bug-coreutils
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

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

Re: Linux 2.6 nanosecond time stamp weirdness breaks GCC build


From: Jamie Lokier
Subject: Re: Linux 2.6 nanosecond time stamp weirdness breaks GCC build
Date: Fri, 2 Apr 2004 17:23:38 +0100
User-agent: Mutt/1.4.1i

Paul Eggert wrote:
> > AFAIK there is no way to determine the stored resolution using file
> > operations alone.
> 
> Would it be easy to add one?  For example, we might extend pathconf so
> that pathconf(filename, _PC_MTIME_DELTA) returns the file system's
> mtime stamp resolution in nanoseconds.

pathconf() and fpathconf() are the obvious POSIXy interfaces for it.

Other possibilities are getxattr(), lgetxattr() and fgetxattr().

The only thing I don't like is that some cacheing algorithms will need
to make 2 system calls for each file being checked, instead of 1.  I
see no way around that, though.  At least the attribute approach would
allow all three (different) delta values to be read in one call (listxattr).

Is there a de facto standard interface used by another OS for this?

> I write "mtime" because I understand that some Microsoft file systems
> use different resolutions for mtime versus ctime versus atime, and
> mtime resolution is all that I need for now.

I didn't know that, thanks.

> Also, the NFSv3 protocol supports a delta quantity that tells the
> NFS client the mtime resolution on the NFS server, so if you assume
> NFSv3 or better the time stamp resolution is known for remote
> servers too.

Nice!

-- Jamie




reply via email to

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