Bruce Momjian wrote:
> 
> Wow, this is the first I am hearing GNU cp -i can return zero exit if it
> doesn't do the copy.  I tested this on Ubuntu 10.04 using cp 7.4 and
> got:
> 
>       $ touch x y
>       $ cp -i x y; echo $?
>       cp: overwrite `y'? n
>       0
> 
> I see the same on my anchent BSD/OS machine too:
> 
>       $ touch x y
>       $ cp -i x y; echo $?
>       overwrite y? n
>       0
> 
> Were we expecting an error if the file already existed?  Assuming that,
> we should assume the file will always exist so basically archiving will
> never progress.  Is this what we want?  I just wasn't aware we were
> expecting an already-existing this to be an error --- I thought we just
> didn't want to overwrite it.

I tested on FreeBSD 7.4 and saw a 1 error return:

        $ touch x y
        $ cp -i x y; echo $?
        overwrite y? (y/n [n]) n
        not overwritten
        1

-- 
  Bruce Momjian  <br...@momjian.us>        http://momjian.us
  EnterpriseDB                             http://enterprisedb.com

  + It's impossible for everything to be true. +

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