/* Create a symlink relative to an open directory. Copyright (C) 2009 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 Eric Blake */ #include #include #if !HAVE_SYMLINK /* Mingw lacks symlink, and it is more efficient to provide a trivial wrapper than to go through at-func.c to call rpl_symlink. */ # include int symlinkat (char const *path1 _UNUSED_PARAMETER_, int fd _UNUSED_PARAMETER_, char const *path2 _UNUSED_PARAMETER_) { errno = ENOSYS; return -1; } #else /* HAVE_SYMLINK */ /* Our openat helper functions expect the directory parameter first, not second. These shims make life easier. */ /* Like symlink, but with arguments reversed. */ static int symlink_reversed (char const *file, char const *contents) { return symlink (contents, file); } /* Like symlinkat, but with arguments reversed. */ static int symlinkat_reversed (int fd, char const *file, char const *contents); # define AT_FUNC_NAME symlinkat_reversed # define AT_FUNC_F1 symlink_reversed # define AT_FUNC_POST_FILE_PARAM_DECLS , char const *contents # define AT_FUNC_POST_FILE_ARGS , contents # include "at-func.c" # undef AT_FUNC_NAME # undef AT_FUNC_F1 # undef AT_FUNC_POST_FILE_PARAM_DECLS # undef AT_FUNC_POST_FILE_ARGS /* Create a symlink FILE, in the directory open on descriptor FD, holding CONTENTS. If possible, do it without changing the working directory. Otherwise, resort to using save_cwd/fchdir, then symlink/restore_cwd. If either the save_cwd or the restore_cwd fails, then give a diagnostic and exit nonzero. */ int symlinkat (char const *contents, int fd, char const *file) { return symlinkat_reversed (fd, file, contents); } #endif /* HAVE_SYMLINK */ /* Gnulib provides a readlink stub for mingw; use it for distinction between EINVAL and ENOENT, rather than always failing with ENOSYS. */ /* POSIX 2008 says that unlike readlink, readlinkat returns 0 for success instead of the buffer length. But this would render readlinkat worthless since readlink does not guarantee a NUL-terminated buffer. Assume this was a bug in POSIX. */ /* Read the contents of symlink FILE into buffer BUF of size LEN, in the directory open on descriptor FD. If possible, do it without changing the working directory. Otherwise, resort to using save_cwd/fchdir, then readlink/restore_cwd. If either the save_cwd or the restore_cwd fails, then give a diagnostic and exit nonzero. */ #define AT_FUNC_NAME readlinkat #define AT_FUNC_F1 readlink #define AT_FUNC_POST_FILE_PARAM_DECLS , char *buf, size_t len #define AT_FUNC_POST_FILE_ARGS , buf, len #define AT_FUNC_RESULT ssize_t #include "at-func.c" #undef AT_FUNC_NAME #undef AT_FUNC_F1 #undef AT_FUNC_POST_FILE_PARAM_DECLS #undef AT_FUNC_POST_FILE_ARGS #undef AT_FUNC_RESULT