Reported by Dan Jacobson in http://bugs.gnu.org/10363
This program is compatible with other realpath(1)
implementations, and also incorporates relpath like support,
through the --relative options. The relpath support
was suggested by Peng Yu, who also provided an initial
implemenation of that functionality.
* AUTHORS: Add my name.
* NEWS: Mention the new command.
* README: Likewise.
* doc/coreutils.texi (realpath invocation): Add realpath info.
* man/Makefile.am (realpath.1): Add dependency.
* man/realpath.x: New template.
* man/.gitignore: Ignore generated man page.
* po/POTFILES.in: Add src/realpath.c.
* src/.gitignore: Exclude realpath.
* src/Makefile.am (EXTRA_PROGRAMS): Add realpath.
* src/realpath.c: New file.
* scripts/git-hooks/commit-msg: Add realpath to the list of prefixes.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/realpath.
* tests/misc/realpath: New file.
Without this change, gcc's -Werror=format would complain that
the '%lx' format requires 'long unsigned int', not 'int'.
* src/tail.c (fremote): Use a temporary variable.
* tests/check.mk (.built-programs): Depend on src/Makefile.am,
so that when we add a program, this file is updated, and the new
program is tested via misc/help-version. Spotted by Pádraig Brady.
* src/tail.c (start_lines): Do not form potentially-invalid address.
Use safe_read's return value as a pointer offset only after
ensuring that it is not SAFE_READ_ERROR (size_t)(-1).
Spotted by coverity.
Also, move declaration of "p" to be closer to first use.
* src/chgrp.c (usage): Group associated options together,
to aid users. Also minimize the differences between
individual messages across these four commands, to
aid translators.
* src/chmod.c: Likewise.
* src/chown.c: Likewise.
* src/chcon.c (usage): Likewise. Document the
--dereference option.
Suggested by Paul Eggert and Jari Aalto
Before, we would use inotify in that case, which would work as long
as updates were taking place locally, but not at all when remote.
Move hard-coded list of known remote FS types into a more
maintainable table in stat.c, alongside the list of FS
names and magic numbers. Generate a new is_local_fs_type function.
* src/Makefile.am (fs-is-local.h): New rule, generated file.
* src/extract-magic: Revamp to parse local/remote keyword after
each magic number in src/stat.c's case statements.
Accept new --local option.
* src/.gitignore: Ignore the generated fs-is-local.h.
* src/tail.c [HAVE_INOTIFY]: Include fs-is-local.h.
(fremote) [HAVE_INOTIFY]: Use the new function in place of
the switch stmt with hard-coded list of FS types.
Emit a warning when processing a file on a file system of unknown type.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
Suggested by Sven Breuner.
* src/stat.c (human_fstype): Add a case: fhgfs, 0x19830326.
* src/tail.c (fremote): Add S_MAGIC_FHGFS.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Update the entry for GPFS to mention FhGFS, too.
Reported by Sven Breuner.
* doc/coreutils.texi (factor invocation): Adjust example to use $(...)
consistently, not a mix of `...` and $(...). Separate the computation
of the product and the actual factorization, so the timing of the
latter doesn't include the cost of the former.
* bootstrap.conf (bootstrap_epilogue): Remove now-unnecessary,
snippet that edited gnulib-tests/gnulib.mk. This snippet was
rendered unnecessary by commit v8.14-73-g5bf2c0e.
This fixes Bug#10293, which I guess was introduced in commit
95c948b06a dated 2003-10-02.
* NEWS: Document fix.
* src/du.c (process_file): Don't count files in different file
systems if -x is given.
* tests/du/one-file-system: Test for this bug.
* src/ls.c (decode_switches): Replace our use of XARGMATCH
with open-coded version so that we can give a better diagnostic.
* tests/ls/time-style-diag: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
Reported by Dan Jacobson in http://bugs.gnu.org/10253
with suggestions from Eric Blake and Paul Eggert.
* src/shred.c: Remove obsolete TODO comment. The first two and the
last item were done, adding --recursive (-r) is neither necessary
nor appropriate, and I don't want to add --interactive. I don't
see a need for the others. Prompted by comments from Amr Ali.
Starting with commit adc30a83, when using --color, ls inhibited
interrupts to avoid corrupting the state of an output terminal.
However, for very large directories, that inhibition rendered ls
uninterruptible for too long, including a potentially long period
even before any output is generated.
* src/ls.c: Two phases of processing are time-consuming enough that
they can provoke this: the readdir loop and the printing loop. The
printing was supposed to be covered by a call to process_signals in
(print_name_with_quoting): ... but that call was mistakenly guarded
by a condition that might be false for many or even all files being
processed. Call process_signals unconditionally.
(print_dir): Also call process_signals in the readdir loop.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported by Arkadiusz Miśkiewicz in http://bugs.gnu.org/10243
Co-authored-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
* src/Makefile.am (fs_normalize_perl_subst, fs-magic, fs-kernel-magic):
Undo previous patch; it missed a \#.
(fs_normalize_perl_subst): Use \043 rather than \#.
\043 is portable to all ASCIIish platforms, whereas \# is portable
only to platforms that are compatible with GNU make (and are
incompatible with POSIX make). Porting this to EBCDIC is left as
an exercise for the reader....
* src/Makefile.am (fs_normalize_perl_subst): Don't make unportable
assumption about \# in the right hand side of a macro definition.
This works with GNU make, but not with POSIX make.
Problem reported by Basavaraj B (Bug#10220).
(fs-magic, fs-kernel-magic): Do the #-substitution here instead.
* src/test.c (unary_operator): gcc reported that initializations
in two case statements were skipped. Enclose in braces.
* src/od.c (decode_one_format): Likewise.
I didn't check how long these were documented as GNU extensions,
nor when they were added by POSIX; but since they are all part
of POSIX 2008, we no longer need call them out as extensions.
The next version of POSIX will standardize %s:
http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=169
but as that is not out yet, I didn't change %s.
* doc/coreutils.texi (Time conversion specifiers): %R and %z are
now POSIX.
(Date conversion specifiers): Likewise for %F, %g, %G.
Commit 5eeaca94 added /sbin to the PATH for tests using mkfs. For other
tests, e.g. tests/cp-fiemap-perf using filefrag, we need /usr/sbin also.
Add both directories generally for the tests, "since many of us always
augment our PATH with all of the sbin paths all of the time anyway" (Bob
in http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/coreutils/2011-11/msg00107.html).
The previous commit is hereby obsolete.
* tests/init.cfg (sanitize_path_): Add /sbin and /usr/sbin to PATH
unless already included. Needed for tests using admin tools like mkfs
and filefrag on systems where the user's environment does not have
these directories in the PATH.
* tests/init.cfg (require_mkfs_PATH_): Remove obsolete function.
* tests/cp/cp-a-selinux: Remove require_mkfs_PATH_ call.
* tests/cp/cp-mv-enotsup-xattr: Likewise.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: Likewise.
* tests/mkdir/writable-under-readonly: Likewise.
* tests/rm/read-only: Likewise.
Commit 5b3e538 proved useful enough to migrate to gnulib after
enhancing it to be more generic, which in turn pointed out that
commit a2c811db missed an offender.
* gnulib: Update to latest.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_reversed_compare_failure): Delete, now that
gnulib provides it.
* tests/ls/dangle: Fix last offender.
but not in gnulib-tests/.
* configure.ac (GNULIB_WARN_CFLAGS): Do not exclude
-Wsuggest-attribute=pure|const, thus enabling these two warning
options in lib/, since gnulib now toes the line.
Continue to disable them in gnulib-tests/, since some programs
there trigger these suggestions and are not worth fixing.
Last week I made a global change, commit a2c811db, `tests: use
"compare exp out", not "compare out exp"', but forgot to add a
corresponding syntax check rule. Without that, it is far too
easy to add a new test or to merge in an old one that would
be non-conforming. Obviously this is only a heuristic, since
it relies on the expected-output file to have a name that starts
with "exp".
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_reversed_compare_failure): Prohibit use of
compare with reversed arguments.
* configure.ac: Update the comment on which gcc versions still must
not use -Wsuggest-attribute=pure option: still required on post-
Fedora 16 rawhide's 4.6.2 20111027.
* bootstrap (AUTOPOINT, AUTORECONF): Factor out definitions.
Run autopoint and libtoolize *before* gnulib-tool.
After it, run an abbreviated autoreconf, rather than a loop around
all tools.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_tool_option_extras): Add both --symlink
and --makefile-name=gnulib.mk. Remove stray use of $bt.
* lib/Makefile.am: Initialize all of the following so that
generated code in gnulib.mk may use += to append to those variables:
AM_CFLAGS, AM_CPPFLAGS, BUILT_SOURCES, CLEANFILES, EXTRA_DIST,
MAINTAINERCLEANFILES, MOSTLYCLEANDIRS, MOSTLYCLEANFILES, SUFFIXES,
noinst_LIBRARIES.
This bootstrap script arose back when gnulib-tool was young.
Since then, it has seen improvements that render much of this
script unnecessary. In particular, it can now make symlinks
to the files it uses. Also, I no longer see as much value in
marking files as read-only via comments.
* bootstrap (slirp, bt_mark_as_generated): Remove.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Use gnulib's gettext-h, not the
gettext module. Not only is gettext-h far smaller (it has far fewer
dependencies than the gnulib module), but it does not suffer from
the problem with the gettext module whereby it adds a -I.../intl
option to compilation flags. That can provoke warnings, since we
don't have such a directory. We used to work around that via a
hack in bootstrap, but that was ugly and inefficient.
* scripts/git-hooks/commit-msg: Don't warn about a line that is
longer than 72 if it is a comment. Git-generated comments would
occasionally trigger this.
* configure.ac: Disable some new warning options pulled in via
an update to gnulib's manywarnings module: -Wformat-nonliteral,
-Wunsuffixed-float-constants, -Wdouble-promotion.
* src/groups.c (main):
* src/install.c (need_copy):
* src/su.c (log_su):
* src/test.c (unary_operator):
* src/whoami.c (main):
Don't assume that getuid and friends always succeed.
This fixes the same problem that we recently fixed with 'id'.
* build-aux/git-log-fix: Comment out two unused entries.
Each of those two entries does indicate an error in a commit log,
but precedes the cut-off date, so has an actual VC'd ChangeLog entry.
I.e., gitlog-to-changelog generates ChangeLog entries since 2008-02,
and these two predate that.
* ChangeLog-2008: Make the indicated correction.
* src/ln.c (usage): A paragraph describing interactions of -s
with -L and -P somehow snuck in between the description of the
--backup option and the values used to control it. Fix this by
moving the value description up.
* scripts/git-hooks/commit-msg: Rewrite in perl.
This is still a work in progress in that it hard-codes coreutils-
specific program names and policies that should be easy to selectively
enable or disable without modifying the script.
* src/sort.c (usage): Use KEYDEF instead of POS, and call out the
specific OPTS that can occur in KEYDEF.
Based on a report by Lars Noodén, http://bugs.gnu.org/10019
* src/id.c (main): Report an error if no args are given and getuid
fails, because print_full_info needs ruid. Redo code so that
getuid and friends are invoked only when needed; this makes the
code easier to follow, and is how I found the above bug.
* src/system.h (emit_size_note): Use "unit" rather than "suffix",
and move multiplication to example instead of in suffix list.
See additional discussion in Bug#9939.
* src/id.c (GETID_MAY_FAIL): Remove.
(main): Check for nonzero errno, rather than having a compile-time
GETID_MAY_FAIL guess. Suggested by Roland McGrath in
<http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=10021#47>.
Also, the old code was incorrect if uid_t was narrower than int.
(print_full_info): Remove unnecessary cast to -1.
* doc/coreutils.texi (Block size): IEC 60027-2 has been superseded
by ISO/IEC 80000-13, so prefer the newer standard but also mention
the old. The new standard specifies Zi and Yi, so they are no
longer GNU extensions. Fix stale URL to BIPM.
2011-11-14 Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>
id: handle (uid_t) -1 more portably
* src/id.c (GETID_MAY_FAIL): Remove.
(main): Check for negative return values, not for -1.
The old code was incorrect if uid_t was narrower than int,
regardless of whether we were on a GNU or a POSIX platform.
The new code is simpler and doesn't need GETID_MAY_FAIL.
(print_full_info): Remove unnecessary cast to -1.
POSIX-conforming getuid, geteuid, etc. functions cannot fail,
but on GNU/Hurd systems and some others, they may.
* src/id.c (main) [__GNU__]: Detect and diagnose any such failure.
* tests/id/gnu-zero-uids: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it to the list.
* tests/init.cfg (require_gnu_): New function.
* Makefile.am (check-git-hook-script-sync): New rule -- not used
anywhere, because it depends on having very recent git.
* scripts/git-hooks/pre-applypatch: New file.
* cfg.mk (url_dir_list): Use this http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/$(PACKAGE)
for the first link listed in the generated announcement.
announce-gen now provides the faster mirror link automatically.
Using ls -l on an SELinux-enabled system would leak one SELinux
context string per non-empty-directory command-line argument.
* src/ls.c (free_ent): New function, factored out of...
(clear_files): ...here. Use it.
(extract_dirs_from_files): Call free_ent (f), rather than simply
free (f->name). The latter failed to free the possibly-malloc'd
linkname and scontext members, and thus could leak one of those
strings per command-line argument.
* THANKS.in: Update.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported by Juraj Marko in http://bugzilla.redhat.com/751974.
Redirect with the shell command, not in a separate 'exec'.
Without this patch, Fedora 15 x86-64 /bin/sh (i.e., Bash 4.2.10)
complained about running out of file descriptors in the shell.
This fixes an incompatibility with POSIX 2008 and with BSD.
Problem reported by Abdallah Clark (Bug#9939)
via Alan Curry (Bug#10016).
* NEWS: Document this.
* doc/coreutils.texi (General output formatting): Document the
new -k behavior, and --kibibytes.
* src/ls.c (file_human_output_opts): New static var.
(long_options, usage): Add --kibibytes.
(decode_switches, gobble_file, print_long_format):
Implement the new -k behavior.
* tests/ls/block-size: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
These issues were seen on an OpenSuse 10.3 system
(kernel 2.6.22.5 x86_64, glibc 2.6.1-18, bash updated to 4.2),
and also on a 64 bit SLES system with a 2.6.16 kernel.
Both systems had 2 CPUs.
There were two issues seen. 1. Occasionally the
timeout.cmd shell script would block SIGINT until
the sleep command exited. 2. Much less frequently the
signal handler in the timeout command itself was ignored,
causing SIGALRM to kill the process.
* tests/misc/timeout-group: Detect the above two cases,
and skip rather than fail. Note only issue 2. causes
a failure unless skipped, but we skip for case 1. also,
for diagnostic purposes.
This could cause a false failure, or even
an infinite loop in rare circumstances.
* tests/misc/timeout-group: Increase the timeouts
passed to the timeout command, so that they're
effectively not used. Instead the command termination
is triggered by the kill commands when everything
is in the correct state.
Reported by Bernhard Voelker.
* gnulib: Update to latest, pulling in the openat/fchmodat separation.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add fchmodat, now that gnulib
has moved it into its own module.
* gnulib: Update to latest, for new gitlog-to-changelog.
* Makefile.am (gen-ChangeLog): Use its new --amend=F option.
* build-aux/git-log-fix: New file, with ChangeLog fixes.
* doc/coreutils.texi (Setting the time): Reorganize slightly
and mention that the hardware clock might need to be explicitly
updated by the user as is the case on Fedora 16 currently.
See http://bugzilla.redhat.com/749516
* gl/modules/randread (Depends-on): Add stdalign.
* gl/lib/randread.c: Include <stdalign.h>, so we can ...
[!_STRING_ARCH_unaligned]: remove definition of stdalign.
* tests/tail-2/pipe-f2: Don't always wait 10 seconds.
Before, this test would always wait 10 seconds.
Now, it stops early when it detects that tail -f has written output.
BTW, the race condition that prompted changing the timeout from 1 second
to 10 was that tail -f could be killed by the timeout before producing
any output.
We deprecated and undocumented the --iso-8601 (-I) option mostly
because date could not parse that particular format. Now that
it can, it's time to restore the documentation.
* src/date.c (usage): Document it.
* doc/coreutils.texi (Options for date): Reinstate documentation.
Reported by Hubert Depesz Lubaczewski in http://bugs.gnu.org/7444.
* gl/modules/tempname.diff: Regenerate to correct bogus offsets
and adjust for 1-line offset. Eric Blake reported that this
patch failed to apply when using patch-2.5.8.
Note that it applies fine using patch-2.6.1.
* src/system.h (ENODATA): Restore definition.
gnulib defines it only on native Windows systems, so removing our
definition would have provoked build failure on systems that use it,
like FreeBSD. Reported by Bruno Haible in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lib.gnulib.bugs/28739/focus=28795
* gnulib: Update to latest, to get new ENODATA-exempting maint.mk rule.
We find it worthwhile to use consistent commit summary prefixes.
To that end, the commit-msg script requires that all commits I make
start with "$P: " (where $P is one of ~100 programs in coreutils)
or one of a few other words, like gnulib tests maint doc build.
It allows more than one word, so e.g., "cat tail head: " would also
be accepted. Pádraig Brady wrote the initial version, with its
72-column and blank-if-present second line checks.
The pre-commit script is the same as the git-supplied sample script,
modulo a bug fix and the "exec 1>&2" redirection.
* scripts/git-hooks/commit-msg: New file.
* scripts/git-hooks/pre-commit: New file.
* scripts/git-hooks/applypatch-msg: New file. Verbatim from .sample.
* cfg.mk: Exempt two of the new scripts from the no-leading-TABs check,
since they're nearly verbatim from git, and we want to stay in sync.
Exempt the commit-msg script from the no-"fail=0" check.
Because tail's fremote function did not designate GPFS as
a remote file system type, tail -f would mistakenly attempt
to use inotify, which cannot work with a remote file system.
* src/tail.c (fremote): List GPFS as a remote file system type.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported in http://bugs.debian.org/646022.
At the moment, things like man/arch.1 are not included in the tarball.
This makes perl a requirement if you want to build/install the arch
helper.
* man/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Add $(NO_INSTALL_PROGS_DEFAULT:%=%.1).
* src/tac.c (temp_stream): Don't exit immediately upon failed heap
allocation, here. That would inhibit processing of any additional
command-line arguments.
* src/tac.c (temp_stream): New function, factored out of...
(copy_to_temp): ...here.
(tac_nonseekable): Don't free or fclose, now that we reuse the file.
Suggested by Ambrose Feinstein.
* THANKS.in: Update.
* src/tac.c (copy_to_temp): Now that the template string tacXXXXXX
is used in only one place, don't bother using a separate variable.
Also, using three unconditional assignments seems slightly clearer.
* src/tac.c (copy_to_temp): Do not reuse the template buffer.
Instead, scribble only on a freshly-xstrdup'd copy each time.
Free that buffer both here, upon failure, and ...
(tac_nonseekable): ...free the buffer in caller, upon success.
* tests/misc/tac-2-nonseekable: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported by Ambrose Feinstein in http://debbugs.gnu.org/9762.
* src/tac.c: Include filenamecat.h.
(copy_to_temp): Use filenamecat rather than xmalloc and sprintf.
Move some declarations "down" to point of initialization.
* tests/check.mk (vc_exe_in_TESTS): The main change is to
not start a sed process for each file under tests/,
which was taking around 2.5s on a 2.1GHz i3-2310M.
Also adjust the rule to no longer use temporary files.
This change affects only systems that have neither *at function support
nor the /proc/self/fd support required to emulate those *at functions.
* src/remove.c (write_protected_non_symlink): Call faccessat
unconditionally. Thus we no longer need euidaccess_stat, which was
the sole function used here to operate on a full relative file name.
Remove full_name parameter and update caller.
* lib/euidaccess-stat.h: Remove file.
* lib/euidaccess-stat.c: Likewise.
* m4/euidaccess-stat.m4: Likewise.
* po/POTFILES.in: Remove lib/euidaccess-stat.c.
* m4/prereq.m4 (gl_PREREQ): Don't require gl_EUIDACCESS_STAT.
Prompted by a report from Bruno Haible that the rm/deep-2
test was failing on HP-UX 11.31.
See http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.general/1748
* tests/df/total-verify: Use require_perl_, so that this test is
skipped when perl is not available.
* tests/rm/deep-2: Likewise, and fix wording in a comment.
Reported by Bruno Haible.
* bootstrap (download_po_files): Fallback to wget when downloading
the .po files via rsync failed. This is necessary to bootstrap behind
a strict firewall.
* tests/ls/slink-acl: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* tests/init.cfg (require_setfacl_): New function.
* gnulib: Update to latest, for file-has-acl changes.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
See http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lib.gnulib.bugs/28538. This
":>k; setfacl -m m::r k; ln -s k s; ls -Log s" should print e.g.,
-rw-r-----+ 1 0 Oct 5 19:22 s
With the ls from coreutils-8.13, it would print this (with "." or
nothing in place of the "+"):
-rw-r-----. 1 0 Oct 5 19:22 s
Interix provides faster replacements for getgr{gid,nam,ent} where
group member information is not fetched from domain controllers.
This makes 'id' usable on domain controlled interix boxes.
* m4/jm-macros.m4: Check for _nomembers functions.
* src/system.h: Redefine function to _nomembers when available.
Add a dummy, non-functional, always-successful replacement setgroups
function, to keep the original code untouched and simple.
* src/chroot.c (setgroups) [! HAVE_SETGROUPS]: Define.
This is related to commit b7f2b51c, 2010-01-01,
"ls: fix color of broken symlinks colored as target"
which didn't handle the --dereference case.
The simplest way to reproduce the resultant
erroneous "argetm" is as follows:
$ ln -s /no-such dangle
$ env LS_COLORS=ln=target ls --dereference --color
ls: cannot access dangle: No such file or directory
argetmdangle
This is also an issue with the `tree` utility,
reported here: http://bugs.debian.org/586765
* src/ls.c (print_color_indicator): Move the handling
of 'ln=target' in $LS_COLORS (color_symlink_as_referent == true)
to a higher scope, to handle all cases where type == C_LINK.
* tests/misc/ls-misc: Add a test case for the specific issue,
and 2 further test cases to verify other code paths in this area.
Reported by Jason Glassey.
At first this looked like a buffer overrun, since there was no test
to ensure that the buffer length was 6. However, since the LS_COLORS
string is NUL-terminated and since settings within it are separated by
":" there was neither the risk of reading beyond end of buffer nor risk
of a false-positive match.
* src/ls.c (print_color_indicator): Use color_symlink_as_referent
rather than manually comparing against "target" again.
* src/system.h (STRNCMP_LIT): Correct description in comment.
These commands would fail to terminate:
yes -- -nan | head -156903 | sort -g > /dev/null
echo nan > F; sort -m -g F F
That can happen with any strtold implementation that includes
uninitialized data in its return value. The problem arises in the
mergefps function when bubble-sorting the two or more lines, each
from one of the input streams being merged: compare(a,b) returns 64,
yet compare(b,a) also returns a positive value. With a broken
comparison function like that, the bubble sort never terminates.
Why do the long-double bit strings corresponding to two identical
"nan" strings not compare equal? Because some parts of the result
are uninitialized and thus depend on the state of the stack.
For more details, see http://bugs.gnu.org/9612.
* src/sort.c (nan_compare): New function.
(general_numcompare): Use it rather than bare memcmp.
Reported by Aaron Denney in http://bugs.debian.org/642557.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* tests/misc/sort-NaN-infloop: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
Pulling in the latest gnulib triggered a new false-positive
syntax-check failure.
* cfg.mk (exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_prohibit_always-defined_macros):
Exempt remove.c; its definitions of DT_UNKNOWN, DT_DIR and DT_LNK are
harmless.
* Makefile.am: add shortcuts to run (very) expensive tests.
Use "make check-expensive" to run tests with RUN_EXPENSIVE_TESTS=yes,
use "make check-very-expensive" to run tests with both
RUN_EXPENSIVE_TESTS=yes and RUN_VERY_EXPENSIVE_TESTS=yes.
Non-expensive tests are included in all cases.
On some systems like glibc on GNU/kFreeBSD, a thread is
implicitly created when timer_settime() is used.
This breaks our scheme to ignore signals we've
sent ourselves.
* src/timeout.c (send_sig): Change the scheme used to
ignore signals we've sent ourselves, to a more robust
but perhaps limited scheme of ignoring all signals of
a certain type after we've sent that signal to the job.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
This fixes a bug in pwd and all getcwd-using applications (for some
uses: df, readlink, stat) when run from a directory whose absolute name
contains more than PATH_MAX / 3 components. For more details, see
http://git.sv.gnu.org/cgit/gnulib.git/commit/?id=f6fe351fc534ae1
* gnulib: Update.
* NEWS (Improvements): Mention it.
* src/md5sum.c (split_3): Detect and handle BSD reversed
format checksums.
* tests/misc/md5sum-bsd: Add a new test.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference new test.
* NEWS: Mention the improvement
Suggested by Rimas Kudelis.
* configure.ac (gl_GCC_VERSION_IFELSE): Define new macro.
(WERROR_CFLAGS): With --enable-gcc-warnings, use it to
add -Wsuggest-attribute=pure only with gcc 4.7 or newer.
* src/stat.c (USE_STATVFS): Adjust definition so that it is enabled
also on AIX 7.x systems that provide statvfs64 and no statvfs.
[USE_STATVFS && ! STAT_STATVFS && STAT_STATVFS64] (STATFS): Define
to statvfs64 in that precise case.
* m4/stat-prog.m4 (cu_PREREQ_STAT_PROG): Adjust the condition
here to match the new one in stat.c, to keep them in sync.
Reported by Bruno Haible. For details, see
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.general/1668
* tests/init.cfg (require_mkfs_PATH_): New function to test whether mkfs
is in PATH, otherwise adding /sbin to PATH. Needed for distributions
(OpenSuSE, Solaris) in which sudo does not include /sbin in PATH.
* tests/cp/cp-a-selinux: Use require_mkfs_PATH_.
* tests/cp/cp-mv-enotsup-xattr: Likewise.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: Likewise.
* tests/mkdir/writable-under-readonly: Likewise.
* tests/rm/read-only: Likewise.
* NEWS (Improvements): Mention the cp-vs-NFSv4-ACL improvement we
have inherited via gnulib. For details, see
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lib.gnulib.bugs/28100
and the following messages in that thread.
* gnulib: Update to latest, for numerous ACL-related improvements.
* tests/init.sh: Relax check for diff -u support.
Rather than checking for GNU diff via --version, simply check
for support for -u itself. Useful at least on OpenBSD 4.9.
* tests/require-perl: Remove file.
* tests/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Remove it from this list.
* tests/init.cfg (require_perl_): New function.
* tests/misc/pwd-long: Use the new function, not the file.
* tests/ls/nameless-uid: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sum-sysv: Likewise.
* tests/misc/cut: Repeat each test using a multibyte locale,
if the configure-time test found such a locale.
Adjust the tests so that they also accept a slightly
different diagnostic that is specific to the MB-patched cut.
* HACKING (Add tests): Mention the variables and default values.
* README-release (Pre-release testing): Mention that setting
the SHELL variable may be required.
Suggested by Bruno Haible.
* tests/split/l-chunk: Don't use the `test "$var"`
idiom to test that var is set to something as
that's not supported by all shells.
The new style matches the usage is the rest of
the test in any case.
Reported by Bruno Haible on AIX 6.1 and 7.1
Without this change, we'd get use-of-uninit value warnings
and harder-to-diagnose failure down the road.
* tests/misc/pwd-long (normalize_to_cwd_relative): Diagnose stat
failure. This failed on AIX 6.1 and 7.1. Reported by Bruno Haible.
* tests/misc/printf-surprise: Also accept a strerror-style string
after the usual 'printf: write error:' diagnostic prefix.
Otherwise, this test would fail on HP-UX 11.
Reported by Bruno Haible.
* src/stdbuf.c (main): Pass the path of `stdbuf` rather than
the command it's running to the search function. This is
significant on platforms without /proc/self/exe
Reported by Bruno Haible
... which is not available on some platforms,
and the replacement currently requires linking
with threading libraries.
* src/split.c (closeout): Remove the call to strsignal()
which is largely redundant anyway as sig2str()
is already used to map number to name in the error.
Reported by Bruno Haible on AIX 6.1 and 7.1
Thanks to an improvement in gnulib's parse-datetime module,
commands like this now succeed (output manually indented):
$ ./date -u -d 2004-02-29T16:21:42.33+07:00 +%FT%T.%N%z
2004-02-29T09:21:42.330000000+0000
* tests/misc/date: Add a test to exercise the new-in-gnulib
parsing of ISO8601-with-"T" dates.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* gnulib: Update, to pull in this parse-datetime improvement.
* gl/lib/heap.c: Move declaration to the top of scope.
Reported by Rob McMahon and Wolfgang Steinwender
in relation to "Sun WorkShop 6 update 2 C 5.3 Patch 111679-12
2003/05/18" and "GCC 2.95.3" respectively.
This effectively reverts the unreleased commit 5a647a05
* src/timeout.c (main): Don't propagate signals from the monitored
process, as on Linux /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern could still
handle them and cause false reports against `timeout`
Lesson: do not include details like "4 million" in a file name.
* tests/rm/many-dir-entries-vs-OOM: Renamed from ...
* tests/rm/4-million-entry-dir: ...this.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Reflect renaming.
* tests/rm/4-million-entry-dir: Create only 200,000 files, rather
than 4 million. The latter was overkill, and was too likely to
fail due to inode exhaustion. Not everyone is using btrfs yet.
Now that this test doesn't take so long, label it as merely
"expensive", rather than "very expensive". Thanks to
Bernhard Voelker for pointing out the risk of inode exhaustion.
Ever since the LAST_PAGE functionality was added
in commit ed0923a1, 1996-12-05,
"Apply big patch (patch-20) from Roland Huebner"
it was ignored when -t or -T were specified or
when -l <= 10.
* src/pr.c (print_page): Increment the current page here.
(print_header): Don't increment the current page here.
* tests/pr/pr-tests: Add a test case.
* NEWS: Mention the fix
Reported at http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=9347
For details, see the gnulib commit,
http://git.sv.gnu.org/cgit/gnulib.git/commit/?id=47cb657e
* tests/rm/4-million-entry-dir: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* gnulib: Update to latest to get the required fts fixes.
* src/head.c (elide_tail_bytes_pipe): Remove the empty statement, ";"
after a jump label; it is needed only when a declaration follows.
* src/kill.c (main): Likewise.
* src/od.c (main): Likewise.
* src/paste.c (collapse_escapes): Likewise.
* src/printf.c (print_formatted): Likewise.
This problem was discovered when trying to build git coreutils on
Solaris 8 sparcv9 with Sun C 5.8: the 3rd argument to mbrlen was
of type int * (a pointer to the gnulib replacement mbstate_t) but
the system mbrlen wants the system mbstate_t *.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add mbrlen.
* src/pathchk.c (mbrlen, mbstate_t) [!(HAVE_MBRLEN && HAVE_MBSTATE_T)]:
Remove macros, which are wrong now that gnulib supplies
replacements for mbstate_t and mbrlen.
* bootstrap: Sync from gnulib. This removes an obsolescent
gettext.m4 patch, along with some other changes that do not
seem to affect coreutils.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Use gettext, not gettext-h.
Current gnulib gettext seems to work without needing special hacking.
* configure.ac (AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION): Now 0.18.1, not 0.17.
* gnulib: Update to latest.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add largefile.
This is useful to Mac OS X 10.5 users if/when configure
is generated using autoconf prior to v2.68-80-gdb2f2e0.
* gnulib: Update to latest.
* tests/du/inaccessible-cwd: Skip this test on systems like HP-UX 11.31
that lack both the *at functions and the /proc/self/fd-based support
we might have used to emulate them. Reported by Bruno Haible in
http://debbugs.gnu.org/8846
* src/join (g_names): New global (was main's "names").
(main): Update all uses of "names".
(line_no[2]): New globals.
(get_line): Increment after reading each line.
(check_order): Print the standard "file name:line_no: " prefix
as well as the offending line when reporting disorder.
Here is a sample old/new comparison:
-join: file 1 is not in sorted order
+join: in:4: is not sorted: contents-of-line-4
* tests/misc/join: Change the two affected tests to expect
the new diagnostic.
Add new tests for more coverage: mismatch in file 2,
two diagnostics, zero-length out-of-order line.
* NEWS (Improvements): Mention it.
Suggested by David Gast in http://debbugs.gnu.org/9236
This is especially important for an error-handling shell function
like this that is actually called only rarely.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_framework_failure): New rule, to prevent
use of the old name.
These changes were mostly mechanical, made by running the
following command:
git grep -lw framework_failure | grep -v ChangeLog \
| xargs perl -pi -e 's/\b(framework_failure)\b/${1}_/'
and then editing init.cfg and `tests/cp/cp-a-selinux' by hand.
* tests/init.cfg (framework_failure): Remove, `framework_failure_'
from init.sh should be used instead in the tests.
Remove now-obsolete "FIXME" comment.
(is_local_dir_, require_strace_, require_membership_in_two_groups_,
require_sparse_support_, skip_if_mcstransd_is_running_,
mkfifo_or_skip_) Use `framework_failure_', not `framework_failure'.
* Many test scripts: Likewise.
* tests/init.cfg (framework_failure, getlimits_): Use 'fatal_'
instead of 'error_'.
(error_): Delete, it's not used anymore (and one is anyway
advised to use 'fatal_' instead).
Update heading comments.
* tests/shell-or-perl (error_): Renamed ...
(fatal_): ... to this, for consistency. Also, add a useful
comment.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Explicitly use the fclose module.
This is required, now that gnulib's close module no longer depends
on fclose. Without this module, we would be exposed to fclose bugs
affecting at least glibc 2.13 and FreeBSD.
Reported by Bernhard Voelker. Suggested by Eric Blake.
* src/copy.c (create_hard_link): A new function refactored
from existing code.
(copy_internal): Call the new function from all 3 locations
that create hard links.
* tests/cp/same-file: Amend to match the adjusted diagnostic.
* tests/cp/preserve-link: Add test cases for when a missing
link in the destination tree is encountered first and second.
Also add cases for old and new separate files in the destination
tree, both to make the clobbering behavior explicit, and to
test any changes in this area in future.
* src/copy.c (copy_internal): Adjust formatting style to conform with
guidelines in HACKING: put braces around two one-line "else" blocks.
* tests/cp/existing-perm-dir: Use $(...), not `...`, and
stat rather than ls+cut to get the mode string.
mode=$(stat --p=%A dst/dir)
* src/copy.c (copy_internal): If we don't create the directory,
then we cannot have omitted permissions. Problem and trivial
fix reported by Eric Lammerts.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add cp/existing-perm-dir.
* tests/cp/existing-perm-dir: New file.
* src/copy.c (copy_internal): With --update (-u), this function would
return early once it found that the destination is not older than the
source, *without* recording the source-dev/ino--to--dest_name mapping.
That mapping is required in order to preserve src hard links in the
destination tree, so when using cp with --update and --preserve=links
(perhaps via -p or -a), cp could fail to preserve one hard link
per inode when at least one of the hard-linked names already exists
in the destination tree.
Reported by Odd Harry Mannsverk in http://debbugs.gnu.org/8419.
* tests/cp/preserve-link: New file. Exercise the flaw/fix.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/timeout.c (settimeout): A new function to convert
from a floating point duration and call alarm() or
timer_settime() if that's available.
(parse_duration): Return a double rather than unsigned int.
(usage): Mention floating point is supported.
(main): Pass the double to settimeout() rather than
calling alarm() directly with the parsed int.
(cleanup): Likewise.
* doc/coreutils.texi (timeout invocation): Say floating point timeouts
now supported, and mention the caveat with resolution.
* bootstrap.conf: Include the timer-time gnulib module.
* tests/misc/timeout-parameters: Add a test with nanoseconds.
* NEWS: Mention the improvement.
This change derives from improvements to gnulib's fsusage module.
* NEWS (Improvements): df now supports disk partitions larger than
4 TiB on MacOS X 10.5 or newer and on AIX 5.2 or newer.
Alphabetize entries.
* gnulib: Update to latest.
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (coreutils_MACROS): Use fdatasync only if declared.
MacOS X 10.7 has an fdatasync that is not declared, and is rumored to
be ineffective. (Bug#9141)
The following dropped the space from the first field
printf "1234567 \t1\n" | unexpand -a
Note POSIX says that spaces should not precede tabs.
Also a single trailing space should not be converted
if the next field starts with non blank characters.
So we enforce those rules too, with this change.
* src/unexpand.c (unexpand): Implement as per POSIX rules.
* tests/misc/unexpand: Add tests, and adjust existing
tests as per POSIX rules.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Reported by Hallvard B Furuseth
Treat fractions as a request to round up to the next representable
value, and treat out-of-range values as maximal ones. This is
consistent with how "sleep" works. And this way, "timeout
999999999999999999d FOO" and "timeout 4.5 foo" are more likely to
do what the user wants.
* src/timeout.c: Include c-strtod.h and xstrtod.h, not xstrtol.h.
(apply_time_suffix): Change it to the way sleep.c's time_suffix
does things. Maybe this function (identical in both programs,
other than its name) should be moved to a library?
(parse_duration): Return a maximal value on overflow. Return
unsigned int, not unsigned long. Allow fractions, which round
up to the next integer value.
* tests/misc/timeout-parameters: Adjust tests to match new behavior.
Add a very large number.
* src/csplit.c (interrupt_handler): Reset signal to SIG_DFL
after deleting the files, so that a second interrupt won't
prematurely terminate cleanup.
(main): Don't use SA_NODEFER | SA_RESETHAND, as that might
allow premature termination of cleanup. Also, this ports better
to platforms like NonStop, which don't ahve SA_RESETHAND.
* src/stat.c (print_stat): Use ST_BLKSIZE() rather than
accessing st_blksize directly, which is not present on
NonStop at least. Reported by Joachim Schmitz.
* src/fiemap.h (struct fiemap): Adjust the previous change
to the fiemap_extents array, which would also require changes
to the sizeof calculations in extent_scan_read().
Instead, only declare the fiemap_extents zero length array
on linux, which is the only platform that references this member.
This avoids a compilation failure on systems that don't support
this non standard construct. We don't use the equivalent C99
flexible array construct so as to have maximum portability.
* src/extent-scan.c: Cleanup. Remove a redundant #ifndef.
* src/mktemp.c: maint: avoid warning by using the comma operator
rather than an always-true conditional (as suggested by Eric Blake).
Reported by Joachim Schmitz in http://debbugs.gnu.org/9064.
This information has already been added to the Texinfo manual, but was
missing from the --help output.
* src/wc.c (usage): As above, for --help.
Reported by Vincent Lefevre in http://bugs.debian.org/395430.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_man_see_also_period): Prohibit a period at
the end of the first line after a "SEE ALSO" marker in man/*.x.
With this, we shouldn't have to make any more changes like those
in today's commit, f2dabd68.
man-pages(7) explicitly says about SEE ALSO sections: "Do not terminate
this with a period." This is also in line with all the other man pages
in coreutils.
* man/cat.x: Remove period at the end of the SEE ALSO section.
* man/tac.x: Likewise.
* m4/jm-macros.m4: Define HAVE_SETRLIMIT.
* src/timeout.c: If the child exited with a signal,
raise that signal to the timeout process itself,
so that callers may also see the signal status.
Use setrlimit to disable core dumps for the timeout
process, which would be generated by some signals.
* src/timeout.c (cleanup): Send signals directly to the child
in case it has started its own process group (like a cascaded
timeout command would for example).
* test/misc/timeout-group: Add a test case.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Or more accurately, commands not started from the shell prompt,
that are interactive, or need to receive Ctrl-C etc. from the terminal.
* doc/coreutils.texi (timeout invocation): Document --foreground.
* src/timeout.c (main): Set the foreground flag and don't create
a separate group.
(cleanup): Only send a signal directly to the monitored command
when the foreground flag is set.
(usage): Describe --foreground.
* tests/misc/timeout-group: Add a new test.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference new test.
NEWS: Mention the new option.
Reported by Shay Shimony
Analysis by Alan Curry
Fix suggested by Paul Eggert
This fact was already noted in the Texinfo manual, but not in the
output of --help.
* src/cp.c (usage): As above, for --help.
Reported by Jari Aalto in http://bugs.debian.org/294327.
Use this new option with --check when the input is expected to
consist solely of checksum lines. With only --check, an invalid
line evokes a warning, but the program can still exit successfully.
With --strict, any invalid line makes the program exit non-zero.
* src/md5sum.c (strict, STRICT_OPTION): Declare/define.
(long_options): Add "strict".
(usage): Describe --strict.
(digest_check): Count improperly_formatted lines, too, and use
that number and the global "strict" to determine the return value.
(main): Handle STRICT_OPTION.
Reject --strict without --check.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Describe it.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* src/date.c (usage): As above, for --help.
* doc/coreutils.texi (Time conversion specifiers): Likewise.
Reported by Britton Leo Kerin in http://bugs.debian.org/115833.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Remove pathmax.
* src/system.h: Don't include "pathmax.h".
(PATH_MAX) [!PATH_MAX]: Define to 8192. Defining it to a constant
is preferable to using a definition from pathmax.h that might expand
to pathconf ("/", _PC_PATH_MAX). Prompted by discussion leading to:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lib.gnulib.bugs/27183/focus=27269
* tests/ls/stat-free-color: The system may perform additional stat
calls upon loading (seen on OpenSuSE-11.4). Count only the number
of stat calls compared to --help.
This also reduces back to "1" the number of expected calls,
effectively reverting part of 2011-06-01 commit, ccf2d9a4.
* tests/init.sh (warn_): Use "sed 1q" in place of "head -1".
The latter is officially obsolete but more portable than "head -n1".
Reported by Bernhard Voelker.
* tests/shell-or-perl: Prefer the `read' builtin over `grep' to
look at the shebang line of test scripts. Since `read' is a
special builtin, it might abort the whole program upon failures,
so add extra sanity checks, verifying that the test script exists
and is readable, before trying to read from it.
This change implements a more correct and idiomatic use of the
features of the Automake-provided 'parallel-tests' harness.
Moreover, this change is required in order for the testsuite to
continue to work with the new testsuite harness that is planned
to be introduced in Automake 1.12 (which, as of the writing date,
is still under development and in alpha state).
* tests/shell-or-perl: New auxiliary script.
* tests/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Distribute it.
* tests/check.mk (TESTS_ENVIRONMENT): Remove definition of the
`shell_or_perl_' shell function, whose code has been moved in
the new script above (with a few improvements and extensions).
Do not use it to run the test scripts.
(LOG_COMPILER): New, properly invoking `shell-or-perl'.
* src/Makefile.am (pkglibexec_PROGRAMS): Rename from pkglib_PROGRAMS.
The latter is invalid. Without this change, automake
v1.11-373-g9ca6326 and newer (on master) would fail with this:
`pkglibdir' is not a legitimate directory for `PROGRAMS'
This changes the default installation directory of libstdbuf.so from
$prefix/lib/coreutils/ to
$prefix/libexec/coreutils/
* src/stdbuf.c (set_LD_PRELOAD): Search in PKGLIBEXECDIR, not PKGLIBDIR,
since that's where we install libstdbuf.so.
Do not search in "", the system default search path.
Ensure that English diagnostics are emitted even when using
French sorting rules.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: Unset LC_ALL and set LC_COLLATE,
LC_CTYPE and LC_NUMERIC to the fr_FR.UTF-8 locale, while setting
LC_MESSAGES=C. Reported by Stefano Lattarini.
Using a .diff is much more maintainable. Otherwise, changes in
the gnulib module description file may not be noticed and merged
promptly and may even result in subtle errors. Luckily, this time,
the failure to propagate gnulib's changes to modules/tempname resulted
only in an obvious link failure.
* gl/modules/tempname: Remove file.
* gl/modules/tempname.diff: Use a .diff file instead.
* gnulib: Update submodule to latest.
* tests/init.cfg (skip_test_): Remove function.
Use skip_ in place of skip_test_ everywhere else.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_skip_): Remove rule.
* tests/**: Use skip_, not skip_test_, everywhere.
* tests/init.sh (warn_): Use printf, not echo. The latter would
misbehave when given strings containing a backslash or starting
with e.g., -n. James Youngman suggested setting IFS.
Running "make check" normally prints a diagnostic to the outermost
stderr (usually a tty) to explain why a test is skipped. It did this
by redirecting FD 9 to stderr (via "exec 9>&2") before invoking the
shell script. Shell scripts write skip-explanation to FD 9 via
init.sh's skip_ function. However, with ksh and HP-UX's /bin/sh,
the effects of "exec 9>&2" are canceled upon fork-and-exec, so we
would get a "Bad file number" diagnostic and no skip explanation on
those systems.
* tests/check.mk (TESTS_ENVIRONMENT): Redirect more portably, via
"$(SHELL) 9>&2", rather than the prior "exec 9>&2; $(SHELL) ..."
Actually, we use "shell_or_perl_ 9>&2", to make this effective
also for the perl-based tests.
* tests/init.sh (stderr_fileno_): Update the advice in comments.
See http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/22488
for lots of discussion. Stefano Lattarini suggested the solution
of putting "9>&2" after the command. Reported by Bruno Haible.
* gnulib: Update to latest.
* src/system.h: Definitions of ST_* macros have moved into the
gnulib module stat-size (specifically, the header file
stat-size.h), so remove them from here.
* src/truncate.c: Include stat-size.h.
* src/stat.c: Likewise.
* src/shred.c: Likewise.
* src/ls.c: Likewise.
* src/du.c: Likewise.
* src/ioblksize.h: New file. Move definition of io_blksize out of
system.h so that system.h does not have to include stat-size.h.
* src/cat.c: Include ioblksize.h.
* src/split.c: Likewise.
* src/copy.c: Include both stat-size.h and ioblksize.h.
* src/Makefile.am (noinst_HEADERS): Add ioblksize.h.
* tests/dd/nocache: Relax the test, as the system
may return various errors from posix_fadvise().
HPUX 11.31 returns ENOTTY for example.
Reported by Bruno Haible
* src/date.c (usage): Add examples for TZ handling,
and "seconds since epoch" parsing, neither of which
was mentioned in the man page until now.
* THANKS.in: Add Rick.
Suggested by Rick Stanley.
* configure.ac: Require autoconf-2.64, which is nearly two years old.
* src/system.h (emit_ancillary_info): Use PACKAGE_URL, now that we
require autoconf-2.64.
* tests/ls/stat-free-color: This test recently began to fail on
rawhide because dynamic library start-up code now stats "/selinux",
making the total number of calls 2 rather than the prior 1.
Create two more dangling symlinks, so that any erroneous stat-
or lstat-calling code will get at least those three.
I think it would be better to exit through the error() and not
to call the exit() after the error(). This way we can get rid of
one function call (and curly brackets).
* src/yes.c (main): Exit through the error(), remove exit() call
after error().
* src/tail.c (start_bytes): Increase *READ_POS (not READ_POS)
by the number of bytes read. This is a real bug that happens
to have no consequence in practice. First, this code is exercised
only when tailing-forever a non-regular file by bytes, and with a
start-relative offset, e.g., "mkfifo f; tail -f -c +3 f", but even
then, the invalid READ_POS value does not influence how tail works.
It is stored in the File_spec.size member, but that member is not
used at all in tail_forever_inotify, and in tail_forever, it is
used only when the File_spec refers to a regular file.
* src/chown-core.c (describe_change): Output the
original owner if possible.
(user_group_str): Handle the case when neither
owner or group are passed.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
* src/chown_core.c (describe_change): Accept the ownership of
the original file and output that when not changing.
This is significant when --from is specified as then
the original and specified ownership may be different.
(user_group_str): A new helper function refactored from
describe_change().
(change_file_owner): Pass the original user and group
strings to describe_change().
* test/chown/basic: Add a test case.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* configure.ac (WARN_CFLAGS): Don't turn off -Wstrict-overflow.
(GNULIB_WARN_CFLAGS): Remove -Wstrict-overflow from the list of
warning options used in lib/.
Normally I find that -Wstrict-overflow produces too many false
positives, but considering that it warns of the bug reported in
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=33498, I now think
it is worthwhile. The lesser of two evils.
Thanks to Daniel Veillard for showing me the gcc bug report.
* src/factor.c (factor_using_pollard_rho): Change type of "i"
to unsigned to avoid warning from gcc's -Wstrict-overflow.
* src/expr.c: Use an unsigned intermediate.
* src/dircolors.c (main): Reorder operations to avoid the risk of
pointer overflow.
* src/tr.c (squeeze_filter): Change NOT_A_CHAR from an anonymous
"enum" to an "int", to avoid this warning:
tr.c:1624:10: error: assuming signed overflow does not occur when
simplifying conditional to constant [-Werror=strict-overflow]
* src/pr.c (main): Make index "i" unsigned.
* cfg.mk (sc_preprocessor_indentation): New test, from libvirt.
Exempt 3 files from new cppi test.
* gl/lib/randread.c: Adjust cpp indentation to comply.
* src/extent-scan.c (extent_need_sync): Likewise.
* src/shred.c (incname): Add an assertion to tell static analyzers
that we know this particular use of strchr never returns NULL.
Finish incomplete sentence in function-describing comment.
* src/split.c (lines_chunk_split): Don't use ignore_error() which
is redundant and confusing when not running with --filter.
(lines_rr): Likewise.
(ofile_open): Likewise. Add a comment to clarify that
filters aren't restarted under file descriptor pressure.
* src/split.c (main): Exit with a diagnostic if --filter
is specified along with a specific chunk number.
* test/split/filter: Ensure this combination fails.
* src/split.c (bytes_split): Stop reading when we
can no longer write to a child process.
(lines_rr): Likewise.
(lines_bytes_split): No change is made here since
input is bounded by the original file size.
* test/split/filter: Add test cases.
src/split.c (main): Don't unblock SIGPIPE before cleanup,
as then any pending signals will be sent and cause
the main split process to exit with a non zero status (141).
* test/split/filter: Add a test for this case.
* src/split.c (lines_bytes_chunk): Handle the edge case
where the file is truncated as we read.
* tests/misc/split-lchunk: Cleanup; no functional change.
* src/chmod.c (describe_change): Pass in the original mode,
and output this in the messages.
* tests/chmod/c-option: Adjust as per the new message.
* THANKS.in: Remove the now auto-generated name.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
Signed-off-by: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>
* cfg.mk: Include via "-include", to accommodate new tight-scope rule.
(sc_check-AUTHORS): Change the name of the rule in src/Makefile.am
to _sc_check-AUTHORS, so it doesn't conflict with this one when
this file is included into the sub-make's context.
* src/Makefile.am (_sc_check-AUTHORS): Rename from sc_check-AUTHORS.
* gnulib: Update to latest.
* src/touch.c (main): Avoid even the hint of possibility that
we'd dereference NULL upon localtime failure. Coverity reported
the potential, but it appears not to be possible, since posixtime
rejects any time for which the subsequent localtime would return NULL.
See http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.general/1253
* src/split.c (lines_chunk_split): Ensure that data is only
written to stdout when k specified. Also ensure that
extra files are not created when there is more data available
than reported in the file size.
* tests/misc/split-lchunk: Verify that split -n l/k/n doesn't
generate any files, and that -n l/n always generates n files.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* src/timeout.c (usage): Add a space to be consistent
with other uses of "(the default)" in the documentation.
Signed-off-by: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>
* tests/misc/tac-continue: Fix typo in usually-skipped test:
s/mkfifo_or_skip/mkfifo_or_skip_/ (i.e., append "_").
This test is usually skipped, because I'm probably the only
one to set the FULL_PARTITION_TMPDIR envvar, and recently the
one I'd been using ceased to exist, so this test was skipped
even for me. Good argument for making this a root-only test
and creating a full partition just for this test case.
* NEWS: "an misleading"
* src/expr.c: "a integer
* src/ptx.c (find_occurs_in_text): "a end"
* src/shred.c (do_wipefd): "a infinite"
* src/sort.c (SUBTHREAD_LINES_HEURISTIC): "an dual-core"
(compare_random): "an checksum"
* cfg.mk (old_NEWS_hash): Update, since the typo was in old news.
* src/printf.c (STRTOX): Don't access memory after a
string containing a single quote character.
* tests/misc/printf: Add tests for various combinations
of single quote characters combined with a numeric format.
* THANKS.in: Add bug reporter.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Reported-by: Paul Marinescu <paul.marinescu@imperial.ac.uk>
* gl/lib/randperm.c (randperm_new): When the number of items
to return H, is much smaller than the total number of items N,
use a hash to represent the sparse permutations of the set N.
This is currently enabled for N > 128K and N/H > 32.
* tests/misc/shuf: Ensure shuf can quickly return 2 numbers
from a large range.
* gl/modules/randperm: Depend on hash.
* NEWS: Mention the change.
skip_test_ emits its diagnostic both to FD 9 (tty), and to
FD 2 (usually the log file), whereas init.sh's skip_ emits
only to FD 9. Without that, the log is slightly less useful.
* tests/cp/fiemap-2: Use skip_test_, not skip_.
* tests/cp/fiemap-perf: Likewise.
* tests/du/bigtime: Likewise.
* tests/du/files0-from-dir: Likewise.
* tests/du/move-dir-while-traversing: Likewise.
* tests/init.sh: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sort-stale-thread-mem: Likewise.
* tests/misc/stat-nanoseconds: Likewise.
* tests/mv/i-3: Likewise.
* tests/mv/sticky-to-xpart: Likewise.
* tests/split/filter: Likewise.
Prompted by a report from Pádraig Brady.
Even on a system with d_type support, the default use of --color
makes ls stat every file in order to be able to honor settings like
EXEC, STICKY, ORPHAN, SETUID, etc., because those settings require
information that is not provided by dirent.d_type. However, if
for a potentially large performance gain, you are willing to disable
those settings, you can now make ls --color give type-related coloring
and perform no stat calls at all (other than the unavoidable call-per-
command-line argument). Before this change, even with all of those
attributes disabled, ls --color would still stat every directory.
Now, we're down to the minimum of one stat call per command-line arg.
* src/ls.c (gobble_file): With --color, don't stat a
non-command-line-specified directory when no directory-coloring
attribute is enabled.
* tests/init.cfg (require_dirent_d_type_): New function.
* tests/d_type-check: New script, mostly from Pádraig Brady.
* tests/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Add it.
* tests/ls/stat-free-color: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* doc/coreutils.texi (General output formatting): Describe how
to use dircolors to make ls --color refrain from calling stat
on a d_type-enabled file system.
Prompted by a query from Josef Bacik.
gnulib's group-member module now ensures that the group_member
function is declared in <unistd.h>, just like it is glibc.
* lib/euidaccess-stat.c: Remove inclusion of "group-member.h".
* src/chgrp.c: Likewise.
* configure.ac: Rather than disabling -Wmissing-field-initializers,
use the fact that gnulib now disables it automatically when required
(on versions of GCC older than 4.7).
* src/system.h: Remove the no longer needed DECLARE_ZEROED_AGGREGATE.
* src/ls.c: Likewise.
* src/pathchk.c: Likewise.
* src/shred.c: Likewise.
* src/stty.c: Likewise.
* src/wc.c: Likewise.
* src/split.c: Include <signal.h>, <sys/wait.h> and "sig2str.h".
(FILTER_OPTION): New anonymous enum member.
(filter_command, filter_pid): New globals.
(open_pipes, open_pipes_alloc, n_open_pipes): Likewise.
(oldblocked, newblocked): Likewise.
(longopts): Add "filter".
(usage): Document --filter.
(create): Extend to create a pipe and fork "sh -c CMD".
(closeout): Adapt to close a pipe and wait for child process.
(cwrite): Call closeout, not just close.
(lines_chunk_split): FIXME
(bytes_chunk_extract): FIXME
(opid, ofile_open, lines_rr, main): FIXME
(ignorable): New function, to encapsulate EPIPE test.
* src/sort.c (key_warn): `sort -k2,1n --debug` would output
warnings about being both "zero width" and "spanning multiple fields".
Suppress the latter one.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-warn: Add a couple of test cases.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Fix my typo (mis-applied patch).
The patch by Jeff Liu was fine, but I mis-applied it
and introduced a compilation error in commit efa479c1.
2011-05-03 Jim Meyering <meyering@redhat.com>
Running "GZIP=-9 ./bootstrap" would fail right away, because the
tool-version-checking code would treat the upper-cased program name
as an environment variable name and if that has a value use the
result as the application name. That works fine for automake,
autoconf, etc. but not for gzip.
* bootstrap (check_versions): Do not treat $GZIP as a program name.
If defined at all, it is supposed to list gzip options.
Reported by Alan Curry in http://debbugs.gnu.org/8609
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Remove misc/pwd-unreadable-parent.
This test was misleading and useless (was always skipped).
Inspired by a report from Bruno Haible: http://debbugs.gnu.org/8570
* tests/misc/pwd-unreadable-parent: Remove file.
* tests/CuSkip.pm (skip): New file/module/function, to help
the perl test scripts "skip" a test consistently, emitting
a diagnostic both into the log file and into the outermost
stderr stream that is more likely to be seen by a human.
* tests/check.mk (TESTS_ENVIRONMENT): Add -MCuSkip.
* tests/misc/date-next-dow: Use CuSkip::skip in place of warn+exit-77.
* tests/misc/tty-eof: Likewise.
* tests/misc/uniq: Likewise.
* tests/rm/fail-eperm: Likewise.
* tests/misc/md5sum-newline: Likewise. Also, s/program_name/ME/.
* tests/misc/ls-misc (setuid_setup, main): Likewise.
* tests/misc/pwd-long: Likewise, and add -I"$abs_srcdir" -MCuSkip
to the $PERL invocation command.
Inspired by a request from Bruno Haible regarding misc/tty-eof:
http://debbugs.gnu.org/8570
* src/dd.c (O_NOCACHE): Undefine. This symbol is defined
via AIX's <fcntl.h>, yet used as an enum name in dd.c.
Reported by Gary V. Vaughan in http://debbugs.gnu.org/8555
* NEWS (Portability): Mention this.
* src/tail.c (tail_forever_inotify): Just as without inotify,
tail --follow=name now terminates when the last tailed-by-name file
is unlinked or moved aside. This bug was introduced on 2009-06-15
via commit ae494d4b, "tail: use inotify if it is available".
Reported by Tim Underwood in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/22286
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention this.
* tests/tail-2/follow-name: Test for this.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Upon btrfs clone failure, print not just
the destination file name, but also the source file name.
That may be useful upon failure of a cross-device clone attempt.
Otherwise, this would fail (albeit rarely) on a "make -j24 check" run.
* tests/tail-2/pipe-f2: Increase timeout from 1 second to 10,
to avoid false positive failure.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Include full-read and full-write
explicitly. Before, we'd get them via safe-read, but with newer
gnulib, that is no longer enough: link failure due to undefined
references to full_write.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: Parenthesize ternary expression used
as an argument to awk's printf. Otherwise, gawk 3.0.1 and the
one from debian stable's original-awk would get a syntax error.
Reported by Dennis Clarke.
Copyright note: tiny change
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: When this test was run as root on an ext3
file system, (ext3 had known problems), it would trickily create and
mount a loopback ext4 file system and use that instead. However, due
to a bug in 2.6.39-rc1..rc3, this loopback test (when run in another
loopback FS) exposed a bug with 1k-blocksize ext4 whereby non-NUL
data would be read from a hole. For details, see this:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.file-systems.ext4/24495
to avoid the expense of extent_copy's unconditional use of
FIEMAP_FLAG_SYNC.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Do not attempt extent_copy on a file
that appears to have no holes.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Document this. At first I labeled this
as a bug fix, but that would be inaccurate, considering there is no
documentation of FIEMAP semantics, nor even consensus among kernel
FS developers. Here's hoping SEEK_HOLE/SEEK_DATA support will soon
make it into the linux kernel.
* src/copy.c (HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_BLOCKS): Define to 0 if undefined,
so we can use it in the return expression, here:
(is_probably_sparse): New function, factored out of...
(copy_reg): ...here. Use the new function.
* src/copy.c (extent_copy): Do not treat "unwritten extents" specially.
Otherwise, with a release-candidate 2.6.39-rc3 kernel, XFS or ext4,
when using gold as your linker, and if you forget to run "make check",
you could end up installing files full of zeros instead of the expected
binaries. For a lot of discussion, see
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.file-systems.xfs.general/37895
* tests/cp/fiemap-empty: Disable this test.
* src/extent-scan.c (extent_need_sync): Always return true,
to make the sole caller always use FIEMAP_FLAG_SYNC.
This will doubtless have an undesirable performance impact,
but we'll mitigate that shortly, by using extent_copy only on
files with holes.
* tests/filefrag-extent-compare: Don't check the length of the
last extent, as this was seen to vary on XFS, where it leaves
trailing blocks allocated for performance reasons.
* tests/cp/fiemap-empty: Though not seen as an issue in practise,
try to avoid possible issues with the allocator in file systems,
by requesting to allocate a power of 2.
* NEWS: Slightly obfuscate a line to avoid a false-positive
doubled-word ("is-is") match.
Fix a grammar error in news for 8.2.
* cfg.mk (old_NEWS_hash): Resync.
and to avoid a false-positive "TO to" in new doubled word check.
* src/install.c (change_timestamps): Rename parameters for
readability. Make the comment match the code.
* extent-scan.h (extent_scan_free): Init the pointer to NULL,
and reset the count to 0, so that we can realloc the buffer.
* src/extent-scan.c (extent_scan_init): Likewise.
(extent_scan_read): Loop over multiple fiemap scans, so we handle
mergeable extents that span across fiemap scan boundaries. Once
we have enough unique extents, return so as to minimize memory use.
Running the new fiemap-empty test uses 600MB of disk space via
fallocate, and in so doing caused failure in unrelated tests that
were running in parallel on a small file system. Rather than
simply running fallocate (which allocates the space, inducing
disk full when it fails), skip the test if there is less than
800MB of free space, as computed via stat and awk.
* tests/init.cfg (require_file_system_bytes_free_): New function.
* tests/cp/fiemap-empty: Use it.
* tests/misc/help-version: Sleep only ~30s, not 10m.
The latter was a problem when somehow that sleep process would
hang around and thereby prevent (for up to 10m) a normal unmount
of the temporary partition in which I'd run the tests.
* tests/cp/preserve-gid: Simply chmod a+rx instead.
That is safer, in case the nameless UID actually has an account,
and might take advantage of root running a program in a directory
under its control
* src/Makefile.am (sc_tight_scope): Adjust rule to use an eval-based
trap-setting for-loop rather than 4x hard-coded 128+N constants.
Also catch SIGQUIT (3). Tweak comments.
* src/extent-scan.c (extent_need_sync): Require sync also for 2.6.38.
Without this, part of the cp/fiemap-empty test would fail both on
F15-to-be (2.6.38.1-6.fc15.x86_64) and rawhide. For details, see
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/22190
When running the erroneous command, cp -rl A D D, and depending on the
structure of directories A and D and the file system type (because that
changes order of dir. entry traversal), cp would sometimes fail to
detect that D was being copied into D, and would create D/D/D/D/D/...
until it hit PATH_MAX or exhausted some resource.
I noticed this via the occasional failure of the cp/into-self test
when run using a ZFS file system. It is occasional because the bug
is dependent on the order in which directory entries are traversed,
and that is apparently indeterminate with ZFS.
Technically, with the current recursive implementation, there is no
risk of an infinite loop, due to stack limitations, but with an
eventual fts-based implementation, it might have iterated until
disk space or inodes are exhausted.
* src/copy.c (copy_dir): Avoid copy-into-self interminable loop on
systems with large PATH_MAX. On other systems, diagnose the copy-into-
self error consistently. Handle the parameter,
first_dir_created_per_command_line_arg, correctly when there are two
or more sub-directories.
* src/copy.c (extent_copy): Treat an allocated but empty extent
much like a hole. I.E. don't read data we know is going to be NUL.
Also we convert the empty extent to a hole only when SPARSE_ALWAYS
so that the source and dest have the same allocation. This will
be improved soon, when we use fallocate() to do the allocation.
* tests/cp/fiemap-empty: A new test for efficiency and correctness
of copying empty extents.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
* src/extent-scan.c (extent_scan_read): Add a more stringent check
for OFF_T overflow, to ensure subsequent code is immune.
Detect overlapping extents and adjust, so as files always copied.
Detection using a single scan with fallback to a standard copy
was thought too expensive in memory or time.
* NEWS: Mention the fix
This bug was introduced in commit ca9e212c, 2009-09-24,
"cp, mv: use linkat to guarantee semantics", which
inadvertently disabled the creation of hardlinks to symlinks.
However rather than implementing the intention of that commit
and relying on gnulib linkat emulation, we'll revert to the
previous emulation as that maintains ownership and timestamps.
* src/copy.c (copy_internal): Use our existing hardlink to
symlink emulation when link() might dereference the symlink.
Also ensure that we copy the timestamps of the original symlink
when we use the emulation.
* tests/cp/link-symlink: Add a test to ensure timestamps copied.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Reported by Ruediger Meier
* tests/tail-2/inotify-rotate: Wait 50% longer for grep to succeed.
Without this change, this test would fail consistently when using
"make -j25 check" with F15 in a virtio- and spinning-rust-backed
virtual machine.
* src/extent-scan.h (struct extent_scan): Add the fm_flags member to
pass to the fiemap scan.
* src/extent-scan.c (extent_need_sync): A new function used to
detect Linux kernels before 2.6.38.
(extent_scan_init): Add FIEMAP_FLAG_SYNC when needed.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: Adjust comment.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
Indirectly suggested by Mike Frysinger
* tests/init.cfg (require_selinux_): Skip the test also when
/proc/filesystems does not list selinuxfs.
Add comments.
* cfg.mk (exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_file_system): Exempt
tests/init.cfg, with its use of /proc/filesystems.
Based on the patch by Mathieu Bridon in http://debbugs.gnu.org/8359.
More discussion in http://bugzilla.redhat.com/573111
* src/find-mount-point.h: Move "*" to where it belongs.
Move "const", too.
* src/find-mount-point.c: Move "const" to conform.
* src/Makefile.am (sc_tight_scope): Allow `*'s before the function name.
Use perl's -l option and drop the \n after (and quotes around) $1.
* src/df.c (alloc_table_row): A new function to allocate storage
for a row of strings.
(print_table): A new function to interate over all stored strings in
the table, and apply alignment honoring the max width of each column.
(get_header): Renamed from print_header, and adjusted accordingly.
(get_dev): Renamed from show_dev. Also we no longer wrap longer
device names over two lines, which can be an unexpected issue for
scripts parsing the output from df.
(get_disk): s/show_/get_/
(get_point): Likewise.
(get_entry): Likewise.
(get_all_entries): Likewise.
* NEWS: Mention the change.
Make GNU coreutils' test recognize "==" as a synonym for "=".
This is already the case in GNU coreutils' expr, bash, ksh,
busybox ash, FreeBSD-current /bin/sh and /bin/test, and
OpenBSD's /bin/sh.
Before, env test a '==' a would fail with this diagnostic:
"test: ==: binary operator expected". Now, it succeeds.
* src/test.c: Accept "==" as a synonym for "=".
* doc/coreutils.texi (String tests): Document it.
Reported as http://debbugs.gnu.org/8263
Also see http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=375
* tests/cp/preserve-gid: Ensure that every process under test uses
the cp binary we've just built. Before this fix, with a restrictive
umask or build-dir permissions, the UID-changing tests would end up
using whatever cp happened to be available through $PATH
Analysis by arbogast.cedric@gmail.com in http://debbugs.gnu.org/8292.
The names in THANKS are generated from two sources: the hard-coded
list, THANKS.in, and the names of committers from the git log.
When a contributor on the hard-coded list commits a change,
we remove their now-redundant name from THANKS.in.
* THANKS.in: Remove a now-duplicate name.
* tests/filefrag-extent-compare: Merge adjacent extents in
each list before processing, so we correctly account for
split extents in either list.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: Remove the explicit syncing,
which was only changing the way extents were arranged,
and thus working around the extent comparison issue
that was seen on ext4 loop back.
* gl/lib/mbsalign.c (rpl_wcswidth): Remove this in favor
of the equivalent wcswidth replacement in gnulib.
* bootstrap.conf: Depend on the wcswidth module.
Suggested by Bruno Haible.
* gnulib: Update to latest, to address http://debbugs.gnu.org/8230.
When built on Solaris 9 and run on Solaris 10, touch would segfault.
Reported by Ben Walton.
* bootstrap: Update from gnulib.
* tests/init.sh: Likewise.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention this.
* src/sort.c (SUBTHREAD_LINES_HEURISTIC): Do not spawn a new thread
for every 4 lines. Increase this from 4 to 128K. 128K lines seems
appropriate for a 5-year-old dual-core laptop, but it is too low for
some common combinations of short lines and/or newer systems.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/extent-scan.c (extent_scan_read): Merge adjacent extents
that vary only in size, so that we may process them more efficiently.
This will be especially useful when we introduce fallocate()
so that we don't reproduce fragmentation in the destination.
* src/dd.c (warn_partial_read): New static var.
(iread): Diagnose partial reads if needed.
(iwrite): Don't diagnose them here; not needed any more.
(scanargs): Determine whether partial reads should be diagnosted.
* src/dd.c (FFS_MASK): A new macro (Find First Set) refactored
from the following enum as it's now used twice.
(usage): Mention the new 'nocache' flag.
(cache_round): A new function to help ignore requests
to drop cache, that are less than page_size.
(invalidate_cache): A new function to call posix_fadvise()
with the appropriate offset and length. Note we don't
use fdadvise() so we can detect errors when count=0.
(dd_copy): Call invalidate_cache() for the portions read.
(iwrite): Likewise for the portions written.
(main): Call invalidate_cache for page_size slop or
for full file when count=0.
* cfg.mk (sc_dd_O_FLAGS): Adjust to pass.
* doc/coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Describe the 'nocache' flag,
and give some examples of how it can be used.
* tests/dd/nocache: A new test.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* doc/coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Clarify that bs= can
cause parital reads to be immediately written to output.
* src/dd.c (usage): Hint that bs= can cause partial writes.
See http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=8171
* src/dd.c (usage): Move 'sync' up with other data transformation
options. Having it alongside 'fsync' and 'fdatasync' is
particularly confusing. Also the double line description of
the 'sync' option, serves as a visual break from the "flag"
type options that follow.
* doc/coreutils.texi (dd invocation): Apply the same grouping
as above, by splitting the "conv=" table in two.
An alternative to this is to auto enable iflag=fullblock
when oflag=direct and bs= is specified.
It was thought better though, to warn about the specific issue,
and give full control of dd's options to the user.
* src/dd.c (iwrite): Warn, when we write after having
disabled O_DIRECT.
See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=614605
* src/du.c (main): Fail on AI_ERR_READ error, rather than merely
diagnosing and continuing. Based on a patch by Stefan Vargyas.
Also move the handling of AI_ERR_EOF into the case stmt.
Do not report ferror/fclose(stdin) failure when we've
already diagnosed e.g., failure to read the DIR, above.
Bug introduced by 2008-11-24 commit 031e2fb5, "du: read and
process --files0-from= input a name at a time,".
* src/wc.c: Handle read failure as with du: do not exit
immediately, but rather go on to print any total and to clean-up.
As above, move the handling of AI_ERR_EOF into the case stmt.
* tests/du/files0-from-dir: New file, to test both du and wc.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/wc.c (main): Diagnose failed argv_iter_init_* failure,
rather than falling through and dereferencing NULL.
Bug introduced by 2008-11-25 commit c2e56e0d,
"wc: read and process --files0-from= input a name at a time,".
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: Move the PERL check to the top,
since we don't test anything without it. In the loop,
don't use skip_test_ as it exits the test completely.
There was an execution path by which "libstdbuf" could be used after
being freed, but that would happen only if there were no libstdbuf.so
alongside the stdbuf program and there had been an installation error
leading to absence of the file, PKGLIBDIR/libstdbuf.so.
* src/stdbuf.c (set_LD_PRELOAD): Rearrange loop to make it perfectly
clear that there is no possibility of use-after-free.
Steve Grubb reported this possible use-after-free of "libstdbuf".
* src/uptime.c (print_uptime): Omit unnecessary "#if defined
HAVE_GETLOADAVG || defined C_GETLOADAVG". This #if is always
true, and removing it will help us simplify the gnulib getloadavg
module.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: Check for fiemap support against a file
rather than a directory to enable tests on BTRFS for example.
Explicity disable the test on ext3 or file systems where we
can't determine the type.
* tests/cp/fiemap-perf: Likewise. Also disable the test on older
BTRFS (like in Fedora 14), where extents are returned for holes.
* tests/init.cfg: Comment that BTRFS only supports fiemap
for regular files.
Don't depend on heuristics to detect sparse files
if fiemap is available. Also don't scan for new
holes unless --sparse=always has been specified.
* src/copy.c (extent_copy): Pass the user specified
sparse mode, and handle as described above.
Do not run a sub-make to set up the environment for each
and every test script. Instead, run it just once and store
the result in a file.
* tests/check.mk (built_programs): Remove definition.
(.built-programs): New rule to create the temporary file.
(CLEANFILES): Arrange to remove it.
(TESTS_ENVIRONMENT): Simply cat .built-programs, rather than
running the sub-make.
* .gitignore: Ignore it.
* tests/cp/fiemap-2: Enable the fiemap check for files, which
will enable the test for files on ext3.
* tests/cp/fiemap-perf: Comment why we're not enabling for ext3.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: Ditto. Also sync the files before
doing a fiemap which was needed for ext4 loop back at least.
Add a comment that FIEMAP_FLAG_SYNC is ineffective, thus
requiring the explicit syncs.
* tests/fiemap-capable: A new python script to determine
if a specified path supports fiemap.
* tests/init.cfg (fiemap_capable_): Use the new python script.
* tests/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Include the new python script.
This is required for patch, and hence is about to move to gnulib.
* gl/lib/di-set.c (di_set_lookup): New function.
* gl/lib/di-set.h: Declare it.
* gl/tests/test-di-set.c (main): Exercise it.
The bug was introduced on 2004-12-04 via commit 7380cf79.
* src/cut.c (set_fields): When computing the maximum range endpoint,
take into consideration the start of any unbounded range, like "999-".
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* tests/misc/cut (big-unbounded-b,c,f): Add tests.
Reported by Paul Marinescu in http://debbugs.gnu.org/7993
The bug was introduced on 2004-12-04 via commit 7380cf79.
Upon failed lseek, sparse_copy_finalize would mistakenly return true.
Admittedly, that is very unlikely, since that particular lseek
is attempted only if the preceding call to sparse_copy induced
a hole at EOF (via lseek on the destination FD). However, now
that sparse_copy has an output parameter, N_READ, there is no
longer any reason to call lseek (fd, 0, SEEK_CUR), so...
* src/copy.c (sparse_copy_finalize): Remove the function.
(copy_reg): Call ftruncate with n_read, rather than
sparse_copy_finalize with its now-unnecessary lseek.
Lasse Collin spotted the bug in sparse_copy_finalize.
This case was overlooked in commit bdde34f9, 2010-08-05,
"sort: tune and refactor --debug code, and fix minor underlining bug"
* src/sort.c (debug_key): Don't adjust the key end when
it's before the key start.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: Add a test case.
* tests/cp/fiemap-perf: Correct erroneous added test.
Since nonexistent names were used, the final test ended up
being "test =", which would always "succeed".
* src/copy.c (write_zeros): This bug caused 4 or 8 bytes to
be written at a time which is very inefficient. One could
trigger the issue with `cp --sparse=never sparse non-sparse`
on a file system that supports fiemap.
The recent FIEMAP-related changes made it so the unusual case of
copying a sparse file to a non-regular destination (e.g., a pipe)
would erroneously write one byte too many to that destination.
That happened because extent_copy assumed that it could use lseek
to obtain the number of bytes written to the output file descriptor.
That was valid only for regular files.
* src/copy.c (sparse_copy): Add a parameter, to be used by extent_copy,
but not by reg_copy. Adjust callers.
(extent_copy): Maintain new local, dest_pos, using new arg, n_read.
Don't call lseek on dest_fd; use new var, dest_pos, instead.
(copy_reg): Add unused arg.
* tests/cp/fiemap-perf: Copy block-comparing code from sparse-fiemap.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: The same test was here, alongside a much
more involved test. Remove it, now that it is in its own file.
Don't use "#ifdef EINTR". dd.c has been doing that since 2004.
* src/copy.c (sparse_copy): Remove #ifdef...#endif around EINTR use.
* src/tee.c (tee_files): Remove #ifdef...#endif around EINTR use.
If we need it, add something like this in system.h:
/* When EINTR is not defined, define it to an improbable value
so that each use does not have to be #ifdef'd. */
#ifndef EINTR
# define EINTR 999988
#endif
* src/copy.c (extent_copy): Before this change, extent_copy would fail
to create holes, thus breaking --sparse=auto and --sparse=always.
I.e., copying a large enough file of all zeros, cp --sparse=always
should introduce a hole, but with extent_copy, it would not.
we're going to have to use it from within extent_copy, too.
* src/copy.c (sparse_copy): New function, factored out of...
(copy_reg): ...here.
Remove now-unused locals.
* src/copy.c (extent_copy): Don't let what should have been a
temporary reduction of buf_size (to handle a short ext_len) become
permanent and thus impact the performance of all further iterations.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Move use of extent_scan to just *after*
we allocate the main copying buffer, so we can...
(extent_scan): Take a new parameter, BUF, and use that rather
than allocating a private buffer. Update caller.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Rename a variable to make more sense from
caller's perspective: s/require_normal_copy/normal_copy_required/.
This is an output-only variable, and the original name could make
it look like an input (or i&o) variable.
so that we benefit from using extents also when reading a sparse
input file with --sparse=never.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Remove erroneous test of "make_holes"
so that we call extent_copy also when make_holes is false.
Otherwise, what's the point of that parameter?
* src/extent-scan.h [struct extent_scan]: Rename member:
s/hit_last_extent/hit_final_extent/. "final" is clearer,
since "last" can be interpreted as "preceding".
Rename extent-scan functions to start with extent_scan_.
* src/Makefile.am (copy_sources): Also distribute extent-scan.h.
* src/extent-scan.c: Don't include error.h or quote.h. Neither is used.
* src/copy.c: shorten a comment to fit in 80 columns
* src/extent-scan.c, src/extent-scan.h: Correct formatting.
* src/copy.c (write_zeros): Add comments.
(extent_copy): Move decls of "ok" and "i" down to scope where used.
Adjust comments.
Rename local: s/holes_len/hole_size/
Print a diagnostic upon failure to write zeros.
Changes:
========
1. fix write_zeros() per Jim's comments.
2. remove char const *fname from struct extent_scan.
3. change the signature of open_extent_scan() from
"void open_extent_scan(struct extent_scan **scan)" to
"void open_extent_scan(struct extent_scan *scan)" to avoid having
to malloc the extent_scan variable; instead save it on the stack.
4. move close_extent_scan() from a function defined in extent-scan.c
to extent-scan.h as a macro definition, but it does nothing for now,
since initial extent scan defined at stack.
5. add a macro "free_extents_info()" defined at extent-scan.h to
release the memory allocated to extent info which should be called
combine with get_extents_info(), it just one line, so IMHO, define
it as macro should be ok.
* src/extent-scan.c: New file; functions to read "extents".
* src/extent-scan.h: Header file of extent-scan.c.
* src/Makefile.am: Reference it and link it to copy_source.
* src/copy.c: Use the new functions and avoid double-free.
* src/copy.c (fiemap_copy): Ensure that our fiemap buffer
is large enough and well-aligned.
Replace "0LL" with equivalent "0" as 3rd argument to lseek.
* src/copy.c (fiemap_copy): Rename from fiemap_copy_ok.
Add/improve comments.
Remove local, "fail".
(fiemap_copy): Do not require caller to set
"normal_copy_required" before calling fiemap_copy.
Report ioctl failure if it's the 2nd or subsequent call.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: Ensure that a file with many extents
(more than fit in copy.c's internal buffer) is copied properly.
Don't require root access if current partition is btrfs or xfs.
Use init.sh, not test-lib.sh.
* tests/filefrag-extent-compare: New file.
* tests/cp/sparse-fiemap: Add a new test for FIEMAP-copy against a
loopbacked ext4 partition.
* tests/Makefile.am (sparse-fiemap): Reference the new test.
* src/fiemap.h: Add fiemap.h for fiemap ioctl(2) support. Copied
from linux's include/linux/fiemap.h, with minor formatting changes.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Now, when `cp' is invoked with --sparse=[WHEN],
we will try to do FIEMAP-copy if the underlying file system
supports it, and fall back to a normal copy if it fails.
* doc/coreutils.texi (cut invocation): Remove the tr -s '[:blank:]'
example, as it doesn't handle leading and trailing blanks. Add `awk`
examples for common field processing operations often asked about.
Also document a `join` hack, to achieve the same thing. Note the
join options are ordered so as to be compatible with other systems.
This allows one to use join as a field extractor like:
join -a1 -o 1.3,1.1 - /dev/null
* src/join.c (join): Don't flag unpairable lines when
one of the files is empty.
* tests/misc/join: Add a new test for empty input, and adjust
a previous test that was only checking against empty input.
* doc/coreutils.texi (join invocation): Document the change.
* NEWS: Likewise.
Lines with a different number of fields than the first line,
will be truncated or padded.
* src/join.c (prfields): A new function refactored from prjoin(),
to output all but the join field.
(prjoin): Don't swap line1 and line2 when line1 is blank
so that the padding is applied to the right place.
(main): Handle the -o 'auto' option.
* tests/misc/join: Add 6 new cases to test the auto format.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
Suggestion from Assaf Gordon
Those were useful when tests might have been run in the same
directory and in parallel. Now, each test is run in a newly-
created empty directory.
* tests/cp/backup-1: Remove obsolete uses of "$$".
* tests/cp/same-file: Likewise.
* tests/dd/misc: Likewise.
* tests/mv/part-symlink: Likewise.
* tests/mv/to-symlink: Likewise.
* tests/touch/fail-diag: Likewise.
There was a non-negligible delay after running a single test.
Now, you'll know why when you see this test's name.
* tests/check.mk (vc_exe_in_TESTS): Don't @-hide commands.
Use $(AM_V_GEN) instead.
* tests/du/move-dir-while-traversing: Ignoring SIGTSTP is enough;
don't also attempt to ignore SIGSTOP, it cannot be handled or ignored.
Spotted by Andreas Schwab.
* tests/du/move-dir-while-traversing: Create an even larger tree
to avoid a false-positive failure due to du terminating before
the rename is triggered.
* src/tail.c (fremote): Do not print a diagnostic when
fstatfs (pipe_FD, &buf) fails, as it now does on linux-2.3.38.
This avoids the spurious failure of tests/misc/tail's f-pipe-1
test, when running in input-from-pipe mode.
The previous gnulib submodule reference was *still* to a
non-public commit. My submodule had a stray commit, so
the reference was always to a local merge commit.
Reported by Rob Vermaas.
* src/uniq.c (find_field): Remove the byte-skipping loop altogether.
Instead, perform the simple calculation. This results in a 10%
performance improvement for large byte offsets.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/uniq.c (find_field): Stop processing loop when end of line
is reached. Before this fix, 'uniq -f 10000000000 /etc/passwd'
would run for a very long time.
* doc/coreutils.texi (tr's Character sets): Document how a 9-bit
octal value is interpreted. tr does not ignore the ninth bit.
(echo invocation, printf invocation): Document that any ninth
bit in \OOO is ignored. (http://debbugs.gnu.org/7574)
* bootstrap.conf: Add the read-file module
* src/ptx.c: Replace the original code which would
needlessly read SIZE_MAX bytes of files larger than this.
* src/shuf.c: Replace the original code.
* src/system.h: Note where it should be included, and
make ordering check portable to GLIBC > 2
* src/copy.c: Move <sys/ioctl.h> along with other system headers
as is done elsewhere.
* src/install.c: Move <sys/wait.h> along with other system headers
as is done elsewhere.
* src/ptx.c: Include <regex.h> rather than "regex.h" as
is done elsewhere. Note <regex.h> is kept after "system.h"
as per commit dba300a0.
* HACKING: Remove mention of "indent-tabs-mode: nil", since
we've remove all of those directives. No longer needed.
Remove dated (pre-emacs-23) reference regarding WhiteSpace mode.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/du.c (prev_level): Move declaration "up" to file-scope global.
(du_files): Reset prev_level to 0 upon abnormal fts_read termination.
Reported by Johathan Nieder in http://bugs.debian.org/609049
Also, improve a diagnostic.
* tests/du/move-dir-while-traversing: Test for the above.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
Before this change, we had a tendency to manually list each
contributor's name in THANKS. Now, each commit "Author" is
included in the generated THANKS file automatically, and most
of the old THANKS file is now a template, THANKS.in.
We'll still have to manually list the names of people who report
problems without a usable patch.
* THANKS.in: New file, derived from THANKS, but removing names of
those who are listed as git log 'Author:'s.
* THANKS: Remove file.
* thanks-gen: New file.
* Makefile.am (THANKS): New rule.
(EXTRA_DIST): Add .mailmap, THANKS.in and thanks-gen.
* .gitignore: Add THANKS and THANKS-to-translators.
* .mailmap: Unify on single address and name-spelling per contributor.
Commit 041c9c47 traded the 'gettext' module for the lighter 'gettext-h'
module, so as to not require the latest gettext release (we only need
the latest release if we ship gettext as a dependent library, but
coreutils has long preferred to use it as an external library).
But that commit overlooked two places necessary to allow the use of
gettext 0.17.
This does not force you to downgrade (using gettext 0.18.1.1 is still
just fine), nor does it affect tarballs (once a tarball is built
with a given gettext version, it can be built on other machines
regardless of what gettext version is present).
* bootstrap.conf (buildreq): Relax prerequisite.
* configure.ac (AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION): Likewise.
* src/split.c (set_suffix_length): Only auto-calculate
the suffix length when the number of files is specified.
* tests/misc/split-a: Add a case to trigger the bug,
and exercise the suffix length auto-calculation.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Reported by Dmitry V. Levin and Sergey Vlasov at
https://bugzilla.altlinux.org/show_bug.cgi?id=24841
* src/csplit.c (create_output_file): Detect overflow when the
file counter wraps around, and exit with a diagnostic. Formerly
the code silently wrapped around and wrote to the wrong file,
losing output data.
* src/getlimits.c (decimal_ascii_add): Remove, replacing with ...
(decimal_absval_add_one): New function, with different signature,
which does not assume ASCII. All callers changed.
(print_int): Remove assumptions that integers fit in 206 bits, and
that characters are ASCII. These assumptions are portable in
practice but are easy to remove here.
* tests/mv/i-3: Adjust comment to match just-changed code.
Spotted by Pádraig Brady.
* tests/init.cfg (retry_delay_): Correct spelling of function name
in usage example.
* gnulib-tests/Makefile.am (test_xvasprintf_CFLAGS):
(test_lock_CFLAGS, test_tls_CFLAGS): Avoid a syntax error when
$(WERROR_CFLAGS) expands to more than one token.
* gnulib-tests/Makefile.am (test_xvasprintf_CFLAGS):
(test_lock_CFLAGS, test_tls_CFLAGS): Do not append GCC-specific
flags like -Wno-format-security unless the GCC-specific flag
-Werror is also specified. This avoids a "make check" failure on
Solaris when using Sun C 5.8.
This prevents a compilation failure on Solaris 8, GCC 4.4.2, with
"configure --enable-gcc-warnings".
* src/who.c (MAXHOSTNAMELEN): Remove; no longer needed.
* src/pinky.c: Likewise.
* tests/init.sh (setup_): Initialize fail=0 before invoking mktempd_.
Ensure that IFS is defined initially.
(mktempd_): Remove fail=0 initialization; no longer needed.
* src/cp.c (do_copy): When -T is specified, initialize
the NEW_DST and SB variables, which are checked when
running: cp -T --force --backup file file
* tests/cp/backup-1: Add the -T case
* src/sort.c (main): If --parallel isn't specified,
restrict the number of threads to 8 by default.
If the --parallel option is specified, then
allow any number of threads to be set, independent
of the number of processors on the system.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Document the changes
to determining the number of threads to use.
Mention the memory overhead when using multiple threads.
* tests/misc/sort-spinlock-abuse: Allow single core
systems that support pthreads.
* tests/misc/sort-stale-thread-mem: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sort-unique-segv: Likewise.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behaviour.
Without this change, tests/misc/sort-compress-hang would consume
more than 10,000 process slots on my RHEL 5.5 x86-64 server,
making it likely for other applications to fail due to lack of
process slots. With this change, the same benchmark causes 'sort'
to consume at most 19 process slots. The change also improved
wall-clock time by 2% and user+system time by 14% on that benchmark.
* NEWS: Document this.
* src/sort.c (MAX_PROCS_BEFORE_REAP): Remove.
(reap_exited): Renamed from reap_some; this is a more accurate name,
since "some" incorrectly implies that it reaps at least one process.
All uses changed.
(reap_some): New function: it *does* reap at least one process.
(pipe_fork): Do not allow more than NMERGE + 2 subprocesses.
(mergefps, sort): Omit check for exited processes: no longer needed,
and anyway the code consumed too much CPU per line when 2 < nprocs.
* NEWS: Document this.
* src/sort.c (UNCOMPRESSED, UNREAPED, REAPED): New constants.
(struct tempnode): New member 'state', to hold these constants.
The pid member is now undefined if state == UNCOMPRESSED.
(struct sortfile): Replace member 'pid' with member 'temp'.
(uintptr): Remove.
(proctab_hasher, proctab_comparator, register_proc, delete_proc):
Proctab entries are now struct tempnode *, not pid_t, to handle
the case where multiple tempnode objects correspond to the same
pid. This avoids a race condition that can cause a hang.
(register_proc): Arg is now struct tempnode *, not pid_t. All
callers changed.
(delete_proc): Set tempnode state to REAPED.
(create_temp_file): No need to set pid member here; it's now
done when the pid is known.
(maybe_create_temp, create_temp): Remove PPID arg. Return struct
tempnode *, not char *. All callers changed.
(maybe_create_temp): Set node state to UNCOMPRESSED or UNREAPED.
No need to set node->pid to 0.
(open_temp): Replace NAME and PID args with a single TEMP arg.
All callers changed. Wait only for unreaped children.
(zaptemp): Wait for decompressor to finish before removing its
temporary-file input. This avoids .nfsXXXX hassles with NFS
and fixes a race (leading to a hang) regardless of NFS.
(open_input_files): Adjust to new way of dealing with temp files
and their subprocesses.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/sort-compress-hang.
* tests/misc/sort-compress-hang: New file.
* NEWS: Document this.
* src/sort.c (avoid_trashing_input): The previous fix to this
function didn't fix all the problems with this code. Replace it
with something simpler: just copy the input file. This doesn't
change the number of files, so return void instead of the updated
file count. Caller changed.
* tests/misc/sort-merge-fdlimit: Test for the bug.
Those options are useful only on systems that lack inotify support
and in the unusual event that a system with inotify support must
resort to polling.
* src/tail.c (usage): Note that the --max-unchanged-stats=N and
--sleep-interval=N options are rarely useful on systems with
inotify support.
* doc/coreutils.texi (tail invocation): Likewise.
* src/sort.c (avoid_trashing_input): Fix a typo that could cause a
buffer overrun in theory. In practice this is extremely unlikely,
as it requires running out of file descriptors in a small merge,
presumably because some other process is hogging all the OS's file
descriptors.
* tests/check.mk (TESTS_ENVIRONMENT): Default TMPDIR to /tmp,
rather than to the working directory; this is more common in
practice, which makes the tests more real-worldish; and it is
often faster. Also, it avoids some problems with NFS cleanups.
* tests/misc/sort-compress: Remove unnecessary code setting TMPDIR.
* tests/misc/sort-compress-proc: Likewise. Do the final sleep
only if TMPDIR is relative, which should be rarely given the
change to TESTS_ENVIRONMENT.
* src/sort.c (uintptr): New type.
(enum procstate, struct procnode, update_proc): Remove.
(proctab_hasher, proctab_comparator, register_proc, wait_proc):
(reap_some): The proctab is now simply a hash of process-IDs
rather than of pointers to objects with reference counts and
states; this is smaller and faster and easier to understand.
(nprocs): Now pid_t, not size_t, since one cannot have more than
PID_MAX children.
(reap): If the argument is -1, wait; if 0 (a new value), do not.
Delete pid from proctab as needed. Ignore children that are not
in proctab, as they are from the program that exec'ed us and are
irrelevant to our success or failure.
(delete_proc, reap_all): New functions.
(open_temp): Register the child.
(sort): Clean up all children afterwards; without this patch,
'sort' sometimes missed failures in children due to race conditions.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/sort-compress-proc.
* tests/misc/sort-compress-proc: New file, to test for the
bugs fixed above.
* tests/misc/sort-stale-thread-mem: Don't initialize fail=0 here;
that is done in init.sh. This avoids a syntax-check failure.
Invoke "Exit $fail" at end, too.
Mark as a very expensive test.
This change does not fix the actual bug. That was done by commit
c9db0ac6, "sort: preallocate merge tree nodes to heap". The fix
was to store each "node" structure on the heap, not on the stack.
Otherwise, a node from one thread's stack could be used in another
thread after the first thread had expired (via pthread_join).
This bug was very hard to trigger when using spinlocks, but
easier once we began using mutexes.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
For details, see http://debbugs.gnu.org/7597.
* src/sort.c (specify_nthreads, merge_tree_init, init_node):
(queue_init, sortlines, struct thread_args, sort, main):
Use size_t, not unsigned long int, for thread counts, since thread
counts are now used to compute sizes.
(specify_nthreads): Check for size_t overflow.
(merge_tree_init, sort): Shorten name of local variable, for
readability.
(merge_tree_init): Move constants next to each other in product,
so that the constant folding is easier to see.
(init_node): Now static. Add 'restrict' only where it might
be helpful for compiler optimization.
(queue_init): 2nd arg is now nthreads, not "reserve", which is
a bit harder to follow. All uses changed.
(struct thread_args): Rename lo_child to is_lo_child, so that
it's obvious to the reader when we're talking about this boolean
as opposed to the new lo_child member of the other structure.
All uses changed.
(sort): Remove unused local variable end_node.
(main): Don't allow large thread counts to cause undefined behavior
later, due to integer overflow.
* src/sort.c: (merge_tree_init) New function. Allocates memory for
merge tree nodes.
(merge_tree_destory) New function.
(init_node) New function.
(sortlines) Refactor node creation code to init_node. Remove now
superfluous arguments. All callers changed.
(sort) Initialize/destory merge tree. Refactor root node creation
to merge_tree_init.
Running a command like this on a multi-core system
sort < big-file | less
would peg all processors at near 100% utilization.
* src/sort.c: (struct merge_node) Change member lock to mutex.
All uses changed.
* tests/Makefile.am (XFAIL_TESTS): Remove definition, now that
this test passes once again. I.e., the sort-spinlock-abuse test
no longer fails.
* NEWS (Bug reports): Mention this.
Reported by DJ Lucas in http://debbugs.gnu.org/7489.
When -n l/N is used and long lines are present that both
span partitions and multiple buffers, one would get
inconsistent chunk sizes.
* src/split.c (main): Add a new undocumented ---io-blksize option
to support full testing with varied buffer sizes.
(cwrite): Refactor most handling of --elide-empty to here.
(bytes_split): Remove handling of --elide-empty.
(lines_chunk_split): Likewise. The specific issue here
was the first handling of elide_empty_files interfered
with the replenishing of the input buffer.
* test/misc/split-lchunk: Add -e and the new ---io-blksize
combinations to the test.
* tests/misc/sort-spinlock-abuse: On a busy system, with only 12
pauses of length 0.1 seconds, the buggy (busy-spinlock blocked)
sort would fail to accumulate 1 second of CPU time, and hence
would mistakenly pass. Increase from 12 to 50.
* src/sort.c (struct thread_args, sortlines_thread, sortlines, sort):
Rename "merge_queue" to "queue", for consistency with other functions
that just use the name "queue" for these things.
* src/sort.c (mergelines_node): Return void, not size_t. All
callers changed. Change *node->dest here, not in caller.
Do not change node->dest: it's not needed and could cause problems
on (mostly theoretical) hosts that do not allow adding integers to
null pointers.
(queue_check_insert_parent): Omit MERGED parameter; no longer needed.
All callers changed.
* src/sort.c (queue_check_insert, queue_check_insert_parent): Make
the queue arg first, for consistency with other functions such as
queue_insert that put the queue arg first. Rename from
check_insert and update_parent, respectively. All callers
changed.
* src/sort.c (struct merge_node): 'lock' is now the actual lock,
not a pointer to the lock; there's no need for indirection here.
Make 'level' unsigned int instead of size_t, since it is a
bit-shift count; also, move it next to a bool so that it's more
likely to take less space. All uses changed.
(sortlines, sort): Spell out initialization instead of using an
initializer. This makes the initializer a bit easier to understand,
and avoids unnecessary stores into the spin lock.
This problem was observed on RHEL 5.5 x86-64 when running as a
client of a NetApp FAS2050.
* tests/cp/cp-mv-backup: Don't leave a file descriptor open to
a file in a directory that will be cleaned up with "rm -rf".
Under NFS, when the rm unlinks that file, it is instead renamed
to .nfsXXXX and then rm cannot remove the parent directory,
and the test fails.
* tests/cp/same-file: Likewise.
* src/sort.c (MAX_MERGE): Avoid integer overflow when on a machine
with (say) 32-bit int and 64-bit size_t and when level == 15.
Without this fix, on such a machine with 32768 or more processors,
the level computation could overflow on large input, and this
would result in division by zero.
* src/sort.c (write_unique): Save the entire "struct line", not
just a pointer to one. Otherwise, with a multi-thread run,
sometimes, with some inputs, fillbuf would would win a race
and clobber a "saved->text" pointer in one thread just before
it was dereferenced in a comparison in another thread.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* README-valgrind: Include the "noinst" programs in
those wrapped by valgrind. Update $PATH in check.mk
rather than Makefile.am. Make wrapper scripts
work when suppressions not setup. Keep lines < 80 chars.
This patch was written by Jim Meyering and myself.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Turn EISDIR to ENOTDIR to improve the
quality of diagnostics for commands like "cp a nosuch/". Reported
by Марк Коренберг and Alan Curry in the thread starting at:
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-coreutils/2010-11/msg00178.html
* THANKS: Update.
* tests/mv/trailing-slash: Add a test.
* src/split.c (usage, long_options, main): New options --number,
--unbuffered, --elide-empty-files.
(set_suffix_length): New function to auto increase suffix length
to handle a specified number of files.
(create): New function. Refactored from cwrite() and ofile_open().
(bytes_split): Add max_files argument to support byte chunking.
(lines_chunk_split): New function. Split file into chunks of lines.
(bytes_chunk_extract): New function. Extract a chunk of file.
(of_info): New struct. Used by functions lines_rr and ofile_open
to keep track of file descriptors associated with output files.
(ofile_open): New function. Shuffle file descriptors when there
are more output files than available file descriptors.
(lines_rr): New function to distribute lines round-robin to files.
(chunk_parse): New function. Parses K/N syntax.
* tests/misc/split-bchunk: New test for byte chunking.
* tests/misc/split-lchunk: New test for line delimited chunking.
* tests/misc/split-rchunk: New test for round-robin chunking.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference new tests.
* tests/misc/split-fail: Add failure scenarios for new options.
* tests/misc/split-l: Fix a typo. s/ln/split/.
* doc/coreutils.texi (split invocation): Document --number.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* .mailmap: Map new email address for shortlog.
Signed-off-by: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>
* NEWS: Describe patch.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add ftoastr.
* src/od.c: Include ftoastr.h, not float.h.
(FLT_DIG, DBL_DIG): Remove. No need to verify LDBL_DIG.
(FMT_BYTES_ALLOCATED): No need to worry about floating point now,
since this format is no longer used for floating point.
(PRINT_FIELDS): New macro, with most of the guts of the old PRINT_TYPE.
(PRINT_TYPE): Rewrite to use PRINT_FIELDS.
(PRINT_FLOATTYPE): New macro. This uses the new functions from
ftoastr.
(print_float, print_double, print_long_double): Reimplement
using PRINT_FLOATTYPE.
(decode_one_format): Calculate field widths based on ftoastr-supplied
macros.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/od-float.
* tests/misc/od-float: New file.
Initially, I did this,
git grep -l srcdir/test-lib.sh|xargs perl -p0i -e '~180-byte script'
but that line would have been much longer than the maximum permitted
by coreutils' commit hook, and wasn't readable besides, so here's a
more readable version:
lhs=$(printf '%s\\n' \
'if test "$VERBOSE" = yes; then' \
' set -x' \
' touch --version' \
'fi' \
'' \
'. $srcdir/test-lib.sh' \
| sed 's/\$/\\\$/g;s/touch/(\\w+)/')
rhs=$(printf '%s\\n' \
'. "${srcdir=.}/init.sh"; path_prepend_ ../src' \
'test "$VERBOSE" = yes && FIXME --version' \
| sed 's/\$/\\\$/g;s/FIXME/\$1/')
git grep -l srcdir/test-lib.sh|xargs perl -p0i -e "s,$lhs,$rhs,"
src/truncate.c (main): Use a bool to store if an error occurred,
rather than an int, to protect against overflow.
(do_ftruncate): Likewise. Also change 0/false to mean failure
rather than success.
... when configured with the --enable-gcc-warnings option.
This follows on from commit 34ef0a01, 2010-10-14,
"sort: fix unportable cast of unsigned char * -> char *"
* configure.ac: -Wall implicitly enables this warning
so remove the explicit disabling.
* gl/modules/fadvise-tests: Add the module previously missed
in commit 63b5e816, 2010-07-14, "fadvise: new module ...".
* gl/tests/test-fadvise.c: Add a comment as to why we don't
check return values.
* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Add sentence-ending period.
* NEWS: Correct stat change description: s/floating point //.
* cfg.mk (old_NEWS_hash): Update, to match this NEWS change.
Also, do the following to avoid "make syntax-check" failure
induced by new rules.
* .x-sc_bindtextdomain: Exempt files with an #ifdef'd "main".
* Makefile.am: Add this file.
The implementation of variable-precision time stamps relied
on heuristics that made the output subtly nondeterministic,
or at least hard to reproduce:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/21531/focus=21538
So, for now at least, we're removing that feature.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Remove fstimeprec.
* gl/lib/fstimeprec.c, gl/lib/fstimeprec.h: Remove files.
* gl/modules/fstimeprec, gl/modules/fstimeprec-tests: Likewise.
* gl/tests/test-fstimeprec.c: Remove file.
* doc/coreutils.texi (csplit invocation): Say that %d and %i are
aliases for %u.
* src/csplit.c (FLAG_THOUSANDS, FLAG_ALTERNATIVE): New constants.
(get_format_flags): Now take char const * and int * and return
size_t. It now stores info about the flags instead of merely
scanning them. Also, it handles '0' correctly. Drop support for
the undocumented '+' and ' ' flags since the value is unsigned.
Add support for the (undocumented) "'" flag. All uses changed.
(get_format_width, get_format_prec): Remove.
(check_format_conv_type): Renamed from get_format_conv_type, with
a different signature. It now converts the format to one that is
compatible with unsigned int, and checks flags. All uses changed.
(max_out): Have snprintf compute the number of bytes needed rather
than attempting to do it ourselves (which doesn't work portably
with outlandish formats such as %4294967296d).
(check_format_conv_type, main): Check for overflow in size
calculations. Don't assume size_t fits in unsigned int.
* tests/misc/csplit: Check for proper handling of flags, with
%0#6.3x. Coreutils 8.6 mishandles this somewhat-weird example.
* src/csplit.c (free_buffer): Also free the line offsets buffers
(remove_line): Also free the containing structure
* tests/misc/csplit-heap: A new test to trigger with leaks of
this magnitude.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test
* NEWS: Mention the fix
Reported by David Hofstee
Without this fix, seq 1000 | csplit - /./ '{*}' would write
the NUL-terminated file name, xx1000, into a buffer of size 6.
* src/csplit.c (main): Use properly sized file name buffer.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* tests/misc/csplit-1000: New test to trigger the bug.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/csplit-1000.
* tests/mv/i-3: Adjust so that the symlink is resolved
before redirecting to the background command, as otherwise
the stdin descriptor passed to the command will fail the
isatty() or ttyname() test.
because dash-0.5.6-2.fc14.x86_64 would also be disqualified.
This reverts part of yesterday's commit 6c058b2d, "tests: avoid
failure due to bug in FreeBSD 8.1's /bin/sh". Note that the offending
aspect of those shells is not officially a bug, since "local" is not
specified by POSIX. However, it is very unintuitive that prepending
"local" to an existing, standards-compliant assignment would evoke
such a fundamental change in semantics.
* tests/init.sh: Remove snippet requiring sane "local" support.
Upstream dash bug report:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.shells.dash/419
* src/stat.c (digits, printf_flags): New static vars.
(make_format): New function.
(out_string, out_int, out_uint, out_uint_o, out_uint_x):
(out_minus_zero): Use it to avoid undefined behavior when invoking
printf.
(print_it): Check for invalid conversion specifications such as
%..X and %1-X, which would otherwise rely on undefined behavior
when invoking printf.
* tests/misc/stat-nanoseconds: Check that the "I" printf flag
doesn't mess up in the C locale, as it formerly did on non-GNU
hosts.
* tests/init.sh: Arrange not to accept FreeBSD 8.1's /bin/sh, since
it fails this test: /bin/sh -c 'f(){ local s=$IFS; test -n "$s"; }; f'
* tests/init.cfg (sanitize_path_): Stop-gap measure to work around
a bug in FreeBSD 8.1's /bin/sh. We'll un-do this change once all
300+ tests use init.sh.
* NEWS: Document this.
* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Likewise.
* gl/lib/fstimeprec.c, gl/lib/fstimeprec.h, gl/modules/fstimeprec:
* gl/modules/fstimeprec-tests, gl/tests/test-fstimeprec.c:
New files.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add fstimeprec.
* src/stat.c: Include fstimeprec.h. Don't include xstrtol.h.
(decimal_point, decimal_point_len): New static vars.
(main): Initialize them.
(epoch_sec, out_ns): Remove.
(out_int, out_uint): Now returns whatever printf returned.
(out_minus_zero, out_epoch_secs): New functions.
(print_stat): Use out_epoch_sec instead of out_ns and epoch_sec.
(print_stat, print_it, usage): Remove the %:X-style formats.
* tests/misc/stat-nanoseconds: Set TZ=UTC0 to avoid problems
with weird time zones. Use a time stamp near the Epoch so that we
don't have to worry about leap seconds. Redo test cases to match
new behavior.
* tests/touch/60-seconds: Change %Y.%:Y to %.9Y, to adjust to
new behavior.
This reverts part of the recent commit 9069af45,
"stat: print timestamps to full resolution", which made %X, %Y, %Z
print floating point numbers. We prefer to retain portability of
%X, %Y and %Z uses, while still providing access to full-resolution
time stamps via modified format strings. Also make the new
%W consistent.
* src/stat.c: Include "xstrtol.h".
(print_it): Accept a new %...:[XYZ] format directive,
e.g., %:X, to print the nanoseconds portion of the corresponding time.
For example, %3.3:Y prints the zero-padded, truncated, milliseconds
part of the time of last modification.
(print_it): Update print_func signature to match.
(neg_to_zero): New helper function.
(epoch_time): Remove function; replace with...
(epoch_sec): New function; use timetostr.
(out_ns): New function. Use "09" only when no other modifier
is specified.
(print_statfs): Change type of "m" to unsigned int,
now that it must accommodate values larger than 255.
(print_stat): Likewise.
Map :X to a code of 'X' + 256. Likewise for Y, Z and W.
(usage): Update.
* tests/touch/60-seconds: Use %Y.%:Y in place of %Y.
* tests/misc/stat-nanoseconds: New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention this.
With improvements by Pádraig Brady.
Thanks to Andreas Schwab for raising the issue.
* tests/ls/stat-free-symlinks: strace currently outputs an
informational message about arch difference to stdout.
Therefore we need to strip that before comparison.
* doc/coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Change the description slightly
so as users might not immediately discount using this option.
Mention that --reflink is overridden by the other linking options and
--attributes-only, and give an example where this might be useful.
* src/copy.c (copy_internal): Bypass the reflink if
--attributes-only is specifed.
* tests/cp/reflink-perm: Ensure both --reflink modes are
overridden by --attributes-only.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
Reported by Jim Meyering.
src/tail.c (main): As an optimization, don't bother checking
for stdin or remote files, when ---disable-inotify is specified.
To improve the fix in commit 61b77891, set the disable_inotify
flag when we fall back to polling, so that we recheck remote files.
NEWS: Mention the fix
* src/du.c (show_date): Fix call to fputs with a buffer that
contains some uninitialized data.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add du/big-timestamp.
* tests/du/bigtime: New file, which checks for the bug.
And remove the now-superfluous totals from the other two warnings,
so the plurals will also work in other languages than English.
* src/md5sum.c (digest_check): Change as above.
* tests/misc/md5sum (check-quiet2): Adjust accordingly.
* gnulib: Update to latest for warning-free tests.
* gnulib-tests/Makefile.am (AM_CFLAGS): Uncomment $(WERROR_CFLAGS),
now that these tests are warning-free.
* tests/misc/sort-float: On systems with DBL_MIN < LDBL_MIN,
this test would fail because the expected output was not sorted.
Detect that case, and if needed, reverse those two values.
* src/fold.c (fold_file): Apply fadvise to istream, not stdin.
This bug would have inhibited the fadvise optimization when not
reading from standard input.
* src/sort.c (key_warnings): Local buffer should be of size
INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND (uintmax_t), not INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND (sword).
This bug was discovered by running 'make check' on a 32-bit
Solaris 8 sparc host, using Sun cc. I saw several other instances
of invoking umaxtostr on a buffer declared to be of size
INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND (VAR), and these instances should at some point
be replaced by INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND (uintmax_t) too, as that's a
less error-prone style.
* tests/misc/ls-misc (push_ls_colors): Don't assume LS_COLORS
is set. This part of the fix is by Jim Meyering.
(sl-dangle2, sl-dangle3, sl-dangle4, sl-dangle5): Don't assume
that newly-created files will have time stamps in the past. They
might not, due to clock skew, if the file systems are remote.
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/21322/focus=21346
* src/install.c (extra_mode): Don't assign ~S_IRWXUGO & ~S_IFMT
to a mode_t variable, as the number might be too big to fit.
Solaris 10 cc warns about this, and the C standard says it
has undefined behavior.
* gl/lib/mbsalign.c: Include <stdint.h> for SIZE_MAX.
Use SIZE_MAX rather than (size_t) -1, to avoid warning for
"size_t x = -1" on Solaris 10 cc.
* gl/modules/mbsalign (Depends-on): Add stdint.
* src/sort.c (fold_toupper): Change this back from char to
unsigned char, fixing a portability issue introduced in commit
59e2e55d0f dated February 26, as the
C Standard doesn't let you convert from unsigned char * to char *
without a cast, and the (in theory more portable) style here is to
convert char values, not pointer values.
(getmonth): Convert char to unsigned char when needed for
comparison.
* configure.ac (GNULIB_WARN_CFLAGS): Define new variable, for use
in gnulib-tests.
* gnulib-tests/Makefile.am: Disable specific -W___ options,
but only for a few specific offending tests:
(test_xvasprintf_CFLAGS): Define.
(test_lock_CFLAGS, test_tls_CFLAGS): Define.
* src/tail.c (tail_forever_inotify): Handle the case where
tail --follow=name with inotify, is not able to add a watch on
a specified directory. This may happen due to inotify resource
limits or if the directory is currently missing or inaccessible.
In all these cases, revert to polling which will try to reopen
the file later. Note inotify returns ENOSPC when it runs out
of resources, and instead we report a particular error message,
lest users think one of their file systems is full.
(main): Document another caveat with using inotify, where we
currently don't recheck directories recreated after the
initial watch is setup.
* tests/tail-2/F-vs-rename: Fix the endless loop triggered by
the above issue.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-hash-abuse: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/wait: Don't fail in the resource exhaustion case.
* tests/tail-2/F-vs-missing: A new test for this failure mode
which was until now just triggered on older buggy linux kernels
which returned ENOSPC constantly from inotify_add_watch().
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
The bug was introduced with commit 23f6d41f, 19-02-2003.
* src/split.c (bytes_split, lines_split, line_bytes_split):
Correctly check the return from full_read().
* tests/misc/split-fail: Ensure split fails when
it can't read its input.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* src/stat.c (print_statfs, usage): Drop %C, since it applies to
files, not file systems.
(out_file_context): Match style of other out_* functions.
(print_stat): Update caller.
* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Document %C.
* NEWS: Document the change.
* src/stat.c (default_format): Don't print SELinux context
when in file system (-f) mode, as the context is associated
with the file, not the file system.
Fix logic inversion, so that in terse mode, %C is included
only when is_selinux_enabled and not vice versa.
This touches all new tests added since commit b062bbd9, when
init.cfg was added. Older tests still exist that could use
conversion, but we can address those later.
* tests/sample-test: Restore hint for --version output.
* tests/misc/stat-birthtime: Include --version if verbose.
* tests/misc/tr-case-class: Likewise.
* tests/misc/stat-mount: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sort-unique: Likewise.
* tests/misc/sort-benchmark-random: Likewise.
Suggested by Jim Meyering.
Yes, this patch intentionally leaks the results of default_format(),
since it is called only twice, and since the results are in scope
until main() exits. Not worth the extra code to pacify valgrind.
* src/stat.c (main): Hoist default format computation out of loop.
(do_statfs, do_stat): Move default format generation...
(default_format): ...into new function. Allocate the result in
pieces, rather than repeating mostly-similar chunks. Allow
translation of verbose format. Pass a second format to do_stat,
for the one aspect of the default format that is conditional on
file type.
* NEWS: Document the translation aspect.
* src/stat.c (epoch_time): New function.
(print_stat): Use it for %[WXYZ].
* NEWS: Document this.
* tests/touch/60-seconds: Adjust test to match.
* tests/misc/stat-birthtime: Likewise.
This module may be moved to gnulib at some stage,
so keep it C89 compatible.
* gl/lib/mbsalign.c (mbsalign): Declare variables at start of scope
(ambsalign): Likewise
* gl/lib/mbsalign.h: Remove trailing comma from enum
Reported by Andrei Suhan
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention the du-exclude--vs--cycle-dir fix.
Reported by Graham Cobb in http://bugs.debian.org/598438,
that bug was fixed by the 2010-07-24 commit, 77428214f,
"du: tune, and fix some -L bugs with dangling or cyclic symlinks"
This valid translation spec aborted:
LC_ALL=en_US.iso-8859-1 tr '[:upper:]- ' '[:lower:]_'
This invalid translation spec aborted:
LC_ALL=en_US.iso-8859-1 tr '[:upper:] ' '[:lower:]'
This was caused by commit 6efd1046, 05-01-2008,
"Avoid tr case-conversion failure in some locales"
This misaligned conversion spec was allowed:
LC_ALL=C tr 'A-Y[:lower:]' 'a-z[:upper:]'
This was caused by commit af5d0c36, 21-10-2007,
"tr: do not reject an unmatched [:lower:] or [:upper:] in SET1"
This misaligned spec was allowed by extending the class:
LC_ALL=C tr '[:upper:] ' '[:lower:]'
* src/tr.c (validate_case_classes): A new function to check
alignment of case conversion classes. Also it adjusts the
length of the sets so that locales with different numbers of
upper and lower case characters, don't cause issues.
(string2_extend): Disallow extending the case conversion
class as in the above example. That is locale dependent
and most likely not what the user wants.
(validate): Do the simple test for "restricted" char classes
earlier, so we don't redundantly do more expensive validation.
(main): Remove the case class validation, and simplify.
* tests/misc/tr-case-class: A new test to test the various
alignment and locale issues, associated with case conversion.
* tests/misc/tr: Move case conversion tests to new tr-case-class.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fixes.
* src/sort.c (sortlines, sort): Use pthread_spin_destroy when a
spin lock is no longer used. This isn't needed on GNU/Linux or
Solaris, but POSIX says it may free up resources on some platforms.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: Don't depend on
printf supporting \xhh format, which isn't supported
by dash for example. Also change from double quoted
strings to single quoted, when we don't need any
variable interpolation.
* tests/misc/stat-mount: Don't try to correlate the
mount points output by df and stat, as they're similar,
but sometimes different in the presence of bind mounts.
* doc/coretuils.texi (stat invocation): Clarify the
bind mount difference between stat and df.
With it, we can remove the two sole tests of HAVE_TERMIOS_H.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add termios.
* src/ls.c: Don't test HAVE_TERMIOS_H.
* src/stty.c: Likewise.
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (gl_CHECK_ALL_TYPES): Remove configure-time
test for termios.h.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Use calloc-gnu, malloc-gnu
and realloc-gnu modules, rather than calloc, malloc and realloc.
The shorter-named modules are now deprecated.
(obsolete_gnulib_modules): Remove.
(gnulib_modules): Remove raise, strbprk; they're obsolete, too.
Move strtod, strtol here, from obsolete_gnulib_modules.
* tests/init.cfg (retry_delay_): Describe
the backoff method used.
* tests/ls/readdir-mountpoint-inode: Add a timeout
to the stat call to eliminate the chance of hangups.
* tests/mv/i-3: Change the timeout required to pass
from 1 second to a range of .1s - 3.1s.
* tests/rm/dangling-symlink: Likewise.
All tests currently pass on NFS on Linux kernel 2.6.22 at least,
but some fail on 2.6.9, so we exclude those here.
* tests/init.cfg (is_local_dir_): A new function
returning if the specified directory is on a local file system.
(require_local_dir_): A new function to skip tests
if the current directory is not on a local file system.
* tests/cp/existing-perm-race: Skip if non local.
* tests/cp/file-perm-race: Likewise.
* tests/cp/parent-perm: Likewise.
* tests/cp/parent-perm-race: Likewise.
* tests/cp/preserve-2: Likewise.
* tests/mv/part-symlink: Likewise.
* tests/du/basic: Use refactored function.
* tests/install/basic-1: Likewise.
* tests/mkdir/p-3: Likewise.
* tests/dd/skip-seek-past-dev: Likewise.
* tests/du/slink: Likewise. Remove redundant test
for NFS file system.
* tests/misc/join: s/local/locale/.
Following on from commit f86bb696, 01-02-2010,
"join: make -t '' operate on the whole line".
Bypassing the delimiter search in this case,
gives about an 8% performance boost.
* src/join (xfields): Don't bother looking for '\n'
in the data, which we know won't be present.
* src/tac.c (main): Reading a line longer than 16KiB would cause
tac to realloc its primary buffer. Then, just before exit, tac
would mistakenly free the original (now free'd) buffer.
This bug was introduced by commit be6c13e7, "maint: always free a
buffer, to avoid even semblance of a leak".
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* tests/misc/tac (double-free): New test, to exercise this.
Reported by Salvo Tomaselli in <http://bugs.debian.org/594666>.
* src/find-mount-point.c: A new file refactoring
find_mount_point() out from df.c
* src/find-mount-point.h: Likewise.
* src/df.c: Use the new find-mount-point module.
* src/stat.c (print_stat): Handle the new %m format.
(find_bind_mount): A new function to
return the bind mount for a file if any.
(out_mount_mount): Print the bind mount for a file, or else
the standard mount point given by the find-mount-point module.
(usage): Document the %m format directive.
* src/Makefile.am: Reference the refactored find-mount-point.c
* po/POTFILES.in: Add find_mount_point.c to the translation list
* doc/coreutils.texi (stat invocation): Document %m,
and how it may differ from the mount point that df outputs.
* test/misc/stat-mount: A new test to correlate mount points
output from df and stat.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature
* THANKS: Add the author
Signed-off-by: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>
* src/df (show_point): Remove the optimization for comparing
the specified path with the device name, as this produces
inconsistent results in the presence of bind mounts. For bind
mounts, the device name is populated with the bind mount target.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
* .x-sc_program_name: Exclude all current and future
c files in gl/tests from this check
* gl/tests/test-di-set.c: Remove the hack to work around
the set_program_name syntax-check
* gl/tests/test-ino-map.c: Likewise
* gl/tests/test-rand-isaac.c: Likewise
* doc/coreutils.texi (md5sum invocation): Mention currently known
security problems. Don't recommend SHA-1 as alternative.
* man/md5sum.x (BUGS): Warn about the vulnerabilities and
reference the SHA-2 based alternatives.
Reported by Simon Josefsson
This change was prompted by the previous one: I audited the code
looking for similar examples. Too bad valgrind doesn't catch this.
* src/sort.c (check, mergefps): xrealloc -> free + xmalloc
* src/who.c (print_user): Likewise.
* src/sort.c (compare_random): Use free/xmalloc rather than
xrealloc, since the old buffer contents need not be preserved.
Also, don't fail if the guessed-sized malloc fails. Suggested by
Bruno Haible.
* tests/ls/readdir-mountpoint-inode: Check to see if skip_test_ is
called in a helper function via $() instead of mistakenly failing.
* THANKS: Update.
* src/sort.c (compare_random): Guess that the output will be
3X the input. This avoids the overhead of calling strxfrm
twice on typical implementations. Suggested by Bruno Haible.
* NEWS: Document this.
* src/sort.c (getmonth): Omit LEN arg, as MONTH is now null-terminated.
(compare_random): Don't null-terminate keys, as caller now does that.
(compare_version): Remove.
(debug_key): Null-terminate string for getmonth.
(keycompare): Support combining -R with any of -d, -f, -i, -V.
Also, support combining -V with any of -d, -i.
(check_ordering_compatibility): Allow newly-supported combinations.
* tests/misc/sort (02q, 02r, 02s): New tests, for new combinations.
(incompat2): Now test -nR, since -fR are now compatible.
Formerly, the 'compare' function and some of its subroutines had a
debugging flag, which caused them to output underlines. This
change refactors the code so that debugging output is
more-separated from the actual sorting. In the process, the
change fixes a minor error in the debugging output. The change
shortens the source code and executable size a tad, and improves
CPU performance by 2.4% on my platform with a simple benchmark (C
locale, line sorting, no debug).
* src/sort.c (long_double, strtold): Move back to prelude, since
they're now used by multiple functions again.
(unit_order): Move to file scope, since it's now used by two functions.
(find_unit_order, human_numcompare, numcompare, general_numcompare):
Remove endptr parameter. All callers changed.
(human_numcompare): Args are now const pointers.
(getmonth): Endptr is now non-const.
(key_numeric): Move up, since it's needed earlier.
(debug_key): Take a line and a key as argument, instead of having
the caller figure out where the field is.
(debug_line): New function.
(keycompare, compare): Omit debug parameter; debug output now done
elsewhere. All callers changed.
(write_line): Renamed from write_bytes; all callers changed.
Use debug_line (not 'compare') to output debug info.
Use a slightly faster check for whether output file is stdout.
(check): Don't do debugging output; it's not that useful here,
and it confuses the code.
(main): Check for incompatibility between -c and --debug.
Use standard diagnostic for incompatible options.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: Fix test case: "--Mi-1" is not
a number, so its first character should not be underlined when
debugging a numeric sort.
* lib/Makefile.am (libcoreutils_a_SOURCES): Remove xmemxfrm.c,
xmemxfrm.h.
* lib/memxfrm.c, lib/memxfrm.h, lib/xmemxfrm.c, lib/xmemxfrm.h: Remove.
* m4/memxfrm.m4: Likewise.
* m4/prereq.m4 (gl_PREREQ): Remove gl_MEMXFRM.
* po/POTFILES.in: Remove lib/xmemxfrm.c.
* src/sort.c: Don't include xmemxfrm.h.
(cmp_hashes): Remove.
(xstrxfrm): New function.
(compare_random): If a line contains NULs, don't create a big
buffer that contains the strxfrm output of each string in the line.
Instead, accumulate checksums and differences as we go, so that
at any one time we have to store at most the output of a single
strxfrm call when processing the line. This removes the need for
an memxfrm function.
* src/sort.c (debug_width): New function, which does not stop
counting tabs at \0, and also invokes mbsnwidth. Stamp out strnlen!
(count_tabs): Remove.
(debug_key): Use debug_width instead of mbsnwidth and count_tabs.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: Check that \0 and \t intermix.
* NEWS: Document changes to sort -h, which are now minor with
respect to the pre-July-30th version.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Likewise. The
documentation now describes how -h comparison is done rather than
being vague with border cases.
* src/sort.c (long_double, strtold): Move back to general_numcompare.
(LD, compute_human): Remove.
(find_unit_order): Remove THOU_SEP parameter, since thousands
separators are now allowed by all callers. Revert to previous
behavior of sorting by suffix, and returning the order rather than
2 * order + binary, since we no longer care whether binary powers
are being used. However, treat all zeros the same, instead of
sorting 0M before 0G; this is more consistent with the desired
behavior of sorting -1G before -1M.
* tests/misc/sort (h1, h3, h6): Adjust to match mostly-reverted
behavior. However, check that all zeros sort together.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: Omit a "_", since the trailing "i"
in "1234Gi" is no longer part of the key.
* NEWS: Document changes to sort -h.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Likewise.
* src/sort.c (long_double, strtold): Move to prelude, since they're
now used by multiple functions.
(LD): New macro.
(struct keyfield.iec_present): Remove this member. All uses removed.
(check_mixed_SI_IEC): Remove. This code was busted in the presence
of multiple threads, as it had a race condition.
(find_unit_order): Remove arg KEY; add arg THOU_SEP; arg ENDPTR is
now char ** rather than char const **. Return an integer that
distinguishes decimal from binary powers. Parse the number
consistently with the intersection of strtold and strnumcmp.
Set *ENDPTR unconditionally.
(compute_human): New static function.
(human_numcompare): Remove arg KEY. Remove 'const' from other args.
Use strnumcmp if possible, but fall back on floating point if not.
(numcompare, general_numcompare): Arg EA is now char ** rather
than char const **.
(numcompare): Adjust to new find_unit_order signature and behavior.
(keycompare): Adjus to new human_numcompare signature.
* tests/misc/sort (h1, h3, h4, h6): Adjust to new behavior.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: Likewise.
* src/sort.c (fillbuf): Don't append eol unless the line is nonempty.
This fixes a bug that was partly but not completely fixed by
the aadc67dfdb commit (dated July 15).
* tests/misc/sort (realloc-buf-2): New test, which catches this
bug on 64-bit hosts.
* src/sort.c (mergelines, queue_destroy, queue_init, queue_insert):
(queue_pop, write_unique, mergelines_node, check_insert):
(update_parent): No longer inline; these uses of "inline"
seemed unlikely to help performance much.
* gl/lib/heap.c (struct heap): Move this here...
* gl/lib/heap.h (struct heap): ... from here, as outside code no
longer needs to access any of these members.
* src/sort.c (queue_pop): Omit unnecessary unlock+lock after
pthread_cond_wait returns. Don't access "count" member of the
heap; any efficiency gains should be quite minor, the access
complicates this code, and "count" should be private anyway.
* src/sort.c (lock_node, unlock_node, queue_destroy, queue_init):
(queue_pop):
Omit 'restrict'; it shouldn't help here, as these functions have just
one pointer parameter and don't access static storage.
(queue_insert, check_insert, update_parent): Omit 'restrict', as
the pointer types differ, and are not char * or unsigned char *,
and therefore can't alias.
(write_unique): Omit 'restrict', as the pointer types are all
read-only.
(merge_loop, sortlines): Omit 'restrict', as any performance
advantages are extremely unlikely and it's not worth cluttering
the code for that.
(struct thread_args): Omit 'restrict': this seems to be incorrect.
It's unlikely for 'restrict' to be correct inside a typedef.
* src/sort.c (inittables, general_numcompare, compare_nodes):
(queue_init, queue_pop): Omit casts that are not needed, typically
because they are between void * and some other pointer type.
* src/du.c (process_file): Avoid recalculation of hashes
and of file-exclusion for directories. Do not descend into
the same directory more than once, unless -l is given; this is faster.
Calculate stat buffer lazily, since it
need not be computed at all for excluded files.
Count space if FTS_ERR, since stat buffer is always valid then.
No need for 'print' local variable.
(main): Use FTS_NOSTAT. Use FTS_TIGHT_CYCLE_CHECK only when not
hashing everything, since process_file finds cycles on its own
when hashing everything.
* tests/du/deref: Add test cases for -L bugs.
* tests/misc/sort-merge-fdlimit: This test was written assuming that
-R typically opens /dev/urandom, but that's no longer the case.
Redo test to specify a random source; this resurrects the point of
checking for file descriptor exhaustion. Also try plain -R, since
that implementation may change in the future too.
* gl/lib/rand-isaac.c: Remove the I/O; this belongs elsewhere.
Add support for ISAAC64. Port to hosts with padding bits.
Add self to author list. Include <limits.h>, for CHAR_BIT.
Don't include string.h, sys/time.h, unistd.h.
(min, just): New functions.
(IF32): New macros.
(ind, ISAAC_STEP, isaac_refill, mix, isaac_init, isaac_seed):
Add support for ISAAC64. Port to hosts with padding bits.
(ind): Now an inline function rather than a macro; no need for it
to be a macro with modern compilers.
(ISAAC_STEP): Renamed from isaac_step, since it's not function-like.
Don't bother to pass args that are always the same. All uses changed.
(ISAAC_STEP, ISAAC_SEED): Move to inside the only function body
that can use it.
(ISAAC_MIX): Renamed from isaac_mix, since it's now a macro and is
no longer function-like. Don't bother saving and restoring state;
no longer needed now that we're not a function. All uses changed.
(isaac_seed_start, isaac_seed_data, isaac_seed_finish): Remove.
(isaac_seed): Take just the one arg; the caller now sets s->m.
* gl/lib/rand-isaac.h: Use _GL_RAND_ISAAC_H to protect, instead
of RAND_ISAAC_H. Try out " #" rather than "# " for indenting.
(ISAAC_BITS_LOG, ISAAC_BITS): New macros.
(ISAAC_WORDS_LOG): Renamed from ISAAC_LOG.
(isaac_word): New type. All uses of uint32_t changed to isaac_word,
to support ISAAC64.
(struct isaac_state): Rename member MM to M, and make it public.
(isaac_seed, isaac_refill): Adjust to new API.
* gl/lib/randread.c: Include sys/time.h.
(get_nonce): New function, containing the nonce stuff that used
to be in rand-isaac.c but better belongs here.
(randread_new): Use it.
* gl/modules/randread (Depends-on): Add inline.
* gl/modules/randread-tests: New file.
* gl/tests/test-rand-isaac.c: New file.
* bootstrap.conf: Include the new module
* gl/lib/fadvise.c: Provide a simpler interface to posix_fadvise.
(fadvise): Provide hint to the whole file associated with a stream.
(fdadvise): Provide hint to the specific portion of a file
associated with a file descriptor.
* gl/lib/fadvise.h: Redefine POSIX_FADV_* to FADVISE_* enums.
* gl/modules/fadvise: New file.
* m4/jm-macros.m4: Remove the no longer needed posix_fadvise check.
* .x-sc_program_name: Exclude test-fadvise.c from this check.
* gl/tests/test-fadvise (main): New test program.
* gl/modules/fadvise-testss: A new index to reference the tests.
* src/sort.c (stream_open): Use the new interface.
* src/dd.c (iwrite): Likewise.
* configure.ac (optional_pkglib_progs): Only update
after the main programs have been selected, so that
libstdbuf.so can be excluded if stdbuf also is.
* gl/lib/rand-isaac.c (isaac_seed_start): New arg SEEDED.
(isaac_seed): New args FD and BYTES_BOUND. Read from FD if possible.
Don't bother with low-quality sources if FD has enough bytes.
* gl/lib/rand-isaac.h: New size_t arg for isaac_seed.
* gl/lib/randread.c: Include fcntl.h, unistd.h.
(NAME_OF_NONCE_DEVICE): New #define.
(nonce_device): New static var.
(randread_new): Use nonce device if available.
* src/sort.c (random_md5_state): New static var.
(random_md5_state_init): New function, to initialize random_md5_state.
(random_state, randread_source): Remove.
(cmp_hashes): Use random_md5_state rather than random_state.
Break ties using memcmp, not by getting more randomness.
If MD5 collisions turn into a problem in practice, we should
simply use a better checksum.
(main): If -R is given, call random_md5_state_init rather than
going single-threaded.
Programs like 'sort' were linking to -lrt in order to get
clock_gettime, but this was misguided: it wasted considerable
resources while gaining at most 10 bits of entropy. Almost nobody
needs the entropy, and there are better ways to get much better
entropy for people who do need it.
* gl/lib/rand-isaac.c (isaac_seed): Include <sys/time.h> not
"gethrxtime.h".
(isaac_seed): Use gettimeofday rather than gethrxtime.
* gl/modules/randread (Depends-on): Depend on gettimeofday
and not gethrxtime.
* src/Makefile.am (mktemp_LDADD, shred_LDADD, shuf_LDADD, sort_LDADD):
(tac_LDADD): Omit $(LIB_GETHRXTIME); no longer needed.
* src/sort.c (keycompare): Use xmemcoll0, as it avoids
a couple of stores.
(write_bytes): Leave the buffer the way we found it,
as it might be used again for a later comparison,
if -u is used.
Don't write NUL after the comparison buffers on each compare,
which increases performance by about 3% for short lines
on a pentium-m with gcc-4.4.1
* src/sort.c: (fillbuf): Delimit input items with NUL.
(write_bytes): Restore the item delimiter char which was
replaced with NUL in fillbuf().
* src/Makefile.am (printf_LDADD, seq_LDADD, sleep_LDADD, sort_LDADD):
(tail_LDADD, uptime_LDADD): Omit $(POW_LIB), as it's no longer
needed due to recent gnulib changes, where the strtod module no
longer uses the pow function. strtold needs pow only because it's
sometimes aliased to strtod. See
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnulib/2010-07/msg00076.html
* NEWS: Add another blank line before the previous version.
(Bug fixes): Move to the start.
(Changes in behavior): Add the item about the du mem usage change
from the "New features" section.
* gl/lib/heap.c (heap_alloc): Use the fact that the xalloc
routines will not return NULL. Also remove the redundant
temporary variables.
(heap_insert): From Jim Meyering, use x2nrealloc() which
is simpler while handling overflow and increasing the
size more efficiently. This reallocation is currently
unused by coreutils in any case as it preallocates enough.
This patch is by Gene Auyeung, Chris Dickens, Chen Guo, and Mike
Nichols, based off of a patch by Paul Eggert, Glen Lenker, et. al.,
with a basic heap implementation based off of the GDSL heap,
originally by Nicolas Darnis.
The number of sorts done in parallel is limited to the number
of available processors by default, or can be further restricted
with the --parallel option.
On a dual-die, 8 core Intel Xeon, results show sorting with
8 threads is almost 4 times faster than using a single thread.
Timings when sorting a 96MB file:
THREADS TIME (s)
1 5.10
2 2.87
4 1.75
8 1.31
Single threaded sorting has also been improved,
especially for cheaper comparison operations:
COMMAND BEFORE (s) AFTER (s)
sort 8.822 8.716
sort -g 10.336 10.222
sort -n 3.077 2.961
LANG=C sort 2.169 2.066
* bootstrap.conf: Add heap, pthread.
* coreutils.texi (sort): Describe the new --parallel option.
* gl/lib/heap.c: New file. Very basic heap implementation.
* gl/lib/heap.h: New file.
* gl/modules/heap: New file.
* src/Makefile.am: Add LIB_PTHREAD.
* src/sort.c: Include heap.h, nproc.h, pthread.h.
(MAX_MERGE): New macro.
(SUBTHREAD_LINES_HEURISTIC, PARALLEL_OPTION): New constants.
(MERGE_END, MERGE_ROOT): New constants.
(struct merge_node): New struct.
(struct merge_node_queue): New struct.
(sortlines temp): Remove declaration.
(usage, long_options, main): New option, --parallel.
(specify_nthreads): New function.
(mergelines): New signature, to emphasize the fact that the HI area
must be part of the destination. All callers changed.
(sequential_sort): New function, renamed from sortlines. Merge in
the functionality of sortlines_temp.
(compare_nodes): New function.
(lock_node, unlock_node): New functions.
(queue_destroy): New function.
(queue_init): New function.
(queue_insert): New function.
(queue_pop): New function.
(write_unique): New function.
(mergelines_node): New function.
(check_insert): New function.
(update_parent): New function.
(merge_loop): New function.
(sortlines): Rewrite to support and use parallelism, with a new
signature. All callers changed.
(struct thread_args): New struct.
(sortlines_thread): New function.
(sortlines_temp): Remove.
(sort): New argument NTHREADS. All uses changed. Output moved to
mergelines_node.
(main): disable threading if we are sorting at random.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/sort-benchmark-random.
* tests/misc/sort-benchmark-random: New file.
Signed-off-by: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>
* gl/lib/ino-map.c (ino_hash): Declare "i" as unsigned int.
Use an intermediate variable for the for-loop upper bound,
so it's a little more readable. Adjust comment.
* gl/lib/di-set.c (di_ent_hash): Likewise.
* src/dd.c (dd_copy): Use requested blocksize (not adjusted) in
diagnostic, to forestall user complaints that the numbers don't
match exactly. Report both exact and human-readable sizes, using
a message format that is consistent with both "BBBB bytes (N XB)
copied" in dd.c and "memory exhausted" in lib/xmalloc.c.
Problem reported by Jim Meyering in:
http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=6524#74
* gl/lib/di-set.c (di_ent_hash): Rework so that the compiler does
not incorrectly warn about shifting by 64-bits in unreachable code.
* gl/lib/ino-map.c (ino_hash): Likewise.
* gl/lib/dev-map.c, gl/lib/dev-map.h, gl/modules/dev-map: Remove.
* gl/lib/ino-map.c, gl/lib/ino-map.h, gl/modules/ino-map: New files.
* gl/modules/dev-map-tests, gl/tests/test-dev-map.c: Remove.
* gl/modules/ino-map-tests, gl/tests/test-ino-map.c: New files.
* gl/lib/di-set.h (struct di_set): Renamed from struct di_set_state,
and now private. All uses changed.
(_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL_): Don't assume C99.
(di_set_alloc): Renamed from di_set_init, with no size arg.
Now allocates the object rather than initializing it.
For now, this no longer takes an initial size; we can put this
back later if it is needed.
* gl/lib/di-set.c: Include hash.h, ino-map.h, and limits.h instead of
stdio.h, assert.h, stdint.h, sys/types.h (di-set.h includes that
now), sys/stat.h, and verify.h.
(N_DEV_BITS_4, N_INO_BITS_4, N_DEV_BITS_8, N_INO_BITS_8): Remove.
(struct dev_ino_4, struct dev_ino_8, struct dev_ino_full): Remove.
(enum di_mode): Remove.
(hashint): New typedef.
(HASHINT_MAX, LARGE_INO_MIN): New macros.
(struct di_ent): Now maps a dev_t to a inode set, instead of
containing a union.
(struct dev_map_ent): Remove.
(struct di_set): New type.
(is_encoded_ptr, decode_ptr, di_ent_create): Remove.
(di_ent_hash, di_ent_compare, di_ent_free, di_set_alloc, di_set_free):
(di_set_insert): Adjust to new representation.
(di_ino_hash, map_device, map_inode_number): New functions.
* gl/modules/di-set (Depends-on): Replace dev-map with ino-map.
Remove 'verify'.
* gl/tests/test-di-set.c: Adjust to the above changes to API.
* src/du.c (INITIAL_DI_SET_SIZE): Remove.
(hash_ins, main): Adjust to new di-set API.
Add comments and adjust interfaces to allow low-level failure
to propagate out to callers.
* src/stat.c (out_file_context): Return bool, not void,
so we can tell callers about failure.
(print_statfs, print_stat, print_it): Propagate failure to caller.
(do_statfs): Propagate print_it failure to caller.
(do_stat): Likewise.
I nearly forgot to update do_stat to propagate print_it failure,
and it compiled just fine in spite of that. To prevent possibility
of a repeat, I've marked each function that returns non-void with
ATTRIBUTE_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT.
* tests/init.cfg: Introduce a retry_delay_() function to
repeatedly call a test function that requires a delay.
This delay can now be shorter for the common case on fast
systems, but will double until a configurable limit it reached
before failing on slower systems.
* tests/dd/reblock: Use retry_delay_.
* tests/misc/cat-buf: Likewise.
* tests/misc/stdbuf: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/F-vs-rename: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/flush-initial: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/tail-n0f: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/wait: Likewise.
* test/dd/misc: Comment that delay is needed to trigger failure.
* src/du.c (INITIAL_DI_SET_SIZE): Increase to the prime just under
1024. This gives a speed-up of about 2% when processing a tree
containing 100,000 files, each with a link count greater than 1,
all pointing to files in some other tree.
When processing a hard-linked file, du must keep track of the file's
device and inode numbers in order to avoid counting its storage
more than once. When du would process many hard linked files --
as are created by some backup tools -- the amount of memory required
for the supporting data structure could become prohibitively large.
This patch takes advantage of the fact that the amount of information
in the numbers of the typical dev,inode pair is far less than even
32 bits, and hence usually fits in the space of a pointer, be it
32 or 64 bits wide. A typical du traversal examines files on no
more than a handful of distinct devices, so the device number can
be encoded in just a few bits. Similarly, few inode numbers use
all of the high bits in an ino_t. Before, we would represent the
dev,inode pair using a naive struct, and allocate space for each.
Thus, an entry in the hash table consisted of a pointer (to that
struct) and a "next" pointer. With this change, we encode the
dev,inode information and put those bits in place of the pointer,
and thus do away with the need to allocate additional space for
each dev,inode pair.
* src/du.c: Include "di-set.h".
Don't include "hash.h"; it's no longer used.
(INITIAL_DI_SET_SIZE): Define.
(di_set): New global, to replace "htab".
(entry_hash, entry_compare, hash_init): Remove functions.
(hash_ins): Use di-set functions, rather than ones from the hash module.
(main): Likewise.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add the new di-set module.
* NEWS (New features): Mention it.
* NEWS: Mention this.
* src/du.c (hash_all): New static var.
(process_file): Use it.
(main): Set it.
* tests/du/hard-link: Add a couple of test cases to help make
sure this bug stays squashed.
* tests/du/files0-from: Adjust existing tests to reflect
change in semantics with duplicate arguments.
* src/copy.c (copy_attr): A new function which merges copy_attr_by_fd
and copy_attr_by_name. Also display all errors when --attributes-only
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Skip copying the file contents if specified.
Refactor the SELinux error handling code a little and display all
SELinux errors when only copying attributes.
* src/copy.h (struct cp_options): Add a data_copy_required boolean
* src/cp.c (main): Default to copying data but don't if specified
* src/install.c: Default to copying data
* src/mv.c: Likewise
tests/cp/reflink-perm: Add a test to check that --attributes-only
does not copy data
* tests/cp/acl: Likewise. Also refactor to remove redundant
acl manipulation
* doc/coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Describe the new option
* NEWS: Mention the new feature
Previously we defaulted to "long-iso" format in locales without
specific format translations, like the en_* locales for example.
This reverts part of commit 6837183d, 08-11-2005, "ls ... acts like
--time-style='posix-long-iso' if the locale settings are messed up"
* src/ls.c (decode_switches): Only use the ISO format when specified.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
Reported by Daniel Qarras at http://bugzilla.redhat.com/525134
* tests/tail-2/inotify-rotate: Switch to new init.sh-based framework.
(grep_timeout): New function.
Use it in place of open-coded loops that might infloop.
This was prompted by my encountering an inexplicable, and so far
unreproducible, infloop in the code that was waiting for "b" to
appear in "out".
From there, they will be used by both test-lib.sh (as we phase it out)
and the newer init.sh, to which all tests will migrate.
* tests/test-lib.sh: Move most functions from here, ...
* tests/init.cfg: ...to here. New file.
* tests/Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Add init.cfg.
* src/stat.c (main): Remove support for the --context (-Z) option.
In upstream releases this option has always been a no-op. It was
first ignored for compatibility, and since the June 2008 commit,
574f7614 (coreutils-7.0), its use has evoked a warning.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
* src/comm.c (usage): Don't align example comments in --help output,
since the extra space (sequence of two spaces) there would be
interpreted by help2man and induce an unwanted line break
in the resulting man page. Reported by Jari Aalto.
* src/tail.c (xlseek): Give INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND a variable name,
not a type name.
* src/ls.c (gobble_file, format_user_or_group_width): Likewise.
* src/head.c (elide_tail_bytes_pipe): Likewise.
(elide_tail_lines_seekable, main): Likewise.
[This change is not complete -- there are doubtless other uses
that can be updated in the same way.]
sprintf is relatively heavy-weight.
* src/sort.c (key_warnings): Use umaxtostr and stpcpy rather
than sprintf.
Also, replace each INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND "type_name" argument
with the equivalent variable name. More maintainable that way.
* src/touch.c (main): Remove support for the deprecated, long-named
--file option, which is an alternate name for --reference (-r).
That option was undocumented with the arrival of --reference, in
the 1995-10-29 commit, 8b92864e1d. Since the 2009-02-09 commit,
ed85df444a, use of --file has elicited a warning. Not only was
this code due for removal, but the long-name-use-detecting code
was buggy in that it would use a stale or uninitialized "long_idx",
as reported by Robin H. Johnson in http://bugs.gentoo.org/322421.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
* src/stat.c (alignof): Remove definition.
Instead, include "alignof.h", and sort the #include directives.
And get its definition from the gnulib module by that name:
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add alignof.
Previously we copied `dd` and suppressed error messages
when truncating neither regular files or shared mem objects.
This was valid for `dd`, as truncation is ancillary to copying
it may also do, but for `truncate` we should display all errors.
Also we used the st_size from non regular files which is undefined,
so we display an error when the user tries this.
* src/truncate (do_truncate): Error when referencing the size
of non regular files or non shared memory objects. Display all
errors returned by ftruncate().
(main): Error when referencing the size of non regular files or
non shared memory objects. Don't suppress error messages for
any file types that can't be opened for writing.
* tests/misc/truncate-dir-fail: Check that referencing the
size of a directory is not supported.
* tests/misc/truncate-fifo: Ensure the test doesn't hang
by using the `timeout` command. Don't test the return from
running ftruncate on the fifo as it's system dependent as
to whether this fails or not.
NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
Reported by Jim Meyering.
* doc/coreutils.texi (truncate invocation): Mention that --reference
bases the --size rather than just setting it.
* src/truncate.c (usage): Likewise. Also remove the clause
describing --size and --reference as being mutually exclusive.
(do_truncate): Add an extra parameter to hold the size
of a referenced file, and use it if positive.
(main): Pass the size of a referenced file to do_truncate().
* tests/misc/truncate-parameters: Adjust for the new combinations.
* NEWS: Mention the change
Suggested by Richard W.M. Jones
* src/sort.c (key_warnings): Always warn about significant leading
blanks when character offsets are specified, unless they key is
possibly a line offset, i.e. of the form -k1.x,1.y. Also suppress
this warning if the user could be sorting right aligned indexes.
* tests/cp/cp-a-selinux: Initialize skip, to avoid a syntax error
in subsequent "test".
Remove redirect-to-/dev/null, now that output is always to a log file.
* src/sort.c (usage): Mention --debug can output warnings to stderr.
Also split the translatable string to aid translation.
(default_key_compare): A new function refactored from main(),
and now also called from the new key_warnings() function.
(key_to_opts): A new function refactored from incompatible_options(),
and now also called from the new key_warnings() function.
(key_numeric): A new function refactored to test if key is numeric.
(key_warnings): A new function to output warnings to stderr,
about questionable use of various options. Currently it warns
about zero length keys and ineffective global options.
(incompatible_options): Refactor out key_to_opts()
(main): Use key_init() to initialize gkey. Refactor out
default_key_compare(). Call key_warnings() in debug mode.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Mention that warnings
are output by --debug.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-warn: A new test for debug warnings.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature
* src/sort (usage): Add description for --debug.
(write_bytes): Pass a line structure so it can subsequently
be passed to compare to highlight the keys when in debug mode.
Also transform TAB and NUL characters written to stdout so
that the highlighting in debug mode aligns correctly.
(human_numcompare): Pass an "endptr" so we can record the extent
of the number matched.
(general_numcompare): Likewise.
(find_unit_order): Likewise.
(getmonth): Likewise.
(numcompare): Likewise. Note we reuse find_unit_order() for this,
which is a good enough approximation, and means we don't need to
change the strnumcmp() interface.
(check_mixed_SI_IEC): Return whether iec_present, so that can be
used to set the "endptr" in find_unit_order. Also make the key
parameter optional, which will be the case from numcompare().
(count_tabs): A new function to determine how much to adjust
the mbswidth() values by (TABs don't have a width).
(mark_key): A new function to output the key highlighting to stdout.
(debug_key): A new function to determine the offset and width
of the key highlighting.
(key_compare): Pass the show_debug parameter so the key highlighting
is only displayed when explicitly called. For each key type, set
the length (lena) and whether leading blanks are auto skipped (skipb)
which are then used by debug_key() to highlight the portion of the
key used in the comparison.
(compare): Pass the show_debug parameter so the key highlighting
is only displayed when explicitly called. Call debug_key() to
highlight the last resort comparison.
(check): Output highlighting for disorder line to stdout.
(main): Process the --debug option and make it mutually exlusive
with the -o option as I don't see it useful there, even potentially
harmful if someone left a --debug in by mistake when updating a file.
Also restricting debug output to stdout, simplifies the logic
for dealing with temporary files.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Describe the --debug option,
and reference it from the --key description.
* tests/misc/sort-debug-keys: A new test for highlighting keys.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* cfg.mk (.re-defmac): Generate better regexps: allow white space
before the '#', and append a word-boundary requirement.
Without the latter, #define NULL_DEV ... would evoke a false-positive.
* cfg.mk (sc_always_defined_macros): Adjust its helpers not to depend
on the existence of ./lib. Instead, extract symbols directly from
gnulib/lib/*.in.h files.
using the new --mail-headers option to gnulib's announce-gen, and
the updated maint.mk rules to connect the pieces.
* README-release: Remove hard-coded To:, Cc: etc. parts, now
that they're emitted automatically into the announcement template.
* cfg.mk (announcement_Cc_): Override the default.
* gnulib: Update to latest, to get newer announce-gen and maint.mk.
* cfg.mk (gl_trap_): Define, using a loop and eval'd trap,
rather than repeated "trap" uses. Also handle "13", SIGPIPE.
(sc_always_defined_macros): Use it.
(sc_system_h_headers): Likewise.
* cfg.mk (gl_generated_headers_): Define.
(headers_with_interesting_macro_defs): Remove headers covered
by the above.
(.re-defmac): Extract symbol names from many more files.
(sc_always_defined_macros): Use VC_LIST_EXCEPT, not VC_LIST, so
that we can use the usual exception mechanism.
Test for $(gnulib_dir), not system.h.
* .x-sc_always_defined_macros: New file. Exempt src/seq.c.
* Makefile.am (syntax_check_exceptions): Add it here.
* src/dd.c (SA_NODEFER, SA_RESETHAND): Remove definitions,
now that gnulib guarantees they are defined in <signal.h>.
* src/ls.c (SA_RESTART): Likewise.
* src/timeout.c (WIFSIGNALED, WTERMSIG): Remove definitions,
now that gnulib guarantees they are defined in <sys/wait.h>.
* src/operand2sig.c: Likewise.
* src/kill.c: Likewise.
* src/sort.c (general_numcompare): Use long doubles unconditionally,
and strtold when available, to convert numbers with greater range and
precision. Performance was seen to be on par with standard doubles.
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Amend the -g description to
mention long double rather than double, and strtold rather than strtod.
* src/getlimits.c (main): Output floating point limits for use in tests.
* tests/misc/sort-float: A new test to ensure sort is using long
doubles when possible, and that locale specific floats are handled.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* tests/test-lib.sh (getlimits_): Normalize indenting.
* NEWS: Mention the new behaviour.
Reported by Nelson Beebe.
* doc/coreutils.texi (factor invocation): Don't say that "factoring
large prime numbers is hard". A pedant might ding you, since it's
trivial to factor a number that is known to be prime. Instead, say
that "factoring large numbers... is hard". Reported by Andreas Eder.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add the following:
netinet_in, sys_ioctl, sys_wait, so that we can eliminate
the #if HAVE_<header>_H tests guarding their header inclusions.
The value of `$?' on entrance to signal handlers in shell scripts
cannot be relied upon, so set the exit code explicitly.
* cfg.mk (sc_always_defined_macros, sc_system_h_headers): Set
the exit code in signal handler explicitly to 128 + SIG<SIGNAL>.
* src/Makefile.am (sc_tight_scope): Likewise.
* tests/test-lib.sh: Likewise.
Necessary for cygwin. Technically, this patch is not correct,
in that it clobbers O_APPEND, but it is no different than any
other use of xfreopen to force binary mode, so all such uses
should be fixed at once in a later patch.
* src/base64.c (main): Open input in binary mode.
* THANKS: Update.
Reported by Yutaka Amanai.
* NEWS: Mention that cp and mv from the previous release did
not support preserving extended attributes (fixed in e489fd04).
Improve the grammar for the "cp capabilities" item.
This regression was introduced in commit 224a69b5, 2009-02-24,
"sort: Fix two bugs with determining the end of field".
The specific regression being that we include 1 field too many when
an end field is specified using obsolescent key syntax (+POS -POS).
* src/sort.c (struct keyfield): Clarify the description of the eword
member, as suggested by Alan Curry.
(main): When processing obsolescent format key specifications,
normalize eword to a zero based count when no specific end char is given
for an end field. This matches what's done when keys are specified with -k.
* tests/misc/sort: Add a few more tests for the obsolescent key formats,
with test 07i being the particular failure addressed by this change.
* THANKS: Add Alan Curry who precisely identified the issue.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Reported by Santiago Rodríguez
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Copy xattrs _after_ setting file ownership
so that capabilities are not cleared when setting ownership.
* tests/cp/capability: A new root test.
* tests/Makefile.am (root_tests): Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* src/Makefile.am (kill_LDADD): Add $(LIBTHREAD) so that
we link with the appropriate libraries to provide Thread Local Storage
on platforms that replace strsignal (like AIX for example).
Tested-by: Daniel Richard G. <danielg@teragram.com>
* tests/ls/color-norm: Use the "time" output by `ls -l`
to check normal style. Previously we used the size from `ls -s`,
but the size of "empty" files can vary depending on whether
SELinux is enabled for example.
* tests/ls/capability: Adjust this test not to expect the no-op escape
sequence that was removed from all other tests by 2010-01-30 commit
5d43617e, "ls --color: don't emit a final no-op escape sequence".
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Suppress SELinux ENOTSUP warnings consistently
between the destination being present or not. Previously we did
not suppress ENOTSUP messages when the destination was present.
(copy_internal): Use the same ENOTSUP supression method as
copy_reg() even though the issue was not seen in this case.
* tests/cp/cp-a-selinux: Add a test case for the issue and
group the other test cases in the file more coherently.
* tests/cp/cp-mv-enotsup-xattr: Do the same check for xattr
warnings, even though they did not have the issue.
The 2010-03-26 commit, 4c38625e, "doc: fix info on cp --preserve..."
was not entirely correct as cp --preserve=all does produce some
xattr warnings.
* src/copy.h: Update and clarify the comments for reduce_diagnostics
and require_preserve_{xattr,context}.
* doc/coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Update the -a and
--preserve=xattr,context options to say when and which
xattr warnings are output.
(mv invocation): Mention that some warnings are output
when preserving xattrs.
* doc/coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Mention that
"capabilities" are preserved when implemented using
extended attributes.
(mv invocation): Mention ACLs etc. are maintained
due to xattrs being copied.
* cfg.mk (detect_empty_lines_at_EOF_): Define.
(sc_prohibit_empty_lines_at_EOF): New rule.
* .x-sc_prohibit_empty_lines_at_EOF: New file. Exempt pr test inputs.
* Makefile.am (syntax_check_exceptions): Add it.
Pádraig Brady suggested to parse the output of tail -n1.
Now that even MinGW provides ftruncate, we know that all
reasonable portability targets provide this function.
Remove the workaround code. We nearly removed the gnulib
module three years ago:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lib.gnulib.bugs/9203
and it is now officially "obsolete".
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Remove ftruncate.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Remove use of HAVE_FTRUNCATE and its
no-longer-used workaround code.
* src/truncate.c: Remove a comment about handling missing ftruncate.
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (ARGMATCH_DIE): Use usage(EXIT_FAILURE), not usage(1).
* .x-sc_prohibit_magic_number_exit: Remove *.m4 exemption that was
masking the above.
* cfg.mk: Update to use new _sc_search_regexp interface. Run this:
perl -pi -e 's/\b_prohibit_regexp\b/_sc_search_regexp/;'
-e 's/\bmsg=/halt=/; s/\bre=/prohibit=/;' cfg.mk
and then adjust backslashes so they still line up.
Related to the 2010-03-25 commit, 88d4b346,
"timeout: use more standard option parsing".
* src/nice.c (main): Don't use parse_long_options()
which is a helper for commands that don't have any
long options specific to them.
* src/chroot.c (main): Likewise.
* tests/misc/nice-fail: Remove a case that now
passes due to us accepting multiple instances of the
--help and --version options.
* tests/misc/chroot-fail: Likewise.
* src/timeout.c (main): Don't use parse_long_options()
which is a helper for commands that don't have any
long options specific to them.
* tests/misc/timeout-parameters: Remove a case that now
passes due to us accepting multiple instances of the
--help and --version options.
* THANKS: Add the author.
Signed-off-by: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com>
The info docs have been inaccurate since 2009-04-17, commit 941bd482,
"mv: ignore xattr-preservation failure when not supported by filesystem"
* doc/coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Say that cp --preserve=all
does _not_ output errors when failing to copy xattrs.
* cfg.mk (_sed_remove_comments): Define, starting with gettext's
moopp sed code, but factoring it to be more understandable.
(sc_space_before_open_paren): Adapt.
Prompted by Bruno Haible's suggestion to use gettext's moopp code.
* gl/lib/mbsalign.c (mbsalign): Ensure the temporary destination buffer
is big enough, as it may need to be bigger than the source buffer
in the presence of single byte non printable chars.
* gl/tests/test-mbsalign.c (main): Add a test to trigger the issue.
* gl/lib/mbsalign.c (mbsalign): Support the MBA_UNIBYTE_FALLBACK
flag which reverts to unibyte mode if one can't allocate memory
or if there are invalid multibyte characters present.
Note memory is no longer dynamically allocated in unibyte mode so
one can assume that mbsalign() will not return an error if this
flag is present. Don't calculate twice, the number of spaces,
when centering. Suppress a signed/unsigned comparison warning.
(ambsalign): A new wrapper function to dynamically allocate
the minimum memory required to hold the aligned string.
* gl/lib/mbsalign.h: Add the MBA_UNIBYTE_FALLBACK flag and
also document others that may be implemented in future.
(ambsalign): A prototype for the new wrapper.
* gl/tests/test-mbsalign.c (main): New test program.
* gl/modules/mbsalign-tests: A new index to reference the tests.
* .x-sc_program_name: Exclude test-mbsalign.c from this check.
* src/rm.c (usage): Update wording to make two points more
apparent: undelete is not trivial, and partial recovery should be
a consideration factor in deciding whether rm is secure enough.
Initially suggested by Reuben Thomas.
Based on a report from Kim Hansen who wanted to
send a KILL signal to the monitored command
when `timeout` itself received a termination signal.
Rather than changing such a signal into a KILL,
we provide the more general mechanism of sending
the KILL after the specified grace period.
* src/timeout.c (cleanup): If a non zero kill delay
is specified, (re)set the alarm to that delay, after
which a KILL signal will be sent to the process group.
(usage): Mention the new option. Separate the description
of DURATION since it's now specified in 2 places.
Clarify that the duration is an integer.
(parse_duration): A new function refactored from main(),
since this logic is now called for two parameters.
(main): Parse the -k option.
* doc/coreutils.texi (timeout invocation): Describe the
new --kill-after option and use @display rather than
@table to show the duration suffixes. Clarify that
a duration of 0 disables the associated timeout.
* tests/misc/timeout-parameters: Check invalid --kill-after.
* tests/misc/timeout: Check a valid --kill-after works.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
Tell the system that we'll access input sequentially,
so that we more efficiently process uncached files in a few cases:
Reading from faster flash devices. E.g. 21 MB/s key:
NORMAL 31.6s (26.8 user)
SEQUENTIAL 27.7s
WILLNEED 27.7s
Processing in parallel with readahead when using a small 1M buffer:
NORMAL 24.7s (21.1 user)
SEQUENTIAL 22.7s
WILLNEED 25.6s
A small benefit when merging:
NORMAL 25.0s (16.9 user)
SEQUENTIAL 24.6s (16.6 user)
WILLNEED 38.4s (13.1 user)
Note WILLNEED is presented above for comparison to show it
has some unwanted characteristics due to its synchronous
prepopulation of the cache. It has a good benefit on a
mechanical disk @ 80MB/s and a multicore system with
competing processes:
NORMAL 14.73s
SEQUENTIAL 10.95s
WILLNEED 05.22s
However the scheduling differences causing this result
are probably best explicitly managed using `nice` etc.
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (coreutils_MACROS): check for posix_fadvise().
* src/sort.c (fadvise_input): A new function to apply
the POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL hint to an input stream.
(stream_open): Call the above function for all input streams.
* tests/envvar-check (vars): Add LANGUAGE to the list of envvars
to unset. At least in glibc (as an extension to POSIX), its value
actually trumps LC_ALL:
$ LC_ALL=es_ES LANGUAGE=fr_FR.UTF-8 /bin/cat no-such
/bin/cat: no-such: Aucun fichier ou dossier de ce type
but only when the default locale is not C:
$ LC_ALL=C LANGUAGE=fr_FR.UTF-8 /bin/cat no-such
/bin/cat: no-such: No such file or directory
Prompted by a report from Mads Kiilerich.
* src/sort.c (char fold_toupper[]): Change to unsigned
so as the correct comparisons are made in getmonth().
This fixes unibyte locales where abbreviated months
have characters that are > 0x7F, but it also works for
multibyte locales with the caveat that multibyte characters
are matched case sensitively.
With this change, the following example sorts correctly:
$ echo -e "1 márta\n2 Feabhra" | LANG=ga_IE.utf8 sort -k2,2M
2 Feabhra
1 márta
* src/sort.c (inittables): Since we ignore blanks around months
in the input, don't include them when they're present in the locale.
With this change, the following example sorts correctly:
$ echo -e "1 2月\n2 1月" | LANG=ja_JP.utf8 sort -k2,2M
2 1月
1 2月
* tests/misc/sort-month: A new test to exercise the above cases.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* src/expr.c (eval4, eval3): Clarify that expr expects integers,
and not the broader category of numbers.
* tests/misc/expr: Update test accordingly.
Suggested by Dan Jacobson.
* cfg.mk (sc_tight_scope): Pass the -s (silent) flag to `make`
so that it doesn't report about calling sub makes.
(sc_check-AUTHORS): Likewise.
(sc_strftime_check): Don't display stderr from `info`.
* src/Makefile.am (sc_tight_scope): Don't annotate with "GEN".
(sc_check-AUTHORS): Likewise.
Output the NORMAL attribute before non file name text.
This attribute will continue into file names that would
not otherwise be colored unless FILE is also set.
The regression was introduced with commit 483297d5, 28-02-2009,
"ls --color no longer outputs unnecessary escape sequences".
* src/ls.c (set_normal_color): A new function to output the
NORMAL attribute sequence if it's enabled.
(print_current_files): Output NORMAL before printing long format info.
(print_file_name_and_frills): Output NORMAL before printing file name.
(print_color_indicator): Reset the attributes before a file name with
attributes so that NORMAL attributes will not combine with them.
(print_name_with_quoting): Ensure attributes are reset after printing
the file name if NORMAL attributes were output.
* tests/ls/color-norm: A new test for NORMAL and FILE combinations.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Reported in https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?26512
These checks were not being run as distcheck-hook targets
are only supported in the top-level Makefile. Instead
these tests are now run during a syntax-check.
* cfg.mk (sc_man_file_correlation): A new syntax check to
call the 2 existing tests to check the correlation between
the programs and man/*.[1x].
* man/Makefile.am (sc_man_file_correlation): Call the 2 existing
man page correlation tests.
(check-x-vs-1): Remove the "GEN" annotation as it's a bit verbose.
(check-programs-vs-x): Likewise.
* src/Makefile.am (all_programs.list): Exclude libstdbuf.so
from the list of programs. This issue was not noticed as
the checks were not actually being run.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-hash-abuse2: Explicitly kill the process
by using cleanup_() rather than using a timeout which may trigger
a failure on very slow systems (< 20 iterations of the loop per second).
* src/base64.c (usage): Don't capitalize the first character
in an --option description.
* src/stdbuf.c (usage): Likewise.
* src/truncate.c (usage): Likewise.
* cfg.mk (sc_option_desc_uppercase): A new syntax check to
stop this happening in future.
* man/Makefile.am (sc_option_desc_uppercase): Ensure all
man pages are generated, then search for erroneous uppercase chars.
* src/Makefile.am (all_programs): Ensure all
commands are built so that all man pages can be generated.
* src/join.c (usage): Mention "fields" rather than repeating "line"
so that it's more obvious that the fields are still parsed, and
thus -o is still honored for headers. Also remove an extraneous
'.' reported by Stéphane Raimbault.
* src/base64.c (usage): Remove extraneous blank line and order
the options alphabetically. Also remove an extraneous '.'
* src/chown.c (usage): Remove extraneous '.'
* src/cp.c (usage): Likewise.
* src/mktemp.c (usage): Likewise.
* src/pr.c (usage): Likewise.
* src/stat.c (usage): Likewise.
* src/uniq.c (usage): Likewise.
Prompted by the continuous integration build failure at:
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/277485
* tests/misc/timeout: Set all expected timeouts to 1s and all
unexpected timeouts to 10s. In this way, tests normally proceed
quickly but may delay up to 10s before reporting failures.
* tests/ls/infloop: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/pid: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/pipe-f: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/wait: Likewise.
* tests/dd/skip-seek-past-dev: Likewise.
Previously passing an empty parameter to -t would
raise an error, but now it means to treat each line
as a single field for matching. This matches the
default operation of `sort` which is usually used
in conjunction with join.
* src/join.c (main): Set the field delimiter to '\n' if
an empty parameter is passed to -t.
(usage): Mention the operation of -t ''.
* tests/misc/join: Add 2 new tests, for the existing -t '\0'
and the new -t '' functionality.
* doc/coreutils.texi (join invocation): Mention that
join -t '' always operates on the whole line, while
join -t '\0' usually does.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
This essentially allows one to use --check-order with headings.
Note join without --check-order will already handle the common case
where headings do match in each file, however using --check-order will fail
often when the header sorts after the first line of data.
Note also that this will join header lines from each file even if
they don't match, with headings from the first file being used.
* NEWS: Mention the new option.
* doc/coreutils.texi (join invocation): Describe the new option.
* src/join.c (usage): Likewise.
(join): Join the header lines unconditionally.
* tests/misc/join: Add 5 new tests.
* src/join.c (join): Refactor the code that checks for misorder
at the tail of the files. The most significant change here is
that freeline() is called thus silencing a valgrind warning about
a definite but inconsequential memory leak.
(freeline): Make more general by doing nothing when passed NULL,
and setting freed pointers to NULL.
* tests/check.mk (TESTS_ENVIRONMENT): Use the generated CONFIG_INCLUDE
variable. Note $(abs_builddir)/$(CONFIG_HEADER) also currently works,
but $(CONFIG_HEADER) is deprecated and may not be generated in future.
$(CONFIG_INCLUDE) was made available by gnulib in commit, 22970f8a,
"syntax-check: detect incorrect boolean macro values in config.h"
* src/ls.c (main): With --color, avoid emitting the final color-
resetting escape sequence when it would be a no-op.
* tests/ls/color-clear-to-eol: Adjust expected output accordingly.
* tests/ls/color-dtype-dir: Likewise.
* tests/ls/multihardlink: Likewise.
* tests/ls/stat-free-symlinks: Likewise.
* tests/misc/ls-misc: Likewise.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
C de-Avillez rebased and adapted four of the new sl-dangle*
tests in tests/misc/ls-misc.
Reported by Jim Avera in
http://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/coreutils/+bug/494663
Enabled when coreutils is configured with --with-tty-group.
Based on a patch written by Piotr Gackiewicz. Details at
http://bugzilla.redhat.com/454261
* src/who.c (is_tty_writable): A new function returning true if a TTY
device is writable by the group. Additionally it checks the group to be
the same as TTY_GROUP_NAME when compiled with --with-tty-group.
* m4/jm-macros.m4: Introduce a new configure option --with-tty-group.
* NEWS: Mention the change.
* cfg.mk (sc_x_sc_dist_check): This coreutils-specific syntax-check
rule would fail in a non-srcdir build, since in that case, each name
from $(VC_LIST) starts with "$(srcdir)/". Fix that.
* gnulib: Update to latest, to pull in a required maint.mk change.
* tests/cp-mv-enotsup-xattr: Create a file system from which to copy
the xattrs so that the test is not skipped if the host file system
does not have user_xattr support. Also don't erroneously fail when
built without xattr support.
* tests/cp/acl: Support USE_ACL not being defined.
* tests/mv/acl: Likewise. Also fix typo in skip message.
* tests/cp/preserve-slink-time: Support HAVE_UTIMENSAT being 0.
* tests/touch/no-dereference: Likewise.
* tests/ls/capability: Normalize so 1 is not required to be last char.
* src/pr.c (init_store_cols): Allocate N*sizeof(*VAR) bytes,
not N*sizeof(int*). The latter would mistakenly allocate double
the required space on a system with 8-byte pointers.
* README-release: Push the automated release and post-release
NEWS-updating commits.
Pádraig Brady reported that I'd pushed the tag without also
pushing the followup commit.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-hash-abuse: Use kill rather than wait
to determine if the tail process is still running.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-hash-abuse2: Ditto.
* tests/ls/infloop: OpenBSD4.5's /bin/sh would mistakenly include
"set -x"-output in an application's stderr stream when stderr is
redirected before stdout. This was causing one spurious test failure.
The work-around: redirect stdout first.
Reported by Nelson Beebe.
* tests/misc/sort-version: Don't use <<- and indented here-doc contents.
s/<<-/<</ and unindent the here-document contents. Otherwise,
bash would ignore the indented delimiter and use EOF, thus silently
skipping this test. OpenBSD5.4's shell reported the failure:
$ printf 'cat<<-x\n foo\n x\n'|sh
sh: <stdin>[4]: here document `x' unclosed
[Exit 1]
by contrast, bash warns but still exits successfully:
$ printf 'cat<<-x\n foo\n x\n'|bash && echo you lose
bash: line 3: warning: here-document at line 1 delimited by \
end-of-file (wanted `x')
foo
x
you lose
* tests/check.mk: Prepend /usr/xpg4/bin to the $PATH if present.
Using the more standard utilities allows tests such as misc/printenv,
which uses the -E option to grep, to complete.
Configure is supposed to detect insufficient XATTR support.
However, if a system has the required headers, but no library,
the configure script would mistakenly enable USE_XATTR.
* m4/xattr.m4 (gl_FUNC_XATTR): If the attr_copy_file function
is not found, don't set USE_XATTR.
Nelson Beebe reported a link failure on RHEL 5.3.
Also, do not let the combination of --disable-xattr and
a stray LIB_XATTR environment setting perturb the build.
* NEWS (Build-related): Mention it.
* src/ls.c: Include <sys/capability.h> later, to avoid build
failure with a header from libcap-2.16-1 or earlier.
See http://bugzilla.redhat.com/483548 for details.
Before this change, with too long a file name, the name would
abut the date field on the left and possibly also the "Page N"
field on the right, rather than leaving a one-space separator
in each case. Fixes a regression introduced on Mar 6 2009,
by commit a4053c5291
* src/pr.c (print_header): Ensure that there is at least one
space before and after the file name part of the header line.
* NEWS: Mention it.
* tests/pr/W20l24f-ll: s/xPage/ x Page/.
* THANKS: Update.
Reported by Denis McKeon, in https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?28492.
* configure.ac: Require autoconf-2.62 and automake-1.11.1 or newer.
* bootstrap.conf (buildreq): Require automake-1.11.1 or newer,
to ensure people use a version with the fix for CVE-2009-4029.
Note that the coreutils-8.2 tarball included a fixed Makefile.in.
Require autoconf-2.62, per automake.
* src/ls.c (print_color_indicator): When using 'LINK target' in
dircolors, treat broken symlink as C_ORPHAN.
* tests/misc/ls-misc (sl-dangle2, sl-dangle3, sl-dangle4)
(sl-dangle5): Test for it, and add more coverage.
* NEWS: Document it.
* THANKS: Update.
Reported by Chris Jones.
* src/tail.c (usage): Reword tail -F description, so that it no
longer mentions details specific to the non-inotify implementation.
Also, join diagnostic strings (while staying under the 509-byte limit)
to ease formatting of translations. The latter was prompted by
a report from Stéphane Raimbault.
* doc/coreutils.texi (tail invocation): Update description here, too.
This fixes a bug whereby tail -F would fail to track changes
to a file that was a target of a rename, and when the source of
the rename was another tailed file.
* src/tail.c (tail_forever_inotify): Ensure the wd is not already
present in the hash table before trying to add it. When a new watch
descriptor is added to the `wd_to_name' hash table, check that it is
not already present. If it is present then remove the previous element.
* src/tail.c (tail_forever_inotify): Avoid modifying fdspec->wd while
it is in the wd_to_name hash table. Once it is removed, it can be
added using the new `wd' as key for the hash table. This fixes the
abort-inducing bug reported by Rob Wortman in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/19372
* src/tail.c (tail_forever_inotify): Do not use f[i] in a context
where i may be larger than the largest valid index. In the final
"if" clause in which we'd remove an inotify watch, we might have
used f[n_files]. Use fspec instead, since it is guaranteed to
be defined.
* src/tail.c (fremote): Add a comment.
Move definition "up" to precede first use, so we can
remove its prototype and the #if..#endif around each use.
(any_remote_file): Rename from any_remote_files.
* src/tail.c (struct File_spec): Add a flag to record if file is remote.
(recheck): If we're using inotify then check if the file has gone remote
and if so, drop it with a warning.
(any_remote_files): A new function to check for any open remote files.
(tailable_stdin): A new function to refactor the check for whether
a tailable file was specified through stdin.
(fremote): A new function to check if a file descriptor
refers to a remote file.
(tail_forever_inotify): Add some comments.
(tail_file): Record if a file is remote when initially opened.
(main): Disable inotify if any remote files specified.
Also document the caveat about remounted files not
being noticed by inotify.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* src/wc.c (main): Set stdout to line buffered mode
to ensure parallel running instances don't intersperse
their output. This adds 6.5% to the run time in the worst case
of many zero length files, but has neglible impact for
standard sized files.
* tests/misc/wc-parallel: New test for atomic output.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference it.
* NEWS: Mention the fix
This is similar to commit 710fe413, 20-10-2009,
"md5sum, sha*sum, sum: line-buffer the printed checksums"
* src/stat.c (human_fstype): Add the following FS types:
fuseblk, rpc_pipefs. Also fix a typo of minux3 to minix3,
and mention the fs-magic-compare make target to help update the list.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* dist-check.mk (built_programs): Use $(bin_PROGRAMS), not $(PROGRAMS).
Otherwise, my-instcheck would fail due to non-installation of e.g.,
the noinst_PROGRAMS, setuidgid and getlimits.
(taint-distcheck): Correct the grep command that checks for libtool
traces in configure.
Regression introduced in coreutils 8.1 due to a bug in the Linux
kernel implementation of utimensat with mtime of UTIME_OMIT.
* gnulib: Update to latest, to pick up utimensat fix.
* NEWS: Mention the change.
* THANKS: Update.
Reported by John Stanley.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Remove the strverscmp module
which is not used since commit e505736f, on 03-10-2008,
"ls and sort: use filevercmp instead of strverscmp"
* doc/coreutils.texi (sort invocation): Reference the additional
info about filevercmp rather than the unused strverscmp.
(Details about version sort): Add some examples that are not
handled well by fileversmp.
* src/ls.c: Change a comment referencing the now unused strverscmp.
* src/remove.c (rm_fts): Fix incorrect comparison of
device and inode numbers.
* tests/rm/one-file-system2: Add a separate test so
that it can be run as a normal user (It doesn't need to mount).
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference it.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
Reported by Jan Larres.
* dist-check.mk (null_AM_MAKEFLAGS): Remove LIBTOOL. Adding it was
erroneous, since it is required when building from a distribution
tarball of a libtool-using project. Reported by Ralf Wildenhues.
(my-distcheck): Reorganize to use a subshell and set -e, so that
failures propagate "out". Without this change, setting LIBTOOL=false
would cause a failure that would then be ignored, probably due to a
problem in $(install-transform-check).
* dist-check.mk (built_programs): More generic, but still assumes src/.
Don't set GZIP in environment when untarring.
(my-distcheck): Use $(DIST_ARCHIVES), rather than assuming that
there is always a .tar.gz file.
* dist-check.mk (null_AM_MAKEFLAGS): Define here, not in maint.mk.
(built_programs): Likewise.
(my-distcheck): Move comments to...
(coreutils-path-check): ...the code they refer to.
Remove obsolete comments.
(null_AM_MAKEFLAGS): Add gperf, even though it's not used here.
* gnulib: Update to latest, for fixed maint.mk.
* gl/lib/tempname.c.diff: Adjust patch to apply to gnulib, now that
most TABs in indentation have been converted to spaces by running
this command: f=tempname.c.diff; patch-xform $f > k && mv k $f
This bug showed up via valgrind as a "Conditional jump or move
depends on uninitialized value(s)" error.
* src/tail.c (ignore_fifo_and_pipe): New function.
(main): Use it only when tailing forever.
The code to compute n_viable and mark some F[i] as ignored would call
isapipe on an uninitialized file descriptor. But n_viable and those
.ignored marks are useful/used only when tailing forever. This bug
was introduced via commit f0ff8c73 (7.6), "tail: make the new
piped-stdin test as portable as the old one".
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention implications of the "make distcheck" change.
This was introduced on 2008-07-22 by commit 9bb0d576, "tests: ensure
"make check" w/tainted build dir no longer impacts $HOME".
* src/sort.c (main): Reset the SIGCHLD handler to the default
as otherwise wait() could return an error.
* tests/misc/sort-compress: Set the CHLD handler in a subshell
to SIG_IGN to ensure the sort command resets it to SIG_DFL.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* src/timeout.c (main): Reset the SIGCHLD handler to the default
as otherwise wait() could return -1 and set errno to ECHILD.
This condition was ignored until commit 0b1dcf33, on 31-08-2009,
"timeout: defensive handling of all wait() errors"
but subsequently timeout would run the command correctly
but then fail with an error message.
* tests/misc/timeout: In a subshell set the CHLD handler to
SIG_IGN to ensure the timeout command resets it to SIG_DFL.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* tests/misc/stty-row-col: Linux virtual consoles at least,
issue an error if you try to increase their size, so skip the
test if we can't increase the dimensions of the tty by 1 cell.
Reported by Matthew Burgess.
* dist-check.mk (tmpdir): Rename from TMPDIR. Use ./tests/torture
unconditionally, rather than $TMPDIR-with-default-to-/tmp.
Otherwise, running "make distcheck" could leave an empty /tmp/coreutils
directory behind.
(tp): Simplify, now that it's always in the build-dir.
(taint-distcheck): Set HOME earlier, in case $(MAKE) misbehaves.
(my-instcheck, coreutils-path-check): Add diagnostics, so it's easier
to diagnose when each runs.
(coreutils-path-check): Run configure with --quiet, to reduce output.
Inspired by Ralf Wildenhues' report of /tmp/coreutils being left behind.
* tests/ls/readdir-mountpoint-inode: With some systems, stat can
succeed on a mount point and report that the inode number is 0.
Since ls displays "?" for those, that would otherwise show up as a
difference. Skip such mount points. Reported by Sergei Steshenko
in http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/19142
* tests/tail-2/inotify-race: Note the caveats of the test.
I.E. the intermittent skips and the gdb hang reported
by Alan Curry. Add extra info to the log on why the test
is skipped as it may be due to multiple reasons. Mark
the test as very expensive so that it's not normally run.
If getgroups failed with ENOSYS, mgetgroups would unnecessarily
fail, and that provoked id into freeing an uninitialized pointer.
Meanwhile, we were not using xalloc_die properly. Both issues
are better solved in gnulib, by introducing xgetgroups; this
patch uses the new interface.
Regression introduced by commit 6a31fd8d7.
* gnulib: Update, for mgetgroups improvments.
* src/id.c (print_full_info): Adjust caller to die on allocation
failure, and no longer worry about ENOSYS.
* src/group-list.c (print_group_list): Likewise.
* src/setuidgid.c (main): Likewise.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* THANKS: Update.
Reported by Scott Harrison.
While "rm ''" would properly fail, "rm F1 '' F2" would fail
to remove F1 and F2, due to the empty string argument.
This bug was introduced on 2009-07-12, via commit 4f73ecaf,
"rm: rewrite to use fts".
* gnulib: Update to latest, for fixed fts.c.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Describe it.
* tests/rm/empty-name: Adjust for changed diagnostic.
(mk_file): Define, copied from misc/ls-misc.
(empty-name-2): New test, for today's fix.
* lib/xfts.c (xfts_open): Reflect the change in fts_open, now that
it no longer fails immediately when one argument is the empty string.
Assert that the bit flags were not the cause of failure.
* po/POTFILES.in: Remove xfts.c.
* THANKS: Update.
Reported by Ladislav Hagara.
* bootstrap (get_version): Don't use perl's $] special
variable, as that requires updating all bootstrap.conf files to
use perl's x.yyyzzz version format. Instead make the regular
expression more general to support version formats from older
perl-5.005_002 (5.5.2) and perl-5.11 which has other numbers
in the version line.
Counterpart to commit 8fe40b84bd, since test-link.c uses rename,
and we override gnulib with a rename() replacement that can xalloc_die.
* gl/modules/link-tests.diff: New file.
Cygwin 1.5 has a broken sleep, and the gnulib tests dragged in
rpl_sleep which then caused a link failure because it wasn't in
libcoreutils.a. We could solve it by using the gnulib sleep module.
However, sleep and usleep may interact poorly with SIGALRM, and they
have less granularity; so it is better to adopt a policy that if we
must sleep, prefer xnanosleep.
* src/sort.c (pipe_fork): Use xnanosleep, to avoid the need for
rpl_sleep on cygwin, and to reduce granularity.
(MAX_FORK_TRIES_COMPRESS, MAX_FORK_TRIES_DECOMPRESS): Increase,
to account for reduction in granularity.
* src/tail.c (tail_file): Use xnanosleep in debug code.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_sleep): New rule.
* cfg.mk (gnu_ftp_host-alpha, gnu_ftp_host-beta gnu_ftp_host-stable):
(gnu_rel_host, url_dir_list): Remove definitions. The defaults,
now provided by maint.mk, are the same.
* gnulib: Update for latest, including those maint.mk additions.
These tests perform no PATH search, and used to simply delete PATH from
the environment. However, that is not portable, as seen on Cygwin,
where cygwin.dll must be resolvable via PATH when starting a sub-shell.
With commit 0cc04241, we took the alternate approach of untainting the
incoming $ENV{PATH}, but that fails when it contains an other-writable
directory. Instead, now we hard code it to '/bin:/usr/bin'.
* tests/misc/pwd-long: Hard code $ENV{PATH} to a safe value.
* tests/rm/fail-eperm: Likewise.
Reported by Gilles Espinasse, Andreas Schwab, and Bauke Jan Douma.
* src/true.c (main): There is no reason to examine argv[0],
call atexit, etc., in the usual case in which we're about to exit.
This has the side effect of making it so that these programs
no longer segfault when subjected to execve abuse.
Before this change, these commands would make "true" segfault:
printf '%s\n' '#include <unistd.h>' 'int main(int c, char**v)' \
'{ execve (v[1], 0, 0); }' > k.c && gcc k.c && ./a.out $PWD/true
Now it succeeds. Reported by Tetsuo Handa and Bart Van Assche
via Ondřej Vašík in http://bugzilla.redhat.com/537684.
Tailing forever and by-name (--follow=name, -F), tail would
sometimes fail to follow a file that had been removed via rename.
If you can't apply this patch and have tail 7.6 or newer, you can
work around the bug via the undocumented --disable-inotify option.
* src/tail.c (tail_forever_inotify): When tailing by name (-F),
do not un-watch a file upon receipt of the IN_MOVE_SELF event.
Reported by Arjan Opmeer in http://bugs.debian.org/548439.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Also see http://marc.info/?l=coreutils-bug&m=125829031916515
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add tail-2/inotify-rotate.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-rotate: New test.
* tests/misc/timeout-parameters: This test could fail due to
the 1-second timeout expiring before a command of "no_such"
could be exec'd and fail. Increase to 10 seconds.
* configure.ac: Use AM_GNU_GETTEXT([external], [need-ngettext]),
rather than AM_GNU_GETTEXT([external], [need-formatstring-macros]).
Reported by Martin Jacobs in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.parsers.bison.bugs/3181
* THANKS: Add his name.
* tests/misc/timeout-parameters: This test would fail due to
the 1-second timeout expiring before a command of "." could
be exec'd and fail. Increase to 10 seconds.
A replacement getgroups is now guaranteed to exist, but it may
fail with ENOSYS. mgetgroups is moved to gnulib, and now takes
gid_t instead of GETGROUPS_T (but setgroups still needs GETGROUPS_T).
* gnulib: Update to latest.
* gl/modules/mgetgroups: Delete, moved to gnulib.
* gl/m4/mgetgroups.m4: Likewise.
* gl/lib/mgetgroups.h: Likewise.
* gl/lib/mgetgroups.c: Likewise.
* src/group-list.c (print_group_list): Adjust callers.
* src/id.c (print_full_info): Likewise.
Capability checking was incorrectly done on just the base name
rather than on the whole path. Consequently there could be both
false positives and negatives when coloring files with capabilities.
Also capability checking was not done at all in certain cases for
non executable files. Note passing absolute rather than relative
names to cap_get_file() reduces the has_capability() overhead
from around 33% to 30%. I.E. ls --color is now around 3% faster.
* src/ls.c (struct fileinfo): Add a has_capability member.
(print_color_indicator): Refactor to pass just a fileinfo pointer
and a flag to say if we're dealing with a symlink target.
(print_name_with_quoting): Likewise.
(gobble_file): Set has_capability in the fileinfo struct. Also do
a capability check even if executable coloring is disabled.
Ditto for SETUID and SETUID coloring.
Comment on how expensive has_capability() is.
(print_long_format): Adjust to refactored print_name_with_quoting.
(quote_name): Likewise.
(print_file_name_and_frills): Likewise.
* tests/ls/capability: Test the various false positive and negatives.
* THANKS: Add reporter (Ivan Labath).
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
cat, head, ptx, shuf, tac, tail, tee, tr, and uniq used freopen
on stdout, and were potentially vulnerable. dircolors, du, and
tsort only used it on stdin, which is unaffected by freopen_safer,
but this covers all uses for consistency.
* cfg.mk (sc_require_stdio_safer): New rule.
* gl/modules/xfreopen (Depends-on): Add freopen-safer.
* gl/lib/xfreopen.c (includes): Use stdio--.h.
* src/ptx.c (includes): Likewise.
* src/shuf.c (includes): Likewise.
* src/uniq.c (includes): Likewise.
* src/dircolors.c (includes): Likewise.
* src/du.c (includes): Likewise.
* src/tsort.c (includes): Likewise.
If stdin or stdout is closed, then freopen(,stderr) can violate
the premise that STDERR_FILENO==fileno(stderr), which in turn
breaks mktemp -q.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add freopen-safer.
* src/mktemp.c (includes): Use stdio--.h.
* tests/misc/close-stdout: Enhance test to catch bug.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add do-release-commit-and-tag.
* build-aux/do-release-commit-and-tag: Remove file. Now it's in gnulib.
* gnulib: Update submodule to the latest, to get the just-moved script.
Reverts earlier patch - fflush() can succeed but fclose() fail for
some cases of write failures, and we want to catch those.
* src/mktemp.c (stdout_closed): New variable.
(maybe_close_stdout): New function, borrowed from dd.c.
(main): Track whether stdout has been closed.
* src/mktemp.c (main): Rather than calling close_stream (which would
make atexit-called close_stdout try to close it a second time),
check for write failure via ferror and fflush.
Now that mkstemps is supported, we might as well use it.
* src/mktemp.c (TMPDIR_OPTION): New enum value.
(longopts): Add new option.
(usage): Document it.
(count_trailing_X_s): Rename...
(count_consecutive_X_s): ...to this, and add parameter.
(mkstemp_len, mkdtemp_len): Add parameter.
(main): Implement new option.
(AUTHORS): Add myself.
* AUTHORS (mktemp): Likewise.
* tests/misc/mktemp: Test new option.
* doc/coreutils.texi (mktemp invocation): Document it.
* NEWS: Likewise.
Fixes http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=548316.
In glibc 2.11 and gnulib, gen_tempname added a parameter
suffixlen (unfortunately, it is typed as int rather than
size_t, for historical compatibility to a poor choice by BSD).
* gnulib: Import latest changes.
* gl/lib/tempname.h.diff: Accommodate new suffixlen parameter.
* gl/lib/tempname.c.diff (check_x_suffix): Allow for X in suffix
beyond x_suffix_len.
(gen_tempname_len): Add suffixlen parameter.
(__gen_tempname): Update caller.
* src/mktemp.c (mkstemp_len, mkdtemp_len): Update callers.
Diffs are more robust than wholesale replacement, because bootstrap
will inform us of any incompatible changes made in upstream gnulib.
* gl/lib/tempname.h: Change...
* gl/lib/tempname.h.diff: ...to diff.
* gl/lib/tempname.c: Change...
* gl/lib/tempname.c.diff: ...to diff.
* src/mktemp.c (main): Remove just-created file if stdout had
problems.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add remove.
* tests/misc/close-stdout: Test it.
* NEWS: Document it.
* src/du.c (symlink_deref_bits): New global, decl moved from ...
(main): ...here.
(process_file): When fts detects a directory cycle that can't
be due to symlinks, report it and arrange to exit nonzero.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
rm -f must not print a diagnostic for a nonexistent file. However,
most linux-based kernel unlinkat functions set errno to EROFS when
the named file (regardless of whether it exists) would lie on a
read-only file system. remove.c now performs an extra fstatat call
in that case, to determine whether the file exists.
* src/remove.c (excise): Map EROFS to ENOENT, if a file is nonexistent.
Reported by Steven Drake in <http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?27923>.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
* gl/lib/mbsalign.c (mbsalign): Mark unused parameter.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Remove obsolete
rename-dest-slash.
* gnulib-tests/Makefile.am (AM_CFLAGS): Reduce set of warnings for
gnulib tests.
* gl/modules/rename-tests.diff (Makefile.am): New file, to add
LIBINTL to LDADD, since we avoid canonicalize-lgpl module.
* gl/lib/regcomp.c.diff (regerror, calc_next)
(build_collating_symbol, parse_bracket_element, build_equiv_class)
(free_tree): Mark unused parameters.
* gl/lib/regex_internal.h.diff (re_string_elem_size_at): New file,
to mark unused parameters.
* gl/lib/printf-args.c.diff (PRINTF_FETCHARGS): New file, to avoid
type mismatch.
* gl/lib/vasnprintf.c (VASNPRINTF): New file, to avoid shadowing
local variable name.
* .gitignore: Ignore temporary build artifacts.
This script automates the process of updating NEWS, performs
the resulting final commit (thus with a consistent log message),
and applies a signed tag (v$VERSION) to the result.
* build-aux/do-release-commit-and-tag: New script.
* README-release: Document it.
Run this command to remove the factored-out "fail=0" lines.
perl -ni -e '/^fail=0$/ or print' $(g grep -l '^fail=0$')
* tests/test-lib.sh: Initialize fail=0 here, not in 300+ scripts.
* tests/...: nearly all bourne shell scripts
Suggested by Eric Blake.
* configure.ac (GNULIB_WARN_CFLAGS): Define.
* lib/Makefile.am (AM_CFLAGS): Use $(GNULIB_WARN_CFLAGS)
rather than $(WARN_CFLAGS) and add $(WERROR_CFLAGS).
* gl/lib/regcomp.c.diff: New file.
* gl/lib/regex_internal.c.diff: New file.
* gl/lib/regexec.c.diff: New file.
These programs can print non-fatal diagnostics to stderr prior to
exec'ing a subsidiary program. However, if we thought the situation
warranted a diagnostic, we insist that the diagnostic be printed
without error, rather than blindly exec, as it may be a security risk.
For an example, try 'nice -n -1 nice 2>/dev/full'. Failure to raise
priority (by lowering niceness) is not fatal, but failure to inform
the user about failure to change priority is dangerous.
* src/nice.c (main): Declare failure if writing advisory message
to stderr fails.
* src/nohup.c (main): Likewise.
* src/su.c (main): Likewise.
* tests/misc/nice: Test this.
* tests/misc/nohup: Likewise.
* NEWS: Document this.
* doc/Makefile.am (check-texinfo): Begin moving each individual test
into its own rules.
(sc-avoid-builtin, sc-avoid-path): New rules.
Extracted from check-texinfo.
(syntax_checks): Add them.
* src/printf.c (usage): Merge strings with echo.c to
aid translators. Move the description for \NNN beside
the other numeric escape codes. Don't mention
"character" as that suggests character conversion.
* src/echo.c (usage): Likewise.
Also mention the \xHH escape sequence.
Allows for unambiguous processing when environment values (or even
non-portable names!) contain newline.
* src/env.c (longopts): Add new option.
(usage): Document it.
(main): Implement it.
* src/printenv.c (longopts): New variable.
(usage): Document new option.
(main): Implement it.
* doc/coreutils.texi (Common options): New macro optNull.
(du invocation, env invocation, printenv invocation): Use it.
* NEWS: Mention this.
* tests/misc/env-null: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Run it.
* tests/misc/sort-compress: Remove non-portable over-restriction
of PATH; besides, commit 3ea177e changed sort to no longer default
to gzip.
* tests/rm/fail-eperm: Untaint, rather than clear, PATH.
* tests/misc/pwd-long: Likewise. Also skip test if long path
cannot be created.
(normalize_to_cwd_relative): Use eq rather than ==, since cygwin
perl doesn't properly handle 64-bit ino_t numerically.
The comment in env.c about -- handling has not matched the behavior
in the code since the initial commit back in 1992.
* src/env.c: Fix bogus comment.
* tests/misc/env: Further tweaks, avoiding PATH problems inherent
in testing -i, and testing program name containing =.
* doc/coreutils.texi (env invocation): Mention that intermediate
program is needed to invoke program with name containing =.
* src/env.c (main): Use unsetenv rather than putenv to remove
items from environ, and check for failure.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add unsetenv.
* tests/misc/env: Test this.
* NEWS: Document it.
* tests/rm/one-file-system (cleanup_): Unmount a/b, rather than
"$other_partition_tmpdir", to accommodate those who link /etc/mtab
to /proc/mounts. Reported by Gilles Espinasse in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/18508
* tests/misc/nice (tests): Accommodate a nice program for which
"nice -n -1 nice" prints nothing. It should print -1 or (usually) 0.
Otherwise, we'd get syntax errors.
* src/timeout.c (install_signal_handlers): Handle any user
specified signal, so that if it does not cause the child
to exit then we don't exit and orphan the child. Previously this
for example, would leave an orphan dd process running:
timeout -sUSR1 1s dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* gnulib-tests/Makefile.am (AM_CFLAGS): Add WARN_CFLAGS.
* configure.ac (enable-gcc-warnings): Also use -funit-at-a-time,
to silence gcc 4.3.4 -Wdisabled-optimization.
* .gitignore: Ignore some more files.
If new data becomes available between the initial read and when tail
registers the inotify watch descriptors, ensure that it is read
before a new event happens on the file.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add tail-2/inotify-race.
* tests/tail-2/inotify-race: New file.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/tail.c (check_fspec): New function.
(tail_forever_inotify): Ensure there is no new data before entering the
inotify events wait loop.
* src/md5sum.c (main): Set stdout to line buffered mode
to ensure parallel running instances don't intersperse
their output. This adds 5% to the run time in the worst case
of many zero length files, or 2% with standard file sizes.
* src/sum.c (main): Likewise.
* tests/misc/md5sum-parallel: New test for atomic output.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference it.
* NEWS: Mention the fix
* README-hacking: Suggest to use ./configure --quiet so that
any warnings are easily noticed.
* m4/gmp.m4 (cu_GMP): Warn if libgmp is not available.
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (coreutils_MACROS): Normalize the libcap warning.
* m4/xattr.m4 (gl_FUNC_XATTR): Warn if libattr is not available.
* src/touch.c (no_dereference): New flag variable.
(longopts): Add -h/--no-dereference.
(touch): Add symlink handling.
(usage): Document new option.
(main): Accept new option.
* NEWS: Document it.
* doc/coreutils.texi (touch invocation): Likewise. Also mention
birthtime.
* tests/touch/no-dereference: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Run it.
* tests/ls/abmon-align: Don't remove (1d;) the first line of output.
That was making the test consider only 11 of 12 month names.
Rewrite not to use \(.*\), as that provoked a malfunction in GNU sed
on powerpc Mac OS X (though we don't know yet whether this is due to a
sed bug, or to miscompilation). Nelson Beebe reported the test failure.
Setting the envvars, LIB_FDATASYNC, LIB_XATTR or LIB_CRYPT
could cause a configure-time and/or build-time malfunction.
Typically, a configure-time function-in-library test is performed
via code like this:
LIB_VAR=
AC_SUBST([LIB_VAR])
prefix_saved_LIBS=$LIBS
AC_SEARCH_LIBS([FUNC], [LIB_NAME],
[test "$ac_cv_search_FUNC" = "none required" ||
LIB_VAR=$ac_cv_search_FUNC])
LIBS=$prefix_saved_LIBS
However, in each of the files affected by this change, the LIB_VAR=
initialization was omitted. Thus, when set in the environment, its
value would propagate into generated Makefiles when FUNC is not found
in LIB_NAME.
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (coreutils_MACROS): Initialize AC_SUBST'd var
* m4/lib-check.m4 (cu_LIB_CHECK): Likewise.
* m4/xattr.m4 (gl_FUNC_XATTR): Likewise.
* src/copy.c (utimens_symlink): Simplify by using lutimens.
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (coreutils_MACROS): Drop utimensat; gnulib does
this for us.
* tests/cp/preserve-slink-time: Recognize lutimes support.
* tests/tail-2/pid: Run tail -f --pid=... on an actual file, not on
/dev/null, to avoid this failure on FreeBSD 6.1: tail: /dev/null:
cannot change nonblocking mode: Inappropriate ioctl for device
Before, on a system without the uname function, the build
system would detect that and not build/install a uname program.
Now that gnulib guarantees a uname function, ...
* configure.ac: Don't check for the uname function.
* src/Makefile.am (build_if_possible__progs): Move uname...
(EXTRA_PROGRAMS): ...to this list.
* src/chcon.c (main): Now that gnulib provides getfilecon wrappers,
we can revert most of the 2009-10-05 commit 3a97d664, "chcon: exit
immediately if SELinux is disabled", since chcon is still useful as
long as the file system provides handlers for the security.*
name space. gnulib's getfilecon wrappers ensure that an offending
context now evokes a return value of -1.
Prompted by comments from Stephen Smalley in
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/18378/focus=18394
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/stat.c (human_fstype) [CIFS, HFS]: Add new file system types.
Prompted by a report from Stuart Kemp.
Normalize the form of a few hexadecimal magic numbers.
Alphabetize on S_MAGIC_ case names.
* src/Makefile.am (fs-magic-compare, fs-def, fs-magic): New rules, to
automate comparison of our list with that in the Linux statfs man page.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/md5sum.c (split_3): Accept openssl checksum syntax, which
differs only by two spaces from that of the bsd checksum tools:
openssl: MD5(f)= d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e
bsd: MD5 (f) = d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e
This change happens to avoid an abort in chcon when SELinux is
disabled while operating on a file with an "unlabeled" context from
back in 2006. However, that same abort can still be triggered by the
same file when running chcon with SELinux enabled. This bug in chcon
will be fixed in a subsequent commit via a getfilecon wrapper. See
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/18378/focus=18384
for how to correct your disk attributes to avoid triggering this bug.
* src/chcon.c (main): Exit immediately if SELinux is disabled.
Reported in http://bugzilla.redhat.com/527142 by Yanko Kaneti.
* src/runcon.c (main): Do not hardcode program name in error message.
* THANKS: Update.
* src/tail.c (tail_forever, tail_forever_inotify): Close a race in
tail_forever_inotify where new data written after the file check by
a now dead process, but before the pid check, is not output. We use
the POSIX guarantee that read() and write() are serialized wrt each
other even in separate processes, to assume full file consistency
after exit() and so poll for new data _after_ the writer has exited.
This also allows us to not redundantly _wait_ for new data if the
process is dead.
* tests/tail-2/pid: Remove the now partially invalid sub second sleep
check as we now don't unconditionally wait, and replace it with a check
for the redundant sleep. Also clarify some of the existing comments.
* NEWS: Mention the fix.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add gnu-web-doc-update.
Remove gendocs, since gnu-web-doc-update depends on it.
* gnu-web-doc-update: Remove file, now that we get it from gnulib.
* tests/tail-2/pid: When using the timeout program to ensuring that
tail -s.1 --pid=$PID_T_MAX does not wait forever, use a timeout longer
than 1 second. A 1-second timeout could be too short on a very busy
system, and result in a timeout, and hence false-positive failure.
2009-09-30 Jim Meyering <meyering@redhat.com>
Previously for `ls -Ls` (but not `ls -Lsl`), we referenced
the st_blocks returned from the previous failed stat() call.
This undefined value was seen to be 0 for dangling symlinks at least.
* src/ls.c (print_file_name_and_frills, length_of_file_name_and_frills):
Don't use st_blocks if the previous stat() failed
* tests/ls/dangle: Add a test case
* NEWS: Mention the fix, and roll up related items into a single entry.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add freopen, strsignal, fsync.
Exposed via make CFLAGS=-DGNULIB_POSIXCHECK 2>&1 \
|perl -lne '/.* use gnulib module (\S+).*/ and print $1' \
|sort |uniq -c|sort -nr
(avoided_gnulib_modules): Don't avoid the "lock" module.
Now it's required, as a dependency of the strsignal module.
* src/stat.c (do_stat): Interpret a command line argument of "-"
to mean "standard input", like many other tools do.
(do_statfs): Fail upon any attempt to use "-".
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
* tests/misc/stat-hyphen: New test, to exercise the above.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add misc/stat-hyphen.
ls prints inode numbers two ways: for long (-l) listings,
and for short ones, e.g., ls -li and ls -i. The code to print
long listings properly printed "?" when the inode was unknown,
but the code for handling short listings would print 0 instead.
Factor out the formatting code into a new function so ls prints
the right string ("?") from both places:
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/ls.c (format_inode): New function.
(print_long_format): Use it here.
(print_file_name_and_frills): Use it here, too.
* tests/ls/dangle: Exercise this fix.
Reported by Yang Ren in http://bugzilla.redhat.com/525400
* src/ls.c (print_dir): Diagnosing the cycle is not enough.
Also set exit status to 2. This is what Solaris' /bin/ls does, too.
* tests/ls/infloop: Rework test: match both expected stdout and stderr.
Require an exit status of 2 in this case.
* doc/coreutils.texi (ls invocation): Mention that a loop provokes
in an exit status of 2.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported by Yang Ren in http://bugzilla.redhat.com/525402.
* THANKS: Correct ordering of Yang Ren's names.
* bootstrap (bootstrap_epilogue): Define a default, empty function.
Remove coreutils-specific code, and instead,
invoke this new function at the end of this script.
* bootstrap.conf (bootstrap_epilogue): Define, to override the default.
This is because bitwise operators are:
- confusing and inconsistent in a boolean context
- non short circuiting
- brittle in C89 where bool can be an int (so > 1)
* bootstrap.conf (obsolete_gnulib_modules): Move rename...
(gnulib_modules): ...here. Add symlink.
* NEWS: Document the change in readlink.
* doc/coreutils.texi (readlink invocation): Likewise.
* tests/readlink/can-f: Update test to new semantics, and add test
of loop.
* src/df.c: Don't include "canonicalize.h". No longer needed,
since canonicalize_file_name is now guaranteed to be declared
in <stdlib.h>, thanks to gnulib.
* src/ls.c (print_color_indicator): This reinstates commit f3f1ccfd,
21-10-2008, "ls: make it possible to disable file capabilities checking"
which was inadvertently reverted with commit 3a169f4c, 14-09-2009,
"ls: handle disabling of colors consistently ...".
* src/ls.c (print_color_indicator): Use consistent syntax for
all file and directory subtypes, and fall back to the color
of the base type if there is no enabled color for the subtype.
This allows turning off specific colors for o+w dirs for example.
* tests/ls/color-dtype-dir: Add a case to test that turning off
coloring for o+w directories, falls back to standard dir color.
* NEWS: Mention the fix
Introduced by commit ac467814, 2005-09-05,
"Colorize set-user-ID ... files and sticky ... directories."
* src/ls.c (usage): Shorten the --color ancillary info by
two lines, while replacing --color=none with --color=never.
Mention "always" is the default parameter of the --color option,
along with the primary help for that option.
Mention the ancillary --color info in the --color primary help.
* doc/coreutils.texi: Add the missing arch, base64, link, readlink,
and unlink entries. Also remove extraneous '.' from some entries
and try to align all entries on the same column.
* THANKS: Add Benno Schulenberg.
* src/system.h: Rename emit_bug_reporting_address() to
emit_ancillary_info() and update it to not print the translation
project address in en_* locales, and _do_ print it in the 'C'
(and other) locales so that it's included in the default man page.
Also mention how to invoke the texinfo documentation for each command.
Also move the "hard-locale.h" include to the 8 files that now use it.
* man/help2man: Strip the newly added texinfo reference from the
--help output as a more verbose version is already added by help2man.
Suggestion from C de-Avillez
* src/mktemp.c (mkstemp_len, mkdtemp_len): Update callers of
gen_tempname_len.
* gl/lib/tempname.c, gl/lib/tempname.h: Rebase against recently
API-modified copy of tempname module in gnulib.
Reported by Lluís Batlle.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Drop rmdir-errno.
* src/rmdir.c (errno_rmdir_non_empty): Check both cases allowed by
POSIX, rather than relying on configure-time check that might
fail during cross-compilation. Reverts commit 9b6eb98d41.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Fix initial value of access_changed variable.
This was introduced by Pádraig Brady in commit cca83faf, 2009-09-14,
"cp,mv: preserve extended attributes even for read-only files"
A valid command like "touch -t 197101010000.60 F" would fail due
to the suffix of ".60". This bug is fixed via the latest change
to gnulib's posixtm module.
* tests/touch/60-seconds: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* tests/misc/sort-continue: Change first line to standard #!/bin/sh,
not #!/bin/bash (though it doesn't matter, since each is invoked
via $(SHELL) dir/test-name.
* tests/dd/skip-seek-past-file: Require sparse support
to ensure that when we're checking if we can create an
$OFF_T_MAX length file, that we don't actually allocate
any space. This was an issue on ecryptfs and was reported
by Bert Wesarg.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Temporarily set u+rw on the destination file
to allow GNU/Linux to set xattrs.
* tests/misc/xattr: Test that change.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported by Ernest N. Mamikonyan.
* NEWS (rm -r, without -f): Mention that the N in "O(N)" represents
hierarchy depth. Suggested by Ralf Wildenhues.
(rm -r, standards conformance): Make wording more accurate.
* src/id.c (print_full_info) [POSIXLY_CORRECT]: Don't print context.
Reported by Ulrich Drepper.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Mention it.
* doc/coreutils.texi (id invocation): Document that id also prints the
security context, when possible, and when POSIXLY_CORRECT is not set.
* tests/id/no-context: New file. Test for this.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add faccessat. Replace strdup
with strdup-posix.
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (coreutils_MACROS): Revert previous change, now
that gnulib does it for us.
* src/remove.c (write_protected_non_symlink): Use faccessat in
more situations.
where N is the depth of the deepest hierarchy rm is processing.
* src/remove.c (write_protected_non_symlink): Use faccessat to
avoid O(N)-per-entry cost of calling euidaccess.
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (coreutils_MACROS): Check for faccessat.
* NEWS (Improvements): Mention it.
* remove.c (rm_fts): Put braces around each of the two offending blocks.
* configure.ac: Don't turn off -Wjump-misses-init.
With the rewrite of remove.c, it is no longer needed.
Before this change, :>f; ln -T f no-such/ would succeed on Solaris 10.
After it, ln fails, as it should: ln: accessing `z/': Not a directory
The command, link f no-such/, had the same problem on that system.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add "link".
* tests/ln/slash-decorated-nonexistent-dest: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Portability): Mention the improvement.
* doc/coreutils.texi (multiplierSuffixes): Mention that
the suffix can be specified without a leading number
* src/split.c (usage): Refactor SIZE help to within a function
* src/truncate.c (usage): Likewise
* src/ls.c (usage): Likewise
* src/df.c (usage): Likewise. Also add a function with BLOCKSIZE help
* src/du.c (usage): Likewise.
* src/system.h: Define 2 functions to emit common help text
This was prompted by https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=511188
* src/dd.c (dd_copy) [C_UNBLOCK]: Always print the final newline for
non-empty output, not just when output size is a multiple of cbs.
* doc/coreutils.texi (dd invocation) [conv=unblock]: Mention that dd
prints a newline after each output record, not just when replacing
trailing spaces.
Reported by Ulrich Drepper.
* tests/dd/unblock: New file. Test for this.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/tail.c (main): Adapt piped-stdin test to use the same isapipe,
test as was used in the preceding POSIXLY_CORRECT condition.
Remove the now-subsumed POSIXLY_CORRECT test.
Reported by Pádraig Brady.
* doc/coreutils.texi (tail invocation): Document this change.
* NEWS (Changes in behavior): Reclassify, clarify.
* tests/tail2/assert: This reverts commit be853120, 25-08-2009,
"tests: tail-2/assert: avoid risk of race condition"
kill -0 doesn't send a signal and so will only confirm that the
background process was forked, which we know already because
we have its pid.
* tests/misc/cat-buf: Increase the delay between writes
to decrease the chance that dd will read both at once.
Since the test is inherently racy, print a warning via
skip_test_ rather than failing outright.
Reported by Jim Meyering.
* src/tail.c (main): Tailing a pipe "forever" is not useful,
and POSIX specifies that tail ignore the -f when there is no
file argument and stdin is a FIFO or pipe. So we do that.
In addition, GNU tail excludes "-" arguments from the list of files
to tail forever, when the associated file descriptor is connected
to a FIFO or pipe. Before this change, ":|tail -f" would hang.
Reported by Ren Yang and Ulrich Drepper.
* tests/tail-2/pipe-f: Test for this.
* tests/tail-2/pipe-f2: Ensure tail doesn't exit early for a fifo.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add these tests.
* NEWS (POSIX conformance): Mention it.
* tests/tail-2/flush-initial: stdbuf is not built on all systems.
In any case it's redundant since stdout will automatically be buffered
since we're redirecting to file. So just call tail without using stdbuf.
* tests/ls/color-clear-to-eol: Some vendor sed programs fail
to operate on lines that are not NL-terminated.
This affects at least Solaris 10's /bin/sed.
Reported by Pádraig Brady.
* tests/tail-2/infloop-1: Sleep 3 seconds, not 1, but in increments
of 0.1 second. Before, this test would fail ~1 time in 20 via
"make -j9 check" on a quad-core system.
Correct comment.
* src/tail.c (main) [HAVE_INOTIFY]: When stdin (i.e., "-", or no args,
but not /dev/stdin) is specified on the command line, don't use inotify.
Reported by Bill Brelsford in <http://bugs.debian.org/545422>.
* tests/tail-2/follow-stdin: New file. Test for this.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add the test.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
This bug was introduced in coreutils-7.5 via commit ae494d4b,
2009-06-02, "tail: use inotify if it is available".
* tests/misc/ls-misc: Set umask to 022. A umask setting permitting
world-write access, e.g., umask o+w, would cause this test to fail.
Report by Mathias Brodala and analysis by Tom Fitzhenry in
<http://bugs.debian.org/544965>.
* src/tail.c (main): Flush any output from tail_file,
before calling tail_forever_inotify, which can block.
* tests/tail-2/flush-initial: New file. Test for the bug.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add tail-2/flush-initial.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
This bug was introduced in coreutils-7.5 via commit ae494d4b,
2009-06-02, "tail: use inotify if it is available".
* src/tail.c (main): Add an undocumented ---disable-inotify option
to allow disabling inotify.
* tests/tail-2/pid: Run test in both normal and "disable_inotify" modes.
* tests/tail-2/tail-n0f: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/wait: Likewise.
* tests/tail-2/append-only: Likewise.
* src/stty.c (mode_info) [TAB0, TAB1, TAB2]: Guard each
entry with #ifdef. Required for GNU/kFreeBSD.
Reported by Petr Salinger in http://bugs.debian.org/520368.
* tests/tail-2/wait: Increase the file name recheck frequency to
fix a failure on systems without inotify and a file timestamp precision
of 1 second (like GNU/kFreeBSD).
* tests/tail-2/wait: Silently skip a portion of the test
when running as root, rather than failing the whole test.
This regression was introduced with commit 84b5844d, 2009-09-03,
"tests: simplify and fix a race in 2 tail --follow tests".
* m4/jm-macros.m4 (coreutils_MACROS): The code to handle configure-time
enabling or disabling of libcap support was broken. It would treat any
libcap configure option as --disable-libcap because it doesn't check
$enableval at all. This change makes sure we do the sane thing:
--disable-libcap -> disable and don't run any tests
--enable-libcap -> run tests and fail if not found
default -> run tests and warn if not found
* src/df.c (main): If open or fstat fails when we're trying to ensure
that all arg-partitions are automounted, fall back on using stat.
Inspired by the report and patch from Olivier Fourdan in
http://bugzilla.redhat.com/520630.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* tests/df/unreadable: New test for the above.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add df/unreadable.
The bug was introduced in coreutils-7.3 via commit dbd17157,
2009-04-28, "df: use open(2), not stat, to trigger automounting".
* tests/tail-2/pid: Use the timeout command to determine process
longevity, rather than querying /proc/$pid/status.
The latter was racy in any case when inotify is used, as then
tail wakes up periodically even for unchanging files therefore
causing the check for "S (sleeping)" state to fail intermittently.
* tests/tail-2/wait: Likewise.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Don't return from the function after an
unsuccessful and required preservation of extended attributes.
This resulted in leaking the copy buffer and file descriptors.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention the fix.
The bug was introduced in coreutils-7.1 via commit 0889381c, 2009-01-23,
"cp/mv: add xattr support".
* src/chown-core.c: Include "ignore-value.h".
(change_file_owner): Don't set "ent" only to ignore it.
* src/chcon.c (process_file): Likewise.
* src/chmod.c: Include "ignore-value.h".
(process_file): Don't set "ent" only to ignore it.
After diagnosing root-dev/ino failure, return false immediately:
Now that we don't set "ent" we must be sure not to use it uninitialized,
and there's no point in issuing --verbose-related output in this case.
* src/timeout.c (main): While keeping argc and argv in
sync may be marginally useful, it is redundant to update argc,
so just remove that to suppress the clang warning.
* src/timeout.c (main): Handle all possible cases of unexpected
failures from wait(). This was prompted by the clang tool reporting
the possible non-initialization of the status variable.
On most unix- and linux-based kernels, ls -i DIR_CONTAINING_MOUNT_POINT
would print the wrong inode number for any entry that is a mount point.
It would do that by relying on readdir's dirent.d_ino values, while
most readdir implementations return the inode number of the underlying,
inaccessible directory. Thus, it is not consistent with what you'd
get when applying stat to the same entry. This bug led to surprising
results like "ls -i" and "ls -i --color" printing different numbers (ls
must usually "stat" a file to colorize its name). This change makes it
so that on offending systems, ls must stat non-command-line-arguments
for which otherwise it would be able to use "for free" dirent.d_ino
values. Regardless of this change, ls is already required to stat every
command-line argument. Note: versions of GNU ls prior to coreutils-6.0
did not perform the invalid optimization, and hence always printed
correct inode numbers. Thus, for the sake of correctness, ls -i is
forgoing the readdir optimization, for any kernel (including linux!)
with POSIX-nonconforming readdir. Note that currently, only Cygwin has
been agile enough to conform.
* src/ls.c (RELIABLE_D_INO): Define.
(print_dir): Use it.
For plenty of discussion, see this long thread:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.coreutils.bugs/14020
This bug was introduced by the 2006-02-26 commit, 33eb3efe:
"In ls, avoid calling stat for --inode (-i), when possible."
* tests/ls/readdir-mountpoint-inode: New test.
* tests/Makefile.am (TESTS): Add it.
* tests/ls/stat-vs-dirent: Don't suppress failure of this test,
now that ls -i is fixed. Though note that it doesn't test well,
since it compares only the always-stat'd command-line arguments.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): When cloning only skip the data copying
* tests/cp/reflink-perm: New test to check times and modes copied
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test
* NEWS: Mention the fix
* doc/coreutils.texi (cp invocation): Document the new
"auto" and "always" options to --reflink.
* src/copy.c (copy_reg): Fall back to a standard copy
when reflink() is not supported and --reflink=auto specified.
* src/copy.h [struct cp_options] (reflink): Change type s/bool/enum/.
* src/cp.c (usage): Describe the --reflink={always,auto} options
and expand a little on what --reflink does.
(main): parse the new parameters to --reflink and allow all
--sparse options with --reflink=auto.
* src/install.c (cp_option_init): Init the enum instead of bool.
* src/mv.c (cp_option_init): Likewise.
* tests/cp/reflink-auto: A new test for falling back to normal copy.
* tests/Makefile.am: Reference the new test.
* NEWS: Mention the new feature.
* Makefile.am (.version, dist-hook, gen-ChangeLog): Use $(AM_V_GEN)
and $(AM_V_at), so that automake's silent-rules option (make V=1/V=0)
now controls whether the commands are printed at build time.
(THANKS-to-translators, check-ls-dircolors): Likewise.
* tests/test-lib.sh (require_selinux_enforcing_): New function.
* tests/mkdir/selinux: Use it.
Otherwise, this test would fail on Rawhide with SELinux disabled.
* tests/tail-2/assert: Avoid spurious failure due to race condition.
Rather than sleeping for 1 second and crossing fingers,
wait explicitly for backgrounded tail process to start.
Otherwise, this test would fail under heavy load.
Now that we prohibit indentation via TABs, there's no need for
Emacs indent-tabs-mode setting lines, so prohibit those, too.
* cfg.mk (sc_prohibit_emacs__indent_tabs_mode__setting): New rule.
...when run on a kernel older than what was implied by headers and
libraries tested at configure time.
* src/copy.c (utimens_symlink): Ignore failure when errno == ENOSYS.
* NEWS (Bug fixes): Mention it.
Reported by Todd Zullinger and Kamil Dudka.
Details in this thread:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.redhat.fedora.devel/119834
* tests/cp/cp-mv-enotsup-xattr: Upon a set-up failiure, rather than
failing the test with a "framework failure" diagnostic, just skip it.
Russell Whitaker reported that this test failed on slackware.
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