GNU bug report logs - #33847
27.0.50; emacsclient does not find server socket

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Package: emacs;

Reported by: Ulrich Mueller <ulm <at> gentoo.org>

Date: Sun, 23 Dec 2018 09:49:01 UTC

Severity: normal

Tags: patch

Merged with 41707

Found in version 27.0.50

Fixed in version 28.1

Done: Lars Ingebrigtsen <larsi <at> gnus.org>

Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.

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From: Paul Eggert <eggert <at> cs.ucla.edu>
To: Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org>
Cc: 33847 <at> debbugs.gnu.org, larsi <at> gnus.org, Gnulib bugs <bug-gnulib <at> gnu.org>, teika <at> gmx.com, ulm <at> gentoo.org
Subject: bug#33847: 27.0.50; emacsclient does not find server socket
Date: Sun, 25 Jul 2021 09:22:06 -0700
On 7/24/21 11:32 PM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:

>> No modules are affected by the --disable-year2038 option on MS-Windows.

It turns out that I was wrong about that. (I don't normally look at the 
MS-Windows part of Gnulib and misunderstood some of the code I was 
reading.) Please see gnulib/m4/year2038.m4 for details. This file is in 
the patches I sent, or you can see it directly here:

https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnulib.git/tree/m4/year2038.m4

This code knows about MS-Windows, Mingw, _USE_32BIT_TIME_T, 
__MINGW_USE_VC2005_COMPAT, and so forth, and attempts to do the right 
thing. As near as I can make out it should work for the scenario you 
describe, but I don't use MS-Windows so I could well be wrong. If I'm 
wrong and this code doesn't do what you want, I suggest contacting 
bug-gnulib to alert Bruno Haible, who wrote that part of the code. I'll 
cc bug-gnulib so that Bruno sees this email. (Bruno, this discussion is 
at <https://bugs.gnu.org/33847#161>.)

Here's some more background. There are two Gnulib modules involved.

The largefile module ensures that a program can open/stat/etc. all 
files, by widening types like off_t, dev_t and time_t if necessary. If 
it finds that time_t is narrower than what the system can support, it 
attempts to widen time_t; if this attempt fails it issues a warning but 
continues.

The year2038 module is stricter: it insists that time_t be at least 64 
bits and aborts 'configure' otherwise. (Strictly speaking, it should 
insist only on at least 33 bits (or 32 bits unsigned); I suppose I 
should look into fixing that.)

The Emacs patches that I sent do not use the year2038 module, because I 
expected that you wouldn't want to worry about the year 2038. The 
year2038 module is used by GNU packages like coreutils where Y2038 is a 
problem even now, due to the long lead times and lack of updatability on 
systems that use these other GNU packages.

> So therefore my question seems to be even more important than I
> thought, and I'm still asking which Gnulib modules are affected by
> this, because I'd need to audit them carefully to see whether the
> 32-bit MS-Windows build with mingw.org's MinGW could be affected.

There should be no need to audit, because Gnulib still supports 
platforms that have only 32-bit time_t.

Gnulib is agnostic about time_t width, and is supposed to work even if 
time_t is 40 bits (which it is on a very few mainframes) or any other 
width. We regularly test it only on 32- and 64-bit time_t, though.




This bug report was last modified 3 years and 226 days ago.

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