#! /bin/sh # vim: filetype=sh noexpandtab ts=8 sw=8 # $FreeBSD$ desc="utimensat can follow symlinks" dir=`dirname $0` . ${dir}/../misc.sh require "utimensat" echo "1..16" n0=`namegen` n1=`namegen` n2=`namegen` DATE1=1900000000 #Sun Mar 17 11:46:40 MDT 2030 DATE2=1950000000 #Fri Oct 17 04:40:00 MDT 2031 DATE3=1960000000 #Mon Feb 9 21:26:40 MST 2032 DATE4=1970000000 #Fri Jun 4 16:13:20 MDT 2032 DATE5=1980000000 #Tue Sep 28 10:00:00 MDT 2032 DATE6=1990000000 #Sat Jan 22 02:46:40 MST 2033 expect 0 mkdir ${n1} 0755 cdir=`pwd` cd ${n1} create_file regular ${n0} ln -s ${n0} ${n2} expect 0 open . O_RDONLY : utimensat 0 ${n0} $DATE1 0 $DATE2 0 0 expect 0 open . O_RDONLY : utimensat 0 ${n2} $DATE3 0 $DATE4 0 AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW expect $DATE1 lstat ${n0} atime expect $DATE2 lstat ${n0} mtime expect $DATE3 lstat ${n2} atime expect $DATE4 lstat ${n2} mtime expect 0 open . O_RDONLY : utimensat 0 ${n2} $DATE5 0 $DATE6 0 0 expect $DATE5 lstat ${n0} atime expect $DATE6 lstat ${n0} mtime # If atime is disabled on the current mount, then ${n2}'s atime should still be # $DATE3. However, if atime is enabled, then ${n2}'s atime will be the current # system time. For this test, it's sufficient to simply check that it didn't # get set to DATE5 test_check "$DATE5" -ne `"$fstest" lstat ${n2} atime` expect $DATE4 lstat ${n2} mtime expect 0 unlink ${n0} expect 0 unlink ${n2} cd ${cdir} expect 0 rmdir ${n1}