Searched hist:195458 (Results 1 - 4 of 4) sorted by relevance
/freebsd-10-stable/lib/libc/sys/ | ||
H A D | pathconf.2 | diff 195458 Wed Jul 08 13:33:27 MDT 2009 trasz There is an optimization in chmod(1), that makes it not to call chmod(2) if the new file mode is the same as it was before; however, this optimization must be disabled for filesystems that support NFSv4 ACLs. Chmod uses pathconf(2) to determine whether this is the case - however, pathconf(2) always follows symbolic links, while the 'chmod -h' doesn't. This change adds lpathconf(3) to make it possible to solve that problem in a clean way. Reviewed by: rwatson (earlier version) Approved by: re (kib) |
/freebsd-10-stable/sys/compat/svr4/ | ||
H A D | svr4_stat.c | diff 195458 Wed Jul 08 13:33:27 MDT 2009 trasz There is an optimization in chmod(1), that makes it not to call chmod(2) if the new file mode is the same as it was before; however, this optimization must be disabled for filesystems that support NFSv4 ACLs. Chmod uses pathconf(2) to determine whether this is the case - however, pathconf(2) always follows symbolic links, while the 'chmod -h' doesn't. This change adds lpathconf(3) to make it possible to solve that problem in a clean way. Reviewed by: rwatson (earlier version) Approved by: re (kib) |
/freebsd-10-stable/include/ | ||
H A D | unistd.h | diff 195458 Wed Jul 08 13:33:27 MDT 2009 trasz There is an optimization in chmod(1), that makes it not to call chmod(2) if the new file mode is the same as it was before; however, this optimization must be disabled for filesystems that support NFSv4 ACLs. Chmod uses pathconf(2) to determine whether this is the case - however, pathconf(2) always follows symbolic links, while the 'chmod -h' doesn't. This change adds lpathconf(3) to make it possible to solve that problem in a clean way. Reviewed by: rwatson (earlier version) Approved by: re (kib) |
/freebsd-10-stable/sys/bsm/ | ||
H A D | audit_kevents.h | diff 195458 Wed Jul 08 13:33:27 MDT 2009 trasz There is an optimization in chmod(1), that makes it not to call chmod(2) if the new file mode is the same as it was before; however, this optimization must be disabled for filesystems that support NFSv4 ACLs. Chmod uses pathconf(2) to determine whether this is the case - however, pathconf(2) always follows symbolic links, while the 'chmod -h' doesn't. This change adds lpathconf(3) to make it possible to solve that problem in a clean way. Reviewed by: rwatson (earlier version) Approved by: re (kib) |
Completed in 89 milliseconds