From 094082841877b8b70a0d793ff091bb74793210b6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tor Lillqvist Date: Tue, 26 Oct 2010 12:20:22 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] Clarify docs for g_path_is_absolute() semantics on Windows --- glib/gutils.c | 31 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 file changed, 26 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/glib/gutils.c b/glib/gutils.c index 94e3951..0227c8f 100644 --- a/glib/gutils.c +++ b/glib/gutils.c @@ -801,11 +801,32 @@ g_path_get_basename (const gchar *file_name) * g_path_is_absolute: * @file_name: a file name. * - * Returns %TRUE if the given @file_name is an absolute file name, - * i.e. it contains a full path from the root directory such as "/usr/local" - * on UNIX or "C:\windows" on Windows systems. - * - * Returns: %TRUE if @file_name is an absolute path. + * Returns %TRUE if the given @file_name is an absolute file name. + * Note that this is a somewhat vague concept on Windows. + * + * On POSIX systems, an absolute file name is well-defined. It always + * starts from the single root directory. For example "/usr/local". + * + * On Windows, the concepts of current drive and drive-specific + * current directory introduce vagueness. This function interprets as + * an absolute file name one that either begins with a directory + * separator such as "\Users\tml" or begins with the root on a drive, + * for example "C:\Windows". The first case also includes UNC paths + * such as "\\myserver\docs\foo". In all cases, either slashes or + * backslashes are accepted. + * + * Note that a file name relative to the current drive root does not + * truly specify a file uniquely over time and across processes, as + * the current drive is a per-process value and can be changed. + * + * File names relative the current directory on some specific drive, + * such as "D:foo/bar", are not interpreted as absolute by this + * function, but they obviously are not relative to the normal current + * directory as returned by getcwd() or g_get_current_dir() + * either. Such paths should be avoided, or need to be handled using + * Windows-specific code. + * + * Returns: %TRUE if @file_name is absolute. */ gboolean g_path_is_absolute (const gchar *file_name) -- 2.7.4