Date: Sun, 8 Sep 2002 18:55:16 +1000 (EST) From: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au> To: "Bruce A. Mah" <bmah@FreeBSD.org> Cc: Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@critter.freebsd.dk>, <freebsd-current@FreeBSD.org> Subject: Re: libmd bug on -CURRENT Message-ID: <20020908183745.X2381-100000@gamplex.bde.org> In-Reply-To: <200209071604.g87G44pc019967@intruder.bmah.org>
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On Sat, 7 Sep 2002, Bruce A. Mah wrote: > If memory serves me right, Bruce Evans wrote: > > libmd is also broken for some cases involving pipes. IIRC, this is > > caused by the bogus st_size checks in the same function. st_size is > > only valid for regular files. > > It's puzzling that the call to lseek(2) doesn't always return an error > in these cases as well (as the manpage seems to imply). Yet, one can do > md5(1) on a pipe: > > tomcat:bmah% cat /etc/motd | md5 > 9caae6eae6f9c2dfea77d6a5fae2e93c > tomcat:bmah% md5 /etc/motd > MD5 (/etc/motd) = 9caae6eae6f9c2dfea77d6a5fae2e93c I don't remember exactly which case(s) are broken. The above works, but cat /dev/motd | md5 /dev/stdin doesn't -- it gives the seek error. I think the open() in mdXFileChunk() gets used for the latter but not when stdin is used directly. This is with /dev/stdin not on devfs or fdescfs. Named pipes seem to work too: mkfifo p; md5 < p & cat /etc/motd >p # same result as md5 /etc/motd > > The loop in the function fails to to terminate if read() returns 0, > > which can probably happen if the file shrinks underneath us. > > Maybe add a check after the read(2), so that if it returns zero, we set > n = 0? It's not clear to me what result should be returned in the case > of trying to compute a checksum on a file that shrinks in the middle of > the computation. Writes that change the file underneath us will make a mess of the result. Hmm ... detecting changes is very easy, at least for regular files - just use fstat() and compare ctimes. Bruce To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
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