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-rw-r--r--libiberty/pexecute.c779
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 779 deletions
diff --git a/libiberty/pexecute.c b/libiberty/pexecute.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 32943af59ef..00000000000
--- a/libiberty/pexecute.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,779 +0,0 @@
-/* Utilities to execute a program in a subprocess (possibly linked by pipes
- with other subprocesses), and wait for it.
- Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-This file is part of the libiberty library.
-Libiberty is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
-modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
-License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
-version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
-Libiberty 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
-Library General Public License for more details.
-
-You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
-License along with libiberty; see the file COPYING.LIB. If not,
-write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
-Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
-
-/* This file exports two functions: pexecute and pwait. */
-
-/* This file lives in at least two places: libiberty and gcc.
- Don't change one without the other. */
-
-#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
-#include "config.h"
-#endif
-
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <errno.h>
-#ifdef NEED_DECLARATION_ERRNO
-extern int errno;
-#endif
-#ifdef HAVE_STRING_H
-#include <string.h>
-#endif
-#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
-#include <unistd.h>
-#endif
-#ifdef HAVE_STDLIB_H
-#include <stdlib.h>
-#endif
-#ifdef HAVE_SYS_WAIT_H
-#include <sys/wait.h>
-#endif
-
-#include "libiberty.h"
-#include "safe-ctype.h"
-
-/* stdin file number. */
-#define STDIN_FILE_NO 0
-
-/* stdout file number. */
-#define STDOUT_FILE_NO 1
-
-/* value of `pipe': port index for reading. */
-#define READ_PORT 0
-
-/* value of `pipe': port index for writing. */
-#define WRITE_PORT 1
-
-static char *install_error_msg = "installation problem, cannot exec `%s'";
-
-/* pexecute: execute a program.
-
- PROGRAM and ARGV are the arguments to execv/execvp.
-
- THIS_PNAME is name of the calling program (i.e. argv[0]).
-
- TEMP_BASE is the path name, sans suffix, of a temporary file to use
- if needed. This is currently only needed for MSDOS ports that don't use
- GO32 (do any still exist?). Ports that don't need it can pass NULL.
-
- (FLAGS & PEXECUTE_SEARCH) is non-zero if $PATH should be searched
- (??? It's not clear that GCC passes this flag correctly).
- (FLAGS & PEXECUTE_FIRST) is nonzero for the first process in chain.
- (FLAGS & PEXECUTE_FIRST) is nonzero for the last process in chain.
- FIRST_LAST could be simplified to only mark the last of a chain of processes
- but that requires the caller to always mark the last one (and not give up
- early if some error occurs). It's more robust to require the caller to
- mark both ends of the chain.
-
- The result is the pid on systems like Unix where we fork/exec and on systems
- like WIN32 and OS2 where we use spawn. It is up to the caller to wait for
- the child.
-
- The result is the WEXITSTATUS on systems like MSDOS where we spawn and wait
- for the child here.
-
- Upon failure, ERRMSG_FMT and ERRMSG_ARG are set to the text of the error
- message with an optional argument (if not needed, ERRMSG_ARG is set to
- NULL), and -1 is returned. `errno' is available to the caller to use.
-
- pwait: cover function for wait.
-
- PID is the process id of the task to wait for.
- STATUS is the `status' argument to wait.
- FLAGS is currently unused (allows future enhancement without breaking
- upward compatibility). Pass 0 for now.
-
- The result is the pid of the child reaped,
- or -1 for failure (errno says why).
-
- On systems that don't support waiting for a particular child, PID is
- ignored. On systems like MSDOS that don't really multitask pwait
- is just a mechanism to provide a consistent interface for the caller.
-
- pfinish: finish generation of script
-
- pfinish is necessary for systems like MPW where a script is generated that
- runs the requested programs.
-*/
-
-#ifdef __MSDOS__
-
-/* MSDOS doesn't multitask, but for the sake of a consistent interface
- the code behaves like it does. pexecute runs the program, tucks the
- exit code away, and returns a "pid". pwait must be called to fetch the
- exit code. */
-
-#include <process.h>
-
-/* For communicating information from pexecute to pwait. */
-static int last_pid = 0;
-static int last_status = 0;
-static int last_reaped = 0;
-
-int
-pexecute (program, argv, this_pname, temp_base, errmsg_fmt, errmsg_arg, flags)
- const char *program;
- char * const *argv;
- const char *this_pname;
- const char *temp_base;
- char **errmsg_fmt, **errmsg_arg;
- int flags;
-{
- int rc;
-
- last_pid++;
- if (last_pid < 0)
- last_pid = 1;
-
- if ((flags & PEXECUTE_ONE) != PEXECUTE_ONE)
- abort ();
-
-#ifdef __DJGPP__
- /* ??? What are the possible return values from spawnv? */
- rc = (flags & PEXECUTE_SEARCH ? spawnvp : spawnv) (P_WAIT, program, argv);
-#else
- char *scmd, *rf;
- FILE *argfile;
- int i, el = flags & PEXECUTE_SEARCH ? 4 : 0;
-
- if (temp_base == 0)
- temp_base = choose_temp_base ();
- scmd = (char *) xmalloc (strlen (program) + strlen (temp_base) + 6 + el);
- rf = scmd + strlen(program) + 2 + el;
- sprintf (scmd, "%s%s @%s.gp", program,
- (flags & PEXECUTE_SEARCH ? ".exe" : ""), temp_base);
- argfile = fopen (rf, "w");
- if (argfile == 0)
- {
- int errno_save = errno;
- free (scmd);
- errno = errno_save;
- *errmsg_fmt = "cannot open `%s.gp'";
- *errmsg_arg = temp_base;
- return -1;
- }
-
- for (i=1; argv[i]; i++)
- {
- char *cp;
- for (cp = argv[i]; *cp; cp++)
- {
- if (*cp == '"' || *cp == '\'' || *cp == '\\' || ISSPACE (*cp))
- fputc ('\\', argfile);
- fputc (*cp, argfile);
- }
- fputc ('\n', argfile);
- }
- fclose (argfile);
-
- rc = system (scmd);
-
- {
- int errno_save = errno;
- remove (rf);
- free (scmd);
- errno = errno_save;
- }
-#endif
-
- if (rc == -1)
- {
- *errmsg_fmt = install_error_msg;
- *errmsg_arg = (char *)program;
- return -1;
- }
-
- /* Tuck the status away for pwait, and return a "pid". */
- last_status = rc << 8;
- return last_pid;
-}
-
-/* Use ECHILD if available, otherwise use EINVAL. */
-#ifdef ECHILD
-#define PWAIT_ERROR ECHILD
-#else
-#define PWAIT_ERROR EINVAL
-#endif
-
-int
-pwait (pid, status, flags)
- int pid;
- int *status;
- int flags;
-{
- /* On MSDOS each pexecute must be followed by it's associated pwait. */
- if (pid != last_pid
- /* Called twice for the same child? */
- || pid == last_reaped)
- {
- errno = PWAIT_ERROR;
- return -1;
- }
- /* ??? Here's an opportunity to canonicalize the values in STATUS.
- Needed? */
-#ifdef __DJGPP__
- *status = (last_status >> 8);
-#else
- *status = last_status;
-#endif
- last_reaped = last_pid;
- return last_pid;
-}
-
-#endif /* MSDOS */
-
-#if defined (_WIN32) && ! defined (_UWIN)
-
-#include <process.h>
-
-#ifdef __CYGWIN__
-
-#define fix_argv(argvec) (argvec)
-
-extern int _spawnv ();
-extern int _spawnvp ();
-
-#else /* ! __CYGWIN__ */
-
-/* This is a kludge to get around the Microsoft C spawn functions' propensity
- to remove the outermost set of double quotes from all arguments. */
-
-const char * const *
-fix_argv (argvec)
- char **argvec;
-{
- int i;
-
- for (i = 1; argvec[i] != 0; i++)
- {
- int len, j;
- char *temp, *newtemp;
-
- temp = argvec[i];
- len = strlen (temp);
- for (j = 0; j < len; j++)
- {
- if (temp[j] == '"')
- {
- newtemp = xmalloc (len + 2);
- strncpy (newtemp, temp, j);
- newtemp [j] = '\\';
- strncpy (&newtemp [j+1], &temp [j], len-j);
- newtemp [len+1] = 0;
- temp = newtemp;
- len++;
- j++;
- }
- }
-
- argvec[i] = temp;
- }
-
- for (i = 0; argvec[i] != 0; i++)
- {
- if (strpbrk (argvec[i], " \t"))
- {
- int len, trailing_backslash;
- char *temp;
-
- len = strlen (argvec[i]);
- trailing_backslash = 0;
-
- /* There is an added complication when an arg with embedded white
- space ends in a backslash (such as in the case of -iprefix arg
- passed to cpp). The resulting quoted strings gets misinterpreted
- by the command interpreter -- it thinks that the ending quote
- is escaped by the trailing backslash and things get confused.
- We handle this case by escaping the trailing backslash, provided
- it was not escaped in the first place. */
- if (len > 1
- && argvec[i][len-1] == '\\'
- && argvec[i][len-2] != '\\')
- {
- trailing_backslash = 1;
- ++len; /* to escape the final backslash. */
- }
-
- len += 2; /* and for the enclosing quotes. */
-
- temp = xmalloc (len + 1);
- temp[0] = '"';
- strcpy (temp + 1, argvec[i]);
- if (trailing_backslash)
- temp[len-2] = '\\';
- temp[len-1] = '"';
- temp[len] = '\0';
-
- argvec[i] = temp;
- }
- }
-
- return (const char * const *) argvec;
-}
-#endif /* __CYGWIN__ */
-
-#include <io.h>
-#include <fcntl.h>
-#include <signal.h>
-
-/* mingw32 headers may not define the following. */
-
-#ifndef _P_WAIT
-# define _P_WAIT 0
-# define _P_NOWAIT 1
-# define _P_OVERLAY 2
-# define _P_NOWAITO 3
-# define _P_DETACH 4
-
-# define WAIT_CHILD 0
-# define WAIT_GRANDCHILD 1
-#endif
-
-/* Win32 supports pipes */
-int
-pexecute (program, argv, this_pname, temp_base, errmsg_fmt, errmsg_arg, flags)
- const char *program;
- char * const *argv;
- const char *this_pname;
- const char *temp_base;
- char **errmsg_fmt, **errmsg_arg;
- int flags;
-{
- int pid;
- int pdes[2], org_stdin, org_stdout;
- int input_desc, output_desc;
- int retries, sleep_interval;
-
- /* Pipe waiting from last process, to be used as input for the next one.
- Value is STDIN_FILE_NO if no pipe is waiting
- (i.e. the next command is the first of a group). */
- static int last_pipe_input;
-
- /* If this is the first process, initialize. */
- if (flags & PEXECUTE_FIRST)
- last_pipe_input = STDIN_FILE_NO;
-
- input_desc = last_pipe_input;
-
- /* If this isn't the last process, make a pipe for its output,
- and record it as waiting to be the input to the next process. */
- if (! (flags & PEXECUTE_LAST))
- {
- if (_pipe (pdes, 256, O_BINARY) < 0)
- {
- *errmsg_fmt = "pipe";
- *errmsg_arg = NULL;
- return -1;
- }
- output_desc = pdes[WRITE_PORT];
- last_pipe_input = pdes[READ_PORT];
- }
- else
- {
- /* Last process. */
- output_desc = STDOUT_FILE_NO;
- last_pipe_input = STDIN_FILE_NO;
- }
-
- if (input_desc != STDIN_FILE_NO)
- {
- org_stdin = dup (STDIN_FILE_NO);
- dup2 (input_desc, STDIN_FILE_NO);
- close (input_desc);
- }
-
- if (output_desc != STDOUT_FILE_NO)
- {
- org_stdout = dup (STDOUT_FILE_NO);
- dup2 (output_desc, STDOUT_FILE_NO);
- close (output_desc);
- }
-
- pid = (flags & PEXECUTE_SEARCH ? _spawnvp : _spawnv)
- (_P_NOWAIT, program, fix_argv(argv));
-
- if (input_desc != STDIN_FILE_NO)
- {
- dup2 (org_stdin, STDIN_FILE_NO);
- close (org_stdin);
- }
-
- if (output_desc != STDOUT_FILE_NO)
- {
- dup2 (org_stdout, STDOUT_FILE_NO);
- close (org_stdout);
- }
-
- if (pid == -1)
- {
- *errmsg_fmt = install_error_msg;
- *errmsg_arg = program;
- return -1;
- }
-
- return pid;
-}
-
-/* MS CRTDLL doesn't return enough information in status to decide if the
- child exited due to a signal or not, rather it simply returns an
- integer with the exit code of the child; eg., if the child exited with
- an abort() call and didn't have a handler for SIGABRT, it simply returns
- with status = 3. We fix the status code to conform to the usual WIF*
- macros. Note that WIFSIGNALED will never be true under CRTDLL. */
-
-int
-pwait (pid, status, flags)
- int pid;
- int *status;
- int flags;
-{
-#ifdef __CYGWIN__
- return wait (status);
-#else
- int termstat;
-
- pid = _cwait (&termstat, pid, WAIT_CHILD);
-
- /* ??? Here's an opportunity to canonicalize the values in STATUS.
- Needed? */
-
- /* cwait returns the child process exit code in termstat.
- A value of 3 indicates that the child caught a signal, but not
- which one. Since only SIGABRT, SIGFPE and SIGINT do anything, we
- report SIGABRT. */
- if (termstat == 3)
- *status = SIGABRT;
- else
- *status = (((termstat) & 0xff) << 8);
-
- return pid;
-#endif /* __CYGWIN__ */
-}
-
-#endif /* _WIN32 && ! _UWIN */
-
-#ifdef OS2
-
-/* ??? Does OS2 have process.h? */
-extern int spawnv ();
-extern int spawnvp ();
-
-int
-pexecute (program, argv, this_pname, temp_base, errmsg_fmt, errmsg_arg, flags)
- const char *program;
- char * const *argv;
- const char *this_pname;
- const char *temp_base;
- char **errmsg_fmt, **errmsg_arg;
- int flags;
-{
- int pid;
-
- if ((flags & PEXECUTE_ONE) != PEXECUTE_ONE)
- abort ();
- /* ??? Presumably 1 == _P_NOWAIT. */
- pid = (flags & PEXECUTE_SEARCH ? spawnvp : spawnv) (1, program, argv);
- if (pid == -1)
- {
- *errmsg_fmt = install_error_msg;
- *errmsg_arg = program;
- return -1;
- }
- return pid;
-}
-
-int
-pwait (pid, status, flags)
- int pid;
- int *status;
- int flags;
-{
- /* ??? Here's an opportunity to canonicalize the values in STATUS.
- Needed? */
- int pid = wait (status);
- return pid;
-}
-
-#endif /* OS2 */
-
-#ifdef MPW
-
-/* MPW pexecute doesn't actually run anything; instead, it writes out
- script commands that, when run, will do the actual executing.
-
- For example, in GCC's case, GCC will write out several script commands:
-
- cpp ...
- cc1 ...
- as ...
- ld ...
-
- and then exit. None of the above programs will have run yet. The task
- that called GCC will then execute the script and cause cpp,etc. to run.
- The caller must invoke pfinish before calling exit. This adds
- the finishing touches to the generated script. */
-
-static int first_time = 1;
-
-int
-pexecute (program, argv, this_pname, temp_base, errmsg_fmt, errmsg_arg, flags)
- const char *program;
- char * const *argv;
- const char *this_pname;
- const char *temp_base;
- char **errmsg_fmt, **errmsg_arg;
- int flags;
-{
- char tmpprogram[255];
- char *cp, *tmpname;
- int i;
-
- mpwify_filename (program, tmpprogram);
- if (first_time)
- {
- printf ("Set Failed 0\n");
- first_time = 0;
- }
-
- fputs ("If {Failed} == 0\n", stdout);
- /* If being verbose, output a copy of the command. It should be
- accurate enough and escaped enough to be "clickable". */
- if (flags & PEXECUTE_VERBOSE)
- {
- fputs ("\tEcho ", stdout);
- fputc ('\'', stdout);
- fputs (tmpprogram, stdout);
- fputc ('\'', stdout);
- fputc (' ', stdout);
- for (i=1; argv[i]; i++)
- {
- fputc ('\'', stdout);
- /* See if we have an argument that needs fixing. */
- if (strchr(argv[i], '/'))
- {
- tmpname = (char *) xmalloc (256);
- mpwify_filename (argv[i], tmpname);
- argv[i] = tmpname;
- }
- for (cp = argv[i]; *cp; cp++)
- {
- /* Write an Option-d escape char in front of special chars. */
- if (strchr("'+", *cp))
- fputc ('\266', stdout);
- fputc (*cp, stdout);
- }
- fputc ('\'', stdout);
- fputc (' ', stdout);
- }
- fputs ("\n", stdout);
- }
- fputs ("\t", stdout);
- fputs (tmpprogram, stdout);
- fputc (' ', stdout);
-
- for (i=1; argv[i]; i++)
- {
- /* See if we have an argument that needs fixing. */
- if (strchr(argv[i], '/'))
- {
- tmpname = (char *) xmalloc (256);
- mpwify_filename (argv[i], tmpname);
- argv[i] = tmpname;
- }
- if (strchr (argv[i], ' '))
- fputc ('\'', stdout);
- for (cp = argv[i]; *cp; cp++)
- {
- /* Write an Option-d escape char in front of special chars. */
- if (strchr("'+", *cp))
- fputc ('\266', stdout);
- fputc (*cp, stdout);
- }
- if (strchr (argv[i], ' '))
- fputc ('\'', stdout);
- fputc (' ', stdout);
- }
-
- fputs ("\n", stdout);
-
- /* Output commands that arrange to clean up and exit if a failure occurs.
- We have to be careful to collect the status from the program that was
- run, rather than some other script command. Also, we don't exit
- immediately, since necessary cleanups are at the end of the script. */
- fputs ("\tSet TmpStatus {Status}\n", stdout);
- fputs ("\tIf {TmpStatus} != 0\n", stdout);
- fputs ("\t\tSet Failed {TmpStatus}\n", stdout);
- fputs ("\tEnd\n", stdout);
- fputs ("End\n", stdout);
-
- /* We're just composing a script, can't fail here. */
- return 0;
-}
-
-int
-pwait (pid, status, flags)
- int pid;
- int *status;
- int flags;
-{
- *status = 0;
- return 0;
-}
-
-/* Write out commands that will exit with the correct error code
- if something in the script failed. */
-
-void
-pfinish ()
-{
- printf ("\tExit \"{Failed}\"\n");
-}
-
-#endif /* MPW */
-
-/* include for Unix-like environments but not for Dos-like environments */
-#if ! defined (__MSDOS__) && ! defined (OS2) && ! defined (MPW) \
- && ! (defined (_WIN32) && ! defined (_UWIN))
-
-extern int execv ();
-extern int execvp ();
-
-int
-pexecute (program, argv, this_pname, temp_base, errmsg_fmt, errmsg_arg, flags)
- const char *program;
- char * const *argv;
- const char *this_pname;
- const char *temp_base ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED;
- char **errmsg_fmt, **errmsg_arg;
- int flags;
-{
- int (*func)() = (flags & PEXECUTE_SEARCH ? execvp : execv);
- int pid;
- int pdes[2];
- int input_desc, output_desc;
- int retries, sleep_interval;
- /* Pipe waiting from last process, to be used as input for the next one.
- Value is STDIN_FILE_NO if no pipe is waiting
- (i.e. the next command is the first of a group). */
- static int last_pipe_input;
-
- /* If this is the first process, initialize. */
- if (flags & PEXECUTE_FIRST)
- last_pipe_input = STDIN_FILE_NO;
-
- input_desc = last_pipe_input;
-
- /* If this isn't the last process, make a pipe for its output,
- and record it as waiting to be the input to the next process. */
- if (! (flags & PEXECUTE_LAST))
- {
- if (pipe (pdes) < 0)
- {
- *errmsg_fmt = "pipe";
- *errmsg_arg = NULL;
- return -1;
- }
- output_desc = pdes[WRITE_PORT];
- last_pipe_input = pdes[READ_PORT];
- }
- else
- {
- /* Last process. */
- output_desc = STDOUT_FILE_NO;
- last_pipe_input = STDIN_FILE_NO;
- }
-
- /* Fork a subprocess; wait and retry if it fails. */
- sleep_interval = 1;
- pid = -1;
- for (retries = 0; retries < 4; retries++)
- {
- pid = fork ();
- if (pid >= 0)
- break;
- sleep (sleep_interval);
- sleep_interval *= 2;
- }
-
- switch (pid)
- {
- case -1:
- *errmsg_fmt = "fork";
- *errmsg_arg = NULL;
- return -1;
-
- case 0: /* child */
- /* Move the input and output pipes into place, if necessary. */
- if (input_desc != STDIN_FILE_NO)
- {
- close (STDIN_FILE_NO);
- dup (input_desc);
- close (input_desc);
- }
- if (output_desc != STDOUT_FILE_NO)
- {
- close (STDOUT_FILE_NO);
- dup (output_desc);
- close (output_desc);
- }
-
- /* Close the parent's descs that aren't wanted here. */
- if (last_pipe_input != STDIN_FILE_NO)
- close (last_pipe_input);
-
- /* Exec the program. */
- (*func) (program, argv);
-
- fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", this_pname);
- fprintf (stderr, install_error_msg, program);
- fprintf (stderr, ": %s\n", xstrerror (errno));
- exit (-1);
- /* NOTREACHED */
- return 0;
-
- default:
- /* In the parent, after forking.
- Close the descriptors that we made for this child. */
- if (input_desc != STDIN_FILE_NO)
- close (input_desc);
- if (output_desc != STDOUT_FILE_NO)
- close (output_desc);
-
- /* Return child's process number. */
- return pid;
- }
-}
-
-int
-pwait (pid, status, flags)
- int pid;
- int *status;
- int flags ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED;
-{
- /* ??? Here's an opportunity to canonicalize the values in STATUS.
- Needed? */
-#ifdef VMS
- pid = waitpid (-1, status, 0);
-#else
- pid = wait (status);
-#endif
- return pid;
-}
-
-#endif /* ! __MSDOS__ && ! OS2 && ! MPW && ! (_WIN32 && ! _UWIN) */