Scripts: Fix exit status of xzdiff/xzcmp.

This is a minor fix since this affects only the situation when
the files differ and the exit status is something else than 0.
In such case there could be SIGPIPE from a decompression tool
and that would result in exit status of 2 from xzdiff/xzcmp
while the correct behavior would be to return 1 or whatever
else diff or cmp may have returned.

This commit omits the -q option from xz/gzip/bzip2/lzop arguments.
I'm not sure why the -q was used in the first place, perhaps it
hides warnings in some situation that I cannot see at the moment.
Hopefully the removal won't introduce a new bug.

With gzip the -q option was harmful because it made gzip return 2
instead of >= 128 with SIGPIPE. Ignoring exit status 2 (warning
from gzip) isn't practical because bzip2 uses exit status 2 to
indicate corrupt input file. It's better if SIGPIPE results in
exit status >= 128.

With bzip2 the removal of -q seems to be good because with -q
it prints nothing if input is corrupt. The other tools aren't
silent in this situation even with -q. On the other hand, if
zstd support is added, it will need -q since otherwise it's
noisy in normal situations.

Thanks to Étienne Mollier and Sebastian Andrzej Siewior.
This commit is contained in:
Lasse Collin 2021-01-11 22:01:51 +02:00
parent b33a345cba
commit 09c331b03c
1 changed files with 21 additions and 14 deletions

View File

@ -116,23 +116,18 @@ elif test $# -eq 2; then
if test "$1$2" = --; then if test "$1$2" = --; then
xz_status=$( xz_status=$(
exec 4>&1 exec 4>&1
($xz1 -cdfq - 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- | ($xz1 -cdf - 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- |
eval "$cmp" - - >&3 eval "$cmp" - - >&3
) )
elif # Reject Solaris 8's buggy /bin/bash 2.03. elif # Reject Solaris 8's buggy /bin/bash 2.03.
echo X | (echo X | eval "$cmp" /dev/fd/5 - >/dev/null 2>&1) 5<&0; then echo X | (echo X | eval "$cmp" /dev/fd/5 - >/dev/null 2>&1) 5<&0; then
# NOTE: xz_status will contain two numbers.
xz_status=$( xz_status=$(
exec 4>&1 exec 4>&1
($xz1 -cdfq -- "$1" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- | ($xz1 -cdf -- "$1" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- |
( ($xz2 -cdfq -- "$2" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- 5<&- </dev/null | ( ($xz2 -cdf -- "$2" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- 5<&- </dev/null |
eval "$cmp" /dev/fd/5 - >&3) 5<&0 eval "$cmp" /dev/fd/5 - >&3) 5<&0
) )
cmp_status=$?
case $xz_status in
*[1-9]*) xz_status=1;;
*) xz_status=0;;
esac
(exit $cmp_status)
else else
F=`expr "/$2" : '.*/\(.*\)[-.][ablmotxz2]*$'` || F=$prog F=`expr "/$2" : '.*/\(.*\)[-.][ablmotxz2]*$'` || F=$prog
tmp= tmp=
@ -161,10 +156,10 @@ elif test $# -eq 2; then
mkdir -- "${TMPDIR-/tmp}/$prog.$$" || exit 2 mkdir -- "${TMPDIR-/tmp}/$prog.$$" || exit 2
tmp="${TMPDIR-/tmp}/$prog.$$" tmp="${TMPDIR-/tmp}/$prog.$$"
fi fi
$xz2 -cdfq -- "$2" > "$tmp/$F" || exit 2 $xz2 -cdf -- "$2" > "$tmp/$F" || exit 2
xz_status=$( xz_status=$(
exec 4>&1 exec 4>&1
($xz1 -cdfq -- "$1" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- | ($xz1 -cdf -- "$1" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- |
eval "$cmp" - '"$tmp/$F"' >&3 eval "$cmp" - '"$tmp/$F"' >&3
) )
cmp_status=$? cmp_status=$?
@ -175,7 +170,7 @@ elif test $# -eq 2; then
*) *)
xz_status=$( xz_status=$(
exec 4>&1 exec 4>&1
($xz1 -cdfq -- "$1" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- | ($xz1 -cdf -- "$1" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- |
eval "$cmp" - '"$2"' >&3 eval "$cmp" - '"$2"' >&3
);; );;
esac;; esac;;
@ -184,7 +179,7 @@ elif test $# -eq 2; then
*[-.][zZ] | *_z | *[-.][gx]z | *[-.]bz2 | *[-.]lzma | *.t[abglx]z | *.tbz2 | *[-.]lzo | *.tzo | -) *[-.][zZ] | *_z | *[-.][gx]z | *[-.]bz2 | *[-.]lzma | *.t[abglx]z | *.tbz2 | *[-.]lzo | *.tzo | -)
xz_status=$( xz_status=$(
exec 4>&1 exec 4>&1
($xz2 -cdfq -- "$2" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- | ($xz2 -cdf -- "$2" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- |
eval "$cmp" '"$1"' - >&3 eval "$cmp" '"$1"' - >&3
);; );;
*) *)
@ -197,5 +192,17 @@ else
fi fi
cmp_status=$? cmp_status=$?
test "$xz_status" -eq 0 || exit 2 for num in $xz_status ; do
# 0 from decompressor means successful decompression. SIGPIPE from
# decompressor is possible when diff or cmp exits before the whole file
# has been decompressed. In that case we want to retain the exit status
# from diff or cmp. Note that using "trap '' PIPE" is not possible
# because gzip changes its behavior (including exit status) if SIGPIPE
# is ignored.
test "$num" -eq 0 && continue
test "$num" -ge 128 \
&& test "$(kill -l "$num" 2> /dev/null)" = "PIPE" \
&& continue
exit 2
done
exit $cmp_status exit $cmp_status