Summary: | Make 64-bit off_t the default on i386 and others | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | glibc | Reporter: | Leslie Satenstein <lsatenstein> |
Component: | libc | Assignee: | Ulrich Drepper <drepper.fsp> |
Status: | REOPENED --- | ||
Severity: | normal | CC: | aj, bugdal, fweimer |
Priority: | P2 | Flags: | fweimer:
security-
|
Version: | unspecified | ||
Target Milestone: | --- | ||
Host: | Target: | ||
Build: | Last reconfirmed: |
Description
Leslie Satenstein
2011-07-31 01:10:57 UTC
Large DVD Iso files can't be copied. Not a bug in glibc but a limitation of a 32-bit system unless you use the proper interfaces, see for example this web page: http://www.suse.de/~aj/linux_lfs.html Here is my come-back. Since one can add a #define to allow using buffered IO (fread, fwrite, etc) for files in excess of 2 gigabytes. then this define should be permanent within stdio.h . I wanted to read an ISO DVD and could not. I would refer the owner of this maintenance problem to the actual libc.pdf file section 4.17, which makes no mention of the #define. (However in respoonse to Andreas Jaeger, personal reply (which I appreciate receiving and for which I thank him), using the search of the libc.PDF I did find a chapter about large file support. Something is wrong when today a large file is one measured in petabytes. Please redirect this topic and this bug to the documentation project and of course to a steering committee to update the stream IO functionality to handle very large files, or to state that in the libc.pdf fopen() document, to refer to the large file section. I lost quite a few hours of digging to independently discoover the #define that enables large file support. I would also ask why large file support is turned on for 64 bit linux? Had 64 bit linux the same constraint, I would have not been concerned. (I was porting code from 64bit to 32bit), for older systems. Thank you again Andreas, for the prompt reply. This is how POSIX defines it. Changing it is not possible without breaking programs. Please reopen and rename this bug. It should be called "It's 2011 and -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 is still not the default." Seriously, the attempt at coexistence between programs compiled correctly and a few that mistakenly omitted -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 is an endless source of subtle bugs - for instance if a 32-bit-offset program inherits a file descriptor from a 64-bit-offset one, which happens basically anytime a properly built shell runs a 32-bit-offset program. As per my comment last year, I think this issue merits revisiting. Since the intended protections against bad behavior/file corruption break down when file descriptors are inherited between programs built with differing values for _FILE_OFFSET_BITS, and since it's now 2012, I think there's a strong argument to be made for making 64-bit off_t the default. I know a small but persistent number of programs on Debian and other mainstream dists are still built without any attention to _FILE_OFFSET_BITS, and this leads to broken corner case issues. Fixing this at the libc level makes a lot more sense than fixing it in every single program... |