Am 18.10.2019 um 17:00 hat Max Reitz geschrieben:
> On 18.10.19 16:27, Kevin Wolf wrote:
> > Am 18.10.2019 um 14:59 hat Philippe Mathieu-Daudé geschrieben:
> >> Hi Kevin,
> >>
> >> On 10/18/19 1:51 PM, Kevin Wolf wrote:
> >>> Some tests in 118 use chmod to remove write permissions from the file
> >
On 18.10.19 16:27, Kevin Wolf wrote:
> Am 18.10.2019 um 14:59 hat Philippe Mathieu-Daudé geschrieben:
>> Hi Kevin,
>>
>> On 10/18/19 1:51 PM, Kevin Wolf wrote:
>>> Some tests in 118 use chmod to remove write permissions from the file
>>> and assume that the image can indeed not be opened read-write
On 10/18/19 4:27 PM, Kevin Wolf wrote:
Am 18.10.2019 um 14:59 hat Philippe Mathieu-Daudé geschrieben:
Hi Kevin,
On 10/18/19 1:51 PM, Kevin Wolf wrote:
Some tests in 118 use chmod to remove write permissions from the file
and assume that the image can indeed not be opened read-write
afterwards.
Am 18.10.2019 um 14:59 hat Philippe Mathieu-Daudé geschrieben:
> Hi Kevin,
>
> On 10/18/19 1:51 PM, Kevin Wolf wrote:
> > Some tests in 118 use chmod to remove write permissions from the file
> > and assume that the image can indeed not be opened read-write
> > afterwards. This doesn't work when t
Hi Kevin,
On 10/18/19 1:51 PM, Kevin Wolf wrote:
Some tests in 118 use chmod to remove write permissions from the file
and assume that the image can indeed not be opened read-write
afterwards. This doesn't work when the test is run as root, because root
can still open the file as writable even w
Some tests in 118 use chmod to remove write permissions from the file
and assume that the image can indeed not be opened read-write
afterwards. This doesn't work when the test is run as root, because root
can still open the file as writable even when the permission bit isn't
set.
Introduce a @skip