lsof: correct check for symbolic link
Busybox lsof used the d_type field of a 'struct dirent' to verify whether the
entry is a symbolic link. This field, however, is not portable. On at least
one board [1] I have seen, that field is 0, and the check fails even though
the entry is a link.
The explicit check for a symbolic link is really only needed to skip the
default directory entries '.' and '..'. The directory /proc/<pid>/fd/
should not contain anything else but these two and symbolic links.
With these assumptions, this patch replaces the explicit link check with a
basic check for '.' and '..' (and any hidden file). In the unlikely case that
there are other file types, xmalloc_readlink() will return NULL, and we can
skip the entry.
[1] A MIPS-based board with glibc 2.9, Linux 2.6.32.27.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de.schampheleire@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Denys Vlasenko <vda.linux@googlemail.com>
diff --git a/procps/lsof.c b/procps/lsof.c
index 7e0ffa4..b0156a5 100644
--- a/procps/lsof.c
+++ b/procps/lsof.c
@@ -61,9 +61,12 @@
d_fd = opendir(name);
if (d_fd) {
while ((entry = readdir(d_fd)) != NULL) {
- if (entry->d_type == DT_LNK) {
- safe_strncpy(name + baseofs, entry->d_name, 10);
- fdlink = xmalloc_readlink(name);
+ /* Skip entries '.' and '..' (and any hidden file) */
+ if (entry->d_name[0] == '.')
+ continue;
+
+ safe_strncpy(name + baseofs, entry->d_name, 10);
+ if ((fdlink = xmalloc_readlink(name)) != NULL) {
printf("%d\t%s\t%s\n", proc->pid, proc->exe, fdlink);
free(fdlink);
}