Re: [Bug] wrapper.c uses unportable unsetenv

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

 



<rsbecker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:

> The unsetenv()/setenv(overwrite) calls are not 100% portable - as in not on
> all POSIX implementations. It breaks the build on some of the NonStop
> platforms. This will change in a year or two but I really don't want to fall
> behind on git releases.
>
> This was introduced at 3540c71 but I was on vacation when it happened so did
> not catch it during reviews - my apologies for that.

I do not quite understand.  xsetenv() does use the three-arg
setenv(), but that is not anything new.  It merely replaced a call
to the same three-arg setenv() in environment.c that have already
been there, introduced by d7ac12b2 (Add set_git_dir() function,
2007-08-01).

You may argue that 3540c71 has done a shoddy job by introducing
xunsetenv() without adding any caller, and to this day, we do not
have a single caller to the wrapper, but we already have a few calls
to unsetenv() that is compiled unconditionally.

So if you built any version of Git, you must have had these somehow
"available" in your build (e.g. your system headers may have made
them a no-op), and I'd expect you'd keep doing the same to locally
work it around on the platform side, without ...

> Is it critical that this be called or can we #ifdef it away if it isn't
> supported for a build? The #if is exactly this:

... doing something like this in the generic part of the code.
Please don't do this.

> wrapper.c@150
> + #if (_TANDEM_ARCH_ > 3 || (_TANDEM_ARCH_ == 3 && __L_Series_RVU >= 2010))
> 	if (setenv(name, value, overwrite))
> 		die_errno(_("could not setenv '%s'"), name ? name :
> "(null)");
> + #endif
>
> wrapper.c@154
> + #if (_TANDEM_ARCH_ > 3 || (_TANDEM_ARCH_ == 3 && __L_Series_RVU >= 2010))
> 	if (!unsetenv(name))
> 		die_errno(_("could not unsetenv '%s'"), name ? name :
> "(null)");
> + #endif


There are compat/setenv.c and compat/unsetenv.c to be used when
NO_SETENV and NO_UNSETENV are defined.  Is that how you built your
Git earlier since 2007, perhaps?





[Index of Archives]     [Linux Kernel Development]     [Gcc Help]     [IETF Annouce]     [DCCP]     [Netdev]     [Networking]     [Security]     [V4L]     [Bugtraq]     [Yosemite]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux Security]     [Linux RAID]     [Linux SCSI]     [Fedora Users]

  Powered by Linux