From: nobu@... Date: 2014-03-02T02:15:32+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:61214] [ruby-trunk - Feature #7596] [Closed] Find::find should not silently ignores errors Issue #7596 has been updated by Nobuyoshi Nakada. Status changed from Open to Closed % Done changed from 0 to 100 Applied in changeset r45241. ---------- find.rb: add ignore_error * lib/find.rb (Find#find): add "ignore_error" keyword argument defaulted to true. [ruby-core:51025] [Feature #7596] ---------------------------------------- Feature #7596: Find::find should not silently ignores errors https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/7596#change-45566 * Author: Hoylen Sue * Status: Closed * Priority: Low * Assignee: Yukihiro Matsumoto * Category: lib * Target version: next minor ---------------------------------------- =begin The current implementation of (({Find::find})) silently ignores errors. It deliberately catches a number of (({Errno::*})) errors and just continues processing. This can cause unexpected (and often unnoticed) results when, for example, unreadable directories are encountered. Find will not recurse into those directories, but does also not tell the user that it is skipping them and their contents. This happened to me when there was a directory owned by another user. I suggest making the default behaviour to ((*not*)) ignore errors. But then provide an ((*option*)) for the caller to indicate that they want (({find})) to keep going if it encounters some types of errors. This way the caller has control and the default behaviour is the one with "least surprise" for the caller. Either that, or at least change the documentation to point out that the current implementation silently ignores errors and unreadable directories. That way the caller will know the limitations of the method. http://www.ruby-doc.org/stdlib-1.9.3/libdoc/find/rdoc/Find.html When updating the documentation, it would also be useful for documentation for the "Find" module's "find" class method to also point out that: "The associated block is never called with "." or "..", except when they are explicitly provided as one of the arguments." You can check this behavour by trying out different values for "testdirname" in the following command ruby -e 'require "find"; Find.find(ARGV[0]) { |d| puts "<#{d}>" }' testdirname =end -- http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/