/* * Copyright (c) 1992, Brian Berliner and Jeff Polk * Copyright (c) 1989-1992, Brian Berliner * * You may distribute under the terms of the GNU General Public License as * specified in the README file that comes with the CVS source distribution. */ #include "cvs.h" #ifdef SERVER_SUPPORT static void time_stamp_server PROTO((char *, Vers_TS *, Entnode *)); #endif /* Fill in and return a Vers_TS structure for the file FINFO. TAG and DATE are from the command line. */ Vers_TS * Version_TS (finfo, options, tag, date, force_tag_match, set_time) struct file_info *finfo; /* Keyword expansion options, I think generally from the command line. Can be either NULL or "" to indicate none are specified here. */ char *options; char *tag; char *date; int force_tag_match; int set_time; { Node *p; RCSNode *rcsdata; Vers_TS *vers_ts; struct stickydirtag *sdtp; Entnode *entdata; #ifdef UTIME_EXPECTS_WRITABLE int change_it_back = 0; #endif /* get a new Vers_TS struct */ vers_ts = (Vers_TS *) xmalloc (sizeof (Vers_TS)); memset ((char *) vers_ts, 0, sizeof (*vers_ts)); /* * look up the entries file entry and fill in the version and timestamp * if entries is NULL, there is no entries file so don't bother trying to * look it up (used by checkout -P) */ if (finfo->entries == NULL) { sdtp = NULL; p = NULL; } else { p = findnode_fn (finfo->entries, finfo->file); sdtp = (struct stickydirtag *) finfo->entries->list->data; /* list-private */ } entdata = NULL; if (p != NULL) { entdata = (Entnode *) p->data; if (entdata->type == ENT_SUBDIR) { /* According to cvs.texinfo, the various fields in the Entries file for a directory (other than the name) do not have a defined meaning. We need to pass them along without getting confused based on what is in them. Therefore we make sure not to set vn_user and the like from Entries, add.c and perhaps other code will expect these fields to be NULL for a directory. */ vers_ts->entdata = entdata; } else #ifdef SERVER_SUPPORT /* An entries line with "D" in the timestamp indicates that the client sent Is-modified without sending Entry. So we want to use the entries line for the sole purpose of telling time_stamp_server what is up; we don't want the rest of CVS to think there is an entries line. */ if (strcmp (entdata->timestamp, "D") != 0) #endif { vers_ts->vn_user = xstrdup (entdata->version); vers_ts->ts_rcs = xstrdup (entdata->timestamp); vers_ts->ts_conflict = xstrdup (entdata->conflict); if (!tag) { if (!(sdtp && sdtp->aflag)) vers_ts->tag = xstrdup (entdata->tag); } if (!date) { if (!(sdtp && sdtp->aflag)) vers_ts->date = xstrdup (entdata->date); } vers_ts->entdata = entdata; } /* Even if we don't have an "entries line" as such (vers_ts->entdata), we want to pick up options which could have been from a Kopt protocol request. */ if (!options || (options && *options == '\0')) { if (!(sdtp && sdtp->aflag)) vers_ts->options = xstrdup (entdata->options); } } /* * -k options specified on the command line override (and overwrite) * options stored in the entries file */ if (options && *options != '\0') vers_ts->options = xstrdup (options); else if (!vers_ts->options || *vers_ts->options == '\0') { if (finfo->rcs != NULL) { /* If no keyword expansion was specified on command line, use whatever was in the rcs file (if there is one). This is how we, if we are the server, tell the client whether a file is binary. */ char *rcsexpand = RCS_getexpand (finfo->rcs); if (rcsexpand != NULL) { vers_ts->options = xmalloc (strlen (rcsexpand) + 3); strcpy (vers_ts->options, "-k"); strcat (vers_ts->options, rcsexpand); } } } if (!vers_ts->options) vers_ts->options = xstrdup (""); /* * if tags were specified on the command line, they override what is in * the Entries file */ if (tag || date) { vers_ts->tag = xstrdup (tag); vers_ts->date = xstrdup (date); } else if (!vers_ts->entdata && (sdtp && sdtp->aflag == 0)) { if (!vers_ts->tag) { vers_ts->tag = xstrdup (sdtp->tag); vers_ts->nonbranch = sdtp->nonbranch; } if (!vers_ts->date) vers_ts->date = xstrdup (sdtp->date); } /* Now look up the info on the source controlled file */ if (finfo->rcs != NULL) { rcsdata = finfo->rcs; rcsdata->refcount++; } else if (finfo->repository != NULL) rcsdata = RCS_parse (finfo->file, finfo->repository); else rcsdata = NULL; if (rcsdata != NULL) { /* squirrel away the rcsdata pointer for others */ vers_ts->srcfile = rcsdata; if (vers_ts->tag && strcmp (vers_ts->tag, TAG_BASE) == 0) { vers_ts->vn_rcs = xstrdup (vers_ts->vn_user); vers_ts->vn_tag = xstrdup (vers_ts->vn_user); } else { int simple; vers_ts->vn_rcs = RCS_getversion (rcsdata, vers_ts->tag, vers_ts->date, force_tag_match, &simple); if (vers_ts->vn_rcs == NULL) vers_ts->vn_tag = NULL; else if (simple) vers_ts->vn_tag = xstrdup (vers_ts->tag); else vers_ts->vn_tag = xstrdup (vers_ts->vn_rcs); } /* * If the source control file exists and has the requested revision, * get the Date the revision was checked in. If "user" exists, set * its mtime. */ if (set_time && vers_ts->vn_rcs != NULL) { #ifdef SERVER_SUPPORT if (server_active) server_modtime (finfo, vers_ts); else #endif { struct utimbuf t; memset (&t, 0, sizeof (t)); t.modtime = RCS_getrevtime (rcsdata, vers_ts->vn_rcs, 0, 0); if (t.modtime != (time_t) -1) { t.actime = t.modtime; #ifdef UTIME_EXPECTS_WRITABLE if (!iswritable (finfo->file)) { xchmod (finfo->file, 1); change_it_back = 1; } #endif /* UTIME_EXPECTS_WRITABLE */ /* This used to need to ignore existence_errors (for cases like where update.c now clears set_time if noexec, but didn't used to). I think maybe now it doesn't (server_modtime does not like those kinds of cases). */ (void) utime (finfo->file, &t); #ifdef UTIME_EXPECTS_WRITABLE if (change_it_back == 1) { xchmod (finfo->file, 0); change_it_back = 0; } #endif /* UTIME_EXPECTS_WRITABLE */ } } } } /* get user file time-stamp in ts_user */ if (finfo->entries != (List *) NULL) { #ifdef SERVER_SUPPORT if (server_active) time_stamp_server (finfo->file, vers_ts, entdata); else #endif vers_ts->ts_user = time_stamp (finfo->file); } return (vers_ts); } #ifdef SERVER_SUPPORT /* Set VERS_TS->TS_USER to time stamp for FILE. */ /* Separate these out to keep the logic below clearer. */ #define mark_lost(V) ((V)->ts_user = 0) #define mark_unchanged(V) ((V)->ts_user = xstrdup ((V)->ts_rcs)) static void time_stamp_server (file, vers_ts, entdata) char *file; Vers_TS *vers_ts; Entnode *entdata; { struct stat sb; char *cp; if (CVS_LSTAT (file, &sb) < 0) { if (! existence_error (errno)) error (1, errno, "cannot stat temp file"); /* Missing file means lost or unmodified; check entries file to see which. XXX FIXME - If there's no entries file line, we wouldn't be getting the file at all, so consider it lost. I don't know that that's right, but it's not clear to me that either choice is. Besides, would we have an RCS string in that case anyways? */ if (entdata == NULL) mark_lost (vers_ts); else if (entdata->timestamp && entdata->timestamp[0] == '=') mark_unchanged (vers_ts); else if (entdata->timestamp != NULL && (entdata->timestamp[0] == 'M' || entdata->timestamp[0] == 'D') && entdata->timestamp[1] == '\0') vers_ts->ts_user = xstrdup ("Is-modified"); else mark_lost (vers_ts); } else if (sb.st_mtime == 0) { /* We shouldn't reach this case any more! */ abort (); } else { struct tm *tm_p; struct tm local_tm; vers_ts->ts_user = xmalloc (25); /* We want to use the same timestamp format as is stored in the st_mtime. For unix (and NT I think) this *must* be universal time (UT), so that files don't appear to be modified merely because the timezone has changed. For VMS, or hopefully other systems where gmtime returns NULL, the modification time is stored in local time, and therefore it is not possible to cause st_mtime to be out of sync by changing the timezone. */ tm_p = gmtime (&sb.st_mtime); if (tm_p) { memcpy (&local_tm, tm_p, sizeof (local_tm)); cp = asctime (&local_tm); /* copy in the modify time */ } else cp = ctime (&sb.st_mtime); cp[24] = 0; (void) strcpy (vers_ts->ts_user, cp); } } #endif /* SERVER_SUPPORT */ /* * Gets the time-stamp for the file "file" and returns it in space it * allocates */ char * time_stamp (file) char *file; { struct stat sb; char *cp; char *ts; if (CVS_LSTAT (file, &sb) < 0) { ts = NULL; } else { struct tm *tm_p; struct tm local_tm; ts = xmalloc (25); /* We want to use the same timestamp format as is stored in the st_mtime. For unix (and NT I think) this *must* be universal time (UT), so that files don't appear to be modified merely because the timezone has changed. For VMS, or hopefully other systems where gmtime returns NULL, the modification time is stored in local time, and therefore it is not possible to cause st_mtime to be out of sync by changing the timezone. */ tm_p = gmtime (&sb.st_mtime); if (tm_p) { memcpy (&local_tm, tm_p, sizeof (local_tm)); cp = asctime (&local_tm); /* copy in the modify time */ } else cp = ctime(&sb.st_mtime); cp[24] = 0; (void) strcpy (ts, cp); } return (ts); } /* * free up a Vers_TS struct */ void freevers_ts (versp) Vers_TS **versp; { if ((*versp)->srcfile) freercsnode (&((*versp)->srcfile)); if ((*versp)->vn_user) free ((*versp)->vn_user); if ((*versp)->vn_rcs) free ((*versp)->vn_rcs); if ((*versp)->vn_tag) free ((*versp)->vn_tag); if ((*versp)->ts_user) free ((*versp)->ts_user); if ((*versp)->ts_rcs) free ((*versp)->ts_rcs); if ((*versp)->options) free ((*versp)->options); if ((*versp)->tag) free ((*versp)->tag); if ((*versp)->date) free ((*versp)->date); if ((*versp)->ts_conflict) free ((*versp)->ts_conflict); free ((char *) *versp); *versp = (Vers_TS *) NULL; }