glibc/SOURCES/glibc-RHEL-54447-7.patch

84 lines
3.2 KiB
Diff

commit 9d26e50364def249e483b1601beb6ecf9141ecc7
Author: Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@redhat.com>
Date: Fri Jul 26 13:21:34 2024 +0100
posix: Use <support/check.h> facilities in tst-truncate and tst-truncate64
Remove local FAIL macro in favor to FAIL_RET from <support/check.h>,
which provides equivalent reporting, with the name of the file of the
failure site additionally included, for the tst-truncate-common core
shared between the tst-truncate and tst-truncate64 tests.
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit fe47595504a55e7bb992f8928533df154b510383)
diff --git a/posix/tst-truncate-common.c b/posix/tst-truncate-common.c
index 00c999d372693bfa..1f6c4bd256a638f9 100644
--- a/posix/tst-truncate-common.c
+++ b/posix/tst-truncate-common.c
@@ -21,6 +21,8 @@
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <unistd.h>
+#include <support/check.h>
+
static void do_prepare (void);
#define PREPARE(argc, argv) do_prepare ()
static int do_test (void);
@@ -42,9 +44,6 @@ do_prepare (void)
}
}
-#define FAIL(str) \
- do { printf ("error: %s (line %d)\n", str, __LINE__); return 1; } while (0)
-
static int
do_test_with_offset (off_t offset)
{
@@ -54,35 +53,35 @@ do_test_with_offset (off_t offset)
memset (buf, 0xcf, sizeof (buf));
if (pwrite (temp_fd, buf, sizeof (buf), offset) != sizeof (buf))
- FAIL ("write failed");
+ FAIL_RET ("write failed");
if (fstat (temp_fd, &st) < 0 || st.st_size != (offset + sizeof (buf)))
- FAIL ("initial size wrong");
+ FAIL_RET ("initial size wrong");
if (ftruncate (temp_fd, offset + 800) < 0)
- FAIL ("size reduction with ftruncate failed");
+ FAIL_RET ("size reduction with ftruncate failed");
if (fstat (temp_fd, &st) < 0 || st.st_size != (offset + 800))
- FAIL ("size after reduction with ftruncate is incorrect");
+ FAIL_RET ("size after reduction with ftruncate is incorrect");
/* The following test covers more than POSIX. POSIX does not require
that ftruncate() can increase the file size. But we are testing
Unix systems. */
if (ftruncate (temp_fd, offset + 1200) < 0)
- FAIL ("size increate with ftruncate failed");
+ FAIL_RET ("size increate with ftruncate failed");
if (fstat (temp_fd, &st) < 0 || st.st_size != (offset + 1200))
- FAIL ("size after increase is incorrect");
+ FAIL_RET ("size after increase is incorrect");
if (truncate (temp_filename, offset + 800) < 0)
- FAIL ("size reduction with truncate failed");
+ FAIL_RET ("size reduction with truncate failed");
if (fstat (temp_fd, &st) < 0 || st.st_size != (offset + 800))
- FAIL ("size after reduction with truncate incorrect");
+ FAIL_RET ("size after reduction with truncate incorrect");
/* The following test covers more than POSIX. POSIX does not require
that truncate() can increase the file size. But we are testing
Unix systems. */
if (truncate (temp_filename, (offset + 1200)) < 0)
- FAIL ("size increase with truncate failed");
+ FAIL_RET ("size increase with truncate failed");
if (fstat (temp_fd, &st) < 0 || st.st_size != (offset + 1200))
- FAIL ("size increase with truncate is incorrect");
+ FAIL_RET ("size increase with truncate is incorrect");
return 0;
}