1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
|
# NOTE: this file tests how large files (>2GB) work with perlio (or stdio).
# sysopen(), sysseek(), syswrite(), sysread() are tested in t/lib/syslfs.t.
# If you modify/add tests here, remember to update also ext/Fcntl/t/syslfs.t.
BEGIN {
chdir 't' if -d 't';
require './test.pl';
set_up_inc('../lib');
require Config;
# Don't bother if there are no quad offsets.
skip_all('no 64-bit file offsets')
if $Config::Config{lseeksize} < 8;
}
use strict;
our @s;
my $big0 = tempfile();
my $big1 = tempfile();
my $big2 = tempfile();
my $explained;
sub explain {
unless ($explained++) {
print <<EOM;
#
# If the lfs (large file support: large meaning larger than two
# gigabytes) tests are skipped or fail, it may mean either that your
# process (or process group) is not allowed to write large files
# (resource limits) or that the file system (the network filesystem?)
# you are running the tests on doesn't let your user/group have large
# files (quota) or the filesystem simply doesn't support large files.
# You may even need to reconfigure your kernel. (This is all very
# operating system and site-dependent.)
#
# Perl may still be able to support large files, once you have
# such a process, enough quota, and such a (file) system.
# It is just that the test failed now.
#
EOM
}
if (@_) {
skip_all(@_);
}
}
$| = 1;
print "# checking whether we have sparse files...\n";
# Known have-nots.
if ($^O eq 'MSWin32' || $^O eq 'NetWare' || $^O eq 'VMS') {
skip_all("no sparse files in $^O");
}
# Known haves that have problems running this test
# (for example because they do not support sparse files, like UNICOS)
if ($^O eq 'unicos') {
skip_all("no sparse files in $^O, unable to test large files");
}
# Then try heuristically to deduce whether we have sparse files.
# Let's not depend on Fcntl or any other extension.
sub SEEK_SET () {0}
sub SEEK_CUR () {1}
sub SEEK_END () {2}
# We'll start off by creating a one megabyte file which has
# only three "true" bytes. If we have sparseness, we should
# consume less blocks than one megabyte (assuming nobody has
# one megabyte blocks...)
open(BIG, ">$big1") or
die "open $big1 failed: $!";
binmode(BIG) or
die "binmode $big1 failed: $!";
seek(BIG, 1_000_000, SEEK_SET) or
die "seek $big1 failed: $!";
print BIG "big" or
die "print $big1 failed: $!";
close(BIG) or
die "close $big1 failed: $!";
my @s1 = stat($big1);
print "# s1 = @s1\n";
open(BIG, ">$big2") or
die "open $big2 failed: $!";
binmode(BIG) or
die "binmode $big2 failed: $!";
seek(BIG, 2_000_000, SEEK_SET) or
die "seek $big2 failed: $!";
print BIG "big" or
die "print $big2 failed: $!";
close(BIG) or
die "close $big2 failed: $!";
my @s2 = stat($big2);
print "# s2 = @s2\n";
unless ($s1[7] == 1_000_003 && $s2[7] == 2_000_003 &&
$s1[11] == $s2[11] && $s1[12] == $s2[12] &&
$s1[12] > 0) {
skip_all("no sparse files?");
}
print "# we seem to have sparse files...\n";
# By now we better be sure that we do have sparse files:
# if we are not, the following will hog 5 gigabytes of disk. Ooops.
# This may fail by producing some signal; run in a subprocess first for safety
$ENV{LC_ALL} = "C";
my $r = system '../perl', '-e', <<"EOF";
open my \$big, '>', q{$big0} or die qq{open $big0: $!};
seek \$big, 5_000_000_000, 0 or die qq{seek $big0: $!};
print \$big "big" or die qq{print $big0: $!};
close \$big or die qq{close $big0: $!};
exit 0;
EOF
open(BIG, ">$big0") or die "open failed: $!";
binmode BIG;
if ($r or not seek(BIG, 5_000_000_000, SEEK_SET)) {
my $err = $r ? 'signal '.($r & 0x7f) : $!;
explain("seeking past 2GB failed: $err");
}
# Either the print or (more likely, thanks to buffering) the close will
# fail if there are are filesize limitations (process or fs).
my $print = print BIG "big";
print "# print failed: $!\n" unless $print;
my $close = close BIG;
print "# close failed: $!\n" unless $close;
unless ($print && $close) {
if ($! =~/too large/i) {
explain("writing past 2GB failed: process limits?");
} elsif ($! =~ /quota/i) {
explain("filesystem quota limits?");
} else {
explain("error: $!");
}
}
@s = stat($big0);
print "# @s\n";
unless ($s[7] == 5_000_000_003) {
explain("kernel/fs not configured to use large files?");
}
sub offset ($$) {
local $::Level = $::Level + 1;
my ($offset_will_be, $offset_want) = @_;
my $offset_is = eval $offset_will_be;
unless ($offset_is == $offset_want) {
print "# bad offset $offset_is, want $offset_want\n";
my ($offset_func) = ($offset_will_be =~ /^(\w+)/);
if (unpack("L", pack("L", $offset_want)) == $offset_is) {
print "# 32-bit wraparound suspected in $offset_func() since\n";
print "# $offset_want cast into 32 bits equals $offset_is.\n";
} elsif ($offset_want - unpack("L", pack("L", $offset_want)) - 1
== $offset_is) {
print "# 32-bit wraparound suspected in $offset_func() since\n";
printf "# %s - unpack('L', pack('L', %s)) - 1 equals %s.\n",
$offset_want,
$offset_want,
$offset_is;
}
fail($offset_will_be);
} else {
pass($offset_will_be);
}
}
plan(tests => 17);
is($s[7], 5_000_000_003, 'exercises pp_stat');
is(-s $big0, 5_000_000_003, 'exercises pp_ftsize');
is(-e $big0, 1);
is(-f $big0, 1);
open(BIG, $big0) or die "open failed: $!";
binmode BIG;
isnt(seek(BIG, 4_500_000_000, SEEK_SET), undef);
offset('tell(BIG)', 4_500_000_000);
isnt(seek(BIG, 1, SEEK_CUR), undef);
# If you get 205_032_705 from here it means that
# your tell() is returning 32-bit values since (I32)4_500_000_001
# is exactly 205_032_705.
offset('tell(BIG)', 4_500_000_001);
isnt(seek(BIG, -1, SEEK_CUR), undef);
offset('tell(BIG)', 4_500_000_000);
isnt(seek(BIG, -3, SEEK_END), undef);
offset('tell(BIG)', 5_000_000_000);
my $big;
is(read(BIG, $big, 3), 3);
is($big, "big");
# 705_032_704 = (I32)5_000_000_000
# See that we don't have "big" in the 705_... spot:
# that would mean that we have a wraparound.
isnt(seek(BIG, 705_032_704, SEEK_SET), undef);
my $zero;
is(read(BIG, $zero, 3), 3);
is($zero, "\0\0\0");
explain() unless $::Tests_Are_Passing;
END {
# unlink may fail if applied directly to a large file
# be paranoid about leaving 5 gig files lying around
open(BIG, ">$big0"); # truncate
close(BIG);
}
# eof
|