On Jul 20 15:02, Eric Blake wrote: > Corinna Vinschen <corinna-cygwin <at> cygwin.com> writes: > > > Found the root cause. R/O vs. writeable.> > > It's not, unfortunately. There is no code path in Cygwin's utimens > > and friends which temorarily resets the R/O attribute. If the R/O > > attribute is actually removed temporarily, then touch calls chmod > > or something. > > > > The core function is fhandler_disk_file.cc, fhandler_base::utimens_fs(). > > It would be cool if you culd step through it to see how it behaves > > differently and examine the DOS attributes while doing that. > > What's the status code returned by the NtSetInformationFile call? > > Maybe this will help: In the 'cp -p' case, get_handle() is true, and at that > point of cp's execution, the file is still writable (the chmod comes later). > In the 'touch -r' case, get_handle() is false, and the file is read-only. > But > in both cases, NtSetInformationFile has status 0. > > For the 'touch -r' case, doing stat in another window shows no difference in > the timestamp between lines 1314 and 1317; in other words, it requires > closing > the file for the time change to take effect. > > So, the problem is that timestamp modification gets lost as part of fchmod > calling NtSetAttributesFile to remove the write permissions. Even more, my > debugging was quite slow, with a big lag between when the file was created > and > when the fchmod took place; but rather than using the current time, the > fchmod > was able to remember the time the file was created. I also noticed that > NtSetAttributesFile was instantaneous - I did not have to wait for the fd to > close to see the effects.
Just to be sure. This does not occur with cp -p on other filesystems than MVFS, right? I don't see that problem on NTFS or FAT. fchmod/NtSetAttributesFile calls NtSetInformationFile(FileBasicInformation) with all timestamps set to 0, which means "don't touch them". That works fine on NTFS and FAT, so it's another bug of MVFS. > Is there a way to force utimens to flush pending changes to disk, short of > closing and re-opening the fd? Not that I'm aware of. I don't know any mechanism for flushing metadata changes except for NtClose. Maybe(!) a FlushFileBuffer call will also flush metadata changes: Index: fhandler_disk_file.cc =================================================================== RCS file: /cvs/src/src/winsup/cygwin/fhandler_disk_file.cc,v retrieving revision 1.302 diff -u -p -r1.302 fhandler_disk_file.cc --- fhandler_disk_file.cc 16 Jul 2009 15:28:57 -0000 1.302 +++ fhandler_disk_file.cc 20 Jul 2009 15:26:15 -0000 @@ -1313,6 +1313,8 @@ fhandler_base::utimens_fs (const struct fbi.FileAttributes = 0; NTSTATUS status = NtSetInformationFile (get_handle (), &io, &fbi, sizeof fbi, FileBasicInformation); + if (NT_SUCCESS (status) && pc.fs_is_mvfs ()) + FlushFileBuffers (get_handle ()); if (closeit) close_fs (); /* Opening a directory on a 9x share from a NT machine works(!), but Other than that, I can only suggest a change like this one: Index: fhandler_disk_file.cc =================================================================== RCS file: /cvs/src/src/winsup/cygwin/fhandler_disk_file.cc,v retrieving revision 1.302 diff -u -p -r1.302 fhandler_disk_file.cc --- fhandler_disk_file.cc 16 Jul 2009 15:28:57 -0000 1.302 +++ fhandler_disk_file.cc 20 Jul 2009 15:35:24 -0000 @@ -1306,13 +1306,31 @@ fhandler_base::utimens_fs (const struct IO_STATUS_BLOCK io; FILE_BASIC_INFORMATION fbi; + NTSTATUS status; fbi.CreationTime.QuadPart = 0LL; fbi.LastAccessTime = lastaccess; fbi.LastWriteTime = lastwrite; fbi.ChangeTime.QuadPart = 0LL; fbi.FileAttributes = 0; - NTSTATUS status = NtSetInformationFile (get_handle (), &io, &fbi, sizeof fbi, - FileBasicInformation); + if (pc.fs_is_mvfs () && !closeit) + { + OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr; + HANDLE fh; + + InitializeObjectAttributes (&attr, &ro_u_empty, pc.objcaseinsensitive (), + fh, NULL); + status = NtOpenFile (&fh, FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES, &attr, &io, + FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS, FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT); + if (NT_SUCCESS (status)) + { + status = NtSetInformationFile (fh, &io, &fbi, sizeof fbi, + FileBasicInformation); + NtClose (fh); + } + } + else + status = NtSetInformationFile (get_handle (), &io, &fbi, sizeof fbi, + FileBasicInformation); if (closeit) close_fs (); /* Opening a directory on a 9x share from a NT machine works(!), but > Or do we teach fchmod to honor pending > timestamp changes? The problem is that the calls are stateless. The fchmod call doesn't know about a former utimens call and vice versa. Worse, to do that really correct you would not only have to keep track of the timestamp as set by utimens, you would also have to keep track of them in case of write. That's a can of worms if you ask me. Corinna -- Corinna Vinschen Please, send mails regarding Cygwin to Cygwin Project Co-Leader cygwin AT cygwin DOT com Red Hat -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple