Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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uninitialized trash in struct tm fields could segfault glibc's strftime().
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looks like. dd uses "7 MB" where du uses "7M", for example. this patch
adds flags, similar to the BSD humanize_number. most callers will pass 0.
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It's user then group, not the other way round.
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not stomping on gnu's "an extra argument tells it to set the time so let's
add -s to do the same thing" extension).
Nanoseconds aren't uniformly supported by these apis, so had to stick it in
GLOBALS() and pull it out later. Awkward, open to suggestions for a better way.
(Also, the setting API is microseconds, not nanoseconds. Collect nano, convert
to micro so we can switch APIs later without changing date's external UI again.)
Oh, and shrink really_long_name_mktime() with a for() loop (and rename it)
although I may go back and redo that for portability to hypothetical libraries
if I can convert this mess to struct timespec with proper nanoseconds support.
But that needs an extended strptime() which needs an extended struct tm,
and between us and that is convincing posix computers got fast enough to
care about fractions of a second.
(Yes, I'm aware gnu added %N to date without adding it to strptime, implying
they reimplemented strptime longhand inside date. I'm not doing that.)
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Humans get upset when date(1) lets mktime(3) work out what the 99th day
of the 99th month would be rather than rejecting the invalid date. For
the subtly wrong cases, rather than get into the leap year business,
let's rely on localtime_r(3).
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-inum is a commonly implemented extension to search by inode number.
Linux's fs-layer tracepoints log many events in terms of inodes, so
"find -inum" is useful for mapping those events back to specific files.
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Can't say I'm happy with the API (-z and -Z to keep them independent would
be nice), but compatibility with what exists trumps having a good API...
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There's a nanoseconds field value that says use current time, which I set
but forgot to clear in the right places. (Oops.)
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The most likely reason for setfscreatecon to fail is that you don't have permission, and that's reported by the write return EACCES. There isn't really a "bad" context; they're just strings.
Before:
$ adb shell mkdir -Z x y
mkdir: bad -Z 'x'
After:
$ adb shell mkdir -Z x y
mkdir: -Z 'x' failed: Permission denied
Other than this, the ToT mkdir works fine with SELinux.
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to greppable TODO annotations in the individual files. (grep -riw TODO)
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Doing a world writeable mkdir and _then_ adding a label seems like a race
window, so set the global "create stuff with these labels" context, then
do the creates.
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I have no idea why -Z isn't showing up in mkdir --help when enabled, I
need to look at that...
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it's 1999 and every path ever is from cwd or root" api versions for sockets
and as a fallback of the open fails.
There are still some holes (symlink to socket with -L will give you info
about the symlink, not the socket, and symlink to a file you can't open will
give you info about the symlink, not the file) but the correct fix is
to make O_PATH work in the kernel for the LSM functions. (If we can read
this data by path, we should be able to read it by O_PATH. We should not
need two codepaths for this.)
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make lib/lsm.h auto-include from toys.h.
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strwidth() got called on ->extra which was NULL. Had some other bad effects
ala "ls -sk file1 file2 file3" ignored the -k. This should fix that too.
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show label: at the start (yes, even "ls -R" in an empty dir).
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portability.h to new lib/lsm.h. Update ls.c to use it.
Fix "ls . toys" (two directories when one is . or ..), which was filtering
out the . as something we shouldn't recurse into even though it was explicitly
listed on the command line. For some reason "ls -Z . toys" is still segfaulting
though (but "ls -Z ." isn't), need to figure out why...
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and some cleanups while I was there.
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symfollow true/false.)
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under traversal. Pass through full flag set in dirtree_add_node(), add
dirtree_start() wrapper to provide symlink-only behavior (avoiding a lot
of DIRTREE_SYMFOLLOW*!!(logic) repeated in callers).
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This patch uses lgetfilecon rather than fgetfilecon because
dirtree_parentfd always seems to return -1 in this function. If/when
the SMACK code is fixed to work with dirtree_parentfd, I'll send a
matching patch for SELinux.
In the meantime, this works, and although ls -h is still on my to-do
list, I think this patch is sufficient to let us replace toolbox ls
with toybox ls.
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Behavior change in flags: allow -long to work together, and -l1 work like -l
not -1.
I didn't make ls -gCl remember the g, though. (Because -Cg and -gC take
the last one: I'll preserve explicit state but not implicit state. And if
-1Cl and -lC1 aren't going to behave the same, it wasn't consistent anyway.)
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Option triggers printing security context,
for smack that is file's access smack label.
Change-Id: I9054d9bcfe4d149e8fbfa0831b6ab50165d2bd91
Signed-off-by: Jan Cybulski <j.cybulski@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: José Bollo <jose.bollo@open.eurogiciel.org>
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confusing update-alternatives, the paths of the links installed by toybox should
match those installed by busybox. This is accomplished by changing the flags
of a few tools within toybox.
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argument of -n).
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it didn't activate.
test: find . -name README -exec echo one '{}' ';' -or -exec echo two '{}' ';'
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(I tweaked some comment text while I was there.)
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