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1 /* Lock files for editing.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1993-1994, 1996, 1998-2015 Free Software
4 Foundation, Inc.
5
6 Author: Richard King
7 (according to authors.el)
8
9 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
10
11 GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
12 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
13 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
14 (at your option) any later version.
15
16 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
17 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
18 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
19 GNU General Public License for more details.
20
21 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
22 along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
23
24
25 #include <config.h>
26 #include <sys/types.h>
27 #include <sys/stat.h>
28 #include <signal.h>
29 #include <stdio.h>
30
31 #ifdef HAVE_PWD_H
32 #include <pwd.h>
33 #endif
34
35 #include <sys/file.h>
36 #include <fcntl.h>
37 #include <unistd.h>
38
39 #ifdef __FreeBSD__
40 #include <sys/sysctl.h>
41 #endif /* __FreeBSD__ */
42
43 #include <errno.h>
44
45 #include <c-ctype.h>
46
47 #include "lisp.h"
48 #include "character.h"
49 #include "buffer.h"
50 #include "coding.h"
51 #include "systime.h"
52 #ifdef WINDOWSNT
53 #include <share.h>
54 #include <sys/socket.h> /* for fcntl */
55 #include "w32.h" /* for dostounix_filename */
56 #endif
57
58 #ifdef HAVE_UTMP_H
59 #include <utmp.h>
60 #endif
61
62 /* A file whose last-modified time is just after the most recent boot.
63 Define this to be NULL to disable checking for this file. */
64 #ifndef BOOT_TIME_FILE
65 #define BOOT_TIME_FILE "/var/run/random-seed"
66 #endif
67
68 #ifndef WTMP_FILE
69 #define WTMP_FILE "/var/log/wtmp"
70 #endif
71
72 /* Normally use a symbolic link to represent a lock.
73 The strategy: to lock a file FN, create a symlink .#FN in FN's
74 directory, with link data `user@host.pid'. This avoids a single
75 mount (== failure) point for lock files.
76
77 When the host in the lock data is the current host, we can check if
78 the pid is valid with kill.
79
80 Otherwise, we could look at a separate file that maps hostnames to
81 reboot times to see if the remote pid can possibly be valid, since we
82 don't want Emacs to have to communicate via pipes or sockets or
83 whatever to other processes, either locally or remotely; rms says
84 that's too unreliable. Hence the separate file, which could
85 theoretically be updated by daemons running separately -- but this
86 whole idea is unimplemented; in practice, at least in our
87 environment, it seems such stale locks arise fairly infrequently, and
88 Emacs' standard methods of dealing with clashes suffice.
89
90 We use symlinks instead of normal files because (1) they can be
91 stored more efficiently on the filesystem, since the kernel knows
92 they will be small, and (2) all the info about the lock can be read
93 in a single system call (readlink). Although we could use regular
94 files to be useful on old systems lacking symlinks, nowadays
95 virtually all such systems are probably single-user anyway, so it
96 didn't seem worth the complication.
97
98 Similarly, we don't worry about a possible 14-character limit on
99 file names, because those are all the same systems that don't have
100 symlinks.
101
102 This is compatible with the locking scheme used by Interleaf (which
103 has contributed this implementation for Emacs), and was designed by
104 Ethan Jacobson, Kimbo Mundy, and others.
105
106 --karl@cs.umb.edu/karl@hq.ileaf.com.
107
108 On some file systems, notably those of MS-Windows, symbolic links
109 do not work well, so instead of a symlink .#FN -> 'user@host.pid',
110 the lock is a regular file .#FN with contents 'user@host.pid'. To
111 establish a lock, a nonce file is created and then renamed to .#FN.
112 On MS-Windows this renaming is atomic unless the lock is forcibly
113 acquired. On other systems the renaming is atomic if the lock is
114 forcibly acquired; if not, the renaming is done via hard links,
115 which is good enough for lock-file purposes.
116
117 To summarize, race conditions can occur with either:
118
119 * Forced locks on MS-Windows systems.
120
121 * Non-forced locks on non-MS-Windows systems that support neither
122 hard nor symbolic links. */
123
124 \f
125 /* Return the time of the last system boot. */
126
127 static time_t boot_time;
128 static bool boot_time_initialized;
129
130 #ifdef BOOT_TIME
131 static void get_boot_time_1 (const char *, bool);
132 #endif
133
134 static time_t
135 get_boot_time (void)
136 {
137 #if defined (BOOT_TIME)
138 int counter;
139 #endif
140
141 if (boot_time_initialized)
142 return boot_time;
143 boot_time_initialized = 1;
144
145 #if defined (CTL_KERN) && defined (KERN_BOOTTIME)
146 {
147 int mib[2];
148 size_t size;
149 struct timeval boottime_val;
150
151 mib[0] = CTL_KERN;
152 mib[1] = KERN_BOOTTIME;
153 size = sizeof (boottime_val);
154
155 if (sysctl (mib, 2, &boottime_val, &size, NULL, 0) >= 0)
156 {
157 boot_time = boottime_val.tv_sec;
158 return boot_time;
159 }
160 }
161 #endif /* defined (CTL_KERN) && defined (KERN_BOOTTIME) */
162
163 if (BOOT_TIME_FILE)
164 {
165 struct stat st;
166 if (stat (BOOT_TIME_FILE, &st) == 0)
167 {
168 boot_time = st.st_mtime;
169 return boot_time;
170 }
171 }
172
173 #if defined (BOOT_TIME)
174 #ifndef CANNOT_DUMP
175 /* The utmp routines maintain static state.
176 Don't touch that state unless we are initialized,
177 since it might not survive dumping. */
178 if (! initialized)
179 return boot_time;
180 #endif /* not CANNOT_DUMP */
181
182 /* Try to get boot time from utmp before wtmp,
183 since utmp is typically much smaller than wtmp.
184 Passing a null pointer causes get_boot_time_1
185 to inspect the default file, namely utmp. */
186 get_boot_time_1 (0, 0);
187 if (boot_time)
188 return boot_time;
189
190 /* Try to get boot time from the current wtmp file. */
191 get_boot_time_1 (WTMP_FILE, 1);
192
193 /* If we did not find a boot time in wtmp, look at wtmp, and so on. */
194 for (counter = 0; counter < 20 && ! boot_time; counter++)
195 {
196 char cmd_string[sizeof WTMP_FILE ".19.gz"];
197 Lisp_Object tempname, filename;
198 bool delete_flag = 0;
199
200 filename = Qnil;
201
202 tempname = make_formatted_string
203 (cmd_string, "%s.%d", WTMP_FILE, counter);
204 if (! NILP (Ffile_exists_p (tempname)))
205 filename = tempname;
206 else
207 {
208 tempname = make_formatted_string (cmd_string, "%s.%d.gz",
209 WTMP_FILE, counter);
210 if (! NILP (Ffile_exists_p (tempname)))
211 {
212 Lisp_Object args[6];
213
214 /* The utmp functions on mescaline.gnu.org accept only
215 file names up to 8 characters long. Choose a 2
216 character long prefix, and call make_temp_file with
217 second arg non-zero, so that it will add not more
218 than 6 characters to the prefix. */
219 filename = Fexpand_file_name (build_string ("wt"),
220 Vtemporary_file_directory);
221 filename = make_temp_name (filename, 1);
222 args[0] = build_string ("gzip");
223 args[1] = Qnil;
224 args[2] = list2 (QCfile, filename);
225 args[3] = Qnil;
226 args[4] = build_string ("-cd");
227 args[5] = tempname;
228 Fcall_process (6, args);
229 delete_flag = 1;
230 }
231 }
232
233 if (! NILP (filename))
234 {
235 get_boot_time_1 (SSDATA (filename), 1);
236 if (delete_flag)
237 unlink (SSDATA (filename));
238 }
239 }
240
241 return boot_time;
242 #else
243 return 0;
244 #endif
245 }
246
247 #ifdef BOOT_TIME
248 /* Try to get the boot time from wtmp file FILENAME.
249 This succeeds if that file contains a reboot record.
250
251 If FILENAME is zero, use the same file as before;
252 if no FILENAME has ever been specified, this is the utmp file.
253 Use the newest reboot record if NEWEST,
254 the first reboot record otherwise.
255 Ignore all reboot records on or before BOOT_TIME.
256 Success is indicated by setting BOOT_TIME to a larger value. */
257
258 void
259 get_boot_time_1 (const char *filename, bool newest)
260 {
261 struct utmp ut, *utp;
262
263 if (filename)
264 {
265 /* On some versions of IRIX, opening a nonexistent file name
266 is likely to crash in the utmp routines. */
267 if (faccessat (AT_FDCWD, filename, R_OK, AT_EACCESS) != 0)
268 return;
269
270 utmpname (filename);
271 }
272
273 setutent ();
274
275 while (1)
276 {
277 /* Find the next reboot record. */
278 ut.ut_type = BOOT_TIME;
279 utp = getutid (&ut);
280 if (! utp)
281 break;
282 /* Compare reboot times and use the newest one. */
283 if (utp->ut_time > boot_time)
284 {
285 boot_time = utp->ut_time;
286 if (! newest)
287 break;
288 }
289 /* Advance on element in the file
290 so that getutid won't repeat the same one. */
291 utp = getutent ();
292 if (! utp)
293 break;
294 }
295 endutent ();
296 }
297 #endif /* BOOT_TIME */
298 \f
299 /* An arbitrary limit on lock contents length. 8 K should be plenty
300 big enough in practice. */
301 enum { MAX_LFINFO = 8 * 1024 };
302
303 /* Here is the structure that stores information about a lock. */
304
305 typedef struct
306 {
307 /* Location of '@', '.', ':' in USER. If there's no colon, COLON
308 points to the end of USER. */
309 char *at, *dot, *colon;
310
311 /* Lock file contents USER@HOST.PID with an optional :BOOT_TIME
312 appended. This memory is used as a lock file contents buffer, so
313 it needs room for MAX_LFINFO + 1 bytes. A string " (pid NNNN)"
314 may be appended to the USER@HOST while generating a diagnostic,
315 so make room for its extra bytes (as opposed to ".NNNN") too. */
316 char user[MAX_LFINFO + 1 + sizeof " (pid )" - sizeof "."];
317 } lock_info_type;
318
319 /* Write the name of the lock file for FNAME into LOCKNAME. Length
320 will be that of FNAME plus two more for the leading ".#", plus one
321 for the null. */
322 #define MAKE_LOCK_NAME(lockname, fname) \
323 (lockname = SAFE_ALLOCA (SBYTES (fname) + 2 + 1), \
324 fill_in_lock_file_name (lockname, fname))
325
326 static void
327 fill_in_lock_file_name (char *lockfile, Lisp_Object fn)
328 {
329 char *last_slash = memrchr (SSDATA (fn), '/', SBYTES (fn));
330 char *base = last_slash + 1;
331 ptrdiff_t dirlen = base - SSDATA (fn);
332 memcpy (lockfile, SSDATA (fn), dirlen);
333 lockfile[dirlen] = '.';
334 lockfile[dirlen + 1] = '#';
335 strcpy (lockfile + dirlen + 2, base);
336 }
337
338 /* For some reason Linux kernels return EPERM on file systems that do
339 not support hard or symbolic links. This symbol documents the quirk.
340 There is no way to tell whether a symlink call fails due to
341 permissions issues or because links are not supported, but luckily
342 the lock file code should work either way. */
343 enum { LINKS_MIGHT_NOT_WORK = EPERM };
344
345 /* Rename OLD to NEW. If FORCE, replace any existing NEW.
346 It is OK if there are temporarily two hard links to OLD.
347 Return 0 if successful, -1 (setting errno) otherwise. */
348 static int
349 rename_lock_file (char const *old, char const *new, bool force)
350 {
351 #ifdef WINDOWSNT
352 return sys_rename_replace (old, new, force);
353 #else
354 if (! force)
355 {
356 struct stat st;
357
358 if (link (old, new) == 0)
359 return unlink (old) == 0 || errno == ENOENT ? 0 : -1;
360 if (errno != ENOSYS && errno != LINKS_MIGHT_NOT_WORK)
361 return -1;
362
363 /* 'link' does not work on this file system. This can occur on
364 a GNU/Linux host mounting a FAT32 file system. Fall back on
365 'rename' after checking that NEW does not exist. There is a
366 potential race condition since some other process may create
367 NEW immediately after the existence check, but it's the best
368 we can portably do here. */
369 if (lstat (new, &st) == 0 || errno == EOVERFLOW)
370 {
371 errno = EEXIST;
372 return -1;
373 }
374 if (errno != ENOENT)
375 return -1;
376 }
377
378 return rename (old, new);
379 #endif
380 }
381
382 /* Create the lock file LFNAME with contents LOCK_INFO_STR. Return 0 if
383 successful, an errno value on failure. If FORCE, remove any
384 existing LFNAME if necessary. */
385
386 static int
387 create_lock_file (char *lfname, char *lock_info_str, bool force)
388 {
389 #ifdef WINDOWSNT
390 /* Symlinks are supported only by later versions of Windows, and
391 creating them is a privileged operation that often triggers
392 User Account Control elevation prompts. Avoid the problem by
393 pretending that 'symlink' does not work. */
394 int err = ENOSYS;
395 #else
396 int err = symlink (lock_info_str, lfname) == 0 ? 0 : errno;
397 #endif
398
399 if (err == EEXIST && force)
400 {
401 unlink (lfname);
402 err = symlink (lock_info_str, lfname) == 0 ? 0 : errno;
403 }
404
405 if (err == ENOSYS || err == LINKS_MIGHT_NOT_WORK || err == ENAMETOOLONG)
406 {
407 static char const nonce_base[] = ".#-emacsXXXXXX";
408 char *last_slash = strrchr (lfname, '/');
409 ptrdiff_t lfdirlen = last_slash + 1 - lfname;
410 USE_SAFE_ALLOCA;
411 char *nonce = SAFE_ALLOCA (lfdirlen + sizeof nonce_base);
412 int fd;
413 memcpy (nonce, lfname, lfdirlen);
414 strcpy (nonce + lfdirlen, nonce_base);
415
416 fd = mkostemp (nonce, O_BINARY | O_CLOEXEC);
417 if (fd < 0)
418 err = errno;
419 else
420 {
421 ptrdiff_t lock_info_len;
422 if (! O_CLOEXEC)
423 fcntl (fd, F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC);
424 lock_info_len = strlen (lock_info_str);
425 err = 0;
426 /* Use 'write', not 'emacs_write', as garbage collection
427 might signal an error, which would leak FD. */
428 if (write (fd, lock_info_str, lock_info_len) != lock_info_len
429 || fchmod (fd, S_IRUSR | S_IRGRP | S_IROTH) != 0)
430 err = errno;
431 /* There is no need to call fsync here, as the contents of
432 the lock file need not survive system crashes. */
433 if (emacs_close (fd) != 0)
434 err = errno;
435 if (!err && rename_lock_file (nonce, lfname, force) != 0)
436 err = errno;
437 if (err)
438 unlink (nonce);
439 }
440
441 SAFE_FREE ();
442 }
443
444 return err;
445 }
446
447 /* Lock the lock file named LFNAME.
448 If FORCE, do so even if it is already locked.
449 Return 0 if successful, an error number on failure. */
450
451 static int
452 lock_file_1 (char *lfname, bool force)
453 {
454 /* Call this first because it can GC. */
455 printmax_t boot = get_boot_time ();
456
457 Lisp_Object luser_name = Fuser_login_name (Qnil);
458 char const *user_name = STRINGP (luser_name) ? SSDATA (luser_name) : "";
459 Lisp_Object lhost_name = Fsystem_name ();
460 char const *host_name = STRINGP (lhost_name) ? SSDATA (lhost_name) : "";
461 char lock_info_str[MAX_LFINFO + 1];
462 printmax_t pid = getpid ();
463
464 if (boot)
465 {
466 if (sizeof lock_info_str
467 <= snprintf (lock_info_str, sizeof lock_info_str,
468 "%s@%s.%"pMd":%"pMd,
469 user_name, host_name, pid, boot))
470 return ENAMETOOLONG;
471 }
472 else if (sizeof lock_info_str
473 <= snprintf (lock_info_str, sizeof lock_info_str,
474 "%s@%s.%"pMd,
475 user_name, host_name, pid))
476 return ENAMETOOLONG;
477
478 return create_lock_file (lfname, lock_info_str, force);
479 }
480
481 /* Return true if times A and B are no more than one second apart. */
482
483 static bool
484 within_one_second (time_t a, time_t b)
485 {
486 return (a - b >= -1 && a - b <= 1);
487 }
488 \f
489 /* On systems lacking ELOOP, test for an errno value that shouldn't occur. */
490 #ifndef ELOOP
491 # define ELOOP (-1)
492 #endif
493
494 /* Read the data for the lock file LFNAME into LFINFO. Read at most
495 MAX_LFINFO + 1 bytes. Return the number of bytes read, or -1
496 (setting errno) on error. */
497
498 static ptrdiff_t
499 read_lock_data (char *lfname, char lfinfo[MAX_LFINFO + 1])
500 {
501 ptrdiff_t nbytes;
502
503 while ((nbytes = readlinkat (AT_FDCWD, lfname, lfinfo, MAX_LFINFO + 1)) < 0
504 && errno == EINVAL)
505 {
506 int fd = emacs_open (lfname, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY | O_NOFOLLOW, 0);
507 if (0 <= fd)
508 {
509 /* Use read, not emacs_read, since FD isn't unwind-protected. */
510 ptrdiff_t read_bytes = read (fd, lfinfo, MAX_LFINFO + 1);
511 int read_errno = errno;
512 if (emacs_close (fd) != 0)
513 return -1;
514 errno = read_errno;
515 return read_bytes;
516 }
517
518 if (errno != ELOOP)
519 return -1;
520
521 /* readlinkat saw a non-symlink, but emacs_open saw a symlink.
522 The former must have been removed and replaced by the latter.
523 Try again. */
524 QUIT;
525 }
526
527 return nbytes;
528 }
529
530 /* Return 0 if nobody owns the lock file LFNAME or the lock is obsolete,
531 1 if another process owns it (and set OWNER (if non-null) to info),
532 2 if the current process owns it,
533 or -1 if something is wrong with the locking mechanism. */
534
535 static int
536 current_lock_owner (lock_info_type *owner, char *lfname)
537 {
538 int ret;
539 lock_info_type local_owner;
540 ptrdiff_t lfinfolen;
541 intmax_t pid, boot_time;
542 char *at, *dot, *lfinfo_end;
543
544 /* Even if the caller doesn't want the owner info, we still have to
545 read it to determine return value. */
546 if (!owner)
547 owner = &local_owner;
548
549 /* If nonexistent lock file, all is well; otherwise, got strange error. */
550 lfinfolen = read_lock_data (lfname, owner->user);
551 if (lfinfolen < 0)
552 return errno == ENOENT ? 0 : -1;
553 if (MAX_LFINFO < lfinfolen)
554 return -1;
555 owner->user[lfinfolen] = 0;
556
557 /* Parse USER@HOST.PID:BOOT_TIME. If can't parse, return -1. */
558 /* The USER is everything before the last @. */
559 owner->at = at = memrchr (owner->user, '@', lfinfolen);
560 if (!at)
561 return -1;
562 owner->dot = dot = strrchr (at, '.');
563 if (!dot)
564 return -1;
565
566 /* The PID is everything from the last `.' to the `:'. */
567 if (! c_isdigit (dot[1]))
568 return -1;
569 errno = 0;
570 pid = strtoimax (dot + 1, &owner->colon, 10);
571 if (errno == ERANGE)
572 pid = -1;
573
574 /* After the `:', if there is one, comes the boot time. */
575 switch (owner->colon[0])
576 {
577 case 0:
578 boot_time = 0;
579 lfinfo_end = owner->colon;
580 break;
581
582 case ':':
583 if (! c_isdigit (owner->colon[1]))
584 return -1;
585 boot_time = strtoimax (owner->colon + 1, &lfinfo_end, 10);
586 break;
587
588 default:
589 return -1;
590 }
591 if (lfinfo_end != owner->user + lfinfolen)
592 return -1;
593
594 /* On current host? */
595 Lisp_Object system_name = Fsystem_name ();
596 if (STRINGP (system_name)
597 && dot - (at + 1) == SBYTES (system_name)
598 && memcmp (at + 1, SSDATA (system_name), SBYTES (system_name)) == 0)
599 {
600 if (pid == getpid ())
601 ret = 2; /* We own it. */
602 else if (0 < pid && pid <= TYPE_MAXIMUM (pid_t)
603 && (kill (pid, 0) >= 0 || errno == EPERM)
604 && (boot_time == 0
605 || (boot_time <= TYPE_MAXIMUM (time_t)
606 && within_one_second (boot_time, get_boot_time ()))))
607 ret = 1; /* An existing process on this machine owns it. */
608 /* The owner process is dead or has a strange pid, so try to
609 zap the lockfile. */
610 else
611 return unlink (lfname);
612 }
613 else
614 { /* If we wanted to support the check for stale locks on remote machines,
615 here's where we'd do it. */
616 ret = 1;
617 }
618
619 return ret;
620 }
621
622 \f
623 /* Lock the lock named LFNAME if possible.
624 Return 0 in that case.
625 Return positive if some other process owns the lock, and info about
626 that process in CLASHER.
627 Return -1 if cannot lock for any other reason. */
628
629 static int
630 lock_if_free (lock_info_type *clasher, char *lfname)
631 {
632 int err;
633 while ((err = lock_file_1 (lfname, 0)) == EEXIST)
634 {
635 switch (current_lock_owner (clasher, lfname))
636 {
637 case 2:
638 return 0; /* We ourselves locked it. */
639 case 1:
640 return 1; /* Someone else has it. */
641 case -1:
642 return -1; /* current_lock_owner returned strange error. */
643 }
644
645 /* We deleted a stale lock; try again to lock the file. */
646 }
647
648 return err ? -1 : 0;
649 }
650
651 /* lock_file locks file FN,
652 meaning it serves notice on the world that you intend to edit that file.
653 This should be done only when about to modify a file-visiting
654 buffer previously unmodified.
655 Do not (normally) call this for a buffer already modified,
656 as either the file is already locked, or the user has already
657 decided to go ahead without locking.
658
659 When this returns, either the lock is locked for us,
660 or lock creation failed,
661 or the user has said to go ahead without locking.
662
663 If the file is locked by someone else, this calls
664 ask-user-about-lock (a Lisp function) with two arguments,
665 the file name and info about the user who did the locking.
666 This function can signal an error, or return t meaning
667 take away the lock, or return nil meaning ignore the lock. */
668
669 void
670 lock_file (Lisp_Object fn)
671 {
672 Lisp_Object orig_fn, encoded_fn;
673 char *lfname;
674 lock_info_type lock_info;
675 struct gcpro gcpro1;
676 USE_SAFE_ALLOCA;
677
678 /* Don't do locking if the user has opted out. */
679 if (! create_lockfiles)
680 return;
681
682 /* Don't do locking while dumping Emacs.
683 Uncompressing wtmp files uses call-process, which does not work
684 in an uninitialized Emacs. */
685 if (! NILP (Vpurify_flag))
686 return;
687
688 orig_fn = fn;
689 GCPRO1 (fn);
690 fn = Fexpand_file_name (fn, Qnil);
691 #ifdef WINDOWSNT
692 /* Ensure we have only '/' separators, to avoid problems with
693 looking (inside fill_in_lock_file_name) for backslashes in file
694 names encoded by some DBCS codepage. */
695 dostounix_filename (SSDATA (fn));
696 #endif
697 encoded_fn = ENCODE_FILE (fn);
698
699 /* Create the name of the lock-file for file fn */
700 MAKE_LOCK_NAME (lfname, encoded_fn);
701
702 /* See if this file is visited and has changed on disk since it was
703 visited. */
704 {
705 register Lisp_Object subject_buf;
706
707 subject_buf = get_truename_buffer (orig_fn);
708
709 if (!NILP (subject_buf)
710 && NILP (Fverify_visited_file_modtime (subject_buf))
711 && !NILP (Ffile_exists_p (fn)))
712 call1 (intern ("ask-user-about-supersession-threat"), fn);
713
714 }
715
716 /* Try to lock the lock. */
717 if (0 < lock_if_free (&lock_info, lfname))
718 {
719 /* Someone else has the lock. Consider breaking it. */
720 Lisp_Object attack;
721 char *dot = lock_info.dot;
722 ptrdiff_t pidlen = lock_info.colon - (dot + 1);
723 static char const replacement[] = " (pid ";
724 int replacementlen = sizeof replacement - 1;
725 memmove (dot + replacementlen, dot + 1, pidlen);
726 strcpy (dot + replacementlen + pidlen, ")");
727 memcpy (dot, replacement, replacementlen);
728 attack = call2 (intern ("ask-user-about-lock"), fn,
729 build_string (lock_info.user));
730 /* Take the lock if the user said so. */
731 if (!NILP (attack))
732 lock_file_1 (lfname, 1);
733 }
734
735 UNGCPRO;
736 SAFE_FREE ();
737 }
738
739 void
740 unlock_file (Lisp_Object fn)
741 {
742 char *lfname;
743 USE_SAFE_ALLOCA;
744
745 fn = Fexpand_file_name (fn, Qnil);
746 fn = ENCODE_FILE (fn);
747
748 MAKE_LOCK_NAME (lfname, fn);
749
750 if (current_lock_owner (0, lfname) == 2)
751 unlink (lfname);
752
753 SAFE_FREE ();
754 }
755
756 void
757 unlock_all_files (void)
758 {
759 register Lisp_Object tail, buf;
760 register struct buffer *b;
761
762 FOR_EACH_LIVE_BUFFER (tail, buf)
763 {
764 b = XBUFFER (buf);
765 if (STRINGP (BVAR (b, file_truename))
766 && BUF_SAVE_MODIFF (b) < BUF_MODIFF (b))
767 unlock_file (BVAR (b, file_truename));
768 }
769 }
770 \f
771 DEFUN ("lock-buffer", Flock_buffer, Slock_buffer,
772 0, 1, 0,
773 doc: /* Lock FILE, if current buffer is modified.
774 FILE defaults to current buffer's visited file,
775 or else nothing is done if current buffer isn't visiting a file.
776
777 If the option `create-lockfiles' is nil, this does nothing. */)
778 (Lisp_Object file)
779 {
780 if (NILP (file))
781 file = BVAR (current_buffer, file_truename);
782 else
783 CHECK_STRING (file);
784 if (SAVE_MODIFF < MODIFF
785 && !NILP (file))
786 lock_file (file);
787 return Qnil;
788 }
789
790 DEFUN ("unlock-buffer", Funlock_buffer, Sunlock_buffer,
791 0, 0, 0,
792 doc: /* Unlock the file visited in the current buffer.
793 If the buffer is not modified, this does nothing because the file
794 should not be locked in that case. */)
795 (void)
796 {
797 if (SAVE_MODIFF < MODIFF
798 && STRINGP (BVAR (current_buffer, file_truename)))
799 unlock_file (BVAR (current_buffer, file_truename));
800 return Qnil;
801 }
802
803 /* Unlock the file visited in buffer BUFFER. */
804
805 void
806 unlock_buffer (struct buffer *buffer)
807 {
808 if (BUF_SAVE_MODIFF (buffer) < BUF_MODIFF (buffer)
809 && STRINGP (BVAR (buffer, file_truename)))
810 unlock_file (BVAR (buffer, file_truename));
811 }
812
813 DEFUN ("file-locked-p", Ffile_locked_p, Sfile_locked_p, 1, 1, 0,
814 doc: /* Return a value indicating whether FILENAME is locked.
815 The value is nil if the FILENAME is not locked,
816 t if it is locked by you, else a string saying which user has locked it. */)
817 (Lisp_Object filename)
818 {
819 Lisp_Object ret;
820 char *lfname;
821 int owner;
822 lock_info_type locker;
823 USE_SAFE_ALLOCA;
824
825 filename = Fexpand_file_name (filename, Qnil);
826
827 MAKE_LOCK_NAME (lfname, filename);
828
829 owner = current_lock_owner (&locker, lfname);
830 if (owner <= 0)
831 ret = Qnil;
832 else if (owner == 2)
833 ret = Qt;
834 else
835 ret = make_string (locker.user, locker.at - locker.user);
836
837 SAFE_FREE ();
838 return ret;
839 }
840
841 void
842 syms_of_filelock (void)
843 {
844 DEFVAR_LISP ("temporary-file-directory", Vtemporary_file_directory,
845 doc: /* The directory for writing temporary files. */);
846 Vtemporary_file_directory = Qnil;
847
848 DEFVAR_BOOL ("create-lockfiles", create_lockfiles,
849 doc: /* Non-nil means use lockfiles to avoid editing collisions. */);
850 create_lockfiles = 1;
851
852 defsubr (&Sunlock_buffer);
853 defsubr (&Slock_buffer);
854 defsubr (&Sfile_locked_p);
855 }