IMO both the new and old errors were accurate and this is just a behaviour change in glibc rather than a regression. Rsync upstream already adapted to the new glibc behaviour and unless glibc upstream reverts the change this will stay the glibc behaviour in Ubuntu, too.
** Changed in: glibc (Ubuntu) Status: New => Invalid ** Changed in: glibc (Ubuntu Groovy) Status: New => Invalid ** Changed in: rsync (Ubuntu Groovy) Status: New => Triaged ** Tags added: rls-gg-incoming -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to rsync in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1902109 Title: rsync uses lchmod and fails in Ubuntu >= 20.10 if /proc isn't mounted Status in GLibC: Confirmed Status in glibc package in Ubuntu: Invalid Status in rsync package in Ubuntu: Triaged Status in glibc source package in Groovy: Invalid Status in rsync source package in Groovy: Triaged Bug description: Rsync in Ubuntu 20.10 fails when /proc isn't mounted, while it worked before. This happens because AC_CHECK_FUNC(lchmod) returns "yes" in 20.10, while it returned "no" before. Steps to reproduce: # Emulate /proc not being mounted $ mount --bind / /mnt $ chroot /mnt rsync -a /bin/ls . rsync: [receiver] failed to set permissions on "/.ls.CDExhu": Operation not supported (95) rsync error: some files/attrs were not transferred (see previous errors) (code 3) at main.c(1330) [sender=3.2.3] I reported this issue upstream in https://github.com/WayneD/rsync/issues/109 but the rsync developer says it's a problem in libc, and it might well be. Simple C code to reproduce the problem without rsync: printf("lchmod returned: %d\n", lchmod("/tmp/ls", 0755)); If /tmp/ls is e.g. mode=0123, and needs to be changed, lchmod fails when /proc isn't mounted, yet it succeeds if it is mounted. Python had a similar issue, and they ended up avoiding AC_CHECK_FUNC(lchmod) under Linux: https://bugs.python.org/issue34652 https://github.com/python/cpython/commit/69e96910153219b0b15a18323b917bd74336d229#diff-49473dca262eeab3b4a43002adb08b4db31020d190caaad1594b47f1d5daa810R3140 ```c if test "$MACHDEP" != linux; then AC_CHECK_FUNC(lchmod) fi ``` So I'm not sure which package is causing the bug here. Should autoconf return false? Should libc implement lchown without the bug? Or should rsync skip lchmod under Linux, like python did? To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/glibc/+bug/1902109/+subscriptions -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages Post to : touch-packages@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp