unzip, find broken by auto handling of .exe file extension

Marco Atzeri marco.atzeri@gmail.com
Tue Sep 13 08:00:00 GMT 2016


On 13/09/2016 01:30, Stephen Anderson wrote:
>

>>
>> This characteristics is needed as windows for historical reason
>> requested  ".exe" extension for all executable files, while
>> Unix have not such restriction.
>>
>> So "cat.exe" is recognized by cygwin also as "cat".
>> Without this feature all scripts taken by traditional Unix's will
>> be broken and cygwin will be unusable.
>>
>> Try this experiment on Linux:
>>
>> touch foo
>> mkdir foo
>>
>> does it work ?
>
> This is not relevant, there is no foo, there is only foo.exe.

foo.exe is also foo for cygwin .
It seems you have problem to understand it

>
> In the case of windows _command_ processing, certain extensions are searched for automatically without creating an equivalency in file names. This means that for the same directory and filename hierarchy, windows and linux archive processing work, cygwin uniquely fails. Not a desirable outcome.
>
> IMHO the only time cygwin should be looking for .exe (or .cmd, .bat etc if desired), is when no match is found on loading a _command_, possibly only from a shell.

Feel free to provide a patch to solve it, but I suspect your solution 
will be worst then current implementation.
There is no way to predict if the search for a file will be used to run 
it afterwards, so breaking functional scripts or programs.

> sja

Regards
Marco


--
Problem reports:       http://cygwin.com/problems.html
FAQ:                   http://cygwin.com/faq/
Documentation:         http://cygwin.com/docs.html
Unsubscribe info:      http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple



More information about the Cygwin mailing list