On 13.09.13 07:08, Jiang Xin wrote:
> Tvangeste found that the "relative_path" function could not work
> properly on Windows if "in" and "prefix" have dos driver prefix.
> ($gmane/234434)
>
> e.g., When execute: test-path-utils relative_path "C:/a/b" "D:/x/y",
> should return "C:/a/b", but returns "../../C:/a/b", which is wrong.
>
> So make relative_path honor dos_drive_prefix, and add test cases
> for it in t0060.
>
> Reported-by: Tvangeste <i.4m.l...@yandex.ru>
> Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j...@kdbg.org>
> Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello....@gmail.com>
> ---
>  path.c                | 20 ++++++++++++++++++++
>  t/t0060-path-utils.sh |  4 ++++
>  2 files changed, 24 insertions(+)
>
> diff --git a/path.c b/path.c
> index 9fd28bcd..65d376d 100644
> --- a/path.c
> +++ b/path.c
> @@ -434,6 +434,16 @@ int adjust_shared_perm(const char *path)
>       return 0;
>  }
>  
> +static int have_same_root(const char *path1, const char *path2)
> +{
> +     int is_abs1, is_abs2;
> +
> +     is_abs1 = is_absolute_path(path1);
> +     is_abs2 = is_absolute_path(path2);
> +     return (is_abs1 && is_abs2 && tolower(path1[0]) == tolower(path2[0])) ||
> +            (!is_abs1 && !is_abs2);
> +}
> +
I think the name of the fuction is somewhat misleading, as we are not sure if
they really have the same root.
And that is investigated further down.

may_have_same_root() could be a better name.

[snip]

>       while (i < prefix_len && j < in_len && prefix[i] == in[j]) {
>               if (is_dir_sep(prefix[i])) {
>                       while (is_dir_sep(prefix[i]))
> diff --git a/t/t0060-path-utils.sh b/t/t0060-path-utils.sh
> index 82a6f21..0187d11 100755
> --- a/t/t0060-path-utils.sh
> +++ b/t/t0060-path-utils.sh
> @@ -210,6 +210,10 @@ relative_path foo/a/b/           foo/a/b         ./
>  relative_path foo/a          foo/a/b         ../
>  relative_path foo/x/y                foo/a/b         ../../x/y
>  relative_path foo/a/c                foo/a/b         ../c
> +relative_path foo/a/b                /foo/x/y        foo/a/b
> +relative_path /foo/a/b               foo/x/y         /foo/a/b
> +relative_path d:/a/b         D:/a/c          ../b            MINGW
> +relative_path C:/a/b         D:/a/c          C:/a/b          MINGW
Side question:
What happens if we feed in a relative path with a dos drive?
like "c:foo" which is different from c:/foo.


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