eval { my $q = pack "q", 0 };
if ($@) {
print "1..0\n# no 64-bit types\n";
- bye();
+ exit(0);
}
chdir 't' if -d 't';
unshift @INC, '../lib';
+ require Config; import Config;
+ # Don't bother if there are no quad offsets.
+ if ($Config{lseeksize} < 8) {
+ print "1..0\n# no 64-bit file offsets\n";
+ exit(0);
+ }
require Fcntl; import Fcntl;
}
exit(0);
}
+sub explain {
+ print <<EOM;
+#
+# If the lfs (large file support: large meaning larger than two gigabytes)
+# tests are skipped or fail, it may mean either that your process is not
+# allowed to write large files or that the file system you are running
+# the tests on doesn't support large files, or both. You may also need
+# to reconfigure your kernel. (This is all very system-dependent.)
+#
+# Perl may still be able to support large files, once you have
+# such a process and such a (file) system.
+#
+EOM
+}
+
# Known have-nots.
if ($^O eq 'win32' || $^O eq 'vms') {
print "1..0\n# no sparse files\n";
print "# @s\n";
+my $BLOCKSIZE = 512; # is this really correct everywhere?
+
unless (@s == 13 &&
$s[7] == 1_000_003 &&
- defined $s[11] &&
defined $s[12] &&
- $s[11] * $s[12] < 1000_003) {
+ $BLOCKSIZE * $s[12] < 1_000_003) {
print "1..0\n# no sparse files?\n";
bye();
}
# By now we better be sure that we do have sparse files:
# if we are not, the following will hog 5 gigabytes of disk. Ooops.
-print "1..8\n";
-
-my $fail = 0;
-
sysopen(BIG, "big", O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC) or
do { warn "sysopen failed: $!\n"; bye };
sysseek(BIG, 5_000_000_000, SEEK_SET);
-syswrite(BIG, "big");
+# The syswrite will fail if there are are filesize limitations (process or fs).
+unless(syswrite(BIG, "big") == 3) {
+ $ENV{LC_ALL} = "C";
+ if ($! =~/File too large/) {
+ print "1..0\n# writing past 2GB failed\n";
+ explain();
+ bye();
+ }
+}
close BIG;
@s = stat("big");
print "# @s\n";
sub fail () {
- print " not ";
+ print "not ";
$fail++;
}
-fail unless $s[7] == 5_000_000_003;
+print "1..8\n";
+
+my $fail = 0;
+
+fail unless $s[7] == 5_000_000_003; # exercizes pp_stat
print "ok 1\n";
-fail unless -s "big" == 5_000_000_003;
+fail unless -s "big" == 5_000_000_003; # exercizes pp_ftsize
print "ok 2\n";
sysopen(BIG, "big", O_RDONLY) or do { warn "sysopen failed: $!\n"; bye };
fail unless $big eq "big";
print "ok 8\n";
-bye();
+explain if $fail;
-if ($fail) {
- print STDERR <<EOM;
-#
-# If the lfs (large file support) tests fail, it means that
-# the *file system* you are running the tests on doesn't support
-# large files (files larger than two gigabytes). Perl may still
-# be able to support such files, once you have such a file system.
-#
-EOM
-}
+bye();
# eof