In commit redo-0.11-4-g34669fb, we changed os.stat into os.lstat to avoid false positives in the "manual override" detector: a .do file that generates $3 as a symlink would trigger manual override if the *target* of that symlink ever changed, which is incorrect. Unfortunately using os.lstat() leads to a different problem: if X depends on Y and Y is a symlink to Z, then X would not be rebuilt when Z changes, which is clearly wrong. The fix is twofold: 1. read_stamp() should change on changes to both the link itself, *and* the target of the link. 2. We shouldn't mark a target as overridden under so many situations. We'll use *only* the primary mtime of the os.lstat(), not all the other bits in the stamp. Step 2 fixes a few other false positives also. For example, if you 'cp -a' a whole tree to another location, the st_ino of all the targets will change, which would trigger a mass of "manual override" warnings. Although a change in inode is sufficient to count an input as having changed (just to be extra safe), it should *not* be considered a manual override. Now we can distinguish between the two. Because the stamp format has changed, update the SCHEMA_VER field. I should have done this every other time I changed the stamp format, but I forgot. Sorry. That leads to spurious "manually modified" warnings after upgrading redo.
7 lines
144 B
Python
Executable file
7 lines
144 B
Python
Executable file
#!/usr/bin/env python2
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import time
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t2 = int(time.time()) + 1.0
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while 1:
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t = time.time()
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if t >= t2: break
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time.sleep(t2 - t + 0.01)
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