[#97536] [Ruby master Bug#16694] JIT vs hardened GCC with PCH — v.ondruch@...
Issue #16694 has been reported by vo.x (Vit Ondruch).
11 messages
2020/03/18
[ruby-core:97592] [Ruby master Bug#16737] File::BINARY doesn't work
From:
nobu@...
Date:
2020-03-25 05:30:29 UTC
List:
ruby-core #97592
Issue #16737 has been updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada).
Binary mode makes sense only on Windows.
Just ignore it.
----------------------------------------
Bug #16737: File::BINARY doesn't work
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16737#change-84775
* Author: sos4nt (Stefan Sch館ler)
* Status: Open
* Priority: Normal
* Backport: 2.5: UNKNOWN, 2.6: UNKNOWN, 2.7: UNKNOWN
----------------------------------------
`File.open` takes a `mode` argument which can be given as a string or as an integer using `File::Constants`.
When using the latter, the constant `File::BINARY` doesn't have any effect:
```ruby
# this works:
File.open('foo', 'wb') do |f|
p f.binmode?
p f.external_encoding
end
#=> true
#=> #<Encoding:ASCII-8BIT>
# this doesn't:
File.open('foo', File::WRONLY|File::TRUNC|File::CREAT|File::BINARY) do |f|
p f.binmode?
p f.external_encoding
end
#=> false
#=> nil
```
Further inspecting `File::BINARY` reveals that it has a value of zero:
```ruby
File::BINARY #=> 0
```
So it's no surprise that OR-ing it doesn't do anything.
I've tried various Ruby versions from 1.9.3 to 2.7.0 and all showed the above behavior. (I'm on macOS if that matters)
I'm aware that I can achieve the desired result by using a string mode or by passing `binary: true`. But since Ruby accepts `mode` to be given as an integer, there should be a (working) "b" equivalent.
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