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Date:      Tue, 2 Jan 1996 01:22:11 +0000
From:      Alexander Frolkin <alexander@frolkin.demon.co.uk>
To:        Thimble Smith <tim@mysql.com>
Cc:        freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: weirdness w/ gdb (and others) and home directory
Message-ID:  <19960102012211.B660@gamma>
In-Reply-To: <20000410022851.B8117@threads.polyesthetic.msg>; from Thimble Smith on Mon, Apr 10, 2000 at 02:28:51AM -0400
References:  <20000410022851.B8117@threads.polyesthetic.msg>

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On Mon, Apr 10, 2000 at 02:28:51AM -0400, Thimble Smith wrote:
> Hi.  I'm seeing some "weird" stuff with my 4.0-STABLE box.  The
> symptom is:
> 
>     tim:/tmp$ gdb /bin/pwd
>     GNU gdb 4.18
> 
>     [License]
> 
>     This GDB was configured as "i386-unknown-freebsd"...
>     (no debugging symbols found)...
>     (gdb) run
>     Starting program: /bin/pwd 
>     warning: shared library handler failed to enable breakpoint
>     /usr/home/tim
> 
>     Program exited normally.
>     (gdb) 
> 
> 
> It prints "/usr/home/tim", even though I was in "/tmp" when I ran
> it.

This works fine for me (i.e. displays /tmp). Here's my uname -a:

FreeBSD xxx 4.0-STABLE FreeBSD 4.0-STABLE #0: Sun Apr  2 16:28:02 GMT
2000  root@yyy:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/XXX  i386


Alexander.

> It's not gdb, I'm quite sure.  A 3.4-STABLE box doesn't do this.  I
> started trying to figure this out because I was trying to use cook
> (/usr/ports/devel/cook), and any recipe that redirected output to
> a file would put that file in my home directory, no matter where I
> ran cook from.
> 
> For example, when I run the following script I get:
> 
>     tim:/usr/tmp/junk$ sh thetest.sh 
>     /* Howto.list, /tmp/cook-test, Mon Apr 10 02:03 2000 */
>     cook: pwd > junk
>     cook: ln -s /tmp/cook-test not-junk
>     1c1
>     < total 8
>     ---
>     > total 9
>     6a7
>     > -rw-r--r--   1 tim  tim    10 Apr 10 02:03 junk
>     /home/tim
>     lrwxr-xr-x  1 tim  wheel  14 Apr 10 02:03 /tmp/cook-test/not-junk -> /tmp/cook-test
> 
> 
> Here's the script:
> 
>     #! /bin/sh
> 
>     test -e /tmp/cook-test && rm -rf /tmp/cook-test
>     mkdir /tmp/cook-test || exit 2
>     cd /tmp/cook-test || exit 2
>     cat <<EOF > Howto.cook
>     all: junk not-junk ;
> 
>     /* this will create a file in my home directory! */
>     junk:
>     {
>             pwd > junk;
>     }
> 
>     /* this does what I want it to - put a symlink in the current dir */
>     not-junk:
>     {
>             ln -s `pwd` not-junk;
>     }
>     EOF
> 
>     /bin/ls -l $HOME > before
> 
>     cook
> 
>     /bin/ls -l $HOME > after
> 
>     diff before after
> 
>     cat $HOME/junk
>     ls -l /tmp/cook-test/not-junk
> 
>     exit 0
> 
> 
> I don't know what these two things have in common.  Make can redirect
> output just fine.  The shell does just fine, too.  I'm trying to run
> through the source code for cook to see exactly what it does, but I
> haven't traced the problem yet.  I don't even know where to start with
> looking at gdb's code.
> 
> tim:/home/tim$ uname -a
> FreeBSD threads.polyesthetic.msg 4.0-STABLE FreeBSD 4.0-STABLE #3: Tue Mar 21 02:31:14 EST 2000     root@threads.polyesthetic.msg:/usr/src/sys/compile/THREADS  i386
> 
> I'm wondering, is anyone else seeing this?  Can anyone give me a hint
> about where I should be looking to track this down?  I haven't seen
> any mention of it in -stable, -current or -bugs.
> 
> If you're not seeing this, I'd appreciate your letting me know that,
> too, so I can narrow down the number of things I have to look at.
> 
> Thanks a lot,
> 
> Tim
> 
> 
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