nixpkgs/pkgs/tools/misc/coreutils/setting-time-backward-compatibility.patch
Pjotr Prins bdc54592c7 Adding (disabled) time compatibility patch for coreutils - this allows
the compilation of older Linux kernels against newer headers (not a recommended
practise!)


svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=12944
2008-10-05 08:41:54 +00:00

115 lines
3 KiB
Diff

--- coreutils-6.12/lib/utimens.c 2008-05-29 09:21:57.000000000 -0400
+++ lib/utimens.c 2008-06-07 11:36:50.000000000 -0400
@@ -96,20 +96,42 @@
#endif
/* POSIX 200x added two interfaces to set file timestamps with
- nanosecond resolution. */
+ nanosecond resolution. We provide a fallback for ENOSYS (for
+ example, compiling against Linux 2.6.25 kernel headers and glibc
+ 2.7, but running on Linux 2.6.18 kernel). */
#if HAVE_UTIMENSAT
if (fd < 0)
- return utimensat (AT_FDCWD, file, timespec, 0);
+ {
+ int result = utimensat (AT_FDCWD, file, timespec, 0);
+#ifdef __linux__
+ /* Work around what might be a kernel bug:
+ http://bugzilla.redhat.com/442352
+ http://bugzilla.redhat.com/449910
+ It appears that utimensat can mistakenly return 280 rather
+ than 0 to indicate success.
+ FIXME: remove in 2010 or whenever the offending kernels
+ are no longer in common use. */
+ if (0 < result)
+ result = 0;
+#endif
+
+ if (result == 0 || errno != ENOSYS)
+ return result;
+ }
#endif
#if HAVE_FUTIMENS
- return futimens (fd, timespec);
-#else
+ {
+ int result = futimens (fd, timespec);
+ if (result == 0 || errno != ENOSYS)
+ return result;
+ }
+#endif
/* The platform lacks an interface to set file timestamps with
nanosecond resolution, so do the best we can, discarding any
fractional part of the timestamp. */
{
-# if HAVE_FUTIMESAT || HAVE_WORKING_UTIMES
+#if HAVE_FUTIMESAT || HAVE_WORKING_UTIMES
struct timeval timeval[2];
struct timeval const *t;
if (timespec)
@@ -125,9 +147,9 @@
if (fd < 0)
{
-# if HAVE_FUTIMESAT
+# if HAVE_FUTIMESAT
return futimesat (AT_FDCWD, file, t);
-# endif
+# endif
}
else
{
@@ -141,21 +163,21 @@
worth optimizing, and who knows what other messed-up systems
are out there? So play it safe and fall back on the code
below. */
-# if HAVE_FUTIMESAT
+# if HAVE_FUTIMESAT
if (futimesat (fd, NULL, t) == 0)
return 0;
-# elif HAVE_FUTIMES
+# elif HAVE_FUTIMES
if (futimes (fd, t) == 0)
return 0;
-# endif
+# endif
}
-# endif /* HAVE_FUTIMESAT || HAVE_WORKING_UTIMES */
+#endif /* HAVE_FUTIMESAT || HAVE_WORKING_UTIMES */
if (!file)
{
-# if ! (HAVE_FUTIMESAT || (HAVE_WORKING_UTIMES && HAVE_FUTIMES))
+#if ! (HAVE_FUTIMESAT || (HAVE_WORKING_UTIMES && HAVE_FUTIMES))
errno = ENOSYS;
-# endif
+#endif
/* Prefer EBADF to ENOSYS if both error numbers apply. */
if (errno == ENOSYS)
@@ -170,9 +192,9 @@
return -1;
}
-# if HAVE_WORKING_UTIMES
+#if HAVE_WORKING_UTIMES
return utimes (file, t);
-# else
+#else
{
struct utimbuf utimbuf;
struct utimbuf const *ut;
@@ -187,9 +209,8 @@
return utime (file, ut);
}
-# endif /* !HAVE_WORKING_UTIMES */
+#endif /* !HAVE_WORKING_UTIMES */
}
-#endif /* !HAVE_FUTIMENS */
}
/* Set the access and modification time stamps of FILE to be