# This program is distributable under the terms of the GNU GPL (see
# COPYING).
-# Test rsync handling of hardlinks. By default (in 2.5.1) rsync does
-# not detect symlinks and they get split into different files. If you
-# specify -H, then hard links are detected and recreated as hardlinks
-# on the other end.
+# Test rsync handling of hardlinks. By default, rsync does not detect
+# hard links and they get sent as separate files. If you specify -H,
+# then hard links are detected and linked together on the receiver.
. "$suitedir/rsync.fns"
-set -x
-
# Build some hardlinks
fromdir="$scratchdir/from"
checkit "$RSYNC -aHivv --no-whole-file \"$fromdir/\" \"$todir/\"" "$fromdir" "$todir"
+# Add a new link in a new subdirectory to test that we don't try to link
+# the files before the directory gets created.
mkdir "$fromdir/subdir"
ln "$name1" "$fromdir/subdir/new-file"
rm "$todir/text"
checkit "$RSYNC -aHivv \"$fromdir/\" \"$todir/\"" "$fromdir" "$todir"
+# Do some duplicate copies using --link-dest and --copy-dest to test that
+# we hard-link all locally-inherited items.
+checkit "$RSYNC -aHivv --link-dest=\"$todir\" \"$fromdir/\" \"$chkdir/\"" "$todir" "$chkdir"
+
+rm -rf "$chkdir"
+checkit "$RSYNC -aHivv --copy-dest=\"$todir\" \"$fromdir/\" \"$chkdir/\"" "$fromdir" "$chkdir"
+
# Make sure there's nothing wrong with sending a single file with -H
# enabled (this has broken twice so far, so we need this test).
rm -rf "$todir"