GNU bug report logs -
#10472
`realpath --relative-to=<path> /` outputs inconsistent trailing slash
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Reported by: Mike Frysinger <vapier <at> gentoo.org>
Date: Tue, 10 Jan 2012 20:17:02 UTC
Severity: normal
Done: Pádraig Brady <P <at> draigBrady.com>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
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On 01/30/2012 09:10 PM, Eric Blake wrote:
> On 01/10/2012 01:15 PM, Mike Frysinger wrote:
>> however, if the last argument is just the root path:
>> realpath --relative-to=/usr /
>> realpath --relative-to=/usr/ /
>> we end up with a trailing slash:
>> ../
>>
>> for consistency, i don't think that should be the case
>>
>> (reported by Ulrich Müller via https://bugs.gentoo.org/398339)
>
> Another bug, on a system where // is distinct from /:
>
> $ realpath --relative-to=/ //machine / // /bin
> machine
> .
> .
> bin
> $ realpath --relative-to=// //machine / // /bin
> machine
> .
> .
> bin
>
> when it should really be:
>
> $ realpath --relative-to=/ //machine / // /bin
> //machine
> .
> //
> bin
> $ realpath --relative-to=// //machine / // /bin
> machine
> /
> .
> /bin
>
> We need to make realpath robust to correct leading // handling; I don't
> know if we should follow the lead of 'dirname' in only doing it on
> machines where // is special, or if it is easier to make it honor POSIX
> by special-casing // everywhere even on machines where / and // are
> identical.
So on such a machine, I guess `readlink -m //machine/` outputs '//machine'.
To match up with that, I think it makes sense to only do this on systems
where a double slash is significant.
BTW, this is how I'm interpreting this example:
> $ realpath --relative-to=// //machine / // /bin
> machine
> /
> .
> /bin
I'm taking --relative-to=// to mean relative to "the network".
Hence relative output will be machines on the network,
while absolute are local paths.
gnulib says // matters for Apollo DomainOS (too old to port to),
Cygwin, and z/OS.
cheers,
Pádraig.
This bug report was last modified 13 years and 75 days ago.
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