Eric Blake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> According to James Youngman on 2/1/2005 3:17 AM:
>>
>> Unix systems automatically generate sparse files when programs seek
>> forwards on their output file.  There is no need to have a "sparse"
>> attribute.  This is what coreutils' "cp" does.
>
> Right now, the tests/du/8gb test uses dd to try to create a sparse file;
> and strace'ing that on cygwin shows that it uses just lseek() followed by
> ftruncate() (no intervening write()).  But the code in src/copy.c goes to
> great lengths to write() before calling ftruncate(), with the comment that
>  "the kernel would truncate the file at the end of the last write
> operation".  Which is it?  Is copy doing more work than it should, or
> should dd also be doing a write before truncate?  POSIX does say that
> ftruncate shall increase the size of the file in XSI systems, but allows
> it return an error and keep the size unchanged on non-XSI systems.

Well, to make that test case stop skipping on cygwin, we could
apply the band-aid of simply using cp --sparse=always to
copy the dd-created file.

I'm reluctant to modify dd solely to accommodate Cygwin
when it may be jumping on the XSI bandwagon soon anyhow,
but if the change is not too ugly, I'll consider it.

> I ask, because at the moment, cygwin's implementation only makes a sparse
> file on write() after lseek(), although the developers are considering
> making ftruncate() after lseek() also create a sparse file.


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