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|
/* $OpenBSD: recover.c,v 1.7 2001/06/18 21:39:26 millert Exp $ */
/*-
* Copyright (c) 1993, 1994
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996
* Keith Bostic. All rights reserved.
*
* See the LICENSE file for redistribution information.
*/
#include "config.h"
#ifndef lint
static const char sccsid[] = "@(#)recover.c 10.21 (Berkeley) 9/15/96";
#endif /* not lint */
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/types.h> /* XXX: param.h may not have included types.h */
#include <sys/queue.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
/*
* We include <sys/file.h>, because the open #defines were found there
* on historical systems. We also include <fcntl.h> because the open(2)
* #defines are found there on newer systems.
*/
#include <sys/file.h>
#include <bitstring.h>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <pwd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include "common.h"
#include "pathnames.h"
/*
* Recovery code.
*
* The basic scheme is as follows. In the EXF structure, we maintain full
* paths of a b+tree file and a mail recovery file. The former is the file
* used as backing store by the DB package. The latter is the file that
* contains an email message to be sent to the user if we crash. The two
* simple states of recovery are:
*
* + first starting the edit session:
* the b+tree file exists and is mode 700, the mail recovery
* file doesn't exist.
* + after the file has been modified:
* the b+tree file exists and is mode 600, the mail recovery
* file exists, and is exclusively locked.
*
* In the EXF structure we maintain a file descriptor that is the locked
* file descriptor for the mail recovery file. NOTE: we sometimes have to
* do locking with fcntl(2). This is a problem because if you close(2) any
* file descriptor associated with the file, ALL of the locks go away. Be
* sure to remember that if you have to modify the recovery code. (It has
* been rhetorically asked of what the designers could have been thinking
* when they did that interface. The answer is simple: they weren't.)
*
* To find out if a recovery file/backing file pair are in use, try to get
* a lock on the recovery file.
*
* To find out if a backing file can be deleted at boot time, check for an
* owner execute bit. (Yes, I know it's ugly, but it's either that or put
* special stuff into the backing file itself, or correlate the files at
* boot time, neither of which looks like fun.) Note also that there's a
* window between when the file is created and the X bit is set. It's small,
* but it's there. To fix the window, check for 0 length files as well.
*
* To find out if a file can be recovered, check the F_RCV_ON bit. Note,
* this DOES NOT mean that any initialization has been done, only that we
* haven't yet failed at setting up or doing recovery.
*
* To preserve a recovery file/backing file pair, set the F_RCV_NORM bit.
* If that bit is not set when ending a file session:
* If the EXF structure paths (rcv_path and rcv_mpath) are not NULL,
* they are unlink(2)'d, and free(3)'d.
* If the EXF file descriptor (rcv_fd) is not -1, it is closed.
*
* The backing b+tree file is set up when a file is first edited, so that
* the DB package can use it for on-disk caching and/or to snapshot the
* file. When the file is first modified, the mail recovery file is created,
* the backing file permissions are updated, the file is sync(2)'d to disk,
* and the timer is started. Then, at RCV_PERIOD second intervals, the
* b+tree file is synced to disk. RCV_PERIOD is measured using SIGALRM, which
* means that the data structures (SCR, EXF, the underlying tree structures)
* must be consistent when the signal arrives.
*
* The recovery mail file contains normal mail headers, with two additions,
* which occur in THIS order, as the FIRST TWO headers:
*
* X-vi-recover-file: file_name
* X-vi-recover-path: recover_path
*
* Since newlines delimit the headers, this means that file names cannot have
* newlines in them, but that's probably okay. As these files aren't intended
* to be long-lived, changing their format won't be too painful.
*
* Btree files are named "vi.XXXX" and recovery files are named "recover.XXXX".
*/
#define VI_FHEADER "X-vi-recover-file: "
#define VI_PHEADER "X-vi-recover-path: "
static int rcv_copy __P((SCR *, int, char *));
static void rcv_email __P((SCR *, char *));
static char *rcv_gets __P((char *, size_t, int));
static int rcv_mailfile __P((SCR *, int, char *));
static int rcv_mktemp __P((SCR *, char *, char *, int));
/*
* rcv_tmp --
* Build a file name that will be used as the recovery file.
*
* PUBLIC: int rcv_tmp __P((SCR *, EXF *, char *));
*/
int
rcv_tmp(sp, ep, name)
SCR *sp;
EXF *ep;
char *name;
{
struct stat sb;
int fd;
char *dp, *p, path[MAXPATHLEN];
/*
* !!!
* ep MAY NOT BE THE SAME AS sp->ep, DON'T USE THE LATTER.
*
*
* If the recovery directory doesn't exist, try and create it. As
* the recovery files are themselves protected from reading/writing
* by other than the owner, the worst that can happen is that a user
* would have permission to remove other user's recovery files. If
* the sticky bit has the BSD semantics, that too will be impossible.
*/
if (opts_empty(sp, O_RECDIR, 0))
goto err;
dp = O_STR(sp, O_RECDIR);
if (stat(dp, &sb)) {
if (errno != ENOENT || mkdir(dp, 0)) {
msgq(sp, M_SYSERR, "%s", dp);
goto err;
}
(void)chmod(dp, S_IRWXU | S_IRWXG | S_IRWXO | S_ISVTX);
}
/* Newlines delimit the mail messages. */
for (p = name; *p; ++p)
if (*p == '\n') {
msgq(sp, M_ERR,
"055|Files with newlines in the name are unrecoverable");
goto err;
}
(void)snprintf(path, sizeof(path), "%s/vi.XXXXXX", dp);
if ((fd = rcv_mktemp(sp, path, dp, S_IRWXU)) == -1)
goto err;
(void)close(fd);
if ((ep->rcv_path = strdup(path)) == NULL) {
msgq(sp, M_SYSERR, NULL);
(void)unlink(path);
err: msgq(sp, M_ERR,
"056|Modifications not recoverable if the session fails");
return (1);
}
/* We believe the file is recoverable. */
F_SET(ep, F_RCV_ON);
return (0);
}
/*
* rcv_init --
* Force the file to be snapshotted for recovery.
*
* PUBLIC: int rcv_init __P((SCR *));
*/
int
rcv_init(sp)
SCR *sp;
{
EXF *ep;
recno_t lno;
ep = sp->ep;
/* Only do this once. */
F_CLR(ep, F_FIRSTMODIFY);
/* If we already know the file isn't recoverable, we're done. */
if (!F_ISSET(ep, F_RCV_ON))
return (0);
/* Turn off recoverability until we figure out if this will work. */
F_CLR(ep, F_RCV_ON);
/* Test if we're recovering a file, not editing one. */
if (ep->rcv_mpath == NULL) {
/* Build a file to mail to the user. */
if (rcv_mailfile(sp, 0, NULL))
goto err;
/* Force a read of the entire file. */
if (db_last(sp, &lno))
goto err;
/* Turn on a busy message, and sync it to backing store. */
sp->gp->scr_busy(sp,
"057|Copying file for recovery...", BUSY_ON);
if (ep->db->sync(ep->db, R_RECNOSYNC)) {
msgq_str(sp, M_SYSERR, ep->rcv_path,
"058|Preservation failed: %s");
sp->gp->scr_busy(sp, NULL, BUSY_OFF);
goto err;
}
sp->gp->scr_busy(sp, NULL, BUSY_OFF);
}
/* Turn off the owner execute bit. */
(void)chmod(ep->rcv_path, S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR);
/* We believe the file is recoverable. */
F_SET(ep, F_RCV_ON);
return (0);
err: msgq(sp, M_ERR,
"059|Modifications not recoverable if the session fails");
return (1);
}
/*
* rcv_sync --
* Sync the file, optionally:
* flagging the backup file to be preserved
* snapshotting the backup file and send email to the user
* sending email to the user if the file was modified
* ending the file session
*
* PUBLIC: int rcv_sync __P((SCR *, u_int));
*/
int
rcv_sync(sp, flags)
SCR *sp;
u_int flags;
{
EXF *ep;
int fd, rval;
char *dp, buf[1024];
/* Make sure that there's something to recover/sync. */
ep = sp->ep;
if (ep == NULL || !F_ISSET(ep, F_RCV_ON))
return (0);
/* Sync the file if it's been modified. */
if (F_ISSET(ep, F_MODIFIED)) {
SIGBLOCK;
if (ep->db->sync(ep->db, R_RECNOSYNC)) {
F_CLR(ep, F_RCV_ON | F_RCV_NORM);
msgq_str(sp, M_SYSERR,
ep->rcv_path, "060|File backup failed: %s");
SIGUNBLOCK;
return (1);
}
SIGUNBLOCK;
/* REQUEST: don't remove backing file on exit. */
if (LF_ISSET(RCV_PRESERVE))
F_SET(ep, F_RCV_NORM);
/* REQUEST: send email. */
if (LF_ISSET(RCV_EMAIL))
rcv_email(sp, ep->rcv_mpath);
}
/*
* !!!
* Each time the user exec's :preserve, we have to snapshot all of
* the recovery information, i.e. it's like the user re-edited the
* file. We copy the DB(3) backing file, and then create a new mail
* recovery file, it's simpler than exiting and reopening all of the
* underlying files.
*
* REQUEST: snapshot the file.
*/
rval = 0;
if (LF_ISSET(RCV_SNAPSHOT)) {
if (opts_empty(sp, O_RECDIR, 0))
goto err;
dp = O_STR(sp, O_RECDIR);
(void)snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "%s/vi.XXXXXX", dp);
if ((fd = rcv_mktemp(sp, buf, dp, S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR)) == -1)
goto err;
sp->gp->scr_busy(sp,
"061|Copying file for recovery...", BUSY_ON);
if (rcv_copy(sp, fd, ep->rcv_path) ||
close(fd) || rcv_mailfile(sp, 1, buf)) {
(void)unlink(buf);
(void)close(fd);
rval = 1;
}
sp->gp->scr_busy(sp, NULL, BUSY_OFF);
}
if (0) {
err: rval = 1;
}
/* REQUEST: end the file session. */
if (LF_ISSET(RCV_ENDSESSION) && file_end(sp, NULL, 1))
rval = 1;
return (rval);
}
/*
* rcv_mailfile --
* Build the file to mail to the user.
*/
static int
rcv_mailfile(sp, issync, cp_path)
SCR *sp;
int issync;
char *cp_path;
{
EXF *ep;
GS *gp;
struct passwd *pw;
size_t len;
time_t now;
uid_t uid;
int fd;
char *dp, *p, *t, buf[4096], mpath[MAXPATHLEN];
char *t1, *t2, *t3;
/*
* XXX
* MAXHOSTNAMELEN is in various places on various systems, including
* <netdb.h> and <sys/socket.h>. If not found, use a large default.
*/
#ifndef MAXHOSTNAMELEN
#define MAXHOSTNAMELEN 1024
#endif
char host[MAXHOSTNAMELEN];
gp = sp->gp;
if ((pw = getpwuid(uid = getuid())) == NULL) {
msgq(sp, M_ERR,
"062|Information on user id %u not found", uid);
return (1);
}
if (opts_empty(sp, O_RECDIR, 0))
return (1);
dp = O_STR(sp, O_RECDIR);
(void)snprintf(mpath, sizeof(mpath), "%s/recover.XXXXXX", dp);
if ((fd = rcv_mktemp(sp, mpath, dp, S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR)) == -1)
return (1);
/*
* XXX
* We keep an open lock on the file so that the recover option can
* distinguish between files that are live and those that need to
* be recovered. There's an obvious window between the mkstemp call
* and the lock, but it's pretty small.
*/
ep = sp->ep;
if (file_lock(sp, NULL, NULL, fd, 1) != LOCK_SUCCESS)
msgq(sp, M_SYSERR, "063|Unable to lock recovery file");
if (!issync) {
/* Save the recover file descriptor, and mail path. */
ep->rcv_fd = fd;
if ((ep->rcv_mpath = strdup(mpath)) == NULL) {
msgq(sp, M_SYSERR, NULL);
goto err;
}
cp_path = ep->rcv_path;
}
/*
* XXX
* We can't use stdio(3) here. The problem is that we may be using
* fcntl(2), so if ANY file descriptor into the file is closed, the
* lock is lost. So, we could never close the FILE *, even if we
* dup'd the fd first.
*/
t = sp->frp->name;
if ((p = strrchr(t, '/')) == NULL)
p = t;
else
++p;
(void)time(&now);
(void)gethostname(host, sizeof(host));
len = snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf),
"%s%s\n%s%s\n%s\n%s\n%s%s\n%s%s\n%s\n\n",
VI_FHEADER, t, /* Non-standard. */
VI_PHEADER, cp_path, /* Non-standard. */
"Reply-To: root",
"From: root (Nvi recovery program)",
"To: ", pw->pw_name,
"Subject: Nvi saved the file ", p,
"Precedence: bulk"); /* For vacation(1). */
if (len > sizeof(buf) - 1)
goto lerr;
if (write(fd, buf, len) != len)
goto werr;
len = snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf),
"%s%.24s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s%s\n\n",
"On ", ctime(&now), ", the user ", pw->pw_name,
" was editing a file named ", t, " on the machine ",
host, ", when it was saved for recovery. ",
"You can recover most, if not all, of the changes ",
"to this file using the -r option to ", gp->progname, ":\n\n\t",
gp->progname, " -r ", t);
if (len > sizeof(buf) - 1) {
lerr: msgq(sp, M_ERR, "064|Recovery file buffer overrun");
goto err;
}
/*
* Format the message. (Yes, I know it's silly.)
* Requires that the message end in a <newline>.
*/
#define FMTCOLS 60
for (t1 = buf; len > 0; len -= t2 - t1, t1 = t2) {
/* Check for a short length. */
if (len <= FMTCOLS) {
t2 = t1 + (len - 1);
goto wout;
}
/* Check for a required <newline>. */
t2 = strchr(t1, '\n');
if (t2 - t1 <= FMTCOLS)
goto wout;
/* Find the closest space, if any. */
for (t3 = t2; t2 > t1; --t2)
if (*t2 == ' ') {
if (t2 - t1 <= FMTCOLS)
goto wout;
t3 = t2;
}
t2 = t3;
/* t2 points to the last character to display. */
wout: *t2++ = '\n';
/* t2 points one after the last character to display. */
if (write(fd, t1, t2 - t1) != t2 - t1)
goto werr;
}
if (issync) {
rcv_email(sp, mpath);
if (close(fd)) {
werr: msgq(sp, M_SYSERR, "065|Recovery file");
goto err;
}
}
return (0);
err: if (!issync)
ep->rcv_fd = -1;
if (fd != -1)
(void)close(fd);
return (1);
}
/*
* people making love
* never exactly the same
* just like a snowflake
*
* rcv_list --
* List the files that can be recovered by this user.
*
* PUBLIC: int rcv_list __P((SCR *));
*/
int
rcv_list(sp)
SCR *sp;
{
struct dirent *dp;
struct stat sb;
DIR *dirp;
FILE *fp;
int found;
char *p, *t, file[MAXPATHLEN], path[MAXPATHLEN];
/* Open the recovery directory for reading. */
if (opts_empty(sp, O_RECDIR, 0))
return (1);
p = O_STR(sp, O_RECDIR);
if (chdir(p) || (dirp = opendir(".")) == NULL) {
msgq_str(sp, M_SYSERR, p, "recdir: %s");
return (1);
}
/* Read the directory. */
for (found = 0; (dp = readdir(dirp)) != NULL;) {
if (strncmp(dp->d_name, "recover.", 8))
continue;
/*
* If it's readable, it's recoverable.
*
* XXX
* Should be "r", we don't want to write the file. However,
* if we're using fcntl(2), there's no way to lock a file
* descriptor that's not open for writing.
*/
if ((fp = fopen(dp->d_name, "r+")) == NULL)
continue;
switch (file_lock(sp, NULL, NULL, fileno(fp), 1)) {
case LOCK_FAILED:
/*
* XXX
* Assume that a lock can't be acquired, but that we
* should permit recovery anyway. If this is wrong,
* and someone else is using the file, we're going to
* die horribly.
*/
break;
case LOCK_SUCCESS:
break;
case LOCK_UNAVAIL:
/* If it's locked, it's live. */
(void)fclose(fp);
continue;
}
/* Check the headers. */
if (fgets(file, sizeof(file), fp) == NULL ||
strncmp(file, VI_FHEADER, sizeof(VI_FHEADER) - 1) ||
(p = strchr(file, '\n')) == NULL ||
fgets(path, sizeof(path), fp) == NULL ||
strncmp(path, VI_PHEADER, sizeof(VI_PHEADER) - 1) ||
(t = strchr(path, '\n')) == NULL) {
msgq_str(sp, M_ERR, dp->d_name,
"066|%s: malformed recovery file");
goto next;
}
*p = *t = '\0';
/*
* If the file doesn't exist, it's an orphaned recovery file,
* toss it.
*
* XXX
* This can occur if the backup file was deleted and we crashed
* before deleting the email file.
*/
errno = 0;
if (stat(path + sizeof(VI_PHEADER) - 1, &sb) &&
errno == ENOENT) {
(void)unlink(dp->d_name);
goto next;
}
/* Get the last modification time and display. */
(void)fstat(fileno(fp), &sb);
(void)printf("%.24s: %s\n",
ctime(&sb.st_mtime), file + sizeof(VI_FHEADER) - 1);
found = 1;
/* Close, discarding lock. */
next: (void)fclose(fp);
}
if (found == 0)
(void)printf("vi: no files to recover.\n");
(void)closedir(dirp);
return (0);
}
/*
* rcv_read --
* Start a recovered file as the file to edit.
*
* PUBLIC: int rcv_read __P((SCR *, FREF *));
*/
int
rcv_read(sp, frp)
SCR *sp;
FREF *frp;
{
struct dirent *dp;
struct stat sb;
DIR *dirp;
EXF *ep;
time_t rec_mtime;
int fd, found, locked, requested, sv_fd;
char *name, *p, *t, *rp, *recp, *pathp;
char file[MAXPATHLEN], path[MAXPATHLEN], recpath[MAXPATHLEN];
if (opts_empty(sp, O_RECDIR, 0))
return (1);
rp = O_STR(sp, O_RECDIR);
if ((dirp = opendir(rp)) == NULL) {
msgq_str(sp, M_SYSERR, rp, "%s");
return (1);
}
name = frp->name;
sv_fd = -1;
rec_mtime = 0;
recp = pathp = NULL;
for (found = requested = 0; (dp = readdir(dirp)) != NULL;) {
if (strncmp(dp->d_name, "recover.", 8))
continue;
(void)snprintf(recpath,
sizeof(recpath), "%s/%s", rp, dp->d_name);
/*
* If it's readable, it's recoverable. It would be very
* nice to use stdio(3), but, we can't because that would
* require closing and then reopening the file so that we
* could have a lock and still close the FP. Another tip
* of the hat to fcntl(2).
*
* XXX
* Should be O_RDONLY, we don't want to write it. However,
* if we're using fcntl(2), there's no way to lock a file
* descriptor that's not open for writing.
*/
if ((fd = open(recpath, O_RDWR, 0)) == -1)
continue;
switch (file_lock(sp, NULL, NULL, fd, 1)) {
case LOCK_FAILED:
/*
* XXX
* Assume that a lock can't be acquired, but that we
* should permit recovery anyway. If this is wrong,
* and someone else is using the file, we're going to
* die horribly.
*/
locked = 0;
break;
case LOCK_SUCCESS:
locked = 1;
break;
case LOCK_UNAVAIL:
/* If it's locked, it's live. */
(void)close(fd);
continue;
}
/* Check the headers. */
if (rcv_gets(file, sizeof(file), fd) == NULL ||
strncmp(file, VI_FHEADER, sizeof(VI_FHEADER) - 1) ||
(p = strchr(file, '\n')) == NULL ||
rcv_gets(path, sizeof(path), fd) == NULL ||
strncmp(path, VI_PHEADER, sizeof(VI_PHEADER) - 1) ||
(t = strchr(path, '\n')) == NULL) {
msgq_str(sp, M_ERR, recpath,
"067|%s: malformed recovery file");
goto next;
}
*p = *t = '\0';
++found;
/*
* If the file doesn't exist, it's an orphaned recovery file,
* toss it.
*
* XXX
* This can occur if the backup file was deleted and we crashed
* before deleting the email file.
*/
errno = 0;
if (stat(path + sizeof(VI_PHEADER) - 1, &sb) &&
errno == ENOENT) {
(void)unlink(dp->d_name);
goto next;
}
/* Check the file name. */
if (strcmp(file + sizeof(VI_FHEADER) - 1, name))
goto next;
++requested;
/*
* If we've found more than one, take the most recent.
*
* XXX
* Since we're using st_mtime, for portability reasons,
* we only get a single second granularity, instead of
* getting it right.
*/
(void)fstat(fd, &sb);
if (recp == NULL || rec_mtime < sb.st_mtime) {
p = recp;
t = pathp;
if ((recp = strdup(recpath)) == NULL) {
msgq(sp, M_SYSERR, NULL);
recp = p;
goto next;
}
if ((pathp = strdup(path)) == NULL) {
msgq(sp, M_SYSERR, NULL);
free(recp);
recp = p;
pathp = t;
goto next;
}
if (p != NULL) {
free(p);
free(t);
}
rec_mtime = sb.st_mtime;
if (sv_fd != -1)
(void)close(sv_fd);
sv_fd = fd;
} else
next: (void)close(fd);
}
(void)closedir(dirp);
if (recp == NULL) {
msgq_str(sp, M_INFO, name,
"068|No files named %s, readable by you, to recover");
return (1);
}
if (found) {
if (requested > 1)
msgq(sp, M_INFO,
"069|There are older versions of this file for you to recover");
if (found > requested)
msgq(sp, M_INFO,
"070|There are other files for you to recover");
}
/*
* Create the FREF structure, start the btree file.
*
* XXX
* file_init() is going to set ep->rcv_path.
*/
if (file_init(sp, frp, pathp + sizeof(VI_PHEADER) - 1, 0)) {
free(recp);
free(pathp);
(void)close(sv_fd);
return (1);
}
/*
* We keep an open lock on the file so that the recover option can
* distinguish between files that are live and those that need to
* be recovered. The lock is already acquired, just copy it.
*/
ep = sp->ep;
ep->rcv_mpath = recp;
ep->rcv_fd = sv_fd;
if (!locked)
F_SET(frp, FR_UNLOCKED);
/* We believe the file is recoverable. */
F_SET(ep, F_RCV_ON);
return (0);
}
/*
* rcv_copy --
* Copy a recovery file.
*/
static int
rcv_copy(sp, wfd, fname)
SCR *sp;
int wfd;
char *fname;
{
int nr, nw, off, rfd;
char buf[8 * 1024];
if ((rfd = open(fname, O_RDONLY, 0)) == -1)
goto err;
while ((nr = read(rfd, buf, sizeof(buf))) > 0)
for (off = 0; nr; nr -= nw, off += nw)
if ((nw = write(wfd, buf + off, nr)) < 0)
goto err;
if (nr == 0)
return (0);
err: msgq_str(sp, M_SYSERR, fname, "%s");
return (1);
}
/*
* rcv_gets --
* Fgets(3) for a file descriptor.
*/
static char *
rcv_gets(buf, len, fd)
char *buf;
size_t len;
int fd;
{
int nr;
char *p;
if ((nr = read(fd, buf, len - 1)) == -1)
return (NULL);
if ((p = strchr(buf, '\n')) == NULL)
return (NULL);
(void)lseek(fd, (off_t)((p - buf) + 1), SEEK_SET);
return (buf);
}
/*
* rcv_mktemp --
* Paranoid make temporary file routine.
*/
static int
rcv_mktemp(sp, path, dname, perms)
SCR *sp;
char *path, *dname;
int perms;
{
int fd;
/*
* !!!
* We expect mkstemp(3) to set the permissions correctly. On
* historic System V systems, mkstemp didn't. Do it here, on
* GP's. This also protects us from users with stupid umasks.
*
* XXX
* The variable perms should really be a mode_t.
*/
if ((fd = mkstemp(path)) == -1 || fchmod(fd, perms) == -1) {
msgq_str(sp, M_SYSERR, dname, "%s");
if (fd != -1) {
close(fd);
unlink(path);
fd = -1;
}
}
return (fd);
}
/*
* rcv_email --
* Send email.
*/
static void
rcv_email(sp, fname)
SCR *sp;
char *fname;
{
struct stat sb;
char buf[MAXPATHLEN * 2 + 20];
if (_PATH_SENDMAIL[0] != '/' || stat(_PATH_SENDMAIL, &sb))
msgq_str(sp, M_SYSERR,
_PATH_SENDMAIL, "071|not sending email: %s");
else {
/*
* !!!
* If you need to port this to a system that doesn't have
* sendmail, the -t flag causes sendmail to read the message
* for the recipients instead of specifying them some other
* way.
*/
(void)snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf),
"%s -t < %s", _PATH_SENDMAIL, fname);
(void)system(buf);
}
}
|