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Re: seekable stdin test failure on OS X


From: Eric Blake
Subject: Re: seekable stdin test failure on OS X
Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2007 05:58:37 -0600
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According to Bruno Haible on 4/10/2007 4:29 PM:
> Hi Eric,
> 
> The 'e1' variable is not needed, I think. No standard specifies that errno
> must be preserved across function calls:
>   - C99 does not mention 'errno' in the description of fflush,
>   - POSIX does, and says in 
> http://www.opengroup.org/susv3/functions/xsh_chap02_03.html
>     that "The value of errno should only be examined when it is indicated to
>     be valid by a function's return value."

True enough.  I'm checking in this:

2007-04-12  Eric Blake  <address@hidden>

        No need to preserve errno on success.
        * lib/fflush.c (rpl_fflush): Simplify errno tracking.
        Reported by Bruno Haible.

- --
Don't work too hard, make some time for fun as well!

Eric Blake             address@hidden
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Index: lib/fflush.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /sources/gnulib/gnulib/lib/fflush.c,v
retrieving revision 1.1
diff -u -p -r1.1 fflush.c
--- lib/fflush.c        10 Apr 2007 03:09:07 -0000      1.1
+++ lib/fflush.c        12 Apr 2007 11:57:49 -0000
@@ -36,38 +36,33 @@ int fpurge (FILE *);
 int
 rpl_fflush (FILE *stream)
 {
-  int e1; /* Leave errno unchanged on success.  */
-  int e2; /* Capture errno of first fflush if nothing else succeeds.  */
+  int e; /* Capture errno of first fflush if nothing else succeeds.  */
   int result;
 
   /* Try flushing the stream.  C89 guarantees behavior of output
      streams, so we only need to worry if failure might have been on
      an input stream.  When stream is NULL, POSIX only requires
      flushing of output streams.  */
-  e1 = errno;
   result = fflush (stream);
-  if (! stream || result == 0 || errno != EBADF)
+  if (! stream || result == 0 || (e = errno) != EBADF)
     return result;
 
   /* POSIX does not specify behavior for non-seekable streams.  */
-  e2 = errno;
   if (fseeko (stream, 0, SEEK_CUR) != 0)
     {
-      errno = e2;
+      errno = e;
       return EOF;
     }
 
   /* To get here, we must be flushing a seekable input stream, so the
      semantics of fpurge are now appropriate.  */
 #if HAVE_FPURGE
-  errno = e1;
   result = fpurge (stream);
 #elif HAVE___FPURGE
   /* __fpurge has no return value, and on Solaris, we can't even trust
      errno.  So assume it succeeds.  */
   __fpurge (stream);
   result = 0;
-  errno = e1;
 #else /* ! HAVE___FPURGE */
 
   /* No single replacement; do it manually.  */
@@ -82,13 +77,10 @@ rpl_fflush (FILE *stream)
     else if (fseeko (stream, position, SEEK_SET) != 0)
       {
        result = EOF;
-       errno = e2;
+       errno = e;
       }
     else
-      {
-       result = 0;
-       errno = e1;
-      }
+      result = 0;
   }
 #endif /* ! HAVE___FPURGE */
 

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