}
/**
- * Write an array of buffers to a file descriptor.
+ * Write an array of buffers, handling non-fatal errors.
*
- * \param fd The file descriptor.
+ * \param fd The file descriptor to write to.
* \param iov Pointer to one or more buffers.
* \param iovcnt The number of buffers.
*
- * EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK is not considered a fatal error condition. For example
- * DCCP CCID3 has a sending wait queue which fills up and is emptied
- * asynchronously. The EAGAIN case means that there is currently no space in
- * the wait queue, but this can change at any moment.
+ * EAGAIN, EWOULDBLOCK and EINTR are not considered error conditions. If a
+ * write operation fails with EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK, the number of bytes that
+ * have been written so far is returned. In the EINTR case the operation is
+ * retried. Short writes are handled by issuing a subsequent write operation
+ * for the remaining part.
*
* \return Negative on fatal errors, number of bytes written else.
*
* For blocking file descriptors, this function returns either the sum of all
- * buffer sizes, or the error code of the fatal error that caused the last
- * write call to fail.
+ * buffer sizes or a negative error code which indicates the fatal error that
+ * caused a write call to fail.
*
- * For nonblocking file descriptors there is a third possibility: Any positive
- * return value less than the sum of the buffer sizes indicates that some bytes
- * have been written but the next write would block.
+ * For nonblocking file descriptors there is a third possibility: Any
+ * non-negative return value less than the sum of the buffer sizes indicates
+ * that a write operation returned EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK.
*
* \sa writev(2), \ref xwrite().
*/
}
/**
- * Write all data to a file descriptor.
+ * Write to a file descriptor, fail on short writes.
*
* \param fd The file descriptor.
- * \param buf The buffer to be sent.
- * \param len The length of \a buf.
+ * \param buf The buffer to be written.
+ * \param len The length of the buffer.
*
- * This is like \ref xwrite() but returns \p -E_SHORT_WRITE if not
- * all data could be written.
+ * For blocking file descriptors this function behaves identical to \ref
+ * xwrite(). For non-blocking file descriptors it returns -E_SHORT_WRITE
+ * (rather than a value less than len) if not all data could be written.
*
* \return Number of bytes written on success, negative error code else.
*/
}
/**
- * Read a buffer and check its content for a pattern.
- *
- * \param fd The file descriptor to receive from.
- * \param pattern The expected pattern.
- * \param bufsize The size of the internal buffer.
+ * Read a buffer and compare its contents to a string, ignoring case.
*
- * This function tries to read at most \a bufsize bytes from the non-blocking
- * file descriptor \a fd. If at least \p strlen(\a pattern) bytes have been
- * received, the beginning of the received buffer is compared with \a pattern,
- * ignoring case.
+ * \param fd The file descriptor to read from.
+ * \param expectation The expected string to compare to.
*
- * \return Positive if \a pattern was received, negative on errors, zero if no data
- * was available to read.
+ * The given file descriptor is expected to be in non-blocking mode. The string
+ * comparison is performed using strncasecmp(3).
*
- * \sa \ref read_nonblock(), \sa strncasecmp(3).
+ * \return Zero if no data was available, positive if a buffer was read whose
+ * contents compare as equal to the expected string, negative otherwise.
+ * Possible errors: (a) not enough data was read, (b) the buffer contents
+ * compared as non-equal, (c) a read error occurred. In the first two cases,
+ * -E_READ_PATTERN is returned. In the read error case the (negative) return
+ * value of the underlying call to \ref read_nonblock() is returned.
*/
-int read_pattern(int fd, const char *pattern, size_t bufsize)
+int read_and_compare(int fd, const char *expectation)
{
- size_t n, len;
- char *buf = alloc(bufsize + 1);
- int ret = read_nonblock(fd, buf, bufsize, &n);
+ size_t n, len = strlen(expectation);
+ char *buf = alloc(len + 1);
+ int ret = read_nonblock(fd, buf, len, &n);
- buf[n] = '\0';
if (ret < 0)
goto out;
+ buf[n] = '\0';
ret = 0;
if (n == 0)
goto out;
ret = -E_READ_PATTERN;
- len = strlen(pattern);
if (n < len)
goto out;
- if (strncasecmp(buf, pattern, len) != 0)
+ if (strncasecmp(buf, expectation, len) != 0)
goto out;
ret = 1;
out:
- if (ret < 0) {
- PARA_NOTICE_LOG("%s\n", para_strerror(-ret));
- PARA_NOTICE_LOG("recvd %zu bytes: %s\n", n, buf);
- }
free(buf);
return ret;
}
-/**
- * Check whether a file exists.
- *
- * \param fn The file name.
- *
- * \return True iff file exists.
- */
-bool file_exists(const char *fn)
-{
- struct stat statbuf;
-
- return !stat(fn, &statbuf);
-}
-
/**
* Set a file descriptor to blocking mode.
*
}
/**
- * Wrapper for chdir(2).
- *
- * \param path The specified directory.
- *
- * \return Standard.
- */
-int para_chdir(const char *path)
-{
- int ret = chdir(path);
-
- if (ret >= 0)
- return 1;
- return -ERRNO_TO_PARA_ERROR(errno);
-}
-
-/**
- * Save the cwd and open a given directory.
- *
- * \param dirname Path to the directory to open.
- * \param dir Result pointer.
- * \param cwd File descriptor of the current working directory.
- *
- * \return Standard.
- *
- * Opening the current directory (".") and calling fchdir() to return is
- * usually faster and more reliable than saving cwd in some buffer and calling
- * chdir() afterwards.
+ * Create a directory, don't fail if it already exists.
*
- * If \a cwd is not \p NULL "." is opened and the resulting file descriptor is
- * stored in \a cwd. If the function returns success, and \a cwd is not \p
- * NULL, the caller must close this file descriptor (probably after calling
- * fchdir(*cwd)).
- *
- * On errors, the function undos everything, so the caller needs neither close
- * any files, nor change back to the original working directory.
+ * \param path Name of the directory to create.
*
- * \sa getcwd(3).
+ * This function passes the fixed mode value 0777 to mkdir(3) (which consults
+ * the file creation mask and restricts this value).
*
+ * \return Zero if the path already existed as a directory or as a symbolic
+ * link which leads to a directory, one if the path did not exist and the
+ * directory has been created successfully, negative error code else.
*/
-static int para_opendir(const char *dirname, DIR **dir, int *cwd)
+int para_mkdir(const char *path)
{
- int ret;
+ /*
+ * We call opendir(3) rather than relying on stat(2) because this way
+ * we don't need extra code to get the symlink case right.
+ */
+ DIR *dir = opendir(path);
- *dir = NULL;
- if (cwd) {
- ret = para_open(".", O_RDONLY, 0);
- if (ret < 0)
- return ret;
- *cwd = ret;
- }
- ret = para_chdir(dirname);
- if (ret < 0)
- goto close_cwd;
- *dir = opendir(".");
- if (*dir)
- return 1;
- ret = -ERRNO_TO_PARA_ERROR(errno);
- /* Ignore return value of fchdir() and close(). We're busted anyway. */
- if (cwd) {
- int __a_unused ret2 = fchdir(*cwd); /* STFU, gcc */
+ if (dir) {
+ closedir(dir);
+ return 0;
}
-close_cwd:
- if (cwd)
- close(*cwd);
- return ret;
-}
-
-/**
- * A wrapper for mkdir(2).
- *
- * \param path Name of the directory to create.
- * \param mode The permissions to use.
- *
- * \return Standard.
- */
-int para_mkdir(const char *path, mode_t mode)
-{
- if (!mkdir(path, mode))
- return 1;
- return -ERRNO_TO_PARA_ERROR(errno);
+ if (errno != ENOENT)
+ return -ERRNO_TO_PARA_ERROR(errno);
+ return mkdir(path, 0777) == 0? 1 : -ERRNO_TO_PARA_ERROR(errno);
}
/**
* \param start The start address of the memory mapping.
* \param length The size of the mapping.
*
- * \return Standard.
+ * If NULL is passed as the start address, the length value is ignored and the
+ * function does nothing.
+ *
+ * \return Zero if NULL was passed, one if the memory area was successfully
+ * unmapped, a negative error code otherwise.
*
* \sa munmap(2), \ref mmap_full_file().
*/
int para_munmap(void *start, size_t length)
{
- int err;
-
if (!start)
return 0;
if (munmap(start, length) >= 0)
return 1;
- err = errno;
- PARA_ERROR_LOG("munmap (%p/%zu) failed: %s\n", start, length,
- strerror(err));
- return -ERRNO_TO_PARA_ERROR(err);
+ return -ERRNO_TO_PARA_ERROR(errno);
}
/**
}
}
}
-
-/**
- * Traverse the given directory recursively.
- *
- * \param dirname The directory to traverse.
- * \param func The function to call for each entry.
- * \param private_data Pointer to an arbitrary data structure.
- *
- * For each regular file under \a dirname, the supplied function \a func is
- * called. The full path of the regular file and the \a private_data pointer
- * are passed to \a func. Directories for which the calling process has no
- * permissions to change to are silently ignored.
- *
- * \return Standard.
- */
-int for_each_file_in_dir(const char *dirname,
- int (*func)(const char *, void *), void *private_data)
-{
- DIR *dir;
- struct dirent *entry;
- int cwd_fd, ret = para_opendir(dirname, &dir, &cwd_fd);
-
- if (ret < 0)
- return ret == -ERRNO_TO_PARA_ERROR(EACCES)? 1 : ret;
- /* scan cwd recursively */
- while ((entry = readdir(dir))) {
- mode_t m;
- char *tmp;
- struct stat s;
-
- if (!strcmp(entry->d_name, "."))
- continue;
- if (!strcmp(entry->d_name, ".."))
- continue;
- if (lstat(entry->d_name, &s) == -1)
- continue;
- m = s.st_mode;
- if (!S_ISREG(m) && !S_ISDIR(m))
- continue;
- tmp = make_message("%s/%s", dirname, entry->d_name);
- if (!S_ISDIR(m)) {
- ret = func(tmp, private_data);
- free(tmp);
- if (ret < 0)
- goto out;
- continue;
- }
- /* directory */
- ret = for_each_file_in_dir(tmp, func, private_data);
- free(tmp);
- if (ret < 0)
- goto out;
- }
- ret = 1;
-out:
- closedir(dir);
- if (fchdir(cwd_fd) < 0 && ret >= 0)
- ret = -ERRNO_TO_PARA_ERROR(errno);
- close(cwd_fd);
- return ret;
-}