Pádraig Brady <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> dd handles skip weirdly
>
> disk=/dev/sda8
> dd if=$disk bs=8M count=1 skip=1000 of=/dev/null #ok
> dd if=$disk bs=8M count=1 skip=1000K of=/dev/null #reads whole disk! as seek
> fails
>
> I had a 10s look at the source and noticed a comment
> saying POS
On Wed, Apr 16, 2008 at 11:30 PM, Brock Noland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I agree that I would expect if the file is seekable and seek fails, dd
> would exit. But here it looks like we just cannot seek that large of
> an offset?
I implemented something that seeks in portions and it results
rh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> Running du -sk on an apache disk cache containing 10GB of data and
> 30,000 directories and files
> I see du using maybe .03% of the cpu. It takes an hour for it to complete.
If you have an old version, and depending on how it's configured,
ext3 can be
Eric Blake wrote:
> According to James J. Perry on 4/16/2008 4:25 PM:
> | We are in the cutover process and one of the DBAs found this behavior.
> | If testfile1 is owned by usera:group1 in a parent directory with
> | permissions 777 owned by usera:group1, userb:group2 can delete testfile1
> | even
On Wed, Apr 16, 2008 at 7:01 PM, Pádraig Brady <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> dd handles skip weirdly
>
> disk=/dev/sda8
> dd if=$disk bs=8M count=1 skip=1000 of=/dev/null #ok
> dd if=$disk bs=8M count=1 skip=1000K of=/dev/null #reads whole disk! as seek
> fails
>
> I had a 10s look at the sour
--On Wednesday, April 16, 2008 10:36 PM -0500 Brock Noland
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Respectfully,
Got it, thanks. The problem I'm having then, I see, is not related to the
coreutils su, but specifically to the BSD su shipped with Darwin. Sorry
for the noise.
Linux:
[EMAIL PROTECTE
On Wed, Apr 16, 2008 at 9:55 PM, Quanah Gibson-Mount <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] build]# su -l zimbra -c "echo $PATH"
> /usr/kerberos/sbin:/usr/local/java/bin:/usr/local/ant/bin:/usr/local/mysql/bin:/usr/local/ant/bin:/usr/local/java/bin:/usr/kerberos/bin:/usr/local/bin:/bin:/us
[EMAIL PROTECTED] build]# su -l zimbra
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ echo $PATH
/opt/zimbra/bin:/opt/zimbra/zimbramon:/opt/zimbra/postfix/sbin:/opt/zimbra/openldap/bin:/opt/zimbra/snmp/bin:/opt/zimbra/sleepycat/bin:/opt/zimbra/openssl/bin:/opt/zimbra/java/bin:/usr/kerberos/bin:/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin
Eric Blake wrote:
In particular, the EACCES errors on unlink() mention that without the
sticky bit, all you need is write access to the directory (and your
directory is world writable); with the sticky bit set, you must also own
the directory and file.
^^^
To stave off confusion.
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According to rh on 4/16/2008 12:14 PM:
| Hello,
| Running du -sk on an apache disk cache containing 10GB of data and
| 30,000 directories and files
| I see du using maybe .03% of the cpu. It takes an hour for it to complete.
Probably because du is
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According to Simon Hengel on 4/16/2008 10:37 AM:
| Hello list,
| md5sum with the -c option did not work on files with "\r\n" and "\r" line
| endings.
|
| A patch is attached.
Thanks for the patch, but it corrupts actual \r in file names on platforms
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According to James J. Perry on 4/16/2008 4:25 PM:
| We are in the cutover process and one of the DBAs found this behavior.
| If testfile1 is owned by usera:group1 in a parent directory with
| permissions 777 owned by usera:group1, userb:group2 can del
We are in the cutover process and one of the DBAs found this behavior.
If testfile1 is owned by usera:group1 in a parent directory with
permissions 777 owned by usera:group1, userb:group2 can delete testfile1
even if testfile1 has permissions 600. Conversely if the same parent
directory has permis
dd handles skip weirdly
disk=/dev/sda8
dd if=$disk bs=8M count=1 skip=1000 of=/dev/null #ok
dd if=$disk bs=8M count=1 skip=1000K of=/dev/null #reads whole disk! as seek
fails
I had a 10s look at the source and noticed a comment
saying POSIX doesn't specify what we should do when
skipping past t
[ re-added bug-autoconf ]
* Eric Blake wrote on Wed, Apr 16, 2008 at 08:04:23PM CEST:
> Subject: [PATCH] Document pdksh exec behavior.
>
> * doc/autoconf.texi (Limitations of Builtins) : New
> subsection.
> Discovered by Jim Meyering.
This looks good to me, thanks.
Cheers,
Ralf
__
This addresses a FIXME in src/copy.c:
-/* FIXME: rewrite this to use a hash table so we avoid the quadratic
- performance hit that's probably noticeable only on trees deeper
- than a few hundred levels. See use of active_dir_map in remove.c */
The performance benefit is there, but
Utility: df
Didn't know where to send these suggestions but two things that would be
nice...
1. Colour. Show different file system types (ie nfs) in a different
colour
2. Adjustable width. I have my screen width at about 142 characters
wide.That way the nfs mounts aren't taking up t
Hello,
Running du -sk on an apache disk cache containing 10GB of data and
30,000 directories and files
I see du using maybe .03% of the cpu. It takes an hour for it to complete.
Are there any plans to make du multi-threaded? Or otherwise improve
it's performance?
Is it filesystem sensitiv
Hello list,
md5sum with the -c option did not work on files with "\r\n" and "\r" line
endings.
A patch is attached.
With best regards,
Simon Hengel.
=== modified file 'src/md5sum.c'
--- src/md5sum.c 2008-04-16 15:51:12 +
+++ src/md5sum.c 2008-04-16 16:27:50 +
@@ -465,7 +465,12 @@
conti
Ralf Wildenhues gmx.de> writes:
> > case bug in the shell portability section. POSIX states that exec is
> > supposed to bypass shell builtins (and while special shell builtins, like
> > 'exit', give undefined behavior when passed to exec, regular shell
> > builtins, like 'fg', are required to e
Matthew Woehlke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> $ /bin/sh -c '(exec mknod --version)' | head -1
>> $ /bin/sh -c 'nice mknod --version' | head -1
>> $ /bin/sh -c 'nohup mknod --version' | head -1
>
> I realize you already pushed something, but for the record, wouldn't
> env' work as well (and without
Matthew Woehlke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Eric Blake wrote:
>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> Hash: SHA1
>>
>> According to Jim Meyering on 4/16/2008 6:30 AM:
>> | My first reaction was "great! that looks much better".
>> | Unfortunately, the technique doesn't work with that shell:
>> |
Eric Blake wrote:
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According to Jim Meyering on 4/16/2008 6:30 AM:
| My first reaction was "great! that looks much better".
| Unfortunately, the technique doesn't work with that shell:
|
| openbsd$ ./mknod --version|head -1
| mknod (GNU coreutils)
Hi Eric,
* Eric Blake wrote on Wed, Apr 16, 2008 at 03:07:42PM CEST:
> According to Jim Meyering on 4/16/2008 6:57 AM:
> | $ PATH=. /bin/sh -c 'exec mknod --version'|head -1
> | /bin/sh: mknod: --: unknown option
>
> Ouch - this looks like a POSIX compliance bug in exec; I'm adding
> bug-autoc
Eric Blake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> According to Jim Meyering on 4/16/2008 6:57 AM:
> | $ PATH=. /bin/sh -c 'exec mknod --version'|head -1
> | /bin/sh: mknod: --: unknown option
>
> Ouch - this looks like a POSIX compliance bug in exec; I'm adding
> bug-autoconf to the distribution in case
Eric Blake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> According to Jim Meyering on 4/16/2008 6:57 AM:
> | $ PATH=. /bin/sh -c 'exec mknod --version'|head -1
> | /bin/sh: mknod: --: unknown option
>
> Ouch - this looks like a POSIX compliance bug in exec; I'm adding
> bug-autoconf to the distribution in case
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According to Jim Meyering on 4/16/2008 6:57 AM:
| $ PATH=. /bin/sh -c 'exec mknod --version'|head -1
| /bin/sh: mknod: --: unknown option
Ouch - this looks like a POSIX compliance bug in exec; I'm adding
bug-autoconf to the distribution in case w
Thomas Schwinge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 16, 2008 at 02:30:57PM +0200, Jim Meyering wrote:
...
>> My first reaction was "great! that looks much better".
>> Unfortunately, the technique doesn't work with that shell:
>>
>> openbsd$ ./mknod --version|head -1
>> mknod (GNU coreutils
Jim Meyering <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Unfortunately, the technique doesn't work with that shell:
>
> openbsd$ ./mknod --version|head -1
> mknod (GNU coreutils) 6.10.188-7cb24
> openbsd$ PATH=. /bin/sh -c 'mknod --version'|head -1
What about /bin/sh -c 'exec mknod --version'?
Andreas.
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According to Jim Meyering on 4/16/2008 6:30 AM:
| My first reaction was "great! that looks much better".
| Unfortunately, the technique doesn't work with that shell:
|
| openbsd$ ./mknod --version|head -1
| mknod (GNU coreutils) 6.10.188-7cb24
|
Hello!
On Wed, Apr 16, 2008 at 02:30:57PM +0200, Jim Meyering wrote:
> Eric Blake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > According to Jim Meyering on 4/16/2008 2:33 AM:
> > | This test would fail not only because the built-in mknod
> > | doesn't support -Z, but because it doesn't know about 'p' pipes.
> >
Eric Blake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> According to Jim Meyering on 4/16/2008 2:33 AM:
> | This test would fail not only because the built-in mknod
> | doesn't support -Z, but because it doesn't know about 'p' pipes.
> |
> | tests: avoid mkdir/selinux failure when mknod is a shell built-in
>
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According to Jim Meyering on 4/16/2008 2:33 AM:
| This test would fail not only because the built-in mknod
| doesn't support -Z, but because it doesn't know about 'p' pipes.
|
| tests: avoid mkdir/selinux failure when mknod is a shell built-in
|
This test would fail not only because the built-in mknod
doesn't support -Z, but because it doesn't know about 'p' pipes.
tests: avoid mkdir/selinux failure when mknod is a shell built-in
* tests/mkdir/selinux: Skip the mknod test if it's a built-in.
diff --git a/tests/mkdir/selin
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