/* $OpenBSD: fileio.c,v 1.65 2005/11/20 18:47:11 kjell Exp $ */ /* This file is in the public domain. */ /* * POSIX fileio.c */ #include "def.h" #include #include #include #include #include "kbd.h" #include #include #include #include #include #include static FILE *ffp; /* * Open a file for reading. */ int ffropen(const char *fn, struct buffer *bp) { struct stat statbuf; if ((ffp = fopen(fn, "r")) == NULL) { if (errno == ENOENT) return (FIOFNF); return (FIOERR); } /* If 'fn' is a directory open it with dired. */ if (fisdir(fn) == TRUE) return (FIODIR); if (bp && fstat(fileno(ffp), &statbuf) == 0) { /* set highorder bit to make sure this isn't all zero */ bp->b_fi.fi_mode = statbuf.st_mode | 0x8000; bp->b_fi.fi_uid = statbuf.st_uid; bp->b_fi.fi_gid = statbuf.st_gid; } return (FIOSUC); } /* * Open a file for writing. */ int ffwopen(const char *fn, struct buffer *bp) { int fd; mode_t mode = DEFFILEMODE; if (bp && bp->b_fi.fi_mode) mode = bp->b_fi.fi_mode & 07777; fd = open(fn, O_RDWR | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC, mode); if (fd == -1) { ffp = NULL; ewprintf("Cannot open file for writing : %s", strerror(errno)); return (FIOERR); } if ((ffp = fdopen(fd, "w")) == NULL) { ewprintf("Cannot open file for writing : %s", strerror(errno)); close(fd); return (FIOERR); } /* * If we have file information, use it. We don't bother to check for * errors, because there's no a lot we can do about it. Certainly * trying to change ownership will fail if we aren't root. That's * probably OK. If we don't have info, no need to get it, since any * future writes will do the same thing. */ if (bp && bp->b_fi.fi_mode) { fchmod(fd, bp->b_fi.fi_mode & 07777); fchown(fd, bp->b_fi.fi_uid, bp->b_fi.fi_gid); } return (FIOSUC); } /* * Close a file. * XXX - Should look at the status. */ /* ARGSUSED */ int ffclose(struct buffer *bp) { (void) fclose(ffp); return (FIOSUC); } /* * Write a buffer to the already opened file. bp points to the * buffer. Return the status. */ int ffputbuf(struct buffer *bp) { struct line *lp, *lpend; lpend = bp->b_linep; for (lp = lforw(lpend); lp != lpend; lp = lforw(lp)) { if (fwrite(ltext(lp), 1, llength(lp), ffp) != llength(lp)) { ewprintf("Write I/O error"); return (FIOERR); } if (lforw(lp) != lpend) /* no implied \n on last line */ putc('\n', ffp); } /* * XXX should be variable controlled (once we have variables) */ if (llength(lback(lpend)) != 0) { if (eyorn("No newline at end of file, add one") == TRUE) { lnewline_at(lback(lpend), llength(lback(lpend))); putc('\n', ffp); } } return (FIOSUC); } /* * Read a line from a file, and store the bytes * in the supplied buffer. Stop on end of file or end of * line. When FIOEOF is returned, there is a valid line * of data without the normally implied \n. */ int ffgetline(char *buf, int nbuf, int *nbytes) { int c, i; i = 0; while ((c = getc(ffp)) != EOF && c != '\n') { buf[i++] = c; if (i >= nbuf) return (FIOLONG); } if (c == EOF && ferror(ffp) != FALSE) { ewprintf("File read error"); return (FIOERR); } *nbytes = i; return (c == EOF ? FIOEOF : FIOSUC); } /* * Make a backup copy of "fname". On Unix the backup has the same * name as the original file, with a "~" on the end; this seems to * be newest of the new-speak. The error handling is all in "file.c". * We do a copy instead of a rename since otherwise another process * with an open fd will get the backup, not the new file. This is * a problem when using mg with things like crontab and vipw. */ int fbackupfile(const char *fn) { struct stat sb; int from, to, serrno; ssize_t nread; char buf[BUFSIZ]; char *nname, *tname; if (stat(fn, &sb) == -1) { ewprintf("Can't stat %s : %s", fn, strerror(errno)); return (FALSE); } if (asprintf(&nname, "%s~", fn) == -1) { ewprintf("Can't allocate temp file name : %s", strerror(errno)); return (ABORT); } if (asprintf(&tname, "%s.XXXXXXXXXX", fn) == -1) { ewprintf("Can't allocate temp file name : %s", strerror(errno)); free(nname); return (ABORT); } if ((from = open(fn, O_RDONLY)) == -1) { free(nname); free(tname); return (FALSE); } to = mkstemp(tname); if (to == -1) { serrno = errno; close(from); free(nname); free(tname); errno = serrno; return (FALSE); } while ((nread = read(from, buf, sizeof(buf))) > 0) { if (write(to, buf, nread) != nread) { nread = -1; break; } } serrno = errno; (void) fchmod(to, (sb.st_mode & 0777)); close(from); close(to); if (nread == -1) { if (unlink(tname) == -1) ewprintf("Can't unlink temp : %s", strerror(errno)); } else { if (rename(tname, nname) == -1) { ewprintf("Can't rename temp : %s", strerror(errno)); (void) unlink(tname); nread = -1; } } free(nname); free(tname); errno = serrno; return (nread == -1 ? FALSE : TRUE); } /* * The string "fn" is a file name. Perform any required appending of directory * name or case adjustments. The same file should be referred to even if the * working directory changes. */ #ifdef SYMBLINK #include #include #ifndef MAXLINK #define MAXLINK 8 /* maximum symbolic links to follow */ #endif #endif #include extern char *wdir; char * adjustname(const char *fn) { static char fnb[MAXPATHLEN]; const char *cp; char user[LOGIN_NAME_MAX], path[MAXPATHLEN]; size_t ulen, plen; path[0] = '\0'; /* first handle tilde expansion */ if (fn[0] == '~') { struct passwd *pw; cp = strchr(fn, '/'); if (cp == NULL) cp = fn + strlen(fn); /* point to the NUL byte */ ulen = cp - &fn[1]; if (ulen >= sizeof(user)) { ewprintf("Login name too long"); return (NULL); } if (ulen == 0) /* ~/ or ~ */ (void)strlcpy(user, getlogin(), sizeof(user)); else { /* ~user/ or ~user */ memcpy(user, &fn[1], ulen); user[ulen] = '\0'; } pw = getpwnam(user); if (pw == NULL) { ewprintf("Unknown user %s", user); return (NULL); } plen = strlcpy(path, pw->pw_dir, sizeof(path)); if (plen == 0 || path[plen - 1] != '/') { if (strlcat(path, "/", sizeof(path)) >= sizeof(path)) { ewprintf("Path too long"); return (NULL); } } fn = cp; if (*fn == '/') fn++; } if (strlcat(path, fn, sizeof(path)) >= sizeof(path)) { ewprintf("Path too long"); return (NULL); } if (realpath(path, fnb) == NULL) (void)strlcpy(fnb, path, sizeof(fnb)); return (fnb); } #ifndef NO_STARTUP /* * Find a startup file for the user and return its name. As a service * to other pieces of code that may want to find a startup file (like * the terminal driver in particular), accepts a suffix to be appended * to the startup file name. */ char * startupfile(char *suffix) { static char file[NFILEN]; char *home; int ret; if ((home = getenv("HOME")) == NULL || *home == '\0') goto nohome; if (suffix == NULL) { ret = snprintf(file, sizeof(file), "%s/.mg", home); if (ret < 0 || ret >= sizeof(file)) return (NULL); } else { ret = snprintf(file, sizeof(file), "%s/.mg-%s", home, suffix); if (ret < 0 || ret >= sizeof(file)) return (NULL); } if (access(file, R_OK) == 0) return (file); nohome: #ifdef STARTUPFILE if (suffix == NULL) { ret = snprintf(file, sizeof(file), "%s", STARTUPFILE); if (ret < 0 || ret >= sizeof(file)) return (NULL); } else { ret = snprintf(file, sizeof(file), "%s%s", STARTUPFILE, suffix); if (ret < 0 || ret >= sizeof(file)) return (NULL); } if (access(file, R_OK) == 0) return (file); #endif /* STARTUPFILE */ return (NULL); } #endif /* !NO_STARTUP */ int copy(char *frname, char *toname) { int ifd, ofd, n; char buf[BUFSIZ]; mode_t mode = DEFFILEMODE; /* XXX?? */ struct stat orig; if ((ifd = open(frname, O_RDONLY)) == -1) return (FALSE); if (fstat(ifd, &orig) == -1) { ewprintf("fstat: %s", strerror(errno)); close(ifd); return (FALSE); } if ((ofd = open(toname, O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC, mode)) == -1) { close(ifd); return (FALSE); } while ((n = read(ifd, buf, sizeof(buf))) > 0) { if (write(ofd, buf, n) != n) { ewprintf("write error : %s", strerror(errno)); break; } } if (fchmod(ofd, orig.st_mode) == -1) ewprintf("Cannot set original mode : %s", strerror(errno)); if (n == -1) { ewprintf("Read error : %s", strerror(errno)); close(ifd); close(ofd); return (FALSE); } /* * It is "normal" for this to fail since we can't guarantee that * we will be running as root. */ if (fchown(ofd, orig.st_uid, orig.st_gid) && errno != EPERM) ewprintf("Cannot set owner : %s", strerror(errno)); (void) close(ifd); (void) close(ofd); return (TRUE); } struct filelist { struct list fl_l; char fl_name[NFILEN + 2]; }; /* * return list of file names that match the name in buf. */ struct list * make_file_list(char *buf) { char *dir, *file, *cp; int len, preflen, ret; DIR *dirp; struct dirent *dent; struct list *last; struct filelist *current; char prefixx[NFILEN + 1]; /* * We need three different strings: dir - the name of the directory * containing what the user typed. Must be a real unix file name, * e.g. no ~user, etc.. Must not end in /. prefix - the portion of * what the user typed that is before the names we are going to find * in the directory. Must have a trailing / if the user typed it. * names from the directory. We open dir, and return prefix * concatenated with names. */ /* first we get a directory name we can look up */ /* * Names ending in . are potentially odd, because adjustname will * treat foo/.. as a reference to another directory, whereas we are * interested in names starting with .. */ len = strlen(buf); if (buf[len - 1] == '.') { buf[len - 1] = 'x'; dir = adjustname(buf); buf[len - 1] = '.'; } else dir = adjustname(buf); if (dir == NULL) return (NULL); /* * If the user typed a trailing / or the empty string * he wants us to use his file spec as a directory name. */ if (buf[0] && buf[strlen(buf) - 1] != '/') { file = strrchr(dir, '/'); if (file) { *file = 0; if (*dir == 0) dir = "/"; } else return (NULL); } /* Now we get the prefix of the name the user typed. */ strlcpy(prefixx, buf, sizeof(prefixx)); cp = strrchr(prefixx, '/'); if (cp == NULL) prefixx[0] = 0; else cp[1] = 0; preflen = strlen(prefixx); /* cp is the tail of buf that really needs to be compared. */ cp = buf + preflen; len = strlen(cp); /* * Now make sure that file names will fit in the buffers allocated. * SV files are fairly short. For BSD, something more general would * be required. */ if ((preflen + MAXNAMLEN) > NFILEN) return (NULL); /* loop over the specified directory, making up the list of files */ /* * Note that it is worth our time to filter out names that don't * match, even though our caller is going to do so again, and to * avoid doing the stat if completion is being done, because stat'ing * every file in the directory is relatively expensive. */ dirp = opendir(dir); if (dirp == NULL) return (NULL); last = NULL; while ((dent = readdir(dirp)) != NULL) { int isdir; if (dent->d_namlen < len || memcmp(cp, dent->d_name, len) != 0) continue; isdir = 0; if (dent->d_type == DT_DIR) { isdir = 1; } else if (dent->d_type == DT_LNK || dent->d_type == DT_UNKNOWN) { struct stat statbuf; char statname[NFILEN + 2]; statbuf.st_mode = 0; ret = snprintf(statname, sizeof(statname), "%s/%s", dir, dent->d_name); if (ret < 0 || ret > sizeof(statname) - 1) continue; if (stat(statname, &statbuf) < 0) continue; if (statbuf.st_mode & S_IFDIR) isdir = 1; } current = malloc(sizeof(struct filelist)); if (current == NULL) break; ret = snprintf(current->fl_name, sizeof(current->fl_name), "%s%s%s", prefixx, dent->d_name, isdir ? "/" : ""); if (ret < 0 || ret >= sizeof(current->fl_name)) { free(current); continue; } current->fl_l.l_next = last; current->fl_l.l_name = current->fl_name; last = (struct list *) current; } closedir(dirp); return (last); } /* * Test if a supplied filename refers to a directory * Returns ABORT on error, TRUE if directory. FALSE otherwise */ int fisdir(const char *fname) { struct stat statbuf; if (stat(fname, &statbuf) != 0) return (ABORT); if (S_ISDIR(statbuf.st_mode)) return (TRUE); return (FALSE); }