On Nov 15 19:54, Christian Franke wrote: > Steve Ward via Cygwin wrote: > > Description of problem: > > While using vim 8.2 on cygwin 3.3 (x86_64) on Windows 10, > > when editing an existing file with vim and saving it, the Window’s > > file system archive bit is always left cleared (not modified state). > > This happens, whether the archive bit was set (is modified) or > > clear (not modified) initially. > > The problem also occurs with 'cp' command: > > $ touch file1 > > $ /bin/cp file1 file2 > > $ /bin/cp --preserve=mode file1 file3 > > $ lsattr file? > ---a-------- file1 > ---a-------- file2 > ------------ file3 > > Some Cygwin functions apparently clear the archive attribute unexpectedly, > for example: > > int fd = open(filename, O_CREAT|O_TRUNC|O_WRONLY, 0644); > write(fd, "Test\n", 5); > fchmod(fd, 0644); // clears archive attribute > close(fd); > > Same with facl(., SETACL, ...). The variants chmod() and acl() are not > affected.
It's funny that it took so long that somebody actually noticed this. This behaviour is present at least since 2004. Cygwin *never* actually cared for the ARCHIVE attribute explicitely. The reason for the above observation is the open call containing the O_CREAT flag. When Cygwin creates files, it sets the attributes to FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL only, not adding the FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ARCHIVE flag. Changing that is actually pretty simple, just set FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ARCHIVE as soon as the underlying NtCreateFile is called for an open(O_CREAT). Fixed in current git. Thanks, Corinna -- Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: https://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: https://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: https://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple