/* Job execution and handling for GNU Make. Copyright (C) 1988, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Make. GNU Make 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. GNU Make 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 GNU Make; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ #include "make.h" #include "commands.h" #include "job.h" #include "file.h" #include "variable.h" #include /* Default shell to use. */ char default_shell[] = "/bin/sh"; #ifdef __MSDOS__ #include static int dos_pid = 123; static int dos_status; static char *dos_bname; static char *dos_bename; static int dos_batch_file; #endif /* MSDOS. */ #ifdef HAVE_FCNTL_H #include #else #include #endif /* If NGROUPS_MAX == 0 then try other methods for finding a real value. */ #if defined (NGROUPS_MAX) && NGROUPS_MAX == 0 #undef NGROUPS_MAX #endif /* NGROUPS_MAX == 0 */ #ifndef NGROUPS_MAX #ifdef POSIX #define GET_NGROUPS_MAX sysconf (_SC_NGROUPS_MAX) #else /* Not POSIX. */ #define NGROUPS_MAX NGROUPS #endif /* POSIX. */ #endif #ifdef HAVE_SYS_WAIT_H #include #endif #ifdef HAVE_WAITPID #define WAIT_NOHANG(status) waitpid (-1, (status), WNOHANG) #else /* Don't have waitpid. */ #ifdef HAVE_WAIT3 #ifndef wait3 extern int wait3 (); #endif #define WAIT_NOHANG(status) wait3 ((status), WNOHANG, (struct rusage *) 0) #endif /* Have wait3. */ #endif /* Have waitpid. */ #if !defined (wait) && !defined (POSIX) extern int wait (); #endif #ifndef HAVE_UNION_WAIT #define WAIT_T int #ifndef WTERMSIG #define WTERMSIG(x) ((x) & 0x7f) #endif #ifndef WCOREDUMP #define WCOREDUMP(x) ((x) & 0x80) #endif #ifndef WEXITSTATUS #define WEXITSTATUS(x) (((x) >> 8) & 0xff) #endif #ifndef WIFSIGNALED #define WIFSIGNALED(x) (WTERMSIG (x) != 0) #endif #ifndef WIFEXITED #define WIFEXITED(x) (WTERMSIG (x) == 0) #endif #else /* Have `union wait'. */ #define WAIT_T union wait #ifndef WTERMSIG #define WTERMSIG(x) ((x).w_termsig) #endif #ifndef WCOREDUMP #define WCOREDUMP(x) ((x).w_coredump) #endif #ifndef WEXITSTATUS #define WEXITSTATUS(x) ((x).w_retcode) #endif #ifndef WIFSIGNALED #define WIFSIGNALED(x) (WTERMSIG(x) != 0) #endif #ifndef WIFEXITED #define WIFEXITED(x) (WTERMSIG(x) == 0) #endif #endif /* Don't have `union wait'. */ #ifndef HAVE_UNISTD_H extern int dup2 (); extern int execve (); extern void _exit (); extern int geteuid (), getegid (); extern int setgid (), getgid (); #endif #ifndef getdtablesize #ifdef HAVE_GETDTABLESIZE extern int getdtablesize (); #else #ifdef HAVE_SYSCONF_OPEN_MAX #define getdtablesize() ((int) sysconf (_SC_OPEN_MAX)) #else #include #define getdtablesize() NOFILE #if !defined (NOFILE) && defined (NOFILES_MAX) /* SCO 3.2 "devsys 4.2" defines NOFILES_{MIN,MAX} in lieu of NOFILE. */ #define NOFILE NOFILES_MAX #endif #endif #endif #endif extern int getloadavg (); extern int start_remote_job_p (); extern int start_remote_job (), remote_status (); RETSIGTYPE child_handler (); static void free_child (), start_job_command (); static int load_too_high (), job_next_command (); /* Chain of all live (or recently deceased) children. */ struct child *children = 0; /* Number of children currently running. */ unsigned int job_slots_used = 0; /* Nonzero if the `good' standard input is in use. */ static int good_stdin_used = 0; /* Chain of children waiting to run until the load average goes down. */ static struct child *waiting_jobs = 0; /* Write an error message describing the exit status given in EXIT_CODE, EXIT_SIG, and COREDUMP, for the target TARGET_NAME. Append "(ignored)" if IGNORED is nonzero. */ static void child_error (target_name, exit_code, exit_sig, coredump, ignored) char *target_name; int exit_code, exit_sig, coredump; int ignored; { if (exit_sig == 0) error (ignored ? "[%s] Error %d (ignored)" : "*** [%s] Error %d", target_name, exit_code); else error ("*** [%s] %s%s", target_name, strsignal (exit_sig), coredump ? " (core dumped)" : ""); } static unsigned int dead_children = 0; /* Notice that a child died. reap_children should be called when convenient. */ RETSIGTYPE child_handler (sig) int sig; { ++dead_children; if (debug_flag) printf ("Got a SIGCHLD; %d unreaped children.\n", dead_children); } extern int shell_function_pid, shell_function_completed; /* Reap dead children, storing the returned status and the new command state (`cs_finished') in the `file' member of the `struct child' for the dead child, and removing the child from the chain. If BLOCK nonzero, reap at least one child, waiting for it to die if necessary. If ERR is nonzero, print an error message first. */ void reap_children (block, err) int block, err; { WAIT_T status; while ((children != 0 || shell_function_pid != 0) && (block || dead_children > 0)) { int remote = 0; register int pid; int exit_code, exit_sig, coredump; register struct child *lastc, *c; int child_failed; int any_remote, any_local; if (err && dead_children == 0) { /* We might block for a while, so let the user know why. */ fflush (stdout); error ("*** Waiting for unfinished jobs...."); } /* We have one less dead child to reap. The test and decrement are not atomic; if it is compiled into: register = dead_children - 1; dead_children = register; a SIGCHLD could come between the two instructions. child_handler increments dead_children. The second instruction here would lose that increment. But the only effect of dead_children being wrong is that we might wait longer than necessary to reap a child, and lose some parallelism; and we might print the "Waiting for unfinished jobs" message above when not necessary. */ if (dead_children != 0) --dead_children; any_remote = 0; any_local = shell_function_pid != -1; for (c = children; c != 0; c = c->next) { any_remote |= c->remote; any_local |= ! c->remote; if (debug_flag) printf ("Live child 0x%08lx PID %d%s\n", (unsigned long int) c, c->pid, c->remote ? " (remote)" : ""); } /* First, check for remote children. */ if (any_remote) pid = remote_status (&exit_code, &exit_sig, &coredump, 0); else pid = 0; if (pid < 0) { remote_status_lose: #ifdef EINTR if (errno == EINTR) continue; #endif pfatal_with_name ("remote_status"); } else if (pid == 0) { #ifndef __MSDOS__ /* No remote children. Check for local children. */ if (any_local) { #ifdef WAIT_NOHANG if (!block) pid = WAIT_NOHANG (&status); else #endif pid = wait (&status); } else pid = 0; if (pid < 0) { #ifdef EINTR if (errno == EINTR) continue; #endif pfatal_with_name ("wait"); } else if (pid == 0) { /* No local children. */ if (block && any_remote) { /* Now try a blocking wait for a remote child. */ pid = remote_status (&exit_code, &exit_sig, &coredump, 1); if (pid < 0) goto remote_status_lose; else if (pid == 0) /* No remote children either. Finally give up. */ break; else /* We got a remote child. */ remote = 1; } else break; } else { /* Chop the status word up. */ exit_code = WEXITSTATUS (status); exit_sig = WIFSIGNALED (status) ? WTERMSIG (status) : 0; coredump = WCOREDUMP (status); } #else /* MSDOS. */ /* Life is very different on MSDOS. */ pid = dos_pid - 1; status = dos_status; exit_code = dos_status; exit_sig = 0; coredump = 0; #endif /* Not MSDOS. */ } else /* We got a remote child. */ remote = 1; /* Check if this is the child of the `shell' function. */ if (!remote && pid == shell_function_pid) { /* It is. Leave an indicator for the `shell' function. */ if (exit_sig == 0 && exit_code == 127) shell_function_completed = -1; else shell_function_completed = 1; break; } child_failed = exit_sig != 0 || exit_code != 0; /* Search for a child matching the deceased one. */ lastc = 0; for (c = children; c != 0; lastc = c, c = c->next) if (c->remote == remote && c->pid == pid) break; if (c == 0) { /* An unknown child died. */ char buf[100]; sprintf (buf, "Unknown%s job %d", remote ? " remote" : "", pid); if (child_failed) child_error (buf, exit_code, exit_sig, coredump, ignore_errors_flag); else error ("%s finished.", buf); } else { if (debug_flag) printf ("Reaping %s child 0x%08lx PID %d%s\n", child_failed ? "losing" : "winning", (unsigned long int) c, c->pid, c->remote ? " (remote)" : ""); /* If this child had the good stdin, say it is now free. */ if (c->good_stdin) good_stdin_used = 0; if (child_failed && !c->noerror && !ignore_errors_flag) { /* The commands failed. Write an error message, delete non-precious targets, and abort. */ static int delete_on_error = -1; child_error (c->file->name, exit_code, exit_sig, coredump, 0); c->file->update_status = 2; if (delete_on_error == -1) { struct file *f = lookup_file (".DELETE_ON_ERROR"); delete_on_error = f != 0 && f->is_target; } if (exit_sig != 0 || delete_on_error) delete_child_targets (c); } else { if (child_failed) { /* The commands failed, but we don't care. */ child_error (c->file->name, exit_code, exit_sig, coredump, 1); child_failed = 0; } /* If there are more commands to run, try to start them. */ if (job_next_command (c)) { if (handling_fatal_signal) { /* Never start new commands while we are dying. Since there are more commands that wanted to be run, the target was not completely remade. So we treat this as if a command had failed. */ c->file->update_status = 2; } else { /* Check again whether to start remotely. Whether or not we want to changes over time. Also, start_remote_job may need state set up by start_remote_job_p. */ c->remote = start_remote_job_p (); start_job_command (c); if (c->file->command_state == cs_running) /* We successfully started the new command. Loop to reap more children. */ continue; } if (c->file->update_status != 0) /* We failed to start the commands. */ delete_child_targets (c); } else /* There are no more commands. We got through them all without an unignored error. Now the target has been successfully updated. */ c->file->update_status = 0; } /* When we get here, all the commands for C->file are finished (or aborted) and C->file->update_status contains 0 or 2. But C->file->command_state is still cs_running if all the commands ran; notice_finish_file looks for cs_running to tell it that it's interesting to check the file's modtime again now. */ if (! handling_fatal_signal) /* Notice if the target of the commands has been changed. This also propagates its values for command_state and update_status to its also_make files. */ notice_finished_file (c->file); if (debug_flag) printf ("Removing child 0x%08lx PID %d%s from chain.\n", (unsigned long int) c, c->pid, c->remote ? " (remote)" : ""); /* Remove the child from the chain and free it. */ if (lastc == 0) children = c->next; else lastc->next = c->next; if (! handling_fatal_signal) /* Avoid nonreentrancy. */ free_child (c); /* There is now another slot open. */ --job_slots_used; /* If the job failed, and the -k flag was not given, die, unless we are already in the process of dying. */ if (!err && child_failed && !keep_going_flag) die (2); } /* Only block for one child. */ block = 0; } } /* Free the storage allocated for CHILD. */ static void free_child (child) register struct child *child; { if (child->command_lines != 0) { register unsigned int i; for (i = 0; i < child->file->cmds->ncommand_lines; ++i) free (child->command_lines[i]); free ((char *) child->command_lines); } if (child->environment != 0) { register char **ep = child->environment; while (*ep != 0) free (*ep++); free ((char *) child->environment); } free ((char *) child); } #ifdef POSIX #ifdef __MSDOS__ void unblock_sigs () { return; } #else extern sigset_t fatal_signal_set; void unblock_sigs () { sigset_t empty; sigemptyset (&empty); sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, &empty, (sigset_t *) 0); } #endif #endif /* Start a job to run the commands specified in CHILD. CHILD is updated to reflect the commands and ID of the child process. */ static void start_job_command (child) register struct child *child; { static int bad_stdin = -1; register char *p; int flags; char **argv; /* Combine the flags parsed for the line itself with the flags specified globally for this target. */ flags = (child->file->command_flags | child->file->cmds->lines_flags[child->command_line - 1]); p = child->command_ptr; child->noerror = flags & COMMANDS_NOERROR; while (*p != '\0') { if (*p == '@') flags |= COMMANDS_SILENT; else if (*p == '+') flags |= COMMANDS_RECURSE; else if (*p == '-') child->noerror = 1; else if (!isblank (*p) && *p != '+') break; ++p; } /* If -q was given, just say that updating `failed'. The exit status of 1 tells the user that -q is saying `something to do'; the exit status for a random error is 2. */ if (question_flag && !(flags & COMMANDS_RECURSE)) { child->file->update_status = 1; notice_finished_file (child->file); return; } /* There may be some preceding whitespace left if there was nothing but a backslash on the first line. */ p = next_token (p); /* Figure out an argument list from this command line. */ { char *end; argv = construct_command_argv (p, &end, child->file); if (end == NULL) child->command_ptr = NULL; else { *end++ = '\0'; child->command_ptr = end; } } if (touch_flag && !(flags & COMMANDS_RECURSE)) { /* Go on to the next command. It might be the recursive one. We construct ARGV only to find the end of the command line. */ free (argv[0]); free ((char *) argv); argv = 0; } if (argv == 0) { next_command: /* This line has no commands. Go to the next. */ if (job_next_command (child)) start_job_command (child); else { /* No more commands. All done. */ child->file->update_status = 0; notice_finished_file (child->file); } return; } /* Print out the command. */ if (just_print_flag || (!(flags & COMMANDS_SILENT) && !silent_flag)) puts (p); /* Tell update_goal_chain that a command has been started on behalf of this target. It is important that this happens here and not in reap_children (where we used to do it), because reap_children might be reaping children from a different target. We want this increment to guaranteedly indicate that a command was started for the dependency chain (i.e., update_file recursion chain) we are processing. */ ++commands_started; /* If -n was given, recurse to get the next line in the sequence. */ if (just_print_flag && !(flags & COMMANDS_RECURSE)) { free (argv[0]); free ((char *) argv); goto next_command; } /* Flush the output streams so they won't have things written twice. */ fflush (stdout); fflush (stderr); /* Set up a bad standard input that reads from a broken pipe. */ if (bad_stdin == -1) { /* Make a file descriptor that is the read end of a broken pipe. This will be used for some children's standard inputs. */ int pd[2]; if (pipe (pd) == 0) { /* Close the write side. */ (void) close (pd[1]); /* Save the read side. */ bad_stdin = pd[0]; /* Set the descriptor to close on exec, so it does not litter any child's descriptor table. When it is dup2'd onto descriptor 0, that descriptor will not close on exec. */ #ifdef FD_SETFD #ifndef FD_CLOEXEC #define FD_CLOEXEC 1 #endif (void) fcntl (bad_stdin, F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC); #endif } } /* Decide whether to give this child the `good' standard input (one that points to the terminal or whatever), or the `bad' one that points to the read side of a broken pipe. */ child->good_stdin = !good_stdin_used; if (child->good_stdin) good_stdin_used = 1; child->deleted = 0; /* Set up the environment for the child. */ if (child->environment == 0) child->environment = target_environment (child->file); #ifndef __MSDOS__ /* start_waiting_job has set CHILD->remote if we can start a remote job. */ if (child->remote) { int is_remote, id, used_stdin; if (start_remote_job (argv, child->environment, child->good_stdin ? 0 : bad_stdin, &is_remote, &id, &used_stdin)) goto error; else { if (child->good_stdin && !used_stdin) { child->good_stdin = 0; good_stdin_used = 0; } child->remote = is_remote; child->pid = id; } } else { /* Fork the child process. */ char **parent_environ; #ifdef POSIX (void) sigprocmask (SIG_BLOCK, &fatal_signal_set, (sigset_t *) 0); #else #ifdef HAVE_SIGSETMASK (void) sigblock (fatal_signal_mask); #endif #endif child->remote = 0; parent_environ = environ; child->pid = vfork (); environ = parent_environ; /* Restore value child may have clobbered. */ if (child->pid == 0) { /* We are the child side. */ unblock_sigs (); child_execute_job (child->good_stdin ? 0 : bad_stdin, 1, argv, child->environment); } else if (child->pid < 0) { /* Fork failed! */ unblock_sigs (); perror_with_name ("vfork", ""); goto error; } } #else /* MSDOS. */ dos_status = spawnvpe (P_WAIT, argv[0], argv, child->environment); ++dead_children; child->pid = dos_pid++; if (dos_batch_file) { dos_batch_file = 0; remove (dos_bname); /* Ignore errors. */ if (access (dos_bename, 0)) dos_status = 1; else dos_status = 0; remove (dos_bename); } #endif /* Not MSDOS. */ /* We are the parent side. Set the state to say the commands are running and return. */ set_command_state (child->file, cs_running); /* Free the storage used by the child's argument list. */ free (argv[0]); free ((char *) argv); return; error: child->file->update_status = 2; notice_finished_file (child->file); } /* Try to start a child running. Returns nonzero if the child was started (and maybe finished), or zero if the load was too high and the child was put on the `waiting_jobs' chain. */ static int start_waiting_job (c) struct child *c; { /* If we can start a job remotely, we always want to, and don't care about the local load average. We record that the job should be started remotely in C->remote for start_job_command to test. */ c->remote = start_remote_job_p (); /* If this job is to be started locally, and we are already running some jobs, make this one wait if the load average is too high. */ if (!c->remote && job_slots_used > 0 && load_too_high ()) { /* Put this child on the chain of children waiting for the load average to go down. */ set_command_state (c->file, cs_running); c->next = waiting_jobs; waiting_jobs = c; return 0; } /* Start the first command; reap_children will run later command lines. */ start_job_command (c); switch (c->file->command_state) { case cs_running: c->next = children; if (debug_flag) printf ("Putting child 0x%08lx PID %05d%s on the chain.\n", (unsigned long int) c, c->pid, c->remote ? " (remote)" : ""); children = c; /* One more job slot is in use. */ ++job_slots_used; unblock_sigs (); break; case cs_not_started: /* All the command lines turned out to be empty. */ c->file->update_status = 0; /* FALLTHROUGH */ case cs_finished: notice_finished_file (c->file); free_child (c); break; default: assert (c->file->command_state == cs_finished); break; } return 1; } /* Create a `struct child' for FILE and start its commands running. */ void new_job (file) register struct file *file; { register struct commands *cmds = file->cmds; register struct child *c; char **lines; register unsigned int i; /* Let any previously decided-upon jobs that are waiting for the load to go down start before this new one. */ start_waiting_jobs (); /* Reap any children that might have finished recently. */ reap_children (0, 0); /* Chop the commands up into lines if they aren't already. */ chop_commands (cmds); if (job_slots != 0) /* Wait for a job slot to be freed up. */ while (job_slots_used == job_slots) reap_children (1, 0); /* Expand the command lines and store the results in LINES. */ lines = (char **) xmalloc (cmds->ncommand_lines * sizeof (char *)); for (i = 0; i < cmds->ncommand_lines; ++i) { /* Collapse backslash-newline combinations that are inside variable or function references. These are left alone by the parser so that they will appear in the echoing of commands (where they look nice); and collapsed by construct_command_argv when it tokenizes. But letting them survive inside function invocations loses because we don't want the functions to see them as part of the text. */ char *in, *out, *ref; /* IN points to where in the line we are scanning. OUT points to where in the line we are writing. When we collapse a backslash-newline combination, IN gets ahead out OUT. */ in = out = cmds->command_lines[i]; while ((ref = index (in, '$')) != 0) { ++ref; /* Move past the $. */ if (out != in) /* Copy the text between the end of the last chunk we processed (where IN points) and the new chunk we are about to process (where REF points). */ bcopy (in, out, ref - in); /* Move both pointers past the boring stuff. */ out += ref - in; in = ref; if (*ref == '(' || *ref == '{') { char openparen = *ref; char closeparen = openparen == '(' ? ')' : '}'; int count; char *p; *out++ = *in++; /* Copy OPENPAREN. */ /* IN now points past the opening paren or brace. Count parens or braces until it is matched. */ count = 0; while (*in != '\0') { if (*in == closeparen && --count < 0) break; else if (*in == '\\' && in[1] == '\n') { /* We have found a backslash-newline inside a variable or function reference. Eat it and any following whitespace. */ int quoted = 0; for (p = in - 1; p > ref && *p == '\\'; --p) quoted = !quoted; if (quoted) /* There were two or more backslashes, so this is not really a continuation line. We don't collapse the quoting backslashes here as is done in collapse_continuations, because the line will be collapsed again after expansion. */ *out++ = *in++; else { /* Skip the backslash, newline and any following whitespace. */ in = next_token (in + 2); /* Discard any preceding whitespace that has already been written to the output. */ while (out > ref && isblank (out[-1])) --out; /* Replace it all with a single space. */ *out++ = ' '; } } else { if (*in == openparen) ++count; *out++ = *in++; } } } } /* There are no more references in this line to worry about. Copy the remaining uninteresting text to the output. */ if (out != in) strcpy (out, in); /* Finally, expand the line. */ lines[i] = allocated_variable_expand_for_file (cmds->command_lines[i], file); } /* Start the command sequence, record it in a new `struct child', and add that to the chain. */ c = (struct child *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct child)); c->file = file; c->command_lines = lines; c->command_line = 0; c->command_ptr = 0; c->environment = 0; /* Fetch the first command line to be run. */ job_next_command (c); /* The job is now primed. Start it running. (This will notice if there are in fact no commands.) */ start_waiting_job (c); if (job_slots == 1) /* Since there is only one job slot, make things run linearly. Wait for the child to die, setting the state to `cs_finished'. */ while (file->command_state == cs_running) reap_children (1, 0); } /* Move CHILD's pointers to the next command for it to execute. Returns nonzero if there is another command. */ static int job_next_command (child) struct child *child; { while (child->command_ptr == 0 || *child->command_ptr == '\0') { /* There are no more lines in the expansion of this line. */ if (child->command_line == child->file->cmds->ncommand_lines) { /* There are no more lines to be expanded. */ child->command_ptr = 0; return 0; } else /* Get the next line to run. */ child->command_ptr = child->command_lines[child->command_line++]; } return 1; } static int load_too_high () { #ifdef __MSDOS__ return 1; #else extern int getloadavg (); double load; if (max_load_average < 0) return 0; make_access (); if (getloadavg (&load, 1) != 1) { static int lossage = -1; /* Complain only once for the same error. */ if (lossage == -1 || errno != lossage) { if (errno == 0) /* An errno value of zero means getloadavg is just unsupported. */ error ("cannot enforce load limits on this operating system"); else perror_with_name ("cannot enforce load limit: ", "getloadavg"); } lossage = errno; load = 0; } user_access (); return load >= max_load_average; #endif } /* Start jobs that are waiting for the load to be lower. */ void start_waiting_jobs () { struct child *job; if (waiting_jobs == 0) return; do { /* Check for recently deceased descendants. */ reap_children (0, 0); /* Take a job off the waiting list. */ job = waiting_jobs; waiting_jobs = job->next; /* Try to start that job. We break out of the loop as soon as start_waiting_job puts one back on the waiting list. */ } while (start_waiting_job (job) && waiting_jobs != 0); } /* Replace the current process with one executing the command in ARGV. STDIN_FD and STDOUT_FD are used as the process's stdin and stdout; ENVP is the environment of the new program. This function does not return. */ void child_execute_job (stdin_fd, stdout_fd, argv, envp) int stdin_fd, stdout_fd; char **argv, **envp; { if (stdin_fd != 0) (void) dup2 (stdin_fd, 0); if (stdout_fd != 1) (void) dup2 (stdout_fd, 1); /* Free up file descriptors. */ { register int d; int max = getdtablesize (); for (d = 3; d < max; ++d) (void) close (d); } /* Run the command. */ exec_command (argv, envp); } /* Replace the current process with one running the command in ARGV, with environment ENVP. This function does not return. */ void exec_command (argv, envp) char **argv, **envp; { /* Be the user, permanently. */ child_access (); /* Run the program. */ environ = envp; execvp (argv[0], argv); switch (errno) { case ENOENT: error ("%s: Command not found", argv[0]); break; case ENOEXEC: { /* The file is not executable. Try it as a shell script. */ extern char *getenv (); char *shell; char **new_argv; int argc; shell = getenv ("SHELL"); if (shell == 0) shell = default_shell; argc = 1; while (argv[argc] != 0) ++argc; new_argv = (char **) alloca ((1 + argc + 1) * sizeof (char *)); new_argv[0] = shell; new_argv[1] = program; while (argc > 0) { new_argv[1 + argc] = argv[argc]; --argc; } execvp (shell, new_argv); if (errno == ENOENT) error ("%s: Shell program not found", shell); else perror_with_name ("execvp: ", shell); break; } default: perror_with_name ("execvp: ", argv[0]); break; } _exit (127); } /* Figure out the argument list necessary to run LINE as a command. Try to avoid using a shell. This routine handles only ' quoting, and " quoting when no backslash, $ or ` characters are seen in the quotes. Starting quotes may be escaped with a backslash. If any of the characters in sh_chars[] is seen, or any of the builtin commands listed in sh_cmds[] is the first word of a line, the shell is used. If RESTP is not NULL, *RESTP is set to point to the first newline in LINE. If *RESTP is NULL, newlines will be ignored. SHELL is the shell to use, or nil to use the default shell. IFS is the value of $IFS, or nil (meaning the default). */ static char ** construct_command_argv_internal (line, restp, shell, ifs) char *line, **restp; char *shell, *ifs; { #ifdef __MSDOS__ static char sh_chars[] = "\"|<>"; static char *sh_cmds[] = { "break", "call", "cd", "chcp", "chdir", "cls", "copy", "ctty", "date", "del", "dir", "echo", "erase", "exit", "for", "goto", "if", "if", "md", "mkdir", "path", "pause", "prompt", "rem", "ren", "rename", "set", "shift", "time", "type", "ver", "verify", "vol", ":", 0 }; #else static char sh_chars[] = "#;\"*?[]&|<>(){}$`^"; static char *sh_cmds[] = { "cd", "eval", "exec", "exit", "login", "logout", "set", "umask", "wait", "while", "for", "case", "if", ":", ".", "break", "continue", "export", "read", "readonly", "shift", "times", "trap", "switch", 0 }; #endif register int i; register char *p; register char *ap; char *end; int instring, word_has_equals, seen_nonequals; char **new_argv = 0; if (restp != NULL) *restp = NULL; /* Make sure not to bother processing an empty line. */ while (isblank (*line)) ++line; if (*line == '\0') return 0; /* See if it is safe to parse commands internally. */ if (shell == 0) shell = default_shell; else if (strcmp (shell, default_shell)) goto slow; if (ifs != 0) for (ap = ifs; *ap != '\0'; ++ap) if (*ap != ' ' && *ap != '\t' && *ap != '\n') goto slow; i = strlen (line) + 1; /* More than 1 arg per character is impossible. */ new_argv = (char **) xmalloc (i * sizeof (char *)); /* All the args can fit in a buffer as big as LINE is. */ ap = new_argv[0] = (char *) xmalloc (i); end = ap + i; /* I is how many complete arguments have been found. */ i = 0; instring = word_has_equals = seen_nonequals = 0; for (p = line; *p != '\0'; ++p) { if (ap > end) abort (); if (instring) { string_char: /* Inside a string, just copy any char except a closing quote or a backslash-newline combination. */ if (*p == instring) instring = 0; else if (*p == '\\' && p[1] == '\n') goto swallow_escaped_newline; else if (*p == '\n' && restp != NULL) { /* End of the command line. */ *restp = p; goto end_of_line; } /* Backslash, $, and ` are special inside double quotes. If we see any of those, punt. */ else if (instring == '"' && index ("\\$`", *p) != 0) goto slow; else *ap++ = *p; } else if (index (sh_chars, *p) != 0) /* Not inside a string, but it's a special char. */ goto slow; else /* Not a special char. */ switch (*p) { case '=': /* Equals is a special character in leading words before the first word with no equals sign in it. This is not the case with sh -k, but we never get here when using nonstandard shell flags. */ if (! seen_nonequals) goto slow; word_has_equals = 1; *ap++ = '='; break; case '\\': /* Backslash-newline combinations are eaten. */ if (p[1] == '\n') { swallow_escaped_newline: /* Eat the backslash, the newline, and following whitespace, replacing it all with a single space. */ p += 2; /* If there is a tab after a backslash-newline, remove it from the source line which will be echoed, since it was most likely used to line up the continued line with the previous one. */ if (*p == '\t') strcpy (p, p + 1); if (instring) goto string_char; else { if (ap != new_argv[i]) /* Treat this as a space, ending the arg. But if it's at the beginning of the arg, it should just get eaten, rather than becoming an empty arg. */ goto end_of_arg; else p = next_token (p) - 1; } } else if (p[1] != '\0') /* Copy and skip the following char. */ *ap++ = *++p; break; case '\'': case '"': instring = *p; break; case '\n': if (restp != NULL) { /* End of the command line. */ *restp = p; goto end_of_line; } else /* Newlines are not special. */ *ap++ = '\n'; break; case ' ': case '\t': end_of_arg: /* We have the end of an argument. Terminate the text of the argument. */ *ap++ = '\0'; new_argv[++i] = ap; /* Update SEEN_NONEQUALS, which tells us if every word heretofore has contained an `='. */ seen_nonequals |= ! word_has_equals; if (word_has_equals && ! seen_nonequals) /* An `=' in a word before the first word without one is magical. */ goto slow; word_has_equals = 0; /* Prepare for the next word. */ /* If this argument is the command name, see if it is a built-in shell command. If so, have the shell handle it. */ if (i == 1) { register int j; for (j = 0; sh_cmds[j] != 0; ++j) if (streq (sh_cmds[j], new_argv[0])) goto slow; } /* Ignore multiple whitespace chars. */ p = next_token (p); /* Next iteration should examine the first nonwhite char. */ --p; break; default: *ap++ = *p; break; } } end_of_line: if (instring) /* Let the shell deal with an unterminated quote. */ goto slow; /* Terminate the last argument and the argument list. */ *ap = '\0'; if (new_argv[i][0] != '\0') ++i; new_argv[i] = 0; if (i == 1) { register int j; for (j = 0; sh_cmds[j] != 0; ++j) if (streq (sh_cmds[j], new_argv[0])) goto slow; } if (new_argv[0] == 0) /* Line was empty. */ return 0; else return new_argv; slow:; /* We must use the shell. */ if (new_argv != 0) { /* Free the old argument list we were working on. */ free (new_argv[0]); free (new_argv); } #ifdef __MSDOS__ { FILE *batch; dos_batch_file = 1; if (dos_bname == 0) { dos_bname = tempnam (".", "mk"); for (i = 0; dos_bname[i] != '\0'; ++i) if (dos_bname[i] == '/') dos_bname[i] = '\\'; dos_bename = (char *) xmalloc (strlen (dos_bname) + 5); strcpy (dos_bename, dos_bname); strcat (dos_bname, ".bat"); strcat (dos_bename, ".err"); } batch = fopen (dos_bename, "w"); /* Create a file. */ if (batch != NULL) fclose (batch); batch = fopen (dos_bname, "w"); fputs ("@echo off\n", batch); fputs (line, batch); fprintf (batch, "\nif errorlevel 1 del %s\n", dos_bename); fclose (batch); new_argv = (char **) xmalloc(2 * sizeof(char *)); new_argv[0] = strdup (dos_bname); new_argv[1] = 0; } #else /* Not MSDOS. */ { /* SHELL may be a multi-word command. Construct a command line "SHELL -c LINE", with all special chars in LINE escaped. Then recurse, expanding this command line to get the final argument list. */ unsigned int shell_len = strlen (shell); static char minus_c[] = " -c "; unsigned int line_len = strlen (line); char *new_line = (char *) alloca (shell_len + (sizeof (minus_c) - 1) + (line_len * 2) + 1); ap = new_line; bcopy (shell, ap, shell_len); ap += shell_len; bcopy (minus_c, ap, sizeof (minus_c) - 1); ap += sizeof (minus_c) - 1; for (p = line; *p != '\0'; ++p) { if (restp != NULL && *p == '\n') { *restp = p; break; } else if (*p == '\\' && p[1] == '\n') { /* Eat the backslash, the newline, and following whitespace, replacing it all with a single space (which is escaped from the shell). */ p += 2; /* If there is a tab after a backslash-newline, remove it from the source line which will be echoed, since it was most likely used to line up the continued line with the previous one. */ if (*p == '\t') strcpy (p, p + 1); p = next_token (p); --p; *ap++ = '\\'; *ap++ = ' '; continue; } if (*p == '\\' || *p == '\'' || *p == '"' || isspace (*p) || index (sh_chars, *p) != 0) *ap++ = '\\'; *ap++ = *p; } *ap = '\0'; new_argv = construct_command_argv_internal (new_line, (char **) NULL, (char *) 0, (char *) 0); } #endif /* MSDOS. */ return new_argv; } /* Figure out the argument list necessary to run LINE as a command. Try to avoid using a shell. This routine handles only ' quoting, and " quoting when no backslash, $ or ` characters are seen in the quotes. Starting quotes may be escaped with a backslash. If any of the characters in sh_chars[] is seen, or any of the builtin commands listed in sh_cmds[] is the first word of a line, the shell is used. If RESTP is not NULL, *RESTP is set to point to the first newline in LINE. If *RESTP is NULL, newlines will be ignored. FILE is the target whose commands these are. It is used for variable expansion for $(SHELL) and $(IFS). */ char ** construct_command_argv (line, restp, file) char *line, **restp; struct file *file; { char *shell, *ifs; char **argv; { /* Turn off --warn-undefined-variables while we expand SHELL and IFS. */ int save = warn_undefined_variables_flag; warn_undefined_variables_flag = 0; shell = allocated_variable_expand_for_file ("$(SHELL)", file); ifs = allocated_variable_expand_for_file ("$(IFS)", file); warn_undefined_variables_flag = save; } argv = construct_command_argv_internal (line, restp, shell, ifs); free (shell); free (ifs); return argv; } #ifndef HAVE_DUP2 int dup2 (old, new) int old, new; { int fd; (void) close (new); fd = dup (old); if (fd != new) { (void) close (fd); errno = EMFILE; return -1; } return fd; } #endif