/* Utility and Unix shadow routines for XEmacs on MS Windows. Copyright (C) 1994, 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of XEmacs. XEmacs 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. XEmacs 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 XEmacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. Geoff Voelker (voelker@cs.washington.edu) 7-29-94 */ /* Adapted for XEmacs by David Hobley */ /* Sync'ed with Emacs 19.34.6 by Marc Paquette */ #include #define getwd _getwd #include "lisp.h" #undef getwd #include "buffer.h" #include "systime.h" #include "syssignal.h" #include "sysproc.h" #include "sysfile.h" #include "syspwd.h" #include "sysdir.h" #include "syswindows.h" #include "nt.h" #include "ntheap.h" extern Lisp_Object Vmswindows_downcase_file_names; #if 0 extern Lisp_Object Vwin32_generate_fake_inodes; #endif extern Lisp_Object Vmswindows_get_true_file_attributes; Fixnum nt_fake_unix_uid; static char startup_dir[ MAXPATHLEN ]; /* Get the current working directory. */ char * getwd (char *dir) { #if 0 if (GetCurrentDirectory (MAXPATHLEN, dir) > 0) return dir; return NULL; #else /* Emacs doesn't actually change directory itself, and we want to force our real wd to be where emacs.exe is to avoid unnecessary conflicts when trying to rename or delete directories. */ strcpy (dir, startup_dir); return dir; #endif } /* Emulate getpwuid, getpwnam and others. */ #define PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE 256 static char the_passwd_name[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE]; static char the_passwd_passwd[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE]; static char the_passwd_gecos[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE]; static char the_passwd_dir[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE]; static char the_passwd_shell[PASSWD_FIELD_SIZE]; static struct passwd the_passwd = { the_passwd_name, the_passwd_passwd, 0, 0, 0, the_passwd_gecos, the_passwd_dir, the_passwd_shell, }; uid_t getuid (void) { return nt_fake_unix_uid; } uid_t geteuid (void) { return nt_fake_unix_uid; } gid_t getgid (void) { return the_passwd.pw_gid; } gid_t getegid (void) { return getgid (); } struct passwd * getpwuid (uid_t uid) { if (uid == nt_fake_unix_uid) { the_passwd.pw_gid = the_passwd.pw_uid = uid; return &the_passwd; } else return NULL; } struct passwd * getpwnam (const char *name) { struct passwd *pw; pw = getpwuid (getuid ()); if (!pw) return pw; if (stricmp (name, pw->pw_name)) return NULL; return pw; } void init_user_info (void) { /* This code is pretty much of ad hoc nature. There is no unix-like UIDs under Windows NT. There is no concept of root user, because all security is ACL-based. Instead, let's use a simple variable, nt-fake-unix-uid, which would allow the user to have a uid of choice. --kkm, 02/03/2000 */ #if 0 /* Find the user's real name by opening the process token and looking up the name associated with the user-sid in that token. Use the relative portion of the identifier authority value from the user-sid as the user id value (same for group id using the primary group sid from the process token). */ char user_sid[256], name[256], domain[256]; DWORD length = sizeof (name), dlength = sizeof (domain), trash; HANDLE token = NULL; SID_NAME_USE user_type; if (OpenProcessToken (GetCurrentProcess (), TOKEN_QUERY, &token) && GetTokenInformation (token, TokenUser, (PVOID) user_sid, sizeof (user_sid), &trash) && LookupAccountSid (NULL, *((PSID *) user_sid), name, &length, domain, &dlength, &user_type)) { strcpy (the_passwd.pw_name, name); /* Determine a reasonable uid value. */ if (stricmp ("administrator", name) == 0) { the_passwd.pw_uid = 0; the_passwd.pw_gid = 0; } else { SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY * pSIA; pSIA = GetSidIdentifierAuthority (*((PSID *) user_sid)); /* I believe the relative portion is the last 4 bytes (of 6) with msb first. */ the_passwd.pw_uid = ((pSIA->Value[2] << 24) + (pSIA->Value[3] << 16) + (pSIA->Value[4] << 8) + (pSIA->Value[5] << 0)); /* restrict to conventional uid range for normal users */ the_passwd.pw_uid = the_passwd.pw_uid % 60001; /* Get group id */ if (GetTokenInformation (token, TokenPrimaryGroup, (PVOID) user_sid, sizeof (user_sid), &trash)) { SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY * pSIA; pSIA = GetSidIdentifierAuthority (*((PSID *) user_sid)); the_passwd.pw_gid = ((pSIA->Value[2] << 24) + (pSIA->Value[3] << 16) + (pSIA->Value[4] << 8) + (pSIA->Value[5] << 0)); /* I don't know if this is necessary, but for safety... */ the_passwd.pw_gid = the_passwd.pw_gid % 60001; } else the_passwd.pw_gid = the_passwd.pw_uid; } } /* If security calls are not supported (presumably because we are running under Windows 95), fallback to this. */ else if (GetUserName (name, &length)) { strcpy (the_passwd.pw_name, name); if (stricmp ("administrator", name) == 0) the_passwd.pw_uid = 0; else the_passwd.pw_uid = 123; the_passwd.pw_gid = the_passwd.pw_uid; } else { strcpy (the_passwd.pw_name, "unknown"); the_passwd.pw_uid = 123; the_passwd.pw_gid = 123; } if (token) CloseHandle (token); #else /* Obtain only logon id here, uid part is moved to getuid */ char name[256]; DWORD length = sizeof (name); if (GetUserName (name, &length)) strcpy (the_passwd.pw_name, name); else strcpy (the_passwd.pw_name, "unknown"); #endif /* Ensure HOME and SHELL are defined. */ #if 0 /* * With XEmacs, setting $HOME is deprecated. */ if (getenv ("HOME") == NULL) putenv ("HOME=c:/"); #endif /* Set dir from environment variables. */ strcpy (the_passwd.pw_dir, (char *)get_home_directory()); /* We used to set pw_shell here, but the order is wrong (SHELL gets init in callproc.c, called later in the init process) and pw_shell is not used anywhere. */ } /* Normalize filename by converting all path separators to the specified separator. Also conditionally convert upper case path name components to lower case. */ static void normalize_filename (char *fp, char path_sep) { char sep; char *elem; /* Always lower-case drive letters a-z, even if the filesystem preserves case in filenames. This is so filenames can be compared by string comparison functions that are case-sensitive. Even case-preserving filesystems do not distinguish case in drive letters. */ if (fp[1] == ':' && *fp >= 'A' && *fp <= 'Z') { *fp += 'a' - 'A'; fp += 2; } if (NILP (Vmswindows_downcase_file_names)) { while (*fp) { if (*fp == '/' || *fp == '\\') *fp = path_sep; fp++; } return; } sep = path_sep; /* convert to this path separator */ elem = fp; /* start of current path element */ do { if (*fp >= 'a' && *fp <= 'z') elem = 0; /* don't convert this element */ if (*fp == 0 || *fp == ':') { sep = *fp; /* restore current separator (or 0) */ *fp = '/'; /* after conversion of this element */ } if (*fp == '/' || *fp == '\\') { if (elem && elem != fp) { *fp = 0; /* temporary end of string */ _strlwr (elem); /* while we convert to lower case */ } *fp = sep; /* convert (or restore) path separator */ elem = fp + 1; /* next element starts after separator */ sep = path_sep; } } while (*fp++); } /* Destructively turn backslashes into slashes. */ void dostounix_filename (char *p) { normalize_filename (p, '/'); } /* Destructively turn slashes into backslashes. */ void unixtodos_filename (char *p) { normalize_filename (p, '\\'); } /* Remove all CR's that are followed by a LF. (From msdos.c...probably should figure out a way to share it, although this code isn't going to ever change.) */ int crlf_to_lf (int n, unsigned char *buf, unsigned *lf_count) { unsigned char *np = buf; unsigned char *startp = buf; unsigned char *endp = buf + n; if (n == 0) return n; while (buf < endp - 1) { if (*buf == 0x0a) (*lf_count)++; if (*buf == 0x0d) { if (*(++buf) != 0x0a) *np++ = 0x0d; } else *np++ = *buf++; } if (buf < endp) { if (*buf == 0x0a) (*lf_count)++; *np++ = *buf++; } return np - startp; } /* Parse the root part of file name, if present. Return length and optionally store pointer to char after root. */ static int parse_root (char * name, char ** pPath) { char * start = name; if (name == NULL) return 0; /* find the root name of the volume if given */ if (isalpha (name[0]) && name[1] == ':') { /* skip past drive specifier */ name += 2; if (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[0])) name++; } else if (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[0]) && IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[1])) { int slashes = 2; name += 2; do { if (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (*name) && --slashes == 0) break; name++; } while ( *name ); if (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[0])) name++; } if (pPath) *pPath = name; return name - start; } /* Get long base name for name; name is assumed to be absolute. */ static int get_long_basename (char * name, char * buf, int size) { WIN32_FIND_DATA find_data; HANDLE dir_handle; int len = 0; #ifdef PIGSFLY char *p; /* If the last component of NAME has a wildcard character, return it as the basename. */ p = name + strlen (name); while (*p != '\\' && *p != ':' && p > name) p--; if (p > name) p++; if (strchr (p, '*') || strchr (p, '?')) { if ((len = strlen (p)) < size) memcpy (buf, p, len + 1); else len = 0; return len; } #endif dir_handle = FindFirstFile (name, &find_data); if (dir_handle != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) { if ((len = strlen (find_data.cFileName)) < size) memcpy (buf, find_data.cFileName, len + 1); else len = 0; FindClose (dir_handle); } return len; } /* Get long name for file, if possible (assumed to be absolute). */ BOOL win32_get_long_filename (char * name, char * buf, int size) { char * o = buf; char * p; char * q; char full[ MAX_PATH ]; int len; len = strlen (name); if (len >= MAX_PATH) return FALSE; /* Use local copy for destructive modification. */ memcpy (full, name, len+1); unixtodos_filename (full); /* Copy root part verbatim. */ len = parse_root (full, &p); memcpy (o, full, len); o += len; size -= len; do { q = p; p = strchr (q, '\\'); if (p) *p = '\0'; len = get_long_basename (full, o, size); if (len > 0) { o += len; size -= len; if (p != NULL) { *p++ = '\\'; if (size < 2) return FALSE; *o++ = '\\'; size--; *o = '\0'; } } else return FALSE; } while (p != NULL && *p); return TRUE; } /* Routines that are no-ops on NT but are defined to get Emacs to compile. */ #if 0 /* #### We do not need those, do we? -kkm */ int unrequest_sigio (void) { return 0; } int request_sigio (void) { return 0; } #endif /* 0 */ #define REG_ROOT "SOFTWARE\\XEmacs\\XEmacs" LPBYTE nt_get_resource (char *key, LPDWORD lpdwtype) { LPBYTE lpvalue; HKEY hrootkey = NULL; DWORD cbData; /* Check both the current user and the local machine to see if we have any resources. */ if (RegOpenKeyEx (HKEY_CURRENT_USER, REG_ROOT, 0, KEY_READ, &hrootkey) == ERROR_SUCCESS) { lpvalue = NULL; if (RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, NULL, NULL, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS && (lpvalue = (LPBYTE) xmalloc (cbData)) != NULL && RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, lpdwtype, lpvalue, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS) { return (lpvalue); } if (lpvalue) xfree (lpvalue); RegCloseKey (hrootkey); } if (RegOpenKeyEx (HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, REG_ROOT, 0, KEY_READ, &hrootkey) == ERROR_SUCCESS) { lpvalue = NULL; if (RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, NULL, NULL, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS && (lpvalue = (LPBYTE) xmalloc (cbData)) != NULL && RegQueryValueEx (hrootkey, key, NULL, lpdwtype, lpvalue, &cbData) == ERROR_SUCCESS) { return (lpvalue); } if (lpvalue) xfree (lpvalue); RegCloseKey (hrootkey); } return (NULL); } void init_environment (void) { /* Check for environment variables and use registry if they don't exist */ { int i; LPBYTE lpval; DWORD dwType; static char * env_vars[] = { "HOME", "emacs_dir", "EMACSLOADPATH", "EMACSDEBUGPATHS", "SHELL", "CMDPROXY", "EMACSDATA", "EMACSPATH", "EMACSPACKAGEPATH", "EMACSLOCKDIR", "INFOPATH" }; #if defined (HEAP_IN_DATA) && !defined(PDUMP) cache_system_info (); #endif for (i = 0; i < countof (env_vars); i++) { if (!getenv (env_vars[i]) && (lpval = nt_get_resource (env_vars[i], &dwType)) != NULL) { if (dwType == REG_EXPAND_SZ) { char buf1[500], buf2[500]; ExpandEnvironmentStrings ((LPSTR) lpval, buf1, 500); _snprintf (buf2, 499, "%s=%s", env_vars[i], buf1); putenv (strdup (buf2)); } else if (dwType == REG_SZ) { char buf[500]; _snprintf (buf, 499, "%s=%s", env_vars[i], lpval); putenv (strdup (buf)); } xfree (lpval); } } } /* Another special case: on NT, the PATH variable is actually named "Path" although cmd.exe (perhaps NT itself) arranges for environment variable lookup and setting to be case insensitive. However, Emacs assumes a fully case sensitive environment, so we need to change "Path" to "PATH" to match the expectations of various elisp packages. We do this by the sneaky method of modifying the string in the C runtime environ entry. The same applies to COMSPEC. */ { char ** envp; for (envp = environ; *envp; envp++) if (_strnicmp (*envp, "PATH=", 5) == 0) memcpy (*envp, "PATH=", 5); else if (_strnicmp (*envp, "COMSPEC=", 8) == 0) memcpy (*envp, "COMSPEC=", 8); } /* Remember the initial working directory for getwd, then make the real wd be the location of emacs.exe to avoid conflicts when renaming or deleting directories. (We also don't call chdir when running subprocesses for the same reason.) */ if (!GetCurrentDirectory (MAXPATHLEN, startup_dir)) ABORT (); { char *p; char modname[MAX_PATH]; if (!GetModuleFileName (NULL, modname, MAX_PATH)) ABORT (); if ((p = strrchr (modname, '\\')) == NULL) ABORT (); *p = 0; SetCurrentDirectory (modname); } init_user_info (); } #ifndef HAVE_X_WINDOWS /* X11R6 on NT provides the single parameter version of this command. */ #include /* Emulate gettimeofday (Ulrich Leodolter, 1/11/95). */ void gettimeofday (struct timeval *tv, struct timezone *tz) { struct _timeb tb; _ftime (&tb); tv->tv_sec = tb.time; tv->tv_usec = tb.millitm * 1000L; if (tz) { tz->tz_minuteswest = tb.timezone; /* minutes west of Greenwich */ tz->tz_dsttime = tb.dstflag; /* type of dst correction */ } } #endif /* HAVE_X_WINDOWS */ /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* IO support and wrapper functions for Win32 API. */ /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* Place a wrapper around the MSVC version of ctime. It returns NULL on network directories, so we handle that case here. (Ulrich Leodolter, 1/11/95). */ char * sys_ctime (const time_t *t) { char *str = (char *) ctime (t); return (str ? str : "Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 1970"); } /* Emulate sleep...we could have done this with a define, but that would necessitate including windows.h in the files that used it. This is much easier. */ #ifndef HAVE_X_WINDOWS void sys_sleep (int seconds) { Sleep (seconds * 1000); } #endif /* #### This is an evil dirty hack. We must get rid of it. Word "munging" is not in XEmacs lexicon. - kkm */ /* Internal MSVC data and functions for low-level descriptor munging */ #if (_MSC_VER == 900) extern char _osfile[]; #endif extern int __cdecl _set_osfhnd (int fd, long h); extern int __cdecl _free_osfhnd (int fd); /* parallel array of private info on file handles */ filedesc fd_info [ MAXDESC ]; typedef struct volume_info_data { struct volume_info_data * next; /* time when info was obtained */ DWORD timestamp; /* actual volume info */ char * root_dir; DWORD serialnum; DWORD maxcomp; DWORD flags; char * name; char * type; } volume_info_data; /* Global referenced by various functions. */ static volume_info_data volume_info; /* Vector to indicate which drives are local and fixed (for which cached data never expires). */ static BOOL fixed_drives[26]; /* Consider cached volume information to be stale if older than 10s, at least for non-local drives. Info for fixed drives is never stale. */ #define DRIVE_INDEX( c ) ( (c) <= 'Z' ? (c) - 'A' : (c) - 'a' ) #define VOLINFO_STILL_VALID( root_dir, info ) \ ( ( isalpha (root_dir[0]) && \ fixed_drives[ DRIVE_INDEX (root_dir[0]) ] ) \ || GetTickCount () - info->timestamp < 10000 ) /* Cache support functions. */ /* Simple linked list with linear search is sufficient. */ static volume_info_data *volume_cache = NULL; static volume_info_data * lookup_volume_info (char * root_dir) { volume_info_data * info; for (info = volume_cache; info; info = info->next) if (stricmp (info->root_dir, root_dir) == 0) break; return info; } static void add_volume_info (char * root_dir, volume_info_data * info) { info->root_dir = xstrdup (root_dir); info->next = volume_cache; volume_cache = info; } /* Wrapper for GetVolumeInformation, which uses caching to avoid performance penalty (~2ms on 486 for local drives, 7.5ms for local cdrom drive, ~5-10ms or more for remote drives on LAN). */ volume_info_data * GetCachedVolumeInformation (char * root_dir) { volume_info_data * info; char default_root[ MAX_PATH ]; /* NULL for root_dir means use root from current directory. */ if (root_dir == NULL) { if (GetCurrentDirectory (MAX_PATH, default_root) == 0) return NULL; parse_root (default_root, &root_dir); *root_dir = 0; root_dir = default_root; } /* Local fixed drives can be cached permanently. Removable drives cannot be cached permanently, since the volume name and serial number (if nothing else) can change. Remote drives should be treated as if they are removable, since there is no sure way to tell whether they are or not. Also, the UNC association of drive letters mapped to remote volumes can be changed at any time (even by other processes) without notice. As a compromise, so we can benefit from caching info for remote volumes, we use a simple expiry mechanism to invalidate cache entries that are more than ten seconds old. */ #if 0 /* No point doing this, because WNetGetConnection is even slower than GetVolumeInformation, consistently taking ~50ms on a 486 (FWIW, GetDriveType is about the only call of this type which does not involve network access, and so is extremely quick). */ /* Map drive letter to UNC if remote. */ if ( isalpha( root_dir[0] ) && !fixed[ DRIVE_INDEX( root_dir[0] ) ] ) { char remote_name[ 256 ]; char drive[3] = { root_dir[0], ':' }; if (WNetGetConnection (drive, remote_name, sizeof (remote_name)) == NO_ERROR) /* do something */ ; } #endif info = lookup_volume_info (root_dir); if (info == NULL || ! VOLINFO_STILL_VALID (root_dir, info)) { char name[ 256 ]; DWORD serialnum; DWORD maxcomp; DWORD flags; char type[ 256 ]; /* Info is not cached, or is stale. */ if (!GetVolumeInformation (root_dir, name, sizeof (name), &serialnum, &maxcomp, &flags, type, sizeof (type))) return NULL; /* Cache the volume information for future use, overwriting existing entry if present. */ if (info == NULL) { info = (volume_info_data *) xmalloc (sizeof (volume_info_data)); add_volume_info (root_dir, info); } else { free (info->name); free (info->type); } info->name = xstrdup (name); info->serialnum = serialnum; info->maxcomp = maxcomp; info->flags = flags; info->type = xstrdup (type); info->timestamp = GetTickCount (); } return info; } /* Get information on the volume where name is held; set path pointer to start of pathname in name (past UNC header\volume header if present). */ int get_volume_info (const char * name, const char ** pPath) { char temp[MAX_PATH]; char *rootname = NULL; /* default to current volume */ volume_info_data * info; if (name == NULL) return FALSE; /* find the root name of the volume if given */ if (isalpha (name[0]) && name[1] == ':') { rootname = temp; temp[0] = *name++; temp[1] = *name++; temp[2] = '\\'; temp[3] = 0; } else if (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[0]) && IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[1])) { char *str = temp; int slashes = 4; rootname = temp; do { if (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (*name) && --slashes == 0) break; *str++ = *name++; } while ( *name ); *str++ = '\\'; *str = 0; } if (pPath) *pPath = name; info = GetCachedVolumeInformation (rootname); if (info != NULL) { /* Set global referenced by other functions. */ volume_info = *info; return TRUE; } return FALSE; } /* Determine if volume is FAT format (ie. only supports short 8.3 names); also set path pointer to start of pathname in name. */ int is_fat_volume (const char * name, const char ** pPath) { if (get_volume_info (name, pPath)) return (volume_info.maxcomp == 12); return FALSE; } /* Map filename to a legal 8.3 name if necessary. */ const char * map_win32_filename (const char * name, const char ** pPath) { static char shortname[MAX_PATH]; char * str = shortname; char c; const char * path; const char * save_name = name; if (is_fat_volume (name, &path)) /* truncate to 8.3 */ { REGISTER int left = 8; /* maximum number of chars in part */ REGISTER int extn = 0; /* extension added? */ REGISTER int dots = 2; /* maximum number of dots allowed */ while (name < path) *str++ = *name++; /* skip past UNC header */ while ((c = *name++)) { switch ( c ) { case '\\': case '/': *str++ = '\\'; extn = 0; /* reset extension flags */ dots = 2; /* max 2 dots */ left = 8; /* max length 8 for main part */ break; case ':': *str++ = ':'; extn = 0; /* reset extension flags */ dots = 2; /* max 2 dots */ left = 8; /* max length 8 for main part */ break; case '.': if ( dots ) { /* Convert path components of the form .xxx to _xxx, but leave . and .. as they are. This allows .emacs to be read as _emacs, for example. */ if (! *name || *name == '.' || IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (*name)) { *str++ = '.'; dots--; } else { *str++ = '_'; left--; dots = 0; } } else if ( !extn ) { *str++ = '.'; extn = 1; /* we've got an extension */ left = 3; /* 3 chars in extension */ } else { /* any embedded dots after the first are converted to _ */ *str++ = '_'; } break; case '~': case '#': /* don't lose these, they're important */ if ( ! left ) str[-1] = c; /* replace last character of part */ /* FALLTHRU */ default: if ( left ) { *str++ = tolower (c); /* map to lower case (looks nicer) */ left--; dots = 0; /* started a path component */ } break; } } *str = '\0'; } else { strcpy (shortname, name); unixtodos_filename (shortname); } if (pPath) *pPath = shortname + (path - save_name); return shortname; } /* Emulate the Unix directory procedures opendir, closedir, and readdir. We can't use the procedures supplied in sysdep.c, so we provide them here. */ struct direct dir_static; /* simulated directory contents */ static HANDLE dir_find_handle = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE; static int dir_is_fat; static char dir_pathname[MAXPATHLEN+1]; static WIN32_FIND_DATA dir_find_data; DIR * opendir (const char *filename) { DIR *dirp; /* Opening is done by FindFirstFile. However, a read is inherent to this operation, so we defer the open until read time. */ if (!(dirp = xnew_and_zero(DIR))) return NULL; if (dir_find_handle != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) return NULL; dirp->dd_fd = 0; dirp->dd_loc = 0; dirp->dd_size = 0; strncpy (dir_pathname, map_win32_filename (filename, NULL), MAXPATHLEN); dir_pathname[MAXPATHLEN] = '\0'; dir_is_fat = is_fat_volume (filename, NULL); return dirp; } int closedir (DIR *dirp) { BOOL retval; /* If we have a find-handle open, close it. */ if (dir_find_handle != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) { retval = FindClose (dir_find_handle); dir_find_handle = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE; } xfree (dirp); if (retval) return 0; else return -1; } struct direct * readdir (DIR *dirp) { /* If we aren't dir_finding, do a find-first, otherwise do a find-next. */ if (dir_find_handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) { char filename[MAXNAMLEN + 3]; int ln; strcpy (filename, dir_pathname); ln = strlen (filename) - 1; if (!IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (filename[ln])) strcat (filename, "\\"); strcat (filename, "*"); dir_find_handle = FindFirstFile (filename, &dir_find_data); if (dir_find_handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) return NULL; } else { if (!FindNextFile (dir_find_handle, &dir_find_data)) return NULL; } /* Emacs never uses this value, so don't bother making it match value returned by xemacs_stat(). */ dir_static.d_ino = 1; dir_static.d_reclen = sizeof (struct direct) - MAXNAMLEN + 3 + dir_static.d_namlen - dir_static.d_namlen % 4; dir_static.d_namlen = strlen (dir_find_data.cFileName); strcpy (dir_static.d_name, dir_find_data.cFileName); if (dir_is_fat) _strlwr (dir_static.d_name); else if (!NILP (Vmswindows_downcase_file_names)) { REGISTER char *p; for (p = dir_static.d_name; *p; p++) if (*p >= 'a' && *p <= 'z') break; if (!*p) _strlwr (dir_static.d_name); } return &dir_static; } #if 0 /* #### Have to check if all that sad story about '95 is true - kkm */ int sys_rename (const char * oldname, const char * newname) { char temp[MAX_PATH]; DWORD attr; /* MoveFile on Win95 doesn't correctly change the short file name alias in a number of circumstances (it is not easy to predict when just by looking at oldname and newname, unfortunately). In these cases, renaming through a temporary name avoids the problem. A second problem on Win95 is that renaming through a temp name when newname is uppercase fails (the final long name ends up in lowercase, although the short alias might be uppercase) UNLESS the long temp name is not 8.3. So, on Win95 we always rename through a temp name, and we make sure the temp name has a long extension to ensure correct renaming. */ strcpy (temp, map_win32_filename (oldname, NULL)); if (GetVersion () & 0x80000000) { char * p; if (p = strrchr (temp, '\\')) p++; else p = temp; /* Force temp name to require a manufactured 8.3 alias - this seems to make the second rename work properly. */ strcpy (p, "_rename_temp.XXXXXX"); sys_mktemp (temp); if (rename (map_win32_filename (oldname, NULL), temp) < 0) return -1; } /* Emulate Unix behavior - newname is deleted if it already exists (at least if it is a file; don't do this for directories). However, don't do this if we are just changing the case of the file name - we will end up deleting the file we are trying to rename! */ newname = map_win32_filename (newname, NULL); /* TODO: Use GetInformationByHandle (on NT) to ensure newname and temp do not refer to the same file, eg. through share aliases. */ if (stricmp (newname, temp) != 0 && (attr = GetFileAttributes (newname)) != -1 && (attr & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) == 0) { _chmod (newname, 0666); _unlink (newname); } return rename (temp, newname); } #endif /* 0 */ static FILETIME utc_base_ft; static long double utc_base; static int init = 0; #if 0 time_t convert_time (FILETIME ft) { long double ret; if (!init) { /* Determine the delta between 1-Jan-1601 and 1-Jan-1970. */ SYSTEMTIME st; st.wYear = 1970; st.wMonth = 1; st.wDay = 1; st.wHour = 0; st.wMinute = 0; st.wSecond = 0; st.wMilliseconds = 0; SystemTimeToFileTime (&st, &utc_base_ft); utc_base = (long double) utc_base_ft.dwHighDateTime * 4096 * 1024 * 1024 + utc_base_ft.dwLowDateTime; init = 1; } if (CompareFileTime (&ft, &utc_base_ft) < 0) return 0; ret = (long double) ft.dwHighDateTime * 4096 * 1024 * 1024 + ft.dwLowDateTime; ret -= utc_base; return (time_t) (ret * 1e-7); } #else static LARGE_INTEGER utc_base_li; time_t convert_time (FILETIME uft) { time_t ret; #ifndef MAXLONGLONG SYSTEMTIME st; struct tm t; FILETIME ft; TIME_ZONE_INFORMATION tzi; DWORD tzid; #else LARGE_INTEGER lft; #endif if (!init) { /* Determine the delta between 1-Jan-1601 and 1-Jan-1970. */ SYSTEMTIME st; st.wYear = 1970; st.wMonth = 1; st.wDay = 1; st.wHour = 0; st.wMinute = 0; st.wSecond = 0; st.wMilliseconds = 0; SystemTimeToFileTime (&st, &utc_base_ft); utc_base_li.LowPart = utc_base_ft.dwLowDateTime; utc_base_li.HighPart = utc_base_ft.dwHighDateTime; init = 1; } #ifdef MAXLONGLONG /* On a compiler that supports long integers, do it the easy way */ lft.LowPart = uft.dwLowDateTime; lft.HighPart = uft.dwHighDateTime; ret = (time_t) ((lft.QuadPart - utc_base_li.QuadPart) / 10000000); #else /* Do it the hard way using mktime. */ FileTimeToLocalFileTime(&uft, &ft); FileTimeToSystemTime (&ft, &st); tzid = GetTimeZoneInformation (&tzi); t.tm_year = st.wYear - 1900; t.tm_mon = st.wMonth - 1; t.tm_mday = st.wDay; t.tm_hour = st.wHour; t.tm_min = st.wMinute; t.tm_sec = st.wSecond; t.tm_isdst = (tzid == TIME_ZONE_ID_DAYLIGHT); /* st.wMilliseconds not applicable */ ret = mktime(&t); if (ret == -1) { ret = 0; } #endif return ret; } #endif #if defined(MINGW) && CYGWIN_VERSION_DLL_MAJOR <= 21 #undef LowPart #undef HighPart #endif #if 0 /* in case we ever have need of this */ void convert_from_time_t (time_t time, FILETIME * pft) { long double tmp; if (!init) { /* Determine the delta between 1-Jan-1601 and 1-Jan-1970. */ SYSTEMTIME st; st.wYear = 1970; st.wMonth = 1; st.wDay = 1; st.wHour = 0; st.wMinute = 0; st.wSecond = 0; st.wMilliseconds = 0; SystemTimeToFileTime (&st, &utc_base_ft); utc_base = (long double) utc_base_ft.dwHighDateTime * 4096 * 1024 * 1024 + utc_base_ft.dwLowDateTime; init = 1; } /* time in 100ns units since 1-Jan-1601 */ tmp = (long double) time * 1e7 + utc_base; pft->dwHighDateTime = (DWORD) (tmp / (4096.0 * 1024 * 1024)); pft->dwLowDateTime = (DWORD) (tmp - pft->dwHighDateTime); } #endif #if 0 /* No reason to keep this; faking inode values either by hashing or even using the file index from GetInformationByHandle, is not perfect and so by default Emacs doesn't use the inode values on Windows. Instead, we now determine file-truename correctly (except for possible drive aliasing etc). */ /* Modified version of "PJW" algorithm (see the "Dragon" compiler book). */ static unsigned hashval (const unsigned char * str) { unsigned h = 0; while (*str) { h = (h << 4) + *str++; h ^= (h >> 28); } return h; } /* Return the hash value of the canonical pathname, excluding the drive/UNC header, to get a hopefully unique inode number. */ static DWORD generate_inode_val (const char * name) { char fullname[ MAX_PATH ]; char * p; unsigned hash; /* Get the truly canonical filename, if it exists. (Note: this doesn't resolve aliasing due to subst commands, or recognize hard links. */ if (!win32_get_long_filename ((char *)name, fullname, MAX_PATH)) ABORT (); parse_root (fullname, &p); /* Normal Win32 filesystems are still case insensitive. */ _strlwr (p); return hashval (p); } #endif /* #### aichner@ecf.teradyne.com reported that with the library provided stat/fstat, (file-exist "d:\\tmp\\") =>> nil, (file-exist "d:\\tmp") =>> t, when d:\tmp exists. Whenever we opt to use non-encapsulated stat(), this should serve as a compatibility test. --kkm */ /* Since stat is encapsulated on Windows NT, we need to encapsulate the equally broken fstat as well. FSFmacs also provides its own utime. Is that necessary here too? */ int mswindows_fstat (int desc, struct stat * buf) { HANDLE fh = (HANDLE) _get_osfhandle (desc); BY_HANDLE_FILE_INFORMATION info; DWORD fake_inode; int permission; switch (GetFileType (fh) & ~FILE_TYPE_REMOTE) { case FILE_TYPE_DISK: buf->st_mode = _S_IFREG; if (!GetFileInformationByHandle (fh, &info)) { errno = EACCES; return -1; } break; case FILE_TYPE_PIPE: buf->st_mode = _S_IFIFO; goto non_disk; case FILE_TYPE_CHAR: case FILE_TYPE_UNKNOWN: default: buf->st_mode = _S_IFCHR; non_disk: memset (&info, 0, sizeof (info)); info.dwFileAttributes = 0; info.ftCreationTime = utc_base_ft; info.ftLastAccessTime = utc_base_ft; info.ftLastWriteTime = utc_base_ft; } if (info.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) { buf->st_mode = _S_IFDIR; buf->st_nlink = 2; /* doesn't really matter */ fake_inode = 0; /* this doesn't either I think */ } else { buf->st_nlink = (short) info.nNumberOfLinks; /* Might as well use file index to fake inode values, but this is not guaranteed to be unique unless we keep a handle open all the time (even then there are situations where it is not unique). Reputedly, there are at most 48 bits of info (on NTFS, presumably less on FAT). */ fake_inode = info.nFileIndexLow ^ info.nFileIndexHigh; } /* MSVC defines _ino_t to be short; other libc's might not. */ if (sizeof (buf->st_ino) == 2) buf->st_ino = (unsigned short) (fake_inode ^ (fake_inode >> 16)); else buf->st_ino = (unsigned short) fake_inode; /* consider files to belong to current user */ buf->st_uid = 0; buf->st_gid = 0; buf->st_dev = info.dwVolumeSerialNumber; buf->st_rdev = info.dwVolumeSerialNumber; buf->st_size = info.nFileSizeLow; /* Convert timestamps to Unix format. */ buf->st_mtime = convert_time (info.ftLastWriteTime); buf->st_atime = convert_time (info.ftLastAccessTime); if (buf->st_atime == 0) buf->st_atime = buf->st_mtime; buf->st_ctime = convert_time (info.ftCreationTime); if (buf->st_ctime == 0) buf->st_ctime = buf->st_mtime; /* determine rwx permissions */ if (info.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY) permission = _S_IREAD | _S_IEXEC; else permission = _S_IREAD | _S_IEXEC |_S_IWRITE; if (info.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) permission |= _S_IEXEC; buf->st_mode |= permission | (permission >> 3) | (permission >> 6); return 0; } /* MSVC stat function can't cope with UNC names and has other bugs, so replace it with our own. This also allows us to calculate consistent inode values without hacks in the main Emacs code. */ int mswindows_stat (const char * path, struct stat * buf) { char * name; WIN32_FIND_DATA wfd; HANDLE fh; DWORD fake_inode; int permission; int len; int rootdir = FALSE; int errm; if (path == NULL || buf == NULL) { errno = EFAULT; return -1; } name = (char *) map_win32_filename (path, &path); /* must be valid filename, no wild cards */ if (strchr (name, '*') || strchr (name, '?')) { errno = ENOENT; return -1; } /* Remove trailing directory separator, unless name is the root directory of a drive or UNC volume in which case ensure there is a trailing separator. */ len = strlen (name); rootdir = (path >= name + len - 1 && (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (*path) || *path == 0)); name = strcpy ((char *)alloca (len + 2), name); errm = SetErrorMode (SEM_FAILCRITICALERRORS | SEM_NOOPENFILEERRORBOX); if (rootdir) { if (!IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[len-1])) strcat (name, "\\"); if (GetDriveType (name) < 2) { SetErrorMode (errm); errno = ENOENT; return -1; } memset (&wfd, 0, sizeof (wfd)); wfd.dwFileAttributes = FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY; wfd.ftCreationTime = utc_base_ft; wfd.ftLastAccessTime = utc_base_ft; wfd.ftLastWriteTime = utc_base_ft; strcpy (wfd.cFileName, name); } else { if (IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[len-1])) name[len - 1] = 0; /* (This is hacky, but helps when doing file completions on network drives.) Optimize by using information available from active readdir if possible. */ if (dir_find_handle != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE && (len = strlen (dir_pathname)), strnicmp (name, dir_pathname, len) == 0 && IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (name[len]) && stricmp (name + len + 1, dir_static.d_name) == 0) { /* This was the last entry returned by readdir. */ wfd = dir_find_data; } else { fh = FindFirstFile (name, &wfd); if (fh == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) { SetErrorMode (errm); errno = ENOENT; return -1; } FindClose (fh); } } if (wfd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) { buf->st_mode = _S_IFDIR; buf->st_nlink = 2; /* doesn't really matter */ fake_inode = 0; /* this doesn't either I think */ } else if (!NILP (Vmswindows_get_true_file_attributes)) { /* This is more accurate in terms of getting the correct number of links, but is quite slow (it is noticeable when Emacs is making a list of file name completions). */ BY_HANDLE_FILE_INFORMATION info; /* No access rights required to get info. */ fh = CreateFile (name, 0, FILE_SHARE_READ|FILE_SHARE_WRITE, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, 0, NULL); if (GetFileInformationByHandle (fh, &info)) { switch (GetFileType (fh)) { case FILE_TYPE_DISK: buf->st_mode = _S_IFREG; break; case FILE_TYPE_PIPE: buf->st_mode = _S_IFIFO; break; case FILE_TYPE_CHAR: case FILE_TYPE_UNKNOWN: default: buf->st_mode = _S_IFCHR; } buf->st_nlink = (short) info.nNumberOfLinks; /* Might as well use file index to fake inode values, but this is not guaranteed to be unique unless we keep a handle open all the time (even then there are situations where it is not unique). Reputedly, there are at most 48 bits of info (on NTFS, presumably less on FAT). */ fake_inode = info.nFileIndexLow ^ info.nFileIndexHigh; CloseHandle (fh); } else { SetErrorMode (errm); errno = EACCES; return -1; } } else { /* Don't bother to make this information more accurate. */ buf->st_mode = _S_IFREG; buf->st_nlink = 1; fake_inode = 0; } SetErrorMode (errm); #if 0 /* Not sure if there is any point in this. */ if (!NILP (Vwin32_generate_fake_inodes)) fake_inode = generate_inode_val (name); else if (fake_inode == 0) { /* For want of something better, try to make everything unique. */ static DWORD gen_num = 0; fake_inode = ++gen_num; } #endif /* #### MSVC defines _ino_t to be short; other libc's might not. */ buf->st_ino = (unsigned short) (fake_inode ^ (fake_inode >> 16)); /* consider files to belong to current user */ buf->st_uid = buf->st_gid = (short) nt_fake_unix_uid; /* volume_info is set indirectly by map_win32_filename */ buf->st_dev = volume_info.serialnum; buf->st_rdev = volume_info.serialnum; buf->st_size = wfd.nFileSizeLow; /* Convert timestamps to Unix format. */ buf->st_mtime = convert_time (wfd.ftLastWriteTime); buf->st_atime = convert_time (wfd.ftLastAccessTime); if (buf->st_atime == 0) buf->st_atime = buf->st_mtime; buf->st_ctime = convert_time (wfd.ftCreationTime); if (buf->st_ctime == 0) buf->st_ctime = buf->st_mtime; /* determine rwx permissions */ if (wfd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY) permission = _S_IREAD | _S_IEXEC; else permission = _S_IREAD | _S_IEXEC |_S_IWRITE; if (wfd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) permission |= _S_IEXEC; buf->st_mode |= permission | (permission >> 3) | (permission >> 6); return 0; } /* From callproc.c */ extern Lisp_Object Vbinary_process_input; extern Lisp_Object Vbinary_process_output; /* Unix pipe() has only one arg */ int sys_pipe (int * phandles) { int rc; unsigned flags; /* make pipe handles non-inheritable; when we spawn a child, we replace the relevant handle with an inheritable one. Also put pipes into binary mode; we will do text mode translation ourselves if required. */ rc = _pipe (phandles, 0, _O_NOINHERIT | _O_BINARY); if (rc == 0) { flags = FILE_PIPE | FILE_READ; if (!NILP (Vbinary_process_output)) flags |= FILE_BINARY; fd_info[phandles[0]].flags = flags; flags = FILE_PIPE | FILE_WRITE; if (!NILP (Vbinary_process_input)) flags |= FILE_BINARY; fd_info[phandles[1]].flags = flags; } return rc; } void term_ntproc (int unused) { } void init_ntproc (void) { /* Initial preparation for subprocess support: replace our standard handles with non-inheritable versions. */ { HANDLE parent; HANDLE stdin_save = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE; HANDLE stdout_save = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE; HANDLE stderr_save = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE; parent = GetCurrentProcess (); /* ignore errors when duplicating and closing; typically the handles will be invalid when running as a gui program. */ DuplicateHandle (parent, GetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE), parent, &stdin_save, 0, FALSE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS); DuplicateHandle (parent, GetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE), parent, &stdout_save, 0, FALSE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS); DuplicateHandle (parent, GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE), parent, &stderr_save, 0, FALSE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS); fclose (stdin); fclose (stdout); fclose (stderr); if (stdin_save != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) _open_osfhandle ((long) stdin_save, O_TEXT); else _open ("nul", O_TEXT | O_NOINHERIT | O_RDONLY); _fdopen (0, "r"); if (stdout_save != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) _open_osfhandle ((long) stdout_save, O_TEXT); else _open ("nul", O_TEXT | O_NOINHERIT | O_WRONLY); _fdopen (1, "w"); if (stderr_save != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) _open_osfhandle ((long) stderr_save, O_TEXT); else _open ("nul", O_TEXT | O_NOINHERIT | O_WRONLY); _fdopen (2, "w"); } /* unfortunately, atexit depends on implementation of malloc */ /* atexit (term_ntproc); */ signal (SIGABRT, term_ntproc); /* determine which drives are fixed, for GetCachedVolumeInformation */ { /* GetDriveType must have trailing backslash. */ char drive[] = "A:\\"; /* Loop over all possible drive letters */ while ( *drive <= 'Z' ) { /* Record if this drive letter refers to a fixed drive. */ fixed_drives[ DRIVE_INDEX (*drive) ] = (GetDriveType (drive) == DRIVE_FIXED); (*drive)++; } } } #ifndef HAVE_TTY Lisp_Object tty_semi_canonicalize_console_connection (Lisp_Object connection, Error_behavior errb) { return Vstdio_str; } Lisp_Object tty_canonicalize_console_connection (Lisp_Object connection, Error_behavior errb) { return Vstdio_str; } Lisp_Object tty_semi_canonicalize_device_connection (Lisp_Object connection, Error_behavior errb) { return Vstdio_str; } Lisp_Object tty_canonicalize_device_connection (Lisp_Object connection, Error_behavior errb) { return Vstdio_str; } #endif /*--------------------------------------------------------------------*/ /* Signal support */ /*--------------------------------------------------------------------*/ /* We need MS-defined signal and raise here */ #undef signal #undef raise #define sigmask(nsig) (1U << nsig) /* We can support as many signals as fit into word */ #define SIG_MAX 32 /* Signal handlers. Initial value = 0 = SIG_DFL */ static void (__cdecl *signal_handlers[SIG_MAX])(int) = {0}; /* Signal block mask: bit set to 1 means blocked */ unsigned signal_block_mask = 0; /* Signal pending mask: bit set to 1 means sig is pending */ unsigned signal_pending_mask = 0; mswindows_sighandler mswindows_sigset (int nsig, mswindows_sighandler handler) { /* We delegate some signals to the system function */ if (nsig == SIGFPE || nsig == SIGABRT || nsig == SIGINT) return signal (nsig, handler); if (nsig < 0 || nsig > SIG_MAX) { errno = EINVAL; return NULL; } /* Store handler ptr */ { mswindows_sighandler old_handler = signal_handlers[nsig]; signal_handlers[nsig] = handler; return old_handler; } } int mswindows_sighold (int nsig) { if (nsig < 0 || nsig > SIG_MAX) return errno = EINVAL; signal_block_mask |= sigmask (nsig); return 0; } int mswindows_sigrelse (int nsig) { if (nsig < 0 || nsig > SIG_MAX) return errno = EINVAL; signal_block_mask &= ~sigmask (nsig); if (signal_pending_mask & sigmask (nsig)) mswindows_raise (nsig); return 0; } int mswindows_sigpause (int nsig) { /* This is currently not called, because the only call to sigpause inside XEmacs is with SIGCHLD parameter. Just in case, we put an assert here, so anyone adds a call to sigpause will be surprised (or surprise someone else...) */ assert (0); return 0; } int mswindows_raise (int nsig) { /* We delegate some raises to the system routine */ if (nsig == SIGFPE || nsig == SIGABRT || nsig == SIGINT) return raise (nsig); if (nsig < 0 || nsig > SIG_MAX) return errno = EINVAL; /* If the signal is blocked, remember to issue later */ if (signal_block_mask & sigmask (nsig)) { signal_pending_mask |= sigmask (nsig); return 0; } if (signal_handlers[nsig] == SIG_IGN) return 0; if (signal_handlers[nsig] != SIG_DFL) { (*signal_handlers[nsig]) (nsig); return 0; } /* Default signal actions */ if (nsig == SIGALRM || nsig == SIGPROF) exit (3); /* Other signals are ignored by default */ return 0; } /*--------------------------------------------------------------------*/ /* Memory-mapped files */ /*--------------------------------------------------------------------*/ int open_input_file (file_data *p_file, const char *filename) { /* Synched with FSF 20.6. We fixed some warnings. */ HANDLE file; HANDLE file_mapping; void *file_base; DWORD size, upper_size; file = CreateFile (filename, GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_READ, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, 0); if (file == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) return FALSE; size = GetFileSize (file, &upper_size); file_mapping = CreateFileMapping (file, NULL, PAGE_READONLY, 0, size, NULL); if (!file_mapping) return FALSE; file_base = MapViewOfFile (file_mapping, FILE_MAP_READ, 0, 0, size); if (file_base == 0) return FALSE; p_file->name = (char *)filename; p_file->size = size; p_file->file = file; p_file->file_mapping = file_mapping; p_file->file_base = (char *)file_base; return TRUE; } int open_output_file (file_data *p_file, const char *filename, unsigned long size) { /* Synched with FSF 20.6. We fixed some warnings. */ HANDLE file; HANDLE file_mapping; void *file_base; file = CreateFile (filename, GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE, 0, NULL, CREATE_ALWAYS, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, 0); if (file == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) return FALSE; file_mapping = CreateFileMapping (file, NULL, PAGE_READWRITE, 0, size, NULL); if (!file_mapping) return FALSE; file_base = MapViewOfFile (file_mapping, FILE_MAP_WRITE, 0, 0, size); if (file_base == NULL) return FALSE; p_file->name = filename; p_file->size = size; p_file->file = file; p_file->file_mapping = file_mapping; p_file->file_base = (char*) file_base; return TRUE; } #if 1 /* !defined(MINGW) */ /* Return pointer to section header for section containing the given relative virtual address. */ static IMAGE_SECTION_HEADER * rva_to_section (DWORD rva, IMAGE_NT_HEADERS * nt_header) { /* Synched with FSF 20.6. We added MINGW stuff. */ PIMAGE_SECTION_HEADER section; int i; section = IMAGE_FIRST_SECTION (nt_header); for (i = 0; i < nt_header->FileHeader.NumberOfSections; i++) { /* Some linkers (eg. the NT SDK linker I believe) swapped the meaning of these two values - or rather, they ignored VirtualSize entirely and always set it to zero. This affects some very old exes (eg. gzip dated Dec 1993). Since mswindows_executable_type relies on this function to work reliably, we need to cope with this. */ DWORD real_size = max (section->SizeOfRawData, section->Misc.VirtualSize); if (rva >= section->VirtualAddress && rva < section->VirtualAddress + real_size) return section; section++; } return NULL; } #endif void mswindows_executable_type (const char * filename, int * is_dos_app, int * is_cygnus_app) { /* Synched with FSF 20.6. We added MINGW stuff and casts. */ file_data executable; char * p; /* Default values in case we can't tell for sure. */ *is_dos_app = FALSE; *is_cygnus_app = FALSE; if (!open_input_file (&executable, filename)) return; p = strrchr (filename, '.'); /* We can only identify DOS .com programs from the extension. */ if (p && stricmp (p, ".com") == 0) *is_dos_app = TRUE; else if (p && (stricmp (p, ".bat") == 0 || stricmp (p, ".cmd") == 0)) { /* A DOS shell script - it appears that CreateProcess is happy to accept this (somewhat surprisingly); presumably it looks at COMSPEC to determine what executable to actually invoke. Therefore, we have to do the same here as well. */ /* Actually, I think it uses the program association for that extension, which is defined in the registry. */ p = egetenv ("COMSPEC"); if (p) mswindows_executable_type (p, is_dos_app, is_cygnus_app); } else { /* Look for DOS .exe signature - if found, we must also check that it isn't really a 16- or 32-bit Windows exe, since both formats start with a DOS program stub. Note that 16-bit Windows executables use the OS/2 1.x format. */ #if 0 /* defined( MINGW ) */ /* mingw32 doesn't have enough headers to detect cygwin apps, just do what we can. */ FILHDR * exe_header; exe_header = (FILHDR*) executable.file_base; if (exe_header->e_magic != DOSMAGIC) goto unwind; if ((char*) exe_header->e_lfanew > (char*) executable.size) { /* Some dos headers (pkunzip) have bogus e_lfanew fields. */ *is_dos_app = TRUE; } else if (exe_header->nt_signature != NT_SIGNATURE) { *is_dos_app = TRUE; } #else IMAGE_DOS_HEADER * dos_header; IMAGE_NT_HEADERS * nt_header; dos_header = (PIMAGE_DOS_HEADER) executable.file_base; if (dos_header->e_magic != IMAGE_DOS_SIGNATURE) goto unwind; nt_header = (PIMAGE_NT_HEADERS) ((char*) dos_header + dos_header->e_lfanew); if ((char*) nt_header > (char*) dos_header + executable.size) { /* Some dos headers (pkunzip) have bogus e_lfanew fields. */ *is_dos_app = TRUE; } else if (nt_header->Signature != IMAGE_NT_SIGNATURE && LOWORD (nt_header->Signature) != IMAGE_OS2_SIGNATURE) { *is_dos_app = TRUE; } else if (nt_header->Signature == IMAGE_NT_SIGNATURE) { /* Look for cygwin.dll in DLL import list. */ IMAGE_DATA_DIRECTORY import_dir = nt_header->OptionalHeader.DataDirectory[IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_IMPORT]; IMAGE_IMPORT_DESCRIPTOR * imports; IMAGE_SECTION_HEADER * section; section = rva_to_section (import_dir.VirtualAddress, nt_header); imports = (IMAGE_IMPORT_DESCRIPTOR *) RVA_TO_PTR (import_dir.VirtualAddress, section, executable); for ( ; imports->Name; imports++) { char *dllname = (char*) RVA_TO_PTR (imports->Name, section, executable); /* The exact name of the cygwin dll has changed with various releases, but hopefully this will be reasonably future proof. */ if (strncmp (dllname, "cygwin", 6) == 0) { *is_cygnus_app = TRUE; break; } } } #endif } unwind: close_file_data (&executable); } static void convert_from_time_t (time_t time, FILETIME * pft) { long double tmp; if (!init) { /* Determine the delta between 1-Jan-1601 and 1-Jan-1970. */ SYSTEMTIME st; st.wYear = 1970; st.wMonth = 1; st.wDay = 1; st.wHour = 0; st.wMinute = 0; st.wSecond = 0; st.wMilliseconds = 0; SystemTimeToFileTime (&st, &utc_base_ft); utc_base = (long double) utc_base_ft.dwHighDateTime * 4096 * 1024 * 1024 + utc_base_ft.dwLowDateTime; init = 1; } /* time in 100ns units since 1-Jan-1601 */ tmp = (long double) time * 1e7 + utc_base; pft->dwHighDateTime = (DWORD) (tmp / (4096.0 * 1024 * 1024)); pft->dwLowDateTime = (DWORD) (tmp - (4096.0 * 1024 * 1024) * pft->dwHighDateTime); } int mswindows_utime (Lisp_Object path, struct utimbuf *times) { struct utimbuf deftime; #if 0 HANDLE fh; #endif static FILETIME mtime; static FILETIME atime; Extbyte *filename; if (times == NULL) { deftime.modtime = deftime.actime = time (NULL); times = &deftime; } LISP_STRING_TO_EXTERNAL (path, filename, Qmswindows_tstr); /* APA: SetFileTime fails to set mtime correctly (always 1-Jan-1970) */ #if 0 /* Need write access to set times. */ fh = CreateFile (filename, GENERIC_WRITE, FILE_SHARE_READ | FILE_SHARE_WRITE, 0, OPEN_EXISTING, 0, NULL); if (fh) { convert_from_time_t (times->actime, &atime); convert_from_time_t (times->modtime, &mtime); if (!SetFileTime (fh, NULL, &atime, &mtime)) { CloseHandle (fh); errno = EACCES; return -1; } CloseHandle (fh); } else { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } return 0; #else return utime (filename, times); #endif } /* Close the system structures associated with the given file. */ void close_file_data (file_data *p_file) { UnmapViewOfFile (p_file->file_base); CloseHandle (p_file->file_mapping); CloseHandle (p_file->file); } void vars_of_nt (void) { DEFVAR_INT ("nt-fake-unix-uid", &nt_fake_unix_uid /* *Set uid returned by `user-uid' and `user-real-uid'. Under NT and 9x, there is no uids, and even no almighty user called root. By setting this variable, you can have any uid of choice. Default is 0. Changes to this variable take effect immediately. */ ); nt_fake_unix_uid = 0; } /* end of nt.c */