| /* lib.c - various reusable stuff. |
| * |
| * Copyright 2006 Rob Landley <rob@landley.net> |
| */ |
| |
| #include "toys.h" |
| |
| void verror_msg(char *msg, int err, va_list va) |
| { |
| char *s = ": %s"; |
| |
| fprintf(stderr, "%s: ", toys.which->name); |
| if (msg) vfprintf(stderr, msg, va); |
| else s+=2; |
| if (err) fprintf(stderr, s, strerror(err)); |
| if (msg || err) putc('\n', stderr); |
| if (!toys.exitval) toys.exitval++; |
| } |
| |
| // These functions don't collapse together because of the va_stuff. |
| |
| void error_msg(char *msg, ...) |
| { |
| va_list va; |
| |
| va_start(va, msg); |
| verror_msg(msg, 0, va); |
| va_end(va); |
| } |
| |
| void perror_msg(char *msg, ...) |
| { |
| va_list va; |
| |
| va_start(va, msg); |
| verror_msg(msg, errno, va); |
| va_end(va); |
| } |
| |
| // Die with an error message. |
| void error_exit(char *msg, ...) |
| { |
| va_list va; |
| |
| va_start(va, msg); |
| verror_msg(msg, 0, va); |
| va_end(va); |
| |
| xexit(); |
| } |
| |
| // Die with an error message and strerror(errno) |
| void perror_exit(char *msg, ...) |
| { |
| va_list va; |
| |
| va_start(va, msg); |
| verror_msg(msg, errno, va); |
| va_end(va); |
| |
| xexit(); |
| } |
| |
| // Exit with an error message after showing help text. |
| void help_exit(char *msg, ...) |
| { |
| va_list va; |
| |
| if (CFG_TOYBOX_HELP) show_help(stderr); |
| |
| if (msg) { |
| va_start(va, msg); |
| verror_msg(msg, 0, va); |
| va_end(va); |
| } |
| |
| xexit(); |
| } |
| |
| // If you want to explicitly disable the printf() behavior (because you're |
| // printing user-supplied data, or because android's static checker produces |
| // false positives for 'char *s = x ? "blah1" : "blah2"; printf(s);' and it's |
| // -Werror there for policy reasons). |
| void error_msg_raw(char *msg) |
| { |
| error_msg("%s", msg); |
| } |
| |
| void perror_msg_raw(char *msg) |
| { |
| perror_msg("%s", msg); |
| } |
| |
| void error_exit_raw(char *msg) |
| { |
| error_exit("%s", msg); |
| } |
| |
| void perror_exit_raw(char *msg) |
| { |
| perror_exit("%s", msg); |
| } |
| |
| // Keep reading until full or EOF |
| ssize_t readall(int fd, void *buf, size_t len) |
| { |
| size_t count = 0; |
| |
| while (count<len) { |
| int i = read(fd, (char *)buf+count, len-count); |
| if (!i) break; |
| if (i<0) return i; |
| count += i; |
| } |
| |
| return count; |
| } |
| |
| // Keep writing until done or EOF |
| ssize_t writeall(int fd, void *buf, size_t len) |
| { |
| size_t count = 0; |
| while (count<len) { |
| int i = write(fd, count+(char *)buf, len-count); |
| if (i<1) return i; |
| count += i; |
| } |
| |
| return count; |
| } |
| |
| // skip this many bytes of input. Return 0 for success, >0 means this much |
| // left after input skipped. |
| off_t lskip(int fd, off_t offset) |
| { |
| off_t cur = lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_CUR); |
| |
| if (cur != -1) { |
| off_t end = lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_END) - cur; |
| |
| if (end > 0 && end < offset) return offset - end; |
| end = offset+cur; |
| if (end == lseek(fd, end, SEEK_SET)) return 0; |
| perror_exit("lseek"); |
| } |
| |
| while (offset>0) { |
| int try = offset>sizeof(libbuf) ? sizeof(libbuf) : offset, or; |
| |
| or = readall(fd, libbuf, try); |
| if (or < 0) perror_exit("lskip to %lld", (long long)offset); |
| else offset -= or; |
| if (or < try) break; |
| } |
| |
| return offset; |
| } |
| |
| // flags: 1=make last dir (with mode lastmode, otherwise skips last component) |
| // 2=make path (already exists is ok) |
| // 4=verbose |
| // returns 0 = path ok, 1 = error |
| int mkpathat(int atfd, char *dir, mode_t lastmode, int flags) |
| { |
| struct stat buf; |
| char *s; |
| |
| // mkdir -p one/two/three is not an error if the path already exists, |
| // but is if "three" is a file. The others we dereference and catch |
| // not-a-directory along the way, but the last one we must explicitly |
| // test for. Might as well do it up front. |
| |
| if (!fstatat(atfd, dir, &buf, 0) && !S_ISDIR(buf.st_mode)) { |
| errno = EEXIST; |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| for (s = dir; ;s++) { |
| char save = 0; |
| mode_t mode = (0777&~toys.old_umask)|0300; |
| |
| // find next '/', but don't try to mkdir "" at start of absolute path |
| if (*s == '/' && (flags&2) && s != dir) { |
| save = *s; |
| *s = 0; |
| } else if (*s) continue; |
| |
| // Use the mode from the -m option only for the last directory. |
| if (!save) { |
| if (flags&1) mode = lastmode; |
| else break; |
| } |
| |
| if (mkdirat(atfd, dir, mode)) { |
| if (!(flags&2) || errno != EEXIST) return 1; |
| } else if (flags&4) |
| fprintf(stderr, "%s: created directory '%s'\n", toys.which->name, dir); |
| |
| if (!(*s = save)) break; |
| } |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| // Split a path into linked list of components, tracking head and tail of list. |
| // Filters out // entries with no contents. |
| struct string_list **splitpath(char *path, struct string_list **list) |
| { |
| char *new = path; |
| |
| *list = 0; |
| do { |
| int len; |
| |
| if (*path && *path != '/') continue; |
| len = path-new; |
| if (len > 0) { |
| *list = xmalloc(sizeof(struct string_list) + len + 1); |
| (*list)->next = 0; |
| memcpy((*list)->str, new, len); |
| (*list)->str[len] = 0; |
| list = &(*list)->next; |
| } |
| new = path+1; |
| } while (*path++); |
| |
| return list; |
| } |
| |
| // Find all file in a colon-separated path with access type "type" (generally |
| // X_OK or R_OK). Returns a list of absolute paths to each file found, in |
| // order. |
| |
| struct string_list *find_in_path(char *path, char *filename) |
| { |
| struct string_list *rlist = NULL, **prlist=&rlist; |
| char *cwd; |
| |
| if (!path) return 0; |
| |
| cwd = xgetcwd(); |
| for (;;) { |
| char *next = strchr(path, ':'); |
| int len = next ? next-path : strlen(path); |
| struct string_list *rnext; |
| struct stat st; |
| |
| rnext = xmalloc(sizeof(void *) + strlen(filename) |
| + (len ? len : strlen(cwd)) + 2); |
| if (!len) sprintf(rnext->str, "%s/%s", cwd, filename); |
| else { |
| char *res = rnext->str; |
| |
| memcpy(res, path, len); |
| res += len; |
| *(res++) = '/'; |
| strcpy(res, filename); |
| } |
| |
| // Confirm it's not a directory. |
| if (!stat(rnext->str, &st) && S_ISREG(st.st_mode)) { |
| *prlist = rnext; |
| rnext->next = NULL; |
| prlist = &(rnext->next); |
| } else free(rnext); |
| |
| if (!next) break; |
| path += len; |
| path++; |
| } |
| free(cwd); |
| |
| return rlist; |
| } |
| |
| long long estrtol(char *str, char **end, int base) |
| { |
| errno = 0; |
| |
| return strtoll(str, end, base); |
| } |
| |
| long long xstrtol(char *str, char **end, int base) |
| { |
| long long l = estrtol(str, end, base); |
| |
| if (errno) perror_exit_raw(str); |
| |
| return l; |
| } |
| |
| // atol() with the kilo/mega/giga/tera/peta/exa extensions. |
| // (zetta and yotta don't fit in 64 bits.) |
| long long atolx(char *numstr) |
| { |
| char *c = numstr, *suffixes="cbkmgtpe", *end; |
| long long val; |
| |
| val = xstrtol(numstr, &c, 0); |
| if (c != numstr && *c && (end = strchr(suffixes, tolower(*c)))) { |
| int shift = end-suffixes-2; |
| |
| if (shift >= 0) { |
| if (toupper(*++c)=='d') do val *= 1000; while (shift--); |
| else val *= 1024LL<<(shift*10); |
| } |
| } |
| while (isspace(*c)) c++; |
| if (c==numstr || *c) error_exit("not integer: %s", numstr); |
| |
| return val; |
| } |
| |
| long long atolx_range(char *numstr, long long low, long long high) |
| { |
| long long val = atolx(numstr); |
| |
| if (val < low) error_exit("%lld < %lld", val, low); |
| if (val > high) error_exit("%lld > %lld", val, high); |
| |
| return val; |
| } |
| |
| int stridx(char *haystack, char needle) |
| { |
| char *off; |
| |
| if (!needle) return -1; |
| off = strchr(haystack, needle); |
| if (!off) return -1; |
| |
| return off-haystack; |
| } |
| |
| char *strlower(char *s) |
| { |
| char *try, *new; |
| |
| if (!CFG_TOYBOX_I18N) { |
| try = new = xstrdup(s); |
| for (; *s; s++) *(new++) = tolower(*s); |
| } else { |
| // I can't guarantee the string _won't_ expand during reencoding, so...? |
| try = new = xmalloc(strlen(s)*2+1); |
| |
| while (*s) { |
| wchar_t c; |
| int len = mbrtowc(&c, s, MB_CUR_MAX, 0); |
| |
| if (len < 1) *(new++) = *(s++); |
| else { |
| s += len; |
| // squash title case too |
| c = towlower(c); |
| |
| // if we had a valid utf8 sequence, convert it to lower case, and can't |
| // encode back to utf8, something is wrong with your libc. But just |
| // in case somebody finds an exploit... |
| len = wcrtomb(new, c, 0); |
| if (len < 1) error_exit("bad utf8 %x", (int)c); |
| new += len; |
| } |
| } |
| *new = 0; |
| } |
| |
| return try; |
| } |
| |
| // strstr but returns pointer after match |
| char *strafter(char *haystack, char *needle) |
| { |
| char *s = strstr(haystack, needle); |
| |
| return s ? s+strlen(needle) : s; |
| } |
| |
| // Remove trailing \n |
| char *chomp(char *s) |
| { |
| char *p = strrchr(s, '\n'); |
| |
| if (p && !p[1]) *p = 0; |
| return s; |
| } |
| |
| int unescape(char c) |
| { |
| char *from = "\\abefnrtv", *to = "\\\a\b\033\f\n\r\t\v"; |
| int idx = stridx(from, c); |
| |
| return (idx == -1) ? 0 : to[idx]; |
| } |
| |
| // If *a starts with b, advance *a past it and return 1, else return 0; |
| int strstart(char **a, char *b) |
| { |
| int len = strlen(b), i = !strncmp(*a, b, len); |
| |
| if (i) *a += len; |
| |
| return i; |
| } |
| |
| // Return how long the file at fd is, if there's any way to determine it. |
| off_t fdlength(int fd) |
| { |
| struct stat st; |
| off_t base = 0, range = 1, expand = 1, old; |
| |
| if (!fstat(fd, &st) && S_ISREG(st.st_mode)) return st.st_size; |
| |
| // If the ioctl works for this, return it. |
| // TODO: is blocksize still always 512, or do we stat for it? |
| // unsigned int size; |
| // if (ioctl(fd, BLKGETSIZE, &size) >= 0) return size*512L; |
| |
| // If not, do a binary search for the last location we can read. (Some |
| // block devices don't do BLKGETSIZE right.) This should probably have |
| // a CONFIG option... |
| |
| // If not, do a binary search for the last location we can read. |
| |
| old = lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_CUR); |
| do { |
| char temp; |
| off_t pos = base + range / 2; |
| |
| if (lseek(fd, pos, 0)>=0 && read(fd, &temp, 1)==1) { |
| off_t delta = (pos + 1) - base; |
| |
| base += delta; |
| if (expand) range = (expand <<= 1) - base; |
| else range -= delta; |
| } else { |
| expand = 0; |
| range = pos - base; |
| } |
| } while (range > 0); |
| |
| lseek(fd, old, SEEK_SET); |
| |
| return base; |
| } |
| |
| // Read contents of file as a single nul-terminated string. |
| // measure file size if !len, allocate buffer if !buf |
| // Existing buffers need len in *plen |
| // Returns amount of data read in *plen |
| char *readfileat(int dirfd, char *name, char *ibuf, off_t *plen) |
| { |
| off_t len, rlen; |
| int fd; |
| char *buf, *rbuf; |
| |
| // Unsafe to probe for size with a supplied buffer, don't ever do that. |
| if (CFG_TOYBOX_DEBUG && (ibuf ? !*plen : *plen)) error_exit("bad readfileat"); |
| |
| if (-1 == (fd = openat(dirfd, name, O_RDONLY))) return 0; |
| |
| // If we dunno the length, probe it. If we can't probe, start with 1 page. |
| if (!*plen) { |
| if ((len = fdlength(fd))>0) *plen = len; |
| else len = 4096; |
| } else len = *plen-1; |
| |
| if (!ibuf) buf = xmalloc(len+1); |
| else buf = ibuf; |
| |
| for (rbuf = buf;;) { |
| rlen = readall(fd, rbuf, len); |
| if (*plen || rlen<len) break; |
| |
| // If reading unknown size, expand buffer by 1.5 each time we fill it up. |
| rlen += rbuf-buf; |
| buf = xrealloc(buf, len = (rlen*3)/2); |
| rbuf = buf+rlen; |
| len -= rlen; |
| } |
| *plen = len = rlen+(rbuf-buf); |
| close(fd); |
| |
| if (rlen<0) { |
| if (ibuf != buf) free(buf); |
| buf = 0; |
| } else buf[len] = 0; |
| |
| return buf; |
| } |
| |
| char *readfile(char *name, char *ibuf, off_t len) |
| { |
| return readfileat(AT_FDCWD, name, ibuf, &len); |
| } |
| |
| // Sleep for this many thousandths of a second |
| void msleep(long miliseconds) |
| { |
| struct timespec ts; |
| |
| ts.tv_sec = miliseconds/1000; |
| ts.tv_nsec = (miliseconds%1000)*1000000; |
| nanosleep(&ts, &ts); |
| } |
| |
| // Inefficient, but deals with unaligned access |
| int64_t peek_le(void *ptr, unsigned size) |
| { |
| int64_t ret = 0; |
| char *c = ptr; |
| int i; |
| |
| for (i=0; i<size; i++) ret |= ((int64_t)c[i])<<(i*8); |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| int64_t peek_be(void *ptr, unsigned size) |
| { |
| int64_t ret = 0; |
| char *c = ptr; |
| int i; |
| |
| for (i=0; i<size; i++) ret = (ret<<8)|(c[i]&0xff); |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| int64_t peek(void *ptr, unsigned size) |
| { |
| return IS_BIG_ENDIAN ? peek_be(ptr, size) : peek_le(ptr, size); |
| } |
| |
| void poke(void *ptr, uint64_t val, int size) |
| { |
| if (size & 8) { |
| volatile uint64_t *p = (uint64_t *)ptr; |
| *p = val; |
| } else if (size & 4) { |
| volatile int *p = (int *)ptr; |
| *p = val; |
| } else if (size & 2) { |
| volatile short *p = (short *)ptr; |
| *p = val; |
| } else { |
| volatile char *p = (char *)ptr; |
| *p = val; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Iterate through an array of files, opening each one and calling a function |
| // on that filehandle and name. The special filename "-" means stdin if |
| // flags is O_RDONLY, stdout otherwise. An empty argument list calls |
| // function() on just stdin/stdout. |
| // |
| // Note: pass O_CLOEXEC to automatically close filehandles when function() |
| // returns, otherwise filehandles must be closed by function(). |
| // pass WARN_ONLY to produce warning messages about files it couldn't |
| // open/create, and skip them. Otherwise function is called with fd -1. |
| void loopfiles_rw(char **argv, int flags, int permissions, |
| void (*function)(int fd, char *name)) |
| { |
| int fd, failok = !(flags&WARN_ONLY); |
| |
| flags &= ~WARN_ONLY; |
| |
| // If no arguments, read from stdin. |
| if (!*argv) function((flags & O_ACCMODE) != O_RDONLY ? 1 : 0, "-"); |
| else do { |
| // Filename "-" means read from stdin. |
| // Inability to open a file prints a warning, but doesn't exit. |
| |
| if (!strcmp(*argv, "-")) fd = 0; |
| else if (0>(fd = notstdio(open(*argv, flags, permissions))) && !failok) { |
| perror_msg_raw(*argv); |
| continue; |
| } |
| function(fd, *argv); |
| if ((flags & O_CLOEXEC) && fd) close(fd); |
| } while (*++argv); |
| } |
| |
| // Call loopfiles_rw with O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC|WARN_ONLY (common case) |
| void loopfiles(char **argv, void (*function)(int fd, char *name)) |
| { |
| loopfiles_rw(argv, O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC|WARN_ONLY, 0, function); |
| } |
| |
| // Slow, but small. |
| |
| char *get_rawline(int fd, long *plen, char end) |
| { |
| char c, *buf = NULL; |
| long len = 0; |
| |
| for (;;) { |
| if (1>read(fd, &c, 1)) break; |
| if (!(len & 63)) buf=xrealloc(buf, len+65); |
| if ((buf[len++]=c) == end) break; |
| } |
| if (buf) buf[len]=0; |
| if (plen) *plen = len; |
| |
| return buf; |
| } |
| |
| char *get_line(int fd) |
| { |
| long len; |
| char *buf = get_rawline(fd, &len, '\n'); |
| |
| if (buf && buf[--len]=='\n') buf[len]=0; |
| |
| return buf; |
| } |
| |
| int wfchmodat(int fd, char *name, mode_t mode) |
| { |
| int rc = fchmodat(fd, name, mode, 0); |
| |
| if (rc) { |
| perror_msg("chmod '%s' to %04o", name, mode); |
| toys.exitval=1; |
| } |
| return rc; |
| } |
| |
| static char *tempfile2zap; |
| static void tempfile_handler(void) |
| { |
| if (1 < (long)tempfile2zap) unlink(tempfile2zap); |
| } |
| |
| // Open a temporary file to copy an existing file into. |
| int copy_tempfile(int fdin, char *name, char **tempname) |
| { |
| struct stat statbuf; |
| int fd; |
| int ignored __attribute__((__unused__)); |
| |
| *tempname = xmprintf("%s%s", name, "XXXXXX"); |
| if(-1 == (fd = mkstemp(*tempname))) error_exit("no temp file"); |
| if (!tempfile2zap) sigatexit(tempfile_handler); |
| tempfile2zap = *tempname; |
| |
| // Set permissions of output file (ignoring errors, usually due to nonroot) |
| |
| fstat(fdin, &statbuf); |
| fchmod(fd, statbuf.st_mode); |
| |
| // We chmod before chown, which strips the suid bit. Caller has to explicitly |
| // switch it back on if they want to keep suid. |
| |
| // Suppress warn-unused-result. Both gcc and clang clutch their pearls about |
| // this but it's _supposed_ to fail when we're not root. |
| ignored = fchown(fd, statbuf.st_uid, statbuf.st_gid); |
| |
| return fd; |
| } |
| |
| // Abort the copy and delete the temporary file. |
| void delete_tempfile(int fdin, int fdout, char **tempname) |
| { |
| close(fdin); |
| close(fdout); |
| if (*tempname) unlink(*tempname); |
| tempfile2zap = (char *)1; |
| free(*tempname); |
| *tempname = NULL; |
| } |
| |
| // Copy the rest of the data and replace the original with the copy. |
| void replace_tempfile(int fdin, int fdout, char **tempname) |
| { |
| char *temp = xstrdup(*tempname); |
| |
| temp[strlen(temp)-6]=0; |
| if (fdin != -1) { |
| xsendfile(fdin, fdout); |
| xclose(fdin); |
| } |
| xclose(fdout); |
| rename(*tempname, temp); |
| tempfile2zap = (char *)1; |
| free(*tempname); |
| free(temp); |
| *tempname = NULL; |
| } |
| |
| // Create a 256 entry CRC32 lookup table. |
| |
| void crc_init(unsigned int *crc_table, int little_endian) |
| { |
| unsigned int i; |
| |
| // Init the CRC32 table (big endian) |
| for (i=0; i<256; i++) { |
| unsigned int j, c = little_endian ? i : i<<24; |
| for (j=8; j; j--) |
| if (little_endian) c = (c&1) ? (c>>1)^0xEDB88320 : c>>1; |
| else c=c&0x80000000 ? (c<<1)^0x04c11db7 : (c<<1); |
| crc_table[i] = c; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Init base64 table |
| |
| void base64_init(char *p) |
| { |
| int i; |
| |
| for (i = 'A'; i != ':'; i++) { |
| if (i == 'Z'+1) i = 'a'; |
| if (i == 'z'+1) i = '0'; |
| *(p++) = i; |
| } |
| *(p++) = '+'; |
| *(p++) = '/'; |
| } |
| |
| int yesno(int def) |
| { |
| char buf; |
| |
| fprintf(stderr, " (%c/%c):", def ? 'Y' : 'y', def ? 'n' : 'N'); |
| fflush(stderr); |
| while (fread(&buf, 1, 1, stdin)) { |
| int new; |
| |
| // The letter changes the value, the newline (or space) returns it. |
| if (isspace(buf)) break; |
| if (-1 != (new = stridx("ny", tolower(buf)))) def = new; |
| } |
| |
| return def; |
| } |
| |
| struct signame { |
| int num; |
| char *name; |
| }; |
| |
| // Signals required by POSIX 2008: |
| // http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/signal.h.html |
| |
| #define SIGNIFY(x) {SIG##x, #x} |
| |
| static struct signame signames[] = { |
| SIGNIFY(ABRT), SIGNIFY(ALRM), SIGNIFY(BUS), |
| SIGNIFY(FPE), SIGNIFY(HUP), SIGNIFY(ILL), SIGNIFY(INT), SIGNIFY(KILL), |
| SIGNIFY(PIPE), SIGNIFY(QUIT), SIGNIFY(SEGV), SIGNIFY(TERM), |
| SIGNIFY(USR1), SIGNIFY(USR2), SIGNIFY(SYS), SIGNIFY(TRAP), |
| SIGNIFY(VTALRM), SIGNIFY(XCPU), SIGNIFY(XFSZ), |
| |
| // Start of non-terminal signals |
| |
| SIGNIFY(CHLD), SIGNIFY(CONT), SIGNIFY(STOP), SIGNIFY(TSTP), |
| SIGNIFY(TTIN), SIGNIFY(TTOU), SIGNIFY(URG) |
| }; |
| |
| // not in posix: SIGNIFY(STKFLT), SIGNIFY(WINCH), SIGNIFY(IO), SIGNIFY(PWR) |
| // obsolete: SIGNIFY(PROF) SIGNIFY(POLL) |
| |
| // Handler that sets toys.signal, and writes to toys.signalfd if set |
| void generic_signal(int sig) |
| { |
| if (toys.signalfd) { |
| char c = sig; |
| |
| writeall(toys.signalfd, &c, 1); |
| } |
| toys.signal = sig; |
| } |
| |
| void exit_signal(int sig) |
| { |
| if (sig) toys.exitval = sig|128; |
| xexit(); |
| } |
| |
| // Install the same handler on every signal that defaults to killing the |
| // process, calling the handler on the way out. Calling multiple times |
| // adds the handlers to a list, to be called in order. |
| void sigatexit(void *handler) |
| { |
| struct arg_list *al = xmalloc(sizeof(struct arg_list)); |
| int i; |
| |
| for (i=0; signames[i].num != SIGCHLD; i++) |
| signal(signames[i].num, exit_signal); |
| al->next = toys.xexit; |
| al->arg = handler; |
| toys.xexit = al; |
| } |
| |
| // Convert name to signal number. If name == NULL print names. |
| int sig_to_num(char *pidstr) |
| { |
| int i; |
| |
| if (pidstr) { |
| char *s; |
| |
| i = estrtol(pidstr, &s, 10); |
| if (!errno && !*s) return i; |
| |
| if (!strncasecmp(pidstr, "sig", 3)) pidstr+=3; |
| } |
| for (i = 0; i < sizeof(signames)/sizeof(struct signame); i++) |
| if (!pidstr) xputs(signames[i].name); |
| else if (!strcasecmp(pidstr, signames[i].name)) return signames[i].num; |
| |
| return -1; |
| } |
| |
| char *num_to_sig(int sig) |
| { |
| int i; |
| |
| for (i=0; i<sizeof(signames)/sizeof(struct signame); i++) |
| if (signames[i].num == sig) return signames[i].name; |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| // premute mode bits based on posix mode strings. |
| mode_t string_to_mode(char *modestr, mode_t mode) |
| { |
| char *whos = "ogua", *hows = "=+-", *whats = "xwrstX", *whys = "ogu", |
| *s, *str = modestr; |
| mode_t extrabits = mode & ~(07777); |
| |
| // Handle octal mode |
| if (isdigit(*str)) { |
| mode = estrtol(str, &s, 8); |
| if (errno || *s || (mode & ~(07777))) goto barf; |
| |
| return mode | extrabits; |
| } |
| |
| // Gaze into the bin of permission... |
| for (;;) { |
| int i, j, dowho, dohow, dowhat, amask; |
| |
| dowho = dohow = dowhat = amask = 0; |
| |
| // Find the who, how, and what stanzas, in that order |
| while (*str && (s = strchr(whos, *str))) { |
| dowho |= 1<<(s-whos); |
| str++; |
| } |
| // If who isn't specified, like "a" but honoring umask. |
| if (!dowho) { |
| dowho = 8; |
| umask(amask=umask(0)); |
| } |
| if (!*str || !(s = strchr(hows, *str))) goto barf; |
| dohow = *(str++); |
| |
| if (!dohow) goto barf; |
| while (*str && (s = strchr(whats, *str))) { |
| dowhat |= 1<<(s-whats); |
| str++; |
| } |
| |
| // Convert X to x for directory or if already executable somewhere |
| if ((dowhat&32) && (S_ISDIR(mode) || (mode&0111))) dowhat |= 1; |
| |
| // Copy mode from another category? |
| if (!dowhat && *str && (s = strchr(whys, *str))) { |
| dowhat = (mode>>(3*(s-whys)))&7; |
| str++; |
| } |
| |
| // Are we ready to do a thing yet? |
| if (*str && *(str++) != ',') goto barf; |
| |
| // Ok, apply the bits to the mode. |
| for (i=0; i<4; i++) { |
| for (j=0; j<3; j++) { |
| mode_t bit = 0; |
| int where = 1<<((3*i)+j); |
| |
| if (amask & where) continue; |
| |
| // Figure out new value at this location |
| if (i == 3) { |
| // suid/sticky bit. |
| if (j) { |
| if ((dowhat & 8) && (dowho&(8|(1<<i)))) bit++; |
| } else if (dowhat & 16) bit++; |
| } else { |
| if (!(dowho&(8|(1<<i)))) continue; |
| if (dowhat&(1<<j)) bit++; |
| } |
| |
| // When selection active, modify bit |
| |
| if (dohow == '=' || (bit && dohow == '-')) mode &= ~where; |
| if (bit && dohow != '-') mode |= where; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (!*str) break; |
| } |
| |
| return mode|extrabits; |
| barf: |
| error_exit("bad mode '%s'", modestr); |
| } |
| |
| // Format access mode into a drwxrwxrwx string |
| void mode_to_string(mode_t mode, char *buf) |
| { |
| char c, d; |
| int i, bit; |
| |
| buf[10]=0; |
| for (i=0; i<9; i++) { |
| bit = mode & (1<<i); |
| c = i%3; |
| if (!c && (mode & (1<<((d=i/3)+9)))) { |
| c = "tss"[d]; |
| if (!bit) c &= ~0x20; |
| } else c = bit ? "xwr"[c] : '-'; |
| buf[9-i] = c; |
| } |
| |
| if (S_ISDIR(mode)) c = 'd'; |
| else if (S_ISBLK(mode)) c = 'b'; |
| else if (S_ISCHR(mode)) c = 'c'; |
| else if (S_ISLNK(mode)) c = 'l'; |
| else if (S_ISFIFO(mode)) c = 'p'; |
| else if (S_ISSOCK(mode)) c = 's'; |
| else c = '-'; |
| *buf = c; |
| } |
| |
| // basename() can modify its argument or return a pointer to a constant string |
| // This just gives after the last '/' or the whole stirng if no / |
| char *getbasename(char *name) |
| { |
| char *s = strrchr(name, '/'); |
| |
| if (s) return s+1; |
| |
| return name; |
| } |
| |
| // Execute a callback for each PID that matches a process name from a list. |
| void names_to_pid(char **names, int (*callback)(pid_t pid, char *name)) |
| { |
| DIR *dp; |
| struct dirent *entry; |
| |
| if (!(dp = opendir("/proc"))) perror_exit("opendir"); |
| |
| while ((entry = readdir(dp))) { |
| unsigned u; |
| char *cmd, **curname; |
| |
| if (!(u = atoi(entry->d_name))) continue; |
| sprintf(libbuf, "/proc/%u/cmdline", u); |
| if (!(cmd = readfile(libbuf, libbuf, sizeof(libbuf)))) continue; |
| |
| for (curname = names; *curname; curname++) |
| if (**curname == '/' ? !strcmp(cmd, *curname) |
| : !strcmp(getbasename(cmd), getbasename(*curname))) |
| if (callback(u, *curname)) break; |
| if (*curname) break; |
| } |
| closedir(dp); |
| } |
| |
| // display first few digits of number with power of two units |
| int human_readable(char *buf, unsigned long long num, int style) |
| { |
| unsigned long long snap = 0; |
| int len, unit, divisor = (style&HR_1000) ? 1000 : 1024; |
| |
| // Divide rounding up until we have 3 or fewer digits. Since the part we |
| // print is decimal, the test is 999 even when we divide by 1024. |
| // We can't run out of units because 2<<64 is 18 exabytes. |
| // test 5675 is 5.5k not 5.6k. |
| for (unit = 0; num > 999; unit++) num = ((snap = num)+(divisor/2))/divisor; |
| len = sprintf(buf, "%llu", num); |
| if (unit && len == 1) { |
| // Redo rounding for 1.2M case, this works with and without HR_1000. |
| num = snap/divisor; |
| snap -= num*divisor; |
| snap = ((snap*100)+50)/divisor; |
| snap /= 10; |
| len = sprintf(buf, "%llu.%llu", num, snap); |
| } |
| if (style & HR_SPACE) buf[len++] = ' '; |
| if (unit) { |
| unit = " kMGTPE"[unit]; |
| |
| if (!(style&HR_1000)) unit = toupper(unit); |
| buf[len++] = unit; |
| } else if (style & HR_B) buf[len++] = 'B'; |
| buf[len] = 0; |
| |
| return len; |
| } |
| |
| // The qsort man page says you can use alphasort, the posix committee |
| // disagreed, and doubled down: http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=142 |
| // So just do our own. (The const is entirely to humor the stupid compiler.) |
| int qstrcmp(const void *a, const void *b) |
| { |
| return strcmp(*(char **)a, *(char **)b); |
| } |
| |
| // According to http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9629399/apdxa.htm |
| // we should generate a uuid structure by reading a clock with 100 nanosecond |
| // precision, normalizing it to the start of the gregorian calendar in 1582, |
| // and looking up our eth0 mac address. |
| // |
| // On the other hand, we have 128 bits to come up with a unique identifier, of |
| // which 6 have a defined value. /dev/urandom it is. |
| |
| void create_uuid(char *uuid) |
| { |
| // Read 128 random bits |
| int fd = xopenro("/dev/urandom"); |
| xreadall(fd, uuid, 16); |
| close(fd); |
| |
| // Claim to be a DCE format UUID. |
| uuid[6] = (uuid[6] & 0x0F) | 0x40; |
| uuid[8] = (uuid[8] & 0x3F) | 0x80; |
| |
| // rfc2518 section 6.4.1 suggests if we're not using a macaddr, we should |
| // set bit 1 of the node ID, which is the mac multicast bit. This means we |
| // should never collide with anybody actually using a macaddr. |
| uuid[11] |= 128; |
| } |
| |
| char *show_uuid(char *uuid) |
| { |
| char *out = libbuf; |
| int i; |
| |
| for (i=0; i<16; i++) out+=sprintf(out, "-%02x"+!(0x550&(1<<i)), uuid[i]); |
| *out = 0; |
| |
| return libbuf; |
| } |
| |
| // Returns pointer to letter at end, 0 if none. *start = initial % |
| char *next_printf(char *s, char **start) |
| { |
| for (; *s; s++) { |
| if (*s != '%') continue; |
| if (*++s == '%') continue; |
| if (start) *start = s-1; |
| while (0 <= stridx("0'#-+ ", *s)) s++; |
| while (isdigit(*s)) s++; |
| if (*s == '.') s++; |
| while (isdigit(*s)) s++; |
| |
| return s; |
| } |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| // Posix inexplicably hasn't got this, so find str in line. |
| char *strnstr(char *line, char *str) |
| { |
| long len = strlen(str); |
| char *s; |
| |
| for (s = line; *s; s++) if (!strncasecmp(s, str, len)) break; |
| |
| return *s ? s : 0; |
| } |
| |
| int dev_minor(int dev) |
| { |
| return ((dev&0xfff00000)>>12)|(dev&0xff); |
| } |
| |
| int dev_major(int dev) |
| { |
| return (dev&0xfff00)>>8; |
| } |
| |
| int dev_makedev(int major, int minor) |
| { |
| return (minor&0xff)|((major&0xfff)<<8)|((minor&0xfff00)<<12); |
| } |
| |
| // Return cached passwd entries. |
| struct passwd *bufgetpwuid(uid_t uid) |
| { |
| struct pwuidbuf_list { |
| struct pwuidbuf_list *next; |
| struct passwd pw; |
| } *list; |
| struct passwd *temp; |
| static struct pwuidbuf_list *pwuidbuf; |
| |
| for (list = pwuidbuf; list; list = list->next) |
| if (list->pw.pw_uid == uid) return &(list->pw); |
| |
| list = xmalloc(512); |
| list->next = pwuidbuf; |
| |
| errno = getpwuid_r(uid, &list->pw, sizeof(*list)+(char *)list, |
| 512-sizeof(*list), &temp); |
| if (!temp) { |
| free(list); |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| pwuidbuf = list; |
| |
| return &list->pw; |
| } |
| |
| // Return cached passwd entries. |
| struct group *bufgetgrgid(gid_t gid) |
| { |
| struct grgidbuf_list { |
| struct grgidbuf_list *next; |
| struct group gr; |
| } *list; |
| struct group *temp; |
| static struct grgidbuf_list *grgidbuf; |
| |
| for (list = grgidbuf; list; list = list->next) |
| if (list->gr.gr_gid == gid) return &(list->gr); |
| |
| list = xmalloc(512); |
| list->next = grgidbuf; |
| |
| errno = getgrgid_r(gid, &list->gr, sizeof(*list)+(char *)list, |
| 512-sizeof(*list), &temp); |
| if (!temp) { |
| free(list); |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| grgidbuf = list; |
| |
| return &list->gr; |
| } |
| |
| // Always null terminates, returns 0 for failure, len for success |
| int readlinkat0(int dirfd, char *path, char *buf, int len) |
| { |
| if (!len) return 0; |
| |
| len = readlinkat(dirfd, path, buf, len-1); |
| if (len<1) return 0; |
| buf[len] = 0; |
| |
| return len; |
| } |
| |
| int readlink0(char *path, char *buf, int len) |
| { |
| return readlinkat0(AT_FDCWD, path, buf, len); |
| } |
| |
| // Do regex matching handling embedded NUL bytes in string (hence extra len |
| // argument). Note that neither the pattern nor the match can currently include |
| // NUL bytes (even with wildcards) and string must be null terminated at |
| // string[len]. But this can find a match after the first NUL. |
| int regexec0(regex_t *preg, char *string, long len, int nmatch, |
| regmatch_t pmatch[], int eflags) |
| { |
| char *s = string; |
| |
| for (;;) { |
| long ll = 0; |
| int rc; |
| |
| while (len && !*s) { |
| s++; |
| len--; |
| } |
| while (s[ll] && ll<len) ll++; |
| |
| rc = regexec(preg, s, nmatch, pmatch, eflags); |
| if (!rc) { |
| for (rc = 0; rc<nmatch && pmatch[rc].rm_so!=-1; rc++) { |
| pmatch[rc].rm_so += s-string; |
| pmatch[rc].rm_eo += s-string; |
| } |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| if (ll==len) return rc; |
| |
| s += ll; |
| len -= ll; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Return user name or string representation of number, returned buffer |
| // lasts until next call. |
| char *getusername(uid_t uid) |
| { |
| struct passwd *pw = bufgetpwuid(uid); |
| static char unum[12]; |
| |
| sprintf(unum, "%u", (unsigned)uid); |
| return pw ? pw->pw_name : unum; |
| } |
| |
| // Return group name or string representation of number, returned buffer |
| // lasts until next call. |
| char *getgroupname(gid_t gid) |
| { |
| struct group *gr = bufgetgrgid(gid); |
| static char gnum[12]; |
| |
| sprintf(gnum, "%u", (unsigned)gid); |
| return gr ? gr->gr_name : gnum; |
| } |
| |
| // Iterate over lines in file, calling function. Function can write 0 to |
| // the line pointer if they want to keep it, or 1 to terminate processing, |
| // otherwise line is freed. Passed file descriptor is closed at the end. |
| void do_lines(int fd, void (*call)(char **pline, long len)) |
| { |
| FILE *fp = fd ? xfdopen(fd, "r") : stdin; |
| |
| for (;;) { |
| char *line = 0; |
| ssize_t len; |
| |
| len = getline(&line, (void *)&len, fp); |
| if (len > 0) { |
| call(&line, len); |
| if (line == (void *)1) break; |
| free(line); |
| } else break; |
| } |
| |
| if (fd) fclose(fp); |
| } |