When fileutils with stream error checking was borrowed
from GNU lib, an omission was also propagated where an
errno of EPIPE wouldn't be preserved in close_stream()
making a test for EPIPE in close_stdout() meaningless.
This patch corrects such oversight so that an errno of
EPIPE no longer produces 'write error' at program end.
( gnulib provides for optionally ignoring EPIPE, but )
( if a program chooses to ignore it, then their code )
( appears to suffer from this close_stream oversight )
Reference(s):
. original fileutilis addition
commit c7cf98b0e0
. bugzilla report
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=976199
For portability, check for error.h during configure and define
HAVE_ERROR_H accordingly.
If this header is not available, emulate the functionality of error()
from glibc with an inline wrapper in include/c.h.
For portability, check for stdio_ext.h during configure and define
HAVE_STDIO_EXT_H accordingly.
If the current system does not provide this header, use a fallback for
__fpending(). This definition will not work on all systems as it relies
on internal data structures of libc. A more portable solution should be
preferred, for example by using gnulib.
./lib/fileutils.c:9:5: warning: no previous declaration for 'close_stream' [-Wmissing-declarations]
./lib/fileutils.c:23:6: warning: no previous declaration for 'close_stdout' [-Wmissing-declarations]
Signed-off-by: Sami Kerola <kerolasa@iki.fi>