These are probably cosmetic comments, but here they are anyway...


At 09:54 13/01/01 +0000, W.H.Scholten wrote:

>+char *dirname(char *path) {
>+       char *slash;
>+
>+       while (path[ strlen(path)-1 ] == '/') path[ strlen(path)-1 ] = 0;

if path is an empty string, you are accessing path[-1], which is dangerous.

Also, you're computing strlen too many times, and strlen is a loop
(while (*ptr) ptr++). so I suggest using a pointer to the string as in
/usr/bin/dirname/dirname.c. mainly:
         if (*path == '\0') return "/";  /* if const is not ok, strdup("/") */
         ptr = path;
         while (*ptr) ptr++;
         while ((*ptr == '/') && (ptr > path)) ptr--;
...


>+
>+       slash = strrchr(path, '/');
>+       if (slash) {
>+               *slash = 0;
>+               while (path[ strlen(path)-1 ] == '/') path[ strlen(path)-1 
>] = 0;

you already did that (I mean trimming the trailing slashes).

Finally, I'd propose adding such a function (dirname) in a library (either libc
or say libfile) to allow code reuse. such a lib would contain functions
such as basename, dir_create (mkdir -p), .... so that the commands
mkdir, rmdir, cp, mv, ... etc call the lib functions instead of rewriting code.


regards,
mouss



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