From 9654b67a5443f046dd1e5fe655dc463463f6f9e3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?utf8?q?P=C3=A1draig=20Brady?=
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 2013 18:31:48 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] cp: with --link always use linkat() if available * src/copy.c (copy_reg): If linkat() is available it doesn't matter about the gnulib emulation provided, and thus the LINK_FOLLOWS_SYMLINKS should not have significance here. This was noticed on FreeBSD and the consequence is that cp --link will create hardlinks to symlinks there, rather than emulating with symlinks to symlinks. * tests/cp/link-deref.sh: Adjust the checks to cater for all cases where hardlinks to symlinks are supported. --- src/copy.c | 14 ++++++++++---- tests/cp/link-deref.sh | 7 +++---- 2 files changed, 13 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/copy.c b/src/copy.c index 3e4cbff7f4..0b7c59ea95 100644 --- a/src/copy.c +++ b/src/copy.c @@ -98,6 +98,14 @@ rpl_mkfifo (char const *file, mode_t mode) #define SAME_GROUP(A, B) ((A).st_gid == (B).st_gid) #define SAME_OWNER_AND_GROUP(A, B) (SAME_OWNER (A, B) && SAME_GROUP (A, B)) +/* LINK_FOLLOWS_SYMLINKS is tri-state; if it is -1, we don't know + how link() behaves, so assume we can't hardlink symlinks in that case. */ +#if defined HAVE_LINKAT || ! LINK_FOLLOWS_SYMLINKS +# define CAN_HARDLINK_SYMLINKS 1 +#else +# define CAN_HARDLINK_SYMLINKS 0 +#endif + struct dir_list { struct dir_list *parent; @@ -2484,15 +2492,13 @@ copy_internal (char const *src_name, char const *dst_name, should not follow the link. We can approximate the desired behavior by skipping this hard-link creating block and instead copying the symlink, via the 'S_ISLNK'- copying code below. - LINK_FOLLOWS_SYMLINKS is tri-state; if it is -1, we don't know - how link() behaves, so we use the fallback case for safety. Note gnulib's linkat module, guarantees that the symlink is not dereferenced. However its emulation currently doesn't maintain timestamps or ownership so we only call it when we know the emulation will not be needed. */ else if (x->hard_link - && !(LINK_FOLLOWS_SYMLINKS && S_ISLNK (src_mode) + && !(! CAN_HARDLINK_SYMLINKS && S_ISLNK (src_mode) && x->dereference == DEREF_NEVER)) { if (! create_hard_link (src_name, dst_name, false, false, dereference)) @@ -2632,7 +2638,7 @@ copy_internal (char const *src_name, char const *dst_name, /* If we've just created a hard-link due to cp's --link option, we're done. */ if (x->hard_link && ! S_ISDIR (src_mode) - && !(LINK_FOLLOWS_SYMLINKS && S_ISLNK (src_mode) + && !(! CAN_HARDLINK_SYMLINKS && S_ISLNK (src_mode) && x->dereference == DEREF_NEVER)) return delayed_ok; diff --git a/tests/cp/link-deref.sh b/tests/cp/link-deref.sh index e56d5929e1..73c86a8899 100755 --- a/tests/cp/link-deref.sh +++ b/tests/cp/link-deref.sh @@ -20,10 +20,9 @@ print_ver_ cp if grep '^#define HAVE_LINKAT 1' "$CONFIG_HEADER" > /dev/null \ - && grep '^#define LINK_FOLLOWS_SYMLINKS 0' "$CONFIG_HEADER" > /dev/null; then - # With this config (which is the case on GNU/Linux) cp will attempt to - # linkat() to hardlink a symlink. So now see if the current file system - # supports this operation. + || grep '^#define LINK_FOLLOWS_SYMLINKS 0' "$CONFIG_HEADER" > /dev/null; then + # With this config cp will attempt to linkat() to hardlink a symlink. + # So now double check the current file system supports this operation. ln -s testtarget test_sl || framework_failure_ ln -P test_sl test_hl_sl || framework_failure_ ino_sl="$(stat -c '%i' test_sl)" || framework_failure_ -- 2.47.2