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Date:      Sun, 19 May 2002 17:27:47 +0000
From:      "J. Mallett" <jmallett@FreeBSD.ORG>
To:        Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely5.cicely.de>
Cc:        "J. Mallett" <jmallett@FreeBSD.ORG>, freebsd-current@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: make(1) patch to ReadMakefile() to use realpath(3)
Message-ID:  <20020519172746.GA16770@FreeBSD.ORG>
In-Reply-To: <20020519165639.GL44753@cicely5.cicely.de>
References:  <20020519100420.GA8356@FreeBSD.ORG> <20020519132159.GI44753@cicely5.cicely.de> <20020519140003.GA19399@FreeBSD.ORG> <20020519153428.GK44753@cicely5.cicely.de> <20020519162710.GA19228@FreeBSD.ORG> <20020519165639.GL44753@cicely5.cicely.de>

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On Sun, May 19, 2002 at 06:56:40PM +0200, Bernd Walter wrote:
> > I'm ``blindly'' using the only answer we have to a question: how can I get
> > an absolute (thus unique) path to an object in the filesystem.
> 
> Forget it - it's not possible with FreeBSD (see below).
> I'm just a bit frustrated about all the brokenness with softlink
> handling I saw,  without noticing that FreeBSD doesn't give you a
> chance to do it right.

I really doubt there isn't a way to do it right somehow, stuff like this
has been around forever.  Consider how extensively @sys expansion was relied
on by AFS, and so on.  You just have to hide the physical path somehow.

> > I'm open to alternative ways of doing that, especially as I described
> > canonpath(3) above.
> 
> After some digging it seems like it's worse.
> getcwd already returns a canonical path on FreeBSD, NetBSD and Solaris.
> Only HP-UX returns the accumulated chdir path.
> Very dissapointing.

Look at getcwd_logical() in pwd.c
-- 
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