linux-user: Use direct syscall for utimensat
The linux utimensat syscall differs in semantics from the
libc function because the syscall combines the features
of utimensat() and futimens(). Rather than trying to
split these apart in order to call the two libc functions
which then call the same underlying syscall, just always
directly make the host syscall. This fixes bugs in some
of the corner cases which should return errors from the
syscall but which we were incorrectly directing to futimens().
This doesn't reduce the set of hosts that our syscall
implementation will work on, because if the direct syscall
fails ENOSYS then the libc functions would also fail ENOSYS.
(The system call has been in the kernel since 2.6.22 anyway.)
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Riku Voipio <riku.voipio@linaro.org>
diff --git a/linux-user/syscall.c b/linux-user/syscall.c
index 51f558d..21ae996 100644
--- a/linux-user/syscall.c
+++ b/linux-user/syscall.c
@@ -520,16 +520,7 @@
}
#ifdef TARGET_NR_utimensat
-#ifdef CONFIG_UTIMENSAT
-static int sys_utimensat(int dirfd, const char *pathname,
- const struct timespec times[2], int flags)
-{
- if (pathname == NULL)
- return futimens(dirfd, times);
- else
- return utimensat(dirfd, pathname, times, flags);
-}
-#elif defined(__NR_utimensat)
+#if defined(__NR_utimensat)
#define __NR_sys_utimensat __NR_utimensat
_syscall4(int,sys_utimensat,int,dirfd,const char *,pathname,
const struct timespec *,tsp,int,flags)