/* path.cc: path support. Copyright 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 Cygnus Solutions. This file is part of Cygwin. This software is a copyrighted work licensed under the terms of the Cygwin license. Please consult the file "CYGWIN_LICENSE" for details. */ /* This module's job is to - convert between POSIX and Win32 style filenames, - support the `mount' functionality, - support symlinks for files and directories Pathnames are handled as follows: - / is equivalent to \ - Paths beginning with // (or \\) are not translated (i.e. looked up in the mount table) and are assumed to be UNC path names. - Paths containing a : are not translated (paths like /foo/bar/baz:qux: don't make much sense but having the rule written this way allows one to use strchr). The goal in the above set of rules is to allow both POSIX and Win32 flavors of pathnames without either interfering. The rules are intended to be as close to a superset of both as possible. A possible future enhancement would be to allow people to disable/enable the mount table handling to support pure Win32 pathnames. Hopefully this won't be needed. The suggested way to do this would be an environment variable because a) we need something that is inherited from parent to child, b) environment variables can be passed from the DOS shell to a cygwin app, c) it allows disabling the feature on an app by app basis within the same session (whereas playing about with the registry wouldn't -- without getting too complicated). Example: CYGWIN=pathrules[=@]{win32,posix}. If CYGWIN=pathrules=win32, mount table handling is disabled. [The intent is to have CYGWIN be a catchall for tweaking various cygwin.dll features]. Note that you can have more than one path to a file. The mount table is always prefered when translating Win32 paths to POSIX paths. Win32 paths in mount table entries may be UNC paths or standard Win32 paths starting with : Text vs Binary issues are not considered here in path style decisions. / and \ are treated as equivalent. One or the other is prefered in certain situations (e.g. / is preferred in result of getcwd, \ is preferred in arguments to Win32 api calls), but this code will translate as necessary. Apps wishing to translate to/from pure Win32 and POSIX-like pathnames can use cygwin_foo. Removing mounted filesystem support would simplify things greatly, but having it gives us a mechanism of treating disk that lives on a UNIX machine as having UNIX semantics [it allows one to edit a text file on that disk and not have cr's magically appear and perhaps break apps running on UNIX boxes]. It also useful to be able to layout a hierarchy without changing the underlying directories. The semantics of mounting file systems is not intended to precisely follow normal UNIX systems. Each DOS drive is defined to have a current directory. Supporting this would complicate things so for now things are defined so that c: means c:\. */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "winsup.h" #include #include static int normalize_win32_path (const char *cwd, const char *src, char *dst); static char *getcwd_inner (char *buf, size_t ulen, int posix_p); static void slashify (const char *src, char *dst, int trailing_slash_p); static void backslashify (const char *src, char *dst, int trailing_slash_p); static int path_prefix_p_ (const char *path1, const char *path2, int len1); static int get_cwd_win32 (); static NO_COPY const char escape_char = '^'; struct symlink_info { char buf[3 + MAX_PATH * 3]; char *known_suffix; char *ext_here; char *contents; unsigned pflags; DWORD fileattr; int is_symlink; symlink_info (): known_suffix (NULL), contents (buf + MAX_PATH + 1) {} int check (const char *path, const suffix_info *suffixes); }; /********************** Path Helper Functions *************************/ #define path_prefix_p(p1, p2, l1) \ ((tolower(*(p1))==tolower(*(p2))) && \ path_prefix_p_(p1, p2, l1)) #define SYMLINKATTR(x) \ (((x) & (FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SYSTEM | FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY)) == \ FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SYSTEM) /* Return non-zero if PATH1 is a prefix of PATH2. Both are assumed to be of the same path style and / vs \ usage. Neither may be "". LEN1 = strlen (PATH1). It's passed because often it's already known. Examples: /foo/ is a prefix of /foo <-- may seem odd, but desired /foo is a prefix of /foo/ / is a prefix of /foo/bar / is not a prefix of foo/bar foo/ is a prefix foo/bar /foo is not a prefix of /foobar */ /* Determine if path prefix matches current cygdrive */ #define iscygdrive(path) \ (path_prefix_p (cygwin_shared->mount.cygdrive, (path), cygwin_shared->mount.cygdrive_len)) #define iscygdrive_device(path) \ (iscygdrive(path) && isalpha(path[cygwin_shared->mount.cygdrive_len]) && \ (isdirsep(path[cygwin_shared->mount.cygdrive_len + 1]) || \ !path[cygwin_shared->mount.cygdrive_len + 1])) /******************** Directory-related Support **************************/ /* Cache getcwd value. FIXME: We need a lock for these in order to support multiple threads. */ #ifdef _MT_SAFE #define cwd_win32 _reent_winsup()->_cwd_win32 #define cwd_posix _reent_winsup()->_cwd_posix #define cwd_hash _reent_winsup()->_cwd_hash #else static char *cwd_win32; static char *cwd_posix; static unsigned long cwd_hash; #endif static int path_prefix_p_ (const char *path1, const char *path2, int len1) { /* Handle case where PATH1 has trailing '/' and when it doesn't. */ if (len1 > 0 && SLASH_P (path1[len1 - 1])) len1--; if (len1 == 0) return SLASH_P (path2[0]) && !SLASH_P (path2[1]); if (!strncasematch (path1, path2, len1)) return 0; return SLASH_P (path2[len1]) || path2[len1] == 0 || path1[len1 - 1] == ':'; } /* Convert an arbitrary path SRC to a pure Win32 path, suitable for passing to Win32 API routines. If an error occurs, `error' is set to the errno value. Otherwise it is set to 0. follow_mode values: SYMLINK_FOLLOW - convert to PATH symlink points to SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW - convert to PATH of symlink itself SYMLINK_IGNORE - do not check PATH for symlinks SYMLINK_CONTENTS - just return symlink contents */ void path_conv::check (const char *src, symlink_follow follow_mode, int use_full_path, const suffix_info *suffixes) { /* This array is used when expanding symlinks. It is MAX_PATH * 2 in length so that we can hold the expanded symlink plus a trailer. */ char path_buf[MAX_PATH]; char path_copy[MAX_PATH]; char tmp_buf[MAX_PATH]; symlink_info sym; char *rel_path, *full_path; if ((error = check_null_empty_path (src))) return; if (use_full_path) rel_path = path_buf, full_path = this->path; else rel_path = this->path, full_path = path_buf; /* This loop handles symlink expansion. */ int loop = 0; path_flags = 0; known_suffix = NULL; fileattr = (DWORD) -1; for (;;) { MALLOC_CHECK; /* Must look up path in mount table, etc. */ error = cygwin_shared->mount.conv_to_win32_path (src, rel_path, full_path, devn, unit, &path_flags); MALLOC_CHECK; if (error != 0) return; if (devn != FH_BAD) { fileattr = 0; return; } /* Eat trailing slashes */ char *tail = strchr (full_path, '\0'); /* If path is only a drivename, Windows interprets it as the current working directory on this drive instead of the root dir which is what we want. So we need the trailing backslash in this case. */ while (tail > full_path + 3 && (*--tail == '\\')) *tail = '\0'; if (full_path[0] && full_path[1] == ':' && full_path[2] == '\0') strcat (full_path, "\\"); if (follow_mode == SYMLINK_IGNORE) { fileattr = GetFileAttributesA (path); goto out; } /* Make a copy of the path that we can munge up */ strcpy (path_copy, full_path); tail = path_copy + 1 + (tail - full_path); // Point to end of copy /* Scan path_copy from right to left looking either for a symlink or an actual existing file. If an existing file is found, just return. If a symlink is found exit the for loop. Also: be careful to preserve the errno returned from symlink.check as the caller may need it. */ /* FIXME: Do we have to worry about multiple \'s here? */ int component = 0; // Number of translated components sym.contents[0] = '\0'; for (;;) { save_errno s (0); const suffix_info *suff; /* Don't allow symlink.check to set anything in the path_conv class if we're working on an inner component of the path */ if (component) { suff = NULL; sym.pflags = 0; } else { suff = suffixes; sym.pflags = path_flags; } int len = sym.check (path_copy, suff); if (!component) path_flags = sym.pflags; /* If symlink.check found an existing non-symlink file, then it returns a length of 0 and sets errno to EINVAL. It also sets any suffix found into `ext_here'. */ if (!sym.is_symlink && sym.fileattr != (DWORD) -1) { if (component == 0) { fileattr = sym.fileattr; goto fillin; } goto out; // file found } /* Found a symlink if len > 0. If component == 0, then the src path itself was a symlink. If !follow_mode then we're done. Otherwise we have to insert the path found into the full path that we are building and perform all of these operations again on the newly derived path. */ else if (len > 0) { if (component == 0 && follow_mode != SYMLINK_FOLLOW) { set_symlink (); // last component of path is a symlink. fileattr = sym.fileattr; if (follow_mode == SYMLINK_CONTENTS) strcpy (path, sym.contents); goto fillin; } break; } /* No existing file found. */ s.reset (); // remember errno from symlink.check if (!(tail = strrchr (path_copy, '\\')) || (tail > path_copy && tail[-1] == ':')) goto out; // all done /* Haven't found a valid pathname component yet. Pinch off the tail and try again. */ *tail = '\0'; component++; } /* Arrive here if above loop detected a symlink. */ if (++loop > MAX_LINK_DEPTH) { error = ELOOP; // Eep. return; } MALLOC_CHECK; tail = full_path + (tail - path_copy); int taillen = strlen (tail); int buflen = strlen (sym.contents); if (buflen + taillen > MAX_PATH) { error = ENAMETOOLONG; strcpy (path, "::ENAMETOOLONG::"); return; } /* Copy tail of full_path to discovered symlink. */ char *p; for (p = sym.contents + buflen; *tail; tail++) *p++ = *tail == '\\' ? '/' : *tail; *p = '\0'; /* If symlink referred to an absolute path, then we just use sym.contents and loop. Otherwise tack the head of path_copy before sym.contents and translate it back from a Win32-style path to a POSIX-style one. */ if (isabspath (sym.contents)) src = sym.contents; else if (!(tail = strrchr (path_copy, '\\'))) system_printf ("problem parsing %s - '%s'", src, full_path); else { int headlen = 1 + tail - path_copy; p = sym.contents - headlen; memcpy (p, path_copy, headlen); MALLOC_CHECK; error = cygwin_shared->mount.conv_to_posix_path (p, tmp_buf, 1); MALLOC_CHECK; if (error) return; src = tmp_buf; } } fillin: if (sym.known_suffix) known_suffix = this->path + (sym.known_suffix - path_copy); else if (sym.ext_here && follow_mode != SYMLINK_CONTENTS) { known_suffix = strchr (this->path, '\0'); strcpy (known_suffix, sym.ext_here); } out: DWORD serial, volflags; strcpy (tmp_buf, full_path); if (!rootdir (tmp_buf) || !GetVolumeInformation (tmp_buf, NULL, 0, &serial, NULL, &volflags, NULL, 0)) { debug_printf ("GetVolumeInformation(%s) = ERR, full_path(%s), set_has_acls(FALSE)", tmp_buf, full_path, GetLastError ()); set_has_acls (FALSE); } else { debug_printf ("GetVolumeInformation(%s) = OK, full_path(%s), set_has_acls(%d)", tmp_buf, full_path, volflags & FS_PERSISTENT_ACLS); set_has_acls (volflags & FS_PERSISTENT_ACLS); } } #define deveq(s) (strcasematch (name, (s))) #define deveqn(s, n) (strncasematch (name, (s), (n))) static __inline int digits (const char *name) { char *p; int n = strtol(name, &p, 10); return p > name && !*p ? n : -1; } const char *windows_device_names[] = { NULL, "\\dev\\console", "conin", "conout", "\\dev\\ttym", "\\dev\\tty%d", "\\dev\\ptym", "\\\\.\\com%d", "\\dev\\pipe", "\\dev\\piper", "\\dev\\pipew", "\\dev\\socket", "\\dev\\windows", NULL, NULL, NULL, "\\dev\\disk", "\\dev\\fd%d", "\\dev\\st%d", "nul", "\\dev\\zero", "\\dev\\%srandom", }; static int get_raw_device_number (const char *uxname, const char *w32path, int &unit) { DWORD devn = FH_BAD; if (strncasematch (w32path, "\\\\.\\tape", 8)) { devn = FH_TAPE; unit = digits (w32path + 8); // norewind tape devices have leading n in name if (strncasematch (uxname, "/dev/n", 6)) unit += 128; } else if (isdrive (w32path + 4)) { devn = FH_FLOPPY; unit = tolower (w32path[4]) - 'a'; } else if (strncasematch (w32path, "\\\\.\\physicaldrive", 17)) { devn = FH_FLOPPY; unit = digits (w32path + 17) + 128; } return devn; } int __stdcall get_device_number (const char *name, int &unit, BOOL from_conv) { DWORD devn = FH_BAD; unit = 0; if ((*name == '/' && deveqn ("/dev/", 5)) || (*name == '\\' && deveqn ("\\dev\\", 5))) { name += 5; if (deveq ("tty")) { if (tty_attached (myself)) { unit = myself->ctty; devn = FH_TTYS; } else if (myself->ctty > 0) devn = FH_CONSOLE; } else if (deveqn ("tty", 3) && (unit = digits (name + 3)) >= 0) devn = FH_TTYS; else if (deveq ("ttym")) devn = FH_TTYM; else if (deveq ("ptmx")) devn = FH_PTYM; else if (deveq ("windows")) devn = FH_WINDOWS; else if (deveq ("conin")) devn = FH_CONIN; else if (deveq ("conout")) devn = FH_CONOUT; else if (deveq ("null")) devn = FH_NULL; else if (deveq ("zero")) devn = FH_ZERO; else if (deveq ("random") || deveq ("urandom")) { devn = FH_RANDOM; unit = 8 + (deveqn ("u", 1) ? 1 : 0); /* Keep unit Linux conformant */ } else if (deveqn ("com", 3) && (unit = digits (name + 3)) >= 0) devn = FH_SERIAL; else if (deveq ("pipe") || deveq ("piper") || deveq ("pipew")) devn = FH_PIPE; else if (deveq ("tcp") || deveq ("udp") || deveq ("streamsocket") || deveq ("dgsocket")) devn = FH_SOCKET; else if (! from_conv) devn = get_raw_device_number (name - 5, path_conv (name - 5, SYMLINK_IGNORE).get_win32 (), unit); } else if (deveqn ("com", 3) && (unit = digits (name + 3)) >= 0) devn = FH_SERIAL; return devn; } /* Return TRUE if src_path is a Win32 device name, filling out the device name in win32_path */ static BOOL win32_device_name (const char *src_path, char *win32_path, DWORD &devn, int &unit) { const char *devfmt; devn = get_device_number (src_path, unit, TRUE); if (devn == FH_BAD) return FALSE; if ((devfmt = windows_device_names[FHDEVN (devn)]) == NULL) return FALSE; if (devn == FH_RANDOM) __small_sprintf (win32_path, devfmt, unit == 8 ? "" : "u"); else __small_sprintf (win32_path, devfmt, unit); return TRUE; } /* Normalize a POSIX path. \'s are converted to /'s in the process. All duplicate /'s, except for 2 leading /'s, are deleted. The result is 0 for success, or an errno error value. */ #define isslash(c) ((c) == '/') static int normalize_posix_path (const char *cwd, const char *src, char *dst) { const char *src_start = src; char *dst_start = dst; syscall_printf ("cwd %s, src %s", cwd, src); if (isdrive (src) || strpbrk (src, "\\:")) { cygwin_conv_to_full_posix_path (src, dst); return 0; } if (!isslash (src[0])) { if (strlen (cwd) + 1 + strlen (src) >= MAX_PATH) { debug_printf ("ENAMETOOLONG = normalize_posix_path (%s)", src); return ENAMETOOLONG; } strcpy (dst, cwd); dst = strchr (dst, '\0'); if (*src == '.') { if (dst == dst_start + 1) dst--; goto sawdot; } if (dst > dst_start && !isslash (dst[-1])) *dst++ = '/'; } /* Two leading /'s? If so, preserve them. */ else if (isslash (src[1])) { *dst++ = '/'; *dst++ = '/'; src += 2; if (isslash (*src)) { /* Starts with three or more slashes - reset. */ dst = dst_start; *dst++ = '/'; src = src_start + 1; } } while (*src) { /* Strip runs of /'s. */ if (!isslash (*src)) *dst++ = *src++; else { while (*++src) { while (isslash (*src)) src++; if (*src != '.') break; sawdot: if (src[1] != '.') { if ((src[1] && !isslash (src[1]))) break; } else { if (src[2] && !isslash (src[2])) break; while (dst > dst_start && !isslash (*--dst)) continue; src++; } } *dst++ = '/'; } } *dst = '\0'; if (--dst > dst_start && isslash (*dst)) *dst = '\0'; debug_printf ("%s = normalize_posix_path (%s)", dst_start, src_start); return 0; } /* Normalize a Win32 path. /'s are converted to \'s in the process. All duplicate \'s, except for 2 leading \'s, are deleted. The result is 0 for success, or an errno error value. FIXME: A lot of this should be mergeable with the POSIX critter. */ static int normalize_win32_path (const char *cwd, const char *src, char *dst) { const char *src_start = src; char *dst_start = dst; if (!SLASH_P (src[0]) && strchr (src, ':') == NULL) { if (strlen (cwd) + 1 + strlen (src) >= MAX_PATH) { debug_printf ("ENAMETOOLONG = normalize_win32_path (%s)", src); return ENAMETOOLONG; } strcpy (dst, cwd); dst += strlen (dst); if (!*cwd || !SLASH_P (dst[-1])) *dst++ = '\\'; } /* Two leading \'s? If so, preserve them. */ else if (SLASH_P (src[0]) && SLASH_P (src[1])) { *dst++ = '\\'; ++src; } while (*src) { /* Strip duplicate /'s. */ if (SLASH_P (src[0]) && SLASH_P (src[1])) src++; /* Ignore "./". */ else if (src[0] == '.' && SLASH_P (src[1]) && (src == src_start || SLASH_P (src[-1]))) { src += 2; } /* Backup if "..". */ else if (src[0] == '.' && src[1] == '.' /* dst must be greater than dst_start */ && dst[-1] == '\\' && (SLASH_P (src[2]) || src[2] == 0)) { /* Back up over /, but not if it's the first one. */ if (dst > dst_start + 1) dst--; /* Now back up to the next /. */ while (dst > dst_start + 1 && dst[-1] != '\\' && dst[-2] != ':') dst--; src += 2; if (SLASH_P (*src)) src++; } /* Otherwise, add char to result. */ else { if (*src == '/') *dst++ = '\\'; else *dst++ = *src; ++src; } } *dst = 0; debug_printf ("%s = normalize_win32_path (%s)", dst_start, src_start); return 0; } /* Various utilities. */ /* slashify: Convert all back slashes in src path to forward slashes in dst path. Add a trailing slash to dst when trailing_slash_p arg is set to 1. */ static void slashify (const char *src, char *dst, int trailing_slash_p) { const char *start = src; while (*src) { if (*src == '\\') *dst++ = '/'; else *dst++ = *src; ++src; } if (trailing_slash_p && src > start && !isdirsep (src[-1])) *dst++ = '/'; *dst++ = 0; } /* backslashify: Convert all forward slashes in src path to back slashes in dst path. Add a trailing slash to dst when trailing_slash_p arg is set to 1. */ static void backslashify (const char *src, char *dst, int trailing_slash_p) { const char *start = src; while (*src) { if (*src == '/') *dst++ = '\\'; else *dst++ = *src; ++src; } if (trailing_slash_p && src > start && !isdirsep (src[-1])) *dst++ = '\\'; *dst++ = 0; } /* nofinalslash: Remove trailing / and \ from SRC (except for the first one). It is ok for src == dst. */ void __stdcall nofinalslash (const char *src, char *dst) { int len = strlen (src); if (src != dst) memcpy (dst, src, len + 1); while (len > 1 && SLASH_P (dst[--len])) dst[len] = '\0'; } /* slash_drive_prefix_p: Return non-zero if PATH begins with //. */ static int slash_drive_prefix_p (const char *path) { return (isdirsep(path[0]) && isdirsep(path[1]) && isalpha (path[2]) && (path[3] == 0 || path[3] == '/')); } /* slash_unc_prefix_p: Return non-zero if PATH begins with //UNC/SHARE */ int __stdcall slash_unc_prefix_p (const char *path) { char *p = NULL; int ret = (isdirsep (path[0]) && isdirsep (path[1]) && isalpha (path[2]) && path[3] != 0 && !isdirsep (path[3]) && ((p = strchr(&path[3], '/')) != NULL)); if (!ret || p == NULL) return ret; return ret && isalnum (p[1]); } /* conv_path_list: Convert a list of path names to/from Win32/POSIX. SRC is not a const char * because we temporarily modify it to ease the implementation. I believe Win32 always has '.' in $PATH. POSIX obviously doesn't. We certainly don't want to handle that here, but it is something for the caller to think about. */ static void conv_path_list (const char *src, char *dst, int to_posix_p) { char *s; char *d = dst; char src_delim = to_posix_p ? ';' : ':'; char dst_delim = to_posix_p ? ':' : ';'; int (*conv_fn) (const char *, char *) = (to_posix_p ? cygwin_conv_to_posix_path : cygwin_conv_to_win32_path); do { s = strchr (src, src_delim); if (s) { *s = 0; (*conv_fn) (src[0] != 0 ? src : ".", d); d += strlen (d); *d++ = dst_delim; *s = src_delim; src = s + 1; } else { /* Last one. */ (*conv_fn) (src[0] != 0 ? src : ".", d); } } while (s != NULL); } /************************* mount_info class ****************************/ /* init: Initialize the mount table. */ void mount_info::init () { nmounts = 0; had_to_create_mount_areas = 0; /* Fetch the mount table and cygdrive-related information from the registry. */ from_registry (); } /* conv_to_win32_path: Ensure src_path is a pure Win32 path and store the result in win32_path. If win32_path != NULL, the relative path, if possible to keep, is stored in win32_path. If the relative path isn't possible to keep, the full path is stored. If full_win32_path != NULL, the full path is stored there. The result is zero for success, or an errno value. {,full_}win32_path must have sufficient space (i.e. MAX_PATH bytes). */ int mount_info::conv_to_win32_path (const char *src_path, char *win32_path, char *full_win32_path, DWORD &devn, int &unit, unsigned *flags) { int src_path_len = strlen (src_path); int trailing_slash_p = (src_path_len > 1 && SLASH_P (src_path[src_path_len - 1])); MALLOC_CHECK; int isrelpath; unsigned dummy_flags; devn = FH_BAD; unit = 0; if (!flags) flags = &dummy_flags; *flags = 0; debug_printf ("conv_to_win32_path (%s)", src_path); if (src_path_len >= MAX_PATH) { debug_printf ("ENAMETOOLONG = conv_to_win32_path (%s)", src_path); return ENAMETOOLONG; } int i, rc; char *dst = NULL; mount_item *mi = NULL; /* initialized to avoid compiler warning */ char pathbuf[MAX_PATH]; char cwd[MAX_PATH]; getcwd_inner (cwd, MAX_PATH, TRUE); /* FIXME: check rc */ /* Determine where the destination should be placed. */ if (full_win32_path != NULL) dst = full_win32_path; else if (win32_path != NULL) dst = win32_path; if (dst == NULL) goto out; /* Sanity check. */ /* An MS-DOS spec has either a : or a \. If this is found, short circuit most of the rest of this function. */ if (strpbrk (src_path, ":\\") != NULL) { debug_printf ("%s already win32", src_path); rc = normalize_win32_path (cwd_win32, src_path, dst); if (rc) { debug_printf ("normalize_win32_path failed, rc %d", rc); return rc; } isrelpath = !isabspath (src_path); *flags = set_flags_from_win32_path (dst); goto fillin; } /* Normalize the path, taking out ../../ stuff, we need to do this so that we can move from one mounted directory to another with relative stuff. eg mounting c:/foo /foo d:/bar /bar cd /bar ls ../foo should look in c:/foo, not d:/foo. We do this by first getting an absolute UNIX-style path and then converting it to a DOS-style path, looking up the appropriate drive in the mount table. */ /* No need to fetch cwd if path is absolute. */ isrelpath = !isslash (*src_path); rc = normalize_posix_path (cwd, src_path, pathbuf); if (rc) { debug_printf ("%d = conv_to_win32_path (%s)", rc, src_path); *flags = 0; return rc; } /* See if this is a cygwin "device" */ if (win32_device_name (pathbuf, dst, devn, unit)) { *flags = MOUNT_BINARY; /* FIXME: Is this a sensible default for devices? */ goto fillin; } /* Check if the cygdrive prefix was specified. If so, just strip off the prefix and transform it into an MS-DOS path. */ MALLOC_CHECK; if (iscygdrive_device (pathbuf)) { if (!cygdrive_win32_path (pathbuf, dst, trailing_slash_p)) return ENOENT; *flags = cygdrive_flags; goto fillin; } /* Check the mount table for prefix matches. */ for (i = 0; i < nmounts; i++) { mi = mount + posix_sorted[i]; if (path_prefix_p (mi->posix_path, pathbuf, mi->posix_pathlen)) break; } if (i >= nmounts) { if (slash_drive_prefix_p (pathbuf)) slash_drive_to_win32_path (pathbuf, dst, trailing_slash_p); else backslashify (pathbuf, dst, trailing_slash_p); /* just convert */ *flags = 0; } else { int n = mi->native_pathlen; memcpy (dst, mi->native_path, n + 1); char *p = pathbuf + mi->posix_pathlen; if (!trailing_slash_p && !*p) { if (isdrive (dst) && !dst[2]) dst[n++] = '\\'; dst[n] = '\0'; } else { /* Do not add trailing \ to UNC device names like \\.\a: */ if (*p != '/' && /* FIXME: this test seems wrong. */ (strncmp (mi->native_path, "\\\\.\\", 4) != 0 || strncmp (mi->native_path + 4, "UNC\\", 4) == 0)) dst[n++] = '\\'; strcpy (dst + n, p); } backslashify (dst, dst, trailing_slash_p); *flags = mi->flags; } fillin: /* Compute relative path if asked to and able to. */ unsigned cwdlen; cwdlen = 0; /* avoid a (hopefully) bogus compiler warning */ if (win32_path == NULL) /* nothing to do */; else if (isrelpath && path_prefix_p (cwd_win32, dst, cwdlen = strlen (cwd_win32))) { size_t n = strlen (dst); if (n < cwdlen) strcpy (win32_path, dst); else { if (n == cwdlen) dst += cwdlen; else dst += isdirsep (cwd_win32[cwdlen - 1]) ? cwdlen : cwdlen + 1; memmove (win32_path, dst, strlen (dst) + 1); if (!*win32_path) { strcpy (win32_path, "."); if (trailing_slash_p) strcat (win32_path, "\\"); } } } else if (win32_path != dst) strcpy (win32_path, dst); out: MALLOC_CHECK; debug_printf ("%s(rel), %s(abs) %p(flags) = conv_to_win32_path (%s)", win32_path, full_win32_path, *flags, src_path); return 0; } /* Convert PATH (for which slash_drive_prefix_p returns 1) to WIN32 form. */ void mount_info::slash_drive_to_win32_path (const char *path, char *buf, int trailing_slash_p) { buf[0] = path[2]; buf[1] = ':'; if (path[3] == '0') strcpy (buf + 2, "\\"); else backslashify (path + 3, buf + 2, trailing_slash_p); } /* cygdrive_posix_path: Build POSIX path used as the mount point for cygdrives created when there is no other way to obtain a POSIX path from a Win32 one. */ void mount_info::cygdrive_posix_path (const char *src, char *dst, int trailing_slash_p) { int len = cygdrive_len; memcpy (dst, cygdrive, len + 1); /* Now finish the path off with the drive letter to be used. The cygdrive prefix always ends with a trailing slash so the drive letter is added after the path. */ dst[len++] = tolower (src[0]); if (!src[2] || (SLASH_P (src[2]) && !src[3])) dst[len++] = '\000'; else { dst[len++] = '/'; strcpy (dst + len, src + 3); } slashify (dst, dst, trailing_slash_p); } int mount_info::cygdrive_win32_path (const char *src, char *dst, int trailing_slash_p) { const char *p = src + cygdrive_len; if (!isalpha (*p) || (!isdirsep (p[1]) && p[1])) return 0; dst[0] = *p; dst[1] = ':'; strcpy (dst + 2, p + 1); backslashify (dst, dst, trailing_slash_p || !dst[2]); debug_printf ("src '%s', dst '%s'", src, dst); return 1; } /* conv_to_posix_path: Ensure src_path is a POSIX path. The result is zero for success, or an errno value. posix_path must have sufficient space (i.e. MAX_PATH bytes). If keep_rel_p is non-zero, relative paths stay that way. */ int mount_info::conv_to_posix_path (const char *src_path, char *posix_path, int keep_rel_p) { int src_path_len = strlen (src_path); int relative_path_p = !isabspath (src_path); int trailing_slash_p; if (src_path_len <= 1) trailing_slash_p = 0; else { const char *lastchar = src_path + src_path_len - 1; trailing_slash_p = SLASH_P (*lastchar) && lastchar[-1] != ':'; } debug_printf ("conv_to_posix_path (%s, %s, %s)", src_path, keep_rel_p ? "keep-rel" : "no-keep-rel", trailing_slash_p ? "add-slash" : "no-add-slash"); MALLOC_CHECK; if (src_path_len >= MAX_PATH) { debug_printf ("ENAMETOOLONG"); return ENAMETOOLONG; } /* FIXME: For now, if the path is relative and it's supposed to stay that way, skip mount table processing. */ if (keep_rel_p && relative_path_p) { slashify (src_path, posix_path, 0); debug_printf ("%s = conv_to_posix_path (%s)", posix_path, src_path); return 0; } char pathbuf[MAX_PATH]; char cwd[MAX_PATH]; /* No need to fetch cwd if path is absolute. */ if (relative_path_p) getcwd_inner (cwd, MAX_PATH, 0); /* FIXME: check rc */ else strcpy (cwd, "/"); /* some innocuous value */ int rc = normalize_win32_path (cwd, src_path, pathbuf); if (rc != 0) { debug_printf ("%d = conv_to_posix_path (%s)", rc, src_path); return rc; } int pathbuflen = strlen (pathbuf); for (int i = 0; i < nmounts; ++i) { mount_item &mi = mount[native_sorted[i]]; if (! path_prefix_p (mi.native_path, pathbuf, mi.native_pathlen)) continue; /* SRC_PATH is in the mount table. */ int nextchar; const char *p = pathbuf + mi.native_pathlen; if (!*p || !p[1]) nextchar = 0; else if (isdirsep (*p)) nextchar = -1; else nextchar = 1; int addslash = nextchar > 0 ? 1 : 0; if ((mi.posix_pathlen + (pathbuflen - mi.native_pathlen) + addslash) >= MAX_PATH) return ENAMETOOLONG; strcpy (posix_path, mi.posix_path); if (addslash) strcat (posix_path, "/"); if (nextchar) slashify (p, posix_path + addslash + (mi.posix_pathlen == 1 ? 0 : mi.posix_pathlen), trailing_slash_p); goto out; } /* Not in the database. This should [theoretically] only happen if either the path begins with //, or / isn't mounted, or the path has a drive letter not covered by the mount table. If it's a relative path then the caller must want an absolute path (otherwise we would have returned above). So we always return an absolute path at this point. */ if (isdrive (pathbuf)) cygdrive_posix_path (pathbuf, posix_path, trailing_slash_p); else { /* The use of src_path and not pathbuf here is intentional. We couldn't translate the path, so just ensure no \'s are present. */ slashify (src_path, posix_path, trailing_slash_p); } out: debug_printf ("%s = conv_to_posix_path (%s)", posix_path, src_path); MALLOC_CHECK; return 0; } /* Return flags associated with a mount point given the win32 path. */ unsigned mount_info::set_flags_from_win32_path (const char *p) { for (int i = 0; i < nmounts; i++) { mount_item &mi = mount[native_sorted[i]]; if (path_prefix_p (mi.native_path, p, mi.native_pathlen)) return mi.flags; } return 0; } /* read_mounts: Given a specific regkey, read mounts from under its key. */ void mount_info::read_mounts (reg_key& r) { char posix_path[MAX_PATH]; HKEY key = r.get_key (); DWORD i, posix_path_size; int found_cygdrive = FALSE; /* Loop through subkeys */ /* FIXME: we would like to not check MAX_MOUNTS but the heap in the shared area is currently statically allocated so we can't have an arbitrarily large number of mounts. */ for (DWORD i = 0; ; i++) { char native_path[MAX_PATH]; int mount_flags; posix_path_size = MAX_PATH; /* FIXME: if maximum posix_path_size is 256, we're going to run into problems if we ever try to store a mount point that's over 256 but is under MAX_PATH! */ LONG err = RegEnumKeyEx (key, i, posix_path, &posix_path_size, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL); if (err == ERROR_NO_MORE_ITEMS) break; else if (err != ERROR_SUCCESS) { debug_printf ("RegEnumKeyEx failed, error %d!\n", err); break; } if (iscygdrive (posix_path)) { found_cygdrive = TRUE; continue; } /* Get a reg_key based on i. */ reg_key subkey = reg_key (key, KEY_READ, posix_path, NULL); /* Fetch info from the subkey. */ subkey.get_string ("native", native_path, sizeof (native_path), ""); mount_flags = subkey.get_int ("flags", 0); /* Add mount_item corresponding to registry mount point. */ int res = cygwin_shared->mount.add_item (native_path, posix_path, mount_flags, FALSE); if (res && get_errno () == EMFILE) break; /* The number of entries exceeds MAX_MOUNTS */ } if (!found_cygdrive) return; loop: for (i = 0; ;i++) { posix_path_size = MAX_PATH; LONG err = RegEnumKeyEx (key, i, posix_path, &posix_path_size, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL); if (err != ERROR_SUCCESS) break; if (iscygdrive (posix_path)) { /* This shouldn't be in the mount table. */ (void) r.kill (posix_path); goto loop; } } } /* from_registry: Build the entire mount table from the registry. Also, read in cygdrive-related information from its registry location. */ void mount_info::from_registry () { /* Use current mount areas if either user or system mount areas already exist. Otherwise, import old mounts. */ reg_key r; /* Retrieve cygdrive-related information. */ read_cygdrive_info_from_registry (); nmounts = 0; /* First read mounts from user's table. */ read_mounts (r); /* Then read mounts from system-wide mount table. */ reg_key r1 (HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, KEY_READ, "SOFTWARE", CYGWIN_INFO_CYGNUS_REGISTRY_NAME, CYGWIN_INFO_CYGWIN_REGISTRY_NAME, CYGWIN_INFO_CYGWIN_MOUNT_REGISTRY_NAME, NULL); read_mounts (r1); /* If we had to create both user and system mount areas, import old mounts. */ if (had_to_create_mount_areas == 2) import_v1_mounts (); } /* add_reg_mount: Add mount item to registry. Return zero on success, non-zero on failure. */ /* FIXME: Need a mutex to avoid collisions with other tasks. */ int mount_info::add_reg_mount (const char * native_path, const char * posix_path, unsigned mountflags) { /* Add the mount to the right registry location, depending on whether MOUNT_SYSTEM is set in the mount flags. */ if (!(mountflags & MOUNT_SYSTEM)) /* current_user mount */ { /* reg_key for user mounts in HKEY_CURRENT_USER. */ reg_key reg_user; /* Start by deleting existing mount if one exists. */ reg_user.kill (posix_path); /* Create the new mount. */ reg_key subkey = reg_key (reg_user.get_key (), KEY_ALL_ACCESS, posix_path, NULL); subkey.set_string ("native", native_path); subkey.set_int ("flags", mountflags); } else /* local_machine mount */ { /* reg_key for system mounts in HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE. */ reg_key reg_sys (HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, KEY_ALL_ACCESS, "SOFTWARE", CYGWIN_INFO_CYGNUS_REGISTRY_NAME, CYGWIN_INFO_CYGWIN_REGISTRY_NAME, CYGWIN_INFO_CYGWIN_MOUNT_REGISTRY_NAME, NULL); if (reg_sys.get_key () == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) { set_errno (EACCES); return -1; } /* Start by deleting existing mount if one exists. */ reg_sys.kill (posix_path); /* Create the new mount. */ reg_key subkey = reg_key (reg_sys.get_key (), KEY_ALL_ACCESS, posix_path, NULL); subkey.set_string ("native", native_path); subkey.set_int ("flags", mountflags); } return 0; /* Success! */ } /* del_reg_mount: delete mount item from registry indicated in flags. Return zero on success, non-zero on failure.*/ /* FIXME: Need a mutex to avoid collisions with other tasks. */ int mount_info::del_reg_mount (const char * posix_path, unsigned flags) { int killres; if ((flags & MOUNT_SYSTEM) == 0) /* Delete from user registry */ { reg_key reg_user (KEY_ALL_ACCESS, CYGWIN_INFO_CYGWIN_MOUNT_REGISTRY_NAME, NULL); killres = reg_user.kill (posix_path); } else /* Delete from system registry */ { reg_key reg_sys (HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, KEY_ALL_ACCESS, "SOFTWARE", CYGWIN_INFO_CYGNUS_REGISTRY_NAME, CYGWIN_INFO_CYGWIN_REGISTRY_NAME, CYGWIN_INFO_CYGWIN_MOUNT_REGISTRY_NAME, NULL); if (reg_sys.get_key () == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) { set_errno (EACCES); return -1; } killres = reg_sys.kill (posix_path); } if (killres != ERROR_SUCCESS) { __seterrno_from_win_error (killres); return -1; } return 0; /* Success! */ } /* read_cygdrive_info_from_registry: Read the default prefix and flags to use when creating cygdrives from the special user registry location used to store cygdrive information. */ void mount_info::read_cygdrive_info_from_registry () { /* reg_key for user mounts in HKEY_CURRENT_USER. */ reg_key r; if (r.get_string ("cygdrive prefix", cygdrive, sizeof (cygdrive), "") != 0) { /* Didn't find it so write the default to the registry and use it. */ write_cygdrive_info_to_registry ("/cygdrive", MOUNT_AUTO); } else { /* Fetch cygdrive_flags from registry; returns MOUNT_AUTO on error. */ cygdrive_flags = r.get_int ("cygdrive flags", MOUNT_AUTO); slashify (cygdrive, cygdrive, 1); cygdrive_len = strlen(cygdrive); } } /* write_cygdrive_info_to_registry: Write the default prefix and flags to use when creating cygdrives to the special user registry location used to store cygdrive information. */ int mount_info::write_cygdrive_info_to_registry (const char *cygdrive_prefix, unsigned flags) { /* reg_key for user mounts in HKEY_CURRENT_USER. */ reg_key r; /* Verify cygdrive prefix starts with a forward slash and if there's another character, it's not a slash. */ if ((cygdrive_prefix == NULL) || (*cygdrive_prefix == 0) || (!isslash (cygdrive_prefix[0])) || ((cygdrive_prefix[1] != '\0') && (isslash (cygdrive_prefix[1])))) { set_errno (EINVAL); return -1; } char hold_cygdrive_prefix[strlen (cygdrive_prefix) + 1]; /* Ensure that there is never a final slash */ nofinalslash (cygdrive_prefix, hold_cygdrive_prefix); r.set_string ("cygdrive prefix", hold_cygdrive_prefix); r.set_int ("cygdrive flags", flags); /* This also needs to go in the in-memory copy of "cygdrive" */ slashify (cygdrive_prefix, cygwin_shared->mount.cygdrive, 1); cygwin_shared->mount.cygdrive_flags = flags; cygwin_shared->mount.cygdrive_len = strlen(cygwin_shared->mount.cygdrive); return 0; } struct mntent * mount_info::getmntent (int x) { if (x < 0 || x >= nmounts) return NULL; return mount[native_sorted[x]].getmntent (); } static mount_item *mounts_for_sort; /* sort_by_posix_name: qsort callback to sort the mount entries. Sort user mounts ahead of system mounts to the same POSIX path. */ /* FIXME: should the user should be able to choose whether to prefer user or system mounts??? */ static int sort_by_posix_name (const void *a, const void *b) { mount_item *ap = mounts_for_sort + (*((int*) a)); mount_item *bp = mounts_for_sort + (*((int*) b)); /* Base weighting on longest posix path first so that the most obvious path will be chosen. */ size_t alen = strlen (ap->posix_path); size_t blen = strlen (bp->posix_path); int res = blen - alen; if (res) return res; /* Path lengths differed */ /* The two paths were the same length, so just determine normal lexical sorted order. */ res = strcmp (ap->posix_path, bp->posix_path); if (res == 0) { /* need to select between user and system mount to same POSIX path */ if ((bp->flags & MOUNT_SYSTEM) == 0) /* user mount */ return 1; else return -1; } return res; } /* sort_by_native_name: qsort callback to sort the mount entries. Sort user mounts ahead of system mounts to the same POSIX path. */ /* FIXME: should the user should be able to choose whether to prefer user or system mounts??? */ static int sort_by_native_name (const void *a, const void *b) { mount_item *ap = mounts_for_sort + (*((int*) a)); mount_item *bp = mounts_for_sort + (*((int*) b)); /* Base weighting on longest win32 path first so that the most obvious path will be chosen. */ size_t alen = strlen (ap->native_path); size_t blen = strlen (bp->native_path); int res = blen - alen; if (res) return res; /* Path lengths differed */ /* The two paths were the same length, so just determine normal lexical sorted order. */ res = strcmp (ap->native_path, bp->native_path); if (res == 0) { /* need to select between user and system mount to same POSIX path */ if ((bp->flags & MOUNT_SYSTEM) == 0) /* user mount */ return 1; else return -1; } return res; } void mount_info::sort () { for (int i = 0; i < nmounts; i++) native_sorted[i] = posix_sorted[i] = i; /* Sort them into reverse length order, otherwise we won't be able to look for /foo in /. */ mounts_for_sort = mount; /* ouch. */ qsort (posix_sorted, nmounts, sizeof (posix_sorted[0]), sort_by_posix_name); qsort (native_sorted, nmounts, sizeof (native_sorted[0]), sort_by_native_name); } /* Add an entry to the mount table. Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure and errno is set. This is where all argument validation is done. It may not make sense to do this when called internally, but it's cleaner to keep it all here. */ int mount_info::add_item (const char *native, const char *posix, unsigned mountflags, int reg_p) { /* Something's wrong if either path is NULL or empty, or if it's not a UNC or absolute path. */ if ((native == NULL) || (*native == 0) || (posix == NULL) || (*posix == 0) || (!slash_unc_prefix_p (native) && !isabspath (native))) { set_errno (EINVAL); return -1; } /* Make sure both paths do not end in /. */ char nativetmp[MAX_PATH]; char posixtmp[MAX_PATH]; if (slash_drive_prefix_p (native)) slash_drive_to_win32_path (native, nativetmp, 0); else backslashify (native, nativetmp, 0); nofinalslash (nativetmp, nativetmp); slashify (posix, posixtmp, 0); nofinalslash (posixtmp, posixtmp); debug_printf ("%s[%s], %s[%s], %p", native, nativetmp, posix, posixtmp, mountflags); /* Duplicate /'s in path are an error. */ for (char *p = posixtmp + 1; *p; ++p) { if (p[-1] == '/' && p[0] == '/') { set_errno (EINVAL); return -1; } } /* Write over an existing mount item with the same POSIX path if it exists and is from the same registry area. */ int i; for (i = 0; i < nmounts; i++) { if (strcasematch (mount[i].posix_path, posixtmp) && (mount[i].flags & MOUNT_SYSTEM) == (mountflags & MOUNT_SYSTEM)) break; } if (i == nmounts) { if (nmounts < MAX_MOUNTS) i = nmounts++; else { set_errno (EMFILE); return -1; } } if (reg_p && add_reg_mount (nativetmp, posixtmp, mountflags)) return -1; mount[i].init (nativetmp, posixtmp, mountflags); sort (); return 0; } /* Delete a mount table entry where path is either a Win32 or POSIX path. Since the mount table is really just a table of aliases, deleting / is ok (although running without a slash mount is strongly discouraged because some programs may run erratically without one). If MOUNT_SYSTEM is set in flags, remove from system registry, otherwise remove the user registry mount. */ int mount_info::del_item (const char *path, unsigned flags, int reg_p) { char pathtmp[MAX_PATH]; int posix_path_p = FALSE; /* Something's wrong if path is NULL or empty. */ if (path == NULL || *path == 0 || !isabspath (path)) { set_errno (EINVAL); return -1; } if (slash_drive_prefix_p (path)) slash_drive_to_win32_path (path, pathtmp, 0); else if (slash_unc_prefix_p (path) || strpbrk (path, ":\\")) backslashify (path, pathtmp, 0); else { slashify (path, pathtmp, 0); posix_path_p = TRUE; } nofinalslash (pathtmp, pathtmp); if (reg_p && posix_path_p && del_reg_mount (pathtmp, flags) && del_reg_mount (path, flags)) /* for old irregular entries */ return -1; for (int i = 0; i < nmounts; i++) { int ent = native_sorted[i]; /* in the same order as getmntent() */ if (((posix_path_p) ? strcasematch (mount[ent].posix_path, pathtmp) : strcasematch (mount[ent].native_path, pathtmp)) && (mount[ent].flags & MOUNT_SYSTEM) == (flags & MOUNT_SYSTEM)) { if (!posix_path_p && reg_p && del_reg_mount (mount[ent].posix_path, flags)) return -1; nmounts--; /* One less mount table entry */ /* Fill in the hole if not at the end of the table */ if (ent < nmounts) memmove (mount + ent, mount + ent + 1, sizeof (mount[ent]) * (nmounts - ent)); sort (); /* Resort the table */ return 0; } } set_errno (EINVAL); return -1; } /* read_v1_mounts: Given a reg_key to an old mount table registry area, read in the mounts. The "which" arg contains zero if we're reading the user area and MOUNT_SYSTEM if we're reading the system area. This way we can store the mounts read in the appropriate place when they are written back to the new registry layout. */ void mount_info::read_v1_mounts (reg_key r, unsigned which) { unsigned mountflags = 0; /* MAX_MOUNTS was 30 when we stopped using the v1 layout */ for (int i = 0; i < 30; i++) { char key_name[10]; char win32path[MAX_PATH]; char unixpath[MAX_PATH]; __small_sprintf (key_name, "%02x", i); reg_key k (r.get_key (), KEY_ALL_ACCESS, key_name, NULL); /* The registry names are historical but useful so are left alone. */ k.get_string ("native", win32path, sizeof (win32path), ""); k.get_string ("unix", unixpath, sizeof (unixpath), ""); /* Does this entry contain something? */ if (*win32path != 0) { mountflags = 0; if (k.get_int ("fbinary", 0)) mountflags |= MOUNT_BINARY; /* Or in zero or MOUNT_SYSTEM depending on which table we're reading. */ mountflags |= which; int res = cygwin_shared->mount.add_item (win32path, unixpath, mountflags, TRUE); if (res && get_errno () == EMFILE) break; /* The number of entries exceeds MAX_MOUNTS */ } } } /* import_v1_mounts: If v1 mounts are present, load them and write the new entries to the new registry area. */ void mount_info::import_v1_mounts () { reg_key r (HKEY_CURRENT_USER, KEY_ALL_ACCESS, "SOFTWARE", "Cygnus Solutions", "CYGWIN.DLL setup", "b15.0", "mounts", NULL); nmounts = 0; /* First read mounts from user's table. */ read_v1_mounts (r, 0); /* Then read mounts from system-wide mount table. */ reg_key r1 (HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, KEY_ALL_ACCESS, "SOFTWARE", "Cygnus Solutions", "CYGWIN.DLL setup", "b15.0", "mounts", NULL); read_v1_mounts (r1, MOUNT_SYSTEM); } /************************* mount_item class ****************************/ struct mntent * mount_item::getmntent () { #ifdef _MT_SAFE struct mntent &ret=_reent_winsup()->_ret; #else static NO_COPY struct mntent ret; #endif /* Pass back pointers to mount_info strings reserved for use by getmntent rather than pointers to strings in the internal mount table because the mount table might change, causing weird effects from the getmntent user's point of view. */ strcpy (cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_fsname, native_path); ret.mnt_fsname = cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_fsname; strcpy (cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_dir, posix_path); ret.mnt_dir = cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_dir; if (!(flags & MOUNT_SYSTEM)) /* user mount */ strcpy (cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_type, (char *) "user"); else /* system mount */ strcpy (cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_type, (char *) "system"); if ((flags & MOUNT_AUTO)) /* cygdrive */ strcat (cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_type, (char *) ",auto"); ret.mnt_type = cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_type; /* mnt_opts is a string that details mount params such as binary or textmode, or exec. We don't print `silent' here; it's a magic internal thing. */ if (! (flags & MOUNT_BINARY)) strcpy (cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_opts, (char *) "textmode"); else strcpy (cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_opts, (char *) "binmode"); if (flags & MOUNT_CYGWIN_EXEC) strcat (cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_opts, (char *) ",cygexec"); else if (flags & MOUNT_EXEC) strcat (cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_opts, (char *) ",exec"); ret.mnt_opts = cygwin_shared->mount.mnt_opts; ret.mnt_freq = 1; ret.mnt_passno = 1; return &ret; } /* Fill in the fields of a mount table entry. */ void mount_item::init (const char *native, const char *posix, unsigned mountflags) { strcpy ((char *) native_path, native); strcpy ((char *) posix_path, posix); native_pathlen = strlen (native_path); posix_pathlen = strlen (posix_path); flags = mountflags; } /********************** Mount System Calls **************************/ /* Mount table system calls. Note that these are exported to the application. */ /* mount: Add a mount to the mount table in memory and to the registry that will cause paths under win32_path to be translated to paths under posix_path. */ extern "C" int mount (const char *win32_path, const char *posix_path, unsigned flags) { int res = -1; if (flags & MOUNT_AUTO) /* normal mount */ { /* When flags include MOUNT_AUTO, take this to mean that we actually want to change the cygdrive prefix and flags without actually mounting anything. */ res = cygwin_shared->mount.write_cygdrive_info_to_registry (posix_path, flags); win32_path = NULL; } else { if (iscygdrive (posix_path)) { set_errno (EINVAL); return res; /* Don't try to add cygdrive prefix. */ } res = cygwin_shared->mount.add_item (win32_path, posix_path, flags, TRUE); } syscall_printf ("%d = mount (%s, %s, %p)", res, win32_path, posix_path, flags); return res; } /* umount: The standard umount call only has a path parameter. Since it is not possible for this call to specify whether to remove the mount from the user or global mount registry table, assume the user table. */ extern "C" int umount (const char *path) { return cygwin_umount (path, 0); } /* cygwin_umount: This is like umount but takes an additional flags parameter that specifies whether to umount from the user or system-wide registry area. */ extern "C" int cygwin_umount (const char *path, unsigned flags) { int res = cygwin_shared->mount.del_item (path, flags, TRUE); syscall_printf ("%d = cygwin_umount (%s, %d)", res, path, flags); return res; } #ifdef _MT_SAFE #define iteration _reent_winsup()->_iteration #else static int iteration; #endif extern "C" FILE * setmntent (const char *filep, const char *) { iteration = 0; return (FILE *) filep; } extern "C" struct mntent * getmntent (FILE *) { return cygwin_shared->mount.getmntent (iteration++); } extern "C" int endmntent (FILE *) { return 1; } /********************** Symbolic Link Support **************************/ /* Create a symlink from FROMPATH to TOPATH. */ extern "C" int symlink (const char *topath, const char *frompath) { HANDLE h; int res = -1; path_conv win32_path (frompath, SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW); if (win32_path.error) { set_errno (win32_path.error); goto done; } syscall_printf ("symlink (%s, %s)", topath, win32_path.get_win32 ()); if (topath[0] == 0) { set_errno (EINVAL); goto done; } if (strlen (topath) >= MAX_PATH) { set_errno (ENAMETOOLONG); goto done; } if (win32_path.is_device () || win32_path.file_attributes () != (DWORD) -1) { set_errno (EEXIST); goto done; } h = CreateFileA(win32_path.get_win32 (), GENERIC_WRITE, 0, &sec_none_nih, CREATE_NEW, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, 0); if (h == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) __seterrno (); else { char buf[sizeof (SYMLINK_COOKIE) + MAX_PATH + 10]; __small_sprintf (buf, "%s%s", SYMLINK_COOKIE, topath); DWORD len = strlen (buf) + 1; /* Note that the terminating nul is written. */ DWORD written; if (!WriteFile (h, buf, len, &written, NULL) || written != len) { __seterrno (); CloseHandle (h); DeleteFileA (win32_path.get_win32 ()); } else { CloseHandle (h); set_file_attribute (win32_path.has_acls (), win32_path.get_win32 (), S_IFLNK | S_IRWXU | S_IRWXG | S_IRWXO); SetFileAttributesA (win32_path.get_win32 (), FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SYSTEM); res = 0; } } done: syscall_printf ("%d = symlink (%s, %s)", res, topath, frompath); return res; } static __inline char * has_suffix (const char *path, const suffix_info *suffixes) { char *ext = strrchr (path, '.'); if (ext) for (const suffix_info *ex = suffixes; ex->name != NULL; ex++) if (strcasematch (ext, ex->name)) return ext; return NULL; } static __inline__ int next_suffix (char *ext_here, const suffix_info *&suffixes) { if (!suffixes) return 1; while (suffixes && suffixes->name) if (!suffixes->addon) suffixes++; else { strcpy (ext_here, suffixes->name); suffixes++; return 1; } return 0; } /* Check if PATH is a symlink. PATH must be a valid Win32 path name. If PATH is a symlink, put the value of the symlink--the file to which it points--into BUF. The value stored in BUF is not necessarily null terminated. BUFLEN is the length of BUF; only up to BUFLEN characters will be stored in BUF. BUF may be NULL, in which case nothing will be stored. Set *SYML if PATH is a symlink. Set *EXEC if PATH appears to be executable. This is an efficiency hack because we sometimes have to open the file anyhow. *EXEC will not be set for every executable file. Return -1 on error, 0 if PATH is not a symlink, or the length stored into BUF if PATH is a symlink. */ int symlink_info::check (const char *in_path, const suffix_info *suffixes) { HANDLE h; int res = 0; char extbuf[MAX_PATH + 5]; const char *path = in_path; if (!suffixes) ext_here = NULL; else if ((known_suffix = has_suffix (in_path, suffixes)) != NULL) { suffixes = NULL; ext_here = NULL; } else { path = strcpy (extbuf, in_path); ext_here = strchr (path, '\0'); } is_symlink = TRUE; do { if (!next_suffix (ext_here, suffixes)) break; fileattr = GetFileAttributesA (path); if (fileattr == (DWORD) -1) { /* The GetFileAttributesA call can fail for reasons that don't matter, so we just return 0. For example, getting the attributes of \\HOST will typically fail. */ debug_printf ("GetFileAttributesA (%s) failed", path); __seterrno (); continue; } /* Windows allows path\. even when `path' isn't a directory. Detect this scenario and disallow it, since it is non-UNIX like. */ char *p = strchr (path, '\0'); if (p > path + 1 && p[-1] == '.' && SLASH_P (p[-2]) && !(fileattr & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY)) { debug_printf ("\\. specified on non-directory"); set_errno (ENOTDIR); return 0; } /* A symlink will have the `system' file attribute. */ /* Only files can be symlinks (which can be symlinks to directories). */ if (!(pflags & PATH_SYMLINK) && !SYMLINKATTR (fileattr)) goto file_not_symlink; /* Open the file. */ h = CreateFileA (path, GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_READ, &sec_none_nih, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, 0); res = -1; if (h == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) goto file_not_symlink; else { char cookie_buf[sizeof (SYMLINK_COOKIE) - 1]; DWORD got; if (! ReadFile (h, cookie_buf, sizeof (cookie_buf), &got, 0)) set_errno (EIO); else if (got == sizeof (cookie_buf) && memcmp (cookie_buf, SYMLINK_COOKIE, sizeof (cookie_buf)) == 0) { /* It's a symlink. */ pflags = PATH_SYMLINK; res = ReadFile (h, contents, MAX_PATH + 1, &got, 0); if (!res) set_errno (EIO); else { /* Versions prior to b16 stored several trailing NULs with the path (to fill the path out to 1024 chars). Current versions only store one trailing NUL. The length returned is the path without *any* trailing NULs. We also have to handle (or at least not die from) corrupted paths. */ if (memchr (contents, 0, got) != NULL) res = strlen (contents); else res = got; } } else if (got == sizeof (cookie_buf) && memcmp (cookie_buf, SOCKET_COOKIE, sizeof (cookie_buf)) == 0) { pflags |= PATH_SOCKET; goto close_and_return; } else { /* Not a symlink, see if executable. */ if (!(pflags & (PATH_EXEC | PATH_CYGWIN_EXEC)) && got >= 2 && ((cookie_buf[0] == '#' && cookie_buf[1] == '!') || (cookie_buf[0] == ':' && cookie_buf[1] == '\n'))) pflags |= PATH_EXEC; close_and_return: CloseHandle (h); goto file_not_symlink; } } CloseHandle (h); break; } while (suffixes); goto out; file_not_symlink: set_errno (EINVAL); is_symlink = FALSE; syscall_printf ("not a symlink"); res = 0; out: syscall_printf ("%d = symlink.check (%s, %p) (%p)", res, path, contents, pflags); return res; } /* readlink system call */ extern "C" int readlink (const char *path, char *buf, int buflen) { extern suffix_info stat_suffixes[]; path_conv pathbuf (path, SYMLINK_CONTENTS, 0, stat_suffixes); if (pathbuf.error) { set_errno (pathbuf.error); syscall_printf ("-1 = readlink (%s, %p, %d)", path, buf, buflen); return -1; } if (!pathbuf.issymlink ()) { if (pathbuf.fileattr != (DWORD) -1) set_errno (EINVAL); return -1; } int len = strlen (pathbuf.get_win32 ()); if (len > (buflen - 1)) { set_errno (ENAMETOOLONG); return -1; } memcpy (buf, pathbuf.get_win32 (), len); buf[len] = '\0'; /* errno set by symlink.check if error */ return len; } /* Some programs rely on st_dev/st_ino being unique for each file. Hash the path name and hope for the best. The hash arg is not always initialized to zero since readdir needs to compute the dirent ino_t based on a combination of the hash of the directory done during the opendir call and the hash or the filename within the directory. FIXME: Not bullet-proof. */ /* Cygwin internal */ unsigned long __stdcall hash_path_name (unsigned long hash, const char *name) { if (!*name) return hash; /* Perform some initial permutations on the pathname if this is not "seeded" */ if (!hash) { /* Simplistic handling of drives. If there is a drive specified, make sure that the initial letter is upper case. If there is no \ after the ':' assume access through the root directory of that drive. FIXME: Should really honor MS-Windows convention of using the environment to track current directory on various drives. */ if (name[1] == ':') { char *nn, *newname = (char *) alloca (strlen (name) + 2); nn = strncpy (newname, name, 2); if (islower (*nn)) *newname = toupper (*nn); *(nn += 2) = '\0'; name += 2; if (*name != '\\') { *nn = '\\'; *++nn = '\0'; } strcpy (nn, name); name = newname; goto hashit; } /* Fill out the hashed path name with the current working directory if this is not an absolute path and there is no pre-specified hash value. Otherwise the inodes same will differ depending on whether a file is referenced with an absolute value or relatively. */ if (*name != '\\' && (cwd_win32 == NULL || get_cwd_win32 ())) { hash = cwd_hash; if (name[0] == '.' && name[1] == '\0') return hash; hash = hash_path_name (hash, "\\"); } } hashit: /* Build up hash. Ignore single trailing slash or \a\b\ != \a\b or \a\b\. but allow a single \ if that's all there is. */ do { hash += *name + (*name << 17); hash ^= hash >> 2; } while (*++name != '\0' && !(*name == '\\' && (!name[1] || (name[1] == '.' && !name[2])))); return hash; } static int get_cwd_win32 () { DWORD dlen, len; for (dlen = 256; ; dlen *= 2) { cwd_win32 = (char *) realloc (cwd_win32, dlen + 2); if ((len = GetCurrentDirectoryA (dlen, cwd_win32)) < dlen) break; } if (len == 0) __seterrno (); else cwd_hash = hash_path_name (0, cwd_win32); return len; } /* getcwd */ char * getcwd_inner (char *buf, size_t ulen, int posix_p) { char *resbuf = NULL; size_t len = ulen; if (cwd_win32 == NULL && !get_cwd_win32 ()) return NULL; if (!posix_p) { if (strlen (cwd_win32) >= len) set_errno (ERANGE); else { strcpy (buf, cwd_win32); resbuf = buf; } syscall_printf ("%p (%s) = getcwd_inner (%p, %d, win32) (cached)", resbuf, resbuf ? resbuf : "", buf, len); return resbuf; } else if (cwd_posix != NULL) { if (strlen (cwd_posix) >= len) set_errno (ERANGE); else { strcpy (buf, cwd_posix); resbuf = buf; } syscall_printf ("%p (%s) = getcwd_inner (%p, %d, posix) (cached)", resbuf, resbuf ? resbuf : "", buf, len); return resbuf; } /* posix_p required and cwd_posix == NULL */ char temp[MAX_PATH]; /* Turn from Win32 style to our style. */ cygwin_shared->mount.conv_to_posix_path (cwd_win32, temp, 0); size_t tlen = strlen (temp); cwd_posix = (char *) realloc ( cwd_posix, tlen + 1); if (cwd_posix != NULL) strcpy (cwd_posix, temp); if (tlen >= ulen) { /* len was too small */ set_errno (ERANGE); } else { strcpy (buf, temp); resbuf = buf; } syscall_printf ("%p (%s) = getcwd_inner (%p, %d, %s)", resbuf, resbuf ? resbuf : "", buf, len, posix_p ? "posix" : "win32"); return resbuf; } char * getcwd (char *buf, size_t ulen) { char *res; if (buf == NULL || ulen == 0) { buf = (char *) alloca (MAX_PATH); res = getcwd_inner (buf, MAX_PATH, 1); res = strdup (buf); } else { res = getcwd_inner (buf, ulen, 1); } return res; } /* getwd: standards? */ extern "C" char * getwd (char *buf) { return getcwd (buf, MAX_PATH); } /* chdir: POSIX 5.2.1.1 */ extern "C" int chdir (const char *dir) { syscall_printf ("dir %s", dir); path_conv path (dir); if (path.error) { set_errno (path.error); syscall_printf ("-1 = chdir (%s)", dir); return -1; } char *native_dir = path.get_win32 (); /* Check to see if path translates to something like C:. If it does, append a \ to the native directory specification to defeat the Windows 95 (i.e. MS-DOS) tendency of returning to the last directory visited on the given drive. */ if (isdrive (native_dir) && !native_dir[2]) { native_dir[2] = '\\'; native_dir[3] = '\0'; } int res = SetCurrentDirectoryA (native_dir) ? 0 : -1; if (res == -1) __seterrno (); else { /* Store new cache information */ free (cwd_win32); cwd_win32 = strdup (path); char pathbuf[MAX_PATH]; (void) normalize_posix_path (cwd_posix, dir, pathbuf); free (cwd_posix); cwd_posix = strdup (pathbuf); } syscall_printf ("%d = chdir() cwd_posix '%s' native '%s'", res, cwd_posix, native_dir); return res; } /******************** Exported Path Routines *********************/ /* Cover functions to the path conversion routines. These are exported to the world as cygwin_foo by cygwin.din. */ extern "C" int cygwin_conv_to_win32_path (const char *path, char *win32_path) { path_conv p (path, SYMLINK_FOLLOW, 0); if (p.error) { set_errno (p.error); return -1; } strcpy (win32_path, p.get_win32 ()); return 0; } extern "C" int cygwin_conv_to_full_win32_path (const char *path, char *win32_path) { path_conv p (path, SYMLINK_FOLLOW, 1); if (p.error) { set_errno (p.error); return -1; } strcpy (win32_path, p.get_win32 ()); return 0; } /* This is exported to the world as cygwin_foo by cygwin.din. */ extern "C" int cygwin_conv_to_posix_path (const char *path, char *posix_path) { if (check_null_empty_path_errno (path)) return -1; cygwin_shared->mount.conv_to_posix_path (path, posix_path, 1); return 0; } extern "C" int cygwin_conv_to_full_posix_path (const char *path, char *posix_path) { if (check_null_empty_path_errno (path)) return -1; cygwin_shared->mount.conv_to_posix_path (path, posix_path, 0); return 0; } /* The realpath function is supported on some UNIX systems. */ extern "C" char * realpath (const char *path, char *resolved) { int err; path_conv real_path (path, SYMLINK_FOLLOW, 1); if (real_path.error) err = real_path.error; else { err = cygwin_shared->mount.conv_to_posix_path (real_path.get_win32 (), resolved, 0); if (err == 0) return resolved; } /* FIXME: on error, we are supposed to put the name of the path component which could not be resolved into RESOLVED. */ resolved[0] = '\0'; set_errno (err); return NULL; } /* Return non-zero if path is a POSIX path list. This is exported to the world as cygwin_foo by cygwin.din. DOCTOOL-START Rather than use a mode to say what the "proper" path list format is, we allow any, and give apps the tools they need to convert between the two. If a ';' is present in the path list it's a Win32 path list. Otherwise, if the first path begins with [letter]: (in which case it can be the only element since if it wasn't a ';' would be present) it's a Win32 path list. Otherwise, it's a POSIX path list. DOCTOOL-END */ extern "C" int cygwin_posix_path_list_p (const char *path) { int posix_p = ! (strchr (path, ';') || isdrive (path)); return posix_p; } /* These are used for apps that need to convert env vars like PATH back and forth. The conversion is a two step process. First, an upper bound on the size of the buffer needed is computed. Then the conversion is done. This allows the caller to use alloca if it wants. */ static int conv_path_list_buf_size (const char *path_list, int to_posix_p) { int i, num_elms, max_mount_path_len, size; const char *p; /* The theory is that an upper bound is current_size + (num_elms * max_mount_path_len) */ char delim = to_posix_p ? ';' : ':'; p = path_list; for (num_elms = 1; (p = strchr (p, delim)) != NULL; ++num_elms) ++p; /* 7: strlen ("//c") + slop, a conservative initial value */ for (max_mount_path_len = 7, i = 0; i < cygwin_shared->mount.nmounts; ++i) { int mount_len = (to_posix_p ? cygwin_shared->mount.mount[i].posix_pathlen : cygwin_shared->mount.mount[i].native_pathlen); if (max_mount_path_len < mount_len) max_mount_path_len = mount_len; } /* 100: slop */ size = strlen (path_list) + (num_elms * max_mount_path_len) + 100; return size; } extern "C" int cygwin_win32_to_posix_path_list_buf_size (const char *path_list) { return conv_path_list_buf_size (path_list, 1); } extern "C" int cygwin_posix_to_win32_path_list_buf_size (const char *path_list) { return conv_path_list_buf_size (path_list, 0); } extern "C" int cygwin_win32_to_posix_path_list (const char *win32, char *posix) { conv_path_list (win32, posix, 1); return 0; } extern "C" int cygwin_posix_to_win32_path_list (const char *posix, char *win32) { conv_path_list (posix, win32, 0); return 0; } /* cygwin_split_path: Split a path into directory and file name parts. Buffers DIR and FILE are assumed to be big enough. Examples (path -> `dir' / `file'): / -> `/' / `' "" -> `.' / `' . -> `.' / `.' (FIXME: should this be `.' / `'?) .. -> `.' / `..' (FIXME: should this be `..' / `'?) foo -> `.' / `foo' foo/bar -> `foo' / `bar' foo/bar/ -> `foo' / `bar' /foo -> `/' / `foo' /foo/bar -> `/foo' / `bar' c: -> `c:/' / `' c:/ -> `c:/' / `' c:foo -> `c:/' / `foo' c:/foo -> `c:/' / `foo' */ extern "C" void cygwin_split_path (const char *path, char *dir, char *file) { int dir_started_p = 0; /* Deal with drives. Remember that c:foo <==> c:/foo. */ if (isdrive (path)) { *dir++ = *path++; *dir++ = *path++; *dir++ = '/'; if (! *path) { *dir = 0; *file = 0; return; } if (SLASH_P (*path)) ++path; dir_started_p = 1; } /* Determine if there are trailing slashes and "delete" them if present. We pretend as if they don't exist. */ const char *end = path + strlen (path); /* path + 1: keep leading slash. */ while (end > path + 1 && SLASH_P (end[-1])) --end; /* At this point, END points to one beyond the last character (with trailing slashes "deleted"). */ /* Point LAST_SLASH at the last slash (duh...). */ const char *last_slash; for (last_slash = end - 1; last_slash >= path; --last_slash) if (SLASH_P (*last_slash)) break; if (last_slash == path) { *dir++ = '/'; *dir = 0; } else if (last_slash > path) { memcpy (dir, path, last_slash - path); dir[last_slash - path] = 0; } else { if (dir_started_p) ; /* nothing to do */ else *dir++ = '.'; *dir = 0; } memcpy (file, last_slash + 1, end - last_slash - 1); file[end - last_slash - 1] = 0; } /********************** String Helper Functions ************************/ #define CHXOR ('a' ^ 'A') #define ch_case_eq(ch1, ch2) \ ({ \ unsigned char x; \ !((x = ((unsigned char)ch1 ^ (unsigned char)ch2)) && \ (x != CHXOR || !isalpha (ch1))); \ }) /* Return TRUE if two strings match up to length n */ int __stdcall strncasematch (const char *s1, const char *s2, size_t n) { if (s1 == s2) return 1; n++; while (--n && *s1) { if (!ch_case_eq (*s1, *s2)) return 0; s1++; s2++; } return !n || *s2 == '\0'; } /* Return TRUE if two strings match */ int __stdcall strcasematch (const char *s1, const char *s2) { if (s1 == s2) return 1; while (*s1) { if (!ch_case_eq (*s1, *s2)) return 0; s1++; s2++; } return *s2 == '\0'; } char * __stdcall strcasestr (const char *searchee, const char *lookfor) { if (*searchee == 0) { if (*lookfor) return NULL; return (char *) searchee; } while (*searchee) { int i = 0; while (1) { if (lookfor[i] == 0) return (char *) searchee; if (!ch_case_eq (lookfor[i], searchee[i])) break; lookfor++; } searchee++; } return NULL; }