Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
|
|
|
|
While writing tests for cpio, I found that cpio tries to open empty
files if they're regular files, and fails to archive them if unreadable.
This can be easily avoided, and is not the usual behavior.
|
|
Note that directory timestamps are still sometimes wrong because creating
things in a directory can update the timestamp. Also, cp -r has logic to
ensure we can write to a directory that doesn't have write permission,
cpio does not. This is fixable, but not what existing cpio does.
|
|
|
|
Fix FLAG_o to actually be 1 like the comment says, don't try to strlen(name) before reading it, pad TRAILER!!! entry correctly.
|
|
After some waffling I put it in "posix", even though it was last specified in
susv2 (where it was the obsolete 6 byte header entries predating susv4).
LSB specifies it, including the 8 byte header fields, but for the actual
command it just references SUSv2. (LSB isn't so much a standard as Red Hat's
"notes to self".)
|