/* Work around a bug of lstat on some systems
- Copyright (C) 1997-2006, 2008-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ Copyright (C) 1997-2006, 2008-2018 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
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, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
+ along with this program. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
/* written by Jim Meyering */
+/* If the user's config.h happens to include <sys/stat.h>, let it include only
+ the system's <sys/stat.h> here, so that orig_lstat doesn't recurse to
+ rpl_lstat. */
+#define __need_system_sys_stat_h
#include <config.h>
#if !HAVE_LSTAT
#else /* HAVE_LSTAT */
/* Get the original definition of lstat. It might be defined as a macro. */
-# define __need_system_sys_stat_h
# include <sys/types.h>
# include <sys/stat.h>
# undef __need_system_sys_stat_h
-static inline int
+static int
orig_lstat (const char *filename, struct stat *buf)
{
return lstat (filename, buf);
}
/* Specification. */
-# include <sys/stat.h>
+/* Write "sys/stat.h" here, not <sys/stat.h>, otherwise OSF/1 5.1 DTK cc
+ eliminates this include because of the preliminary #include <sys/stat.h>
+ above. */
+# include "sys/stat.h"
+
+# include "stat-time.h"
# include <string.h>
# include <errno.h>
/* lstat works differently on Linux and Solaris systems. POSIX (see
- `pathname resolution' in the glossary) requires that programs like
- `ls' take into consideration the fact that FILE has a trailing slash
+ "pathname resolution" in the glossary) requires that programs like
+ 'ls' take into consideration the fact that FILE has a trailing slash
when FILE is a symbolic link. On Linux and Solaris 10 systems, the
lstat function already has the desired semantics (in treating
- `lstat ("symlink/", sbuf)' just like `lstat ("symlink/.", sbuf)',
+ 'lstat ("symlink/", sbuf)' just like 'lstat ("symlink/.", sbuf)',
but on Solaris 9 and earlier it does not.
If FILE has a trailing slash and specifies a symbolic link,
int
rpl_lstat (const char *file, struct stat *sbuf)
{
- size_t len;
- int lstat_result = orig_lstat (file, sbuf);
-
- if (lstat_result != 0)
- return lstat_result;
+ int result = orig_lstat (file, sbuf);
/* This replacement file can blindly check against '/' rather than
using the ISSLASH macro, because all platforms with '\\' either
lack symlinks (mingw) or have working lstat (cygwin) and thus do
not compile this file. 0 len should have already been filtered
out above, with a failure return of ENOENT. */
- len = strlen (file);
- if (file[len - 1] != '/' || S_ISDIR (sbuf->st_mode))
- return 0;
-
- /* At this point, a trailing slash is only permitted on
- symlink-to-dir; but it should have found information on the
- directory, not the symlink. Call stat() to get info about the
- link's referent. Our replacement stat guarantees valid results,
- even if the symlink is not pointing to a directory. */
- if (!S_ISLNK (sbuf->st_mode))
+ if (result == 0)
{
- errno = ENOTDIR;
- return -1;
+ if (S_ISDIR (sbuf->st_mode) || file[strlen (file) - 1] != '/')
+ result = stat_time_normalize (result, sbuf);
+ else
+ {
+ /* At this point, a trailing slash is permitted only on
+ symlink-to-dir; but it should have found information on the
+ directory, not the symlink. Call 'stat' to get info about the
+ link's referent. Our replacement stat guarantees valid results,
+ even if the symlink is not pointing to a directory. */
+ if (!S_ISLNK (sbuf->st_mode))
+ {
+ errno = ENOTDIR;
+ return -1;
+ }
+ result = stat (file, sbuf);
+ }
}
- return stat (file, sbuf);
+ return result;
}
#endif /* HAVE_LSTAT */