buildtools/gcc/fixincludes/procopen.c
Michael Lotz a84f174425 Bring GCC 4.3.3 to trunk.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/buildtools/trunk@29033 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
2009-01-26 05:03:14 +00:00

219 lines
6.3 KiB
C

/*
* server.c Set up and handle communications with a server process.
*
* Server Handling copyright 1992-1999, 2004 The Free Software Foundation
*
* Server Handling is free software.
* You may 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.
*
* Server Handling 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 Server Handling. See the file "COPYING". If not,
* write to: The Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
* 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
* Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
*
* As a special exception, The Free Software Foundation gives
* permission for additional uses of the text contained in his release
* of ServerHandler.
*
* The exception is that, if you link the ServerHandler library with other
* files to produce an executable, this does not by itself cause the
* resulting executable to be covered by the GNU General Public License.
* Your use of that executable is in no way restricted on account of
* linking the ServerHandler library code into it.
*
* This exception does not however invalidate any other reasons why
* the executable file might be covered by the GNU General Public License.
*
* This exception applies only to the code released by The Free
* Software Foundation under the name ServerHandler. If you copy code
* from other sources under the General Public License into a copy of
* ServerHandler, as the General Public License permits, the exception
* does not apply to the code that you add in this way. To avoid
* misleading anyone as to the status of such modified files, you must
* delete this exception notice from them.
*
* If you write modifications of your own for ServerHandler, it is your
* choice whether to permit this exception to apply to your modifications.
* If you do not wish that, delete this exception notice.
*/
#include "fixlib.h"
#include "server.h"
STATIC const char* def_args[] =
{ (char *) NULL, (char *) NULL };
/*
* chain_open
*
* Given an FD for an inferior process to use as stdin,
* start that process and return a NEW FD that that process
* will use for its stdout. Requires the argument vector
* for the new process and, optionally, a pointer to a place
* to store the child's process id.
*/
int
chain_open (int stdin_fd, tCC** pp_args, pid_t* p_child)
{
t_fd_pair stdout_pair;
pid_t ch_id;
tCC *pz_cmd;
stdout_pair.read_fd = stdout_pair.write_fd = -1;
/*
* Create a pipe it will be the child process' stdout,
* and the parent will read from it.
*/
if (pipe ((int *) &stdout_pair) < 0)
{
if (p_child != (pid_t *) NULL)
*p_child = NOPROCESS;
return -1;
}
/*
* If we did not get an arg list, use the default
*/
if (pp_args == (tCC **) NULL)
pp_args = def_args;
/*
* If the arg list does not have a program,
* assume the "SHELL" from the environment, or, failing
* that, then sh. Set argv[0] to whatever we decided on.
*/
if (pz_cmd = *pp_args,
(pz_cmd == (char *) NULL) || (*pz_cmd == '\0'))
{
pz_cmd = getenv ("SHELL");
if (pz_cmd == (char *) NULL)
pz_cmd = "sh";
}
#ifdef DEBUG_PRINT
printf ("START: %s\n", pz_cmd);
{
int idx = 0;
while (pp_args[++idx] != (char *) NULL)
printf (" ARG %2d: %s\n", idx, pp_args[idx]);
}
#endif
/*
* Call fork() and see which process we become
*/
ch_id = fork ();
switch (ch_id)
{
case NOPROCESS: /* parent - error in call */
close (stdout_pair.read_fd);
close (stdout_pair.write_fd);
if (p_child != (pid_t *) NULL)
*p_child = NOPROCESS;
return -1;
default: /* parent - return opposite FD's */
if (p_child != (pid_t *) NULL)
*p_child = ch_id;
#ifdef DEBUG_PRINT
printf ("for pid %d: stdin from %d, stdout to %d\n"
"for parent: read from %d\n",
ch_id, stdin_fd, stdout_pair.write_fd, stdout_pair.read_fd);
#endif
close (stdin_fd);
close (stdout_pair.write_fd);
return stdout_pair.read_fd;
case NULLPROCESS: /* child - continue processing */
break;
}
/*
* Close the pipe end handed back to the parent process
*/
close (stdout_pair.read_fd);
/*
* Close our current stdin and stdout
*/
close (STDIN_FILENO);
close (STDOUT_FILENO);
/*
* Make the fd passed in the stdin, and the write end of
* the new pipe become the stdout.
*/
dup2 (stdout_pair.write_fd, STDOUT_FILENO);
dup2 (stdin_fd, STDIN_FILENO);
if (*pp_args == (char *) NULL)
*pp_args = pz_cmd;
execvp (pz_cmd, (char**)pp_args);
fprintf (stderr, "Error %d: Could not execvp( '%s', ... ): %s\n",
errno, pz_cmd, xstrerror (errno));
exit (EXIT_PANIC);
}
/*
* proc2_open
*
* Given a pointer to an argument vector, start a process and
* place its stdin and stdout file descriptors into an fd pair
* structure. The "write_fd" connects to the inferior process
* stdin, and the "read_fd" connects to its stdout. The calling
* process should write to "write_fd" and read from "read_fd".
* The return value is the process id of the created process.
*/
pid_t
proc2_open (t_fd_pair* p_pair, tCC** pp_args)
{
pid_t ch_id;
/* Create a bi-directional pipe. Writes on 0 arrive on 1 and vice
versa, so the parent and child processes will read and write to
opposite FD's. */
if (pipe ((int *) p_pair) < 0)
return NOPROCESS;
p_pair->read_fd = chain_open (p_pair->read_fd, pp_args, &ch_id);
if (ch_id == NOPROCESS)
close (p_pair->write_fd);
return ch_id;
}
/*
* proc2_fopen
*
* Identical to "proc2_open()", except that the "fd"'s are
* "fdopen(3)"-ed into file pointers instead.
*/
pid_t
proc2_fopen (t_pf_pair* pf_pair, tCC** pp_args)
{
t_fd_pair fd_pair;
pid_t ch_id = proc2_open (&fd_pair, pp_args);
if (ch_id == NOPROCESS)
return ch_id;
pf_pair->pf_read = fdopen (fd_pair.read_fd, "r");
pf_pair->pf_write = fdopen (fd_pair.write_fd, "w");
return ch_id;
}