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wget/src/utils.c

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/* Various utility functions.
Copyright (C) 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This file is part of GNU Wget.
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GNU Wget is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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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.
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GNU Wget is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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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
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along with Wget; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
In addition, as a special exception, the Free Software Foundation
gives permission to link the code of its release of Wget with the
OpenSSL project's "OpenSSL" library (or with modified versions of it
that use the same license as the "OpenSSL" library), and distribute
the linked executables. You must obey the GNU General Public License
in all respects for all of the code used other than "OpenSSL". If you
modify this file, you may extend this exception to your version of the
file, but you are not obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do
so, delete this exception statement from your version. */
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#include <config.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <string.h>
#include <time.h>
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TIME_H
# include <sys/time.h>
#endif
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#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
#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 <stdarg.h>
#ifdef HAVE_LOCALE_H
# include <locale.h>
#endif
/* For TIOCGWINSZ and friends: */
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_IOCTL_H
# include <sys/ioctl.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_TERMIOS_H
# include <termios.h>
#endif
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/* Needed for run_with_timeout. */
#include <signal.h>
#ifdef HAVE_SETJMP_H
# include <setjmp.h>
#endif
#ifndef HAVE_SIGSETJMP
/* If sigsetjmp is a macro, configure won't pick it up. */
# ifdef sigsetjmp
# define HAVE_SIGSETJMP
# endif
#endif
#undef USE_SIGNAL_TIMEOUT
#if defined(HAVE_SIGSETJMP) || defined(HAVE_SIGBLOCK)
# define USE_SIGNAL_TIMEOUT
#endif
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#include "wget.h"
#include "utils.h"
#include "hash.h"
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/* Utility function: like xstrdup(), but also lowercases S. */
char *
xstrdup_lower (const char *s)
{
char *copy = xstrdup (s);
char *p = copy;
for (; *p; p++)
*p = TOLOWER (*p);
return copy;
}
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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 = xmalloc (end - beg + 1);
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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 = xrealloc (res, (i + 2) * sizeof (char *));
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res[i] = strdupdelim (p, s);
res[++i] = NULL;
++s;
/* Skip the blanks following the ','. */
while (ISSPACE (*s))
++s;
p = s;
}
else
++s;
}
res = xrealloc (res, (i + 2) * sizeof (char *));
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res[i] = strdupdelim (p, s);
res[i + 1] = NULL;
return res;
}
/* Like sprintf, but allocates a string of sufficient size with malloc
and returns it. GNU libc has a similar function named asprintf,
which requires the pointer to the string to be passed. */
char *
aprintf (const char *fmt, ...)
{
/* This function is implemented using vsnprintf, which we provide
for the systems that don't have it. Therefore, it should be 100%
portable. */
int size = 32;
char *str = xmalloc (size);
while (1)
{
int n;
va_list args;
/* See log_vprintf_internal for explanation why it's OK to rely
on the return value of vsnprintf. */
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va_start (args, fmt);
n = vsnprintf (str, size, fmt, args);
va_end (args);
/* If the printing worked, return the string. */
if (n > -1 && n < size)
return str;
/* Else try again with a larger buffer. */
if (n > -1) /* C99 */
size = n + 1; /* precisely what is needed */
else
size <<= 1; /* twice the old size */
str = xrealloc (str, size);
}
}
/* Concatenate the NULL-terminated list of string arguments into
freshly allocated space. */
char *
concat_strings (const char *str0, ...)
{
va_list args;
int saved_lengths[5]; /* inspired by Apache's apr_pstrcat */
char *ret, *p;
const char *next_str;
int total_length = 0;
int argcount;
/* Calculate the length of and allocate the resulting string. */
argcount = 0;
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va_start (args, str0);
for (next_str = str0; next_str != NULL; next_str = va_arg (args, char *))
{
int len = strlen (next_str);
if (argcount < countof (saved_lengths))
saved_lengths[argcount++] = len;
total_length += len;
}
va_end (args);
p = ret = xmalloc (total_length + 1);
/* Copy the strings into the allocated space. */
argcount = 0;
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va_start (args, str0);
for (next_str = str0; next_str != NULL; next_str = va_arg (args, char *))
{
int len;
if (argcount < countof (saved_lengths))
len = saved_lengths[argcount++];
else
len = strlen (next_str);
memcpy (p, next_str, len);
p += len;
}
va_end (args);
*p = '\0';
return ret;
}
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/* Return pointer to a static char[] buffer in which zero-terminated
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string-representation of TM (in form hh:mm:ss) is printed.
If TM is NULL, the current time will be used. */
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char *
time_str (time_t *tm)
{
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static char output[15];
struct tm *ptm;
time_t secs = tm ? *tm : time (NULL);
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if (secs == -1)
{
/* In case of error, return the empty string. Maybe we should
just abort if this happens? */
*output = '\0';
return output;
}
ptm = localtime (&secs);
sprintf (output, "%02d:%02d:%02d", ptm->tm_hour, ptm->tm_min, ptm->tm_sec);
return output;
}
/* Like the above, but include the date: YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss. */
char *
datetime_str (time_t *tm)
{
static char output[20]; /* "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss" + \0 */
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struct tm *ptm;
time_t secs = tm ? *tm : time (NULL);
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if (secs == -1)
{
/* In case of error, return the empty string. Maybe we should
just abort if this happens? */
*output = '\0';
return output;
}
ptm = localtime (&secs);
sprintf (output, "%04d-%02d-%02d %02d:%02d:%02d",
ptm->tm_year + 1900, ptm->tm_mon + 1, ptm->tm_mday,
ptm->tm_hour, ptm->tm_min, ptm->tm_sec);
return output;
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}
/* The Windows versions of the following two functions are defined in
mswindows.c. */
#ifndef WINDOWS
void
fork_to_background (void)
{
pid_t pid;
/* Whether we arrange our own version of opt.lfilename here. */
bool logfile_changed = false;
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if (!opt.lfilename)
{
/* We must create the file immediately to avoid either a race
condition (which arises from using unique_name and failing to
use fopen_excl) or lying to the user about the log file name
(which arises from using unique_name, printing the name, and
using fopen_excl later on.) */
FILE *new_log_fp = unique_create (DEFAULT_LOGFILE, false, &opt.lfilename);
if (new_log_fp)
{
logfile_changed = true;
fclose (new_log_fp);
}
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}
pid = fork ();
if (pid < 0)
{
/* parent, error */
perror ("fork");
exit (1);
}
else if (pid != 0)
{
/* parent, no error */
printf (_("Continuing in background, pid %d.\n"), (int) pid);
if (logfile_changed)
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printf (_("Output will be written to `%s'.\n"), opt.lfilename);
exit (0); /* #### should we use _exit()? */
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}
/* child: give up the privileges and keep running. */
setsid ();
freopen ("/dev/null", "r", stdin);
freopen ("/dev/null", "w", stdout);
freopen ("/dev/null", "w", stderr);
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}
#endif /* not WINDOWS */
/* "Touch" FILE, i.e. make its mtime ("modified time") equal the time
specified with TM. The atime ("access time") is set to the current
time. */
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void
touch (const char *file, time_t tm)
{
#ifdef HAVE_STRUCT_UTIMBUF
struct utimbuf times;
#else
struct {
time_t actime;
time_t modtime;
} times;
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#endif
times.modtime = tm;
times.actime = time (NULL);
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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;
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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. */
bool
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file_exists_p (const char *filename)
{
#ifdef HAVE_ACCESS
return access (filename, F_OK) >= 0;
#else
struct_stat buf;
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return stat (filename, &buf) >= 0;
#endif
}
/* Returns 0 if PATH is a directory, 1 otherwise (any kind of file).
Returns 0 on error. */
bool
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file_non_directory_p (const char *path)
{
struct_stat buf;
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/* Use lstat() rather than stat() so that symbolic links pointing to
directories can be identified correctly. */
if (lstat (path, &buf) != 0)
return false;
return S_ISDIR (buf.st_mode) ? false : true;
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}
/* Return the size of file named by FILENAME, or -1 if it cannot be
opened or seeked into. */
wgint
file_size (const char *filename)
{
#if defined(HAVE_FSEEKO) && defined(HAVE_FTELLO)
wgint size;
/* We use fseek rather than stat to determine the file size because
that way we can also verify that the file is readable without
explicitly checking for permissions. Inspired by the POST patch
by Arnaud Wylie. */
FILE *fp = fopen (filename, "rb");
if (!fp)
return -1;
fseeko (fp, 0, SEEK_END);
size = ftello (fp);
fclose (fp);
return size;
#else
struct_stat st;
if (stat (filename, &st) < 0)
return -1;
return st.st_size;
#endif
}
/* stat file names named PREFIX.1, PREFIX.2, etc., until one that
doesn't exist is found. Return a freshly allocated copy of the
unused file name. */
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static char *
unique_name_1 (const char *prefix)
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{
int count = 1;
int plen = strlen (prefix);
char *template = (char *)alloca (plen + 1 + 24);
char *template_tail = template + plen;
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memcpy (template, prefix, plen);
*template_tail++ = '.';
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do
number_to_string (template_tail, count++);
while (file_exists_p (template));
return xstrdup (template);
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}
/* Return a unique file name, based on FILE.
More precisely, if FILE doesn't exist, it is returned unmodified.
If not, FILE.1 is tried, then FILE.2, etc. The first FILE.<number>
file name that doesn't exist is returned.
The resulting file is not created, only verified that it didn't
exist at the point in time when the function was called.
Therefore, where security matters, don't rely that the file created
by this function exists until you open it with O_EXCL or
equivalent.
If ALLOW_PASSTHROUGH is 0, it always returns a freshly allocated
string. Otherwise, it may return FILE if the file doesn't exist
(and therefore doesn't need changing). */
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char *
unique_name (const char *file, bool allow_passthrough)
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{
/* If the FILE itself doesn't exist, return it without
modification. */
if (!file_exists_p (file))
return allow_passthrough ? (char *)file : xstrdup (file);
/* Otherwise, find a numeric suffix that results in unused file name
and return it. */
return unique_name_1 (file);
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}
/* Create a file based on NAME, except without overwriting an existing
file with that name. Providing O_EXCL is correctly implemented,
this function does not have the race condition associated with
opening the file returned by unique_name. */
FILE *
unique_create (const char *name, bool binary, char **opened_name)
{
/* unique file name, based on NAME */
char *uname = unique_name (name, false);
FILE *fp;
while ((fp = fopen_excl (uname, binary)) == NULL && errno == EEXIST)
{
xfree (uname);
uname = unique_name (name, false);
}
if (opened_name && fp != NULL)
{
if (fp)
*opened_name = uname;
else
{
*opened_name = NULL;
xfree (uname);
}
}
else
xfree (uname);
return fp;
}
/* Open the file for writing, with the addition that the file is
opened "exclusively". This means that, if the file already exists,
this function will *fail* and errno will be set to EEXIST. If
BINARY is set, the file will be opened in binary mode, equivalent
to fopen's "wb".
If opening the file fails for any reason, including the file having
previously existed, this function returns NULL and sets errno
appropriately. */
FILE *
fopen_excl (const char *fname, bool binary)
{
int fd;
#ifdef O_EXCL
int flags = O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_EXCL;
# ifdef O_BINARY
if (binary)
flags |= O_BINARY;
# endif
fd = open (fname, flags, 0666);
if (fd < 0)
return NULL;
return fdopen (fd, binary ? "wb" : "w");
#else /* not O_EXCL */
/* Manually check whether the file exists. This is prone to race
conditions, but systems without O_EXCL haven't deserved
better. */
if (file_exists_p (fname))
{
errno = EEXIST;
return NULL;
}
return fopen (fname, binary ? "wb" : "w");
#endif /* not O_EXCL */
}
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/* 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)
{
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int i, ret, quit = 0;
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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. Allow creation of
of intermediate directories to fail, as the initial path components
are not necessarily directories! */
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if (!file_exists_p (dir))
ret = mkdir (dir, 0777);
else
ret = 0;
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if (quit)
break;
else
dir[i] = '/';
}
return ret;
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}
/* Merge BASE with FILE. BASE can be a directory or a file name, FILE
should be a file name.
file_merge("/foo/bar", "baz") => "/foo/baz"
file_merge("/foo/bar/", "baz") => "/foo/bar/baz"
file_merge("foo", "bar") => "bar"
In other words, it's a simpler and gentler version of uri_merge_1. */
char *
file_merge (const char *base, const char *file)
{
char *result;
const char *cut = (const char *)strrchr (base, '/');
if (!cut)
return xstrdup (file);
result = xmalloc (cut - base + 1 + strlen (file) + 1);
memcpy (result, base, cut - base);
result[cut - base] = '/';
strcpy (result + (cut - base) + 1, file);
return result;
}
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static bool in_acclist (const char *const *, const char *, bool);
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/* Determine whether a file is acceptable to be followed, according to
lists of patterns to accept/reject. */
bool
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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, true)
&& !in_acclist ((const char *const *)opt.rejects, s, true));
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else
return in_acclist ((const char *const *)opt.accepts, s, true);
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}
else if (opt.rejects)
return !in_acclist ((const char *const *)opt.rejects, s, true);
return true;
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}
/* 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. */
bool
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frontcmp (const char *s1, const char *s2)
{
for (; *s1 && *s2 && (*s1 == *s2); ++s1, ++s2);
return *s1 == '\0';
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}
/* 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++)
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{
/* Remove leading '/' if ALLABS */
char *p = *x + ((flags & ALLABS) && (**x == '/'));
if (has_wildcards_p (p))
{
if (fnmatch (p, s, FNM_PATHNAME) == 0)
break;
}
else
{
if (frontcmp (p, s))
break;
}
}
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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. */
bool
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accdir (const char *directory, enum accd flags)
{
/* Remove starting '/'. */
if (flags & ALLABS && *directory == '/')
++directory;
if (opt.includes)
{
if (!proclist (opt.includes, directory, flags))
return false;
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}
if (opt.excludes)
{
if (proclist (opt.excludes, directory, flags))
return false;
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}
return true;
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}
/* Return true if STRING ends with TAIL. For instance:
match_tail ("abc", "bc", false) -> 1
match_tail ("abc", "ab", false) -> 0
match_tail ("abc", "abc", false) -> 1
If FOLD_CASE is true, the comparison will be case-insensitive. */
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bool
match_tail (const char *string, const char *tail, bool fold_case)
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{
int i, j;
/* We want this to be fast, so we code two loops, one with
case-folding, one without. */
if (!fold_case)
{
for (i = strlen (string), j = strlen (tail); i >= 0 && j >= 0; i--, j--)
if (string[i] != tail[j])
break;
}
else
{
for (i = strlen (string), j = strlen (tail); i >= 0 && j >= 0; i--, j--)
if (TOLOWER (string[i]) != TOLOWER (tail[j]))
break;
}
/* If the tail was exhausted, the match was succesful. */
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if (j == -1)
return true;
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else
return false;
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}
/* Checks whether string S matches each element of ACCEPTS. A list
element are matched either with fnmatch() or match_tail(),
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according to whether the element contains wildcards or not.
If the BACKWARD is false, don't do backward comparison -- just compare
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them normally. */
static bool
in_acclist (const char *const *accepts, const char *s, bool backward)
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{
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 true;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
else
{
if (backward)
{
if (match_tail (s, *accepts, 0))
return true;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
else
{
if (!strcmp (s, *accepts))
return true;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
}
}
return false;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
/* Return the location of STR's suffix (file extension). Examples:
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
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--)
;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
if (str[i++] == '.')
return (char *)str + i;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
else
return NULL;
}
/* Return true if S contains globbing wildcards (`*', `?', `[' or
`]'). */
bool
has_wildcards_p (const char *s)
{
for (; *s; s++)
if (*s == '*' || *s == '?' || *s == '[' || *s == ']')
return true;
return false;
}
/* Return true if FNAME ends with a typical HTML suffix. The
following (case-insensitive) suffixes are presumed to be HTML
files:
html
htm
?html (`?' matches one character)
#### CAVEAT. This is not necessarily a good indication that FNAME
refers to a file that contains HTML! */
bool
has_html_suffix_p (const char *fname)
{
char *suf;
if ((suf = suffix (fname)) == NULL)
return false;
if (!strcasecmp (suf, "html"))
return true;
if (!strcasecmp (suf, "htm"))
return true;
if (suf[0] && !strcasecmp (suf + 1, "html"))
return true;
return false;
}
2001-12-09 22:34:48 -05:00
/* Read a line from FP and return the pointer to freshly allocated
2003-10-04 18:58:34 -04:00
storage. The storage space is obtained through malloc() and should
be freed with free() when it is no longer needed.
2001-12-09 22:34:48 -05:00
The length of the line is not limited, except by available memory.
The newline character at the end of line is retained. The line is
terminated with a zero character.
After end-of-file is encountered without anything being read, NULL
is returned. NULL is also returned on error. To distinguish
2001-12-09 22:34:48 -05:00
between these two cases, use the stdio function ferror(). */
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
char *
read_whole_line (FILE *fp)
{
int length = 0;
2001-12-09 22:34:48 -05:00
int bufsize = 82;
char *line = xmalloc (bufsize);
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
while (fgets (line + length, bufsize - length, fp))
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
{
length += strlen (line + length);
if (length == 0)
/* Possible for example when reading from a binary file where
a line begins with \0. */
continue;
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);
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
if (length == 0 || ferror (fp))
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
{
xfree (line);
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
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);
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
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.
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
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().
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
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;
2005-03-05 21:11:10 -05:00
long size;
bool inhibit_close = false;
/* Some magic in the finest tradition of Perl and its kin: if FILE
is "-", just use stdin. */
if (HYPHENP (file))
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
{
fd = fileno (stdin);
inhibit_close = true;
/* 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 = xnew (struct file_memory);
#ifdef HAVE_MMAP
{
struct_fstat 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);
2001-04-06 00:43:13 -04:00
if (fm->content == (char *)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)
{
wgint 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
2003-10-04 18:58:34 -04:00
smaller than requested, and it would be unreasonable 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;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
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;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
/* 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);
}
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
/* 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);
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
}
/* 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);
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
return v1;
}
/* Count v1. */
for (i = 0; v1[i]; i++);
/* Count v2. */
for (j = 0; v2[j]; j++);
/* Reallocate v1. */
v1 = xrealloc (v1, (i + j + 1) * sizeof (char **));
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
memcpy (v1 + i, v2, (j + 1) * sizeof (char *));
xfree (v2);
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
return v1;
}
2005-05-30 09:31:24 -04:00
/* Append a freshly allocated copy of STR to VEC. If VEC is NULL, it
is allocated as needed. Return the new value of the vector. */
char **
vec_append (char **vec, const char *str)
{
int cnt; /* count of vector elements, including
the one we're about to append */
if (vec != NULL)
{
for (cnt = 0; vec[cnt]; cnt++)
;
++cnt;
}
else
cnt = 1;
/* Reallocate the array to fit the new element and the NULL. */
vec = xrealloc (vec, (cnt + 1) * sizeof (char *));
/* Append a copy of STR to the vector. */
vec[cnt - 1] = xstrdup (str);
vec[cnt] = NULL;
return vec;
}
/* 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_contains (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_contains... */
int
string_set_contains (struct hash_table *ht, const char *s)
{
return hash_table_contains (ht, s);
}
static int
string_set_to_array_mapper (void *key, void *value_ignored, void *arg)
{
char ***arrayptr = (char ***) arg;
*(*arrayptr)++ = (char *) key;
return 0;
}
/* Convert the specified string set to array. ARRAY should be large
enough to hold hash_table_count(ht) char pointers. */
void string_set_to_array (struct hash_table *ht, char **array)
{
hash_table_map (ht, string_set_to_array_mapper, &array);
}
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);
}
/* Get grouping data, the separator and grouping info, by calling
localeconv(). The information is cached after the first call to
the function.
In locales that don't set a thousand separator (such as the "C"
2005-06-26 22:18:52 -04:00
locale), this forces it to be ",". We are now only showing
thousand separators in one place, so this shouldn't be a problem in
practice. */
static void
get_grouping_data (const char **sep, const char **grouping)
{
static const char *cached_sep;
static const char *cached_grouping;
static bool initialized;
if (!initialized)
{
/* Get the grouping info from the locale. */
struct lconv *lconv = localeconv ();
cached_sep = lconv->thousands_sep;
cached_grouping = lconv->grouping;
if (!*cached_sep)
{
/* Many locales (such as "C" or "hr_HR") don't specify
grouping, which we still want to use it for legibility.
In those locales set the sep char to ',', unless that
character is used for decimal point, in which case set it
to ".". */
if (*lconv->decimal_point != ',')
cached_sep = ",";
else
cached_sep = ".";
cached_grouping = "\x03";
}
initialized = true;
}
*sep = cached_sep;
*grouping = cached_grouping;
}
/* Return a printed representation of N with thousand separators.
This should respect locale settings, with the exception of the "C"
locale which mandates no separator, but we use one anyway.
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
Unfortunately, we cannot use %'d (in fact it would be %'j) to get
the separators because it's too non-portable, and it's hard to test
for this feature at configure time. Besides, it wouldn't work in
the "C" locale, which many Unix users still work in. */
const char *
with_thousand_seps (wgint n)
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
{
static char outbuf[48];
char *p = outbuf + sizeof outbuf;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
/* Info received from locale */
const char *grouping, *sep;
int seplen;
/* State information */
int i = 0, groupsize;
const char *atgroup;
bool negative = n < 0;
/* Initialize grouping data. */
get_grouping_data (&sep, &grouping);
seplen = strlen (sep);
atgroup = grouping;
groupsize = *atgroup++;
/* This will overflow on WGINT_MIN, but we're not using this to
print negative numbers anyway. */
if (negative)
n = -n;
/* Write the number into the buffer, backwards, inserting the
separators as necessary. */
*--p = '\0';
while (1)
{
*--p = n % 10 + '0';
n /= 10;
if (n == 0)
break;
/* Prepend SEP to every groupsize'd digit and get new groupsize. */
if (++i == groupsize)
{
if (seplen == 1)
*--p = *sep;
else
memcpy (p -= seplen, sep, seplen);
i = 0;
if (*atgroup)
groupsize = *atgroup++;
}
}
if (negative)
*--p = '-';
return p;
}
/* N, a byte quantity, is converted to a human-readable abberviated
form a la sizes printed by `ls -lh'. The result is written to a
static buffer, a pointer to which is returned.
Unlike `with_thousand_seps', this approximates to the nearest unit.
Quoting GNU libit: "Most people visually process strings of 3-4
digits effectively, but longer strings of digits are more prone to
misinterpretation. Hence, converting to an abbreviated form
usually improves readability."
This intentionally uses kilobyte (KB), megabyte (MB), etc. in their
2005-06-23 19:07:02 -04:00
original computer-related meaning of "powers of 1024". Powers of
2005-04-28 09:18:30 -04:00
1000 would be useless since Wget already displays sizes with
thousand separators. We don't use the "*bibyte" names invented in
1998, and seldom used in practice. Wikipedia's entry on kilobyte
discusses this in some detail. */
char *
human_readable (HR_NUMTYPE n)
{
/* These suffixes are compatible with those of GNU `ls -lh'. */
static char powers[] =
{
'K', /* kilobyte, 2^10 bytes */
'M', /* megabyte, 2^20 bytes */
'G', /* gigabyte, 2^30 bytes */
'T', /* terabyte, 2^40 bytes */
'P', /* petabyte, 2^50 bytes */
'E', /* exabyte, 2^60 bytes */
};
static char buf[8];
int i;
/* If the quantity is smaller than 1K, just print it. */
if (n < 1024)
{
snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), "%d", (int) n);
return buf;
}
/* Loop over powers, dividing N with 1024 in each iteration. This
works unchanged for all sizes of wgint, while still avoiding
non-portable `long double' arithmetic. */
for (i = 0; i < countof (powers); i++)
{
/* At each iteration N is greater than the *subsequent* power.
That way N/1024.0 produces a decimal number in the units of
*this* power. */
if ((n / 1024) < 1024 || i == countof (powers) - 1)
{
2005-06-27 10:10:57 -04:00
double val = n / 1024.0;
/* Print values smaller than 10 with one decimal digits, and
others without any decimals. */
snprintf (buf, sizeof (buf), "%.*f%c",
val < 10 ? 1 : 0, val, powers[i]);
return buf;
}
n /= 1024;
}
return NULL; /* unreached */
}
/* Count the digits in the provided number. Used to allocate space
when printing numbers. */
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
int
numdigit (wgint number)
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
{
int cnt = 1;
if (number < 0)
++cnt; /* accomodate '-' */
while ((number /= 10) != 0)
++cnt;
return cnt;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
#define PR(mask) *p++ = n / (mask) + '0'
/* DIGITS_<D> is used to print a D-digit number and should be called
with mask==10^(D-1). It prints n/mask (the first digit), reducing
n to n%mask (the remaining digits), and calling DIGITS_<D-1>.
Recursively this continues until DIGITS_1 is invoked. */
#define DIGITS_1(mask) PR (mask)
#define DIGITS_2(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_1 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_3(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_2 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_4(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_3 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_5(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_4 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_6(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_5 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_7(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_6 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_8(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_7 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_9(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_8 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_10(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_9 ((mask) / 10)
/* DIGITS_<11-20> are only used on machines with 64-bit wgints. */
#define DIGITS_11(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_10 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_12(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_11 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_13(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_12 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_14(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_13 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_15(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_14 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_16(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_15 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_17(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_16 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_18(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_17 ((mask) / 10)
#define DIGITS_19(mask) PR (mask), n %= (mask), DIGITS_18 ((mask) / 10)
/* SPRINTF_WGINT is used by number_to_string to handle pathological
cases and to portably support strange sizes of wgint. Ideally this
would just use "%j" and intmax_t, but many systems don't support
it, so it's used only if nothing else works. */
#if SIZEOF_LONG >= SIZEOF_WGINT
# define SPRINTF_WGINT(buf, n) sprintf (buf, "%ld", (long) (n))
#elif SIZEOF_LONG_LONG >= SIZEOF_WGINT
# define SPRINTF_WGINT(buf, n) sprintf (buf, "%lld", (long long) (n))
#elif defined(WINDOWS)
2005-06-25 12:08:35 -04:00
# define SPRINTF_WGINT(buf, n) sprintf (buf, "%I64d", (__int64) (n))
#else
# define SPRINTF_WGINT(buf, n) sprintf (buf, "%j", (intmax_t) (n))
#endif
/* Shorthand for casting to wgint. */
#define W wgint
/* Print NUMBER to BUFFER in base 10. This is equivalent to
`sprintf(buffer, "%lld", (long long) number)', only typically much
faster and portable to machines without long long.
The speedup may make a difference in programs that frequently
convert numbers to strings. Some implementations of sprintf,
particularly the one in GNU libc, have been known to be extremely
slow when converting integers to strings.
Return the pointer to the location where the terminating zero was
printed. (Equivalent to calling buffer+strlen(buffer) after the
function is done.)
BUFFER should be big enough to accept as many bytes as you expect
the number to take up. On machines with 64-bit longs the maximum
needed size is 24 bytes. That includes the digits needed for the
largest 64-bit number, the `-' sign in case it's negative, and the
terminating '\0'. */
char *
number_to_string (char *buffer, wgint number)
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
{
char *p = buffer;
wgint n = number;
#if (SIZEOF_WGINT != 4) && (SIZEOF_WGINT != 8)
/* We are running in a strange or misconfigured environment. Let
sprintf cope with it. */
SPRINTF_WGINT (buffer, n);
p += strlen (buffer);
#else /* (SIZEOF_WGINT == 4) || (SIZEOF_WGINT == 8) */
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
if (n < 0)
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
{
if (n < -WGINT_MAX)
{
/* -n would overflow. Have sprintf deal with this. */
SPRINTF_WGINT (buffer, n);
p += strlen (buffer);
return p;
}
*p++ = '-';
n = -n;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
/* Use the DIGITS_ macro appropriate for N's number of digits. That
way printing any N is fully open-coded without a loop or jump.
(Also see description of DIGITS_*.) */
if (n < 10) DIGITS_1 (1);
else if (n < 100) DIGITS_2 (10);
else if (n < 1000) DIGITS_3 (100);
else if (n < 10000) DIGITS_4 (1000);
else if (n < 100000) DIGITS_5 (10000);
else if (n < 1000000) DIGITS_6 (100000);
else if (n < 10000000) DIGITS_7 (1000000);
else if (n < 100000000) DIGITS_8 (10000000);
else if (n < 1000000000) DIGITS_9 (100000000);
#if SIZEOF_WGINT == 4
/* wgint is 32 bits wide: no number has more than 10 digits. */
else DIGITS_10 (1000000000);
#else
2005-06-19 18:34:58 -04:00
/* wgint is 64 bits wide: handle numbers with 9-19 decimal digits.
Constants are constructed by compile-time multiplication to avoid
dealing with different notations for 64-bit constants
(nL/nLL/nI64, depending on the compiler and architecture). */
else if (n < 10*(W)1000000000) DIGITS_10 (1000000000);
else if (n < 100*(W)1000000000) DIGITS_11 (10*(W)1000000000);
else if (n < 1000*(W)1000000000) DIGITS_12 (100*(W)1000000000);
else if (n < 10000*(W)1000000000) DIGITS_13 (1000*(W)1000000000);
else if (n < 100000*(W)1000000000) DIGITS_14 (10000*(W)1000000000);
else if (n < 1000000*(W)1000000000) DIGITS_15 (100000*(W)1000000000);
else if (n < 10000000*(W)1000000000) DIGITS_16 (1000000*(W)1000000000);
else if (n < 100000000*(W)1000000000) DIGITS_17 (10000000*(W)1000000000);
else if (n < 1000000000*(W)1000000000) DIGITS_18 (100000000*(W)1000000000);
else DIGITS_19 (1000000000*(W)1000000000);
#endif
*p = '\0';
#endif /* (SIZEOF_WGINT == 4) || (SIZEOF_WGINT == 8) */
return p;
1999-12-02 02:42:23 -05:00
}
#undef PR
#undef W
#undef SPRINTF_WGINT
#undef DIGITS_1
#undef DIGITS_2
#undef DIGITS_3
#undef DIGITS_4
#undef DIGITS_5
#undef DIGITS_6
#undef DIGITS_7
#undef DIGITS_8
#undef DIGITS_9
#undef DIGITS_10
#undef DIGITS_11
#undef DIGITS_12
#undef DIGITS_13
#undef DIGITS_14
#undef DIGITS_15
#undef DIGITS_16
#undef DIGITS_17
#undef DIGITS_18
#undef DIGITS_19
#define RING_SIZE 3
/* Print NUMBER to a statically allocated string and return a pointer
to the printed representation.
This function is intended to be used in conjunction with printf.
It is hard to portably print wgint values:
a) you cannot use printf("%ld", number) because wgint can be long
long on 32-bit machines with LFS.
b) you cannot use printf("%lld", number) because NUMBER could be
long on 32-bit machines without LFS, or on 64-bit machines,
which do not require LFS. Also, Windows doesn't support %lld.
c) you cannot use printf("%j", (int_max_t) number) because not all
versions of printf support "%j", the most notable being the one
on Windows.
d) you cannot #define WGINT_FMT to the appropriate format and use
printf(WGINT_FMT, number) because that would break translations
for user-visible messages, such as printf("Downloaded: %d
bytes\n", number).
What you should use instead is printf("%s", number_to_static_string
(number)).
CAVEAT: since the function returns pointers to static data, you
must be careful to copy its result before calling it again.
However, to make it more useful with printf, the function maintains
an internal ring of static buffers to return. That way things like
printf("%s %s", number_to_static_string (num1),
number_to_static_string (num2)) work as expected. Three buffers
are currently used, which means that "%s %s %s" will work, but "%s
%s %s %s" won't. If you need to print more than three wgints,
bump the RING_SIZE (or rethink your message.) */
char *
number_to_static_string (wgint number)
{
static char ring[RING_SIZE][24];
static int ringpos;
char *buf = ring[ringpos];
number_to_string (buf, number);
ringpos = (ringpos + 1) % RING_SIZE;
return buf;
}
/* Determine the width of the terminal we're running on. If that's
not possible, return 0. */
int
determine_screen_width (void)
{
/* If there's a way to get the terminal size using POSIX
tcgetattr(), somebody please tell me. */
#ifdef TIOCGWINSZ
int fd;
struct winsize wsz;
if (opt.lfilename != NULL)
return 0;
fd = fileno (stderr);
if (ioctl (fd, TIOCGWINSZ, &wsz) < 0)
return 0; /* most likely ENOTTY */
return wsz.ws_col;
#elif defined(WINDOWS)
CONSOLE_SCREEN_BUFFER_INFO csbi;
if (!GetConsoleScreenBufferInfo (GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE), &csbi))
return 0;
return csbi.dwSize.X;
#else /* neither TIOCGWINSZ nor WINDOWS */
return 0;
#endif /* neither TIOCGWINSZ nor WINDOWS */
}
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/* Whether the rnd system (either rand or [dl]rand48) has been
seeded. */
static int rnd_seeded;
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/* Return a random number between 0 and MAX-1, inclusive.
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If the system does not support lrand48 and MAX is greater than the
value of RAND_MAX+1 on the system, the returned value will be in
the range [0, RAND_MAX]. This may be fixed in a future release.
The random number generator is seeded automatically the first time
it is called.
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This uses lrand48 where available, rand elsewhere. DO NOT use it
for cryptography. It is only meant to be used in situations where
quality of the random numbers returned doesn't really matter. */
int
random_number (int max)
{
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#ifdef HAVE_DRAND48
if (!rnd_seeded)
{
srand48 ((long) time (NULL) ^ (long) getpid ());
rnd_seeded = 1;
}
return lrand48 () % max;
#else /* not HAVE_DRAND48 */
double bounded;
int rnd;
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if (!rnd_seeded)
{
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srand ((unsigned) time (NULL) ^ (unsigned) getpid ());
rnd_seeded = 1;
}
rnd = rand ();
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/* Like rand() % max, but uses the high-order bits for better
randomness on architectures where rand() is implemented using a
simple congruential generator. */
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bounded = (double) max * rnd / (RAND_MAX + 1.0);
return (int) bounded;
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#endif /* not HAVE_DRAND48 */
}
/* Return a random uniformly distributed floating point number in the
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[0, 1) range. Uses drand48 where available, and a really lame
kludge elsewhere. */
double
random_float (void)
{
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#ifdef HAVE_DRAND48
if (!rnd_seeded)
{
srand48 ((long) time (NULL) ^ (long) getpid ());
rnd_seeded = 1;
}
return drand48 ();
#else /* not HAVE_DRAND48 */
return ( random_number (10000) / 10000.0
+ random_number (10000) / (10000.0 * 10000.0)
+ random_number (10000) / (10000.0 * 10000.0 * 10000.0)
+ random_number (10000) / (10000.0 * 10000.0 * 10000.0 * 10000.0));
#endif /* not HAVE_DRAND48 */
}
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/* Implementation of run_with_timeout, a generic timeout-forcing
routine for systems with Unix-like signal handling. */
#ifdef USE_SIGNAL_TIMEOUT
# ifdef HAVE_SIGSETJMP
# define SETJMP(env) sigsetjmp (env, 1)
static sigjmp_buf run_with_timeout_env;
static void
abort_run_with_timeout (int sig)
{
assert (sig == SIGALRM);
siglongjmp (run_with_timeout_env, -1);
}
# else /* not HAVE_SIGSETJMP */
# define SETJMP(env) setjmp (env)
static jmp_buf run_with_timeout_env;
static void
abort_run_with_timeout (int sig)
{
assert (sig == SIGALRM);
/* We don't have siglongjmp to preserve the set of blocked signals;
if we longjumped out of the handler at this point, SIGALRM would
remain blocked. We must unblock it manually. */
int mask = siggetmask ();
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mask &= ~sigmask (SIGALRM);
sigsetmask (mask);
/* Now it's safe to longjump. */
longjmp (run_with_timeout_env, -1);
}
# endif /* not HAVE_SIGSETJMP */
/* Arrange for SIGALRM to be delivered in TIMEOUT seconds. This uses
setitimer where available, alarm otherwise.
TIMEOUT should be non-zero. If the timeout value is so small that
it would be rounded to zero, it is rounded to the least legal value
instead (1us for setitimer, 1s for alarm). That ensures that
SIGALRM will be delivered in all cases. */
static void
alarm_set (double timeout)
{
#ifdef ITIMER_REAL
/* Use the modern itimer interface. */
struct itimerval itv;
xzero (itv);
itv.it_value.tv_sec = (long) timeout;
itv.it_value.tv_usec = 1000000 * (timeout - (long)timeout);
if (itv.it_value.tv_sec == 0 && itv.it_value.tv_usec == 0)
/* Ensure that we wait for at least the minimum interval.
Specifying zero would mean "wait forever". */
itv.it_value.tv_usec = 1;
setitimer (ITIMER_REAL, &itv, NULL);
#else /* not ITIMER_REAL */
/* Use the old alarm() interface. */
int secs = (int) timeout;
if (secs == 0)
/* Round TIMEOUTs smaller than 1 to 1, not to zero. This is
because alarm(0) means "never deliver the alarm", i.e. "wait
forever", which is not what someone who specifies a 0.5s
timeout would expect. */
secs = 1;
alarm (secs);
#endif /* not ITIMER_REAL */
}
/* Cancel the alarm set with alarm_set. */
static void
alarm_cancel (void)
{
#ifdef ITIMER_REAL
struct itimerval disable;
xzero (disable);
setitimer (ITIMER_REAL, &disable, NULL);
#else /* not ITIMER_REAL */
alarm (0);
#endif /* not ITIMER_REAL */
}
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/* Call FUN(ARG), but don't allow it to run for more than TIMEOUT
seconds. Returns true if the function was interrupted with a
timeout, false otherwise.
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This works by setting up SIGALRM to be delivered in TIMEOUT seconds
using setitimer() or alarm(). The timeout is enforced by
longjumping out of the SIGALRM handler. This has several
advantages compared to the traditional approach of relying on
signals causing system calls to exit with EINTR:
* The callback function is *forcibly* interrupted after the
timeout expires, (almost) regardless of what it was doing and
whether it was in a syscall. For example, a calculation that
takes a long time is interrupted as reliably as an IO
operation.
* It works with both SYSV and BSD signals because it doesn't
depend on the default setting of SA_RESTART.
* It doesn't require special handler setup beyond a simple call
to signal(). (It does use sigsetjmp/siglongjmp, but they're
2003-10-02 11:15:36 -04:00
optional.)
The only downside is that, if FUN allocates internal resources that
are normally freed prior to exit from the functions, they will be
lost in case of timeout. */
bool
run_with_timeout (double timeout, void (*fun) (void *), void *arg)
{
int saved_errno;
if (timeout == 0)
{
fun (arg);
return false;
}
signal (SIGALRM, abort_run_with_timeout);
if (SETJMP (run_with_timeout_env) != 0)
{
/* Longjumped out of FUN with a timeout. */
signal (SIGALRM, SIG_DFL);
return true;
}
alarm_set (timeout);
fun (arg);
/* Preserve errno in case alarm() or signal() modifies it. */
saved_errno = errno;
alarm_cancel ();
signal (SIGALRM, SIG_DFL);
errno = saved_errno;
return false;
}
#else /* not USE_SIGNAL_TIMEOUT */
#ifndef WINDOWS
/* A stub version of run_with_timeout that just calls FUN(ARG). Don't
define it under Windows, because Windows has its own version of
run_with_timeout that uses threads. */
int
run_with_timeout (double timeout, void (*fun) (void *), void *arg)
{
fun (arg);
return false;
}
#endif /* not WINDOWS */
#endif /* not USE_SIGNAL_TIMEOUT */
#ifndef WINDOWS
/* Sleep the specified amount of seconds. On machines without
nanosleep(), this may sleep shorter if interrupted by signals. */
void
xsleep (double seconds)
{
#ifdef HAVE_NANOSLEEP
/* nanosleep is the preferred interface because it offers high
accuracy and, more importantly, because it allows us to reliably
restart receiving a signal such as SIGWINCH. (There was an
actual Debian bug report about --limit-rate malfunctioning while
the terminal was being resized.) */
struct timespec sleep, remaining;
sleep.tv_sec = (long) seconds;
sleep.tv_nsec = 1000000000 * (seconds - (long) seconds);
while (nanosleep (&sleep, &remaining) < 0 && errno == EINTR)
/* If nanosleep has been interrupted by a signal, adjust the
sleeping period and return to sleep. */
sleep = remaining;
#elif defined(HAVE_USLEEP)
/* If usleep is available, use it in preference to select. */
if (seconds >= 1)
{
/* On some systems, usleep cannot handle values larger than
1,000,000. If the period is larger than that, use sleep
first, then add usleep for subsecond accuracy. */
sleep (seconds);
seconds -= (long) seconds;
}
usleep (seconds * 1000000);
#else /* fall back select */
/* Note that, although Windows supports select, it can't be used to
implement sleeping because Winsock's select doesn't implement
timeout when it is passed NULL pointers for all fd sets. (But it
does under Cygwin, which implements Unix-compatible select.) */
struct timeval sleep;
sleep.tv_sec = (long) seconds;
sleep.tv_usec = 1000000 * (seconds - (long) seconds);
select (0, NULL, NULL, NULL, &sleep);
/* If select returns -1 and errno is EINTR, it means we were
interrupted by a signal. But without knowing how long we've
actually slept, we can't return to sleep. Using gettimeofday to
track sleeps is slow and unreliable due to clock skew. */
#endif
}
#endif /* not WINDOWS */
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/* Encode the string STR of length LENGTH to base64 format and place it
to B64STORE. The output will be \0-terminated, and must point to a
writable buffer of at least 1+BASE64_LENGTH(length) bytes. It
returns the length of the resulting base64 data, not counting the
terminating zero.
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This implementation will not emit newlines after 76 characters of
base64 data. */
int
base64_encode (const char *str, int length, char *b64store)
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{
/* Conversion table. */
static char tbl[64] = {
'A','B','C','D','E','F','G','H',
'I','J','K','L','M','N','O','P',
'Q','R','S','T','U','V','W','X',
'Y','Z','a','b','c','d','e','f',
'g','h','i','j','k','l','m','n',
'o','p','q','r','s','t','u','v',
'w','x','y','z','0','1','2','3',
'4','5','6','7','8','9','+','/'
};
int i;
const unsigned char *s = (const unsigned char *) str;
char *p = b64store;
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/* Transform the 3x8 bits to 4x6 bits, as required by base64. */
for (i = 0; i < length; i += 3)
{
*p++ = tbl[s[0] >> 2];
*p++ = tbl[((s[0] & 3) << 4) + (s[1] >> 4)];
*p++ = tbl[((s[1] & 0xf) << 2) + (s[2] >> 6)];
*p++ = tbl[s[2] & 0x3f];
s += 3;
}
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/* Pad the result if necessary... */
if (i == length + 1)
*(p - 1) = '=';
else if (i == length + 2)
*(p - 1) = *(p - 2) = '=';
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/* ...and zero-terminate it. */
*p = '\0';
return p - b64store;
2005-04-06 16:42:22 -04:00
}
#define IS_ASCII(c) (((c) & 0x80) == 0)
#define IS_BASE64(c) ((IS_ASCII (c) && base64_char_to_value[c] >= 0) || c == '=')
/* Get next character from the string, except that non-base64
characters are ignored, as mandated by rfc2045. */
#define NEXT_BASE64_CHAR(c, p) do { \
c = *p++; \
} while (c != '\0' && !IS_BASE64 (c))
/* Decode data from BASE64 (assumed to be encoded as base64) into
memory pointed to by TO. TO should be large enough to accomodate
the decoded data, which is guaranteed to be less than
strlen(base64).
Since TO is assumed to contain binary data, it is not
NUL-terminated. The function returns the length of the data
written to TO. -1 is returned in case of error caused by malformed
base64 input. */
int
base64_decode (const char *base64, char *to)
{
/* Table of base64 values for first 128 characters. Note that this
assumes ASCII (but so does Wget in other places). */
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static short base64_char_to_value[128] =
{
-1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, /* 0- 9 */
-1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, /* 10- 19 */
-1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, /* 20- 29 */
-1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, /* 30- 39 */
-1, -1, -1, 62, -1, -1, -1, 63, 52, 53, /* 40- 49 */
54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, -1, -1, /* 50- 59 */
-1, -1, -1, -1, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, /* 60- 69 */
5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, /* 70- 79 */
15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, /* 80- 89 */
25, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, 26, 27, 28, /* 90- 99 */
29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, /* 100-109 */
39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, /* 110-119 */
49, 50, 51, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1 /* 120-127 */
};
const char *p = base64;
char *q = to;
while (1)
{
unsigned char c;
unsigned long value;
/* Process first byte of a quadruplet. */
NEXT_BASE64_CHAR (c, p);
if (!c)
break;
if (c == '=')
return -1; /* illegal '=' while decoding base64 */
value = base64_char_to_value[c] << 18;
/* Process scond byte of a quadruplet. */
NEXT_BASE64_CHAR (c, p);
if (!c)
return -1; /* premature EOF while decoding base64 */
if (c == '=')
return -1; /* illegal `=' while decoding base64 */
value |= base64_char_to_value[c] << 12;
*q++ = value >> 16;
/* Process third byte of a quadruplet. */
NEXT_BASE64_CHAR (c, p);
if (!c)
return -1; /* premature EOF while decoding base64 */
if (c == '=')
{
NEXT_BASE64_CHAR (c, p);
if (!c)
return -1; /* premature EOF while decoding base64 */
2005-04-06 16:42:22 -04:00
if (c != '=')
return -1; /* padding `=' expected but not found */
continue;
}
value |= base64_char_to_value[c] << 6;
*q++ = 0xff & value >> 8;
/* Process fourth byte of a quadruplet. */
NEXT_BASE64_CHAR (c, p);
if (!c)
return -1; /* premature EOF while decoding base64 */
2005-04-06 16:42:22 -04:00
if (c == '=')
continue;
value |= base64_char_to_value[c];
*q++ = 0xff & value;
}
return q - to;
}
#undef IS_ASCII
#undef IS_BASE64
#undef NEXT_BASE64_CHAR
/* Simple merge sort for use by stable_sort. Implementation courtesy
2005-05-06 07:03:21 -04:00
Zeljko Vrba with additional debugging by Nenad Barbutov. */
static void
mergesort_internal (void *base, void *temp, size_t size, size_t from, size_t to,
2005-06-19 18:34:58 -04:00
int (*cmpfun) (const void *, const void *))
{
#define ELT(array, pos) ((char *)(array) + (pos) * size)
if (from < to)
{
size_t i, j, k;
size_t mid = (to + from) / 2;
mergesort_internal (base, temp, size, from, mid, cmpfun);
mergesort_internal (base, temp, size, mid + 1, to, cmpfun);
i = from;
j = mid + 1;
for (k = from; (i <= mid) && (j <= to); k++)
if (cmpfun (ELT (base, i), ELT (base, j)) <= 0)
memcpy (ELT (temp, k), ELT (base, i++), size);
else
memcpy (ELT (temp, k), ELT (base, j++), size);
while (i <= mid)
memcpy (ELT (temp, k++), ELT (base, i++), size);
while (j <= to)
memcpy (ELT (temp, k++), ELT (base, j++), size);
for (k = from; k <= to; k++)
memcpy (ELT (base, k), ELT (temp, k), size);
}
#undef ELT
}
/* Stable sort with interface exactly like standard library's qsort.
Uses mergesort internally, allocating temporary storage with
alloca. */
void
stable_sort (void *base, size_t nmemb, size_t size,
2005-06-19 18:34:58 -04:00
int (*cmpfun) (const void *, const void *))
{
if (size > 1)
{
void *temp = alloca (nmemb * size * sizeof (void *));
mergesort_internal (base, temp, size, 0, nmemb - 1, cmpfun);
}
}
/* Print a decimal number. If it is equal to or larger than ten, the
number is rounded. Otherwise it is printed with one significant
digit without trailing zeros and with no more than three fractional
digits total. For example, 0.1 is printed as "0.1", 0.035 is
printed as "0.04", 0.0091 as "0.009", and 0.0003 as simply "0".
This is useful for displaying durations because it provides
order-of-magnitude information without unnecessary clutter --
long-running downloads are shown without the fractional part, and
short ones still retain one significant digit. */
const char *
print_decimal (double number)
{
static char buf[32];
double n = number >= 0 ? number : -number;
if (n >= 9.95)
/* Cut off at 9.95 because the below %.1f would round 9.96 to
"10.0" instead of "10". OTOH 9.94 will print as "9.9". */
snprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "%.0f", number);
else if (n >= 0.95)
snprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "%.1f", number);
else if (n >= 0.001)
snprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "%.1g", number);
else if (n >= 0.0005)
/* round [0.0005, 0.001) to 0.001 */
snprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "%.3f", number);
else
/* print numbers close to 0 as 0, not 0.000 */
strcpy (buf, "0");
return buf;
}