Re: vdr 1.7.23: patch for handling symlinks in recordings directory as earlier

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 13.02.2012 12:00, Klaus Schmidinger wrote:
On 13.02.2012 11:44, Lucian Muresan wrote:
On 13.02.2012 10:43, Klaus Schmidinger wrote:
On 01/27/2012 01:04 PM, Oliver Endriss wrote:
On Thursday 26 January 2012 11:07:18 Klaus Schmidinger wrote:
On 25.01.2012 14:11, Oliver Endriss wrote:
On Wednesday 25 January 2012 10:29:16 Klaus Schmidinger wrote:
On 17.01.2012 14:26, sundararaj reel wrote:

[...]

Well, with this patch, symbolic links are not displayed at all on my
VDR machine, whereas with sundararaj reel's fix they are displayed
correctly.

So what you're saying it that this...

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


--- a/recording.c
+++ b/recording.c
@@ -1120,9 +1120,13 @@ void cRecordings::ScanVideoDir(const char
*DirName, bool Foreground, int LinkLev
continue;
}
Link = 1;
+#if 0
+ // do not resolve the symbolic links in paths to real path
+ // thereby keeping all the recordings under one directory
buffer = ReadLink(buffer);
if (!*buffer)
continue;
+#endif
if (stat(buffer, &st) != 0)
continue;
}
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



...works, while this...

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


--- recording.c 2012/01/25 09:32:39 2.45
+++ recording.c 2012/01/26 10:02:29
@@ -1120,11 +1120,6 @@
continue;
}
Link = 1;
- buffer = ReadLink(buffer);
- if (!*buffer)
- continue;
- if (stat(buffer, &st) != 0)
- continue;
}
if (S_ISDIR(st.st_mode)) {
if (endswith(buffer, deleted ? DELEXT : RECEXT)) {
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



...doesn't?

I find that hard to believe, because the only difference here is that
the second version removes the stat() call, which is superfluous if
'buffer' is no longer modified.

Haven't really looked at the code, until now, and I also do not
exactly know what the call to stat does and also didn't try to
understand the whole picture now, but your patch does not simply
remove just the call to stat, but also a *continue* statement from the
*while* loop, this could have strong
implications, so just please consider analyzing the issue with respect
to that.

The original code was

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

if (stat(buffer, &st) == 0) {
int Link = 0;
if (S_ISLNK(st.st_mode)) {
if (LinkLevel > MAX_LINK_LEVEL) {
isyslog("max link level exceeded - not scanning %s", *buffer);
continue;
}
Link = 1;
buffer = ReadLink(buffer);
if (!*buffer)
continue;
if (stat(buffer, &st) != 0)
continue;
}
...
}
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


After Sundararaj's patch it looked like this (just leaving out the lines
that his '#if 0' disabled):

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

if (stat(buffer, &st) == 0) {
int Link = 0;
if (S_ISLNK(st.st_mode)) {
if (LinkLevel > MAX_LINK_LEVEL) {
isyslog("max link level exceeded - not scanning %s", *buffer);
continue;
}
if (stat(buffer, &st) != 0)
continue;
}
...
}
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Reducing this to the stat() calls results in

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

if (stat(buffer, &st) == 0) {
...
if (stat(buffer, &st) != 0)
continue;
}
...
}
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


As you can see, 'buffer' is no longer modified between the two calls, so
they
will both return the same value. The code sequence is only entered if
the first
stat() call returns 0, so the second call will also return 0, and thus the
'continue' statement will never be executed.

Now I looked a bit closer, and noticed that the "first" call to stat is actually not to *stat*, but to *lstat* in vanilla vdr-1.7.23, so if you remove the call to the second one, could it be that you're not really cutting redundancy, maybe it actually makes a difference?

Lucian

_______________________________________________
vdr mailing list
vdr@xxxxxxxxxxx
http://www.linuxtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/vdr


[Index of Archives]     [Linux Media]     [Asterisk]     [DCCP]     [Netdev]     [Xorg]     [Util Linux NG]     [Xfree86]     [Big List of Linux Books]     [Fedora Users]     [Fedora Women]     [ALSA Devel]     [Linux USB]

  Powered by Linux