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typos.
author | Jeff Law <law@redhat.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 10 Sep 1997 21:16:20 +0000 |
parents | e33cf4ba547c |
children | 33fbdbaf65c2 |
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/* Copyright (C) 1985, 86, 87, 93, 94, 96 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. */ #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <config.h> #ifdef VMS #include "vms-pwd.h" #else #include <pwd.h> #endif /* not VMS */ #include <sys/file.h> #ifdef USG #include <fcntl.h> #include <string.h> #endif /* USG */ #include "lisp.h" #include "buffer.h" #include <errno.h> #ifndef errno extern int errno; #endif #ifdef CLASH_DETECTION /* The strategy: to lock a file FN, create a symlink .#FN in FN's directory, with link data `user@host.pid'. This avoids a single mount (== failure) point for lock files. When the host in the lock data is the current host, we can check if the pid is valid with kill. Otherwise, we could look at a separate file that maps hostnames to reboot times to see if the remote pid can possibly be valid, since we don't want Emacs to have to communicate via pipes or sockets or whatever to other processes, either locally or remotely; rms says that's too unreliable. Hence the separate file, which could theoretically be updated by daemons running separately -- but this whole idea is unimplemented; in practice, at least in our environment, it seems such stale locks arise fairly infrequently, and Emacs' standard methods of dealing with clashes suffice. We use symlinks instead of normal files because (1) they can be stored more efficiently on the filesystem, since the kernel knows they will be small, and (2) all the info about the lock can be read in a single system call (readlink). Although we could use regular files to be useful on old systems lacking symlinks, nowadays virtually all such systems are probably single-user anyway, so it didn't seem worth the complication. Similarly, we don't worry about a possible 14-character limit on file names, because those are all the same systems that don't have symlinks. This is compatible with the locking scheme used by Interleaf (which has contributed this implementation for Emacs), and was designed by Ethan Jacobson, Kimbo Mundy, and others. --karl@cs.umb.edu/karl@hq.ileaf.com. */ /* Here is the structure that stores information about a lock. */ typedef struct { char *user; char *host; unsigned long pid; } lock_info_type; /* When we read the info back, we might need this much more, enough for decimal representation plus null. */ #define LOCK_PID_MAX (4 * sizeof (unsigned long)) /* Free the two dynamically-allocated pieces in PTR. */ #define FREE_LOCK_INFO(i) do { xfree ((i).user); xfree ((i).host); } while (0) /* Write the name of the lock file for FN into LFNAME. Length will be that of FN plus two more for the leading `.#' plus one for the null. */ #define MAKE_LOCK_NAME(lock, file) \ (lock = (char *) alloca (XSTRING (file)->size + 2 + 1), \ fill_in_lock_file_name (lock, (file))) static void fill_in_lock_file_name (lockfile, fn) register char *lockfile; register Lisp_Object fn; { register char *p; strcpy (lockfile, XSTRING (fn)->data); /* Shift the nondirectory part of the file name (including the null) right two characters. Here is one of the places where we'd have to do something to support 14-character-max file names. */ for (p = lockfile + strlen (lockfile); p != lockfile && *p != '/'; p--) p[2] = *p; /* Insert the `.#'. */ p[1] = '.'; p[2] = '#'; } /* Lock the lock file named LFNAME. If FORCE is nonzero, we do so even if it is already locked. Return 1 if successful, 0 if not. */ static int lock_file_1 (lfname, force) char *lfname; int force; { register int err; char *user_name; char *host_name; char *lock_info_str; if (STRINGP (Fuser_login_name (Qnil))) user_name = (char *)XSTRING (Fuser_login_name (Qnil))->data; else user_name = ""; if (STRINGP (Fsystem_name ())) host_name = (char *)XSTRING (Fsystem_name ())->data; else host_name = ""; lock_info_str = (char *)alloca (strlen (user_name) + strlen (host_name) + LOCK_PID_MAX + 5); sprintf (lock_info_str, "%s@%s.%lu", user_name, host_name, (unsigned long) getpid ()); err = symlink (lock_info_str, lfname); if (errno == EEXIST && force) { unlink (lfname); err = symlink (lock_info_str, lfname); } return err == 0; } /* Return 0 if nobody owns the lock file LFNAME or the lock is obsolete, 1 if another process owns it (and set OWNER (if non-null) to info), 2 if the current process owns it, or -1 if something is wrong with the locking mechanism. */ static int current_lock_owner (owner, lfname) lock_info_type *owner; char *lfname; { #ifndef index extern char *rindex (), *index (); #endif int o, p, len, ret; int local_owner = 0; char *at, *dot; char *lfinfo = 0; int bufsize = 50; /* Read arbitrarily-long contents of symlink. Similar code in file-symlink-p in fileio.c. */ do { bufsize *= 2; lfinfo = (char *) xrealloc (lfinfo, bufsize); len = readlink (lfname, lfinfo, bufsize); } while (len >= bufsize); /* If nonexistent lock file, all is well; otherwise, got strange error. */ if (len == -1) { xfree (lfinfo); return errno == ENOENT ? 0 : -1; } /* Link info exists, so `len' is its length. Null terminate. */ lfinfo[len] = 0; /* Even if the caller doesn't want the owner info, we still have to read it to determine return value, so allocate it. */ if (!owner) { owner = (lock_info_type *) alloca (sizeof (lock_info_type)); local_owner = 1; } /* Parse USER@HOST.PID. If can't parse, return -1. */ /* The USER is everything before the first @. */ at = index (lfinfo, '@'); dot = rindex (lfinfo, '.'); if (!at || !dot) { xfree (lfinfo); return -1; } len = at - lfinfo; owner->user = (char *) xmalloc (len + 1); strncpy (owner->user, lfinfo, len); owner->user[len] = 0; /* The PID is everything after the last `.'. */ owner->pid = atoi (dot + 1); /* The host is everything in between. */ len = dot - at - 1; owner->host = (char *) xmalloc (len + 1); strncpy (owner->host, at + 1, len); owner->host[len] = 0; /* We're done looking at the link info. */ xfree (lfinfo); /* On current host? */ if (STRINGP (Fsystem_name ()) && strcmp (owner->host, XSTRING (Fsystem_name ())->data) == 0) { if (owner->pid == getpid ()) ret = 2; /* We own it. */ else if (owner->pid > 0 && (kill (owner->pid, 0) >= 0 || errno == EPERM)) ret = 1; /* An existing process on this machine owns it. */ /* The owner process is dead or has a strange pid (<=0), so try to zap the lockfile. */ else if (unlink (lfname) < 0) ret = -1; else ret = 0; } else { /* If we wanted to support the check for stale locks on remote machines, here's where we'd do it. */ ret = 1; } /* Avoid garbage. */ if (local_owner || ret <= 0) { FREE_LOCK_INFO (*owner); } return ret; } /* Lock the lock named LFNAME if possible. Return 0 in that case. Return positive if some other process owns the lock, and info about that process in CLASHER. Return -1 if cannot lock for any other reason. */ static int lock_if_free (clasher, lfname) lock_info_type *clasher; register char *lfname; { if (lock_file_1 (lfname, 0) == 0) { int locker; if (errno != EEXIST) return -1; locker = current_lock_owner (clasher, lfname); if (locker == 2) { FREE_LOCK_INFO (*clasher); return 0; /* We ourselves locked it. */ } else if (locker == 1) return 1; /* Someone else has it. */ return -1; /* Something's wrong. */ } return 0; } /* lock_file locks file FN, meaning it serves notice on the world that you intend to edit that file. This should be done only when about to modify a file-visiting buffer previously unmodified. Do not (normally) call this for a buffer already modified, as either the file is already locked, or the user has already decided to go ahead without locking. When this returns, either the lock is locked for us, or the user has said to go ahead without locking. If the file is locked by someone else, this calls ask-user-about-lock (a Lisp function) with two arguments, the file name and info about the user who did the locking. This function can signal an error, or return t meaning take away the lock, or return nil meaning ignore the lock. */ void lock_file (fn) register Lisp_Object fn; { register Lisp_Object attack, orig_fn; register char *lfname, *locker; lock_info_type lock_info; orig_fn = fn; fn = Fexpand_file_name (fn, Qnil); /* Create the name of the lock-file for file fn */ MAKE_LOCK_NAME (lfname, fn); /* See if this file is visited and has changed on disk since it was visited. */ { register Lisp_Object subject_buf; subject_buf = get_truename_buffer (orig_fn); if (!NILP (subject_buf) && NILP (Fverify_visited_file_modtime (subject_buf)) && !NILP (Ffile_exists_p (fn))) call1 (intern ("ask-user-about-supersession-threat"), fn); } /* Try to lock the lock. */ if (lock_if_free (&lock_info, lfname) <= 0) /* Return now if we have locked it, or if lock creation failed */ return; /* Else consider breaking the lock */ locker = (char *) alloca (strlen (lock_info.user) + strlen (lock_info.host) + LOCK_PID_MAX + 9); sprintf (locker, "%s@%s (pid %lu)", lock_info.user, lock_info.host, lock_info.pid); FREE_LOCK_INFO (lock_info); attack = call2 (intern ("ask-user-about-lock"), fn, build_string (locker)); if (!NILP (attack)) /* User says take the lock */ { lock_file_1 (lfname, 1); return; } /* User says ignore the lock */ } void unlock_file (fn) register Lisp_Object fn; { register char *lfname; fn = Fexpand_file_name (fn, Qnil); MAKE_LOCK_NAME (lfname, fn); if (current_lock_owner (0, lfname) == 2) unlink (lfname); } void unlock_all_files () { register Lisp_Object tail; register struct buffer *b; for (tail = Vbuffer_alist; GC_CONSP (tail); tail = XCONS (tail)->cdr) { b = XBUFFER (XCONS (XCONS (tail)->car)->cdr); if (STRINGP (b->file_truename) && BUF_SAVE_MODIFF (b) < BUF_MODIFF (b)) unlock_file (b->file_truename); } } DEFUN ("lock-buffer", Flock_buffer, Slock_buffer, 0, 1, 0, "Lock FILE, if current buffer is modified.\n\ FILE defaults to current buffer's visited file,\n\ or else nothing is done if current buffer isn't visiting a file.") (file) Lisp_Object file; { if (NILP (file)) file = current_buffer->file_truename; else CHECK_STRING (file, 0); if (SAVE_MODIFF < MODIFF && !NILP (file)) lock_file (file); return Qnil; } DEFUN ("unlock-buffer", Funlock_buffer, Sunlock_buffer, 0, 0, 0, "Unlock the file visited in the current buffer,\n\ if it should normally be locked.") () { if (SAVE_MODIFF < MODIFF && STRINGP (current_buffer->file_truename)) unlock_file (current_buffer->file_truename); return Qnil; } /* Unlock the file visited in buffer BUFFER. */ unlock_buffer (buffer) struct buffer *buffer; { if (BUF_SAVE_MODIFF (buffer) < BUF_MODIFF (buffer) && STRINGP (buffer->file_truename)) unlock_file (buffer->file_truename); } DEFUN ("file-locked-p", Ffile_locked_p, Sfile_locked_p, 0, 1, 0, "Return nil if the FILENAME is not locked,\n\ t if it is locked by you, else a string of the name of the locker.") (filename) Lisp_Object filename; { Lisp_Object ret; register char *lfname; int owner; lock_info_type locker; filename = Fexpand_file_name (filename, Qnil); MAKE_LOCK_NAME (lfname, filename); owner = current_lock_owner (&locker, lfname); if (owner <= 0) ret = Qnil; else if (owner == 2) ret = Qt; else ret = build_string (locker.user); if (owner > 0) FREE_LOCK_INFO (locker); return ret; } /* Initialization functions. */ syms_of_filelock () { defsubr (&Sunlock_buffer); defsubr (&Slock_buffer); defsubr (&Sfile_locked_p); } #endif /* CLASH_DETECTION */