newlib-cygwin/winsup/cygwin/fhandler_disk_file.cc

2479 lines
73 KiB
C++

/* fhandler_disk_file.cc
Copyright 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,
2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 Red Hat, Inc.
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. */
#include "winsup.h"
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/acl.h>
#include <sys/statvfs.h>
#include "cygerrno.h"
#include "security.h"
#include "path.h"
#include "fhandler.h"
#include "dtable.h"
#include "cygheap.h"
#include "shared_info.h"
#include "pinfo.h"
#include "ntdll.h"
#include "tls_pbuf.h"
#include "pwdgrp.h"
#include <winioctl.h>
#define _COMPILING_NEWLIB
#include <dirent.h>
class __DIR_mounts
{
int count;
const char *parent_dir;
int parent_dir_len;
UNICODE_STRING mounts[MAX_MOUNTS];
bool found[MAX_MOUNTS + 2];
UNICODE_STRING cygdrive;
#define __DIR_PROC (MAX_MOUNTS)
#define __DIR_CYGDRIVE (MAX_MOUNTS+1)
__ino64_t eval_ino (int idx)
{
__ino64_t ino = 0;
char fname[parent_dir_len + mounts[idx].Length + 2];
struct __stat64 st;
char *c = stpcpy (fname, parent_dir);
if (c[- 1] != '/')
*c++ = '/';
sys_wcstombs (c, mounts[idx].Length + 1,
mounts[idx].Buffer, mounts[idx].Length / sizeof (WCHAR));
path_conv pc (fname, PC_SYM_NOFOLLOW | PC_POSIX | PC_KEEP_HANDLE);
if (!stat_worker (pc, &st))
ino = st.st_ino;
return ino;
}
public:
__DIR_mounts (const char *posix_path)
: parent_dir (posix_path)
{
parent_dir_len = strlen (parent_dir);
count = mount_table->get_mounts_here (parent_dir, parent_dir_len, mounts,
&cygdrive);
rewind ();
}
~__DIR_mounts ()
{
for (int i = 0; i < count; ++i)
RtlFreeUnicodeString (&mounts[i]);
RtlFreeUnicodeString (&cygdrive);
}
__ino64_t check_mount (PUNICODE_STRING fname, __ino64_t ino,
bool eval = true)
{
if (parent_dir_len == 1) /* root dir */
{
if (RtlEqualUnicodeString (fname, &ro_u_proc, FALSE))
{
found[__DIR_PROC] = true;
return 2;
}
if (fname->Length / sizeof (WCHAR) == mount_table->cygdrive_len - 2
&& RtlEqualUnicodeString (fname, &cygdrive, FALSE))
{
found[__DIR_CYGDRIVE] = true;
return 2;
}
}
for (int i = 0; i < count; ++i)
if (RtlEqualUnicodeString (fname, &mounts[i], FALSE))
{
found[i] = true;
return eval ? eval_ino (i) : 1;
}
return ino;
}
__ino64_t check_missing_mount (PUNICODE_STRING retname = NULL)
{
for (int i = 0; i < count; ++i)
if (!found[i])
{
found[i] = true;
if (retname)
{
*retname = mounts[i];
return eval_ino (i);
}
return 1;
}
if (parent_dir_len == 1) /* root dir */
{
if (!found[__DIR_PROC])
{
found[__DIR_PROC] = true;
if (retname)
*retname = ro_u_proc;
return 2;
}
if (!found[__DIR_CYGDRIVE])
{
found[__DIR_CYGDRIVE] = true;
if (cygdrive.Length > 0)
{
if (retname)
*retname = cygdrive;
return 2;
}
}
}
return 0;
}
void rewind () { memset (found, 0, sizeof found); }
};
inline bool
path_conv::isgood_inode (__ino64_t ino) const
{
/* We can't trust remote inode numbers of only 32 bit. That means,
remote NT4 NTFS, as well as shares of Samba version < 3.0.
The known exception are SFU NFS shares, which return the valid 32 bit
inode number from the remote file system unchanged. */
return hasgood_inode () && (ino > UINT32_MAX || !isremote () || fs_is_nfs ());
}
/* Check reparse point for type. IO_REPARSE_TAG_MOUNT_POINT types are
either volume mount points, which are treated as directories, or they
are directory mount points, which are treated as symlinks.
IO_REPARSE_TAG_SYMLINK types are always symlinks. We don't know
anything about other reparse points, so they are treated as unknown. */
static inline int
readdir_check_reparse_point (POBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr)
{
DWORD ret = DT_UNKNOWN;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
HANDLE reph;
UNICODE_STRING subst;
if (NT_SUCCESS (NtOpenFile (&reph, READ_CONTROL, attr, &io,
FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT
| FILE_OPEN_REPARSE_POINT)))
{
PREPARSE_DATA_BUFFER rp = (PREPARSE_DATA_BUFFER)
alloca (MAXIMUM_REPARSE_DATA_BUFFER_SIZE);
if (NT_SUCCESS (NtFsControlFile (reph, NULL, NULL, NULL,
&io, FSCTL_GET_REPARSE_POINT, NULL, 0,
(LPVOID) rp, MAXIMUM_REPARSE_DATA_BUFFER_SIZE)))
{
if (rp->ReparseTag == IO_REPARSE_TAG_MOUNT_POINT)
{
RtlInitCountedUnicodeString (&subst,
(WCHAR *)((char *)rp->MountPointReparseBuffer.PathBuffer
+ rp->MountPointReparseBuffer.SubstituteNameOffset),
rp->MountPointReparseBuffer.SubstituteNameLength);
/* Only volume mountpoints are treated as directories. */
if (RtlEqualUnicodePathPrefix (&subst, &ro_u_volume, TRUE))
ret = DT_DIR;
else
ret = DT_LNK;
}
else if (rp->ReparseTag == IO_REPARSE_TAG_SYMLINK)
ret = DT_LNK;
NtClose (reph);
}
}
return ret;
}
inline __ino64_t
path_conv::get_ino_by_handle (HANDLE hdl)
{
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
FILE_INTERNAL_INFORMATION fai;
if (NT_SUCCESS (NtQueryInformationFile (hdl, &io, &fai, sizeof fai,
FileInternalInformation))
&& isgood_inode (fai.FileId.QuadPart))
return fai.FileId.QuadPart;
return 0;
}
#if 0
/* This function is obsolete. We're keeping it in so we don't forget
that we already did all that at one point. */
unsigned __stdcall
path_conv::ndisk_links (DWORD nNumberOfLinks)
{
if (!isdir () || isremote ())
return nNumberOfLinks;
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
HANDLE fh;
if (!NT_SUCCESS (NtOpenFile (&fh, SYNCHRONIZE | FILE_LIST_DIRECTORY,
get_object_attr (attr, sec_none_nih),
&io, FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_SYNCHRONOUS_IO_NONALERT
| FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT
| FILE_DIRECTORY_FILE)))
return nNumberOfLinks;
unsigned count = 0;
bool first = true;
PFILE_BOTH_DIRECTORY_INFORMATION fdibuf = (PFILE_BOTH_DIRECTORY_INFORMATION)
alloca (65536);
__DIR_mounts *dir = new __DIR_mounts (normalized_path);
while (NT_SUCCESS (NtQueryDirectoryFile (fh, NULL, NULL, NULL, &io, fdibuf,
65536, FileBothDirectoryInformation,
FALSE, NULL, first)))
{
if (first)
{
first = false;
/* All directories have . and .. as their first entries.
If . is not present as first entry, we're on a drive's
root direcotry, which doesn't have these entries. */
if (fdibuf->FileNameLength != 2 || fdibuf->FileName[0] != L'.')
count = 2;
}
for (PFILE_BOTH_DIRECTORY_INFORMATION pfdi = fdibuf;
pfdi;
pfdi = (PFILE_BOTH_DIRECTORY_INFORMATION)
(pfdi->NextEntryOffset ? (PBYTE) pfdi + pfdi->NextEntryOffset
: NULL))
{
switch (pfdi->FileAttributes
& (FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY | FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT))
{
case FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY:
/* Just a directory */
++count;
break;
case FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY | FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT:
/* Volume mount point or symlink to directory */
{
UNICODE_STRING fname;
RtlInitCountedUnicodeString (&fname, pfdi->FileName,
pfdi->FileNameLength);
InitializeObjectAttributes (&attr, &fname,
objcaseinsensitive (), fh, NULL);
if (is_volume_mountpoint (&attr))
++count;
}
break;
default:
break;
}
UNICODE_STRING fname;
RtlInitCountedUnicodeString (&fname, pfdi->FileName,
pfdi->FileNameLength);
dir->check_mount (&fname, 0, false);
}
}
while (dir->check_missing_mount ())
++count;
NtClose (fh);
delete dir;
return count;
}
#endif
/* For files on NFS shares, we request an EA of type NfsV3Attributes.
This returns the content of a struct fattr3 as defined in RFC 1813.
The content is the NFS equivalent of struct stat. so there's not much
to do here except for copying. */
int __stdcall
fhandler_base::fstat_by_nfs_ea (struct __stat64 *buf)
{
fattr3 *nfs_attr = pc.nfsattr ();
if (get_io_handle ())
{
/* NFS stumbles over its own caching. If you write to the file,
a subsequent fstat does not return the actual size of the file,
but the size at the time the handle has been opened. Unless
access through another handle invalidates the caching within the
NFS client. */
if (get_access () & GENERIC_WRITE)
FlushFileBuffers (get_io_handle ());
nfs_fetch_fattr3 (get_io_handle (), nfs_attr);
}
buf->st_dev = nfs_attr->fsid;
buf->st_ino = nfs_attr->fileid;
buf->st_mode = (nfs_attr->mode & 0xfff)
| nfs_type_mapping[nfs_attr->type & 7];
buf->st_nlink = nfs_attr->nlink;
/* FIXME: How to convert UNIX uid/gid to Windows SIDs? */
#if 0
buf->st_uid = nfs_attr->uid;
buf->st_gid = nfs_attr->gid;
#else
buf->st_uid = myself->uid;
buf->st_gid = myself->gid;
#endif
buf->st_rdev = makedev (nfs_attr->rdev.specdata1,
nfs_attr->rdev.specdata2);
buf->st_size = nfs_attr->size;
buf->st_blksize = PREFERRED_IO_BLKSIZE;
buf->st_blocks = (nfs_attr->used + S_BLKSIZE - 1) / S_BLKSIZE;
buf->st_atim = nfs_attr->atime;
buf->st_mtim = nfs_attr->mtime;
buf->st_ctim = nfs_attr->ctime;
return 0;
}
int __stdcall
fhandler_base::fstat_by_handle (struct __stat64 *buf)
{
/* Don't use FileAllInformation info class. It returns a pathname rather
than a filename, so it needs a really big buffer for no good reason
since we don't need the name anyway. So we just call the three info
classes necessary to get all information required by stat(2). */
FILE_STANDARD_INFORMATION fsi;
FILE_INTERNAL_INFORMATION fii;
HANDLE h = get_stat_handle ();
NTSTATUS status = 0;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
/* If the file has been opened for other purposes than stat, we can't rely
on the information stored in pc.fnoi. So we overwrite them here. */
if (get_io_handle ())
{
PFILE_NETWORK_OPEN_INFORMATION pfnoi = pc.fnoi ();
status = NtQueryInformationFile (h, &io, pfnoi, sizeof *pfnoi,
FileNetworkOpenInformation);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
debug_printf ("%p = NtQueryInformationFile(%S, "
"FileNetworkOpenInformation)",
status, pc.get_nt_native_path ());
return -1;
}
}
if (!pc.hasgood_inode ())
fsi.NumberOfLinks = 1;
else
{
status = NtQueryInformationFile (h, &io, &fsi, sizeof fsi,
FileStandardInformation);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
debug_printf ("%p = NtQueryInformationFile(%S, "
"FileStandardInformation)",
status, pc.get_nt_native_path ());
return -1;
}
if (!ino)
{
status = NtQueryInformationFile (h, &io, &fii, sizeof fii,
FileInternalInformation);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
debug_printf ("%p = NtQueryInformationFile(%S, "
"FileInternalInformation)",
status, pc.get_nt_native_path ());
return -1;
}
else if (pc.isgood_inode (fii.FileId.QuadPart))
ino = fii.FileId.QuadPart;
}
}
return fstat_helper (buf, fsi.NumberOfLinks);
}
int __stdcall
fhandler_base::fstat_by_name (struct __stat64 *buf)
{
NTSTATUS status;
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
UNICODE_STRING dirname;
UNICODE_STRING basename;
HANDLE dir;
struct {
FILE_ID_BOTH_DIR_INFORMATION fdi;
WCHAR buf[NAME_MAX + 1];
} fdi_buf;
if (!ino && pc.hasgood_inode () && !pc.has_buggy_fileid_dirinfo ())
{
RtlSplitUnicodePath (pc.get_nt_native_path (), &dirname, &basename);
InitializeObjectAttributes (&attr, &dirname, pc.objcaseinsensitive (),
NULL, NULL);
status = NtOpenFile (&dir, SYNCHRONIZE | FILE_LIST_DIRECTORY,
&attr, &io, FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_SYNCHRONOUS_IO_NONALERT
| FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT
| FILE_DIRECTORY_FILE);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
debug_printf ("%p = NtOpenFile(%S)", status,
pc.get_nt_native_path ());
else
{
status = NtQueryDirectoryFile (dir, NULL, NULL, NULL, &io,
&fdi_buf.fdi, sizeof fdi_buf,
FileIdBothDirectoryInformation,
TRUE, &basename, TRUE);
NtClose (dir);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
debug_printf ("%p = NtQueryDirectoryFile(%S)", status,
pc.get_nt_native_path ());
else
ino = fdi_buf.fdi.FileId.QuadPart;
}
}
return fstat_helper (buf, 1);
}
int __stdcall
fhandler_base::fstat_fs (struct __stat64 *buf)
{
int res = -1;
int oret;
int open_flags = O_RDONLY | O_BINARY;
if (get_stat_handle ())
{
if (!nohandle () && !is_fs_special ())
res = pc.fs_is_nfs () ? fstat_by_nfs_ea (buf) : fstat_by_handle (buf);
if (res)
res = fstat_by_name (buf);
return res;
}
/* First try to open with generic read access. This allows to read the file
in fstat_helper (when checking for executability) without having to
re-open it. Opening a file can take a lot of time on network drives
so we try to avoid that. */
oret = open_fs (open_flags, 0);
if (!oret)
{
query_open (query_read_attributes);
oret = open_fs (open_flags, 0);
}
if (oret)
{
/* We now have a valid handle, regardless of the "nohandle" state.
Since fhandler_base::open only calls CloseHandle if !nohandle,
we have to set it to false before calling close and restore
the state afterwards. */
res = pc.fs_is_nfs () ? fstat_by_nfs_ea (buf) : fstat_by_handle (buf);
bool no_handle = nohandle ();
nohandle (false);
close_fs ();
nohandle (no_handle);
set_io_handle (NULL);
}
if (res)
res = fstat_by_name (buf);
return res;
}
int __stdcall
fhandler_base::fstat_helper (struct __stat64 *buf,
DWORD nNumberOfLinks)
{
IO_STATUS_BLOCK st;
FILE_COMPRESSION_INFORMATION fci;
HANDLE h = get_stat_handle ();
PFILE_NETWORK_OPEN_INFORMATION pfnoi = pc.fnoi ();
ULONG attributes = pc.file_attributes ();
to_timestruc_t ((PFILETIME) &pfnoi->LastAccessTime, &buf->st_atim);
to_timestruc_t ((PFILETIME) &pfnoi->LastWriteTime, &buf->st_mtim);
/* If the ChangeTime is 0, the underlying FS doesn't support this timestamp
(FAT for instance). If so, it's faked using LastWriteTime. */
to_timestruc_t (pfnoi->ChangeTime.QuadPart ? (PFILETIME) &pfnoi->ChangeTime
: (PFILETIME) &pfnoi->LastWriteTime,
&buf->st_ctim);
to_timestruc_t ((PFILETIME) &pfnoi->CreationTime, &buf->st_birthtim);
buf->st_rdev = buf->st_dev = get_dev ();
/* CV 2011-01-13: Observations on the Cygwin mailing list point to an
interesting behaviour in some Windows versions. Apparently the size of
a directory is computed at the time the directory is first scanned. This
can result in two subsequent NtQueryInformationFile calls to return size
0 in the first call and size > 0 in the second call. This in turn can
affect applications like newer tar.
FIXME: Is the allocation size affected as well? */
buf->st_size = pc.isdir () ? 0 : (_off64_t) pfnoi->EndOfFile.QuadPart;
/* The number of links to a directory includes the number of subdirectories
in the directory, since all those subdirectories point to it. However,
this is painfully slow, so we do without it. */
#if 0
buf->st_nlink = pc.ndisk_links (nNumberOfLinks);
#else
buf->st_nlink = nNumberOfLinks;
#endif
/* Enforce namehash as inode number on untrusted file systems. */
if (ino && pc.isgood_inode (ino))
buf->st_ino = (__ino64_t) ino;
else
buf->st_ino = get_ino ();
buf->st_blksize = PREFERRED_IO_BLKSIZE;
if (pfnoi->AllocationSize.QuadPart >= 0LL)
/* A successful NtQueryInformationFile returns the allocation size
correctly for compressed and sparse files as well. */
buf->st_blocks = (pfnoi->AllocationSize.QuadPart + S_BLKSIZE - 1)
/ S_BLKSIZE;
else if (::has_attribute (attributes, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_COMPRESSED
| FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SPARSE_FILE)
&& h && !is_fs_special ()
&& !NtQueryInformationFile (h, &st, (PVOID) &fci, sizeof fci,
FileCompressionInformation))
/* Otherwise we request the actual amount of bytes allocated for
compressed and sparsed files. */
buf->st_blocks = (fci.CompressedFileSize.QuadPart + S_BLKSIZE - 1)
/ S_BLKSIZE;
else
/* Otherwise compute no. of blocks from file size. */
buf->st_blocks = (buf->st_size + S_BLKSIZE - 1) / S_BLKSIZE;
buf->st_mode = 0;
/* Using a side effect: get_file_attributes checks for directory.
This is used, to set S_ISVTX, if needed. */
if (pc.isdir ())
buf->st_mode = S_IFDIR;
else if (pc.issymlink ())
{
buf->st_size = pc.get_symlink_length ();
/* symlinks are everything for everyone! */
buf->st_mode = S_IFLNK | S_IRWXU | S_IRWXG | S_IRWXO;
get_file_attribute (h, pc, NULL,
&buf->st_uid, &buf->st_gid);
goto done;
}
else if (pc.issocket ())
buf->st_mode = S_IFSOCK;
if (!get_file_attribute (is_fs_special () && !pc.issocket () ? NULL : h, pc,
&buf->st_mode, &buf->st_uid, &buf->st_gid))
{
/* If read-only attribute is set, modify ntsec return value */
if (::has_attribute (attributes, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY)
&& !pc.isdir () && !pc.issymlink ())
buf->st_mode &= ~(S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH);
if (buf->st_mode & S_IFMT)
/* nothing */;
else if (!is_fs_special ())
buf->st_mode |= S_IFREG;
else
{
buf->st_dev = buf->st_rdev = dev ();
buf->st_mode = dev ().mode;
buf->st_size = 0;
}
}
else
{
buf->st_mode |= STD_RBITS;
if (!::has_attribute (attributes, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY))
buf->st_mode |= STD_WBITS;
/* | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH; we don't give write to group etc */
if (pc.isdir ())
buf->st_mode |= S_IFDIR | STD_WBITS | STD_XBITS;
else if (buf->st_mode & S_IFMT)
/* nothing */;
else if (is_fs_special ())
{
buf->st_dev = buf->st_rdev = dev ();
buf->st_mode = dev ().mode;
buf->st_size = 0;
}
else
{
buf->st_mode |= S_IFREG;
/* Check suffix for executable file. */
if (pc.exec_state () != is_executable)
{
PUNICODE_STRING path = pc.get_nt_native_path ();
if (RtlEqualUnicodePathSuffix (path, &ro_u_exe, TRUE)
|| RtlEqualUnicodePathSuffix (path, &ro_u_lnk, TRUE)
|| RtlEqualUnicodePathSuffix (path, &ro_u_com, TRUE))
pc.set_exec ();
}
/* No known suffix, check file header. This catches binaries and
shebang scripts. */
if (pc.exec_state () == dont_know_if_executable)
{
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
NTSTATUS status = 0;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
/* We have to re-open the file. Either the file is not opened
for reading, or the read will change the file position of the
original handle. */
pc.init_reopen_attr (&attr, h);
status = NtOpenFile (&h, SYNCHRONIZE | FILE_READ_DATA,
&attr, &io, FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT
| FILE_SYNCHRONOUS_IO_NONALERT);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
debug_printf ("%p = NtOpenFile(%S)", status,
pc.get_nt_native_path ());
else
{
LARGE_INTEGER off = { QuadPart:0LL };
char magic[3];
status = NtReadFile (h, NULL, NULL, NULL,
&io, magic, 3, &off, NULL);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
debug_printf ("%p = NtReadFile(%S)", status,
pc.get_nt_native_path ());
else if (has_exec_chars (magic, io.Information))
{
/* Heureka, it's an executable */
pc.set_exec ();
buf->st_mode |= STD_XBITS;
}
NtClose (h);
}
}
}
if (pc.exec_state () == is_executable)
buf->st_mode |= STD_XBITS;
/* This fakes the permissions of all files to match the current umask. */
buf->st_mode &= ~(cygheap->umask);
/* If the FS supports ACLs, we're here because we couldn't even open
the file for READ_CONTROL access. Chances are high that the file's
security descriptor has no ACE for "Everyone", so we should not fake
any access for "others". */
if (has_acls ())
buf->st_mode &= ~(S_IROTH | S_IWOTH | S_IXOTH);
}
done:
syscall_printf ("0 = fstat (%S, %p) st_size=%D, st_mode=%p, st_ino=%D"
"st_atim=%x.%x st_ctim=%x.%x "
"st_mtim=%x.%x st_birthtim=%x.%x",
pc.get_nt_native_path (), buf,
buf->st_size, buf->st_mode, buf->st_ino,
buf->st_atim.tv_sec, buf->st_atim.tv_nsec,
buf->st_ctim.tv_sec, buf->st_ctim.tv_nsec,
buf->st_mtim.tv_sec, buf->st_mtim.tv_nsec,
buf->st_birthtim.tv_sec, buf->st_birthtim.tv_nsec);
return 0;
}
int __stdcall
fhandler_disk_file::fstat (struct __stat64 *buf)
{
return fstat_fs (buf);
}
int __stdcall
fhandler_disk_file::fstatvfs (struct statvfs *sfs)
{
int ret = -1, opened = 0;
NTSTATUS status;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
FILE_FS_FULL_SIZE_INFORMATION full_fsi;
FILE_FS_SIZE_INFORMATION fsi;
/* We must not use the stat handle here, even if it exists. The handle
has been opened with FILE_OPEN_REPARSE_POINT, thus, in case of a volume
mount point, it points to the FS of the mount point, rather than to the
mounted FS. */
HANDLE fh = get_handle ();
if (!fh)
{
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
opened = NT_SUCCESS (NtOpenFile (&fh, READ_CONTROL,
pc.get_object_attr (attr, sec_none_nih),
&io, FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT));
if (!opened)
{
/* Can't open file. Try again with parent dir. */
UNICODE_STRING dirname;
RtlSplitUnicodePath (pc.get_nt_native_path (), &dirname, NULL);
attr.ObjectName = &dirname;
opened = NT_SUCCESS (NtOpenFile (&fh, READ_CONTROL, &attr, &io,
FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT));
if (!opened)
goto out;
}
}
sfs->f_files = ULONG_MAX;
sfs->f_ffree = ULONG_MAX;
sfs->f_favail = ULONG_MAX;
sfs->f_fsid = pc.fs_serial_number ();
sfs->f_flag = pc.fs_flags ();
sfs->f_namemax = pc.fs_name_len ();
/* Get allocation related information. Try to get "full" information
first, which is only available since W2K. If that fails, try to
retrieve normal allocation information. */
status = NtQueryVolumeInformationFile (fh, &io, &full_fsi, sizeof full_fsi,
FileFsFullSizeInformation);
if (NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
sfs->f_bsize = full_fsi.BytesPerSector * full_fsi.SectorsPerAllocationUnit;
sfs->f_frsize = sfs->f_bsize;
sfs->f_blocks = full_fsi.TotalAllocationUnits.LowPart;
sfs->f_bfree = full_fsi.ActualAvailableAllocationUnits.LowPart;
sfs->f_bavail = full_fsi.CallerAvailableAllocationUnits.LowPart;
if (sfs->f_bfree > sfs->f_bavail)
{
/* Quotas active. We can't trust TotalAllocationUnits. */
NTFS_VOLUME_DATA_BUFFER nvdb;
status = NtFsControlFile (fh, NULL, NULL, NULL, &io,
FSCTL_GET_NTFS_VOLUME_DATA,
NULL, 0, &nvdb, sizeof nvdb);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
debug_printf ("%p = NtFsControlFile(%S, FSCTL_GET_NTFS_VOLUME_DATA)",
status, pc.get_nt_native_path ());
else
sfs->f_blocks = nvdb.TotalClusters.QuadPart;
}
ret = 0;
}
else
{
status = NtQueryVolumeInformationFile (fh, &io, &fsi, sizeof fsi,
FileFsSizeInformation);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
goto out;
}
sfs->f_bsize = fsi.BytesPerSector * fsi.SectorsPerAllocationUnit;
sfs->f_frsize = sfs->f_bsize;
sfs->f_blocks = fsi.TotalAllocationUnits.LowPart;
sfs->f_bfree = fsi.AvailableAllocationUnits.LowPart;
sfs->f_bavail = sfs->f_bfree;
ret = 0;
}
out:
if (opened)
NtClose (fh);
syscall_printf ("%d = fstatvfs (%s, %p)", ret, get_name (), sfs);
return ret;
}
int __stdcall
fhandler_disk_file::fchmod (mode_t mode)
{
extern int chmod_device (path_conv& pc, mode_t mode);
int res = -1;
int oret = 0;
NTSTATUS status;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
if (pc.is_fs_special ())
return chmod_device (pc, mode);
if (!get_handle ())
{
query_open (query_write_dac);
if (!(oret = open (O_BINARY, 0)))
{
/* Need WRITE_DAC|WRITE_OWNER to write ACLs. */
if (pc.has_acls ())
return -1;
/* Otherwise FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES is sufficient. */
query_open (query_write_attributes);
if (!(oret = open (O_BINARY, 0)))
return -1;
}
}
if (pc.fs_is_nfs ())
{
/* chmod on NFS shares works by writing an EA of type NfsV3Attributes.
Only type and mode have to be set. Apparently type isn't checked
for consistency, so it's sufficent to set it to NF3REG all the time. */
struct {
FILE_FULL_EA_INFORMATION ffei;
char buf[sizeof (NFS_V3_ATTR) + sizeof (fattr3)];
} ffei_buf;
ffei_buf.ffei.NextEntryOffset = 0;
ffei_buf.ffei.Flags = 0;
ffei_buf.ffei.EaNameLength = sizeof (NFS_V3_ATTR) - 1;
ffei_buf.ffei.EaValueLength = sizeof (fattr3);
strcpy (ffei_buf.ffei.EaName, NFS_V3_ATTR);
fattr3 *nfs_attr = (fattr3 *) (ffei_buf.ffei.EaName
+ ffei_buf.ffei.EaNameLength + 1);
memset (nfs_attr, 0, sizeof (fattr3));
nfs_attr->type = NF3REG;
nfs_attr->mode = mode;
status = NtSetEaFile (get_handle (), &io,
&ffei_buf.ffei, sizeof ffei_buf);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
else
res = 0;
goto out;
}
if (pc.has_acls ())
{
if (pc.isdir ())
mode |= S_IFDIR;
if (!set_file_attribute (get_handle (), pc,
ILLEGAL_UID, ILLEGAL_GID, mode))
res = 0;
}
/* If the mode has any write bits set, the DOS R/O flag is in the way. */
if (mode & (S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH))
pc &= (DWORD) ~FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY;
else if (!pc.has_acls ()) /* Never set DOS R/O if security is used. */
pc |= (DWORD) FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY;
if (S_ISSOCK (mode))
pc |= (DWORD) FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SYSTEM;
status = NtSetAttributesFile (get_handle (), pc.file_attributes ());
/* MVFS needs a good amount of kicking to be convinced that it has to write
back metadata changes and to invalidate the cached metadata information
stored for the given handle. This method to open a second handle to
the file and write the same metadata information twice has been found
experimentally: http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2009-07/msg00533.html */
if (pc.fs_is_mvfs () && NT_SUCCESS (status) && !oret)
{
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
HANDLE fh;
pc.init_reopen_attr (&attr, get_handle ());
if (NT_SUCCESS (NtOpenFile (&fh, FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES, &attr, &io,
FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT)))
{
NtSetAttributesFile (fh, pc.file_attributes ());
NtClose (fh);
}
}
/* Correct NTFS security attributes have higher priority */
if (!pc.has_acls ())
{
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
else
res = 0;
}
out:
if (oret)
close_fs ();
return res;
}
int __stdcall
fhandler_disk_file::fchown (__uid32_t uid, __gid32_t gid)
{
int oret = 0;
if (!pc.has_acls ())
{
/* fake - if not supported, pretend we're like win95
where it just works */
/* FIXME: Could be supported on NFS when user->uid mapping is in place. */
return 0;
}
if (!get_handle ())
{
query_open (query_write_control);
if (!(oret = fhandler_disk_file::open (O_BINARY, 0)))
return -1;
}
mode_t attrib = 0;
if (pc.isdir ())
attrib |= S_IFDIR;
__uid32_t old_uid;
int res = get_file_attribute (get_handle (), pc, &attrib, &old_uid, NULL);
if (!res)
{
/* Typical Windows default ACLs can contain permissions for one
group, while being owned by another user/group. The permission
bits returned above are pretty much useless then. Creating a
new ACL with these useless permissions results in a potentially
broken symlink. So what we do here is to set the underlying
permissions of symlinks to a sensible value which allows the
world to read the symlink and only the new owner to change it. */
if (pc.issymlink ())
attrib = S_IFLNK | STD_RBITS | STD_WBITS;
res = set_file_attribute (get_handle (), pc, uid, gid, attrib);
/* If you're running a Samba server which has no winbidd running, the
uid<->SID mapping is disfunctional. Even trying to chown to your
own account fails since the account used on the server is the UNIX
account which gets used for the standard user mapping. This is a
default mechanism which doesn't know your real Windows SID.
There are two possible error codes in different Samba releases for
this situation, one of them is unfortunately the not very significant
STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED. Instead of relying on the error codes, we're
using the below very simple heuristic. If set_file_attribute failed,
and the original user account was either already unknown, or one of
the standard UNIX accounts, we're faking success. */
if (res == -1 && pc.fs_is_samba ())
{
cygsid sid;
if (old_uid == ILLEGAL_UID
|| (sid.getfrompw (internal_getpwuid (old_uid))
&& RtlEqualPrefixSid (sid,
well_known_samba_unix_user_fake_sid)))
{
debug_printf ("Faking chown worked on standalone Samba");
res = 0;
}
}
}
if (oret)
close_fs ();
return res;
}
int _stdcall
fhandler_disk_file::facl (int cmd, int nentries, __aclent32_t *aclbufp)
{
int res = -1;
int oret = 0;
if (!pc.has_acls ())
{
cant_access_acl:
switch (cmd)
{
struct __stat64 st;
case SETACL:
/* Open for writing required to be able to set ctime
(even though setting the ACL is just pretended). */
if (!get_handle ())
oret = open (O_WRONLY | O_BINARY, 0);
res = 0;
break;
case GETACL:
if (!aclbufp)
set_errno (EFAULT);
else if (nentries < MIN_ACL_ENTRIES)
set_errno (ENOSPC);
else
{
if (!fstat (&st))
{
aclbufp[0].a_type = USER_OBJ;
aclbufp[0].a_id = st.st_uid;
aclbufp[0].a_perm = (st.st_mode & S_IRWXU) >> 6;
aclbufp[1].a_type = GROUP_OBJ;
aclbufp[1].a_id = st.st_gid;
aclbufp[1].a_perm = (st.st_mode & S_IRWXG) >> 3;
aclbufp[2].a_type = OTHER_OBJ;
aclbufp[2].a_id = ILLEGAL_GID;
aclbufp[2].a_perm = st.st_mode & S_IRWXO;
aclbufp[3].a_type = CLASS_OBJ;
aclbufp[3].a_id = ILLEGAL_GID;
aclbufp[3].a_perm = S_IRWXU | S_IRWXG | S_IRWXO;
res = MIN_ACL_ENTRIES;
}
}
break;
case GETACLCNT:
res = MIN_ACL_ENTRIES;
break;
default:
set_errno (EINVAL);
break;
}
}
else
{
if ((cmd == SETACL && !get_handle ())
|| (cmd != SETACL && !get_stat_handle ()))
{
query_open (cmd == SETACL ? query_write_control : query_read_control);
if (!(oret = open (O_BINARY, 0)))
{
if (cmd == GETACL || cmd == GETACLCNT)
goto cant_access_acl;
return -1;
}
}
switch (cmd)
{
case SETACL:
if (!aclsort32 (nentries, 0, aclbufp))
{
bool rw = false;
res = setacl (get_handle (), pc, nentries, aclbufp, rw);
if (rw)
{
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
FILE_BASIC_INFORMATION fbi;
fbi.CreationTime.QuadPart
= fbi.LastAccessTime.QuadPart
= fbi.LastWriteTime.QuadPart
= fbi.ChangeTime.QuadPart = 0LL;
fbi.FileAttributes = (pc.file_attributes ()
& ~FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY)
?: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL;
NtSetInformationFile (get_handle (), &io, &fbi, sizeof fbi,
FileBasicInformation);
}
}
break;
case GETACL:
if (!aclbufp)
set_errno(EFAULT);
else
res = getacl (get_stat_handle (), pc, nentries, aclbufp);
/* For this ENOSYS case, see security.cc:get_file_attribute(). */
if (res == -1 && get_errno () == ENOSYS)
goto cant_access_acl;
break;
case GETACLCNT:
res = getacl (get_stat_handle (), pc, 0, NULL);
/* Ditto. */
if (res == -1 && get_errno () == ENOSYS)
goto cant_access_acl;
break;
default:
set_errno (EINVAL);
break;
}
}
if (oret)
close_fs ();
return res;
}
ssize_t
fhandler_disk_file::fgetxattr (const char *name, void *value, size_t size)
{
if (pc.is_fs_special ())
{
set_errno (ENOTSUP);
return -1;
}
return read_ea (get_handle (), pc, name, (char *) value, size);
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::fsetxattr (const char *name, const void *value, size_t size,
int flags)
{
if (pc.is_fs_special ())
{
set_errno (ENOTSUP);
return -1;
}
return write_ea (get_handle (), pc, name, (const char *) value, size, flags);
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::fadvise (_off64_t offset, _off64_t length, int advice)
{
if (advice < POSIX_FADV_NORMAL || advice > POSIX_FADV_NOREUSE)
{
set_errno (EINVAL);
return -1;
}
/* Windows only supports advice flags for the whole file. We're using
a simplified test here so that we don't have to ask for the actual
file size. Length == 0 means all bytes starting at offset anyway.
So we only actually follow the advice, if it's given for offset == 0. */
if (offset != 0)
return 0;
/* We only support normal and sequential mode for now. Everything which
is not POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL is treated like POSIX_FADV_NORMAL. */
if (advice != POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL)
advice = POSIX_FADV_NORMAL;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
FILE_MODE_INFORMATION fmi;
NTSTATUS status = NtQueryInformationFile (get_handle (), &io,
&fmi, sizeof fmi,
FileModeInformation);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
else
{
fmi.Mode &= ~FILE_SEQUENTIAL_ONLY;
if (advice == POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL)
fmi.Mode |= FILE_SEQUENTIAL_ONLY;
status = NtSetInformationFile (get_handle (), &io, &fmi, sizeof fmi,
FileModeInformation);
if (NT_SUCCESS (status))
return 0;
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
}
return -1;
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::ftruncate (_off64_t length, bool allow_truncate)
{
int res = -1;
if (length < 0 || !get_handle ())
set_errno (EINVAL);
else if (pc.isdir ())
set_errno (EISDIR);
else if (!(get_access () & GENERIC_WRITE))
set_errno (EBADF);
else
{
NTSTATUS status;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
FILE_STANDARD_INFORMATION fsi;
FILE_END_OF_FILE_INFORMATION feofi;
status = NtQueryInformationFile (get_handle (), &io, &fsi, sizeof fsi,
FileStandardInformation);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
return -1;
}
/* If called through posix_fallocate, silently succeed if length
is less than the file's actual length. */
if (!allow_truncate && length < fsi.EndOfFile.QuadPart)
return 0;
feofi.EndOfFile.QuadPart = length;
/* Create sparse files only when called through ftruncate, not when
called through posix_fallocate. */
if (allow_truncate
&& (pc.fs_flags () & FILE_SUPPORTS_SPARSE_FILES)
&& length >= fsi.EndOfFile.QuadPart + (128 * 1024))
{
status = NtFsControlFile (get_handle (), NULL, NULL, NULL, &io,
FSCTL_SET_SPARSE, NULL, 0, NULL, 0);
syscall_printf ("%p = NtFsControlFile(%S, FSCTL_SET_SPARSE)",
status, pc.get_nt_native_path ());
}
status = NtSetInformationFile (get_handle (), &io,
&feofi, sizeof feofi,
FileEndOfFileInformation);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
else
res = 0;
}
return res;
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::link (const char *newpath)
{
size_t nlen = strlen (newpath);
path_conv newpc (newpath, PC_SYM_NOFOLLOW | PC_POSIX | PC_NULLEMPTY, stat_suffixes);
if (newpc.error)
{
set_errno (newpc.error);
return -1;
}
if (newpc.exists ())
{
syscall_printf ("file '%S' exists?", newpc.get_nt_native_path ());
set_errno (EEXIST);
return -1;
}
if (isdirsep (newpath[nlen - 1]) || has_dot_last_component (newpath, false))
{
set_errno (ENOENT);
return -1;
}
char new_buf[nlen + 5];
if (!newpc.error)
{
/* If the original file is a lnk special file (except for sockets),
and if the original file has a .lnk suffix, add one to the hardlink
as well. */
if (pc.is_lnk_special () && !pc.issocket ()
&& RtlEqualUnicodePathSuffix (pc.get_nt_native_path (),
&ro_u_lnk, TRUE))
{
/* Shortcut hack. */
stpcpy (stpcpy (new_buf, newpath), ".lnk");
newpath = new_buf;
newpc.check (newpath, PC_SYM_NOFOLLOW);
}
else if (!pc.isdir ()
&& pc.is_binary ()
&& RtlEqualUnicodePathSuffix (pc.get_nt_native_path (),
&ro_u_exe, TRUE)
&& !RtlEqualUnicodePathSuffix (newpc.get_nt_native_path (),
&ro_u_exe, TRUE))
{
/* Executable hack. */
stpcpy (stpcpy (new_buf, newpath), ".exe");
newpath = new_buf;
newpc.check (newpath, PC_SYM_NOFOLLOW);
}
}
/* We only need READ_CONTROL access so the handle returned in pc is
sufficient. And if the file couldn't be opened with READ_CONTROL
access in path_conv, we won't be able to do it here anyway. */
HANDLE fh = get_stat_handle ();
if (!fh)
{
set_errno (EACCES);
return -1;
}
PUNICODE_STRING tgt = newpc.get_nt_native_path ();
ULONG size = sizeof (FILE_LINK_INFORMATION) + tgt->Length;
PFILE_LINK_INFORMATION pfli = (PFILE_LINK_INFORMATION) alloca (size);
pfli->ReplaceIfExists = FALSE;
pfli->RootDirectory = NULL;
memcpy (pfli->FileName, tgt->Buffer, pfli->FileNameLength = tgt->Length);
NTSTATUS status;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
status = NtSetInformationFile (fh, &io, pfli, size, FileLinkInformation);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
if (status == STATUS_INVALID_DEVICE_REQUEST)
{
/* FS doesn't support hard links. Linux returns EPERM. */
set_errno (EPERM);
return -1;
}
else
{
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
return -1;
}
}
return 0;
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::utimens (const struct timespec *tvp)
{
return utimens_fs (tvp);
}
int
fhandler_base::utimens_fs (const struct timespec *tvp)
{
struct timespec timeofday;
struct timespec tmp[2];
bool closeit = false;
if (!get_handle ())
{
query_open (query_write_attributes);
if (!open_fs (O_BINARY, 0))
{
/* It's documented in MSDN that FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES is sufficient
to change the timestamps. Unfortunately it's not sufficient for a
remote HPFS which requires GENERIC_WRITE, so we just retry to open
for writing, though this fails for R/O files of course. */
query_open (no_query);
if (!open_fs (O_WRONLY | O_BINARY, 0))
{
syscall_printf ("Opening file failed");
return -1;
}
}
closeit = true;
}
clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME, &timeofday);
if (!tvp)
tmp[1] = tmp[0] = timeofday;
else
{
if ((tvp[0].tv_nsec < UTIME_NOW || tvp[0].tv_nsec > 999999999L)
|| (tvp[1].tv_nsec < UTIME_NOW || tvp[1].tv_nsec > 999999999L))
{
if (closeit)
close_fs ();
set_errno (EINVAL);
return -1;
}
tmp[0] = (tvp[0].tv_nsec == UTIME_NOW) ? timeofday : tvp[0];
tmp[1] = (tvp[1].tv_nsec == UTIME_NOW) ? timeofday : tvp[1];
}
debug_printf ("incoming lastaccess %08x %08x", tmp[0].tv_sec, tmp[0].tv_nsec);
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
FILE_BASIC_INFORMATION fbi;
fbi.CreationTime.QuadPart = 0LL;
/* UTIME_OMIT is handled in timespec_to_filetime by setting FILETIME to 0. */
timespec_to_filetime (&tmp[0], (LPFILETIME) &fbi.LastAccessTime);
timespec_to_filetime (&tmp[1], (LPFILETIME) &fbi.LastWriteTime);
fbi.ChangeTime.QuadPart = 0LL;
fbi.FileAttributes = 0;
NTSTATUS status = NtSetInformationFile (get_handle (), &io, &fbi, sizeof fbi,
FileBasicInformation);
/* For this special case for MVFS see the comment in
fhandler_disk_file::fchmod. */
if (pc.fs_is_mvfs () && NT_SUCCESS (status) && !closeit)
{
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
HANDLE fh;
pc.init_reopen_attr (&attr, get_handle ());
if (NT_SUCCESS (NtOpenFile (&fh, FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES, &attr, &io,
FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT)))
{
NtSetInformationFile (fh, &io, &fbi, sizeof fbi,
FileBasicInformation);
NtClose (fh);
}
}
if (closeit)
close_fs ();
/* Opening a directory on a 9x share from a NT machine works(!), but
then NtSetInformationFile fails with STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED. Oh well... */
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status) && status != STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED)
{
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
fhandler_disk_file::fhandler_disk_file () :
fhandler_base (), prw_handle (NULL)
{
}
fhandler_disk_file::fhandler_disk_file (path_conv &pc) :
fhandler_base (), prw_handle (NULL)
{
set_name (pc);
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::open (int flags, mode_t mode)
{
return open_fs (flags, mode);
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::close ()
{
/* Close extra pread/pwrite handle, if it exists. */
if (prw_handle)
NtClose (prw_handle);
/* Delete all POSIX locks on the file. Delete all flock locks on the
file if this is the last reference to this file. */
del_my_locks (on_close);
return fhandler_base::close ();
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::dup (fhandler_base *child)
{
fhandler_disk_file *fhc = (fhandler_disk_file *) child;
int ret = fhandler_base::dup (child);
if (!ret && prw_handle
&& !DuplicateHandle (GetCurrentProcess (), prw_handle,
GetCurrentProcess (), &fhc->prw_handle,
0, TRUE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS))
prw_handle = NULL;
return ret;
}
void
fhandler_disk_file::fixup_after_fork (HANDLE parent)
{
prw_handle = NULL;
fhandler_base::fixup_after_fork (parent);
}
int
fhandler_base::open_fs (int flags, mode_t mode)
{
/* Unfortunately NT allows to open directories for writing, but that's
disallowed according to SUSv3. */
if (pc.isdir () && (flags & O_ACCMODE) != O_RDONLY)
{
set_errno (EISDIR);
return 0;
}
int res = fhandler_base::open (flags | O_DIROPEN, mode);
if (!res)
goto out;
/* This is for file systems known for having a buggy CreateFile call
which might return a valid HANDLE without having actually opened
the file.
The only known file system to date is the SUN NFS Solstice Client 3.1
which returns a valid handle when trying to open a file in a nonexistent
directory. */
if (pc.has_buggy_open () && !pc.exists ())
{
debug_printf ("Buggy open detected.");
close_fs ();
set_errno (ENOENT);
return 0;
}
ino = pc.get_ino_by_handle (get_handle ());
/* A unique ID is necessary to recognize fhandler entries which are
duplicated by dup(2) or fork(2). */
NtAllocateLocallyUniqueId ((PLUID) &unique_id);
out:
syscall_printf ("%d = fhandler_disk_file::open (%S, %p)", res,
pc.get_nt_native_path (), flags);
return res;
}
/* POSIX demands that pread/pwrite don't change the current file position.
While NtReadFile/NtWriteFile support atomic seek-and-io, both change the
file pointer if the file handle has been opened for synchonous I/O.
Using this handle for pread/pwrite would break atomicity, because the
read/write operation would have to be followed by a seek back to the old
file position. What we do is to open another handle to the file on the
first call to either pread or pwrite. This is used for any subsequent
pread/pwrite. Thus the current file position of the "normal" file
handle is not touched.
FIXME:
Note that this is just a hack. The problem with this approach is that
a change to the file permissions might disallow to open the file with
the required permissions to read or write. This appears to be a border case,
but that's exactly what git does. It creates the file for reading and
writing and after writing it, it chmods the file to read-only. Then it
calls pread on the file to examine the content. This works, but if git
would use the original handle to pwrite to the file, it would be broken
with our approach.
One way to implement this is to open the pread/pwrite handle right at
file open time. We would simply maintain two handles, which wouldn't
be much of a problem given how we do that for other fhandler types as
well.
However, ultimately fhandler_disk_file should become a derived class of
fhandler_base_overlapped. Each raw_read or raw_write would fetch the
actual file position, read/write from there, and then set the file
position again. Fortunately, while the file position is not maintained
by the I/O manager, it can be fetched and set to a new value by all
processes holding a handle to that file object. Pread and pwrite differ
from raw_read and raw_write just by not touching the current file pos.
Actually they could be merged with raw_read/raw_write if we add a position
parameter to the latter. */
int
fhandler_disk_file::prw_open (bool write)
{
NTSTATUS status;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
/* First try to open with the original access mask */
ACCESS_MASK access = get_access ();
pc.init_reopen_attr (&attr, get_handle ());
status = NtOpenFile (&prw_handle, access, &attr, &io,
FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS, get_options ());
if (status == STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED)
{
/* If we get an access denied, chmod has been called. Try again
with just the required rights to perform the called function. */
access &= write ? ~GENERIC_READ : ~GENERIC_WRITE;
status = NtOpenFile (&prw_handle, access, &attr, &io,
FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS, get_options ());
}
debug_printf ("%x = NtOpenFile (%p, %x, %S, io, %x, %x)",
status, prw_handle, access, pc.get_nt_native_path (),
FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS, get_options ());
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
ssize_t __stdcall
fhandler_disk_file::pread (void *buf, size_t count, _off64_t offset)
{
if ((get_flags () & O_ACCMODE) == O_WRONLY)
{
set_errno (EBADF);
return -1;
}
/* In binary mode, we can use an atomic NtReadFile call. */
if (rbinary ())
{
extern int __stdcall is_at_eof (HANDLE h);
NTSTATUS status;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
LARGE_INTEGER off = { QuadPart:offset };
if (!prw_handle && prw_open (false))
goto non_atomic;
status = NtReadFile (prw_handle, NULL, NULL, NULL, &io, buf, count,
&off, NULL);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
if (pc.isdir ())
{
set_errno (EISDIR);
return -1;
}
if (status == (NTSTATUS) STATUS_ACCESS_VIOLATION)
{
if (is_at_eof (prw_handle))
return 0;
switch (mmap_is_attached_or_noreserve (buf, count))
{
case MMAP_NORESERVE_COMMITED:
status = NtReadFile (prw_handle, NULL, NULL, NULL, &io,
buf, count, &off, NULL);
if (NT_SUCCESS (status))
return io.Information;
break;
case MMAP_RAISE_SIGBUS:
raise (SIGBUS);
default:
break;
}
}
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
return -1;
}
}
non_atomic:
/* Text mode stays slow and non-atomic. */
ssize_t res;
_off64_t curpos = lseek (0, SEEK_CUR);
if (curpos < 0 || lseek (offset, SEEK_SET) < 0)
res = -1;
else
{
size_t tmp_count = count;
read (buf, tmp_count);
if (lseek (curpos, SEEK_SET) >= 0)
res = (ssize_t) tmp_count;
else
res = -1;
}
debug_printf ("%d = pread (%p, %d, %d)\n", res, buf, count, offset);
return res;
}
ssize_t __stdcall
fhandler_disk_file::pwrite (void *buf, size_t count, _off64_t offset)
{
if ((get_flags () & O_ACCMODE) == O_RDONLY)
{
set_errno (EBADF);
return -1;
}
/* In binary mode, we can use an atomic NtWriteFile call. */
if (wbinary ())
{
NTSTATUS status;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
LARGE_INTEGER off = { QuadPart:offset };
if (!prw_handle && prw_open (true))
goto non_atomic;
status = NtWriteFile (prw_handle, NULL, NULL, NULL, &io, buf, count,
&off, NULL);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
return -1;
}
return io.Information;
}
non_atomic:
/* Text mode stays slow and non-atomic. */
int res;
_off64_t curpos = lseek (0, SEEK_CUR);
if (curpos < 0 || lseek (offset, SEEK_SET) < 0)
res = curpos;
else
{
res = (ssize_t) write (buf, count);
if (lseek (curpos, SEEK_SET) < 0)
res = -1;
}
debug_printf ("%d = pwrite (%p, %d, %d)\n", res, buf, count, offset);
return res;
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::mkdir (mode_t mode)
{
int res = -1;
SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES sa = sec_none_nih;
NTSTATUS status;
HANDLE dir;
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
PFILE_FULL_EA_INFORMATION p = NULL;
ULONG plen = 0;
ULONG access = FILE_LIST_DIRECTORY | SYNCHRONIZE;
if (pc.fs_is_nfs ())
{
/* When creating a dir on an NFS share, we have to set the
file mode by writing a NFS fattr3 structure with the
correct mode bits set. */
plen = sizeof (FILE_FULL_EA_INFORMATION) + sizeof (NFS_V3_ATTR)
+ sizeof (fattr3);
p = (PFILE_FULL_EA_INFORMATION) alloca (plen);
p->NextEntryOffset = 0;
p->Flags = 0;
p->EaNameLength = sizeof (NFS_V3_ATTR) - 1;
p->EaValueLength = sizeof (fattr3);
strcpy (p->EaName, NFS_V3_ATTR);
fattr3 *nfs_attr = (fattr3 *) (p->EaName + p->EaNameLength + 1);
memset (nfs_attr, 0, sizeof (fattr3));
nfs_attr->type = NF3DIR;
nfs_attr->mode = (mode & 07777) & ~cygheap->umask;
}
else if (has_acls () && !isremote ())
/* If the filesystem supports ACLs, we will overwrite the DACL after the
call to NtCreateFile. This requires a handle with READ_CONTROL and
WRITE_DAC access, otherwise get_file_sd and set_file_sd both have to
open the file again.
FIXME: On remote NTFS shares open sometimes fails because even the
creator of the file doesn't have the right to change the DACL.
I don't know what setting that is or how to recognize such a share,
so for now we don't request WRITE_DAC on remote drives. */
access |= READ_CONTROL | WRITE_DAC;
status = NtCreateFile (&dir, access, pc.get_object_attr (attr, sa), &io, NULL,
FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY, FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_CREATE,
FILE_DIRECTORY_FILE | FILE_SYNCHRONOUS_IO_NONALERT
| FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT,
p, plen);
if (NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
if (has_acls ())
set_file_attribute (dir, pc, ILLEGAL_UID, ILLEGAL_GID,
S_JUSTCREATED | S_IFDIR
| ((mode & 07777) & ~cygheap->umask));
NtClose (dir);
res = 0;
}
else
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
return res;
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::rmdir ()
{
extern NTSTATUS unlink_nt (path_conv &pc);
if (!pc.isdir ())
{
set_errno (ENOTDIR);
return -1;
}
if (!pc.exists ())
{
set_errno (ENOENT);
return -1;
}
NTSTATUS status = unlink_nt (pc);
/* Check for existence of remote dirs after trying to delete them.
Two reasons:
- Sometimes SMB indicates failure when it really succeeds.
- Removing a directory on a Samba drive using an old Samba version
sometimes doesn't return an error, if the directory can't be removed
because it's not empty. */
if (isremote ())
{
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
FILE_BASIC_INFORMATION fbi;
NTSTATUS q_status;
q_status = NtQueryAttributesFile (pc.get_object_attr (attr, sec_none_nih),
&fbi);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status) && q_status == STATUS_OBJECT_NAME_NOT_FOUND)
status = STATUS_SUCCESS;
else if (NT_SUCCESS (status) && NT_SUCCESS (q_status))
status = STATUS_DIRECTORY_NOT_EMPTY;
}
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
/* This is the minimal number of entries which fit into the readdir cache.
The number of bytes allocated by the cache is determined by this number,
To tune caching, just tweak this number. To get a feeling for the size,
the size of the readdir cache is DIR_NUM_ENTRIES * 624 + 4 bytes. */
#define DIR_NUM_ENTRIES 100 /* Cache size 62404 bytes */
#define DIR_BUF_SIZE (DIR_NUM_ENTRIES \
* (sizeof (FILE_ID_BOTH_DIR_INFORMATION) \
+ (NAME_MAX + 1) * sizeof (WCHAR)))
struct __DIR_cache
{
char __cache[DIR_BUF_SIZE]; /* W2K needs this buffer 8 byte aligned. */
ULONG __pos;
};
#define d_cachepos(d) (((__DIR_cache *) (d)->__d_dirname)->__pos)
#define d_cache(d) (((__DIR_cache *) (d)->__d_dirname)->__cache)
#define d_mounts(d) ((__DIR_mounts *) (d)->__d_internal)
DIR *
fhandler_disk_file::opendir (int fd)
{
DIR *dir;
DIR *res = NULL;
if (!pc.isdir ())
set_errno (ENOTDIR);
else if ((dir = (DIR *) malloc (sizeof (DIR))) == NULL)
set_errno (ENOMEM);
else if ((dir->__d_dirname = (char *) malloc ( sizeof (struct __DIR_cache)))
== NULL)
{
set_errno (ENOMEM);
goto free_dir;
}
else if ((dir->__d_dirent =
(struct dirent *) malloc (sizeof (struct dirent))) == NULL)
{
set_errno (ENOMEM);
goto free_dirname;
}
else
{
cygheap_fdnew cfd;
if (cfd < 0 && fd < 0)
goto free_dirent;
dir->__d_dirent->__d_version = __DIRENT_VERSION;
dir->__d_cookie = __DIRENT_COOKIE;
dir->__handle = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
dir->__d_position = 0;
dir->__flags = (get_name ()[0] == '/' && get_name ()[1] == '\0')
? dirent_isroot : 0;
dir->__d_internal = (unsigned) new __DIR_mounts (get_name ());
d_cachepos (dir) = 0;
if (!pc.iscygdrive ())
{
if (fd < 0)
{
/* opendir() case. Initialize with given directory name and
NULL directory handle. */
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
NTSTATUS status;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
/* Tools like ls(1) call dirfd() to fetch the directory
descriptor for calls to facl or fstat. The tight access mask
used so far is not sufficient to reuse the handle for these
calls, instead the facl/fstat calls find the handle to be
unusable and have to re-open the file for reading attributes
and control data. So, what we do here is to try to open the
directory with more relaxed access mask which enables to use
the handle for the aforementioned purpose. This should work
in almost all cases. Only if it doesn't work due to
permission problems, we drop the additional access bits and
try again. */
ACCESS_MASK fstat_mask = READ_CONTROL | FILE_READ_ATTRIBUTES;
do
{
status = NtOpenFile (&get_handle (),
SYNCHRONIZE | FILE_LIST_DIRECTORY
| fstat_mask,
pc.get_object_attr (attr, sec_none_nih),
&io, FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_SYNCHRONOUS_IO_NONALERT
| FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT
| FILE_DIRECTORY_FILE);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
{
if (status == STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED && fstat_mask)
fstat_mask = 0;
else
{
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
goto free_mounts;
}
}
}
while (!NT_SUCCESS (status));
}
/* FileIdBothDirectoryInformation is apparently unsupported on
XP when accessing directories on UDF. When trying to use it
so, NtQueryDirectoryFile returns with STATUS_ACCESS_VIOLATION.
It's not clear if the call isn't also unsupported on other
OS/FS combinations (say, Win2K/CDFS or so). Instead of
testing in readdir for yet another error code, let's use
FileIdBothDirectoryInformation only on filesystems supporting
persistent ACLs, FileBothDirectoryInformation otherwise.
NFS clients hide dangling symlinks from directory queries,
unless you use the FileNamesInformation info class.
On newer NFS clients (>=Vista) FileIdBothDirectoryInformation
works fine, but only if the NFS share is mounted to a drive
letter. TODO: We don't test that here for now, but it might
be worth to test if there's a speed gain in using
FileIdBothDirectoryInformation, because it doesn't require to
open the file to read the inode number. */
if (pc.hasgood_inode ())
{
dir->__flags |= dirent_set_d_ino;
if (pc.fs_is_nfs ())
dir->__flags |= dirent_nfs_d_ino;
else if (!pc.has_buggy_fileid_dirinfo ())
dir->__flags |= dirent_get_d_ino;
}
}
if (fd >= 0)
dir->__d_fd = fd;
else
{
/* Filling cfd with `this' (aka storing this in the file
descriptor table should only happen after it's clear that
opendir doesn't fail, otherwise we end up cfree'ing the
fhandler twice, once in opendir() in dir.cc, the second
time on exit. Nasty, nasty... */
cfd = this;
dir->__d_fd = cfd;
if (pc.iscygdrive ())
cfd->nohandle (true);
}
set_close_on_exec (true);
dir->__fh = this;
res = dir;
}
syscall_printf ("%p = opendir (%s)", res, get_name ());
return res;
free_mounts:
delete d_mounts (dir);
free_dirent:
free (dir->__d_dirent);
free_dirname:
free (dir->__d_dirname);
free_dir:
free (dir);
return res;
}
__ino64_t __stdcall
readdir_get_ino (const char *path, bool dot_dot)
{
char *fname;
struct __stat64 st;
HANDLE hdl;
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
__ino64_t ino = 0;
if (dot_dot)
{
fname = (char *) alloca (strlen (path) + 4);
char *c = stpcpy (fname, path);
if (c[-1] != '/')
*c++ = '/';
strcpy (c, "..");
path = fname;
}
path_conv pc (path, PC_SYM_NOFOLLOW | PC_POSIX | PC_NOWARN | PC_KEEP_HANDLE);
if (pc.isspecial ())
{
if (!stat_worker (pc, &st))
ino = st.st_ino;
}
else if (!pc.hasgood_inode ())
ino = hash_path_name (0, pc.get_nt_native_path ());
else if ((hdl = pc.handle ()) != NULL
|| NT_SUCCESS (NtOpenFile (&hdl, READ_CONTROL,
pc.get_object_attr (attr, sec_none_nih),
&io, FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT
| (pc.is_rep_symlink ()
? FILE_OPEN_REPARSE_POINT : 0)))
)
{
ino = pc.get_ino_by_handle (hdl);
if (!ino)
ino = hash_path_name (0, pc.get_nt_native_path ());
}
return ino;
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::readdir_helper (DIR *dir, dirent *de, DWORD w32_err,
DWORD attr, PUNICODE_STRING fname)
{
if (w32_err)
{
bool added = false;
if ((de->d_ino = d_mounts (dir)->check_missing_mount (fname)))
added = true;
if (!added)
{
fname->Length = 0;
return geterrno_from_win_error (w32_err);
}
attr = 0;
dir->__flags &= ~dirent_set_d_ino;
}
/* Set d_type if type can be determined from file attributes. For .lnk
symlinks, d_type will be reset below. Reparse points can be NTFS
symlinks, even if they have the FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY flag set. */
if (attr &&
!(attr & (~FILE_ATTRIBUTE_VALID_FLAGS | FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT)))
{
if (attr & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY)
de->d_type = DT_DIR;
/* FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SYSTEM might denote system-bit type symlinks. */
else if (!(attr & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SYSTEM))
de->d_type = DT_REG;
}
/* Check for directory reparse point. These are potential volume mount
points which have another inode than the underlying directory. */
if ((attr & (FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY | FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT))
== (FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY | FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT))
{
HANDLE reph;
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
InitializeObjectAttributes (&attr, fname, pc.objcaseinsensitive (),
get_handle (), NULL);
de->d_type = readdir_check_reparse_point (&attr);
if (de->d_type == DT_DIR)
{
/* Volume mountpoints are treated as directories. We have to fix
the inode number, otherwise we have the inode number of the
mount point, rather than the inode number of the toplevel
directory of the mounted drive. */
if (NT_SUCCESS (NtOpenFile (&reph, READ_CONTROL, &attr, &io,
FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT)))
{
de->d_ino = pc.get_ino_by_handle (reph);
NtClose (reph);
}
}
}
/* Check for Windows shortcut. If it's a Cygwin or U/WIN symlink, drop the
.lnk suffix and set d_type accordingly. */
if ((attr & (FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY
| FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT
| FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY)) == FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY
&& fname->Length > 4 * sizeof (WCHAR))
{
UNICODE_STRING uname;
RtlInitCountedUnicodeString (&uname,
fname->Buffer
+ fname->Length / sizeof (WCHAR) - 4,
4 * sizeof (WCHAR));
if (RtlEqualUnicodeString (&uname, &ro_u_lnk, TRUE))
{
tmp_pathbuf tp;
char *file = tp.c_get ();
char *p = stpcpy (file, pc.normalized_path);
if (p[-1] != '/')
*p++ = '/';
sys_wcstombs (p, NT_MAX_PATH - (p - file),
fname->Buffer, fname->Length / sizeof (WCHAR));
path_conv fpath (file, PC_SYM_NOFOLLOW);
if (fpath.issymlink ())
{
fname->Length -= 4 * sizeof (WCHAR);
de->d_type = DT_LNK;
}
else if (fpath.isfifo ())
{
fname->Length -= 4 * sizeof (WCHAR);
de->d_type = DT_FIFO;
}
else if (fpath.is_fs_special ())
{
fname->Length -= 4 * sizeof (WCHAR);
de->d_type = S_ISCHR (fpath.dev.mode) ? DT_CHR : DT_BLK;
}
}
}
sys_wcstombs (de->d_name, NAME_MAX + 1, fname->Buffer,
fname->Length / sizeof (WCHAR));
/* Don't try to optimize relative to dir->__d_position. On several
filesystems it's no safe bet that "." and ".." entries always
come first. */
if (de->d_name[0] == '.')
{
if (de->d_name[1] == '\0')
dir->__flags |= dirent_saw_dot;
else if (de->d_name[1] == '.' && de->d_name[2] == '\0')
dir->__flags |= dirent_saw_dot_dot;
}
return 0;
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::readdir (DIR *dir, dirent *de)
{
int res = 0;
NTSTATUS status = STATUS_SUCCESS;
PFILE_ID_BOTH_DIR_INFORMATION buf = NULL;
PWCHAR FileName;
ULONG FileNameLength;
ULONG FileAttributes = 0;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
UNICODE_STRING fname;
/* d_cachepos always refers to the next cache entry to use. If it's 0
we must reload the cache. */
if (d_cachepos (dir) == 0)
{
if ((dir->__flags & dirent_get_d_ino))
{
status = NtQueryDirectoryFile (get_handle (), NULL, NULL, NULL, &io,
d_cache (dir), DIR_BUF_SIZE,
FileIdBothDirectoryInformation,
FALSE, NULL, dir->__d_position == 0);
/* FileIdBothDirectoryInformation isn't supported for remote drives
on NT4 and 2K systems, and it's also not supported on 2K at all,
when accessing network drives on any remote OS. There are also
hacked versions of Samba 3.0.x out there (Debian-based it seems),
which return STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED rather than handling this info
class. We just fall back to using a standard directory query in
this case and note this case using the dirent_get_d_ino flag. */
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status) && status != STATUS_NO_MORE_FILES
&& (status == STATUS_INVALID_LEVEL
|| status == STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED
|| status == STATUS_INVALID_PARAMETER
|| status == STATUS_INVALID_NETWORK_RESPONSE
|| status == STATUS_INVALID_INFO_CLASS))
dir->__flags &= ~dirent_get_d_ino;
/* Something weird happens on Samba up to version 3.0.21c, which is
fixed in 3.0.22. FileIdBothDirectoryInformation seems to work
nicely, but only up to the 128th entry in the directory. After
reaching this entry, the next call to NtQueryDirectoryFile
(FileIdBothDirectoryInformation) returns STATUS_INVALID_LEVEL.
Why should we care, we can just switch to
FileBothDirectoryInformation, isn't it? Nope! The next call to
NtQueryDirectoryFile(FileBothDirectoryInformation) actually
returns STATUS_NO_MORE_FILES, regardless how many files are left
unread in the directory. This does not happen when using
FileBothDirectoryInformation right from the start, but since
we can't decide whether the server we're talking with has this
bug or not, we end up serving Samba shares always in the slow
mode using FileBothDirectoryInformation. So, what we do here is
to implement the solution suggested by Andrew Tridgell, we just
reread all entries up to dir->d_position using
FileBothDirectoryInformation.
However, We do *not* mark this server as broken and fall back to
using FileBothDirectoryInformation further on. This would slow
down every access to such a server, even for directories under
128 entries. Also, bigger dirs only suffer from one additional
call per full directory scan, which shouldn't be too big a hit.
This can easily be changed if necessary. */
if (status == STATUS_INVALID_LEVEL && dir->__d_position)
{
d_cachepos (dir) = 0;
for (int cnt = 0; cnt < dir->__d_position; ++cnt)
{
if (d_cachepos (dir) == 0)
{
status = NtQueryDirectoryFile (get_handle (), NULL, NULL,
NULL, &io, d_cache (dir),
DIR_BUF_SIZE,
FileBothDirectoryInformation,
FALSE, NULL, cnt == 0);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
goto go_ahead;
}
buf = (PFILE_ID_BOTH_DIR_INFORMATION) (d_cache (dir)
+ d_cachepos (dir));
if (buf->NextEntryOffset == 0)
d_cachepos (dir) = 0;
else
d_cachepos (dir) += buf->NextEntryOffset;
}
goto go_ahead;
}
}
if (!(dir->__flags & dirent_get_d_ino))
status = NtQueryDirectoryFile (get_handle (), NULL, NULL, NULL, &io,
d_cache (dir), DIR_BUF_SIZE,
(dir->__flags & dirent_nfs_d_ino)
? FileNamesInformation
: FileBothDirectoryInformation,
FALSE, NULL, dir->__d_position == 0);
}
go_ahead:
if (status == STATUS_NO_MORE_FILES)
/*nothing*/;
else if (!NT_SUCCESS (status))
debug_printf ("NtQueryDirectoryFile failed, status %p, win32 error %lu",
status, RtlNtStatusToDosError (status));
else
{
buf = (PFILE_ID_BOTH_DIR_INFORMATION) (d_cache (dir) + d_cachepos (dir));
if (buf->NextEntryOffset == 0)
d_cachepos (dir) = 0;
else
d_cachepos (dir) += buf->NextEntryOffset;
if ((dir->__flags & dirent_get_d_ino))
{
FileName = buf->FileName;
FileNameLength = buf->FileNameLength;
FileAttributes = buf->FileAttributes;
if ((dir->__flags & dirent_set_d_ino))
de->d_ino = buf->FileId.QuadPart;
}
else if ((dir->__flags & dirent_nfs_d_ino))
{
FileName = ((PFILE_NAMES_INFORMATION) buf)->FileName;
FileNameLength = ((PFILE_NAMES_INFORMATION) buf)->FileNameLength;
}
else
{
FileName = ((PFILE_BOTH_DIRECTORY_INFORMATION) buf)->FileName;
FileNameLength =
((PFILE_BOTH_DIRECTORY_INFORMATION) buf)->FileNameLength;
FileAttributes =
((PFILE_BOTH_DIRECTORY_INFORMATION) buf)->FileAttributes;
}
RtlInitCountedUnicodeString (&fname, FileName, FileNameLength);
de->d_ino = d_mounts (dir)->check_mount (&fname, de->d_ino);
if (de->d_ino == 0 && (dir->__flags & dirent_set_d_ino))
{
/* Don't try to optimize relative to dir->__d_position. On several
filesystems it's no safe bet that "." and ".." entries always
come first. */
if (FileNameLength == sizeof (WCHAR) && FileName[0] == '.')
de->d_ino = pc.get_ino_by_handle (get_handle ());
else if (FileNameLength == 2 * sizeof (WCHAR)
&& FileName[0] == L'.' && FileName[1] == L'.')
{
if (!(dir->__flags & dirent_isroot))
de->d_ino = readdir_get_ino (get_name (), true);
else
de->d_ino = pc.get_ino_by_handle (get_handle ());
}
else
{
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
HANDLE hdl;
NTSTATUS f_status;
InitializeObjectAttributes (&attr, &fname,
pc.objcaseinsensitive (),
get_handle (), NULL);
/* FILE_OPEN_REPARSE_POINT on NFS is a no-op, so the normal
NtOpenFile here returns the inode number of the symlink target,
rather than the inode number of the symlink itself.
Worse, trying to open a symlink without setting the special
"ActOnSymlink" EA triggers a bug in Windows 7 which results
in a timeout of up to 20 seconds, followed by two exceptions
in the NT kernel.
Since both results are far from desirable, we open symlinks
on NFS so that we get the right inode and a happy W7.
And, since some filesystems choke on the EAs, we don't
use them unconditionally. */
f_status = (dir->__flags & dirent_nfs_d_ino)
? NtCreateFile (&hdl, READ_CONTROL, &attr, &io,
NULL, 0, FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_OPEN, FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT,
&nfs_aol_ffei, sizeof nfs_aol_ffei)
: NtOpenFile (&hdl, READ_CONTROL, &attr, &io,
FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT
| FILE_OPEN_REPARSE_POINT);
if (NT_SUCCESS (f_status))
{
/* We call NtQueryInformationFile here, rather than
pc.get_ino_by_handle(), otherwise we can't short-circuit
dirent_set_d_ino correctly. */
FILE_INTERNAL_INFORMATION fai;
f_status = NtQueryInformationFile (hdl, &io, &fai, sizeof fai,
FileInternalInformation);
NtClose (hdl);
if (NT_SUCCESS (f_status))
{
if (pc.isgood_inode (fai.FileId.QuadPart))
de->d_ino = fai.FileId.QuadPart;
else
/* Untrusted file system. Don't try to fetch inode
number again. */
dir->__flags &= ~dirent_set_d_ino;
}
}
}
}
}
if (!(res = readdir_helper (dir, de, RtlNtStatusToDosError (status),
FileAttributes, &fname)))
dir->__d_position++;
else if (!(dir->__flags & dirent_saw_dot))
{
strcpy (de->d_name , ".");
de->d_ino = pc.get_ino_by_handle (get_handle ());
de->d_type = DT_DIR;
dir->__d_position++;
dir->__flags |= dirent_saw_dot;
res = 0;
}
else if (!(dir->__flags & dirent_saw_dot_dot))
{
strcpy (de->d_name , "..");
if (!(dir->__flags & dirent_isroot))
de->d_ino = readdir_get_ino (get_name (), true);
else
de->d_ino = pc.get_ino_by_handle (get_handle ());
de->d_type = DT_DIR;
dir->__d_position++;
dir->__flags |= dirent_saw_dot_dot;
res = 0;
}
syscall_printf ("%d = readdir (%p, %p) (L\"%lS\" > \"%ls\") (attr %p > type %d)",
res, dir, &de, res ? NULL : &fname, res ? "***" : de->d_name,
FileAttributes, de->d_type);
return res;
}
long
fhandler_disk_file::telldir (DIR *dir)
{
return dir->__d_position;
}
void
fhandler_disk_file::seekdir (DIR *dir, long loc)
{
rewinddir (dir);
while (loc > dir->__d_position)
if (!::readdir (dir))
break;
}
void
fhandler_disk_file::rewinddir (DIR *dir)
{
d_cachepos (dir) = 0;
if (wincap.has_buggy_restart_scan () && isremote ())
{
/* This works around a W2K bug. The RestartScan parameter in calls
to NtQueryDirectoryFile on remote shares is ignored, thus
resulting in not being able to rewind on remote shares. By
reopening the directory, we get a fresh new directory pointer. */
OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES attr;
NTSTATUS status;
IO_STATUS_BLOCK io;
HANDLE new_dir;
pc.init_reopen_attr (&attr, get_handle ());
status = NtOpenFile (&new_dir, SYNCHRONIZE | FILE_LIST_DIRECTORY,
&attr, &io, FILE_SHARE_VALID_FLAGS,
FILE_SYNCHRONOUS_IO_NONALERT
| FILE_OPEN_FOR_BACKUP_INTENT
| FILE_DIRECTORY_FILE);
if (!NT_SUCCESS (stat))
debug_printf ("Unable to reopen dir %s, NT error: %p",
get_name (), status);
else
{
NtClose (get_handle ());
set_io_handle (new_dir);
}
}
dir->__d_position = 0;
d_mounts (dir)->rewind ();
}
int
fhandler_disk_file::closedir (DIR *dir)
{
int res = 0;
NTSTATUS status;
delete d_mounts (dir);
if (!get_handle ())
/* ignore */;
else if (get_handle () == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
{
set_errno (EBADF);
res = -1;
}
else if (!NT_SUCCESS (status = NtClose (get_handle ())))
{
__seterrno_from_nt_status (status);
res = -1;
}
syscall_printf ("%d = closedir (%p, %s)", res, dir, get_name ());
return res;
}
fhandler_cygdrive::fhandler_cygdrive () :
fhandler_disk_file (), ndrives (0), pdrive (NULL)
{
}
int
fhandler_cygdrive::open (int flags, mode_t mode)
{
if ((flags & (O_CREAT | O_EXCL)) == (O_CREAT | O_EXCL))
{
set_errno (EEXIST);
return 0;
}
if (flags & O_WRONLY)
{
set_errno (EISDIR);
return 0;
}
flags |= O_DIROPEN;
set_flags (flags);
nohandle (true);
return 1;
}
int
fhandler_cygdrive::close ()
{
return 0;
}
void
fhandler_cygdrive::set_drives ()
{
pdrive = pdrive_buf;
ndrives = GetLogicalDriveStrings (sizeof pdrive_buf, pdrive_buf) / DRVSZ;
}
int
fhandler_cygdrive::fstat (struct __stat64 *buf)
{
fhandler_base::fstat (buf);
buf->st_ino = 2;
buf->st_mode = S_IFDIR | STD_RBITS | STD_XBITS;
if (!ndrives)
set_drives ();
char flptst[] = "X:";
int n = ndrives;
for (const char *p = pdrive; p && *p; p = strchr (p, '\0') + 1)
if (is_floppy ((flptst[0] = *p, flptst))
|| GetFileAttributes (p) == INVALID_FILE_ATTRIBUTES)
n--;
buf->st_nlink = n + 2;
return 0;
}
DIR *
fhandler_cygdrive::opendir (int fd)
{
DIR *dir;
dir = fhandler_disk_file::opendir (fd);
if (dir && !ndrives)
set_drives ();
return dir;
}
int
fhandler_cygdrive::readdir (DIR *dir, dirent *de)
{
char flptst[] = "X:";
while (true)
{
if (!pdrive || !*pdrive)
{
if (!(dir->__flags & dirent_saw_dot))
{
de->d_name[0] = '.';
de->d_name[1] = '\0';
de->d_ino = 2;
}
return ENMFILE;
}
if (!is_floppy ((flptst[0] = *pdrive, flptst))
&& GetFileAttributes (pdrive) != INVALID_FILE_ATTRIBUTES)
break;
pdrive = strchr (pdrive, '\0') + 1;
}
*de->d_name = cyg_tolower (*pdrive);
de->d_name[1] = '\0';
user_shared->warned_msdos = true;
de->d_ino = readdir_get_ino (pdrive, false);
dir->__d_position++;
pdrive = strchr (pdrive, '\0') + 1;
syscall_printf ("%p = readdir (%p) (%s)", &de, dir, de->d_name);
return 0;
}
void
fhandler_cygdrive::rewinddir (DIR *dir)
{
pdrive = pdrive_buf;
dir->__d_position = 0;
}
int
fhandler_cygdrive::closedir (DIR *dir)
{
pdrive = pdrive_buf;
return 0;
}