/* filesubr.c --- subroutines for dealing with files Jim Blandy This file is part of GNU CVS. GNU CVS is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. */ /* These functions were moved out of subr.c because they need different definitions under operating systems (like, say, Windows NT) with different file system semantics. */ #include "cvs.h" #include /* * I don't know of a convenient way to test this at configure time, or else * I'd certainly do it there. */ #if defined(NeXT) #define LOSING_TMPNAM_FUNCTION #endif static int deep_remove_dir PROTO((const char *path)); /* * Copies "from" to "to". */ void copy_file (from, to) const char *from; const char *to; { struct stat sb; struct utimbuf t; int fdin, fdout; if (trace) #ifdef SERVER_SUPPORT (void) fprintf (stderr, "%c-> copy(%s,%s)\n", (server_active) ? 'S' : ' ', from, to); #else (void) fprintf (stderr, "-> copy(%s,%s)\n", from, to); #endif if (noexec) return; if ((fdin = open (from, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY)) < 0) error (1, errno, "cannot open %s for copying", from); if (fstat (fdin, &sb) < 0) error (1, errno, "cannot fstat %s", from); if ((fdout = open (to, O_CREAT | O_WRONLY | O_TRUNC | O_BINARY, (int) sb.st_mode & 07777)) < 0) error (1, errno, "cannot create %s for copying", to); if (sb.st_size > 0) { char buf[BUFSIZ]; int n; for (;;) { n = read (fdin, buf, sizeof(buf)); if (n == -1) { #ifdef EINTR if (errno == EINTR) continue; #endif error (1, errno, "cannot read file %s for copying", from); } else if (n == 0) break; if (write(fdout, buf, n) != n) { error (1, errno, "cannot write file %s for copying", to); } } #ifdef HAVE_FSYNC if (fsync (fdout)) error (1, errno, "cannot fsync file %s after copying", to); #endif } if (close (fdin) < 0) error (0, errno, "cannot close %s", from); if (close (fdout) < 0) error (1, errno, "cannot close %s", to); /* now, set the times for the copied file to match those of the original */ memset ((char *) &t, 0, sizeof (t)); t.actime = sb.st_atime; t.modtime = sb.st_mtime; (void) utime (to, &t); } /* FIXME-krp: these functions would benefit from caching the char * & stat buf. */ /* * Returns non-zero if the argument file is a directory, or is a symbolic * link which points to a directory. */ int isdir (file) const char *file; { struct stat sb; if (stat (file, &sb) < 0) return (0); return (S_ISDIR (sb.st_mode)); } /* * Returns non-zero if the argument file is a symbolic link. */ int islink (file) const char *file; { #ifdef S_ISLNK struct stat sb; if (lstat (file, &sb) < 0) return (0); return (S_ISLNK (sb.st_mode)); #else return (0); #endif } /* * Returns non-zero if the argument file exists. */ int isfile (file) const char *file; { return isaccessible(file, F_OK); } /* * Returns non-zero if the argument file is readable. */ int isreadable (file) const char *file; { return isaccessible(file, R_OK); } /* * Returns non-zero if the argument file is writable. */ int iswritable (file) const char *file; { return isaccessible(file, W_OK); } /* * Returns non-zero if the argument file is accessable according to * mode. If compiled with SETXID_SUPPORT also works if cvs has setxid * bits set. */ int isaccessible (file, mode) const char *file; const int mode; { #ifdef SETXID_SUPPORT struct stat sb; int umask = 0; int gmask = 0; int omask = 0; int uid; if (stat(file, &sb) == -1) return 0; if (mode == F_OK) return 1; uid = geteuid(); if (uid == 0) /* superuser */ { if (mode & X_OK) return sb.st_mode & (S_IXUSR|S_IXGRP|S_IXOTH); else return 1; } if (mode & R_OK) { umask |= S_IRUSR; gmask |= S_IRGRP; omask |= S_IROTH; } if (mode & W_OK) { umask |= S_IWUSR; gmask |= S_IWGRP; omask |= S_IWOTH; } if (mode & X_OK) { umask |= S_IXUSR; gmask |= S_IXGRP; omask |= S_IXOTH; } if (sb.st_uid == uid) return (sb.st_mode & umask) == umask; else if (sb.st_gid == getegid()) return (sb.st_mode & gmask) == gmask; else return (sb.st_mode & omask) == omask; #else return access(file, mode) == 0; #endif } /* * Open a file and die if it fails */ FILE * open_file (name, mode) const char *name; const char *mode; { FILE *fp; if ((fp = fopen (name, mode)) == NULL) error (1, errno, "cannot open %s", name); return (fp); } /* * Make a directory and die if it fails */ void make_directory (name) const char *name; { struct stat sb; if (stat (name, &sb) == 0 && (!S_ISDIR (sb.st_mode))) error (0, 0, "%s already exists but is not a directory", name); if (!noexec && mkdir (name, 0777) < 0) error (1, errno, "cannot make directory %s", name); } /* * Make a path to the argument directory, printing a message if something * goes wrong. */ void make_directories (name) const char *name; { char *cp; if (noexec) return; if (mkdir (name, 0777) == 0 || errno == EEXIST) return; if (! existence_error (errno)) { error (0, errno, "cannot make path to %s", name); return; } if ((cp = strrchr (name, '/')) == NULL) return; *cp = '\0'; make_directories (name); *cp++ = '/'; if (*cp == '\0') return; (void) mkdir (name, 0777); } /* Create directory NAME if it does not already exist; fatal error for other errors. Returns 0 if directory was created; 1 if it already existed. */ int mkdir_if_needed (name) char *name; { if (mkdir (name, 0777) < 0) { if (errno != EEXIST) error (1, errno, "cannot make directory %s", name); return 1; } return 0; } /* * Change the mode of a file, either adding write permissions, or removing * all write permissions. Either change honors the current umask setting. * The EMX doc (0.9c, emxlib.doc) says that chmod sets/clears the readonly * bit. But it always seemed to be a noop when I tried it. Therefore, * I've copied over the "attrib" code from os2/filesubr.c. */ void xchmod (fname, writable) char *fname; int writable; { char *attrib_cmd; char *attrib_option; char *whole_cmd; char *p; char *q; if (!isfile (fname)) { error (0, 0, "cannot change mode of file %s; it does not exist", fname); return; } attrib_cmd = "attrib "; /* No, really? */ if (writable) attrib_option = "-r "; /* make writeable */ else attrib_option = "+r "; /* make read-only */ whole_cmd = xmalloc (strlen (attrib_cmd) + strlen (attrib_option) + strlen (fname) + 1); strcpy (whole_cmd, attrib_cmd); strcat (whole_cmd, attrib_option); /* Copy fname to the end of whole_cmd, translating / to \. Attrib doesn't take / but many parts of CVS rely on being able to use it. */ p = whole_cmd + strlen (whole_cmd); q = fname; while (*q) { if (*q == '/') *p++ = '\\'; else *p++ = *q; ++q; } *p = '\0'; system (whole_cmd); free (whole_cmd); } /* * Rename a file and die if it fails */ void rename_file (from, to) const char *from; const char *to; { if (trace) #ifdef SERVER_SUPPORT (void) fprintf (stderr, "%c-> rename(%s,%s)\n", (server_active) ? 'S' : ' ', from, to); #else (void) fprintf (stderr, "-> rename(%s,%s)\n", from, to); #endif if (noexec) return; unlink_file (to); if (rename (from, to) != 0) error (1, errno, "cannot rename file %s to %s", from, to); } /* * unlink a file, if possible. */ int unlink_file (f) const char *f; { if (trace) #ifdef SERVER_SUPPORT (void) fprintf (stderr, "%c-> unlink(%s)\n", (server_active) ? 'S' : ' ', f); #else (void) fprintf (stderr, "-> unlink(%s)\n", f); #endif if (noexec) return (0); if (isfile (f)) xchmod ((char *)f, 1); return (unlink (f)); } /* * Unlink a file or dir, if possible. If it is a directory do a deep * removal of all of the files in the directory. Return -1 on error * (in which case errno is set). */ int unlink_file_dir (f) const char *f; { if (trace) #ifdef SERVER_SUPPORT (void) fprintf (stderr, "%c-> unlink_file_dir(%s)\n", (server_active) ? 'S' : ' ', f); #else (void) fprintf (stderr, "-> unlink_file_dir(%s)\n", f); #endif if (noexec) return (0); /* For at least some unices, if root tries to unlink() a directory, instead of doing something rational like returning EISDIR, the system will gleefully go ahead and corrupt the filesystem. So we first call isdir() to see if it is OK to call unlink(). This doesn't quite work--if someone creates a directory between the call to isdir() and the call to unlink(), we'll still corrupt the filesystem. Where is the Unix Haters Handbook when you need it? */ if (isdir(f)) return deep_remove_dir(f); else { if (unlink (f) != 0) return -1; } /* We were able to remove the file from the disk */ return 0; } /* Remove a directory and everything it contains. Returns 0 for * success, -1 for failure (in which case errno is set). */ static int deep_remove_dir (path) const char *path; { DIR *dirp; struct dirent *dp; char buf[PATH_MAX]; if (rmdir (path) != 0) { if (errno == ENOTEMPTY || errno == EEXIST /* Ugly workaround for ugly AIX 4.1 (and 3.2) header bug (it defines ENOTEMPTY and EEXIST to 17 but actually returns 87). */ || (ENOTEMPTY == 17 && EEXIST == 17 && errno == 87)) { if ((dirp = opendir (path)) == NULL) /* If unable to open the directory return * an error */ return -1; while ((dp = readdir (dirp)) != NULL) { if (strcmp (dp->d_name, ".") == 0 || strcmp (dp->d_name, "..") == 0) continue; sprintf (buf, "%s/%s", path, dp->d_name); /* See comment in unlink_file_dir explanation of why we use isdir instead of just calling unlink and checking the status. */ if (isdir(buf)) { if (deep_remove_dir(buf)) { closedir(dirp); return -1; } } else { if (unlink (buf) != 0) { closedir(dirp); return -1; } } } closedir (dirp); return rmdir (path); } else return -1; } /* Was able to remove the directory return 0 */ return 0; } /* Read NCHARS bytes from descriptor FD into BUF. Return the number of characters successfully read. The number returned is always NCHARS unless end-of-file or error. */ static size_t block_read (fd, buf, nchars) int fd; char *buf; size_t nchars; { char *bp = buf; size_t nread; do { nread = read (fd, bp, nchars); if (nread == (size_t)-1) { #ifdef EINTR if (errno == EINTR) continue; #endif return (size_t)-1; } if (nread == 0) break; bp += nread; nchars -= nread; } while (nchars != 0); return bp - buf; } /* * Compare "file1" to "file2". Return non-zero if they don't compare exactly. */ int xcmp (file1, file2) const char *file1; const char *file2; { char *buf1, *buf2; struct stat sb1, sb2; int fd1, fd2; int ret; if ((fd1 = open (file1, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY)) < 0) error (1, errno, "cannot open file %s for comparing", file1); if ((fd2 = open (file2, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY)) < 0) error (1, errno, "cannot open file %s for comparing", file2); if (fstat (fd1, &sb1) < 0) error (1, errno, "cannot fstat %s", file1); if (fstat (fd2, &sb2) < 0) error (1, errno, "cannot fstat %s", file2); /* A generic file compare routine might compare st_dev & st_ino here to see if the two files being compared are actually the same file. But that won't happen in CVS, so we won't bother. */ if (sb1.st_size != sb2.st_size) ret = 1; else if (sb1.st_size == 0) ret = 0; else { /* FIXME: compute the optimal buffer size by computing the least common multiple of the files st_blocks field */ size_t buf_size = 8 * 1024; size_t read1; size_t read2; buf1 = xmalloc (buf_size); buf2 = xmalloc (buf_size); do { read1 = block_read (fd1, buf1, buf_size); if (read1 == (size_t)-1) error (1, errno, "cannot read file %s for comparing", file1); read2 = block_read (fd2, buf2, buf_size); if (read2 == (size_t)-1) error (1, errno, "cannot read file %s for comparing", file2); /* assert (read1 == read2); */ ret = memcmp(buf1, buf2, read1); } while (ret == 0 && read1 == buf_size); free (buf1); free (buf2); } (void) close (fd1); (void) close (fd2); return (ret); } /* Just in case this implementation does not define this. */ #ifndef L_tmpnam #define L_tmpnam 50 #endif #ifdef LOSING_TMPNAM_FUNCTION char * cvs_temp_name () { char value[L_tmpnam + 1]; /* FIXME: Should be using TMPDIR. */ strcpy (value, "/tmp/cvsXXXXXX"); mktemp (value); return xstrdup (value); } #else /* Generate a unique temporary filename. Returns a pointer to a newly malloc'd string containing the name. Returns successfully or not at all. */ char * cvs_temp_name () { char value[L_tmpnam + 1]; char *retval; /* FIXME: should be using TMPDIR, perhaps by using tempnam on systems which have it. */ retval = tmpnam (value); if (retval == NULL) error (1, errno, "cannot generate temporary filename"); return xstrdup (retval); } #endif /* Return non-zero iff FILENAME is absolute. Trivial under Unix, but more complicated under other systems. Under EMX let _fnisabs do all this work. */ int isabsolute (filename) const char *filename; { return _fnisabs(filename); } /* Return a pointer into PATH's last component. */ char * last_component (path) char *path; { char *last; /* We can't be sure here if 'path' is already slashified. */ _fnslashify (path); last = strrchr (path, '/'); if (last && (last != path)) return last + 1; else return path; } /* Return the home directory. Returns a pointer to storage managed by this function or its callees (currently getenv). This function will return the same thing every time it is called. */ char * get_homedir () { static char *home = NULL; char *env = getenv ("HOME"); struct passwd *pw; if (home != NULL) return home; if (env) home = env; else if ((pw = (struct passwd *) getpwuid (getuid ())) && pw->pw_dir) home = xstrdup (pw->pw_dir); else return 0; return home; } /* See cvs.h for description. On unix this does nothing, because the shell expands the wildcards. Under EMX, use _fnexplode to get the expanded filenames */ void expand_wild (argc, argv, pargc, pargv) int argc; char **argv; int *pargc; char ***pargv; { int i; *pargc = argc; *pargv = (char **) xmalloc (argc * sizeof (char *)); for (i = 0; i < argc; ++i) (*pargv)[i] = xstrdup (argv[i]); } unsigned char OS2_filename_classes[] = { 0x00,0x01,0x02,0x03, 0x04,0x05,0x06,0x07, 0x08,0x09,0x0a,0x0b, 0x0c,0x0d,0x0e,0x0f, 0x10,0x11,0x12,0x13, 0x14,0x15,0x16,0x17, 0x18,0x19,0x1a,0x1b, 0x1c,0x1d,0x1e,0x1f, 0x20,0x21,0x22,0x23, 0x24,0x25,0x26,0x27, 0x28,0x29,0x2a,0x2b, 0x2c,0x2d,0x2e,0x2f, 0x30,0x31,0x32,0x33, 0x34,0x35,0x36,0x37, 0x38,0x39,0x3a,0x3b, 0x3c,0x3d,0x3e,0x3f, 0x40,0x61,0x62,0x63, 0x64,0x65,0x66,0x67, 0x68,0x69,0x6a,0x6b, 0x6c,0x6d,0x6e,0x6f, 0x70,0x71,0x72,0x73, 0x74,0x75,0x76,0x77, 0x78,0x79,0x7a,0x5b, 0x2f,0x5d,0x5e,0x5f, 0x60,0x61,0x62,0x63, 0x64,0x65,0x66,0x67, 0x68,0x69,0x6a,0x6b, 0x6c,0x6d,0x6e,0x6f, 0x70,0x71,0x72,0x73, 0x74,0x75,0x76,0x77, 0x78,0x79,0x7a,0x7b, 0x7c,0x7d,0x7e,0x7f, 0x80,0x81,0x82,0x83, 0x84,0x85,0x86,0x87, 0x88,0x89,0x8a,0x8b, 0x8c,0x8d,0x8e,0x8f, 0x90,0x91,0x92,0x93, 0x94,0x95,0x96,0x97, 0x98,0x99,0x9a,0x9b, 0x9c,0x9d,0x9e,0x9f, 0xa0,0xa1,0xa2,0xa3, 0xa4,0xa5,0xa6,0xa7, 0xa8,0xa9,0xaa,0xab, 0xac,0xad,0xae,0xaf, 0xb0,0xb1,0xb2,0xb3, 0xb4,0xb5,0xb6,0xb7, 0xb8,0xb9,0xba,0xbb, 0xbc,0xbd,0xbe,0xbf, 0xc0,0xc1,0xc2,0xc3, 0xc4,0xc5,0xc6,0xc7, 0xc8,0xc9,0xca,0xcb, 0xcc,0xcd,0xce,0xcf, 0xd0,0xd1,0xd2,0xd3, 0xd4,0xd5,0xd6,0xd7, 0xd8,0xd9,0xda,0xdb, 0xdc,0xdd,0xde,0xdf, 0xe0,0xe1,0xe2,0xe3, 0xe4,0xe5,0xe6,0xe7, 0xe8,0xe9,0xea,0xeb, 0xec,0xed,0xee,0xef, 0xf0,0xf1,0xf2,0xf3, 0xf4,0xf5,0xf6,0xf7, 0xf8,0xf9,0xfa,0xfb, 0xfc,0xfd,0xfe,0xff, }; /* Like strcmp, but with the appropriate tweaks for file names. Under OS/2, filenames are case-insensitive but case-preserving, and both \ and / are path element separators. */ int fncmp (const char *n1, const char *n2) { char fn1[MAXNAMLEN], fn2[MAXNAMLEN]; strcpy (fn1, n1); _fnslashify(fn1); strcpy (fn2, n2); _fnslashify(fn2); return _fncmp ((unsigned char *) fn1, (unsigned char *) fn2); } /* Fold characters in FILENAME to their canonical forms. If FOLD_FN_CHAR is not #defined, the system provides a default definition for this. */ void fnfold (char *filename) { while (*filename) { *filename = FOLD_FN_CHAR (*filename); filename++; } }