The vast majority of the time we will just be passing the same string value on to the lstat() call. The only time we need to duplicate it is if the path ends in '/'. In one run using a profiler, only 400 of the 200,000 calls (0.2%) required the string to be copied first. Signed-off-by: Dan McGee <dan@archlinux.org> --- lib/libalpm/util.c | 15 ++++++++------- 1 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) diff --git a/lib/libalpm/util.c b/lib/libalpm/util.c index 9a8f06d..357ce50 100644 --- a/lib/libalpm/util.c +++ b/lib/libalpm/util.c @@ -636,17 +636,18 @@ const char *_alpm_filecache_setup(pmhandle_t *handle) int _alpm_lstat(const char *path, struct stat *buf) { int ret; - char *newpath = strdup(path); - size_t len = strlen(newpath); + size_t len = strlen(path); /* strip the trailing slash if one exists */ - if(len != 0 && newpath[len - 1] == '/') { - newpath[len - 1] = '\0'; + if(len != 0 && path[len - 1] == '/') { + char *newpath = strdup(path); + newpath[len - 1] = '\0'; + ret = lstat(newpath, buf); + free(newpath); + } else { + ret = lstat(path, buf); } - ret = lstat(newpath, buf); - - FREE(newpath); return ret; } -- 1.7.5.2