Mercurial > emacs
view lib-src/movemail.c @ 1686:10650dfc82d0
* Makefile.in (install, install.sysv, install.xenix, install.aix):
Install the info files in ${infodir}. Install the executable
under both `emacs' and `emacs-VERSION'.
* Makefile.in: Doc fix.
* Makefile.in (exec_prefix): New variable, as per latest version
of coding standards.
(bindir, libdir): Use it, instead of `prefix'.
(lib-src/Makefile): Edit value of exec_prefix into lib-src/Makefile.
* Makefile.in (mandir): Make the default value for this depend on
$(prefix).
* Makefile.in (datadir, statedir, libdir): Make these all default
to ${prefix}/lib.
(lispdir, locallisppath, etcdir, lockdir, archlibdir): Adjusted
to compensate.
* Makefile.in (install, install.sysv, install.xenix, install.aix):
Install the etags and ctags man pages too.
* Makefile.in (distclean): Don't delete backup files; that's the
job of extraclean.
(extraclean): Like distclean, but deletes backup and autosave files.
Make path specification conform to GNU coding standards.
* configure (long_usage): Remove all traces of old arguments from
usage messages, and document the options we do accept in more
detail: -with-x... and --srcdir.
(options, boolean_opts): Deleted; we don't have enough options to
make this worthwhile.
(prefix, bindir, lisppath, datadir, libdir, lockdir): Deleted,
along with the code which supported them; these should be set as
arguments to the top-level make.
(config_h_opts): Since this no longer doubles as a list of option
names, make them upper case; this simplifies the code which uses
them to build the sed command to edit src/config.h. Change the
code which sets them.
(cc, g, O): Don't allow the user to set these using options; they
should be specified using `CC=' and `CFLAGS=' arguments to the
top-level make. Just choose reasonable default values for them,
and edit them into Makefile.in's default CC and CONFIG_CFLAGS
values.
(gnu_malloc, rel_alloc): Don't allow the user to set these using
options; use them whenever the configuration files say they're
possible.
Simplify the argument processing loop. Don't accept abbreviations
for option names; these might conflict with other configuration
options in the future.
Add some support for the `--srcdir' option. Check for the sources
in . and .. if `--srcdir' is omitted. If the directories we will
compile in don't exist yet, create them under the current directory.
Note that the rest of the build process doesn't really support
this.
Edit only the top Makefile. That should edit the others. Edit
into the makefile: `version', from lisp/version.el, `configname'
and `srcdir' from the configuration arguments, `CC' and
`CONFIG_CFLAGS' as guessed from the presence or absence of GCC in
the user's path, and LOADLIBES as gleaned from the system
description files.
Simplify the report generated; it doesn't need to include any
description of paths now.
Make `config.status' exec configure instead of just calling it, so
there's no harm in overwriting `config.status'.
* Makefile.in (version, configname): New variables, used to choose
the default values for datadir and libdir.
Path variables rearranged into two clearer groups:
- In the first group are the variables specified by the GNU coding
standards (prefix, bindir, datadir, statedir, libdir, mandir,
manext, infodir, and srcdir).
- In the second are the variables actually used for Emacs's paths
(lispdir, locallisppath, lisppath, buildlisppath, etcdir, lockdir,
archlibdir), which depend on the first category.
datadir and libdir default to directories under
${prefix}/lib/emacs instead of ${prefix}/emacs, by popular
demand.
etcdir and lispdir default to subdirectories of datadir.
archlibdir defaults to libdir.
The new installation tree is a bit deeper than it used to be, so
use the new make-path program in lib-src to build them all.
Always build a new src/paths.h.tmp and then move-if-change it to
src/paths.h, to avoid unnecessary rebuilds while responding to the
right changes.
Remove all mention of arch-lib. Run utility commands from
lib-src, and let the executables be copied into archlibdir when
Emacs is installed.
Add targets for src/Makefile, lib-src/Makefile, and
oldXMenu/Makefile, editing the values of the path variables into
them.
Let lib-src do its own installation.
(datadir): Default to putting data files under
${prefix}/lib/emacs/${version}, not /usr/local/emacs.
(emacsdir): Variable deleted; it would only be confusing to use.
(lispdir, etcdir): Default to ${datadir}/lisp.
(mkdir): Use make-path for this.
(lockdir): Do this in mkdir.
(Makefile): New target.
author | Jim Blandy <jimb@redhat.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 12 Dec 1992 15:42:14 +0000 |
parents | 62dd28940dc6 |
children | f00054d40753 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* movemail foo bar -- move file foo to file bar, locking file foo the way /bin/mail respects. Copyright (C) 1986, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ /* Important notice: defining MAIL_USE_FLOCK *will cause loss of mail* if you do it on a system that does not normally use flock as its way of interlocking access to inbox files. The setting of MAIL_USE_FLOCK *must agree* with the system's own conventions. It is not a choice that is up to you. So, if your system uses lock files rather than flock, then the only way you can get proper operation is to enable movemail to write lockfiles there. This means you must either give that directory access modes that permit everyone to write lockfiles in it, or you must make movemail a setuid or setgid program. */ /* * Modified January, 1986 by Michael R. Gretzinger (Project Athena) * * Added POP (Post Office Protocol) service. When compiled -DPOP * movemail will accept input filename arguments of the form * "po:username". This will cause movemail to open a connection to * a pop server running on $MAILHOST (environment variable). Movemail * must be setuid to root in order to work with POP. * * New module: popmail.c * Modified routines: * main - added code within #ifdef MAIL_USE_POP; added setuid (getuid ()) * after POP code. * New routines in movemail.c: * get_errmsg - return pointer to system error message * */ #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <sys/file.h> #include <errno.h> #define NO_SHORTNAMES /* Tell config not to load remap.h */ #include "../src/config.h" #ifdef USG #include <fcntl.h> #include <unistd.h> #ifndef F_OK #define F_OK 0 #define X_OK 1 #define W_OK 2 #define R_OK 4 #endif #endif /* USG */ #ifdef XENIX #include <sys/locking.h> #endif #ifdef MAIL_USE_MMDF extern int lk_open (), lk_close (); #endif /* Cancel substitutions made by config.h for Emacs. */ #undef open #undef read #undef write #undef close char *malloc (); char *strcpy (); char *concat (); char *xmalloc (); #ifndef errno extern int errno; #endif /* Nonzero means this is name of a lock file to delete on fatal error. */ char *delete_lockname; main (argc, argv) int argc; char **argv; { char *inname, *outname; int indesc, outdesc; int nread; #ifndef MAIL_USE_FLOCK struct stat st; long now; int tem; char *lockname, *p; char *tempname; int desc; #endif /* not MAIL_USE_FLOCK */ delete_lockname = 0; if (argc < 3) fatal ("two arguments required"); inname = argv[1]; outname = argv[2]; #ifdef MAIL_USE_MMDF mmdf_init (argv[0]); #endif /* Check access to output file. */ if (access (outname, F_OK) == 0 && access (outname, W_OK) != 0) pfatal_with_name (outname); /* Also check that outname's directory is writeable to the real uid. */ { char *buf = (char *) malloc (strlen (outname) + 1); char *p, q; strcpy (buf, outname); p = buf + strlen (buf); while (p > buf && p[-1] != '/') *--p = 0; if (p == buf) *p++ = '.'; if (access (buf, W_OK) != 0) pfatal_with_name (buf); free (buf); } #ifdef MAIL_USE_POP if (!bcmp (inname, "po:", 3)) { int status; char *user; user = (char *) rindex (inname, ':') + 1; status = popmail (user, outname); exit (status); } setuid (getuid ()); #endif /* MAIL_USE_POP */ /* Check access to input file. */ if (access (inname, R_OK | W_OK) != 0) pfatal_with_name (inname); #ifndef MAIL_USE_MMDF #ifndef MAIL_USE_FLOCK /* Use a lock file named /usr/spool/mail/$USER.lock: If it exists, the mail file is locked. */ /* Note: this locking mechanism is *required* by the mailer (on systems which use it) to prevent loss of mail. On systems that use a lock file, extracting the mail without locking WILL occasionally cause loss of mail due to timing errors! So, if creation of the lock file fails due to access permission on /usr/spool/mail, you simply MUST change the permission and/or make movemail a setgid program so it can create lock files properly. You might also wish to verify that your system is one which uses lock files for this purpose. Some systems use other methods. If your system uses the `flock' system call for mail locking, define MAIL_USE_FLOCK in config.h or the s-*.h file and recompile movemail. If the s- file for your system should define MAIL_USE_FLOCK but does not, send a bug report to bug-gnu-emacs@prep.ai.mit.edu so we can fix it. */ lockname = concat (inname, ".lock", ""); tempname = strcpy (xmalloc (strlen (inname)+1), inname); p = tempname + strlen (tempname); while (p != tempname && p[-1] != '/') p--; *p = 0; strcpy (p, "EXXXXXX"); mktemp (tempname); unlink (tempname); while (1) { /* Create the lock file, but not under the lock file name. */ /* Give up if cannot do that. */ desc = open (tempname, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT, 0666); if (desc < 0) pfatal_with_name ("lock file--see source file etc/movemail.c"); close (desc); tem = link (tempname, lockname); unlink (tempname); if (tem >= 0) break; sleep (1); /* If lock file is a minute old, unlock it. */ if (stat (lockname, &st) >= 0) { now = time (0); if (st.st_ctime < now - 60) unlink (lockname); } } delete_lockname = lockname; #endif /* not MAIL_USE_FLOCK */ #ifdef MAIL_USE_FLOCK indesc = open (inname, O_RDWR); #else /* if not MAIL_USE_FLOCK */ indesc = open (inname, O_RDONLY); #endif /* not MAIL_USE_FLOCK */ #else /* MAIL_USE_MMDF */ indesc = lk_open (inname, O_RDONLY, 0, 0, 10); #endif /* MAIL_USE_MMDF */ if (indesc < 0) pfatal_with_name (inname); #if defined (BSD) || defined (XENIX) /* In case movemail is setuid to root, make sure the user can read the output file. */ /* This is desirable for all systems but I don't want to assume all have the umask system call */ umask (umask (0) & 0333); #endif /* BSD or Xenix */ outdesc = open (outname, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_EXCL, 0666); if (outdesc < 0) pfatal_with_name (outname); #ifdef MAIL_USE_FLOCK #ifdef XENIX if (locking (indesc, LK_RLCK, 0L) < 0) pfatal_with_name (inname); #else if (flock (indesc, LOCK_EX) < 0) pfatal_with_name (inname); #endif #endif /* MAIL_USE_FLOCK */ { char buf[1024]; while (1) { nread = read (indesc, buf, sizeof buf); if (nread != write (outdesc, buf, nread)) { int saved_errno = errno; unlink (outname); errno = saved_errno; pfatal_with_name (outname); } if (nread < sizeof buf) break; } } #ifdef BSD if (fsync (outdesc) < 0) pfatal_and_delete (outname); #endif /* Check to make sure no errors before we zap the inbox. */ if (close (outdesc) != 0) pfatal_and_delete (outname); #ifdef MAIL_USE_FLOCK #if defined (STRIDE) || defined (XENIX) /* Stride, xenix have file locking, but no ftruncate. This mess will do. */ close (open (inname, O_CREAT | O_TRUNC | O_RDWR, 0666)); #else ftruncate (indesc, 0L); #endif /* STRIDE or XENIX */ #endif /* MAIL_USE_FLOCK */ #ifdef MAIL_USE_MMDF lk_close (indesc, 0, 0, 0); #else close (indesc); #endif #ifndef MAIL_USE_FLOCK /* Delete the input file; if we can't, at least get rid of its contents. */ #ifdef MAIL_UNLINK_SPOOL /* This is generally bad to do, because it destroys the permissions that were set on the file. Better to just empty the file. */ if (unlink (inname) < 0 && errno != ENOENT) #endif /* MAIL_UNLINK_SPOOL */ creat (inname, 0600); #ifndef MAIL_USE_MMDF unlink (lockname); #endif /* not MAIL_USE_MMDF */ #endif /* not MAIL_USE_FLOCK */ exit (0); } /* Print error message and exit. */ fatal (s1, s2) char *s1, *s2; { if (delete_lockname) unlink (delete_lockname); error (s1, s2); exit (1); } /* Print error message. `s1' is printf control string, `s2' is arg for it. */ error (s1, s2, s3) char *s1, *s2, *s3; { printf ("movemail: "); printf (s1, s2, s3); printf ("\n"); } pfatal_with_name (name) char *name; { extern int errno, sys_nerr; extern char *sys_errlist[]; char *s; if (errno < sys_nerr) s = concat ("", sys_errlist[errno], " for %s"); else s = "cannot open %s"; fatal (s, name); } pfatal_and_delete (name) char *name; { extern int errno, sys_nerr; extern char *sys_errlist[]; char *s; if (errno < sys_nerr) s = concat ("", sys_errlist[errno], " for %s"); else s = "cannot open %s"; unlink (name); fatal (s, name); } /* Return a newly-allocated string whose contents concatenate those of s1, s2, s3. */ char * concat (s1, s2, s3) char *s1, *s2, *s3; { int len1 = strlen (s1), len2 = strlen (s2), len3 = strlen (s3); char *result = (char *) xmalloc (len1 + len2 + len3 + 1); strcpy (result, s1); strcpy (result + len1, s2); strcpy (result + len1 + len2, s3); *(result + len1 + len2 + len3) = 0; return result; } /* Like malloc but get fatal error if memory is exhausted. */ char * xmalloc (size) unsigned size; { char *result = malloc (size); if (!result) fatal ("virtual memory exhausted", 0); return result; } /* This is the guts of the interface to the Post Office Protocol. */ #ifdef MAIL_USE_POP #include <sys/socket.h> #include <netinet/in.h> #include <netdb.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <pwd.h> #ifdef USG #include <fcntl.h> /* Cancel substitutions made by config.h for Emacs. */ #undef open #undef read #undef write #undef close #endif /* USG */ #define NOTOK (-1) #define OK 0 #define DONE 1 char *progname; FILE *sfi; FILE *sfo; char Errmsg[80]; static int debug = 0; char *get_errmsg (); char *getenv (); int mbx_write (); popmail (user, outfile) char *user; char *outfile; { char *host; int nmsgs, nbytes; char response[128]; register int i; int mbfi; FILE *mbf; struct passwd *pw = (struct passwd *) getpwuid (getuid ()); if (pw == NULL) fatal ("cannot determine user name"); host = getenv ("MAILHOST"); if (host == NULL) { fatal ("no MAILHOST defined"); } if (pop_init (host) == NOTOK) { fatal (Errmsg); } if (getline (response, sizeof response, sfi) != OK) { fatal (response); } if (pop_command ("USER %s", user) == NOTOK || pop_command ("RPOP %s", pw->pw_name) == NOTOK) { pop_command ("QUIT"); fatal (Errmsg); } if (pop_stat (&nmsgs, &nbytes) == NOTOK) { pop_command ("QUIT"); fatal (Errmsg); } if (!nmsgs) { pop_command ("QUIT"); return 0; } mbfi = open (outfile, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_EXCL, 0666); if (mbfi < 0) { pop_command ("QUIT"); pfatal_and_delete (outfile); } fchown (mbfi, getuid (), -1); if ((mbf = fdopen (mbfi, "w")) == NULL) { pop_command ("QUIT"); pfatal_and_delete (outfile); } for (i = 1; i <= nmsgs; i++) { mbx_delimit_begin (mbf); if (pop_retr (i, mbx_write, mbf) != OK) { pop_command ("QUIT"); close (mbfi); unlink (outfile); fatal (Errmsg); } mbx_delimit_end (mbf); fflush (mbf); } if (fsync (mbfi) < 0) { pop_command ("QUIT"); pfatal_and_delete (outfile); } if (close (mbfi) == -1) { pop_command ("QUIT"); pfatal_and_delete (outfile); } for (i = 1; i <= nmsgs; i++) { if (pop_command ("DELE %d", i) == NOTOK) { /* Better to ignore this failure. */ } } pop_command ("QUIT"); return (0); } pop_init (host) char *host; { register struct hostent *hp; register struct servent *sp; int lport = IPPORT_RESERVED - 1; struct sockaddr_in sin; register int s; hp = gethostbyname (host); if (hp == NULL) { sprintf (Errmsg, "MAILHOST unknown: %s", host); return NOTOK; } sp = getservbyname ("pop", "tcp"); if (sp == 0) { strcpy (Errmsg, "tcp/pop: unknown service"); return NOTOK; } sin.sin_family = hp->h_addrtype; bcopy (hp->h_addr, (char *)&sin.sin_addr, hp->h_length); sin.sin_port = sp->s_port; s = rresvport (&lport); if (s < 0) { sprintf (Errmsg, "error creating socket: %s", get_errmsg ()); return NOTOK; } if (connect (s, (char *)&sin, sizeof sin) < 0) { sprintf (Errmsg, "error during connect: %s", get_errmsg ()); close (s); return NOTOK; } sfi = fdopen (s, "r"); sfo = fdopen (s, "w"); if (sfi == NULL || sfo == NULL) { sprintf (Errmsg, "error in fdopen: %s", get_errmsg ()); close (s); return NOTOK; } return OK; } pop_command (fmt, a, b, c, d) char *fmt; { char buf[128]; char errmsg[64]; sprintf (buf, fmt, a, b, c, d); if (debug) fprintf (stderr, "---> %s\n", buf); if (putline (buf, Errmsg, sfo) == NOTOK) return NOTOK; if (getline (buf, sizeof buf, sfi) != OK) { strcpy (Errmsg, buf); return NOTOK; } if (debug) fprintf (stderr, "<--- %s\n", buf); if (*buf != '+') { strcpy (Errmsg, buf); return NOTOK; } else { return OK; } } pop_stat (nmsgs, nbytes) int *nmsgs, *nbytes; { char buf[128]; if (debug) fprintf (stderr, "---> STAT\n"); if (putline ("STAT", Errmsg, sfo) == NOTOK) return NOTOK; if (getline (buf, sizeof buf, sfi) != OK) { strcpy (Errmsg, buf); return NOTOK; } if (debug) fprintf (stderr, "<--- %s\n", buf); if (*buf != '+') { strcpy (Errmsg, buf); return NOTOK; } else { sscanf (buf, "+OK %d %d", nmsgs, nbytes); return OK; } } pop_retr (msgno, action, arg) int (*action)(); { char buf[128]; sprintf (buf, "RETR %d", msgno); if (debug) fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", buf); if (putline (buf, Errmsg, sfo) == NOTOK) return NOTOK; if (getline (buf, sizeof buf, sfi) != OK) { strcpy (Errmsg, buf); return NOTOK; } while (1) { switch (multiline (buf, sizeof buf, sfi)) { case OK: (*action)(buf, arg); break; case DONE: return OK; case NOTOK: strcpy (Errmsg, buf); return NOTOK; } } } getline (buf, n, f) char *buf; register int n; FILE *f; { register char *p; int c; p = buf; while (--n > 0 && (c = fgetc (f)) != EOF) if ((*p++ = c) == '\n') break; if (ferror (f)) { strcpy (buf, "error on connection"); return NOTOK; } if (c == EOF && p == buf) { strcpy (buf, "connection closed by foreign host"); return DONE; } *p = NULL; if (*--p == '\n') *p = NULL; if (*--p == '\r') *p = NULL; return OK; } multiline (buf, n, f) char *buf; register int n; FILE *f; { if (getline (buf, n, f) != OK) return NOTOK; if (*buf == '.') { if (*(buf+1) == NULL) return DONE; else strcpy (buf, buf+1); } return OK; } char * get_errmsg () { extern int errno, sys_nerr; extern char *sys_errlist[]; char *s; if (errno < sys_nerr) s = sys_errlist[errno]; else s = "unknown error"; return (s); } putline (buf, err, f) char *buf; char *err; FILE *f; { fprintf (f, "%s\r\n", buf); fflush (f); if (ferror (f)) { strcpy (err, "lost connection"); return NOTOK; } return OK; } mbx_write (line, mbf) char *line; FILE *mbf; { fputs (line, mbf); fputc (0x0a, mbf); } mbx_delimit_begin (mbf) FILE *mbf; { fputs ("\f\n0, unseen,,\n", mbf); } mbx_delimit_end (mbf) FILE *mbf; { putc ('\037', mbf); } #endif /* MAIL_USE_POP */