/*- * Copyright (c) 2003-2007 Tim Kientzle * All rights reserved. * * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions * are met: * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. * * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR(S) ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES * OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. * IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR(S) BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT * NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF * THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. */ #include "bsdtar_platform.h" __FBSDID("$FreeBSD$"); #ifdef HAVE_SYS_STAT_H #include #endif #ifdef HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H #include /* Linux doesn't define mode_t, etc. in sys/stat.h. */ #endif #include #ifdef HAVE_ERRNO_H #include #endif #ifdef HAVE_IO_H #include #endif #ifdef HAVE_STDARG_H #include #endif #ifdef HAVE_STDINT_H #include #endif #include #ifdef HAVE_STDLIB_H #include #endif #ifdef HAVE_STRING_H #include #endif #ifdef HAVE_WCTYPE_H #include #else /* If we don't have wctype, we need to hack up some version of iswprint(). */ #define iswprint isprint #endif #include "bsdtar.h" #include "err.h" static size_t bsdtar_expand_char(char *, size_t, char); static const char *strip_components(const char *path, int elements); #if defined(_WIN32) && !defined(__CYGWIN__) #define read _read #endif /* TODO: Hack up a version of mbtowc for platforms with no wide * character support at all. I think the following might suffice, * but it needs careful testing. * #if !HAVE_MBTOWC * #define mbtowc(wcp, p, n) ((*wcp = *p), 1) * #endif */ /* * Print a string, taking care with any non-printable characters. * * Note that we use a stack-allocated buffer to receive the formatted * string if we can. This is partly performance (avoiding a call to * malloc()), partly out of expedience (we have to call vsnprintf() * before malloc() anyway to find out how big a buffer we need; we may * as well point that first call at a small local buffer in case it * works), but mostly for safety (so we can use this to print messages * about out-of-memory conditions). */ void safe_fprintf(FILE *f, const char *fmt, ...) { char fmtbuff_stack[256]; /* Place to format the printf() string. */ char outbuff[256]; /* Buffer for outgoing characters. */ char *fmtbuff_heap; /* If fmtbuff_stack is too small, we use malloc */ char *fmtbuff; /* Pointer to fmtbuff_stack or fmtbuff_heap. */ int fmtbuff_length; int length, n; va_list ap; const char *p; unsigned i; wchar_t wc; char try_wc; /* Use a stack-allocated buffer if we can, for speed and safety. */ fmtbuff_heap = NULL; fmtbuff_length = sizeof(fmtbuff_stack); fmtbuff = fmtbuff_stack; /* Try formatting into the stack buffer. */ va_start(ap, fmt); length = vsnprintf(fmtbuff, fmtbuff_length, fmt, ap); va_end(ap); /* If the result was too large, allocate a buffer on the heap. */ if (length >= fmtbuff_length) { fmtbuff_length = length+1; fmtbuff_heap = malloc(fmtbuff_length); /* Reformat the result into the heap buffer if we can. */ if (fmtbuff_heap != NULL) { fmtbuff = fmtbuff_heap; va_start(ap, fmt); length = vsnprintf(fmtbuff, fmtbuff_length, fmt, ap); va_end(ap); } else { /* Leave fmtbuff pointing to the truncated * string in fmtbuff_stack. */ length = sizeof(fmtbuff_stack) - 1; } } /* Note: mbrtowc() has a cleaner API, but mbtowc() seems a bit * more portable, so we use that here instead. */ n = mbtowc(NULL, NULL, 1); /* Reset the shift state. */ /* Write data, expanding unprintable characters. */ p = fmtbuff; i = 0; try_wc = 1; while (*p != '\0') { /* Convert to wide char, test if the wide * char is printable in the current locale. */ if (try_wc && (n = mbtowc(&wc, p, length)) != -1) { length -= n; if (iswprint(wc) && wc != L'\\') { /* Printable, copy the bytes through. */ while (n-- > 0) outbuff[i++] = *p++; } else { /* Not printable, format the bytes. */ while (n-- > 0) i += (unsigned)bsdtar_expand_char( outbuff, i, *p++); } } else { /* After any conversion failure, don't bother * trying to convert the rest. */ i += (unsigned)bsdtar_expand_char(outbuff, i, *p++); try_wc = 0; } /* If our output buffer is full, dump it and keep going. */ if (i > (sizeof(outbuff) - 20)) { outbuff[i] = '\0'; fprintf(f, "%s", outbuff); i = 0; } } outbuff[i] = '\0'; fprintf(f, "%s", outbuff); /* If we allocated a heap-based formatting buffer, free it now. */ if (fmtbuff_heap != NULL) free(fmtbuff_heap); } /* * Render an arbitrary sequence of bytes into printable ASCII characters. */ static size_t bsdtar_expand_char(char *buff, size_t offset, char c) { size_t i = offset; if (isprint((unsigned char)c) && c != '\\') buff[i++] = c; else { buff[i++] = '\\'; switch (c) { case '\a': buff[i++] = 'a'; break; case '\b': buff[i++] = 'b'; break; case '\f': buff[i++] = 'f'; break; case '\n': buff[i++] = 'n'; break; #if '\r' != '\n' /* On some platforms, \n and \r are the same. */ case '\r': buff[i++] = 'r'; break; #endif case '\t': buff[i++] = 't'; break; case '\v': buff[i++] = 'v'; break; case '\\': buff[i++] = '\\'; break; default: sprintf(buff + i, "%03o", 0xFF & (int)c); i += 3; } } return (i - offset); } int yes(const char *fmt, ...) { char buff[32]; char *p; ssize_t l; va_list ap; va_start(ap, fmt); vfprintf(stderr, fmt, ap); va_end(ap); fprintf(stderr, " (y/N)? "); fflush(stderr); l = read(2, buff, sizeof(buff) - 1); if (l < 0) { fprintf(stderr, "Keyboard read failed\n"); exit(1); } if (l == 0) return (0); buff[l] = 0; for (p = buff; *p != '\0'; p++) { if (isspace((unsigned char)*p)) continue; switch(*p) { case 'y': case 'Y': return (1); case 'n': case 'N': return (0); default: return (0); } } return (0); } /*- * The logic here for -C attempts to avoid * chdir() as long as possible. For example: * "-C /foo -C /bar file" needs chdir("/bar") but not chdir("/foo") * "-C /foo -C bar file" needs chdir("/foo/bar") * "-C /foo -C bar /file1" does not need chdir() * "-C /foo -C bar /file1 file2" needs chdir("/foo/bar") before file2 * * The only correct way to handle this is to record a "pending" chdir * request and combine multiple requests intelligently until we * need to process a non-absolute file. set_chdir() adds the new dir * to the pending list; do_chdir() actually executes any pending chdir. * * This way, programs that build tar command lines don't have to worry * about -C with non-existent directories; such requests will only * fail if the directory must be accessed. * * TODO: Make this handle Windows paths correctly. */ void set_chdir(struct bsdtar *bsdtar, const char *newdir) { if (newdir[0] == '/') { /* The -C /foo -C /bar case; dump first one. */ free(bsdtar->pending_chdir); bsdtar->pending_chdir = NULL; } if (bsdtar->pending_chdir == NULL) /* Easy case: no previously-saved dir. */ bsdtar->pending_chdir = strdup(newdir); else { /* The -C /foo -C bar case; concatenate */ char *old_pending = bsdtar->pending_chdir; size_t old_len = strlen(old_pending); bsdtar->pending_chdir = malloc(old_len + strlen(newdir) + 2); if (old_pending[old_len - 1] == '/') old_pending[old_len - 1] = '\0'; if (bsdtar->pending_chdir != NULL) sprintf(bsdtar->pending_chdir, "%s/%s", old_pending, newdir); free(old_pending); } if (bsdtar->pending_chdir == NULL) bsdtar_errc(1, errno, "No memory"); } void do_chdir(struct bsdtar *bsdtar) { if (bsdtar->pending_chdir == NULL) return; if (chdir(bsdtar->pending_chdir) != 0) { bsdtar_errc(1, 0, "could not chdir to '%s'\n", bsdtar->pending_chdir); } free(bsdtar->pending_chdir); bsdtar->pending_chdir = NULL; } static const char * strip_components(const char *p, int elements) { /* Skip as many elements as necessary. */ while (elements > 0) { switch (*p++) { case '/': #if defined(_WIN32) && !defined(__CYGWIN__) case '\\': /* Support \ path sep on Windows ONLY. */ #endif elements--; break; case '\0': /* Path is too short, skip it. */ return (NULL); } } /* Skip any / characters. This handles short paths that have * additional / termination. This also handles the case where * the logic above stops in the middle of a duplicate // * sequence (which would otherwise get converted to an * absolute path). */ for (;;) { switch (*p) { case '/': #if defined(_WIN32) && !defined(__CYGWIN__) case '\\': /* Support \ path sep on Windows ONLY. */ #endif ++p; break; case '\0': return (NULL); default: return (p); } } } /* * Handle --strip-components and any future path-rewriting options. * Returns non-zero if the pathname should not be extracted. * * TODO: Support pax-style regex path rewrites. */ int edit_pathname(struct bsdtar *bsdtar, struct archive_entry *entry) { const char *name = archive_entry_pathname(entry); #if HAVE_REGEX_H char *subst_name; int r; #endif #if HAVE_REGEX_H r = apply_substitution(bsdtar, name, &subst_name, 0); if (r == -1) { bsdtar_warnc(0, "Invalid substitution, skipping entry"); return 1; } if (r == 1) { archive_entry_copy_pathname(entry, subst_name); if (*subst_name == '\0') { free(subst_name); return -1; } else free(subst_name); name = archive_entry_pathname(entry); } if (archive_entry_hardlink(entry)) { r = apply_substitution(bsdtar, archive_entry_hardlink(entry), &subst_name, 1); if (r == -1) { bsdtar_warnc(0, "Invalid substitution, skipping entry"); return 1; } if (r == 1) { archive_entry_copy_hardlink(entry, subst_name); free(subst_name); } } if (archive_entry_symlink(entry) != NULL) { r = apply_substitution(bsdtar, archive_entry_symlink(entry), &subst_name, 1); if (r == -1) { bsdtar_warnc(0, "Invalid substitution, skipping entry"); return 1; } if (r == 1) { archive_entry_copy_symlink(entry, subst_name); free(subst_name); } } #endif /* Strip leading dir names as per --strip-components option. */ if (bsdtar->strip_components > 0) { const char *linkname = archive_entry_hardlink(entry); name = strip_components(name, bsdtar->strip_components); if (name == NULL) return (1); if (linkname != NULL) { linkname = strip_components(linkname, bsdtar->strip_components); if (linkname == NULL) return (1); archive_entry_copy_hardlink(entry, linkname); } } /* By default, don't write or restore absolute pathnames. */ if (!bsdtar->option_absolute_paths) { const char *rp, *p = name; int slashonly = 1; /* Remove leading "//./" or "//?/" or "//?/UNC/" * (absolute path prefixes used by Windows API) */ if ((p[0] == '/' || p[0] == '\\') && (p[1] == '/' || p[1] == '\\') && (p[2] == '.' || p[2] == '?') && (p[3] == '/' || p[3] == '\\')) { if (p[2] == '?' && (p[4] == 'U' || p[4] == 'u') && (p[5] == 'N' || p[5] == 'n') && (p[6] == 'C' || p[6] == 'c') && (p[7] == '/' || p[7] == '\\')) p += 8; else p += 4; slashonly = 0; } do { rp = p; /* Remove leading drive letter from archives created * on Windows. */ if (((p[0] >= 'a' && p[0] <= 'z') || (p[0] >= 'A' && p[0] <= 'Z')) && p[1] == ':') { p += 2; slashonly = 0; } /* Remove leading "/../", "//", etc. */ while (p[0] == '/' || p[0] == '\\') { if (p[1] == '.' && p[2] == '.' && (p[3] == '/' || p[3] == '\\')) { p += 3; /* Remove "/..", leave "/" * for next pass. */ slashonly = 0; } else p += 1; /* Remove "/". */ } } while (rp != p); if (p != name && !bsdtar->warned_lead_slash) { /* Generate a warning the first time this happens. */ if (slashonly) bsdtar_warnc(0, "Removing leading '%c' from member names", name[0]); else bsdtar_warnc(0, "Removing leading drive letter from " "member names"); bsdtar->warned_lead_slash = 1; } /* Special case: Stripping everything yields ".". */ if (*p == '\0') name = "."; else name = p; } else { /* Strip redundant leading '/' characters. */ while (name[0] == '/' && name[1] == '/') name++; } /* Safely replace name in archive_entry. */ if (name != archive_entry_pathname(entry)) { char *q = strdup(name); archive_entry_copy_pathname(entry, q); free(q); } return (0); } /* * It would be nice to just use printf() for formatting large numbers, * but the compatibility problems are quite a headache. Hence the * following simple utility function. */ const char * tar_i64toa(int64_t n0) { static char buff[24]; int64_t n = n0 < 0 ? -n0 : n0; char *p = buff + sizeof(buff); *--p = '\0'; do { *--p = '0' + (int)(n % 10); n /= 10; } while (n > 0); if (n0 < 0) *--p = '-'; return p; } /* * Like strcmp(), but try to be a little more aware of the fact that * we're comparing two paths. Right now, it just handles leading * "./" and trailing '/' specially, so that "a/b/" == "./a/b" * * TODO: Make this better, so that "./a//b/./c/" == "a/b/c" * TODO: After this works, push it down into libarchive. * TODO: Publish the path normalization routines in libarchive so * that bsdtar can normalize paths and use fast strcmp() instead * of this. * * Note: This is currently only used within write.c, so should * not handle \ path separators. */ int pathcmp(const char *a, const char *b) { /* Skip leading './' */ if (a[0] == '.' && a[1] == '/' && a[2] != '\0') a += 2; if (b[0] == '.' && b[1] == '/' && b[2] != '\0') b += 2; /* Find the first difference, or return (0) if none. */ while (*a == *b) { if (*a == '\0') return (0); a++; b++; } /* * If one ends in '/' and the other one doesn't, * they're the same. */ if (a[0] == '/' && a[1] == '\0' && b[0] == '\0') return (0); if (a[0] == '\0' && b[0] == '/' && b[1] == '\0') return (0); /* They're really different, return the correct sign. */ return (*(const unsigned char *)a - *(const unsigned char *)b); }