bug-gnu-emacs
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

bug#28540: eshell/sudo find-file doesn't work as expected with files onl


From: Stefan Kangas
Subject: bug#28540: eshell/sudo find-file doesn't work as expected with files only readable by root
Date: Sun, 29 Sep 2019 03:07:25 +0200

tags 28540 + wontfix
close 28540
quit

Michael Albinus <michael.albinus@gmx.de> writes:

> Yegor Timoshenko <yegortimoshenko@gmail.com> writes:
>
> Hi Yegor,
>
> [sorry for the late reply; this bug flew under my radar]
>
>> To reproduce, M-x eshell and compare behavior of these two commands:
>>
>> $ ff /sudo::/etc/sudoers
>> $ sudo ff /etc/sudoers
>>
>> In the first case the buffer is editable (and can be saved), while in
>> the latter it is opened read-only. Switching read-only flag with C-x
>> C-q doesn't help: I can edit the buffer, but not save it (results in
>> "Doing chmod: operation not permitted" error).
>>
>> GNU Emacs 27.0.50 (build 1, x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw scroll bars)
>>  of 2017-09-21 (198ba449845ffa557ac272c3219c703148648f53)
>>
>> Reproducible in Emacs 25.3 as well.
>>
>> Sorry, two assumptions in the previous email:
>>
>> (defalias 'ff 'find-file)
>> (eval-after-load 'esh-module
>>   '(add-to-list 'eshell-modules-list 'eshell-tramp))
>
> I believe this behavior is correct. In your first test, the file has
> been opened as "/sudo::/etc/sudoers". But in the second test, the file
> has been opened as "/etc/sudoers" (you will see this, when you try to
> pen another file via "C-x C-f": "/etc/" is offered to you as default
> directory).
>
> The point is, that the "sudo" command changes the default directory
> internally to "/sudo:root@localhost:...", but the following Lisp code
> (expanding your alias) evaluates as (find-file "/etc/passwd"). And
> although the current default directory is remote, just the local
> "/etc/passwd" is opened. And you have no write permissions there.
>
> In order to change this behavior, ehsell would need to analyze the
> command given after the leading "sudo". For shell commands like "sudo
> *cat /etc/sudoers", the file name must be kept literally, because it is
> evalled in the shell command. But for Lisp commands, like your "sudo ff
> /etc/sudoers", the file name must be expanded internally to "sudo ff
> /sudo::/etc/sudoers".
>
> This requires much knowledge about what a command like "cat" or "ff" is
> intended to do. I doubt we will go such far in eshell.

I agree.  To do this right in general would be a significant
undertaking for a very minor benefit.  I'm therefore closing this as
wontfix.

If anyone disagrees with that, feel free to reopen.

Best regards,
Stefan Kangas





reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]