#! /bin/sh # Copyright (C) 2002 by Martin Pool # This program is distributable under the terms of the GNU GPL (see # COPYING). # Test rsync handling of duplicate filenames. # It's quite possible that the user might specify the same source file # more than once on the command line, perhaps through shell variables # or wildcard expansions. It might cause problems for rsync if the # same name occurred more than once in the file list, because we might # be trying to update the first copy and generate checksums for the # second copy at the same time. See clean_flist() for the implementation. # We don't need to worry about hardlinks or symlinks. Because we # always rename-and-replace the new copy, they can't affect us. # This test is not great, because it is a timing-dependent bug. . "$suitedir/rsync.fns" # Build some hardlinks mkdir "$fromdir" name1="$fromdir/name1" name2="$fromdir/name2" echo "This is the file" > "$name1" ln -s "$name1" "$name2" || fail "can't create symlink" outfile="$scratchdir/rsync.out" checkit "$RSYNC -avv '$fromdir/' '$fromdir/' '$fromdir/' '$fromdir/' '$fromdir/' '$fromdir/' '$fromdir/' '$fromdir/' '$fromdir/' '$fromdir/' '$todir/'" "$fromdir" "$todir" \ | tee "$outfile" # Make sure each file was only copied once... if [ `grep -c '^name1$' "$outfile"` != 1 ] then test_fail "name1 was not copied exactly once" fi if [ `grep -c '^name2 -> ' "$outfile"` != 1 ] then test_fail "name2 was not copied exactly once" fi # The script would have aborted on error, so getting here means we've won. exit 0