]> code.delx.au - gnu-emacs/blob - src/w32.c
Rebuild Vsystem_configuration at startup.
[gnu-emacs] / src / w32.c
1 /* Utility and Unix shadow routines for GNU Emacs on the Microsoft W32 API.
2 Copyright (C) 1994, 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3
4 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
5
6 GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
7 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
8 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
9 any later version.
10
11 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
12 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
13 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
14 GNU General Public License for more details.
15
16 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
17 along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
18 the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
19 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
20
21 Geoff Voelker (voelker@cs.washington.edu) 7-29-94
22 */
23
24
25 #include <stdlib.h>
26 #include <stdio.h>
27 #include <io.h>
28 #include <errno.h>
29 #include <fcntl.h>
30 #include <ctype.h>
31 #include <signal.h>
32 #include <sys/time.h>
33
34 /* must include CRT headers *before* config.h */
35 #include "config.h"
36 #undef access
37 #undef chdir
38 #undef chmod
39 #undef creat
40 #undef ctime
41 #undef fopen
42 #undef link
43 #undef mkdir
44 #undef mktemp
45 #undef open
46 #undef rename
47 #undef rmdir
48 #undef unlink
49
50 #undef close
51 #undef dup
52 #undef dup2
53 #undef pipe
54 #undef read
55 #undef write
56
57 #define getwd _getwd
58 #include "lisp.h"
59 #undef getwd
60
61 #include <pwd.h>
62
63 #include <windows.h>
64
65 #ifdef HAVE_SOCKETS /* TCP connection support, if kernel can do it */
66 #include <sys/socket.h>
67 #undef socket
68 #undef bind
69 #undef connect
70 #undef htons
71 #undef ntohs
72 #undef inet_addr
73 #undef gethostname
74 #undef gethostbyname
75 #undef getservbyname
76 #endif
77
78 #include "w32.h"
79 #include "ndir.h"
80 #include "w32heap.h"
81
82 /* Get the current working directory. */
83 char *
84 getwd (char *dir)
85 {
86 if (GetCurrentDirectory (MAXPATHLEN, dir) > 0)
87 return dir;
88 return NULL;
89 }
90
91 #ifndef HAVE_SOCKETS
92 /* Emulate gethostname. */
93 int
94 gethostname (char *buffer, int size)
95 {
96 /* NT only allows small host names, so the buffer is
97 certainly large enough. */
98 return !GetComputerName (buffer, &size);
99 }
100 #endif /* HAVE_SOCKETS */
101
102 /* Emulate getloadavg. */
103 int
104 getloadavg (double loadavg[], int nelem)
105 {
106 int i;
107
108 /* A faithful emulation is going to have to be saved for a rainy day. */
109 for (i = 0; i < nelem; i++)
110 {
111 loadavg[i] = 0.0;
112 }
113 return i;
114 }
115
116 /* Emulate the Unix directory procedures opendir, closedir,
117 and readdir. We can't use the procedures supplied in sysdep.c,
118 so we provide them here. */
119
120 struct direct dir_static; /* simulated directory contents */
121 static HANDLE dir_find_handle = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
122 static int dir_is_fat;
123 static char dir_pathname[MAXPATHLEN+1];
124
125 extern Lisp_Object Vw32_downcase_file_names;
126
127 DIR *
128 opendir (char *filename)
129 {
130 DIR *dirp;
131
132 /* Opening is done by FindFirstFile. However, a read is inherent to
133 this operation, so we defer the open until read time. */
134
135 if (!(dirp = (DIR *) malloc (sizeof (DIR))))
136 return NULL;
137 if (dir_find_handle != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
138 return NULL;
139
140 dirp->dd_fd = 0;
141 dirp->dd_loc = 0;
142 dirp->dd_size = 0;
143
144 strncpy (dir_pathname, filename, MAXPATHLEN);
145 dir_pathname[MAXPATHLEN] = '\0';
146 dir_is_fat = is_fat_volume (filename, NULL);
147
148 return dirp;
149 }
150
151 void
152 closedir (DIR *dirp)
153 {
154 /* If we have a find-handle open, close it. */
155 if (dir_find_handle != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
156 {
157 FindClose (dir_find_handle);
158 dir_find_handle = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
159 }
160 xfree ((char *) dirp);
161 }
162
163 struct direct *
164 readdir (DIR *dirp)
165 {
166 WIN32_FIND_DATA find_data;
167
168 /* If we aren't dir_finding, do a find-first, otherwise do a find-next. */
169 if (dir_find_handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
170 {
171 char filename[MAXNAMLEN + 3];
172 int ln;
173
174 strcpy (filename, dir_pathname);
175 ln = strlen (filename) - 1;
176 if (!IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (filename[ln]))
177 strcat (filename, "\\");
178 strcat (filename, "*");
179
180 dir_find_handle = FindFirstFile (filename, &find_data);
181
182 if (dir_find_handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
183 return NULL;
184 }
185 else
186 {
187 if (!FindNextFile (dir_find_handle, &find_data))
188 return NULL;
189 }
190
191 /* Emacs never uses this value, so don't bother making it match
192 value returned by stat(). */
193 dir_static.d_ino = 1;
194
195 dir_static.d_reclen = sizeof (struct direct) - MAXNAMLEN + 3 +
196 dir_static.d_namlen - dir_static.d_namlen % 4;
197
198 dir_static.d_namlen = strlen (find_data.cFileName);
199 strcpy (dir_static.d_name, find_data.cFileName);
200 if (dir_is_fat)
201 _strlwr (dir_static.d_name);
202 else if (!NILP (Vw32_downcase_file_names))
203 {
204 register char *p;
205 for (p = dir_static.d_name; *p; p++)
206 if (*p >= 'a' && *p <= 'z')
207 break;
208 if (!*p)
209 _strlwr (dir_static.d_name);
210 }
211
212 return &dir_static;
213 }
214
215 /* Emulate getpwuid, getpwnam and others. */
216
217 #define PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE 256
218
219 static char the_passwd_name[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE];
220 static char the_passwd_passwd[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE];
221 static char the_passwd_gecos[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE];
222 static char the_passwd_dir[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE];
223 static char the_passwd_shell[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE];
224
225 static struct passwd the_passwd =
226 {
227 the_passwd_name,
228 the_passwd_passwd,
229 0,
230 0,
231 0,
232 the_passwd_gecos,
233 the_passwd_dir,
234 the_passwd_shell,
235 };
236
237 int
238 getuid ()
239 {
240 return the_passwd.pw_uid;
241 }
242
243 int
244 geteuid ()
245 {
246 /* I could imagine arguing for checking to see whether the user is
247 in the Administrators group and returning a UID of 0 for that
248 case, but I don't know how wise that would be in the long run. */
249 return getuid ();
250 }
251
252 int
253 getgid ()
254 {
255 return the_passwd.pw_gid;
256 }
257
258 int
259 getegid ()
260 {
261 return getgid ();
262 }
263
264 struct passwd *
265 getpwuid (int uid)
266 {
267 if (uid == the_passwd.pw_uid)
268 return &the_passwd;
269 return NULL;
270 }
271
272 struct passwd *
273 getpwnam (char *name)
274 {
275 struct passwd *pw;
276
277 pw = getpwuid (getuid ());
278 if (!pw)
279 return pw;
280
281 if (stricmp (name, pw->pw_name))
282 return NULL;
283
284 return pw;
285 }
286
287 void
288 init_user_info ()
289 {
290 /* Find the user's real name by opening the process token and
291 looking up the name associated with the user-sid in that token.
292
293 Use the relative portion of the identifier authority value from
294 the user-sid as the user id value (same for group id using the
295 primary group sid from the process token). */
296
297 char user_sid[256], name[256], domain[256];
298 DWORD length = sizeof (name), dlength = sizeof (domain), trash;
299 HANDLE token = NULL;
300 SID_NAME_USE user_type;
301
302 if (OpenProcessToken (GetCurrentProcess (), TOKEN_QUERY, &token)
303 && GetTokenInformation (token, TokenUser,
304 (PVOID) user_sid, sizeof (user_sid), &trash)
305 && LookupAccountSid (NULL, *((PSID *) user_sid), name, &length,
306 domain, &dlength, &user_type))
307 {
308 strcpy (the_passwd.pw_name, name);
309 /* Determine a reasonable uid value. */
310 if (stricmp ("administrator", name) == 0)
311 {
312 the_passwd.pw_uid = 0;
313 the_passwd.pw_gid = 0;
314 }
315 else
316 {
317 SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY * pSIA;
318
319 pSIA = GetSidIdentifierAuthority (*((PSID *) user_sid));
320 /* I believe the relative portion is the last 4 bytes (of 6)
321 with msb first. */
322 the_passwd.pw_uid = ((pSIA->Value[2] << 24) +
323 (pSIA->Value[3] << 16) +
324 (pSIA->Value[4] << 8) +
325 (pSIA->Value[5] << 0));
326 /* restrict to conventional uid range for normal users */
327 the_passwd.pw_uid = the_passwd.pw_uid % 60001;
328
329 /* Get group id */
330 if (GetTokenInformation (token, TokenPrimaryGroup,
331 (PVOID) user_sid, sizeof (user_sid), &trash))
332 {
333 SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY * pSIA;
334
335 pSIA = GetSidIdentifierAuthority (*((PSID *) user_sid));
336 the_passwd.pw_gid = ((pSIA->Value[2] << 24) +
337 (pSIA->Value[3] << 16) +
338 (pSIA->Value[4] << 8) +
339 (pSIA->Value[5] << 0));
340 /* I don't know if this is necessary, but for safety... */
341 the_passwd.pw_gid = the_passwd.pw_gid % 60001;
342 }
343 else
344 the_passwd.pw_gid = the_passwd.pw_uid;
345 }
346 }
347 /* If security calls are not supported (presumably because we
348 are running under Windows 95), fallback to this. */
349 else if (GetUserName (name, &length))
350 {
351 strcpy (the_passwd.pw_name, name);
352 if (stricmp ("administrator", name) == 0)
353 the_passwd.pw_uid = 0;
354 else
355 the_passwd.pw_uid = 123;
356 the_passwd.pw_gid = the_passwd.pw_uid;
357 }
358 else
359 {
360 strcpy (the_passwd.pw_name, "unknown");
361 the_passwd.pw_uid = 123;
362 the_passwd.pw_gid = 123;
363 }
364
365 /* Ensure HOME and SHELL are defined. */
366 if (getenv ("HOME") == NULL)
367 putenv ("HOME=c:/");
368 if (getenv ("SHELL") == NULL)
369 putenv ((GetVersion () & 0x80000000) ? "SHELL=command" : "SHELL=cmd");
370
371 /* Set dir and shell from environment variables. */
372 strcpy (the_passwd.pw_dir, getenv ("HOME"));
373 strcpy (the_passwd.pw_shell, getenv ("SHELL"));
374
375 if (token)
376 CloseHandle (token);
377 }
378
379 int
380 random ()
381 {
382 /* rand () on NT gives us 15 random bits...hack together 30 bits. */
383 return ((rand () << 15) | rand ());
384 }
385
386 void
387 srandom (int seed)
388 {
389 srand (seed);
390 }
391
392 /* Normalize filename by converting all path separators to
393 the specified separator. Also conditionally convert upper
394 case path name components to lower case. */
395
396 static void
397 normalize_filename (fp, path_sep)
398 register char *fp;
399 char path_sep;
400 {
401 char sep;
402 char *elem;
403
404 /* Always lower-case drive letters a-z, even if the filesystem
405 preserves case in filenames.
406 This is so filenames can be compared by string comparison
407 functions that are case-sensitive. Even case-preserving filesystems
408 do not distinguish case in drive letters. */
409 if (fp[1] == ':' && *fp >= 'A' && *fp <= 'Z')
410 {
411 *fp += 'a' - 'A';
412 fp += 2;
413 }
414
415 if (NILP (Vw32_downcase_file_names))
416 {
417 while (*fp)
418 {
419 if (*fp == '/' || *fp == '\\')
420 *fp = path_sep;
421 fp++;
422 }
423 return;
424 }
425
426 sep = path_sep; /* convert to this path separator */
427 elem = fp; /* start of current path element */
428
429 do {
430 if (*fp >= 'a' && *fp <= 'z')
431 elem = 0; /* don't convert this element */
432
433 if (*fp == 0 || *fp == ':')
434 {
435 sep = *fp; /* restore current separator (or 0) */
436 *fp = '/'; /* after conversion of this element */
437 }
438
439 if (*fp == '/' || *fp == '\\')
440 {
441 if (elem && elem != fp)
442 {
443 *fp = 0; /* temporary end of string */
444 _strlwr (elem); /* while we convert to lower case */
445 }
446 *fp = sep; /* convert (or restore) path separator */
447 elem = fp + 1; /* next element starts after separator */
448 sep = path_sep;
449 }
450 } while (*fp++);
451 }
452
453 /* Destructively turn backslashes into slashes. */
454 void
455 dostounix_filename (p)
456 register char *p;
457 {
458 normalize_filename (p, '/');
459 }
460
461 /* Destructively turn slashes into backslashes. */
462 void
463 unixtodos_filename (p)
464 register char *p;
465 {
466 normalize_filename (p, '\\');
467 }
468
469 /* Remove all CR's that are followed by a LF.
470 (From msdos.c...probably should figure out a way to share it,
471 although this code isn't going to ever change.) */
472 int
473 crlf_to_lf (n, buf)
474 register int n;
475 register unsigned char *buf;
476 {
477 unsigned char *np = buf;
478 unsigned char *startp = buf;
479 unsigned char *endp = buf + n;
480
481 if (n == 0)
482 return n;
483 while (buf < endp - 1)
484 {
485 if (*buf == 0x0d)
486 {
487 if (*(++buf) != 0x0a)
488 *np++ = 0x0d;
489 }
490 else
491 *np++ = *buf++;
492 }
493 if (buf < endp)
494 *np++ = *buf++;
495 return np - startp;
496 }
497
498 /* Routines that are no-ops on NT but are defined to get Emacs to compile. */
499
500 int
501 sigsetmask (int signal_mask)
502 {
503 return 0;
504 }
505
506 int
507 sigblock (int sig)
508 {
509 return 0;
510 }
511
512 int
513 setpgrp (int pid, int gid)
514 {
515 return 0;
516 }
517
518 int
519 alarm (int seconds)
520 {
521 return 0;
522 }
523
524 int
525 unrequest_sigio (void)
526 {
527 return 0;
528 }
529
530 int
531 request_sigio (void)
532 {
533 return 0;
534 }
535
536 #define REG_ROOT "SOFTWARE\\GNU\\Emacs"
537
538 LPBYTE
539 w32_get_resource (key, lpdwtype)
540 char *key;
541 LPDWORD lpdwtype;
542 {
543 LPBYTE lpvalue;
544 HKEY hrootkey = NULL;
545 DWORD cbData;
546 BOOL ok = FALSE;
547
548 /* Check both the current user and the local machine to see if
549 we have any resources. */
550
551 if (RegOpenKeyEx (HKEY_CURRENT_USER, REG_ROOT, 0, KEY_READ, &hrootkey) == ERROR_SUCCESS)
552 {
553 lpvalue = NULL;
554
555 if (RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, NULL, NULL, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS
556 && (lpvalue = (LPBYTE) xmalloc (cbData)) != NULL
557 && RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, lpdwtype, lpvalue, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS)
558 {
559 return (lpvalue);
560 }
561
562 if (lpvalue) xfree (lpvalue);
563
564 RegCloseKey (hrootkey);
565 }
566
567 if (RegOpenKeyEx (HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, REG_ROOT, 0, KEY_READ, &hrootkey) == ERROR_SUCCESS)
568 {
569 lpvalue = NULL;
570
571 if (RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, NULL, NULL, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS &&
572 (lpvalue = (LPBYTE) xmalloc (cbData)) != NULL &&
573 RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, lpdwtype, lpvalue, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS)
574 {
575 return (lpvalue);
576 }
577
578 if (lpvalue) xfree (lpvalue);
579
580 RegCloseKey (hrootkey);
581 }
582
583 return (NULL);
584 }
585
586 char *get_emacs_configuration (void);
587 extern Lisp_Object Vsystem_configuration;
588
589 void
590 init_environment ()
591 {
592 /* Check for environment variables and use registry if they don't exist */
593 {
594 int i;
595 LPBYTE lpval;
596 DWORD dwType;
597
598 static char * env_vars[] =
599 {
600 "HOME",
601 "PRELOAD_WINSOCK",
602 "emacs_dir",
603 "EMACSLOADPATH",
604 "SHELL",
605 "EMACSDATA",
606 "EMACSPATH",
607 "EMACSLOCKDIR",
608 "INFOPATH",
609 "EMACSDOC",
610 "TERM",
611 };
612
613 for (i = 0; i < (sizeof (env_vars) / sizeof (env_vars[0])); i++)
614 {
615 if (!getenv (env_vars[i]) &&
616 (lpval = w32_get_resource (env_vars[i], &dwType)) != NULL)
617 {
618 if (dwType == REG_EXPAND_SZ)
619 {
620 char buf1[500], buf2[500];
621
622 ExpandEnvironmentStrings ((LPSTR) lpval, buf1, 500);
623 _snprintf (buf2, 499, "%s=%s", env_vars[i], buf1);
624 putenv (strdup (buf2));
625 }
626 else if (dwType == REG_SZ)
627 {
628 char buf[500];
629
630 _snprintf (buf, 499, "%s=%s", env_vars[i], lpval);
631 putenv (strdup (buf));
632 }
633
634 xfree (lpval);
635 }
636 }
637 }
638
639 /* Rebuild system configuration to reflect invoking system. */
640 Vsystem_configuration = build_string (EMACS_CONFIGURATION);
641
642 init_user_info ();
643 }
644
645 /* We don't have scripts to automatically determine the system configuration
646 for Emacs before it's compiled, and we don't want to have to make the
647 user enter it, so we define EMACS_CONFIGURATION to invoke this runtime
648 routine. */
649
650 static char configuration_buffer[32];
651
652 char *
653 get_emacs_configuration (void)
654 {
655 char *arch, *oem, *os;
656
657 /* Determine the processor type. */
658 switch (get_processor_type ())
659 {
660
661 #ifdef PROCESSOR_INTEL_386
662 case PROCESSOR_INTEL_386:
663 case PROCESSOR_INTEL_486:
664 case PROCESSOR_INTEL_PENTIUM:
665 arch = "i386";
666 break;
667 #endif
668
669 #ifdef PROCESSOR_INTEL_860
670 case PROCESSOR_INTEL_860:
671 arch = "i860";
672 break;
673 #endif
674
675 #ifdef PROCESSOR_MIPS_R2000
676 case PROCESSOR_MIPS_R2000:
677 case PROCESSOR_MIPS_R3000:
678 case PROCESSOR_MIPS_R4000:
679 arch = "mips";
680 break;
681 #endif
682
683 #ifdef PROCESSOR_ALPHA_21064
684 case PROCESSOR_ALPHA_21064:
685 arch = "alpha";
686 break;
687 #endif
688
689 default:
690 arch = "unknown";
691 break;
692 }
693
694 /* Let oem be "*" until we figure out how to decode the OEM field. */
695 oem = "*";
696
697 os = (GetVersion () & 0x80000000) ? "windows95" : "nt";
698
699 sprintf (configuration_buffer, "%s-%s-%s%d.%d", arch, oem, os,
700 get_w32_major_version (), get_w32_minor_version ());
701 return configuration_buffer;
702 }
703
704 #include <sys/timeb.h>
705
706 /* Emulate gettimeofday (Ulrich Leodolter, 1/11/95). */
707 void
708 gettimeofday (struct timeval *tv, struct timezone *tz)
709 {
710 struct _timeb tb;
711 _ftime (&tb);
712
713 tv->tv_sec = tb.time;
714 tv->tv_usec = tb.millitm * 1000L;
715 if (tz)
716 {
717 tz->tz_minuteswest = tb.timezone; /* minutes west of Greenwich */
718 tz->tz_dsttime = tb.dstflag; /* type of dst correction */
719 }
720 }
721
722 /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
723 /* IO support and wrapper functions for W32 API. */
724 /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
725
726 /* Place a wrapper around the MSVC version of ctime. It returns NULL
727 on network directories, so we handle that case here.
728 (Ulrich Leodolter, 1/11/95). */
729 char *
730 sys_ctime (const time_t *t)
731 {
732 char *str = (char *) ctime (t);
733 return (str ? str : "Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 1970");
734 }
735
736 /* Emulate sleep...we could have done this with a define, but that
737 would necessitate including windows.h in the files that used it.
738 This is much easier. */
739 void
740 sys_sleep (int seconds)
741 {
742 Sleep (seconds * 1000);
743 }
744
745 /* Internal MSVC data and functions for low-level descriptor munging */
746 #if (_MSC_VER == 900)
747 extern char _osfile[];
748 #endif
749 extern int __cdecl _set_osfhnd (int fd, long h);
750 extern int __cdecl _free_osfhnd (int fd);
751
752 /* parallel array of private info on file handles */
753 filedesc fd_info [ MAXDESC ];
754
755 static struct {
756 DWORD serialnum;
757 DWORD maxcomp;
758 DWORD flags;
759 char name[32];
760 char type[32];
761 } volume_info;
762
763 /* Get information on the volume where name is held; set path pointer to
764 start of pathname in name (past UNC header\volume header if present). */
765 int
766 get_volume_info (const char * name, const char ** pPath)
767 {
768 char temp[MAX_PATH];
769 char *rootname = NULL; /* default to current volume */
770
771 if (name == NULL)
772 return FALSE;
773
774 /* find the root name of the volume if given */
775 if (isalpha (name[0]) && name[1] == ':')
776 {
777 rootname = temp;
778 temp[0] = *name++;
779 temp[1] = *name++;
780 temp[2] = '\\';
781 temp[3] = 0;
782 }
783 else if (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[0]) && IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[1]))
784 {
785 char *str = temp;
786 int slashes = 4;
787 rootname = temp;
788 do
789 {
790 if (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (*name) && --slashes == 0)
791 break;
792 *str++ = *name++;
793 }
794 while ( *name );
795
796 *str++ = '\\';
797 *str = 0;
798 }
799
800 if (pPath)
801 *pPath = name;
802
803 if (GetVolumeInformation (rootname,
804 volume_info.name, 32,
805 &volume_info.serialnum,
806 &volume_info.maxcomp,
807 &volume_info.flags,
808 volume_info.type, 32))
809 {
810 return TRUE;
811 }
812 return FALSE;
813 }
814
815 /* Determine if volume is FAT format (ie. only supports short 8.3
816 names); also set path pointer to start of pathname in name. */
817 int
818 is_fat_volume (const char * name, const char ** pPath)
819 {
820 if (get_volume_info (name, pPath))
821 return (volume_info.maxcomp == 12);
822 return FALSE;
823 }
824
825 /* Map filename to a legal 8.3 name if necessary. */
826 const char *
827 map_w32_filename (const char * name, const char ** pPath)
828 {
829 static char shortname[MAX_PATH];
830 char * str = shortname;
831 char c;
832 char * path;
833
834 if (is_fat_volume (name, &path)) /* truncate to 8.3 */
835 {
836 register int left = 8; /* maximum number of chars in part */
837 register int extn = 0; /* extension added? */
838 register int dots = 2; /* maximum number of dots allowed */
839
840 while (name < path)
841 *str++ = *name++; /* skip past UNC header */
842
843 while ((c = *name++))
844 {
845 switch ( c )
846 {
847 case '\\':
848 case '/':
849 *str++ = '\\';
850 extn = 0; /* reset extension flags */
851 dots = 2; /* max 2 dots */
852 left = 8; /* max length 8 for main part */
853 break;
854 case ':':
855 *str++ = ':';
856 extn = 0; /* reset extension flags */
857 dots = 2; /* max 2 dots */
858 left = 8; /* max length 8 for main part */
859 break;
860 case '.':
861 if ( dots )
862 {
863 /* Convert path components of the form .xxx to _xxx,
864 but leave . and .. as they are. This allows .emacs
865 to be read as _emacs, for example. */
866
867 if (! *name ||
868 *name == '.' ||
869 IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (*name))
870 {
871 *str++ = '.';
872 dots--;
873 }
874 else
875 {
876 *str++ = '_';
877 left--;
878 dots = 0;
879 }
880 }
881 else if ( !extn )
882 {
883 *str++ = '.';
884 extn = 1; /* we've got an extension */
885 left = 3; /* 3 chars in extension */
886 }
887 else
888 {
889 /* any embedded dots after the first are converted to _ */
890 *str++ = '_';
891 }
892 break;
893 case '~':
894 case '#': /* don't lose these, they're important */
895 if ( ! left )
896 str[-1] = c; /* replace last character of part */
897 /* FALLTHRU */
898 default:
899 if ( left )
900 {
901 *str++ = tolower (c); /* map to lower case (looks nicer) */
902 left--;
903 dots = 0; /* started a path component */
904 }
905 break;
906 }
907 }
908 *str = '\0';
909 }
910 else
911 {
912 strcpy (shortname, name);
913 unixtodos_filename (shortname);
914 }
915
916 if (pPath)
917 *pPath = shortname + (path - name);
918
919 return shortname;
920 }
921
922
923 /* Shadow some MSVC runtime functions to map requests for long filenames
924 to reasonable short names if necessary. This was originally added to
925 permit running Emacs on NT 3.1 on a FAT partition, which doesn't support
926 long file names. */
927
928 int
929 sys_access (const char * path, int mode)
930 {
931 return _access (map_w32_filename (path, NULL), mode);
932 }
933
934 int
935 sys_chdir (const char * path)
936 {
937 return _chdir (map_w32_filename (path, NULL));
938 }
939
940 int
941 sys_chmod (const char * path, int mode)
942 {
943 return _chmod (map_w32_filename (path, NULL), mode);
944 }
945
946 int
947 sys_creat (const char * path, int mode)
948 {
949 return _creat (map_w32_filename (path, NULL), mode);
950 }
951
952 FILE *
953 sys_fopen(const char * path, const char * mode)
954 {
955 int fd;
956 int oflag;
957 const char * mode_save = mode;
958
959 /* Force all file handles to be non-inheritable. This is necessary to
960 ensure child processes don't unwittingly inherit handles that might
961 prevent future file access. */
962
963 if (mode[0] == 'r')
964 oflag = O_RDONLY;
965 else if (mode[0] == 'w' || mode[0] == 'a')
966 oflag = O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC;
967 else
968 return NULL;
969
970 /* Only do simplistic option parsing. */
971 while (*++mode)
972 if (mode[0] == '+')
973 {
974 oflag &= ~(O_RDONLY | O_WRONLY);
975 oflag |= O_RDWR;
976 }
977 else if (mode[0] == 'b')
978 {
979 oflag &= ~O_TEXT;
980 oflag |= O_BINARY;
981 }
982 else if (mode[0] == 't')
983 {
984 oflag &= ~O_BINARY;
985 oflag |= O_TEXT;
986 }
987 else break;
988
989 fd = _open (map_w32_filename (path, NULL), oflag | _O_NOINHERIT, 0644);
990 if (fd < 0)
991 return NULL;
992
993 return fdopen (fd, mode_save);
994 }
995
996 int
997 sys_link (const char * path1, const char * path2)
998 {
999 errno = EINVAL;
1000 return -1;
1001 }
1002
1003 int
1004 sys_mkdir (const char * path)
1005 {
1006 return _mkdir (map_w32_filename (path, NULL));
1007 }
1008
1009 /* Because of long name mapping issues, we need to implement this
1010 ourselves. Also, MSVC's _mktemp returns NULL when it can't generate
1011 a unique name, instead of setting the input template to an empty
1012 string.
1013
1014 Standard algorithm seems to be use pid or tid with a letter on the
1015 front (in place of the 6 X's) and cycle through the letters to find a
1016 unique name. We extend that to allow any reasonable character as the
1017 first of the 6 X's. */
1018 char *
1019 sys_mktemp (char * template)
1020 {
1021 char * p;
1022 int i;
1023 unsigned uid = GetCurrentThreadId ();
1024 static char first_char[] = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwyz0123456789!%-_@#";
1025
1026 if (template == NULL)
1027 return NULL;
1028 p = template + strlen (template);
1029 i = 5;
1030 /* replace up to the last 5 X's with uid in decimal */
1031 while (--p >= template && p[0] == 'X' && --i >= 0)
1032 {
1033 p[0] = '0' + uid % 10;
1034 uid /= 10;
1035 }
1036
1037 if (i < 0 && p[0] == 'X')
1038 {
1039 i = 0;
1040 do
1041 {
1042 int save_errno = errno;
1043 p[0] = first_char[i];
1044 if (sys_access (template, 0) < 0)
1045 {
1046 errno = save_errno;
1047 return template;
1048 }
1049 }
1050 while (++i < sizeof (first_char));
1051 }
1052
1053 /* Template is badly formed or else we can't generate a unique name,
1054 so return empty string */
1055 template[0] = 0;
1056 return template;
1057 }
1058
1059 int
1060 sys_open (const char * path, int oflag, int mode)
1061 {
1062 /* Force all file handles to be non-inheritable. */
1063 return _open (map_w32_filename (path, NULL), oflag | _O_NOINHERIT, mode);
1064 }
1065
1066 int
1067 sys_rename (const char * oldname, const char * newname)
1068 {
1069 char temp[MAX_PATH];
1070 DWORD attr;
1071
1072 /* MoveFile on Windows 95 doesn't correctly change the short file name
1073 alias in a number of circumstances (it is not easy to predict when
1074 just by looking at oldname and newname, unfortunately). In these
1075 cases, renaming through a temporary name avoids the problem.
1076
1077 A second problem on Windows 95 is that renaming through a temp name when
1078 newname is uppercase fails (the final long name ends up in
1079 lowercase, although the short alias might be uppercase) UNLESS the
1080 long temp name is not 8.3.
1081
1082 So, on Windows 95 we always rename through a temp name, and we make sure
1083 the temp name has a long extension to ensure correct renaming. */
1084
1085 strcpy (temp, map_w32_filename (oldname, NULL));
1086
1087 if (GetVersion () & 0x80000000)
1088 {
1089 char * p;
1090
1091 if (p = strrchr (temp, '\\'))
1092 p++;
1093 else
1094 p = temp;
1095 strcpy (p, "__XXXXXX");
1096 sys_mktemp (temp);
1097 /* Force temp name to require a manufactured 8.3 alias - this
1098 seems to make the second rename work properly. */
1099 strcat (temp, ".long");
1100 if (rename (map_w32_filename (oldname, NULL), temp) < 0)
1101 return -1;
1102 }
1103
1104 /* Emulate Unix behaviour - newname is deleted if it already exists
1105 (at least if it is a file; don't do this for directories).
1106 However, don't do this if we are just changing the case of the file
1107 name - we will end up deleting the file we are trying to rename! */
1108 newname = map_w32_filename (newname, NULL);
1109 if (stricmp (newname, temp) != 0
1110 && (attr = GetFileAttributes (newname)) != -1
1111 && (attr & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) == 0)
1112 {
1113 _chmod (newname, 0666);
1114 _unlink (newname);
1115 }
1116
1117 return rename (temp, newname);
1118 }
1119
1120 int
1121 sys_rmdir (const char * path)
1122 {
1123 return _rmdir (map_w32_filename (path, NULL));
1124 }
1125
1126 int
1127 sys_unlink (const char * path)
1128 {
1129 return _unlink (map_w32_filename (path, NULL));
1130 }
1131
1132 static FILETIME utc_base_ft;
1133 static long double utc_base;
1134 static int init = 0;
1135
1136 static time_t
1137 convert_time (FILETIME ft)
1138 {
1139 long double ret;
1140
1141 if (!init)
1142 {
1143 /* Determine the delta between 1-Jan-1601 and 1-Jan-1970. */
1144 SYSTEMTIME st;
1145
1146 st.wYear = 1970;
1147 st.wMonth = 1;
1148 st.wDay = 1;
1149 st.wHour = 0;
1150 st.wMinute = 0;
1151 st.wSecond = 0;
1152 st.wMilliseconds = 0;
1153
1154 SystemTimeToFileTime (&st, &utc_base_ft);
1155 utc_base = (long double) utc_base_ft.dwHighDateTime
1156 * 4096 * 1024 * 1024 + utc_base_ft.dwLowDateTime;
1157 init = 1;
1158 }
1159
1160 if (CompareFileTime (&ft, &utc_base_ft) < 0)
1161 return 0;
1162
1163 ret = (long double) ft.dwHighDateTime * 4096 * 1024 * 1024 + ft.dwLowDateTime;
1164 ret -= utc_base;
1165 return (time_t) (ret * 1e-7);
1166 }
1167
1168 #if 0
1169 /* in case we ever have need of this */
1170 void
1171 convert_from_time_t (time_t time, FILETIME * pft)
1172 {
1173 long double tmp;
1174
1175 if (!init)
1176 {
1177 /* Determine the delta between 1-Jan-1601 and 1-Jan-1970. */
1178 SYSTEMTIME st;
1179
1180 st.wYear = 1970;
1181 st.wMonth = 1;
1182 st.wDay = 1;
1183 st.wHour = 0;
1184 st.wMinute = 0;
1185 st.wSecond = 0;
1186 st.wMilliseconds = 0;
1187
1188 SystemTimeToFileTime (&st, &utc_base_ft);
1189 utc_base = (long double) utc_base_ft.dwHighDateTime
1190 * 4096 * 1024 * 1024 + utc_base_ft.dwLowDateTime;
1191 init = 1;
1192 }
1193
1194 /* time in 100ns units since 1-Jan-1601 */
1195 tmp = (long double) time * 1e7 + utc_base;
1196 pft->dwHighDateTime = (DWORD) (tmp / (4096.0 * 1024 * 1024));
1197 pft->dwLowDateTime = (DWORD) (tmp - pft->dwHighDateTime);
1198 }
1199 #endif
1200
1201 /* "PJW" algorithm (see the "Dragon" compiler book). */
1202 static unsigned
1203 hashval (const char * str)
1204 {
1205 unsigned h = 0;
1206 unsigned g;
1207 while (*str)
1208 {
1209 h = (h << 4) + *str++;
1210 if ((g = h & 0xf0000000) != 0)
1211 h = (h ^ (g >> 24)) & 0x0fffffff;
1212 }
1213 return h;
1214 }
1215
1216 /* Return the hash value of the canonical pathname, excluding the
1217 drive/UNC header, to get a hopefully unique inode number. */
1218 static _ino_t
1219 generate_inode_val (const char * name)
1220 {
1221 char fullname[ MAX_PATH ];
1222 char * p;
1223 unsigned hash;
1224
1225 GetFullPathName (name, sizeof (fullname), fullname, &p);
1226 get_volume_info (fullname, &p);
1227 /* Normal W32 filesystems are still case insensitive. */
1228 _strlwr (p);
1229 hash = hashval (p);
1230 return (_ino_t) (hash ^ (hash >> 16));
1231 }
1232
1233 /* MSVC stat function can't cope with UNC names and has other bugs, so
1234 replace it with our own. This also allows us to calculate consistent
1235 inode values without hacks in the main Emacs code. */
1236 int
1237 stat (const char * path, struct stat * buf)
1238 {
1239 char * name;
1240 WIN32_FIND_DATA wfd;
1241 HANDLE fh;
1242 int permission;
1243 int len;
1244 int rootdir = FALSE;
1245
1246 if (path == NULL || buf == NULL)
1247 {
1248 errno = EFAULT;
1249 return -1;
1250 }
1251
1252 name = (char *) map_w32_filename (path, &path);
1253 /* must be valid filename, no wild cards */
1254 if (strchr (name, '*') || strchr (name, '?'))
1255 {
1256 errno = ENOENT;
1257 return -1;
1258 }
1259
1260 /* Remove trailing directory separator, unless name is the root
1261 directory of a drive or UNC volume in which case ensure there
1262 is a trailing separator. */
1263 len = strlen (name);
1264 rootdir = (path >= name + len - 1
1265 && (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (*path) || *path == 0));
1266 name = strcpy (alloca (len + 2), name);
1267
1268 if (rootdir)
1269 {
1270 if (!IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[len-1]))
1271 strcat (name, "\\");
1272 if (GetDriveType (name) < 2)
1273 {
1274 errno = ENOENT;
1275 return -1;
1276 }
1277 memset (&wfd, 0, sizeof (wfd));
1278 wfd.dwFileAttributes = FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY;
1279 wfd.ftCreationTime = utc_base_ft;
1280 wfd.ftLastAccessTime = utc_base_ft;
1281 wfd.ftLastWriteTime = utc_base_ft;
1282 strcpy (wfd.cFileName, name);
1283 }
1284 else
1285 {
1286 if (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[len-1]))
1287 name[len - 1] = 0;
1288 fh = FindFirstFile (name, &wfd);
1289 if (fh == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
1290 {
1291 errno = ENOENT;
1292 return -1;
1293 }
1294 FindClose (fh);
1295 }
1296
1297 if (wfd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY)
1298 {
1299 buf->st_mode = _S_IFDIR;
1300 buf->st_nlink = 2; /* doesn't really matter */
1301 }
1302 else
1303 {
1304 #if 0
1305 /* This is more accurate in terms of gettting the correct number
1306 of links, but is quite slow (it is noticable when Emacs is
1307 making a list of file name completions). */
1308 BY_HANDLE_FILE_INFORMATION info;
1309
1310 fh = CreateFile (name, GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_READ | FILE_SHARE_WRITE,
1311 NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, NULL);
1312
1313 if (GetFileInformationByHandle (fh, &info))
1314 {
1315 switch (GetFileType (fh))
1316 {
1317 case FILE_TYPE_DISK:
1318 buf->st_mode = _S_IFREG;
1319 break;
1320 case FILE_TYPE_PIPE:
1321 buf->st_mode = _S_IFIFO;
1322 break;
1323 case FILE_TYPE_CHAR:
1324 case FILE_TYPE_UNKNOWN:
1325 default:
1326 buf->st_mode = _S_IFCHR;
1327 }
1328 buf->st_nlink = info.nNumberOfLinks;
1329 /* Could use file index, but this is not guaranteed to be
1330 unique unless we keep a handle open all the time. */
1331 /* buf->st_ino = info.nFileIndexLow ^ info.nFileIndexHigh; */
1332 CloseHandle (fh);
1333 }
1334 else
1335 {
1336 errno = EACCES;
1337 return -1;
1338 }
1339 #else
1340 buf->st_mode = _S_IFREG;
1341 buf->st_nlink = 1;
1342 #endif
1343 }
1344
1345 /* consider files to belong to current user */
1346 buf->st_uid = the_passwd.pw_uid;
1347 buf->st_gid = the_passwd.pw_gid;
1348
1349 /* volume_info is set indirectly by map_w32_filename */
1350 buf->st_dev = volume_info.serialnum;
1351 buf->st_rdev = volume_info.serialnum;
1352
1353 buf->st_ino = generate_inode_val (name);
1354
1355 buf->st_size = wfd.nFileSizeLow;
1356
1357 /* Convert timestamps to Unix format. */
1358 buf->st_mtime = convert_time (wfd.ftLastWriteTime);
1359 buf->st_atime = convert_time (wfd.ftLastAccessTime);
1360 if (buf->st_atime == 0) buf->st_atime = buf->st_mtime;
1361 buf->st_ctime = convert_time (wfd.ftCreationTime);
1362 if (buf->st_ctime == 0) buf->st_ctime = buf->st_mtime;
1363
1364 /* determine rwx permissions */
1365 if (wfd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY)
1366 permission = _S_IREAD;
1367 else
1368 permission = _S_IREAD | _S_IWRITE;
1369
1370 if (wfd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY)
1371 permission |= _S_IEXEC;
1372 else
1373 {
1374 char * p = strrchr (name, '.');
1375 if (p != NULL &&
1376 (stricmp (p, ".exe") == 0 ||
1377 stricmp (p, ".com") == 0 ||
1378 stricmp (p, ".bat") == 0 ||
1379 stricmp (p, ".cmd") == 0))
1380 permission |= _S_IEXEC;
1381 }
1382
1383 buf->st_mode |= permission | (permission >> 3) | (permission >> 6);
1384
1385 return 0;
1386 }
1387
1388 #ifdef HAVE_SOCKETS
1389
1390 /* Wrappers for winsock functions to map between our file descriptors
1391 and winsock's handles; also set h_errno for convenience.
1392
1393 To allow Emacs to run on systems which don't have winsock support
1394 installed, we dynamically link to winsock on startup if present, and
1395 otherwise provide the minimum necessary functionality
1396 (eg. gethostname). */
1397
1398 /* function pointers for relevant socket functions */
1399 int (PASCAL *pfn_WSAStartup) (WORD wVersionRequired, LPWSADATA lpWSAData);
1400 void (PASCAL *pfn_WSASetLastError) (int iError);
1401 int (PASCAL *pfn_WSAGetLastError) (void);
1402 int (PASCAL *pfn_socket) (int af, int type, int protocol);
1403 int (PASCAL *pfn_bind) (SOCKET s, const struct sockaddr *addr, int namelen);
1404 int (PASCAL *pfn_connect) (SOCKET s, const struct sockaddr *addr, int namelen);
1405 int (PASCAL *pfn_ioctlsocket) (SOCKET s, long cmd, u_long *argp);
1406 int (PASCAL *pfn_recv) (SOCKET s, char * buf, int len, int flags);
1407 int (PASCAL *pfn_send) (SOCKET s, const char * buf, int len, int flags);
1408 int (PASCAL *pfn_closesocket) (SOCKET s);
1409 int (PASCAL *pfn_shutdown) (SOCKET s, int how);
1410 int (PASCAL *pfn_WSACleanup) (void);
1411
1412 u_short (PASCAL *pfn_htons) (u_short hostshort);
1413 u_short (PASCAL *pfn_ntohs) (u_short netshort);
1414 unsigned long (PASCAL *pfn_inet_addr) (const char * cp);
1415 int (PASCAL *pfn_gethostname) (char * name, int namelen);
1416 struct hostent * (PASCAL *pfn_gethostbyname) (const char * name);
1417 struct servent * (PASCAL *pfn_getservbyname) (const char * name, const char * proto);
1418
1419 /* SetHandleInformation is only needed to make sockets non-inheritable. */
1420 BOOL (WINAPI *pfn_SetHandleInformation) (HANDLE object, DWORD mask, DWORD flags);
1421 #ifndef HANDLE_FLAG_INHERIT
1422 #define HANDLE_FLAG_INHERIT 1
1423 #endif
1424
1425 HANDLE winsock_lib;
1426 static int winsock_inuse;
1427
1428 BOOL
1429 term_winsock (void)
1430 {
1431 if (winsock_lib != NULL && winsock_inuse == 0)
1432 {
1433 /* Not sure what would cause WSAENETDOWN, or even if it can happen
1434 after WSAStartup returns successfully, but it seems reasonable
1435 to allow unloading winsock anyway in that case. */
1436 if (pfn_WSACleanup () == 0 ||
1437 pfn_WSAGetLastError () == WSAENETDOWN)
1438 {
1439 if (FreeLibrary (winsock_lib))
1440 winsock_lib = NULL;
1441 return TRUE;
1442 }
1443 }
1444 return FALSE;
1445 }
1446
1447 BOOL
1448 init_winsock (int load_now)
1449 {
1450 WSADATA winsockData;
1451
1452 if (winsock_lib != NULL)
1453 return TRUE;
1454
1455 pfn_SetHandleInformation = NULL;
1456 pfn_SetHandleInformation
1457 = (void *) GetProcAddress (GetModuleHandle ("kernel32.dll"),
1458 "SetHandleInformation");
1459
1460 winsock_lib = LoadLibrary ("wsock32.dll");
1461
1462 if (winsock_lib != NULL)
1463 {
1464 /* dynamically link to socket functions */
1465
1466 #define LOAD_PROC(fn) \
1467 if ((pfn_##fn = (void *) GetProcAddress (winsock_lib, #fn)) == NULL) \
1468 goto fail;
1469
1470 LOAD_PROC( WSAStartup );
1471 LOAD_PROC( WSASetLastError );
1472 LOAD_PROC( WSAGetLastError );
1473 LOAD_PROC( socket );
1474 LOAD_PROC( bind );
1475 LOAD_PROC( connect );
1476 LOAD_PROC( ioctlsocket );
1477 LOAD_PROC( recv );
1478 LOAD_PROC( send );
1479 LOAD_PROC( closesocket );
1480 LOAD_PROC( shutdown );
1481 LOAD_PROC( htons );
1482 LOAD_PROC( ntohs );
1483 LOAD_PROC( inet_addr );
1484 LOAD_PROC( gethostname );
1485 LOAD_PROC( gethostbyname );
1486 LOAD_PROC( getservbyname );
1487 LOAD_PROC( WSACleanup );
1488
1489 #undef LOAD_PROC
1490
1491 /* specify version 1.1 of winsock */
1492 if (pfn_WSAStartup (0x101, &winsockData) == 0)
1493 {
1494 if (winsockData.wVersion != 0x101)
1495 goto fail;
1496
1497 if (!load_now)
1498 {
1499 /* Report that winsock exists and is usable, but leave
1500 socket functions disabled. I am assuming that calling
1501 WSAStartup does not require any network interaction,
1502 and in particular does not cause or require a dial-up
1503 connection to be established. */
1504
1505 pfn_WSACleanup ();
1506 FreeLibrary (winsock_lib);
1507 winsock_lib = NULL;
1508 }
1509 winsock_inuse = 0;
1510 return TRUE;
1511 }
1512
1513 fail:
1514 FreeLibrary (winsock_lib);
1515 winsock_lib = NULL;
1516 }
1517
1518 return FALSE;
1519 }
1520
1521
1522 int h_errno = 0;
1523
1524 /* function to set h_errno for compatability; map winsock error codes to
1525 normal system codes where they overlap (non-overlapping definitions
1526 are already in <sys/socket.h> */
1527 static void set_errno ()
1528 {
1529 if (winsock_lib == NULL)
1530 h_errno = EINVAL;
1531 else
1532 h_errno = pfn_WSAGetLastError ();
1533
1534 switch (h_errno)
1535 {
1536 case WSAEACCES: h_errno = EACCES; break;
1537 case WSAEBADF: h_errno = EBADF; break;
1538 case WSAEFAULT: h_errno = EFAULT; break;
1539 case WSAEINTR: h_errno = EINTR; break;
1540 case WSAEINVAL: h_errno = EINVAL; break;
1541 case WSAEMFILE: h_errno = EMFILE; break;
1542 case WSAENAMETOOLONG: h_errno = ENAMETOOLONG; break;
1543 case WSAENOTEMPTY: h_errno = ENOTEMPTY; break;
1544 }
1545 errno = h_errno;
1546 }
1547
1548 static void check_errno ()
1549 {
1550 if (h_errno == 0 && winsock_lib != NULL)
1551 pfn_WSASetLastError (0);
1552 }
1553
1554 /* [andrewi 3-May-96] I've had conflicting results using both methods,
1555 but I believe the method of keeping the socket handle separate (and
1556 insuring it is not inheritable) is the correct one. */
1557
1558 //#define SOCK_REPLACE_HANDLE
1559
1560 #ifdef SOCK_REPLACE_HANDLE
1561 #define SOCK_HANDLE(fd) ((SOCKET) _get_osfhandle (fd))
1562 #else
1563 #define SOCK_HANDLE(fd) ((SOCKET) fd_info[fd].hnd)
1564 #endif
1565
1566 int
1567 sys_socket(int af, int type, int protocol)
1568 {
1569 int fd;
1570 long s;
1571 child_process * cp;
1572
1573 if (winsock_lib == NULL)
1574 {
1575 h_errno = ENETDOWN;
1576 return INVALID_SOCKET;
1577 }
1578
1579 check_errno ();
1580
1581 /* call the real socket function */
1582 s = (long) pfn_socket (af, type, protocol);
1583
1584 if (s != INVALID_SOCKET)
1585 {
1586 /* Although under NT 3.5 _open_osfhandle will accept a socket
1587 handle, if opened with SO_OPENTYPE == SO_SYNCHRONOUS_NONALERT,
1588 that does not work under NT 3.1. However, we can get the same
1589 effect by using a backdoor function to replace an existing
1590 descriptor handle with the one we want. */
1591
1592 /* allocate a file descriptor (with appropriate flags) */
1593 fd = _open ("NUL:", _O_RDWR);
1594 if (fd >= 0)
1595 {
1596 #ifdef SOCK_REPLACE_HANDLE
1597 /* now replace handle to NUL with our socket handle */
1598 CloseHandle ((HANDLE) _get_osfhandle (fd));
1599 _free_osfhnd (fd);
1600 _set_osfhnd (fd, s);
1601 /* setmode (fd, _O_BINARY); */
1602 #else
1603 /* Make a non-inheritable copy of the socket handle. */
1604 {
1605 HANDLE parent;
1606 HANDLE new_s = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
1607
1608 parent = GetCurrentProcess ();
1609
1610 /* Apparently there is a bug in NT 3.51 with some service
1611 packs, which prevents using DuplicateHandle to make a
1612 socket handle non-inheritable (causes WSACleanup to
1613 hang). The work-around is to use SetHandleInformation
1614 instead if it is available and implemented. */
1615 if (!pfn_SetHandleInformation
1616 || !pfn_SetHandleInformation ((HANDLE) s,
1617 HANDLE_FLAG_INHERIT,
1618 HANDLE_FLAG_INHERIT))
1619 {
1620 DuplicateHandle (parent,
1621 (HANDLE) s,
1622 parent,
1623 &new_s,
1624 0,
1625 FALSE,
1626 DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS);
1627 pfn_closesocket (s);
1628 s = (SOCKET) new_s;
1629 }
1630 fd_info[fd].hnd = (HANDLE) s;
1631 }
1632 #endif
1633
1634 /* set our own internal flags */
1635 fd_info[fd].flags = FILE_SOCKET | FILE_BINARY | FILE_READ | FILE_WRITE;
1636
1637 cp = new_child ();
1638 if (cp)
1639 {
1640 cp->fd = fd;
1641 cp->status = STATUS_READ_ACKNOWLEDGED;
1642
1643 /* attach child_process to fd_info */
1644 if (fd_info[ fd ].cp != NULL)
1645 {
1646 DebPrint (("sys_socket: fd_info[%d] apparently in use!\n", fd));
1647 abort ();
1648 }
1649
1650 fd_info[ fd ].cp = cp;
1651
1652 /* success! */
1653 winsock_inuse++; /* count open sockets */
1654 return fd;
1655 }
1656
1657 /* clean up */
1658 _close (fd);
1659 }
1660 pfn_closesocket (s);
1661 h_errno = EMFILE;
1662 }
1663 set_errno ();
1664
1665 return -1;
1666 }
1667
1668
1669 int
1670 sys_bind (int s, const struct sockaddr * addr, int namelen)
1671 {
1672 if (winsock_lib == NULL)
1673 {
1674 h_errno = ENOTSOCK;
1675 return SOCKET_ERROR;
1676 }
1677
1678 check_errno ();
1679 if (fd_info[s].flags & FILE_SOCKET)
1680 {
1681 int rc = pfn_bind (SOCK_HANDLE (s), addr, namelen);
1682 if (rc == SOCKET_ERROR)
1683 set_errno ();
1684 return rc;
1685 }
1686 h_errno = ENOTSOCK;
1687 return SOCKET_ERROR;
1688 }
1689
1690
1691 int
1692 sys_connect (int s, const struct sockaddr * name, int namelen)
1693 {
1694 if (winsock_lib == NULL)
1695 {
1696 h_errno = ENOTSOCK;
1697 return SOCKET_ERROR;
1698 }
1699
1700 check_errno ();
1701 if (fd_info[s].flags & FILE_SOCKET)
1702 {
1703 int rc = pfn_connect (SOCK_HANDLE (s), name, namelen);
1704 if (rc == SOCKET_ERROR)
1705 set_errno ();
1706 return rc;
1707 }
1708 h_errno = ENOTSOCK;
1709 return SOCKET_ERROR;
1710 }
1711
1712 u_short
1713 sys_htons (u_short hostshort)
1714 {
1715 return (winsock_lib != NULL) ?
1716 pfn_htons (hostshort) : hostshort;
1717 }
1718
1719 u_short
1720 sys_ntohs (u_short netshort)
1721 {
1722 return (winsock_lib != NULL) ?
1723 pfn_ntohs (netshort) : netshort;
1724 }
1725
1726 unsigned long
1727 sys_inet_addr (const char * cp)
1728 {
1729 return (winsock_lib != NULL) ?
1730 pfn_inet_addr (cp) : INADDR_NONE;
1731 }
1732
1733 int
1734 sys_gethostname (char * name, int namelen)
1735 {
1736 if (winsock_lib != NULL)
1737 return pfn_gethostname (name, namelen);
1738
1739 if (namelen > MAX_COMPUTERNAME_LENGTH)
1740 return !GetComputerName (name, &namelen);
1741
1742 h_errno = EFAULT;
1743 return SOCKET_ERROR;
1744 }
1745
1746 struct hostent *
1747 sys_gethostbyname(const char * name)
1748 {
1749 struct hostent * host;
1750
1751 if (winsock_lib == NULL)
1752 {
1753 h_errno = ENETDOWN;
1754 return NULL;
1755 }
1756
1757 check_errno ();
1758 host = pfn_gethostbyname (name);
1759 if (!host)
1760 set_errno ();
1761 return host;
1762 }
1763
1764 struct servent *
1765 sys_getservbyname(const char * name, const char * proto)
1766 {
1767 struct servent * serv;
1768
1769 if (winsock_lib == NULL)
1770 {
1771 h_errno = ENETDOWN;
1772 return NULL;
1773 }
1774
1775 check_errno ();
1776 serv = pfn_getservbyname (name, proto);
1777 if (!serv)
1778 set_errno ();
1779 return serv;
1780 }
1781
1782 #endif /* HAVE_SOCKETS */
1783
1784
1785 /* Shadow main io functions: we need to handle pipes and sockets more
1786 intelligently, and implement non-blocking mode as well. */
1787
1788 int
1789 sys_close (int fd)
1790 {
1791 int rc;
1792
1793 if (fd < 0 || fd >= MAXDESC)
1794 {
1795 errno = EBADF;
1796 return -1;
1797 }
1798
1799 if (fd_info[fd].cp)
1800 {
1801 child_process * cp = fd_info[fd].cp;
1802
1803 fd_info[fd].cp = NULL;
1804
1805 if (CHILD_ACTIVE (cp))
1806 {
1807 /* if last descriptor to active child_process then cleanup */
1808 int i;
1809 for (i = 0; i < MAXDESC; i++)
1810 {
1811 if (i == fd)
1812 continue;
1813 if (fd_info[i].cp == cp)
1814 break;
1815 }
1816 if (i == MAXDESC)
1817 {
1818 #ifdef HAVE_SOCKETS
1819 if (fd_info[fd].flags & FILE_SOCKET)
1820 {
1821 #ifndef SOCK_REPLACE_HANDLE
1822 if (winsock_lib == NULL) abort ();
1823
1824 pfn_shutdown (SOCK_HANDLE (fd), 2);
1825 rc = pfn_closesocket (SOCK_HANDLE (fd));
1826 #endif
1827 winsock_inuse--; /* count open sockets */
1828 }
1829 #endif
1830 delete_child (cp);
1831 }
1832 }
1833 }
1834
1835 /* Note that sockets do not need special treatment here (at least on
1836 NT and Windows 95 using the standard tcp/ip stacks) - it appears that
1837 closesocket is equivalent to CloseHandle, which is to be expected
1838 because socket handles are fully fledged kernel handles. */
1839 rc = _close (fd);
1840
1841 if (rc == 0)
1842 fd_info[fd].flags = 0;
1843
1844 return rc;
1845 }
1846
1847 int
1848 sys_dup (int fd)
1849 {
1850 int new_fd;
1851
1852 new_fd = _dup (fd);
1853 if (new_fd >= 0)
1854 {
1855 /* duplicate our internal info as well */
1856 fd_info[new_fd] = fd_info[fd];
1857 }
1858 return new_fd;
1859 }
1860
1861
1862 int
1863 sys_dup2 (int src, int dst)
1864 {
1865 int rc;
1866
1867 if (dst < 0 || dst >= MAXDESC)
1868 {
1869 errno = EBADF;
1870 return -1;
1871 }
1872
1873 /* make sure we close the destination first if it's a pipe or socket */
1874 if (src != dst && fd_info[dst].flags != 0)
1875 sys_close (dst);
1876
1877 rc = _dup2 (src, dst);
1878 if (rc == 0)
1879 {
1880 /* duplicate our internal info as well */
1881 fd_info[dst] = fd_info[src];
1882 }
1883 return rc;
1884 }
1885
1886 /* From callproc.c */
1887 extern Lisp_Object Vbinary_process_input;
1888 extern Lisp_Object Vbinary_process_output;
1889
1890 /* Unix pipe() has only one arg */
1891 int
1892 sys_pipe (int * phandles)
1893 {
1894 int rc;
1895 unsigned flags;
1896 child_process * cp;
1897
1898 /* make pipe handles non-inheritable; when we spawn a child,
1899 we replace the relevant handle with an inheritable one. */
1900 rc = _pipe (phandles, 0, _O_NOINHERIT);
1901
1902 if (rc == 0)
1903 {
1904 /* set internal flags, and put read and write handles into binary
1905 mode as necessary; if not in binary mode, set the MSVC internal
1906 FDEV (0x40) flag to prevent _read from treating ^Z as eof (this
1907 could otherwise allow Emacs to hang because it then waits
1908 indefinitely for the child process to exit, when it might not be
1909 finished). */
1910 flags = FILE_PIPE | FILE_READ;
1911 if (!NILP (Vbinary_process_output))
1912 {
1913 flags |= FILE_BINARY;
1914 setmode (phandles[0], _O_BINARY);
1915 }
1916 #if (_MSC_VER == 900)
1917 else
1918 _osfile[phandles[0]] |= 0x40;
1919 #endif
1920
1921 fd_info[phandles[0]].flags = flags;
1922
1923 flags = FILE_PIPE | FILE_WRITE;
1924 if (!NILP (Vbinary_process_input))
1925 {
1926 flags |= FILE_BINARY;
1927 setmode (phandles[1], _O_BINARY);
1928 }
1929 #if (_MSC_VER == 900)
1930 else
1931 _osfile[phandles[1]] |= 0x40;
1932 #endif
1933
1934 fd_info[phandles[1]].flags = flags;
1935 }
1936
1937 return rc;
1938 }
1939
1940 /* From ntproc.c */
1941 extern Lisp_Object Vw32_pipe_read_delay;
1942
1943 /* Function to do blocking read of one byte, needed to implement
1944 select. It is only allowed on sockets and pipes. */
1945 int
1946 _sys_read_ahead (int fd)
1947 {
1948 child_process * cp;
1949 int rc;
1950
1951 if (fd < 0 || fd >= MAXDESC)
1952 return STATUS_READ_ERROR;
1953
1954 cp = fd_info[fd].cp;
1955
1956 if (cp == NULL || cp->fd != fd || cp->status != STATUS_READ_READY)
1957 return STATUS_READ_ERROR;
1958
1959 if ((fd_info[fd].flags & (FILE_PIPE | FILE_SOCKET)) == 0
1960 || (fd_info[fd].flags & FILE_READ) == 0)
1961 {
1962 DebPrint (("_sys_read_ahead: internal error: fd %d is not a pipe or socket!\n", fd));
1963 abort ();
1964 }
1965
1966 cp->status = STATUS_READ_IN_PROGRESS;
1967
1968 if (fd_info[fd].flags & FILE_PIPE)
1969 {
1970 /* Use read to get CRLF translation */
1971 rc = _read (fd, &cp->chr, sizeof (char));
1972
1973 /* Give subprocess time to buffer some more output for us before
1974 reporting that input is available; we need this because Windows 95
1975 connects DOS programs to pipes by making the pipe appear to be
1976 the normal console stdout - as a result most DOS programs will
1977 write to stdout without buffering, ie. one character at a
1978 time. Even some W32 programs do this - "dir" in a command
1979 shell on NT is very slow if we don't do this. */
1980 if (rc > 0)
1981 {
1982 int wait = XINT (Vw32_pipe_read_delay);
1983
1984 if (wait > 0)
1985 Sleep (wait);
1986 else if (wait < 0)
1987 while (++wait <= 0)
1988 /* Yield remainder of our time slice, effectively giving a
1989 temporary priority boost to the child process. */
1990 Sleep (0);
1991 }
1992 }
1993 #ifdef HAVE_SOCKETS
1994 else if (fd_info[fd].flags & FILE_SOCKET)
1995 rc = pfn_recv (SOCK_HANDLE (fd), &cp->chr, sizeof (char), 0);
1996 #endif
1997
1998 if (rc == sizeof (char))
1999 cp->status = STATUS_READ_SUCCEEDED;
2000 else
2001 cp->status = STATUS_READ_FAILED;
2002
2003 return cp->status;
2004 }
2005
2006 int
2007 sys_read (int fd, char * buffer, unsigned int count)
2008 {
2009 int nchars;
2010 int extra = 0;
2011 int to_read;
2012 DWORD waiting;
2013
2014 if (fd < 0 || fd >= MAXDESC)
2015 {
2016 errno = EBADF;
2017 return -1;
2018 }
2019
2020 if (fd_info[fd].flags & (FILE_PIPE | FILE_SOCKET))
2021 {
2022 child_process *cp = fd_info[fd].cp;
2023
2024 if ((fd_info[fd].flags & FILE_READ) == 0)
2025 {
2026 errno = EBADF;
2027 return -1;
2028 }
2029
2030 /* presence of a child_process structure means we are operating in
2031 non-blocking mode - otherwise we just call _read directly.
2032 Note that the child_process structure might be missing because
2033 reap_subprocess has been called; in this case the pipe is
2034 already broken, so calling _read on it is okay. */
2035 if (cp)
2036 {
2037 int current_status = cp->status;
2038
2039 switch (current_status)
2040 {
2041 case STATUS_READ_FAILED:
2042 case STATUS_READ_ERROR:
2043 /* report normal EOF */
2044 return 0;
2045
2046 case STATUS_READ_READY:
2047 case STATUS_READ_IN_PROGRESS:
2048 DebPrint (("sys_read called when read is in progress\n"));
2049 errno = EWOULDBLOCK;
2050 return -1;
2051
2052 case STATUS_READ_SUCCEEDED:
2053 /* consume read-ahead char */
2054 *buffer++ = cp->chr;
2055 count--;
2056 extra = 1;
2057 cp->status = STATUS_READ_ACKNOWLEDGED;
2058 ResetEvent (cp->char_avail);
2059
2060 case STATUS_READ_ACKNOWLEDGED:
2061 break;
2062
2063 default:
2064 DebPrint (("sys_read: bad status %d\n", current_status));
2065 errno = EBADF;
2066 return -1;
2067 }
2068
2069 if (fd_info[fd].flags & FILE_PIPE)
2070 {
2071 PeekNamedPipe ((HANDLE) _get_osfhandle (fd), NULL, 0, NULL, &waiting, NULL);
2072 to_read = min (waiting, (DWORD) count);
2073
2074 /* Use read to get CRLF translation */
2075 nchars = _read (fd, buffer, to_read);
2076 }
2077 #ifdef HAVE_SOCKETS
2078 else /* FILE_SOCKET */
2079 {
2080 if (winsock_lib == NULL) abort ();
2081
2082 /* do the equivalent of a non-blocking read */
2083 pfn_ioctlsocket (SOCK_HANDLE (fd), FIONREAD, &waiting);
2084 if (waiting == 0 && extra == 0)
2085 {
2086 h_errno = errno = EWOULDBLOCK;
2087 return -1;
2088 }
2089
2090 nchars = 0;
2091 if (waiting)
2092 {
2093 /* always use binary mode for sockets */
2094 nchars = pfn_recv (SOCK_HANDLE (fd), buffer, count, 0);
2095 if (nchars == SOCKET_ERROR)
2096 {
2097 DebPrint(("sys_read.recv failed with error %d on socket %ld\n",
2098 pfn_WSAGetLastError (), SOCK_HANDLE (fd)));
2099 if (extra == 0)
2100 {
2101 set_errno ();
2102 return -1;
2103 }
2104 nchars = 0;
2105 }
2106 }
2107 }
2108 #endif
2109 }
2110 else
2111 nchars = _read (fd, buffer, count);
2112 }
2113 else
2114 nchars = _read (fd, buffer, count);
2115
2116 return nchars + extra;
2117 }
2118
2119 /* For now, don't bother with a non-blocking mode */
2120 int
2121 sys_write (int fd, const void * buffer, unsigned int count)
2122 {
2123 int nchars;
2124
2125 if (fd < 0 || fd >= MAXDESC)
2126 {
2127 errno = EBADF;
2128 return -1;
2129 }
2130
2131 if (fd_info[fd].flags & (FILE_PIPE | FILE_SOCKET))
2132 if ((fd_info[fd].flags & FILE_WRITE) == 0)
2133 {
2134 errno = EBADF;
2135 return -1;
2136 }
2137 #ifdef HAVE_SOCKETS
2138 if (fd_info[fd].flags & FILE_SOCKET)
2139 {
2140 if (winsock_lib == NULL) abort ();
2141 nchars = pfn_send (SOCK_HANDLE (fd), buffer, count, 0);
2142 if (nchars == SOCKET_ERROR)
2143 {
2144 DebPrint(("sys_read.send failed with error %d on socket %ld\n",
2145 pfn_WSAGetLastError (), SOCK_HANDLE (fd)));
2146 set_errno ();
2147 }
2148 }
2149 else
2150 #endif
2151 nchars = _write (fd, buffer, count);
2152
2153 return nchars;
2154 }
2155
2156
2157 void
2158 term_ntproc ()
2159 {
2160 #ifdef HAVE_SOCKETS
2161 /* shutdown the socket interface if necessary */
2162 term_winsock ();
2163 #endif
2164 }
2165
2166 extern BOOL dos_process_running;
2167
2168 void
2169 init_ntproc ()
2170 {
2171 #ifdef HAVE_SOCKETS
2172 /* Initialise the socket interface now if available and requested by
2173 the user by defining PRELOAD_WINSOCK; otherwise loading will be
2174 delayed until open-network-stream is called (w32-has-winsock can
2175 also be used to dynamically load or reload winsock).
2176
2177 Conveniently, init_environment is called before us, so
2178 PRELOAD_WINSOCK can be set in the registry. */
2179
2180 /* Always initialize this correctly. */
2181 winsock_lib = NULL;
2182
2183 if (getenv ("PRELOAD_WINSOCK") != NULL)
2184 init_winsock (TRUE);
2185 #endif
2186
2187 /* Initial preparation for subprocess support: replace our standard
2188 handles with non-inheritable versions. */
2189 {
2190 HANDLE parent;
2191 HANDLE stdin_save = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
2192 HANDLE stdout_save = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
2193 HANDLE stderr_save = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
2194
2195 parent = GetCurrentProcess ();
2196
2197 /* ignore errors when duplicating and closing; typically the
2198 handles will be invalid when running as a gui program. */
2199 DuplicateHandle (parent,
2200 GetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE),
2201 parent,
2202 &stdin_save,
2203 0,
2204 FALSE,
2205 DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS);
2206
2207 DuplicateHandle (parent,
2208 GetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE),
2209 parent,
2210 &stdout_save,
2211 0,
2212 FALSE,
2213 DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS);
2214
2215 DuplicateHandle (parent,
2216 GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE),
2217 parent,
2218 &stderr_save,
2219 0,
2220 FALSE,
2221 DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS);
2222
2223 fclose (stdin);
2224 fclose (stdout);
2225 fclose (stderr);
2226
2227 if (stdin_save != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
2228 _open_osfhandle ((long) stdin_save, O_TEXT);
2229 else
2230 open ("nul", O_TEXT | O_NOINHERIT | O_RDONLY);
2231 fdopen (0, "r");
2232
2233 if (stdout_save != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
2234 _open_osfhandle ((long) stdout_save, O_TEXT);
2235 else
2236 open ("nul", O_TEXT | O_NOINHERIT | O_WRONLY);
2237 fdopen (1, "w");
2238
2239 if (stderr_save != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
2240 _open_osfhandle ((long) stderr_save, O_TEXT);
2241 else
2242 open ("nul", O_TEXT | O_NOINHERIT | O_WRONLY);
2243 fdopen (2, "w");
2244 }
2245
2246 /* Restrict Emacs to running only one DOS program at a time (with any
2247 number of W32 programs). This is to prevent the user from
2248 running into problems with DOS programs being run in the same VDM
2249 under both Windows 95 and Windows NT.
2250
2251 Note that it is possible for Emacs to run DOS programs in separate
2252 VDMs, but unfortunately the pipe implementation on Windows 95 then
2253 fails to report when the DOS process exits (which is supposed to
2254 break the pipe). Until this bug is fixed, or we can devise a
2255 work-around, we must try to avoid letting the user start more than
2256 one DOS program if possible. */
2257
2258 dos_process_running = FALSE;
2259
2260 /* unfortunately, atexit depends on implementation of malloc */
2261 /* atexit (term_ntproc); */
2262 signal (SIGABRT, term_ntproc);
2263 }
2264
2265 /* end of nt.c */