block: simplify path_is_absolute

On Windows, all the logic is already in is_windows_drive and
is_windows_drive_prefix.  On POSIX, there is no need to look
out for colons.

The win32 code changes the behaviour in some cases, we could have
something like "d:foo.img". The old code would treat it as relative
path, the new one as absolute. Now the path is absolute, because to
go from c:/program files/blah to d:foo.img you cannot say c:/program
files/blah/d:foo.img.  You have to say d:foo.img.  But you could also
say it's relative because (I think, at least it was like that in DOS
15 years ago) d:foo.img is relative to the current path of drive D.
Considering how path_is_absolute is used by path_combine, I think it's
better to treat it as absolute.

Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com>
stable-1.1
Paolo Bonzini 2012-05-08 16:51:47 +02:00 committed by Kevin Wolf
parent fa4478d5c8
commit f53f4da9c6
1 changed files with 4 additions and 11 deletions

15
block.c
View File

@ -210,21 +210,14 @@ static int path_has_protocol(const char *path)
int path_is_absolute(const char *path)
{
const char *p;
#ifdef _WIN32
/* specific case for names like: "\\.\d:" */
if (*path == '/' || *path == '\\')
if (is_windows_drive(path) || is_windows_drive_prefix(path)) {
return 1;
#endif
p = strchr(path, ':');
if (p)
p++;
else
p = path;
#ifdef _WIN32
return (*p == '/' || *p == '\\');
}
return (*path == '/' || *path == '\\');
#else
return (*p == '/');
return (*path == '/');
#endif
}