Mercurial > emacs
view lib-src/movemail.c @ 10219:d97313bb6f39
(bibtex-string, bibtex-preamble): Use forward-line.
(sort-subr): Don't call autload for this--that's done in loaddefs.el.
(bibtex-mode): Add autoload cookie.
Changed keybinding for bibtex-print-help-message
(from \C-ch to \C-c?). Therefore, describe-mode is not longer on
\C-c?. Also, changed prefix \C-cn for bibtex-narrow functions to
\C-c\C-r.
(bibtex-string-files): Changed documentation.
(bibtex-mode-map): Inscriptions of menu bar changed from "Entry
Types" to "Entry-Types" and "Bibtex Edit" to "BibTeX-Edit".
(bibtex-string-files): Changed documentation.
(bibtex-mode): If environment variable BIBINPUTS isn't defined,
string files are searched in the current directory.
(bibtex-completion-candidates): Now buffer-local to allow
evaluation of different bibtex-string-files in different buffers.
(bibtex-autokey-edit-before-use, bibtex-clean-entry): New variable
that determines, if the user is allowed to edit auto-generated
reference keys before they are used.
(bibtex-generate-autokey, bibtex-clean-entry): New function to
generate an autokey if necessary.
(bibtex-autokey-names, bibtex-autokey-name-change-strings,
bibtex-autokey-name-length, bibtex-autokey-name-separator,
bibtex-autokey-year-length, bibtex-autokey-titlewords,
bibtex-autokey-title-terminators,
bibtex-autokey-titlewords-stretch,
bibtex-autokey-titleword-first-ignore,
bibtex-autokey-titleword-abbrevs,
bibtex-autokey-titleword-change-strings,
bibtex-autokey-titleword-length,
bibtex-autokey-titleword-separator,
bibtex-autokey-name-year-separator,
bibtex-autokey-year-title-separator): New variables related to
bibtex-generate-autokey.
(bibtex-find-entry-location): Optional second parameter maybedup
to tell it that entering a duplicate entry isn't to report by an
error but by the return value of the function (necessary for
bibtex-clean-entry to find the correct position of an entry with
an autogenerated key without disturbing the user with unwanted
messages).
(bibtex-help-message): New variable to avoid printing of help
messages in the echo area.
(assoc-of-regexp): New function to match an alist of regexps.
(bibtex-string-files, bibtex-completion-candidates, bibtex-mode):
New variables to allow bibtex-complete-string to work on strings
initialized from a variable and from @String definitions in a list
of files, too.
(bibtex-predefined-strings, bibtex-entry-field-alist): Changed to
user options.
(bibtex-mode): Changed doc string.
(many functions and variables): Changed documentation strings of
variables and functions to hold a complete sentence in the first
line.
(bibtex-print-help-message): Now line dependent and reports if it
is called outside a BibTeX field.
(validate-bibtex-buffer): Completely rewritten to validate, if
buffer is syntactically correct.
(find-bibtex-duplicates): Moved into validate-bibtex-buffer.
(ispell-abstract, bibtex-ispell-abstract, ispell-bibtex-entry,
bibtex-ispell-entry, beginning-of-bibtex-entry,
bibtex-beginning-of-entry, end-of-bibtex-entry,
bibtex-end-of-entry, hide-bibtex-entry-bodies,
bibtex-hide-entry-bodies, narrow-to-bibtex-entry,
bibtex-narrow-to-entry, sort-bibtex-entries, bibtex-sort-entries,
validate-bibtex-buffer, bibtex-validate-buffer,
find-bibtex-entry-location, bibtex-find-entry-location): All
interactive functions are renamed, so that any interface function
begins with "bibtex-". Mapping:
ispell-abstract --> bibtex-ispell-abstract
ispell-bibtex-entry --> bibtex-ispell-entry
beginning-of-bibtex-entry --> bibtex-beginning-of-entry
end-of-bibtex-entry --> bibtex-end-of-entry
hide-bibtex-entry-bodies --> bibtex-hide-entry-bodies
narrow-to-bibtex-entry --> bibtex-narrow-to-entry
sort-bibtex-entries --> bibtex-sort-entries
validate-bibtex-buffer --> bibtex-validate-buffer
find-bibtex-entry-location --> bibtex-find-entry-location
(bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries,
bibtex-sort-ignore-string-entries): Default is now t.
(bibtex-complete-string): String list is built from additional
string list bibtex-predefined-string and current strings in file.
(string-equalp): Deleted and substituted by string-equal.
(assoc-string-equalp): Renamed to assoc-ignore-case.
(bibtex-entry): Reference key can be entered with completion. All
reference keys that are defined in buffer and all labels that
appear in crossreference entries are object to completion.
(Entry types): Changed order of entries in menu "entry types".
(bibtex-entry-field-alist): Changed order of entries slightly to
be more conform with standard BibTeX style layouts.
(bibtex-mode-map): Uniform keybindings for \C-c\C-e prefix (often
used types on control keys, sometimes used types on normal keys,
rarely used types on shift keys, almost never used types on meta
keys).
(bibtex-mode-map): Function narrow-to-bibtex-entry and counterpart
widen and function hide-bibtex-entry-bodies and counterpart
show-all bounded to appropriate local keys.
(bibtex-abbrev-table): Deleted
(bibtex-current-entry-label, put-string-on-kill-ring): Deleted
(AUCTeX provides all the functionality needed for citation
completion).
(bibtex-enclosing-reference, bibtex-pop-previous, bibtex-pop-next,
bibtex-clean-entry): Hacked for speed (bibtex-pop-previous and
bibtex-pop-next were to slow for larger BibTeX files).
(bibtex-pop-previous, bibtex-pop-next): Delimiters from previous
or next entry are changed to actual delimters if necessary.
(bibtex-entry): Fixed bug (False entry wasn't reported in error
message if bibtex-entry was called with undefined reference name).
(bibtex-entry-field-alist, bibtex-entry, bibtex-make-field,
bibtex-next-field, bibtex-clean-entry): Every reference entry now
contains a comment in addition to the name of the reference. This
comment appears in the echo area if you start editing that field
(after calling bibtex-next-field).
(bibtex-include-OPTcrossref, bibtex-entry): Changed
bibtex-include-OPTcrossref from single boolean variable to hold a
list of reference names which should have a crossref field.
(bibtex-complete-word): New function, which completes word
fragment before point to the longest prefix of predefined strings
in the buffer in the same way that ispell-complete-word operates
for words found in the dictionary.
(bibtex-reference-head): Start of bibtex-reference-head changed
from "^[ \t]*\\(" to "^\\( \\|\t\\)*\\(" (bibtex-pop-previous and
bibtex-pop-next didn't work, probably due to a bug in
re-search-forward).
(several functions): Added support for {} as field delimiters
(better than '"' for accented characters.
(bibtex-clean-entry): If optional field crossref is empty or
missing, former optional fields (if bibtex-include-OPTcrossref was
t) are necessary again. bibtex-clean-entry complains if they are
empty but not if they are missing, so you can intenionally omit
them, e. g. for a pseudo @Journal entry (needed for
crossreferences) made out of an @article with missing non-optional
fields.
Menu bar entries aren't centered anymore.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 23 Dec 1994 04:18:29 +0000 |
parents | 5410efcb7b6e |
children | f70663b67154 |
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, 1993, 1994 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, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ /* Important notice: defining MAIL_USE_FLOCK or MAIL_USE_LOCKF *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 and MAIL_USE_LOCKF *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 * * Modified August, 1993 by Jonathan Kamens (OpenVision Technologies) * * Move all of the POP code into a separate file, "pop.c". * Use strerror instead of get_errmsg. * */ #define NO_SHORTNAMES /* Tell config not to load remap.h */ #include <../src/config.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <sys/file.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <errno.h> #include <../src/syswait.h> #ifdef MAIL_USE_POP #include "pop.h" #endif #ifdef MSDOS #undef access #endif /* MSDOS */ #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 HAVE_UNISTD_H #include <unistd.h> #endif #ifdef XENIX #include <sys/locking.h> #endif #ifdef MAIL_USE_LOCKF #define MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK #endif #ifdef MAIL_USE_FLOCK #define MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK #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 #ifndef errno extern int errno; #endif char *strerror (); void fatal (); void error (); void pfatal_with_name (); void pfatal_and_delete (); char *concat (); char *xmalloc (); int popmail (); int pop_retr (); int mbx_write (); int mbx_delimit_begin (); int mbx_delimit_end (); /* Nonzero means this is name of a lock file to delete on fatal error. */ char *delete_lockname; int main (argc, argv) int argc; char **argv; { char *inname, *outname; int indesc, outdesc; int nread; WAITTYPE status; #ifndef MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK struct stat st; long now; int tem; char *lockname, *p; char *tempname; int desc; #endif /* not MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK */ delete_lockname = 0; if (argc < 3) { fprintf (stderr, "Usage: movemail inbox destfile"); exit(1); } 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 *) xmalloc (strlen (outname) + 1); char *p; 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 (!strncmp (inname, "po:", 3)) { int status; char *user; for (user = &inname[strlen (inname) - 1]; user >= inname; user--) if (*user == ':') break; 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_SYSTEM_LOCK /* 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_SYSTEM_LOCK in config.h or the s-*.h file and recompile movemail. If the s- file for your system should define MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK 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 = (char *) xmalloc (strlen (inname) + strlen ("EXXXXXX") + 1); strcpy (tempname, 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 | O_EXCL, 0666); if (desc < 0) pfatal_with_name ("lock file--see source file lib-src/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_SYSTEM_LOCK */ #endif /* not MAIL_USE_MMDF */ if (fork () == 0) { setuid (getuid ()); #ifndef MAIL_USE_MMDF #ifdef MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK indesc = open (inname, O_RDWR); #else /* if not MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK */ indesc = open (inname, O_RDONLY); #endif /* not MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK */ #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_SYSTEM_LOCK #ifdef MAIL_USE_LOCKF if (lockf (indesc, F_LOCK, 0) < 0) pfatal_with_name (inname); #else /* not MAIL_USE_LOCKF */ #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 /* not MAIL_USE_LOCKF */ #endif /* MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK */ { 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_SYSTEM_LOCK #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_SYSTEM_LOCK */ #ifdef MAIL_USE_MMDF lk_close (indesc, 0, 0, 0); #else close (indesc); #endif #ifndef MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK /* 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); #endif /* not MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK */ exit (0); } wait (&status); if (!WIFEXITED (status)) exit (1); else if (WRETCODE (status) != 0) exit (WRETCODE (status)); #if !defined (MAIL_USE_MMDF) && !defined (MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK) unlink (lockname); #endif /* not MAIL_USE_MMDF and not MAIL_USE_SYSTEM_LOCK */ return 0; } /* Print error message and exit. */ void 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. */ void error (s1, s2, s3) char *s1, *s2, *s3; { fprintf (stderr, "movemail: "); fprintf (stderr, s1, s2, s3); fprintf (stderr, "\n"); } void pfatal_with_name (name) char *name; { char *s = concat ("", strerror (errno), " for %s"); fatal (s, name); } void pfatal_and_delete (name) char *name; { char *s = concat ("", strerror (errno), " for %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 = (char *) 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 ibuffer[BUFSIZ]; char obuffer[BUFSIZ]; char Errmsg[80]; popmail (user, outfile) char *user; char *outfile; { int nmsgs, nbytes; register int i; int mbfi; FILE *mbf; char *getenv (); int mbx_write (); popserver server; extern char *strerror (); server = pop_open (0, user, 0, POP_NO_GETPASS); if (! server) { error (pop_error); return (1); } if (pop_stat (server, &nmsgs, &nbytes)) { error (pop_error); return (1); } if (!nmsgs) { pop_close (server); return (0); } mbfi = open (outfile, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_EXCL, 0666); if (mbfi < 0) { pop_close (server); error ("Error in open: %s, %s", strerror (errno), outfile); return (1); } fchown (mbfi, getuid (), -1); if ((mbf = fdopen (mbfi, "w")) == NULL) { pop_close (server); error ("Error in fdopen: %s", strerror (errno)); close (mbfi); unlink (outfile); return (1); } for (i = 1; i <= nmsgs; i++) { mbx_delimit_begin (mbf); if (pop_retr (server, i, mbx_write, mbf) != OK) { error (Errmsg); close (mbfi); return (1); } mbx_delimit_end (mbf); fflush (mbf); if (ferror (mbf)) { error ("Error in fflush: %s", strerror (errno)); pop_close (server); close (mbfi); return (1); } } /* On AFS, a call to write only modifies the file in the local * workstation's AFS cache. The changes are not written to the server * until a call to fsync or close is made. Users with AFS home * directories have lost mail when over quota because these checks were * not made in previous versions of movemail. */ #ifdef BSD if (fsync (mbfi) < 0) { error ("Error in fsync: %s", strerror (errno)); return (1); } #endif if (close (mbfi) == -1) { error ("Error in close: %s", strerror (errno)); return (1); } for (i = 1; i <= nmsgs; i++) { if (pop_delete (server, i)) { error (pop_error); pop_close (server); return (1); } } if (pop_quit (server)) { error (pop_error); return (1); } return (0); } pop_retr (server, msgno, action, arg) popserver server; int (*action)(); { extern char *strerror (); char *line; int ret; if (pop_retrieve_first (server, msgno, &line)) { strncpy (Errmsg, pop_error, sizeof (Errmsg)); Errmsg[sizeof (Errmsg)-1] = '\0'; return (NOTOK); } while (! (ret = pop_retrieve_next (server, &line))) { if (! line) break; if ((*action)(line, arg) != OK) { strcpy (Errmsg, strerror (errno)); pop_close (server); return (NOTOK); } } if (ret) { strncpy (Errmsg, pop_error, sizeof (Errmsg)); Errmsg[sizeof (Errmsg)-1] = '\0'; return (NOTOK); } return (OK); } /* Do this as a macro instead of using strcmp to save on execution time. */ #define IS_FROM_LINE(a) ((a[0] == 'F') \ && (a[1] == 'r') \ && (a[2] == 'o') \ && (a[3] == 'm') \ && (a[4] == ' ')) int mbx_write (line, mbf) char *line; FILE *mbf; { if (IS_FROM_LINE (line)) { if (fputc ('>', mbf) == EOF) return (NOTOK); } if (fputs (line, mbf) == EOF) return (NOTOK); if (fputc (0x0a, mbf) == EOF) return (NOTOK); return (OK); } int mbx_delimit_begin (mbf) FILE *mbf; { if (fputs ("\f\n0, unseen,,\n", mbf) == EOF) return (NOTOK); return (OK); } mbx_delimit_end (mbf) FILE *mbf; { if (putc ('\037', mbf) == EOF) return (NOTOK); return (OK); } #endif /* MAIL_USE_POP */ #ifndef HAVE_STRERROR char * strerror (errnum) int errnum; { extern char *sys_errlist[]; extern int sys_nerr; if (errnum >= 0 && errnum < sys_nerr) return sys_errlist[errnum]; return (char *) "Unknown error"; } #endif /* ! HAVE_STRERROR */