wget/src/utils.c

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/* Various functions of utilitarian nature.
Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This file is part of Wget.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#include <config.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#ifdef HAVE_STRING_H
# include <string.h>
#else /* not HAVE_STRING_H */
# include <strings.h>
#endif /* not HAVE_STRING_H */
#include <sys/types.h>
#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
# include <unistd.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_MMAP
# include <sys/mman.h>
#endif
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#ifdef HAVE_PWD_H
# include <pwd.h>
#endif
#include <limits.h>
#ifdef HAVE_UTIME_H
# include <utime.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_UTIME_H
# include <sys/utime.h>
#endif
#include <errno.h>
#ifdef NeXT
# include <libc.h> /* for access() */
#endif
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <assert.h>
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#include "wget.h"
#include "utils.h"
#include "fnmatch.h"
#include "hash.h"
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#ifndef errno
extern int errno;
#endif
/* This section implements several wrappers around the basic
allocation routines. This is done for two reasons: first, so that
the callers of these functions need not consistently check for
errors. If there is not enough virtual memory for running Wget,
something is seriously wrong, and Wget exits with an appropriate
error message.
The second reason why these are useful is that, if DEBUG_MALLOC is
defined, they also provide a handy (if crude) malloc debugging
interface that checks memory leaks. */
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/* Croak the fatal memory error and bail out with non-zero exit
status. */
static void
memfatal (const char *what)
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{
/* HACK: expose save_log_p from log.c, so we can turn it off in
order to prevent saving the log. Saving the log is dangerous
because logprintf() and logputs() can call malloc(), so this
could infloop. When logging is turned off, infloop can no longer
happen.
#### This is no longer really necessary because the new routines
in log.c cons only if the line exceeds eighty characters. But
this can come at the end of a line, so it's OK to be careful.
On a more serious note, it would be good to have a
log_forced_shutdown() routine that exposes this cleanly. */
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extern int save_log_p;
save_log_p = 0;
logprintf (LOG_ALWAYS, _("%s: %s: Not enough memory.\n"), exec_name, what);
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exit (1);
}
/* These functions end with _real because they need to be
distinguished from the debugging functions, and from the macros.
Explanation follows:
If memory debugging is not turned on, wget.h defines these:
#define xmalloc xmalloc_real
#define xrealloc xrealloc_real
#define xstrdup xstrdup_real
#define xfree free
In case of memory debugging, the definitions are a bit more
complex, because we want to provide more information, *and* we want
to call the debugging code. (The former is the reason why xmalloc
and friends need to be macros in the first place.) Then it looks
like this:
#define xmalloc(a) xmalloc_debug (a, __FILE__, __LINE__)
#define xfree(a) xfree_debug (a, __FILE__, __LINE__)
#define xrealloc(a, b) xrealloc_debug (a, b, __FILE__, __LINE__)
#define xstrdup(a) xstrdup_debug (a, __FILE__, __LINE__)
Each of the *_debug function does its magic and calls the real one. */
#ifdef DEBUG_MALLOC
# define STATIC_IF_DEBUG static
#else
# define STATIC_IF_DEBUG
#endif
STATIC_IF_DEBUG void *
xmalloc_real (size_t size)
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{
void *ptr = malloc (size);
if (!ptr)
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memfatal ("malloc");
return ptr;
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}
STATIC_IF_DEBUG void *
xrealloc_real (void *ptr, size_t newsize)
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{
void *newptr;
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/* Not all Un*xes have the feature of realloc() that calling it with
a NULL-pointer is the same as malloc(), but it is easy to
simulate. */
if (ptr)
newptr = realloc (ptr, newsize);
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else
newptr = malloc (newsize);
if (!newptr)
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memfatal ("realloc");
return newptr;
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}
STATIC_IF_DEBUG char *
xstrdup_real (const char *s)
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{
char *copy;
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#ifndef HAVE_STRDUP
int l = strlen (s);
copy = malloc (l + 1);
if (!copy)
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memfatal ("strdup");
memcpy (copy, s, l + 1);
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#else /* HAVE_STRDUP */
copy = strdup (s);
if (!copy)
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memfatal ("strdup");
#endif /* HAVE_STRDUP */
return copy;
}
#ifdef DEBUG_MALLOC
/* Crude home-grown routines for debugging some malloc-related
problems. Featured:
* Counting the number of malloc and free invocations, and reporting
the "balance", i.e. how many times more malloc was called than it
was the case with free.
* Making malloc store its entry into a simple array and free remove
stuff from that array. At the end, print the pointers which have
not been freed, along with the source file and the line number.
This also has the side-effect of detecting freeing memory that
was never allocated.
Note that this kind of memory leak checking strongly depends on
every malloc() being followed by a free(), even if the program is
about to finish. Wget is careful to free the data structure it
allocated in init.c. */
static int malloc_count, free_count;
static struct {
char *ptr;
const char *file;
int line;
} malloc_debug[100000];
/* Both register_ptr and unregister_ptr take O(n) operations to run,
which can be a real problem. It would be nice to use a hash table
for malloc_debug, but the functions in hash.c are not suitable
because they can call malloc() themselves. Maybe it would work if
the hash table were preallocated to a huge size, and if we set the
rehash threshold to 1.0. */
/* Register PTR in malloc_debug. Abort if this is not possible
(presumably due to the number of current allocations exceeding the
size of malloc_debug.) */
static void
register_ptr (void *ptr, const char *file, int line)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (malloc_debug); i++)
if (malloc_debug[i].ptr == NULL)
{
malloc_debug[i].ptr = ptr;
malloc_debug[i].file = file;
malloc_debug[i].line = line;
return;
}
abort ();
}
/* Unregister PTR from malloc_debug. Abort if PTR is not present in
malloc_debug. (This catches calling free() with a bogus pointer.) */
static void
unregister_ptr (void *ptr)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (malloc_debug); i++)
if (malloc_debug[i].ptr == ptr)
{
malloc_debug[i].ptr = NULL;
return;
}
abort ();
}
/* Print the malloc debug stats that can be gathered from the above
information. Currently this is the count of mallocs, frees, the
difference between the two, and the dump of the contents of
malloc_debug. The last part are the memory leaks. */
void
print_malloc_debug_stats (void)
{
int i;
printf ("\nMalloc: %d\nFree: %d\nBalance: %d\n\n",
malloc_count, free_count, malloc_count - free_count);
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (malloc_debug); i++)
if (malloc_debug[i].ptr != NULL)
printf ("0x%08ld: %s:%d\n", (long)malloc_debug[i].ptr,
malloc_debug[i].file, malloc_debug[i].line);
}
void *
xmalloc_debug (size_t size, const char *source_file, int source_line)
{
void *ptr = xmalloc_real (size);
++malloc_count;
register_ptr (ptr, source_file, source_line);
return ptr;
}
void
xfree_debug (void *ptr, const char *source_file, int source_line)
{
assert (ptr != NULL);
++free_count;
unregister_ptr (ptr);
free (ptr);
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}
void *
xrealloc_debug (void *ptr, size_t newsize, const char *source_file, int source_line)
{
void *newptr = xrealloc_real (ptr, newsize);
if (!ptr)
{
++malloc_count;
register_ptr (newptr, source_file, source_line);
}
else if (newptr != ptr)
{
unregister_ptr (ptr);
register_ptr (newptr, source_file, source_line);
}
return newptr;
}
char *
xstrdup_debug (const char *s, const char *source_file, int source_line)
{
char *copy = xstrdup_real (s);
++malloc_count;
register_ptr (copy, source_file, source_line);
return copy;
}
#endif /* DEBUG_MALLOC */
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/* Copy the string formed by two pointers (one on the beginning, other
on the char after the last char) to a new, malloc-ed location.
0-terminate it. */
char *
strdupdelim (const char *beg, const char *end)
{
char *res = (char *)xmalloc (end - beg + 1);
memcpy (res, beg, end - beg);
res[end - beg] = '\0';
return res;
}
/* Parse a string containing comma-separated elements, and return a
vector of char pointers with the elements. Spaces following the
commas are ignored. */
char **
sepstring (const char *s)
{
char **res;
const char *p;
int i = 0;
if (!s || !*s)
return NULL;
res = NULL;
p = s;
while (*s)
{
if (*s == ',')
{
res = (char **)xrealloc (res, (i + 2) * sizeof (char *));
res[i] = strdupdelim (p, s);
res[++i] = NULL;
++s;
/* Skip the blanks following the ','. */
while (ISSPACE (*s))
++s;
p = s;
}
else
++s;
}
res = (char **)xrealloc (res, (i + 2) * sizeof (char *));
res[i] = strdupdelim (p, s);
res[i + 1] = NULL;
return res;
}
/* Return pointer to a static char[] buffer in which zero-terminated
string-representation of TM (in form hh:mm:ss) is printed. It is
shamelessly non-reentrant, but it doesn't matter, really.
If TM is non-NULL, the time_t of the current time will be stored
there. */
char *
time_str (time_t *tm)
{
static char tms[15];
struct tm *ptm;
time_t tim;
*tms = '\0';
tim = time (tm);
if (tim == -1)
return tms;
ptm = localtime (&tim);
sprintf (tms, "%02d:%02d:%02d", ptm->tm_hour, ptm->tm_min, ptm->tm_sec);
return tms;
}
/* Returns an error message for ERRNUM. #### This requires more work.
This function, as well as the whole error system, is very
ill-conceived. */
const char *
uerrmsg (uerr_t errnum)
{
switch (errnum)
{
case URLUNKNOWN:
return _("Unknown/unsupported protocol");
break;
case URLBADPORT:
return _("Invalid port specification");
break;
case URLBADHOST:
return _("Invalid host name");
break;
default:
abort ();
/* $@#@#$ compiler. */
return NULL;
}
}
/* The Windows versions of the following two functions are defined in
mswindows.c. */
/* A cuserid() immitation using getpwuid(), to avoid hassling with
utmp. Besides, not all systems have cuesrid(). Under Windows, it
is defined in mswindows.c.
If WHERE is non-NULL, the username will be stored there.
Otherwise, it will be returned as a static buffer (as returned by
getpwuid()). In the latter case, the buffer should be copied
before calling getpwuid() or pwd_cuserid() again. */
#ifndef WINDOWS
char *
pwd_cuserid (char *where)
{
struct passwd *pwd;
if (!(pwd = getpwuid (getuid ())) || !pwd->pw_name)
return NULL;
if (where)
{
strcpy (where, pwd->pw_name);
return where;
}
else
return pwd->pw_name;
}
void
fork_to_background (void)
{
pid_t pid;
/* Whether we arrange our own version of opt.lfilename here. */
int changedp = 0;
if (!opt.lfilename)
{
opt.lfilename = unique_name (DEFAULT_LOGFILE);
changedp = 1;
}
pid = fork ();
if (pid < 0)
{
/* parent, error */
perror ("fork");
exit (1);
}
else if (pid != 0)
{
/* parent, no error */
printf (_("Continuing in background.\n"));
if (changedp)
printf (_("Output will be written to `%s'.\n"), opt.lfilename);
exit (0);
}
/* child: keep running */
}
#endif /* not WINDOWS */
/* Canonicalize PATH, and return a new path. The new path differs from PATH
in that:
Multple `/'s are collapsed to a single `/'.
Leading `./'s and trailing `/.'s are removed.
Trailing `/'s are removed.
Non-leading `../'s and trailing `..'s are handled by removing
portions of the path.
E.g. "a/b/c/./../d/.." will yield "a/b". This function originates
from GNU Bash.
Changes for Wget:
Always use '/' as stub_char.
Don't check for local things using canon_stat.
Change the original string instead of strdup-ing.
React correctly when beginning with `./' and `../'. */
void
path_simplify (char *path)
{
register int i, start, ddot;
char stub_char;
if (!*path)
return;
/*stub_char = (*path == '/') ? '/' : '.';*/
stub_char = '/';
/* Addition: Remove all `./'-s preceding the string. If `../'-s
precede, put `/' in front and remove them too. */
i = 0;
ddot = 0;
while (1)
{
if (path[i] == '.' && path[i + 1] == '/')
i += 2;
else if (path[i] == '.' && path[i + 1] == '.' && path[i + 2] == '/')
{
i += 3;
ddot = 1;
}
else
break;
}
if (i)
strcpy (path, path + i - ddot);
/* Replace single `.' or `..' with `/'. */
if ((path[0] == '.' && path[1] == '\0')
|| (path[0] == '.' && path[1] == '.' && path[2] == '\0'))
{
path[0] = stub_char;
path[1] = '\0';
return;
}
/* Walk along PATH looking for things to compact. */
i = 0;
while (1)
{
if (!path[i])
break;
while (path[i] && path[i] != '/')
i++;
start = i++;
/* If we didn't find any slashes, then there is nothing left to do. */
if (!path[start])
break;
/* Handle multiple `/'s in a row. */
while (path[i] == '/')
i++;
if ((start + 1) != i)
{
strcpy (path + start + 1, path + i);
i = start + 1;
}
/* Check for trailing `/'. */
if (start && !path[i])
{
zero_last:
path[--i] = '\0';
break;
}
/* Check for `../', `./' or trailing `.' by itself. */
if (path[i] == '.')
{
/* Handle trailing `.' by itself. */
if (!path[i + 1])
goto zero_last;
/* Handle `./'. */
if (path[i + 1] == '/')
{
strcpy (path + i, path + i + 1);
i = (start < 0) ? 0 : start;
continue;
}
/* Handle `../' or trailing `..' by itself. */
if (path[i + 1] == '.' &&
(path[i + 2] == '/' || !path[i + 2]))
{
while (--start > -1 && path[start] != '/');
strcpy (path + start + 1, path + i + 2);
i = (start < 0) ? 0 : start;
continue;
}
} /* path == '.' */
} /* while */
if (!*path)
{
*path = stub_char;
path[1] = '\0';
}
}
/* "Touch" FILE, i.e. make its atime and mtime equal to the time
specified with TM. */
void
touch (const char *file, time_t tm)
{
#ifdef HAVE_STRUCT_UTIMBUF
struct utimbuf times;
times.actime = times.modtime = tm;
#else
time_t times[2];
times[0] = times[1] = tm;
#endif
if (utime (file, &times) == -1)
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logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, "utime(%s): %s\n", file, strerror (errno));
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}
/* Checks if FILE is a symbolic link, and removes it if it is. Does
nothing under MS-Windows. */
int
remove_link (const char *file)
{
int err = 0;
struct stat st;
if (lstat (file, &st) == 0 && S_ISLNK (st.st_mode))
{
DEBUGP (("Unlinking %s (symlink).\n", file));
err = unlink (file);
if (err != 0)
logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("Failed to unlink symlink `%s': %s\n"),
file, strerror (errno));
}
return err;
}
/* Does FILENAME exist? This is quite a lousy implementation, since
it supplies no error codes -- only a yes-or-no answer. Thus it
will return that a file does not exist if, e.g., the directory is
unreadable. I don't mind it too much currently, though. The
proper way should, of course, be to have a third, error state,
other than true/false, but that would introduce uncalled-for
additional complexity to the callers. */
int
file_exists_p (const char *filename)
{
#ifdef HAVE_ACCESS
return access (filename, F_OK) >= 0;
#else
struct stat buf;
return stat (filename, &buf) >= 0;
#endif
}
/* Returns 0 if PATH is a directory, 1 otherwise (any kind of file).
Returns 0 on error. */
int
file_non_directory_p (const char *path)
{
struct stat buf;
/* Use lstat() rather than stat() so that symbolic links pointing to
directories can be identified correctly. */
if (lstat (path, &buf) != 0)
return 0;
return S_ISDIR (buf.st_mode) ? 0 : 1;
}
/* Return a unique filename, given a prefix and count */
static char *
unique_name_1 (const char *fileprefix, int count)
{
char *filename;
if (count)
{
filename = (char *)xmalloc (strlen (fileprefix) + numdigit (count) + 2);
sprintf (filename, "%s.%d", fileprefix, count);
}
else
filename = xstrdup (fileprefix);
if (!file_exists_p (filename))
return filename;
else
{
xfree (filename);
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return NULL;
}
}
/* Return a unique file name, based on PREFIX. */
char *
unique_name (const char *prefix)
{
char *file = NULL;
int count = 0;
while (!file)
file = unique_name_1 (prefix, count++);
return file;
}
/* Create DIRECTORY. If some of the pathname components of DIRECTORY
are missing, create them first. In case any mkdir() call fails,
return its error status. Returns 0 on successful completion.
The behaviour of this function should be identical to the behaviour
of `mkdir -p' on systems where mkdir supports the `-p' option. */
int
make_directory (const char *directory)
{
int quit = 0;
int i;
char *dir;
/* Make a copy of dir, to be able to write to it. Otherwise, the
function is unsafe if called with a read-only char *argument. */
STRDUP_ALLOCA (dir, directory);
/* If the first character of dir is '/', skip it (and thus enable
creation of absolute-pathname directories. */
for (i = (*dir == '/'); 1; ++i)
{
for (; dir[i] && dir[i] != '/'; i++)
;
if (!dir[i])
quit = 1;
dir[i] = '\0';
/* Check whether the directory already exists. */
if (!file_exists_p (dir))
{
if (mkdir (dir, 0777) < 0)
return -1;
}
if (quit)
break;
else
dir[i] = '/';
}
return 0;
}
static int in_acclist PARAMS ((const char *const *, const char *, int));
/* Determine whether a file is acceptable to be followed, according to
lists of patterns to accept/reject. */
int
acceptable (const char *s)
{
int l = strlen (s);
while (l && s[l] != '/')
--l;
if (s[l] == '/')
s += (l + 1);
if (opt.accepts)
{
if (opt.rejects)
return (in_acclist ((const char *const *)opt.accepts, s, 1)
&& !in_acclist ((const char *const *)opt.rejects, s, 1));
else
return in_acclist ((const char *const *)opt.accepts, s, 1);
}
else if (opt.rejects)
return !in_acclist ((const char *const *)opt.rejects, s, 1);
return 1;
}
/* Compare S1 and S2 frontally; S2 must begin with S1. E.g. if S1 is
`/something', frontcmp() will return 1 only if S2 begins with
`/something'. Otherwise, 0 is returned. */
int
frontcmp (const char *s1, const char *s2)
{
for (; *s1 && *s2 && (*s1 == *s2); ++s1, ++s2);
return !*s1;
}
/* Iterate through STRLIST, and return the first element that matches
S, through wildcards or front comparison (as appropriate). */
static char *
proclist (char **strlist, const char *s, enum accd flags)
{
char **x;
for (x = strlist; *x; x++)
if (has_wildcards_p (*x))
{
if (fnmatch (*x, s, FNM_PATHNAME) == 0)
break;
}
else
{
char *p = *x + ((flags & ALLABS) && (**x == '/')); /* Remove '/' */
if (frontcmp (p, s))
break;
}
return *x;
}
/* Returns whether DIRECTORY is acceptable for download, wrt the
include/exclude lists.
If FLAGS is ALLABS, the leading `/' is ignored in paths; relative
and absolute paths may be freely intermixed. */
int
accdir (const char *directory, enum accd flags)
{
/* Remove starting '/'. */
if (flags & ALLABS && *directory == '/')
++directory;
if (opt.includes)
{
if (!proclist (opt.includes, directory, flags))
return 0;
}
if (opt.excludes)
{
if (proclist (opt.excludes, directory, flags))
return 0;
}
return 1;
}
/* Match the end of STRING against PATTERN. For instance:
match_backwards ("abc", "bc") -> 1
match_backwards ("abc", "ab") -> 0
match_backwards ("abc", "abc") -> 1 */
static int
match_backwards (const char *string, const char *pattern)
{
int i, j;
for (i = strlen (string), j = strlen (pattern); i >= 0 && j >= 0; i--, j--)
if (string[i] != pattern[j])
break;
/* If the pattern was exhausted, the match was succesful. */
if (j == -1)
return 1;
else
return 0;
}
/* Checks whether string S matches each element of ACCEPTS. A list
element are matched either with fnmatch() or match_backwards(),
according to whether the element contains wildcards or not.
If the BACKWARD is 0, don't do backward comparison -- just compare
them normally. */
static int
in_acclist (const char *const *accepts, const char *s, int backward)
{
for (; *accepts; accepts++)
{
if (has_wildcards_p (*accepts))
{
/* fnmatch returns 0 if the pattern *does* match the
string. */
if (fnmatch (*accepts, s, 0) == 0)
return 1;
}
else
{
if (backward)
{
if (match_backwards (s, *accepts))
return 1;
}
else
{
if (!strcmp (s, *accepts))
return 1;
}
}
}
return 0;
}
/* Return the malloc-ed suffix of STR. For instance:
suffix ("foo.bar") -> "bar"
suffix ("foo.bar.baz") -> "baz"
suffix ("/foo/bar") -> NULL
suffix ("/foo.bar/baz") -> NULL */
char *
suffix (const char *str)
{
int i;
for (i = strlen (str); i && str[i] != '/' && str[i] != '.'; i--);
if (str[i++] == '.')
return xstrdup (str + i);
else
return NULL;
}
/* Read a line from FP. The function reallocs the storage as needed
to accomodate for any length of the line. Reallocs are done
storage exponentially, doubling the storage after each overflow to
minimize the number of calls to realloc() and fgets(). The newline
character at the end of line is retained.
After end-of-file is encountered without anything being read, NULL
is returned. NULL is also returned on error. To distinguish
between these two cases, use the stdio function ferror(). */
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char *
read_whole_line (FILE *fp)
{
int length = 0;
int bufsize = 81;
char *line = (char *)xmalloc (bufsize);
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while (fgets (line + length, bufsize - length, fp))
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{
length += strlen (line + length);
assert (length > 0);
if (line[length - 1] == '\n')
break;
/* fgets() guarantees to read the whole line, or to use up the
space we've given it. We can double the buffer
unconditionally. */
bufsize <<= 1;
line = xrealloc (line, bufsize);
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}
if (length == 0 || ferror (fp))
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{
xfree (line);
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return NULL;
}
if (length + 1 < bufsize)
/* Relieve the memory from our exponential greediness. We say
`length + 1' because the terminating \0 is not included in
LENGTH. We don't need to zero-terminate the string ourselves,
though, because fgets() does that. */
line = xrealloc (line, length + 1);
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return line;
}
/* Read FILE into memory. A pointer to `struct file_memory' are
returned; use struct element `content' to access file contents, and
the element `length' to know the file length. `content' is *not*
zero-terminated, and you should *not* read or write beyond the [0,
length) range of characters.
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After you are done with the file contents, call read_file_free to
release the memory.
Depending on the operating system and the type of file that is
being read, read_file() either mmap's the file into memory, or
reads the file into the core using read().
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If file is named "-", fileno(stdin) is used for reading instead.
If you want to read from a real file named "-", use "./-" instead. */
struct file_memory *
read_file (const char *file)
{
int fd;
struct file_memory *fm;
long size;
int inhibit_close = 0;
/* Some magic in the finest tradition of Perl and its kin: if FILE
is "-", just use stdin. */
if (HYPHENP (file))
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{
fd = fileno (stdin);
inhibit_close = 1;
/* Note that we don't inhibit mmap() in this case. If stdin is
redirected from a regular file, mmap() will still work. */
}
else
fd = open (file, O_RDONLY);
if (fd < 0)
return NULL;
fm = xmalloc (sizeof (struct file_memory));
#ifdef HAVE_MMAP
{
struct stat buf;
if (fstat (fd, &buf) < 0)
goto mmap_lose;
fm->length = buf.st_size;
/* NOTE: As far as I know, the callers of this function never
modify the file text. Relying on this would enable us to
specify PROT_READ and MAP_SHARED for a marginal gain in
efficiency, but at some cost to generality. */
fm->content = mmap (NULL, fm->length, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
MAP_PRIVATE, fd, 0);
if (fm->content == MAP_FAILED)
goto mmap_lose;
if (!inhibit_close)
close (fd);
fm->mmap_p = 1;
return fm;
}
mmap_lose:
/* The most common reason why mmap() fails is that FD does not point
to a plain file. However, it's also possible that mmap() doesn't
work for a particular type of file. Therefore, whenever mmap()
fails, we just fall back to the regular method. */
#endif /* HAVE_MMAP */
fm->length = 0;
size = 512; /* number of bytes fm->contents can
hold at any given time. */
fm->content = xmalloc (size);
while (1)
{
long nread;
if (fm->length > size / 2)
{
/* #### I'm not sure whether the whole exponential-growth
thing makes sense with kernel read. On Linux at least,
read() refuses to read more than 4K from a file at a
single chunk anyway. But other Unixes might optimize it
better, and it doesn't *hurt* anything, so I'm leaving
it. */
/* Normally, we grow SIZE exponentially to make the number
of calls to read() and realloc() logarithmic in relation
to file size. However, read() can read an amount of data
smaller than requested, and it would be unreasonably to
double SIZE every time *something* was read. Therefore,
we double SIZE only when the length exceeds half of the
entire allocated size. */
size <<= 1;
fm->content = xrealloc (fm->content, size);
}
nread = read (fd, fm->content + fm->length, size - fm->length);
if (nread > 0)
/* Successful read. */
fm->length += nread;
else if (nread < 0)
/* Error. */
goto lose;
else
/* EOF */
break;
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}
if (!inhibit_close)
close (fd);
if (size > fm->length && fm->length != 0)
/* Due to exponential growth of fm->content, the allocated region
might be much larger than what is actually needed. */
fm->content = xrealloc (fm->content, fm->length);
fm->mmap_p = 0;
return fm;
lose:
if (!inhibit_close)
close (fd);
xfree (fm->content);
xfree (fm);
return NULL;
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}
/* Release the resources held by FM. Specifically, this calls
munmap() or xfree() on fm->content, depending whether mmap or
malloc/read were used to read in the file. It also frees the
memory needed to hold the FM structure itself. */
void
read_file_free (struct file_memory *fm)
{
#ifdef HAVE_MMAP
if (fm->mmap_p)
{
munmap (fm->content, fm->length);
}
else
#endif
{
xfree (fm->content);
}
xfree (fm);
}
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/* Free the pointers in a NULL-terminated vector of pointers, then
free the pointer itself. */
void
free_vec (char **vec)
{
if (vec)
{
char **p = vec;
while (*p)
xfree (*p++);
xfree (vec);
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}
}
/* Append vector V2 to vector V1. The function frees V2 and
reallocates V1 (thus you may not use the contents of neither
pointer after the call). If V1 is NULL, V2 is returned. */
char **
merge_vecs (char **v1, char **v2)
{
int i, j;
if (!v1)
return v2;
if (!v2)
return v1;
if (!*v2)
{
/* To avoid j == 0 */
xfree (v2);
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return v1;
}
/* Count v1. */
for (i = 0; v1[i]; i++);
/* Count v2. */
for (j = 0; v2[j]; j++);
/* Reallocate v1. */
v1 = (char **)xrealloc (v1, (i + j + 1) * sizeof (char **));
memcpy (v1 + i, v2, (j + 1) * sizeof (char *));
xfree (v2);
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return v1;
}
/* A set of simple-minded routines to store strings in a linked list.
This used to also be used for searching, but now we have hash
tables for that. */
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/* It's a shame that these simple things like linked lists and hash
tables (see hash.c) need to be implemented over and over again. It
would be nice to be able to use the routines from glib -- see
www.gtk.org for details. However, that would make Wget depend on
glib, and I want to avoid dependencies to external libraries for
reasons of convenience and portability (I suspect Wget is more
portable than anything ever written for Gnome). */
/* Append an element to the list. If the list has a huge number of
elements, this can get slow because it has to find the list's
ending. If you think you have to call slist_append in a loop,
think about calling slist_prepend() followed by slist_nreverse(). */
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slist *
slist_append (slist *l, const char *s)
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{
slist *newel = (slist *)xmalloc (sizeof (slist));
slist *beg = l;
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newel->string = xstrdup (s);
newel->next = NULL;
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if (!l)
return newel;
/* Find the last element. */
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while (l->next)
l = l->next;
l->next = newel;
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return beg;
}
/* Prepend S to the list. Unlike slist_append(), this is O(1). */
slist *
slist_prepend (slist *l, const char *s)
{
slist *newel = (slist *)xmalloc (sizeof (slist));
newel->string = xstrdup (s);
newel->next = l;
return newel;
}
/* Destructively reverse L. */
slist *
slist_nreverse (slist *l)
{
slist *prev = NULL;
while (l)
{
slist *next = l->next;
l->next = prev;
prev = l;
l = next;
}
return prev;
}
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/* Is there a specific entry in the list? */
int
slist_contains (slist *l, const char *s)
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{
for (; l; l = l->next)
if (!strcmp (l->string, s))
return 1;
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return 0;
}
/* Free the whole slist. */
void
slist_free (slist *l)
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{
while (l)
{
slist *n = l->next;
xfree (l->string);
xfree (l);
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l = n;
}
}
/* Sometimes it's useful to create "sets" of strings, i.e. special
hash tables where you want to store strings as keys and merely
query for their existence. Here is a set of utility routines that
makes that transparent. */
void
string_set_add (struct hash_table *ht, const char *s)
{
/* First check whether the set element already exists. If it does,
do nothing so that we don't have to free() the old element and
then strdup() a new one. */
if (hash_table_exists (ht, s))
return;
/* We use "1" as value. It provides us a useful and clear arbitrary
value, and it consumes no memory -- the pointers to the same
string "1" will be shared by all the key-value pairs in all `set'
hash tables. */
hash_table_put (ht, xstrdup (s), "1");
}
/* Synonym for hash_table_exists... */
int
string_set_exists (struct hash_table *ht, const char *s)
{
return hash_table_exists (ht, s);
}
static int
string_set_free_mapper (void *key, void *value_ignored, void *arg_ignored)
{
xfree (key);
return 0;
}
void
string_set_free (struct hash_table *ht)
{
hash_table_map (ht, string_set_free_mapper, NULL);
hash_table_destroy (ht);
}
static int
free_keys_and_values_mapper (void *key, void *value, void *arg_ignored)
{
xfree (key);
xfree (value);
return 0;
}
/* Another utility function: call free() on all keys and values of HT. */
void
free_keys_and_values (struct hash_table *ht)
{
hash_table_map (ht, free_keys_and_values_mapper, NULL);
}
/* Engine for legible and legible_long_long; this function works on
strings. */
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static char *
legible_1 (const char *repr)
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{
static char outbuf[128];
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int i, i1, mod;
char *outptr;
const char *inptr;
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/* Reset the pointers. */
outptr = outbuf;
inptr = repr;
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/* If the number is negative, shift the pointers. */
if (*inptr == '-')
{
*outptr++ = '-';
++inptr;
}
/* How many digits before the first separator? */
mod = strlen (inptr) % 3;
/* Insert them. */
for (i = 0; i < mod; i++)
*outptr++ = inptr[i];
/* Now insert the rest of them, putting separator before every
third digit. */
for (i1 = i, i = 0; inptr[i1]; i++, i1++)
{
if (i % 3 == 0 && i1 != 0)
*outptr++ = ',';
*outptr++ = inptr[i1];
}
/* Zero-terminate the string. */
*outptr = '\0';
return outbuf;
}
/* Legible -- return a static pointer to the legibly printed long. */
char *
legible (long l)
{
char inbuf[24];
/* Print the number into the buffer. */
long_to_string (inbuf, l);
return legible_1 (inbuf);
}
/* Write a string representation of NUMBER into the provided buffer.
We cannot use sprintf() because we cannot be sure whether the
platform supports printing of what we chose for VERY_LONG_TYPE.
Example: Gcc supports `long long' under many platforms, but on many
of those the native libc knows nothing of it and therefore cannot
print it.
How long BUFFER needs to be depends on the platform and the content
of NUMBER. For 64-bit VERY_LONG_TYPE (the most common case), 24
bytes are sufficient. Using more might be a good idea.
This function does not go through the hoops that long_to_string
goes to because it doesn't need to be fast. (It's called perhaps
once in a Wget run.) */
static void
very_long_to_string (char *buffer, VERY_LONG_TYPE number)
{
int i = 0;
int j;
/* Print the number backwards... */
do
{
buffer[i++] = '0' + number % 10;
number /= 10;
}
while (number);
/* ...and reverse the order of the digits. */
for (j = 0; j < i / 2; j++)
{
char c = buffer[j];
buffer[j] = buffer[i - 1 - j];
buffer[i - 1 - j] = c;
}
buffer[i] = '\0';
}
/* The same as legible(), but works on VERY_LONG_TYPE. See sysdep.h. */
char *
legible_very_long (VERY_LONG_TYPE l)
{
char inbuf[128];
/* Print the number into the buffer. */
very_long_to_string (inbuf, l);
return legible_1 (inbuf);
}
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/* Count the digits in a (long) integer. */
int
numdigit (long a)
{
int res = 1;
while ((a /= 10) != 0)
++res;
return res;
}
/* Print NUMBER to BUFFER. This is equivalent to sprintf(buffer,
"%ld", number), only much faster.
BUFFER should accept 24 bytes. This should suffice for the longest
numbers on 64-bit machines, including the `-' sign and the trailing
\0. */
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void
long_to_string (char *buffer, long number)
{
#if (SIZEOF_LONG != 4) && (SIZEOF_LONG != 8)
/* Huh? */
sprintf (buffer, "%ld", number);
#else /* (SIZEOF_LONG == 4) || (SIZEOF_LONG == 8) */
char *p = buffer;
int force = 0;
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if (number < 0)
{
*p++ = '-';
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number = -number;
}
#define FROB(figure) do { \
if (force || number >= figure) \
*p++ = number / figure + '0', number %= figure, force = 1; \
} while (0)
#if SIZEOF_LONG == 8
FROB (1000000000000000000L);
FROB (100000000000000000L);
FROB (10000000000000000L);
FROB (1000000000000000L);
FROB (100000000000000L);
FROB (10000000000000L);
FROB (1000000000000L);
FROB (100000000000L);
FROB (10000000000L);
#endif /* SIZEOF_LONG == 8 */
FROB (1000000000);
FROB (100000000);
FROB (10000000);
FROB (1000000);
FROB (100000);
FROB (10000);
FROB (1000);
FROB (100);
FROB (10);
#undef FROB
*p++ = number + '0';
*p = '\0';
#endif /* (SIZEOF_LONG == 4) || (SIZEOF_LONG == 8) */
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}
/* This should probably be at a better place, but it doesn't really
fit into html-parse.c. */
/* The function returns the pointer to the malloc-ed quoted version of
string s. It will recognize and quote numeric and special graphic
entities, as per RFC1866:
`&' -> `&amp;'
`<' -> `&lt;'
`>' -> `&gt;'
`"' -> `&quot;'
SP -> `&#32;'
No other entities are recognized or replaced. */
char *
html_quote_string (const char *s)
{
const char *b = s;
char *p, *res;
int i;
/* Pass through the string, and count the new size. */
for (i = 0; *s; s++, i++)
{
if (*s == '&')
i += 4; /* `amp;' */
else if (*s == '<' || *s == '>')
i += 3; /* `lt;' and `gt;' */
else if (*s == '\"')
i += 5; /* `quot;' */
else if (*s == ' ')
i += 4; /* #32; */
}
res = (char *)xmalloc (i + 1);
s = b;
for (p = res; *s; s++)
{
switch (*s)
{
case '&':
*p++ = '&';
*p++ = 'a';
*p++ = 'm';
*p++ = 'p';
*p++ = ';';
break;
case '<': case '>':
*p++ = '&';
*p++ = (*s == '<' ? 'l' : 'g');
*p++ = 't';
*p++ = ';';
break;
case '\"':
*p++ = '&';
*p++ = 'q';
*p++ = 'u';
*p++ = 'o';
*p++ = 't';
*p++ = ';';
break;
case ' ':
*p++ = '&';
*p++ = '#';
*p++ = '3';
*p++ = '2';
*p++ = ';';
break;
default:
*p++ = *s;
}
}
*p = '\0';
return res;
}