(1 (first matches))
(t (bug "!ENUMERATE-MATCHES returned more than one match on a non-wild pathname")))))
\f
-;;;; TRUENAME and PROBE-FILE
+;;;; TRUENAME, PROBE-FILE, FILE-AUTHOR, FILE-WRITE-DATE.
-;;; This is only trivially different from PROBE-FILE, which is silly
-;;; but ANSI.
-(defun truename (pathname)
- #!+sb-doc
- "Return the pathname for the actual file described by PATHNAME.
-An error of type FILE-ERROR is signalled if no such file exists, or the
-pathname is wild.
-
-Under Unix, the TRUENAME of a broken symlink is considered to be the name of
-the broken symlink itself."
- (let ((result (probe-file pathname)))
- (unless result
+;;; Rewritten in 12/2007 by RMK, replacing 13+ year old CMU code that
+;;; made a mess of things in order to support search lists (which SBCL
+;;; has never had). These are now all relatively straightforward
+;;; wrappers around stat(2) and realpath(2), with the same basic logic
+;;; in all cases. The wrinkles to be aware of:
+;;;
+;;; * SBCL defines the truename of an existing, dangling or
+;;; self-referring symlink to be the symlink itself.
+;;; * The old version of PROBE-FILE merged the pathspec against
+;;; *DEFAULT-PATHNAME-DEFAULTS* twice, and so lost when *D-P-D*
+;;; was a relative pathname. Even if the case where *D-P-D* is a
+;;; relative pathname is problematic, there's no particular reason
+;;; to get that wrong, so let's try not to.
+;;; * Note that while stat(2) is probably atomic, getting the truename
+;;; for a filename involves poking all over the place, and so is
+;;; subject to race conditions if other programs mutate the file
+;;; system while we're resolving symlinks. So it's not implausible for
+;;; realpath(3) to fail even if stat(2) succeeded. There's nothing
+;;; obvious we can do about this, however.
+;;; * Windows' apparent analogue of realpath(3) is called
+;;; GetFullPathName, and it's a bit less useful than realpath(3).
+;;; In particular, while realpath(3) errors in case the file doesn't
+;;; exist, GetFullPathName seems to return a filename in all cases.
+;;; As realpath(3) is not atomic anyway, we only ever call it when
+;;; we think a file exists, so just be careful when rewriting this
+;;; routine.
+(defun query-file-system (pathspec query-for enoent-errorp)
+ (let ((pathname (translate-logical-pathname
+ (merge-pathnames
+ (pathname pathspec)
+ (sane-default-pathname-defaults)))))
+ (when (wild-pathname-p pathname)
(error 'simple-file-error
:pathname pathname
- :format-control "The file ~S does not exist."
- :format-arguments (list (namestring pathname))))
- result))
+ :format-control "~@<can't find the ~A of wild pathname ~A~
+ (physicalized from ~A).~:>"
+ :format-arguments (list query-for pathname pathspec)))
+ (let ((filename (native-namestring pathname :as-file t)))
+ (multiple-value-bind (existsp errno ino mode nlink uid gid rdev size
+ atime mtime)
+ (sb!unix:unix-stat filename)
+ (declare (ignore ino nlink gid rdev size atime))
+ (if existsp
+ (case query-for
+ (:truename (parse-native-namestring
+ ;; Note: in case the file is stat'able, POSIX
+ ;; realpath(3) gets us a canonical absolute
+ ;; filename, even if the post-merge PATHNAME
+ ;; is not absolute...
+ (multiple-value-bind (realpath errno)
+ (sb!unix:unix-realpath filename)
+ (if realpath
+ realpath
+ (simple-file-perror "couldn't resolve ~A"
+ filename errno)))
+ (pathname-host pathname)
+ (sane-default-pathname-defaults)
+ ;; ... but without any trailing slash.
+ :as-directory (eql (logand mode sb!unix:s-ifmt)
+ sb!unix:s-ifdir)))
+ (:author (sb!unix:uid-username uid))
+ (:write-date (+ unix-to-universal-time mtime)))
+ (progn
+ ;; SBCL has for many years had a policy that a pathname
+ ;; that names an existing, dangling or self-referential
+ ;; symlink denotes the symlink itself. stat(2) fails
+ ;; and sets errno to ELOOP in this case, but we must
+ ;; distinguish cases where the symlink exists from ones
+ ;; where there's a loop in the apparent containing
+ ;; directory.
+ #!-win32
+ (multiple-value-bind (linkp ignore ino mode nlink uid gid rdev
+ size atime mtime)
+ (sb!unix:unix-lstat filename)
+ (declare (ignore ignore ino mode nlink gid rdev size atime))
+ (when (and (or (= errno sb!unix:enoent)
+ (= errno sb!unix:eloop))
+ linkp)
+ (return-from query-file-system
+ (case query-for
+ (:truename
+ ;; So here's a trick: since lstat succeded,
+ ;; FILENAME exists, so its directory exists and
+ ;; only the non-directory part is loopy. So
+ ;; let's resolve FILENAME's directory part with
+ ;; realpath(3), in order to get a canonical
+ ;; absolute name for the directory, and then
+ ;; return a pathname having PATHNAME's name,
+ ;; type, and version, but the rest from the
+ ;; truename of the directory. Since we turned
+ ;; PATHNAME into FILENAME "as a file", FILENAME
+ ;; does not end in a slash, and so we get the
+ ;; directory part of FILENAME by reparsing
+ ;; FILENAME and masking off its name, type, and
+ ;; version bits. But note not to call ourselves
+ ;; recursively, because we don't want to
+ ;; re-merge against *DEFAULT-PATHNAME-DEFAULTS*,
+ ;; since PATHNAME may be a relative pathname.
+ (merge-pathnames
+ (parse-native-namestring
+ (multiple-value-bind (realpath errno)
+ (sb!unix:unix-realpath
+ (native-namestring
+ (make-pathname
+ :name :unspecific
+ :type :unspecific
+ :version :unspecific
+ :defaults (parse-native-namestring
+ filename
+ (pathname-host pathname)
+ (sane-default-pathname-defaults)))))
+ (if realpath
+ realpath
+ (simple-file-perror "couldn't resolve ~A"
+ filename errno)))
+ (pathname-host pathname)
+ (sane-default-pathname-defaults)
+ :as-directory t)
+ pathname))
+ (:author (sb!unix:uid-username uid))
+ (:write-date (+ unix-to-universal-time mtime))))))
+ ;; If we're still here, the file doesn't exist; return
+ ;; NIL or error.
+ (if (and (= errno sb!unix:enoent) (not enoent-errorp))
+ nil
+ (simple-file-perror
+ (format nil "failed to find the ~A of ~~A" query-for)
+ pathspec errno))))))))
+
+
+(defun probe-file (pathspec)
+ #!+sb-doc
+ "Return the truename of PATHSPEC if such a file exists, the
+coercion of PATHSPEC to a pathname if PATHSPEC names a symlink
+that links to itself or to a file that doesn't exist, or NIL if
+errno is set to ENOENT after trying to stat(2) the file. An
+error of type FILE-ERROR is signaled if PATHSPEC is a wild
+pathname, or for any other circumstance where stat(2) fails."
+ (query-file-system pathspec :truename nil))
+
+
+(defun truename (pathspec)
+ #!+sb-doc
+ "If PATHSPEC is a pathname that names an existing file, return
+a pathname that denotes a canonicalized name for the file. If
+pathspec is a stream associated with a file, return a pathname
+that denotes a canonicalized name for the file associated with
+the stream.
+
+An error of type FILE-ERROR is signalled if no such file exists
+or if the file system is such that a canonicalized file name
+cannot be determined or if the pathname is wild.
+
+Under Unix, the TRUENAME of a symlink that links to itself or to
+a file that doesn't exist is considered to be the name of the
+broken symlink itself."
+ ;; Note that eventually this routine might be different for streams
+ ;; than for other pathname designators.
+ (if (streamp pathspec)
+ (query-file-system pathspec :truename t)
+ (query-file-system pathspec :truename t)))
+
+(defun file-author (pathspec)
+ #!+sb-doc
+ "Return the author of the file specified by PATHSPEC. Signal an
+error of type FILE-ERROR if no such file exists, or if PATHSPEC
+is a wild pathname."
+ (query-file-system pathspec :write-date t))
-(defun probe-file (pathname)
+(defun file-write-date (pathspec)
#!+sb-doc
- "Return a pathname which is the truename of the file if it exists, or NIL
-otherwise. An error of type FILE-ERROR is signaled if pathname is wild."
- (let* ((defaulted-pathname (merge-pathnames
- pathname
- (sane-default-pathname-defaults)))
- (namestring (unix-namestring defaulted-pathname t)))
- (when (and namestring (sb!unix:unix-file-kind namestring t))
- (let ((trueishname (sb!unix:unix-resolve-links namestring)))
- (when trueishname
- (let* ((*ignore-wildcards* t)
- (name (simplify-namestring
- trueishname
- (pathname-host defaulted-pathname))))
- (if (eq (sb!unix:unix-file-kind name) :directory)
- ;; FIXME: this might work, but it's ugly.
- (pathname (concatenate 'string name "/"))
- (pathname name))))))))
+ "Return the write date of the file specified by PATHSPEC.
+An error of type FILE-ERROR is signaled if no such file exists,
+or if PATHSPEC is a wild pathname."
+ (query-file-system pathspec :write-date t))
\f
;;;; miscellaneous other operations
;; Needs to bypass PARSE-NATIVE-NAMESTRING & ENSURE-TRAILING-SLASH
(return-from user-homedir-pathname
(sb!win32::get-folder-pathname sb!win32::csidl_profile)))))))
-
-(defun file-write-date (file)
- #!+sb-doc
- "Return file's creation date, or NIL if it doesn't exist.
- An error of type file-error is signaled if file is a wild pathname"
- (let ((name (unix-namestring file t)))
- (when name
- (multiple-value-bind
- (res dev ino mode nlink uid gid rdev size atime mtime)
- (sb!unix:unix-stat name)
- (declare (ignore dev ino mode nlink uid gid rdev size atime))
- (when res
- (+ unix-to-universal-time mtime))))))
-
-(defun file-author (file)
- #!+sb-doc
- "Return the file author as a string, or NIL if the author cannot be
- determined. Signal an error of type FILE-ERROR if FILE doesn't exist,
- or FILE is a wild pathname."
- (let ((name (unix-namestring (pathname file) t)))
- (unless name
- (error 'simple-file-error
- :pathname file
- :format-control "~S doesn't exist."
- :format-arguments (list file)))
- (multiple-value-bind (winp dev ino mode nlink uid)
- (sb!unix:unix-stat name)
- (declare (ignore dev ino mode nlink))
- (and winp (sb!unix:uid-username uid)))))
\f
;;;; DIRECTORY
(declare (ignore path))
nil)
+(defun unix-realpath (path)
+ (declare (type unix-pathname path))
+ (with-alien ((ptr (* char)
+ (alien-funcall (extern-alien
+ "sb_realpath"
+ (function (* char) c-string))
+ path)))
+ (if (null-alien ptr)
+ (values nil (get-errno))
+ (multiple-value-prog1
+ (values (with-alien ((c-string c-string ptr)) c-string)
+ nil)
+ (free-alien ptr)))))
+
;;; UNIX-UNLINK accepts a name and deletes the directory entry for that
;;; name and the file if this is the last link.
(defun unix-unlink (name)
#!-win32
((eql kind s-iflnk) :link)
(t :special))))))
-
-;;; Is the Unix pathname PATHNAME relative, instead of absolute? (E.g.
-;;; "passwd" or "etc/passwd" instead of "/etc/passwd"?)
-(defun relative-unix-pathname? (pathname)
- (declare (type simple-string pathname))
- (or (zerop (length pathname))
- (char/= (schar pathname 0) #\/)))
-
-;;; Return PATHNAME with all symbolic links resolved. PATHNAME should
-;;; already be a complete absolute Unix pathname, since at least in
-;;; sbcl-0.6.12.36 we're called only from TRUENAME, and only after
-;;; paths have been converted to absolute paths, so we don't need to
-;;; try to handle any more generality than that.
-(defun unix-resolve-links (pathname)
- (declare (type simple-string pathname))
- ;; KLUDGE: The Win32 platform doesn't have symbolic links, so
- ;; short-cut this computation (and the check for being an absolute
- ;; unix pathname...)
- #!+win32 (return-from unix-resolve-links pathname)
- (aver (not (relative-unix-pathname? pathname)))
- ;; KLUDGE: readlink and lstat are unreliable if given symlinks
- ;; ending in slashes -- fix the issue here instead of waiting for
- ;; libc to change...
- ;;
- ;; but be careful! Must not strip the final slash from "/". (This
- ;; adjustment might be a candidate for being transferred into the C
- ;; code in a wrap_readlink() function, too.) CSR, 2006-01-18
- (let ((len (length pathname)))
- (when (and (> len 1) (eql #\/ (schar pathname (1- len))))
- (setf pathname (subseq pathname 0 (1- len)))))
- (/noshow "entering UNIX-RESOLVE-LINKS")
- (loop with previous-pathnames = nil do
- (/noshow pathname previous-pathnames)
- (let ((link (unix-readlink pathname)))
- (/noshow link)
- ;; Unlike the old CMU CL code, we handle a broken symlink by
- ;; returning the link itself. That way, CL:TRUENAME on a
- ;; broken link returns the link itself, so that CL:DIRECTORY
- ;; can return broken links, so that even without
- ;; Unix-specific extensions to do interesting things with
- ;; them, at least Lisp programs can see them and, if
- ;; necessary, delete them. (This is handy e.g. when your
- ;; managed-by-Lisp directories are visited by Emacs, which
- ;; creates broken links as notes to itself.)
- (if (null link)
- (return pathname)
- (let ((new-pathname
- (simplify-namestring
- (if (relative-unix-pathname? link)
- (let* ((dir-len (1+ (position #\/
- pathname
- :from-end t)))
- (dir (subseq pathname 0 dir-len)))
- (/noshow dir)
- (concatenate 'string dir link))
- link))))
- (if (unix-file-kind new-pathname)
- (setf pathname new-pathname)
- (return pathname)))))
- ;; To generalize the principle that even if portable Lisp code
- ;; can't do anything interesting with a broken symlink, at
- ;; least it should be able to see and delete it, when we
- ;; detect a cyclic link, we return the link itself. (So even
- ;; though portable Lisp code can't do anything interesting
- ;; with a cyclic link, at least it can see it and delete it.)
- (if (member pathname previous-pathnames :test #'string=)
- (return pathname)
- (push pathname previous-pathnames))))
\f
-
(defconstant micro-seconds-per-internal-time-unit
(/ 1000000 sb!xc:internal-time-units-per-second))