On Sun, Mar 26, 2017 at 3:43 PM, René Scharfe <l.s.r@xxxxxx> wrote: > FreeBSD implements getcwd(3) as a syscall, but falls back to a version > based on readdir(3) if it fails for some reason. The latter requires > permissions to read and execute path components, while the former does > not. That means that if our buffer is too small and we're missing > rights we could get EACCES, but we may succeed with a bigger buffer. > > Keep retrying if getcwd(3) indicates lack of permissions until our > buffer can fit PATH_MAX bytes, as that's the maximum supported by the > syscall on FreeBSD anyway. This way we do what we can to be able to > benefit from the syscall, but we also won't loop forever if there is a > real permission issue. Sorry to be late and maybe I missed something obvious, but the above and the patch seem complex to me compared with something like: diff --git a/strbuf.c b/strbuf.c index ace58e7367..25eadcbedc 100644 --- a/strbuf.c +++ b/strbuf.c @@ -441,7 +441,7 @@ int strbuf_readlink(struct strbuf *sb, const char *path, size_t hint) int strbuf_getcwd(struct strbuf *sb) { size_t oldalloc = sb->alloc; - size_t guessed_len = 128; + size_t guessed_len = PATH_MAX > 128 ? PATH_MAX : 128; for (;; guessed_len *= 2) { strbuf_grow(sb, guessed_len);