On Wednesday 21 of September 2011, Alex Elder wrote:
> On Wed, 2011-09-21 at 15:52 +0200, Boris Ranto wrote:
> > mkfs.xfs failed to create xfs filesystems with 4 TB minus few bytes due
> > to round up error in mkfs.xfs code.
> >
> > This test case is a regression test for the fs creation problem.
> >
> > I've tested the test case with mkfs.xfs patch (in the form posted by
> > Eric Sandeen) and the test passed (and therefore the patch fixed the
> > issue for me).
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Boris Ranto <branto@xxxxxxxxxx>
>
> This looks OK, but I'm a little concerned about the
> shell's ability to handle > 32-bit values in its
> arithmetic expressions (within $((...))).
>
> Using ${fourtb} works for me, but I just don't know
> whether it is written somewhere that bash always
> supports 64-bit (or even arbitrary) precision values.
I can say only that bashizm sux. posix shell unfortunately makes problems
here.
mksh (https://www.mirbsd.org/mksh.htm) supports 32bit arithmetic only (even on
64bit arch).
single unix spec says "signed long", so you cannot rely on posix shell for >
32bit values.
--
Arkadiusz Miśkiewicz PLD/Linux Team
arekm / maven.pl http://ftp.pld-linux.org/
|