Mercurial > emacs
view src/w32.c @ 14752:38436b7a34ce libc-960305
(moss): Fix previous change.
author | Erik Naggum <erik@naggum.no> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 05 Mar 1996 03:02:45 +0000 |
parents | ebdd1b50daba |
children | 8d25697cc14b |
line wrap: on
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/* Utility and Unix shadow routines for GNU Emacs on Windows NT. Copyright (C) 1994, 1995 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 2, 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, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. Geoff Voelker (voelker@cs.washington.edu) 7-29-94 */ /* Define stat before including config.h. */ #include <string.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <malloc.h> static int is_toplevel_share_name (char *); static int stat_toplevel_share (char *, void *); int nt_stat (char *filename, struct stat *statbuf) { int l = strlen (filename); char *str = NULL; /* stat has a bug when passed a name of a directory with a trailing backslash (but a trailing forward slash works fine). */ if (filename[l - 1] == '\\') { str = (char *) alloca (l + 1); strcpy (str, filename); str[l - 1] = '/'; return stat (str, statbuf); } if (stat (filename, statbuf) == 0) return 0; else if (is_toplevel_share_name (filename)) return stat_toplevel_share (filename, statbuf); else return -1; } /* Place a wrapper around the NT version of ctime. It returns NULL on network directories, so we handle that case here. Define it before including config.h. (Ulrich Leodolter, 1/11/95). */ char * nt_ctime (const time_t *t) { char *str = (char *) ctime (t); return (str ? str : "Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 1970"); } #include <config.h> #include <windows.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <io.h> #include <fcntl.h> #include <ctype.h> #define getwd _getwd #include "lisp.h" #undef getwd #include <pwd.h> #include "ndir.h" #include "ntheap.h" extern int report_file_error (char *, Lisp_Object); /* Routines for extending stat above. */ static int get_unassigned_drive_letter () { int i; unsigned int mask; mask = GetLogicalDrives (); for (i = 0; i < 26; i++) { if (mask & (1 << i)) continue; break; } return (i == 26 ? -1 : 'A' + i); } void dostounix_filename (char *); /* Return nonzero if NAME is of the form \\host\share (forward slashes also valid), otherwise return 0. */ static int is_toplevel_share_name (char *filename) { int len; char *name; char *host; char *share; char *suffix; len = strlen (filename); name = alloca (len + 1); strcpy (name, filename); dostounix_filename (name); if (name[0] != '/' || name[1] != '/') return 0; host = strtok (&name[2], "/"); share = strtok (NULL, "/"); suffix = strtok (NULL, "/"); if (!host || !share || suffix) return 0; return 1; } /* FILENAME is of the form \\host\share, and stat can't handle names of this form. But stat can handle \\host\share if it's been assigned a drive letter. So we create a network connection to this share, assign it a drive letter, stat the drive letter, and disconnect from the share. Hassle... */ static int stat_toplevel_share (char *filename, void *statbuf) { NETRESOURCE net; int drive_letter; char drive[4]; int result; drive_letter = get_unassigned_drive_letter (); if (drive_letter < 0) return -1; drive[0] = drive_letter; drive[1] = ':'; drive[2] = '\0'; net.dwType = RESOURCETYPE_DISK; net.lpLocalName = drive; net.lpRemoteName = filename; net.lpProvider = NULL; switch (WNetAddConnection2 (&net, NULL, NULL, 0)) { case NO_ERROR: break; case ERROR_ALREADY_ASSIGNED: default: return -1; } /* Name the toplevel directory on the drive letter. */ drive[2] = '/'; drive[3] = '\0'; result = stat (drive, (void *) statbuf); /* Strip the slash so we can disconnect. */ drive[2] = '\0'; if (WNetCancelConnection2 (drive, 0, TRUE) != NO_ERROR) result = -1; return result; } /* Get the current working directory. */ int getwd (char *dir) { return GetCurrentDirectory (MAXPATHLEN, dir); } /* Emulate gethostname. */ int gethostname (char *buffer, int size) { /* NT only allows small host names, so the buffer is certainly large enough. */ return !GetComputerName (buffer, &size); } /* Emulate getloadavg. */ int getloadavg (double loadavg[], int nelem) { int i; /* A faithful emulation is going to have to be saved for a rainy day. */ for (i = 0; i < nelem; i++) { loadavg[i] = 0.0; } return i; } /* Emulate sleep...we could have done this with a define, but that would necessitate including windows.h in the files that used it. This is much easier. */ void nt_sleep (int seconds) { Sleep (seconds * 1000); } /* Emulate the Unix directory procedures opendir, closedir, and readdir. We can't use the procedures supplied in sysdep.c, so we provide them here. */ struct direct dir_static; /* simulated directory contents */ static int dir_finding; static HANDLE dir_find_handle; DIR * opendir (char *filename) { DIR *dirp; /* Opening is done by FindFirstFile. However, a read is inherent to this operation, so we have a flag to handle the open at read time. This flag essentially means "there is a find-handle open and it needs to be closed." */ if (!(dirp = (DIR *) malloc (sizeof (DIR)))) { return 0; } dirp->dd_fd = 0; dirp->dd_loc = 0; dirp->dd_size = 0; /* This is tacky, but we need the directory name for our implementation of readdir. */ strncpy (dirp->dd_buf, filename, DIRBLKSIZ); return dirp; } void closedir (DIR *dirp) { /* If we have a find-handle open, close it. */ if (dir_finding) { FindClose (dir_find_handle); dir_finding = 0; } xfree ((char *) dirp); } struct direct * readdir (DIR *dirp) { WIN32_FIND_DATA find_data; /* If we aren't dir_finding, do a find-first, otherwise do a find-next. */ if (!dir_finding) { char filename[MAXNAMLEN + 3]; int ln; strncpy (filename, dirp->dd_buf, MAXNAMLEN); ln = strlen (filename)-1; if (!IS_ANY_SEP (filename[ln])) strcat (filename, "\\"); strcat (filename, "*.*"); dir_find_handle = FindFirstFile (filename, &find_data); if (dir_find_handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) return NULL; dir_finding = 1; } else { if (!FindNextFile (dir_find_handle, &find_data)) return NULL; } /* NT's unique ID for a file is 64 bits, so we have to fake it here. This should work as long as we never use 0. */ dir_static.d_ino = 1; dir_static.d_reclen = sizeof (struct direct) - MAXNAMLEN + 3 + dir_static.d_namlen - dir_static.d_namlen % 4; dir_static.d_namlen = strlen (find_data.cFileName); strncpy (dir_static.d_name, find_data.cFileName, MAXNAMLEN); return &dir_static; } /* Emulate getpwuid and getpwnam. */ int getuid (); /* forward declaration */ #define PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE 256 static char the_passwd_name[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE]; static char the_passwd_passwd[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE]; static char the_passwd_gecos[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE]; static char the_passwd_dir[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE]; static char the_passwd_shell[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE]; static struct passwd the_passwd = { the_passwd_name, the_passwd_passwd, 0, 0, 0, the_passwd_gecos, the_passwd_dir, the_passwd_shell, }; struct passwd * getpwuid (int uid) { int size = PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE; if (!GetUserName (the_passwd.pw_name, &size)) return NULL; the_passwd.pw_passwd[0] = '\0'; the_passwd.pw_uid = 0; the_passwd.pw_gid = 0; strcpy (the_passwd.pw_gecos, the_passwd.pw_name); the_passwd.pw_dir[0] = '\0'; the_passwd.pw_shell[0] = '\0'; return &the_passwd; } struct passwd * getpwnam (char *name) { struct passwd *pw; pw = getpwuid (getuid ()); if (!pw) return pw; if (strcmp (name, pw->pw_name)) return NULL; return pw; } /* We don't have scripts to automatically determine the system configuration for Emacs before it's compiled, and we don't want to have to make the user enter it, so we define EMACS_CONFIGURATION to invoke this runtime routine. */ static char configuration_buffer[32]; char * get_emacs_configuration (void) { char *arch, *oem, *os; /* Determine the processor type. */ switch (get_processor_type ()) { #ifdef PROCESSOR_INTEL_386 case PROCESSOR_INTEL_386: case PROCESSOR_INTEL_486: case PROCESSOR_INTEL_PENTIUM: arch = "i386"; break; #endif #ifdef PROCESSOR_INTEL_860 case PROCESSOR_INTEL_860: arch = "i860"; break; #endif #ifdef PROCESSOR_MIPS_R2000 case PROCESSOR_MIPS_R2000: case PROCESSOR_MIPS_R3000: case PROCESSOR_MIPS_R4000: arch = "mips"; break; #endif #ifdef PROCESSOR_ALPHA_21064 case PROCESSOR_ALPHA_21064: arch = "alpha"; break; #endif default: arch = "unknown"; break; } /* Let oem be "*" until we figure out how to decode the OEM field. */ oem = "*"; #ifdef WINDOWS95 os = "win"; #else os = "nt"; #endif sprintf (configuration_buffer, "%s-%s-%s%d.%d", arch, oem, os, get_nt_major_version (), get_nt_minor_version ()); return configuration_buffer; } /* Conjure up inode and device numbers that will serve the purpose of Emacs. Return 1 upon success, 0 upon failure. */ int get_inode_and_device_vals (Lisp_Object filename, Lisp_Object *p_inode, Lisp_Object *p_device) { /* File uids on NT are found using a handle to a file, which implies that it has been opened. Since we want to be able to stat an arbitrary file, we must open it, get the info, and then close it. Also, NT file uids are 64-bits. This is a problem. */ HANDLE handle; BOOL result; DWORD attrs; BY_HANDLE_FILE_INFORMATION info; /* We have to stat files and directories differently, so check to see what filename references. */ attrs = GetFileAttributes (XSTRING (filename)->data); if (attrs == 0xFFFFFFFF) { return 0; } if (attrs & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) { /* Conjure up bogus, but unique, values. */ attrs = GetTickCount (); *p_inode = make_number (attrs); *p_device = make_number (attrs); return 1; } /* FIXME: It shouldn't be opened without READ access, but NT on x86 doesn't allow GetFileInfo in that case (NT on mips does). */ handle = CreateFile (XSTRING (filename)->data, GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_READ | FILE_SHARE_WRITE, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, NULL); if (handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) return 0; result = GetFileInformationByHandle (handle, &info); CloseHandle (handle); if (!result) return 0; *p_inode = make_number (info.nFileIndexLow); /* use the low value */ *p_device = make_number (info.dwVolumeSerialNumber); return 1; } /* The following pipe routines are used to support our fork emulation. Since NT's crt dup always creates inherited handles, we must be careful in setting up pipes. First create non-inherited pipe handles, then create an inherited handle to the write end by dup-ing it, and then close the non-inherited end that was just duped. This gives us one non-inherited handle on the read end and one inherited handle to the write end. As the parent, we close the inherited handle to the write end after spawning the child. */ /* From callproc.c */ extern Lisp_Object Vbinary_process_input; extern Lisp_Object Vbinary_process_output; void pipe_with_inherited_out (int fds[2]) { int inherit_out; unsigned int flags = _O_NOINHERIT; if (!NILP (Vbinary_process_output)) flags |= _O_BINARY; _pipe (fds, 0, flags); inherit_out = dup (fds[1]); close (fds[1]); fds[1] = inherit_out; } void pipe_with_inherited_in (int fds[2]) { int inherit_in; unsigned int flags = _O_NOINHERIT; if (!NILP (Vbinary_process_input)) flags |= _O_BINARY; _pipe (fds, 0, flags); inherit_in = dup (fds[0]); close (fds[0]); fds[0] = inherit_in; } /* The following two routines are used to manipulate stdin, stdout, and stderr of our child processes. Assuming that in, out, and err are inherited, we make them stdin, stdout, and stderr of the child as follows: - Save the parent's current standard handles. - Set the parent's standard handles to the handles being passed in. (Note that _get_osfhandle is an io.h procedure that maps crt file descriptors to NT file handles.) - Spawn the child, which inherits in, out, and err as stdin, stdout, and stderr. (see Spawnve) - Reset the parent's standard handles to the saved handles. (see reset_standard_handles) We assume that the caller closes in, out, and err after calling us. */ void prepare_standard_handles (int in, int out, int err, HANDLE handles[4]) { HANDLE parent, stdin_save, stdout_save, stderr_save, err_handle; #ifdef WINDOWS95 /* The Win95 beta doesn't set the standard handles correctly. Handicap subprocesses until we get a version that works correctly. Undefining the subprocesses macro reveals other incompatibilities, so, since we're expecting subprocs to work in the near future, disable them here. */ report_file_error ("Subprocesses currently disabled on Win95", Qnil); #endif parent = GetCurrentProcess (); stdin_save = GetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE); stdout_save = GetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE); stderr_save = GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE); #ifndef HAVE_NTGUI if (!DuplicateHandle (parent, GetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE), parent, &stdin_save, 0, FALSE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS)) report_file_error ("Duplicating parent's input handle", Qnil); if (!DuplicateHandle (parent, GetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE), parent, &stdout_save, 0, FALSE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS)) report_file_error ("Duplicating parent's output handle", Qnil); if (!DuplicateHandle (parent, GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE), parent, &stderr_save, 0, FALSE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS)) report_file_error ("Duplicating parent's error handle", Qnil); #endif /* !HAVE_NTGUI */ if (!SetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE, (HANDLE) _get_osfhandle (in))) report_file_error ("Changing stdin handle", Qnil); if (!SetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE, (HANDLE) _get_osfhandle (out))) report_file_error ("Changing stdout handle", Qnil); /* We lose data if we use the same handle to the pipe for stdout and stderr, so make a duplicate. This took a while to find. */ if (out == err) { if (!DuplicateHandle (parent, (HANDLE) _get_osfhandle (err), parent, &err_handle, 0, TRUE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS)) report_file_error ("Duplicating out handle to make err handle.", Qnil); } else { err_handle = (HANDLE) _get_osfhandle (err); } if (!SetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE, err_handle)) report_file_error ("Changing stderr handle", Qnil); handles[0] = stdin_save; handles[1] = stdout_save; handles[2] = stderr_save; handles[3] = err_handle; } void reset_standard_handles (int in, int out, int err, HANDLE handles[4]) { HANDLE stdin_save = handles[0]; HANDLE stdout_save = handles[1]; HANDLE stderr_save = handles[2]; HANDLE err_handle = handles[3]; int i; #ifndef HAVE_NTGUI if (!SetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE, stdin_save)) report_file_error ("Resetting input handle", Qnil); if (!SetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE, stdout_save)) { i = GetLastError (); report_file_error ("Resetting output handle", Qnil); } if (!SetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE, stderr_save)) report_file_error ("Resetting error handle", Qnil); #endif /* !HAVE_NTGUI */ if (out == err) { /* If out and err are the same handle, then we duplicated out and stuck it in err_handle. Close the duplicate to clean up. */ if (!CloseHandle (err_handle)) report_file_error ("Closing error handle duplicated from out.", Qnil); } } int random () { /* rand () on NT gives us 15 random bits...hack together 30 bits. */ return ((rand () << 15) | rand ()); } void srandom (int seed) { srand (seed); } /* Destructively turn backslashes into slashes. */ void dostounix_filename (p) register char *p; { while (*p) { if (*p == '\\') *p = '/'; p++; } } /* Routines that are no-ops on NT but are defined to get Emacs to compile. */ int sigsetmask (int signal_mask) { return 0; } int sigblock (int sig) { return 0; } int kill (int pid, int signal) { return 0; } int setpgrp (int pid, int gid) { return 0; } int alarm (int seconds) { return 0; } int unrequest_sigio (void) { return 0; } int request_sigio (void) { return 0; } int getuid () { char buffer[256]; int size = 256; if (!GetUserName (buffer, &size)) /* Assume all powers upon failure. */ return 0; if (!stricmp ("administrator", buffer)) return 0; else /* A complete fabrication...is there anything to base it on? */ return 123; } int geteuid () { /* I could imagine arguing for checking to see whether the user is in the Administrators group and returning a UID of 0 for that case, but I don't know how wise that would be in the long run. */ return getuid (); } /* Remove all CR's that are followed by a LF. (From msdos.c...probably should figure out a way to share it, although this code isn't going to ever change.) */ int crlf_to_lf (n, buf) register int n; register unsigned char *buf; { unsigned char *np = buf; unsigned char *startp = buf; unsigned char *endp = buf + n; if (n == 0) return n; while (buf < endp - 1) { if (*buf == 0x0d) { if (*(++buf) != 0x0a) *np++ = 0x0d; } else *np++ = *buf++; } if (buf < endp) *np++ = *buf++; return np - startp; } #define REG_ROOT "SOFTWARE\\GNU\\Emacs\\" LPBYTE nt_get_resource (key, lpdwtype) char *key; LPDWORD lpdwtype; { LPBYTE lpvalue; HKEY hrootkey = NULL; DWORD cbData; BOOL ok = FALSE; /* Check both the current user and the local machine to see if we have any resources. */ if (RegOpenKeyEx (HKEY_CURRENT_USER, REG_ROOT, 0, KEY_READ, &hrootkey) == ERROR_SUCCESS) { lpvalue = NULL; if (RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, NULL, NULL, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS && (lpvalue = (LPBYTE) xmalloc (cbData)) != NULL && RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, lpdwtype, lpvalue, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS) { return (lpvalue); } if (lpvalue) xfree (lpvalue); RegCloseKey (hrootkey); } if (RegOpenKeyEx (HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, REG_ROOT, 0, KEY_READ, &hrootkey) == ERROR_SUCCESS) { lpvalue = NULL; if (RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, NULL, NULL, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS && (lpvalue = (LPBYTE) xmalloc (cbData)) != NULL && RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, lpdwtype, lpvalue, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS) { return (lpvalue); } if (lpvalue) xfree (lpvalue); RegCloseKey (hrootkey); } return (NULL); } void init_environment () { /* Open a console window to display messages during dumping. */ if (!initialized) AllocConsole (); /* Check for environment variables and use registry if they don't exist */ { int i; LPBYTE lpval; DWORD dwType; static char * env_vars[] = { "emacs_path", "EMACSLOADPATH", "SHELL", "EMACSDATA", "EMACSPATH", "EMACSLOCKDIR", "INFOPATH", "EMACSDOC", "TERM", }; for (i = 0; i < (sizeof (env_vars) / sizeof (env_vars[0])); i++) { if (!getenv (env_vars[i]) && (lpval = nt_get_resource (env_vars[i], &dwType)) != NULL) { if (dwType == REG_EXPAND_SZ) { char buf1[500], buf2[500]; ExpandEnvironmentStrings ((LPSTR) lpval, buf1, 500); _snprintf (buf2, 499, "%s=%s", env_vars[i], buf1); putenv (strdup (buf2)); } else if (dwType == REG_SZ) { char buf[500]; _snprintf (buf, 499, "%s=%s", env_vars[i], lpval); putenv (strdup (buf)); } xfree (lpval); } } } } #ifdef HAVE_TIMEVAL #include <sys/timeb.h> /* Emulate gettimeofday (Ulrich Leodolter, 1/11/95). */ void gettimeofday (struct timeval *tv, struct timezone *tz) { struct _timeb tb; _ftime (&tb); tv->tv_sec = tb.time; tv->tv_usec = tb.millitm * 1000L; if (tz) { tz->tz_minuteswest = tb.timezone; /* minutes west of Greenwich */ tz->tz_dsttime = tb.dstflag; /* type of dst correction */ } } #endif /* HAVE_TIMEVAL */ #ifdef PIGSFLY Keep this around...we might need it later. #ifdef WINDOWSNT { /* * Find the user's real name by opening the process token and looking * up the name associated with the user-sid in that token. */ char b[256], Name[256], RefD[256]; DWORD length = 256, rlength = 256, trash; HANDLE Token; SID_NAME_USE User; if (1) Vuser_real_login_name = build_string ("foo"); else if (!OpenProcessToken (GetCurrentProcess (), TOKEN_QUERY, &Token)) { Vuser_real_login_name = build_string ("unknown"); } else if (!GetTokenInformation (Token, TokenUser, (PVOID)b, 256, &trash)) { CloseHandle (Token); Vuser_real_login_name = build_string ("unknown"); } else if (!LookupAccountSid ((void *)0, (PSID)b, Name, &length, RefD, &rlength, &User)) { CloseHandle (Token); Vuser_real_login_name = build_string ("unknown"); } else Vuser_real_login_name = build_string (Name); } #else /* not WINDOWSNT */ #endif /* not WINDOWSNT */ #endif /* PIGSFLY */