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Re: csplit 'write error' missing errno?


From: Pádraig Brady
Subject: Re: csplit 'write error' missing errno?
Date: Fri, 23 Oct 2015 00:40:07 +0100
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.3.0

On 22/10/15 21:01, Jim Meyering wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 12:22 PM, Assaf Gordon <address@hidden> wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> In a long-running pipeline, we've encountered the following error message 
>> with 'csplit':
>>   csplit: write error for ‘[FILENAME]`
>>
>> It is very likely stemming from out-of-disk-space situation, but because 
>> there was no errno printed, it's hard to know for sure, making 
>> troubleshooting a bit frustrating.
>>
>> The error is printed in 'close_output_file()', in response to checking 
>> 'ferror()'.
>>
>> I wonder if it would be beneficial to add the errno information to the error 
>> message.
>>
>> >From a cursory look it seems 'close_output_file()' is (almost?) always 
>> >called after
>> 'dump_rest_of_file()' or 'save_line_to_file()' which themselves use 
>> 'fwrite()'.
>>
>> So it could perhaps be assumed that if if 'ferror()' indicates an error on 
>> the output stream,
>> then the last operation was fwrite?
>> The downside is that if my assumption doesn't hold, it could print a 
>> misleading errno information.
>>
>> The following patch is a suggestion (not fully tested):
>>
>> ===
>> diff --git a/src/csplit.c b/src/csplit.c
>> index d966df5..d2a0228 100644
>> --- a/src/csplit.c
>> +++ b/src/csplit.c
>> @@ -1004,7 +1004,7 @@ close_output_file (void)
>>      {
>>        if (ferror (output_stream))
>>          {
>> -          error (0, 0, _("write error for %s"), quote (output_filename));
>> +          error (0, errno, _("write error for %s"), quote 
>> (output_filename));
>>            output_stream = NULL;
>>            cleanup_fatal ();
>>          }
>> ===
> 
> Hi Assaf,
> 
> Thanks for investigating.
> 
> That's a fundamental limitation of streams.
> When detecting that error via ferror, the errno value is not
> guaranteed to be useful.  From what I recall of the fwrite
> specification, even immediately after a failed fwrite, errno is not
> guaranteed to be useful, but in practice, it always is,
> so coreutils programs do rely on that.

Right, and whether to check all writes is a
a trade off between maintainability and precise errors.
Checking every output function in addition to checking ferror on close
(as is done in close_stdout for example) will ensure _precise_ errors in
all edge cases, while just relying on ferror will always diagnose errors,
though in certain edge cases not with a precise error message. as you've seen.
Details at: 
http://www.gnu.org/ghm/2011/paris/slides/jim-meyering-goodbye-world.pdf


>> I'll be able to troubleshoot and provide more information in couple of days.
>> A more elaborate solution is to save the errno after 'fwrite()' in a 
>> variable,
>> and print that variable. I can send such a patch if that's a better idea.
> 
> Yes, this sounds better.

Yes the tradeoff discussed above is a bad one in csplit's case
as it only has a single fwrite() call.  We should check the output
of that and call into cleanup_fatal() to exit early to avoid redundant
processing when one can't write the current output file.  This could
be tested with something like: timeout 10 yes | csplit ... /dev/full

thanks,
Pádraig.




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