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Date:      Sat, 20 Nov 1999 12:37:23 -0700
From:      Wes Peters <wes@softweyr.com>
To:        "Daniel C. Sobral" <dcs@newsguy.com>
Cc:        John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>, Garance A Drosihn <drosih@rpi.edu>, hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Portable way to compare struct stat's?
Message-ID:  <3836F873.D3B989FE@softweyr.com>
References:  <XFMail.991118185611.jdp@polstra.com> <3836DF98.9A84EC44@newsguy.com>

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"Daniel C. Sobral" wrote:
> 
> John Polstra wrote:
> >
> > Well, the POSIX requirement isn't optional.  If a system doesn't
> > meet it then it is not POSIX-compliant.  So any application that is
> > targeted toward POSIX systems is perfectly within its rights to rely
> > on the requirement.
> 
> It was stated before that FreeBSD complies with POSIX except where
> POSIX is broken. Well, it's broken here. st_dev+st_ino *can't* work
> with modern, distributed filesystems (without undue overhead).

It's not broken in this case.  2^16 (st_dev) is certainly enough to uniquely 
indentify all mounted filesystems, and 2^32 is (by definition) enough to 
uniquely indentify each of the files on a filesystem.  Discussions (with
strong, valid reasons) about expanding the size of ino_t should be carried
out on -arch.

-- 
            "Where am I, and what am I doing in this handbasket?"

Wes Peters                                                         Softweyr LLC
wes@softweyr.com                                           http://softweyr.com/


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