Bug 21501
Summary: | Upgrade RPM Breaks File Listing | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | [Retired] Red Hat Linux | Reporter: | support |
Component: | wu-ftpd | Assignee: | Bernhard Rosenkraenzer <bero> |
Status: | CLOSED NOTABUG | QA Contact: | Dale Lovelace <dale> |
Severity: | medium | Docs Contact: | |
Priority: | medium | ||
Version: | 6.2 | CC: | gbailey |
Target Milestone: | --- | ||
Target Release: | --- | ||
Hardware: | i386 | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Fixed In Version: | Doc Type: | Bug Fix | |
Doc Text: | Story Points: | --- | |
Clone Of: | Environment: | ||
Last Closed: | 2001-01-11 19:06:25 UTC | Type: | --- |
Regression: | --- | Mount Type: | --- |
Documentation: | --- | CRM: | |
Verified Versions: | Category: | --- | |
oVirt Team: | --- | RHEL 7.3 requirements from Atomic Host: | |
Cloudforms Team: | --- | Target Upstream Version: | |
Embargoed: |
Description
support
2000-11-29 21:53:59 UTC
The behavior of internal-ls doesn't appear to match the behavior of non-internal /bin/ls, so this appears to depend on whether or not your copy of wu-ftpd was built with internal-ls enabled. I did not change a thing I just did a RPM -Fvh with the new RPM from the errata notice and it broke. Eric This is almost certainly a client problem - using the right commands, wu-ftpd gives exactly the right output: No dotfiles for ls -l, dotfiles for ls -la. This bug can also be verified by issuing "ls -ltr" on an FTP server with wu-ftpd-2.6.0-14.6x installed. Basically, the internal "ls" doesn't sort the files by timestamp as it should. I first observed this bug when I would connect to RedHat's FTP update directory and issue "ls -ltr" so that I could see the most recently changed files at the end of the listing. It was really annoying when the FTP server kept sorting the files alphabetically... Right, sorting is not yet implemented in the internal ls in wu-ftpd (and not required by the RFC, by the way). But it gets rid of the need to keep ~/bin/ls etc. in the home directories of all chrooted users. If you don't like it, recompile with --disable-ls. |