[#75225] [Ruby trunk Feature#12324] Support OpenSSL 1.1.0 (and drop support for 0.9.6/0.9.7) — k@...
Issue #12324 has been reported by Kazuki Yamaguchi.
6 messages
2016/04/27
[#78693] Re: [Ruby trunk Feature#12324] Support OpenSSL 1.1.0 (and drop support for 0.9.6/0.9.7)
— Eric Wong <normalperson@...>
2016/12/17
k@rhe.jp wrote:
[#78701] Re: [Ruby trunk Feature#12324] Support OpenSSL 1.1.0 (and drop support for 0.9.6/0.9.7)
— Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@...>
2016/12/17
On Sat, Dec 17, 2016 at 01:31:12AM +0000, Eric Wong wrote:
[#78702] Re: [Ruby trunk Feature#12324] Support OpenSSL 1.1.0 (and drop support for 0.9.6/0.9.7)
— Eric Wong <normalperson@...>
2016/12/17
Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp> wrote:
[ruby-core:74848] [Ruby trunk Bug#12261] Windows: File.dirname with 2+ / or 2+ \\ will return // or \\\\
From:
tom.enebo@...
Date:
2016-04-07 19:30:56 UTC
List:
ruby-core #74848
Issue #12261 has been reported by Thomas Enebo.
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Bug #12261: Windows: File.dirname with 2+ / or 2+ \\ will return // or \\\\
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12261
* Author: Thomas Enebo
* Status: Open
* Priority: Normal
* Assignee:
* ruby -v:
* Backport: 2.1: UNKNOWN, 2.2: UNKNOWN, 2.3: UNKNOWN
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I am working through some File.dirname issues on JRuby and I saw a ruby/spec covering this behavior on windows:
`File.dirname('/////').should == '//'`
Same result if backslashes are used. Is there a reason for this result? It does not seem useful to me but I am not much of a windows user. I would think in this case it would be '/' since I don't see how this is useful for UNC paths in Ruby? If someone could explain it then I will document this at least in JRuby source code :)
So far all versions of MRI seem to have this behavior.
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