binutils-gdb/gnulib/import/getcwd.c
Simon Marchi 5df4cba632 gdb: update gnulib import
This is mostly to get this commit from gnulib:

    e22cd2677a4b7beacbf30b93bb0559f7b89f96ce
    Add ‘extern "C"’ to count-one-bits.h etc.

... which fixes this compilation problem I observed with clang++:

      CXXLD  gdb
    arch/arm-get-next-pcs.o:arm-get-next-pcs.c:function thumb_get_next_pcs_raw(arm_get_next_pcs*): error: undefined reference to 'count_one_bits(unsigned int)'
    <more such undefined references>

I built-tested on GNU/Linux x86-64 (gcc-9 and clang-9) as well as with the
x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc cross-compiler.

gnulib/ChangeLog:

	* update-gnulib.sh (GNULIB_COMMIT_SHA1): Bump to
	e22cd2677a4b7beacbf30b93bb0559f7b89f96ce.
	* Makefile.in, config.in, configure, import/*: Re-generate.
2020-02-22 20:37:18 -05:00

479 lines
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/* Copyright (C) 1991-1999, 2004-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
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 <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#if !_LIBC
# include <config.h>
# include <unistd.h>
#endif
#include <errno.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include <fcntl.h> /* For AT_FDCWD on Solaris 9. */
/* If this host provides the openat function or if we're using the
gnulib replacement function with a native fdopendir, then enable
code below to make getcwd more efficient and robust. */
#if defined HAVE_OPENAT || (defined GNULIB_OPENAT && defined HAVE_FDOPENDIR)
# define HAVE_OPENAT_SUPPORT 1
#else
# define HAVE_OPENAT_SUPPORT 0
#endif
#ifndef __set_errno
# define __set_errno(val) (errno = (val))
#endif
#include <dirent.h>
#ifndef _D_EXACT_NAMLEN
# define _D_EXACT_NAMLEN(d) strlen ((d)->d_name)
#endif
#ifndef _D_ALLOC_NAMLEN
# define _D_ALLOC_NAMLEN(d) (_D_EXACT_NAMLEN (d) + 1)
#endif
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#if _LIBC
# ifndef mempcpy
# define mempcpy __mempcpy
# endif
#endif
#ifndef MAX
# define MAX(a, b) ((a) < (b) ? (b) : (a))
#endif
#ifndef MIN
# define MIN(a, b) ((a) < (b) ? (a) : (b))
#endif
#include "pathmax.h"
/* In this file, PATH_MAX only serves as a threshold for choosing among two
algorithms. */
#ifndef PATH_MAX
# define PATH_MAX 8192
#endif
#if D_INO_IN_DIRENT
# define MATCHING_INO(dp, ino) ((dp)->d_ino == (ino))
#else
# define MATCHING_INO(dp, ino) true
#endif
#if HAVE_MSVC_INVALID_PARAMETER_HANDLER
# include "msvc-inval.h"
#endif
#if !_LIBC
# define __getcwd rpl_getcwd
# define __lstat lstat
# define __closedir closedir
# define __opendir opendir
# define __readdir readdir
#endif
/* The results of opendir() in this file are not used with dirfd and fchdir,
and we do not leak fds to any single-threaded code that could use stdio,
therefore save some unnecessary recursion in fchdir.c.
FIXME - if the kernel ever adds support for multi-thread safety for
avoiding standard fds, then we should use opendir_safer and
openat_safer. */
#ifdef GNULIB_defined_opendir
# undef opendir
#endif
#ifdef GNULIB_defined_closedir
# undef closedir
#endif
#ifdef _MSC_VER
# if HAVE_MSVC_INVALID_PARAMETER_HANDLER
static char *
getcwd_nothrow (char *buf, size_t size)
{
char *result;
TRY_MSVC_INVAL
{
result = _getcwd (buf, size);
}
CATCH_MSVC_INVAL
{
result = NULL;
errno = ERANGE;
}
DONE_MSVC_INVAL;
return result;
}
# else
# define getcwd_nothrow _getcwd
# endif
# define getcwd_system getcwd_nothrow
#else
# define getcwd_system getcwd
#endif
/* Get the name of the current working directory, and put it in SIZE
bytes of BUF. Returns NULL if the directory couldn't be determined or
SIZE was too small. If successful, returns BUF. In GNU, if BUF is
NULL, an array is allocated with 'malloc'; the array is SIZE bytes long,
unless SIZE == 0, in which case it is as big as necessary. */
char *
__getcwd (char *buf, size_t size)
{
/* Lengths of big file name components and entire file names, and a
deep level of file name nesting. These numbers are not upper
bounds; they are merely large values suitable for initial
allocations, designed to be large enough for most real-world
uses. */
enum
{
BIG_FILE_NAME_COMPONENT_LENGTH = 255,
BIG_FILE_NAME_LENGTH = MIN (4095, PATH_MAX - 1),
DEEP_NESTING = 100
};
#if HAVE_OPENAT_SUPPORT
int fd = AT_FDCWD;
bool fd_needs_closing = false;
#else
char dots[DEEP_NESTING * sizeof ".." + BIG_FILE_NAME_COMPONENT_LENGTH + 1];
char *dotlist = dots;
size_t dotsize = sizeof dots;
size_t dotlen = 0;
#endif
DIR *dirstream = NULL;
dev_t rootdev, thisdev;
ino_t rootino, thisino;
char *dir;
register char *dirp;
struct stat st;
size_t allocated = size;
size_t used;
#if HAVE_MINIMALLY_WORKING_GETCWD
/* If AT_FDCWD is not defined, the algorithm below is O(N**2) and
this is much slower than the system getcwd (at least on
GNU/Linux). So trust the system getcwd's results unless they
look suspicious.
Use the system getcwd even if we have openat support, since the
system getcwd works even when a parent is unreadable, while the
openat-based approach does not.
But on AIX 5.1..7.1, the system getcwd is not even minimally
working: If the current directory name is slightly longer than
PATH_MAX, it omits the first directory component and returns
this wrong result with errno = 0. */
# undef getcwd
dir = getcwd_system (buf, size);
if (dir || (size && errno == ERANGE))
return dir;
/* Solaris getcwd (NULL, 0) fails with errno == EINVAL, but it has
internal magic that lets it work even if an ancestor directory is
inaccessible, which is better in many cases. So in this case try
again with a buffer that's almost always big enough. */
if (errno == EINVAL && buf == NULL && size == 0)
{
char big_buffer[BIG_FILE_NAME_LENGTH + 1];
dir = getcwd_system (big_buffer, sizeof big_buffer);
if (dir)
return strdup (dir);
}
# if HAVE_PARTLY_WORKING_GETCWD
/* The system getcwd works, except it sometimes fails when it
shouldn't, setting errno to ERANGE, ENAMETOOLONG, or ENOENT. */
if (errno != ERANGE && errno != ENAMETOOLONG && errno != ENOENT)
return NULL;
# endif
#endif
if (size == 0)
{
if (buf != NULL)
{
__set_errno (EINVAL);
return NULL;
}
allocated = BIG_FILE_NAME_LENGTH + 1;
}
if (buf == NULL)
{
dir = malloc (allocated);
if (dir == NULL)
return NULL;
}
else
dir = buf;
dirp = dir + allocated;
*--dirp = '\0';
if (__lstat (".", &st) < 0)
goto lose;
thisdev = st.st_dev;
thisino = st.st_ino;
if (__lstat ("/", &st) < 0)
goto lose;
rootdev = st.st_dev;
rootino = st.st_ino;
while (!(thisdev == rootdev && thisino == rootino))
{
struct dirent *d;
dev_t dotdev;
ino_t dotino;
bool mount_point;
int parent_status;
size_t dirroom;
size_t namlen;
bool use_d_ino = true;
/* Look at the parent directory. */
#if HAVE_OPENAT_SUPPORT
fd = openat (fd, "..", O_RDONLY);
if (fd < 0)
goto lose;
fd_needs_closing = true;
parent_status = fstat (fd, &st);
#else
dotlist[dotlen++] = '.';
dotlist[dotlen++] = '.';
dotlist[dotlen] = '\0';
parent_status = __lstat (dotlist, &st);
#endif
if (parent_status != 0)
goto lose;
if (dirstream && __closedir (dirstream) != 0)
{
dirstream = NULL;
goto lose;
}
/* Figure out if this directory is a mount point. */
dotdev = st.st_dev;
dotino = st.st_ino;
mount_point = dotdev != thisdev;
/* Search for the last directory. */
#if HAVE_OPENAT_SUPPORT
dirstream = fdopendir (fd);
if (dirstream == NULL)
goto lose;
fd_needs_closing = false;
#else
dirstream = __opendir (dotlist);
if (dirstream == NULL)
goto lose;
dotlist[dotlen++] = '/';
#endif
for (;;)
{
/* Clear errno to distinguish EOF from error if readdir returns
NULL. */
__set_errno (0);
d = __readdir (dirstream);
/* When we've iterated through all directory entries without finding
one with a matching d_ino, rewind the stream and consider each
name again, but this time, using lstat. This is necessary in a
chroot on at least one system (glibc-2.3.6 + linux 2.6.12), where
.., ../.., ../../.., etc. all had the same device number, yet the
d_ino values for entries in / did not match those obtained
via lstat. */
if (d == NULL && errno == 0 && use_d_ino)
{
use_d_ino = false;
rewinddir (dirstream);
d = __readdir (dirstream);
}
if (d == NULL)
{
if (errno == 0)
/* EOF on dirstream, which can mean e.g., that the current
directory has been removed. */
__set_errno (ENOENT);
goto lose;
}
if (d->d_name[0] == '.' &&
(d->d_name[1] == '\0' ||
(d->d_name[1] == '.' && d->d_name[2] == '\0')))
continue;
if (use_d_ino)
{
bool match = (MATCHING_INO (d, thisino) || mount_point);
if (! match)
continue;
}
{
int entry_status;
#if HAVE_OPENAT_SUPPORT
entry_status = fstatat (fd, d->d_name, &st, AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW);
#else
/* Compute size needed for this file name, or for the file
name ".." in the same directory, whichever is larger.
Room for ".." might be needed the next time through
the outer loop. */
size_t name_alloc = _D_ALLOC_NAMLEN (d);
size_t filesize = dotlen + MAX (sizeof "..", name_alloc);
if (filesize < dotlen)
goto memory_exhausted;
if (dotsize < filesize)
{
/* My, what a deep directory tree you have, Grandma. */
size_t newsize = MAX (filesize, dotsize * 2);
size_t i;
if (newsize < dotsize)
goto memory_exhausted;
if (dotlist != dots)
free (dotlist);
dotlist = malloc (newsize);
if (dotlist == NULL)
goto lose;
dotsize = newsize;
i = 0;
do
{
dotlist[i++] = '.';
dotlist[i++] = '.';
dotlist[i++] = '/';
}
while (i < dotlen);
}
memcpy (dotlist + dotlen, d->d_name, _D_ALLOC_NAMLEN (d));
entry_status = __lstat (dotlist, &st);
#endif
/* We don't fail here if we cannot stat() a directory entry.
This can happen when (network) file systems fail. If this
entry is in fact the one we are looking for we will find
out soon as we reach the end of the directory without
having found anything. */
if (entry_status == 0 && S_ISDIR (st.st_mode)
&& st.st_dev == thisdev && st.st_ino == thisino)
break;
}
}
dirroom = dirp - dir;
namlen = _D_EXACT_NAMLEN (d);
if (dirroom <= namlen)
{
if (size != 0)
{
__set_errno (ERANGE);
goto lose;
}
else
{
char *tmp;
size_t oldsize = allocated;
allocated += MAX (allocated, namlen);
if (allocated < oldsize
|| ! (tmp = realloc (dir, allocated)))
goto memory_exhausted;
/* Move current contents up to the end of the buffer.
This is guaranteed to be non-overlapping. */
dirp = memcpy (tmp + allocated - (oldsize - dirroom),
tmp + dirroom,
oldsize - dirroom);
dir = tmp;
}
}
dirp -= namlen;
memcpy (dirp, d->d_name, namlen);
*--dirp = '/';
thisdev = dotdev;
thisino = dotino;
}
if (dirstream && __closedir (dirstream) != 0)
{
dirstream = NULL;
goto lose;
}
if (dirp == &dir[allocated - 1])
*--dirp = '/';
#if ! HAVE_OPENAT_SUPPORT
if (dotlist != dots)
free (dotlist);
#endif
used = dir + allocated - dirp;
memmove (dir, dirp, used);
if (size == 0)
/* Ensure that the buffer is only as large as necessary. */
buf = (used < allocated ? realloc (dir, used) : dir);
if (buf == NULL)
/* Either buf was NULL all along, or 'realloc' failed but
we still have the original string. */
buf = dir;
return buf;
memory_exhausted:
__set_errno (ENOMEM);
lose:
{
int save = errno;
if (dirstream)
__closedir (dirstream);
#if HAVE_OPENAT_SUPPORT
if (fd_needs_closing)
close (fd);
#else
if (dotlist != dots)
free (dotlist);
#endif
if (buf == NULL)
free (dir);
__set_errno (save);
}
return NULL;
}
#ifdef weak_alias
weak_alias (__getcwd, getcwd)
#endif