/* Open a stream to a file. Copyright (C) 2007-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program 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 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program 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 this program. If not, see . */ /* Written by Bruno Haible , 2007. */ /* If the user's config.h happens to include , let it include only the system's here, so that orig_fopen doesn't recurse to rpl_fopen. */ #define __need_FILE #include /* Get the original definition of fopen. It might be defined as a macro. */ #include #undef __need_FILE static FILE * orig_fopen (const char *filename, const char *mode) { return fopen (filename, mode); } /* Specification. */ /* Write "stdio.h" here, not , otherwise OSF/1 5.1 DTK cc eliminates this include because of the preliminary #include above. */ #include "stdio.h" #include #include #include #include #include #include FILE * rpl_fopen (const char *filename, const char *mode) { #if (defined _WIN32 || defined __WIN32__) && ! defined __CYGWIN__ if (strcmp (filename, "/dev/null") == 0) filename = "NUL"; #endif #if FOPEN_TRAILING_SLASH_BUG /* If the filename ends in a slash and a mode that requires write access is specified, then fail. Rationale: POSIX says that "A pathname that contains at least one non-slash character and that ends with one or more trailing slashes shall be resolved as if a single dot character ( '.' ) were appended to the pathname." and "The special filename dot shall refer to the directory specified by its predecessor." If the named file already exists as a directory, then if a mode that requires write access is specified, fopen() must fail because POSIX says that it fails with errno = EISDIR in this case. If the named file does not exist or does not name a directory, then fopen() must fail since the file does not contain a '.' directory. */ { size_t len = strlen (filename); if (len > 0 && filename[len - 1] == '/') { int fd; struct stat statbuf; FILE *fp; if (mode[0] == 'w' || mode[0] == 'a') { errno = EISDIR; return NULL; } fd = open (filename, O_RDONLY); if (fd < 0) return NULL; if (fstat (fd, &statbuf) >= 0 && !S_ISDIR (statbuf.st_mode)) { close (fd); errno = ENOTDIR; return NULL; } fp = fdopen (fd, mode); if (fp == NULL) { int saved_errno = errno; close (fd); errno = saved_errno; } return fp; } } # endif return orig_fopen (filename, mode); }