Hash :
14bf04a5
Author :
Date :
2006-01-09T23:13:56
Sync from coreutils. * doc/getdate.texi (General date syntax): Invalid dates are rejected. (Time of day items): Mention the possibility of leap seconds. Problem reported by Dr. David Alan Gilbert. * lib/chdir-long.c (cdb_free): Don't bother trying to open directory for write access: POSIX says that must fail. * lib/fts.c (diropen): Likewise. * lib/save-cwd.c (save_cwd): Likewise. * lib/chdir-long.c (cdb_free): Open with O_NOCTTY | O_NONBLOCK as well, for minor improvements on hosts that lack O_DIRECTORY. * lib/gettime.c (gettime) [!defined OK_TO_USE_1S_CLOCK]: Report an error at compile-time if only a 1-second nominal clock resolution is found. * lib/lchmod.h: New file. * lib/mkdir-p.c: Include lchmod.h, lchown.h. (make_dir_parents): Use lchown rather than chown, and lchmod rather than chmod. * lib/mountlist.c (ME_DUMMY): "none" and "proc" file systems are dummies too. Problem with "none" reported by Bob Proulx. Problem with "proc" reported by n0dalus. * lib/mountlist.c: Include <limits.h>. (dev_from_mount_options) [defined MOUNTED_GETMNTENT1 || defined MOUNTED_GETMNTENT2]: New function. It no longer assumes "dev=" has the System V meaning on Linux (since it doesn't). It also parses "dev=" more carefully. (read_file_system_list) [defined MOUNTED_GETMNTENT1 || defined MOUNTED_GETMNTENT2]: Use it. MOUNTED_GETMNTENT2 is new here; the code didn't used to look for dev= in that case. * lib/posixtm.h (PDS_PRE_2000): New macro. * lib/posixtm.c (year): Arg is now syntax_bits rather than allow_century. All usages changed. Reject dates outside the range 1969-1999 if PDS_PRE_2000 is used. * modules/mkdir-p (Files): Add chdir-safer.c, chdir-safer.h, lchmod.h, chdir-safer.m4, lchmod.m4. * modules/openat: Add mkdirat.c, openat-priv.h. * modules/lib-ignore: New file. * lib/version-etc.c (COPYRIGHT_YEAR): Update to 2006. Rewrite fts.c not to change the current working directory, by using openat, fstatat, fdopendir, etc.. * lib/fts.c [! _LIBC]: Include "openat.h", "unistd--.h", and "fcntl--.h". [_LIBC] (fchdir): Don't undef or define; no longer used. (FCHDIR): Define in terms of cwd_advance_fd rather than fchdir. Now, this `function' always succeeds, and consumes its file descriptor parameter -- so callers must not close such FDs. Update callers. (diropen_fd, opendirat, cwd_advance_fd): New functions. (diropen): Add parameter, SP. Adjust all callers. Implement using diropen_fd, rather than open. (fts_open): Initialize new member, fts_cwd_fd. Remove fts_rft-setting code. (fts_close): Close fts_cwd_fd, if necessary. (__opendir2): Define in terms of opendir or opendirat, depending on whether the FST_NOCHDIR flag is set. (fts_build): Since fts_safe_changedir consumes its FD, and since this code must do `closedir(dirp)', dup the dirfd(dirp) argument, and close the dup'd file descriptor upon failure. (fts_stat): Use fstatat(...AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) in place of lstat. (fts_safe_changedir): Tweak semantics to reflect that this function now calls cwd_advance_fd and hence consumes its FD argument. * lib/fts_.h [struct FTS] (fts_cwd_fd): New member. (fts_rft): Remove now-unused member. * lib/openat.c (fchownat): New function. * lib/openat.h (fchmodat, fchownat): Declare. (chmodat, lchmodat): Define convenience functions. (chownat, lchownat): Likewise. * lib/chdir-safer.h, chdir-safer.c: New files. * lib/modechange.c (mode_compile): Reject an invalid mode string that starts with an octal digit. From Andreas Gruenbacher. * lib/openat.c: Include "fcntl--.h" and "unistd--.h", to map open and dup to open_safer and dup_safer, respectively. (openat_permissive): Fix typo in comment. * lib/openat.c: Don't include <stdlib.h>, <unistd.h>, <fcntl.h>, "gettext.h"; either no longer needed or are guaranteed by openat.h. (_): Remove; no longer needed. (openat): Renamed from rpl_openat; no need for rpl_openat since openat.h renames openat for us. Replace most of the body with a call to openat_permissive, to avoid duplicate code. Port to (probably hypothetical) environments were mode_t is wider than int. (openat_permissive): Require mode arg, so that we can check types better. Put it just after flags. Change cwd failure indicator from pointer-to-bool to pointer-to-errno-value. All callers changed. Invoke openat_save_fail and/or openat_restore_fail if cwd_errno is null, so that openat can call us. (openat_permissive, fdopendir, fstatat, unlinkat): Simplify errno handling to avoid some duplicate code, as it's OK to set errno on success. * lib/openat.h: Revamp code so that function macros depend on __OPENAT_PREFIX only, not also on AT_FDCWD. (openat_ro): Remove. Caller changed to use openat_permissive. (openat_permissive): Now a macro, if not a function. (openat_restore_fail, openat_save_fail): Now always functions, since mkdirat needs them even if __OPENAT_PREFIX is defined. * lib/openat-priv.h: New file, defining macros used by mkdirat.c and openat.c. * lib/mkdirat.c: Include openat-priv.h. Remove definitions of macros defined therein. * lib/openat.c: Likewise. * lib/mkdirat.c (mkdirat): New file and function. * lib/openat.h (mkdirat): Declare. * lib/openat.c (fdopendir): Don't change errno when returning non-NULL. * lib/openat.h (openat_permissive): Declare. (openat_ro): Define. * lib/openat.c (EXPECTED_ERRNO): New macro. (openat_permissive): New function -- used in remove.c rewrite. (all functions): Set errno just before returning, only if there was an actual failure. Use EXPECTED_ERRNO rather than comparing against only ENOTDIR. Emulate openat-family functions using Linux's procfs, if possible. Idea and some code based on Ulrich Drepper's glibc changes. * lib/openat.c: (BUILD_PROC_NAME): New macro. Include <stdio.h>, <string.h>, "alloca.h" and "intprops.h". (rpl_openat): Emulate by trying to open /proc/self/fd/%d/%s, before falling back on save_cwd and restore_cwd. (fdopendir, fstatat, unlinkat): Likewise. * lib/openat.c (fstatat, unlinkat): Perform the syscall directly, skipping the save_cwd...restore_cwd overhead, if FILE is absolute. * lib/openat.c (rpl_openat): Use the promoted type (int), not mode_t, as second argument to va_arg. Otherwise, some versions of gcc warn that `if this code is reached, the program will abort'. Add POSIX ACL support * lib/acl.h (copy_acl, set_acl): Add declarations. * lib/acl.c (acl_entries): Add fallback implementation for POSIX ACL systems other than Linux. (chmod_or_fchmod): New function: use fchmod when possible, and chmod otherwise. (file_has_acl): Add a POSIX ACL implementation, with a Linux-specific subcase. (copy_acl): Add: copy an acl and S_ISUID, S_ISGID, and S_ISVTX from one file to another. Fall back to fchmod/chmod when acls are unsupported. (set_acl): Add: set a file's acl and S_ISUID, S_ISGID, and S_ISVTX to a defined value. Fall back to fchmod/chmod when acls are unsupported. * m4/lib-ignore.m4: New file. * m4/lchmod.m4: New file. * m4/chdir-safer.m4: New file. * m4/openat.m4 (gl_FUNC_OPENAT): Require and compile mkdirat.c. Require openat-priv.h. * m4/acl.m4 (AC_FUNC_ACL): Add POSIX ACL and Linux-specific acl tests.
/* Provide a replacement for lchmod on hosts that lack it.
Copyright (C) 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */
/* Written by Paul Eggert. */
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#ifndef HAVE_LCHMOD
/* The lchmod replacement follows symbolic links. Callers should take
this into account; lchmod should be applied only to arguments that
are known to not be symbolic links. On hosts that lack lchmod,
this can lead to race conditions between the check and the
invocation of lchmod, but we know of no workarounds that are
reliable in general. You might try requesting support for lchmod
from your operating system supplier. */
# define lchmod chmod
#endif