289
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1 /* env - manipulate environment and execute a program in that environment
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2 Copyright (C) 1986 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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3
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4 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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5 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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6 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
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7 any later version.
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8
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9 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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10 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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11 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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12 GNU General Public License for more details.
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13
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14 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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15 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
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16 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
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17
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18 /* Mly 861126 */
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19
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20 /* If first argument is "-", then a new environment is constructed
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21 from scratch; otherwise the environment is inherited from the parent
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22 process, except as modified by other options.
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23
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24 So, "env - foo" will invoke the "foo" program in a null environment,
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25 whereas "env foo" would invoke "foo" in the same environment as that
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26 passed to "env" itself.
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27
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28 Subsequent arguments are interpreted as follows:
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29
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30 * "variable=value" (i.e., an arg containing a "=" character)
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31 means to set the specified environment variable to that value.
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32 `value' may be of zero length ("variable="). Note that setting
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33 a variable to a zero-length value is different from unsetting it.
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34
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35 * "-u variable" or "-unset variable"
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36 means to unset that variable.
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37 If that variable isn't set, does nothing.
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38
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39 * "-s variable value" or "-set variable value"
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40 same as "variable=value".
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41
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42 * "-" or "--"
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43 are used to indicate that the following argument is the program
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44 to invoke. This is only necessary when the program's name
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45 begins with "-" or contains a "=".
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46
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47 * anything else
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48 The first remaining argument specifies a program to invoke
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49 (it is searched for according to the specification of the PATH
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50 environment variable) and any arguments following that are
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51 passed as arguments to that program.
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52
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53 If no program-name is specified following the environment
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54 specifications, the resulting environment is printed.
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55 This is like specifying a program-name of "printenv".
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56
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57 Examples:
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58 If the environment passed to "env" is
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59 { USER=rms EDITOR=emacs PATH=.:/gnubin:/hacks }
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60
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61 * "env DISPLAY=gnu:0 nemacs"
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62 calls "nemacs" in the envionment
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63 { USER=rms EDITOR=emacs PATH=.:/gnubin:/hacks DISPLAY=gnu:0 }
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64
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65 * "env - USER=foo /hacks/hack bar baz"
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66 calls the "hack" program on arguments "bar" and "baz"
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67 in an environment in which the only variable is "USER".
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68 Note that the "-" option clears out the PATH variable,
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69 so one should be careful to specify in which directory
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70 to find the program to call.
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71
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72 * "env -u EDITOR USER=foo PATH=/energy -- e=mc2 bar baz"
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73 The program "/energy/e=mc2" is called with environment
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74 { USER=foo PATH=/energy }
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75 */
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76
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77 #ifdef EMACS
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78 #define NO_SHORTNAMES
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79 #include "../src/config.h"
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80 #endif /* EMACS */
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81
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82 #include <stdio.h>
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83
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84 extern int execvp ();
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85
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86 char *xmalloc (), *xrealloc ();
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87 char *concat ();
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88
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89 extern char **environ;
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90
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91 char **nenv;
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92 int nenv_size;
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93
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94 char *progname;
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95 void setenv ();
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96 void fatal ();
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97 char *myindex ();
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98
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99 main (argc, argv, envp)
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100 register int argc;
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101 register char **argv;
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102 char **envp;
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103 {
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104 register char *tem;
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105
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106 progname = argv[0];
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107 argc--;
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108 argv++;
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109
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110 nenv_size = 100;
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111 nenv = (char **) xmalloc (nenv_size * sizeof (char *));
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112 *nenv = (char *) 0;
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113
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114 /* "-" flag means to not inherit parent's environment */
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115 if (argc && !strcmp (*argv, "-"))
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116 {
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117 argc--;
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118 argv++;
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119 }
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120 else
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121 /* Else pass on existing env vars. */
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122 for (; *envp; envp++)
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123 {
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124 tem = myindex (*envp, '=');
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125 if (tem)
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126 {
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127 *tem = '\000';
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128 setenv (*envp, tem + 1);
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129 }
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130 }
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131
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132 while (argc > 0)
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133 {
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134 tem = myindex (*argv, '=');
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135 if (tem)
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136 /* If arg contains a "=" it specifies to set a variable */
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137 {
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138 *tem = '\000';
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139 setenv (*argv, tem + 1);
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140 argc--;
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141 argv++;
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142 continue;
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143 }
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144
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145 if (**argv != '-')
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146 /* Remaining args are program name and args to pass it */
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147 break;
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148
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149 if (argc < 2)
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150 fatal ("no argument for `%s' option", *argv);
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151 if (!strcmp (*argv, "-u")
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152 || !strcmp (*argv, "-unset"))
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153 /* Unset a variable */
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154 {
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155 argc--;
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156 argv++;
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157 setenv (*argv, (char *) 0);
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158 argc--;
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159 argv++;
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160 }
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161 else if (!strcmp (*argv, "-s") ||
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162 !strcmp (*argv, "-set"))
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163 /* Set a variable */
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164 {
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165 argc--;
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166 argv++;
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167 tem = *argv;
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168 if (argc < 2)
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169 fatal ("no value specified for variable \"%s\"", tem);
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170 argc--;
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171 argv++;
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172 setenv (tem, *argv);
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173 argc--;
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174 argv++;
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175 }
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176 else if (!strcmp (*argv, "-") || !strcmp (*argv, "--"))
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177 {
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178 argc--;
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179 argv++;
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180 break;
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181 }
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182 else
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183 {
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184 fatal ("unrecognized option `%s'", *argv);
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185 }
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186 }
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187
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188 /* If no program specified print the environment and exit */
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189 if (argc <= 0)
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190 {
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191 while (*nenv)
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192 printf ("%s\n", *nenv++);
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193 exit (0);
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194 }
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195 else
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196 {
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197 extern int errno, sys_nerr;
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198 extern char *sys_errlist[];
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199
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200 environ = nenv;
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201 (void) execvp (*argv, argv);
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202
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203 fprintf (stderr, "%s: cannot execute `%s'", progname, *argv);
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204 if (errno < sys_nerr)
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205 fprintf (stderr, ": %s\n", sys_errlist[errno]);
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206 else
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207 putc ('\n', stderr);
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208 exit (errno != 0 ? errno : 1);
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209 }
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210 }
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211
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212 void
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213 setenv (var, val)
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214 register char *var, *val;
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215 {
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216 register char **e;
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217 int len = strlen (var);
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218
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219 {
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220 register char *tem = myindex (var, '=');
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221 if (tem)
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222 fatal ("environment variable names can not contain `=': %s", var);
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223 else if (*var == '\000')
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224 fatal ("zero-length environment variable name specified");
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225 }
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226
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227 for (e = nenv; *e; e++)
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228 if (!strncmp (var, *e, len) && (*e)[len] == '=')
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229 {
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230 if (val)
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231 goto set;
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232 else
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233 do
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234 {
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235 *e = *(e + 1);
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236 } while (*e++);
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237 return;
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238 }
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239
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240 if (!val)
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241 return; /* Nothing to unset */
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242
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243 len = e - nenv;
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244 if (len + 1 >= nenv_size)
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245 {
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246 nenv_size += 100;
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247 nenv = (char **) xrealloc (nenv, nenv_size * sizeof (char *));
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248 e = nenv + len;
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249 }
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250
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251 set:
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252 val = concat (var, "=", val);
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253 if (*e)
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254 free (*e);
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255 else
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256 *(e + 1) = (char *) 0;
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257 *e = val;
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258 return;
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259 }
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260
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261 void
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262 fatal (msg, arg1, arg2)
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263 char *msg, *arg1, *arg2;
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264 {
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265 fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", progname);
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266 fprintf (stderr, msg, arg1, arg2);
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267 putc ('\n', stderr);
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268 exit (1);
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269 }
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270
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271
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272 extern char *malloc (), *realloc ();
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273
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274 void
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275 memory_fatal ()
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276 {
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277 fatal ("virtual memory exhausted");
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278 }
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279
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280 char *
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281 xmalloc (size)
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282 int size;
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283 {
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284 register char *value;
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285 value = (char *) malloc (size);
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286 if (!value)
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287 memory_fatal ();
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288 return (value);
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289 }
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290
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291 char *
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292 xrealloc (ptr, size)
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293 char *ptr;
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294 int size;
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295 {
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296 register char *value;
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297 value = (char *) realloc (ptr, size);
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298 if (!value)
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299 memory_fatal ();
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300 return (value);
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301 }
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302
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303 /* Return a newly-allocated string whose contents concatenate
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304 those of S1, S2, S3. */
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305
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306 char *
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307 concat (s1, s2, s3)
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308 char *s1, *s2, *s3;
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309 {
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310 int len1 = strlen (s1), len2 = strlen (s2), len3 = strlen (s3);
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311 char *result = (char *) xmalloc (len1 + len2 + len3 + 1);
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312
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313 strcpy (result, s1);
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314 strcpy (result + len1, s2);
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315 strcpy (result + len1 + len2, s3);
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316 result[len1 + len2 + len3] = 0;
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317
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318 return result;
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319 }
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320
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321 /* Return a pointer to the first occurrence in STR of C,
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322 or 0 if C does not occur. */
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323
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324 char *
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325 myindex (str, c)
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326 char *str;
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327 char c;
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328 {
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329 char *s = str;
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330
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331 while (*s)
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332 {
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333 if (*s == c)
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334 return s;
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335 s++;
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336 }
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337 return 0;
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338 }
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