NetBSD/bin/sh/cd.c

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/* $NetBSD: cd.c,v 1.53 2022/01/31 16:54:28 kre Exp $ */
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/*-
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* Copyright (c) 1991, 1993
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
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*
* This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
* Kenneth Almquist.
*
* 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.
* 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
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* may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
* without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``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 REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS 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 <sys/cdefs.h>
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#ifndef lint
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#if 0
static char sccsid[] = "@(#)cd.c 8.2 (Berkeley) 5/4/95";
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#else
__RCSID("$NetBSD: cd.c,v 1.53 2022/01/31 16:54:28 kre Exp $");
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#endif
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#endif /* not lint */
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <errno.h>
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/*
* The cd and pwd commands.
*/
#include "shell.h"
#include "var.h"
#include "nodes.h" /* for jobs.h */
#include "jobs.h"
#include "options.h"
#include "builtins.h"
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#include "output.h"
#include "memalloc.h"
#include "error.h"
#include "exec.h"
#include "redir.h"
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#include "mystring.h"
#include "show.h"
#include "cd.h"
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STATIC int docd(const char *, bool, bool);
STATIC char *getcomponent(void);
STATIC bool updatepwd(const char *);
STATIC void find_curdir(int noerror);
STATIC bool is_curdir(const char *);
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char *curdir = NULL; /* current working directory */
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char *prevdir; /* previous working directory */
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STATIC char *cdcomppath;
int
cdcmd(int argc, char **argv)
{
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const char *dest;
Make cd (really) do cd -P, and not just claim that is what it is doing while doing a half-hearted, broken, partial, version of cd -L instead. The latter (as the manual says) is not supported, what's more, it is an abomination, and should never be supported (anywhere.) Fix the doc so that the pretense that we notice when a path given crosses a symlink (and turns on printing of the destination directory) is claimed no more (that used to be true until late Dec 2016, but was changed). Now the print happens if -o cdprint is set, or if an entry from CDPATH that is not "" or "." is used (or if the "cd dest repl" cd cmd variant is used.) Fix CDPATH processing: avoid the magic '%' processing that is used for PATH and MAILPATH from corrupting CDPATH. The % magic (both variants) remains undocumented. Also, don't double the '/' if an entry in PATH or CDPATH ends in '/' (as in CDPATH=":/usr/src/"). A "cd usr.bin" used to do chdir("/usr/src//usr.bin"). No more. This is almost invisible, and relatively harmless, either way.... Also fix a bug where if a plausible destination directory in CDPATH was located, but the chdir() failed (eg: permission denied) and then a later "." or "" CDPATH entry succeeded, "print" mode was turned on. That is: cd /tmp; mkdir bin mkdir -p P/bin; chmod 0 P/bin CDPATH=/tmp/P: cd bin would cd to /tmp/bin (correctly) but print it (incorrectly). Also when in "cd dest replace" mode, if the result of the replacement generates '-' as the path named, as in: cd $PWD - then simply change to '-' (or attempt to, with CDPATH search), rather than having this being equivalent to "cd -") Because of these changes, the pwd command (and $PWD) essentially always acts as pwd -P, even when called as pwd -L (which is still the default.) That is, even more than it did before. Also fixed a (kind of minor) mem management error (CDPATH related) "whosoever shall padvance must stunalloc before repeating" (and the same for MAILPATH).
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const char *path, *cp;
char *p;
char *d;
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struct stat statb;
char opt;
bool eopt = false;
Make cd (really) do cd -P, and not just claim that is what it is doing while doing a half-hearted, broken, partial, version of cd -L instead. The latter (as the manual says) is not supported, what's more, it is an abomination, and should never be supported (anywhere.) Fix the doc so that the pretense that we notice when a path given crosses a symlink (and turns on printing of the destination directory) is claimed no more (that used to be true until late Dec 2016, but was changed). Now the print happens if -o cdprint is set, or if an entry from CDPATH that is not "" or "." is used (or if the "cd dest repl" cd cmd variant is used.) Fix CDPATH processing: avoid the magic '%' processing that is used for PATH and MAILPATH from corrupting CDPATH. The % magic (both variants) remains undocumented. Also, don't double the '/' if an entry in PATH or CDPATH ends in '/' (as in CDPATH=":/usr/src/"). A "cd usr.bin" used to do chdir("/usr/src//usr.bin"). No more. This is almost invisible, and relatively harmless, either way.... Also fix a bug where if a plausible destination directory in CDPATH was located, but the chdir() failed (eg: permission denied) and then a later "." or "" CDPATH entry succeeded, "print" mode was turned on. That is: cd /tmp; mkdir bin mkdir -p P/bin; chmod 0 P/bin CDPATH=/tmp/P: cd bin would cd to /tmp/bin (correctly) but print it (incorrectly). Also when in "cd dest replace" mode, if the result of the replacement generates '-' as the path named, as in: cd $PWD - then simply change to '-' (or attempt to, with CDPATH search), rather than having this being equivalent to "cd -") Because of these changes, the pwd command (and $PWD) essentially always acts as pwd -P, even when called as pwd -L (which is still the default.) That is, even more than it did before. Also fixed a (kind of minor) mem management error (CDPATH related) "whosoever shall padvance must stunalloc before repeating" (and the same for MAILPATH).
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int print = cdprint; /* set -o cdprint to enable */
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while ((opt = nextopt("Pe")) != '\0')
if (opt == 'e')
eopt = true;
/*
* Try (quite hard) to have 'curdir' defined, nothing has set
* it on entry to the shell, but we want 'cd fred; cd -' to work.
*/
getpwd(1);
dest = *argptr;
if (dest == NULL) {
dest = bltinlookup("HOME", 1);
if (dest == NULL)
error("HOME not set");
Make cd (really) do cd -P, and not just claim that is what it is doing while doing a half-hearted, broken, partial, version of cd -L instead. The latter (as the manual says) is not supported, what's more, it is an abomination, and should never be supported (anywhere.) Fix the doc so that the pretense that we notice when a path given crosses a symlink (and turns on printing of the destination directory) is claimed no more (that used to be true until late Dec 2016, but was changed). Now the print happens if -o cdprint is set, or if an entry from CDPATH that is not "" or "." is used (or if the "cd dest repl" cd cmd variant is used.) Fix CDPATH processing: avoid the magic '%' processing that is used for PATH and MAILPATH from corrupting CDPATH. The % magic (both variants) remains undocumented. Also, don't double the '/' if an entry in PATH or CDPATH ends in '/' (as in CDPATH=":/usr/src/"). A "cd usr.bin" used to do chdir("/usr/src//usr.bin"). No more. This is almost invisible, and relatively harmless, either way.... Also fix a bug where if a plausible destination directory in CDPATH was located, but the chdir() failed (eg: permission denied) and then a later "." or "" CDPATH entry succeeded, "print" mode was turned on. That is: cd /tmp; mkdir bin mkdir -p P/bin; chmod 0 P/bin CDPATH=/tmp/P: cd bin would cd to /tmp/bin (correctly) but print it (incorrectly). Also when in "cd dest replace" mode, if the result of the replacement generates '-' as the path named, as in: cd $PWD - then simply change to '-' (or attempt to, with CDPATH search), rather than having this being equivalent to "cd -") Because of these changes, the pwd command (and $PWD) essentially always acts as pwd -P, even when called as pwd -L (which is still the default.) That is, even more than it did before. Also fixed a (kind of minor) mem management error (CDPATH related) "whosoever shall padvance must stunalloc before repeating" (and the same for MAILPATH).
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} else if (argptr[1]) {
/* Do 'ksh' style substitution */
if (!curdir)
error("PWD not set");
p = strstr(curdir, dest);
if (!p)
error("bad substitution");
d = stalloc(strlen(curdir) + strlen(argptr[1]) + 1);
memcpy(d, curdir, p - curdir);
strcpy(d + (p - curdir), argptr[1]);
strcat(d, p + strlen(dest));
dest = d;
print = 1;
} else if (dest[0] == '-' && dest[1] == '\0') {
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dest = prevdir ? prevdir : curdir;
print = 1;
}
if (*dest == '\0')
dest = ".";
Make cd (really) do cd -P, and not just claim that is what it is doing while doing a half-hearted, broken, partial, version of cd -L instead. The latter (as the manual says) is not supported, what's more, it is an abomination, and should never be supported (anywhere.) Fix the doc so that the pretense that we notice when a path given crosses a symlink (and turns on printing of the destination directory) is claimed no more (that used to be true until late Dec 2016, but was changed). Now the print happens if -o cdprint is set, or if an entry from CDPATH that is not "" or "." is used (or if the "cd dest repl" cd cmd variant is used.) Fix CDPATH processing: avoid the magic '%' processing that is used for PATH and MAILPATH from corrupting CDPATH. The % magic (both variants) remains undocumented. Also, don't double the '/' if an entry in PATH or CDPATH ends in '/' (as in CDPATH=":/usr/src/"). A "cd usr.bin" used to do chdir("/usr/src//usr.bin"). No more. This is almost invisible, and relatively harmless, either way.... Also fix a bug where if a plausible destination directory in CDPATH was located, but the chdir() failed (eg: permission denied) and then a later "." or "" CDPATH entry succeeded, "print" mode was turned on. That is: cd /tmp; mkdir bin mkdir -p P/bin; chmod 0 P/bin CDPATH=/tmp/P: cd bin would cd to /tmp/bin (correctly) but print it (incorrectly). Also when in "cd dest replace" mode, if the result of the replacement generates '-' as the path named, as in: cd $PWD - then simply change to '-' (or attempt to, with CDPATH search), rather than having this being equivalent to "cd -") Because of these changes, the pwd command (and $PWD) essentially always acts as pwd -P, even when called as pwd -L (which is still the default.) That is, even more than it did before. Also fixed a (kind of minor) mem management error (CDPATH related) "whosoever shall padvance must stunalloc before repeating" (and the same for MAILPATH).
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cp = dest;
if (*cp == '.' && *++cp == '.')
cp++;
if (*cp == 0 || *cp == '/' || (path = bltinlookup("CDPATH", 1)) == NULL)
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path = nullstr;
Make cd (really) do cd -P, and not just claim that is what it is doing while doing a half-hearted, broken, partial, version of cd -L instead. The latter (as the manual says) is not supported, what's more, it is an abomination, and should never be supported (anywhere.) Fix the doc so that the pretense that we notice when a path given crosses a symlink (and turns on printing of the destination directory) is claimed no more (that used to be true until late Dec 2016, but was changed). Now the print happens if -o cdprint is set, or if an entry from CDPATH that is not "" or "." is used (or if the "cd dest repl" cd cmd variant is used.) Fix CDPATH processing: avoid the magic '%' processing that is used for PATH and MAILPATH from corrupting CDPATH. The % magic (both variants) remains undocumented. Also, don't double the '/' if an entry in PATH or CDPATH ends in '/' (as in CDPATH=":/usr/src/"). A "cd usr.bin" used to do chdir("/usr/src//usr.bin"). No more. This is almost invisible, and relatively harmless, either way.... Also fix a bug where if a plausible destination directory in CDPATH was located, but the chdir() failed (eg: permission denied) and then a later "." or "" CDPATH entry succeeded, "print" mode was turned on. That is: cd /tmp; mkdir bin mkdir -p P/bin; chmod 0 P/bin CDPATH=/tmp/P: cd bin would cd to /tmp/bin (correctly) but print it (incorrectly). Also when in "cd dest replace" mode, if the result of the replacement generates '-' as the path named, as in: cd $PWD - then simply change to '-' (or attempt to, with CDPATH search), rather than having this being equivalent to "cd -") Because of these changes, the pwd command (and $PWD) essentially always acts as pwd -P, even when called as pwd -L (which is still the default.) That is, even more than it did before. Also fixed a (kind of minor) mem management error (CDPATH related) "whosoever shall padvance must stunalloc before repeating" (and the same for MAILPATH).
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while ((p = padvance(&path, dest, 0)) != NULL) {
stunalloc(p);
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if (stat(p, &statb) >= 0 && S_ISDIR(statb.st_mode)) {
Make cd (really) do cd -P, and not just claim that is what it is doing while doing a half-hearted, broken, partial, version of cd -L instead. The latter (as the manual says) is not supported, what's more, it is an abomination, and should never be supported (anywhere.) Fix the doc so that the pretense that we notice when a path given crosses a symlink (and turns on printing of the destination directory) is claimed no more (that used to be true until late Dec 2016, but was changed). Now the print happens if -o cdprint is set, or if an entry from CDPATH that is not "" or "." is used (or if the "cd dest repl" cd cmd variant is used.) Fix CDPATH processing: avoid the magic '%' processing that is used for PATH and MAILPATH from corrupting CDPATH. The % magic (both variants) remains undocumented. Also, don't double the '/' if an entry in PATH or CDPATH ends in '/' (as in CDPATH=":/usr/src/"). A "cd usr.bin" used to do chdir("/usr/src//usr.bin"). No more. This is almost invisible, and relatively harmless, either way.... Also fix a bug where if a plausible destination directory in CDPATH was located, but the chdir() failed (eg: permission denied) and then a later "." or "" CDPATH entry succeeded, "print" mode was turned on. That is: cd /tmp; mkdir bin mkdir -p P/bin; chmod 0 P/bin CDPATH=/tmp/P: cd bin would cd to /tmp/bin (correctly) but print it (incorrectly). Also when in "cd dest replace" mode, if the result of the replacement generates '-' as the path named, as in: cd $PWD - then simply change to '-' (or attempt to, with CDPATH search), rather than having this being equivalent to "cd -") Because of these changes, the pwd command (and $PWD) essentially always acts as pwd -P, even when called as pwd -L (which is still the default.) That is, even more than it did before. Also fixed a (kind of minor) mem management error (CDPATH related) "whosoever shall padvance must stunalloc before repeating" (and the same for MAILPATH).
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int dopr = print;
int x;
Make cd (really) do cd -P, and not just claim that is what it is doing while doing a half-hearted, broken, partial, version of cd -L instead. The latter (as the manual says) is not supported, what's more, it is an abomination, and should never be supported (anywhere.) Fix the doc so that the pretense that we notice when a path given crosses a symlink (and turns on printing of the destination directory) is claimed no more (that used to be true until late Dec 2016, but was changed). Now the print happens if -o cdprint is set, or if an entry from CDPATH that is not "" or "." is used (or if the "cd dest repl" cd cmd variant is used.) Fix CDPATH processing: avoid the magic '%' processing that is used for PATH and MAILPATH from corrupting CDPATH. The % magic (both variants) remains undocumented. Also, don't double the '/' if an entry in PATH or CDPATH ends in '/' (as in CDPATH=":/usr/src/"). A "cd usr.bin" used to do chdir("/usr/src//usr.bin"). No more. This is almost invisible, and relatively harmless, either way.... Also fix a bug where if a plausible destination directory in CDPATH was located, but the chdir() failed (eg: permission denied) and then a later "." or "" CDPATH entry succeeded, "print" mode was turned on. That is: cd /tmp; mkdir bin mkdir -p P/bin; chmod 0 P/bin CDPATH=/tmp/P: cd bin would cd to /tmp/bin (correctly) but print it (incorrectly). Also when in "cd dest replace" mode, if the result of the replacement generates '-' as the path named, as in: cd $PWD - then simply change to '-' (or attempt to, with CDPATH search), rather than having this being equivalent to "cd -") Because of these changes, the pwd command (and $PWD) essentially always acts as pwd -P, even when called as pwd -L (which is still the default.) That is, even more than it did before. Also fixed a (kind of minor) mem management error (CDPATH related) "whosoever shall padvance must stunalloc before repeating" (and the same for MAILPATH).
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if (!print)
dopr = strcmp(p, dest);
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if ((x = docd(p, dopr != 0, eopt)) >= 0)
return x;
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}
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}
error("can't cd to %s", dest);
/* NOTREACHED */
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}
/*
* Actually do the chdir. In an interactive shell, print the
* directory name if "print" is nonzero.
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*/
STATIC int
docd(const char *dest, bool print, bool eopt)
{
bool gotpwd;
Make cd (really) do cd -P, and not just claim that is what it is doing while doing a half-hearted, broken, partial, version of cd -L instead. The latter (as the manual says) is not supported, what's more, it is an abomination, and should never be supported (anywhere.) Fix the doc so that the pretense that we notice when a path given crosses a symlink (and turns on printing of the destination directory) is claimed no more (that used to be true until late Dec 2016, but was changed). Now the print happens if -o cdprint is set, or if an entry from CDPATH that is not "" or "." is used (or if the "cd dest repl" cd cmd variant is used.) Fix CDPATH processing: avoid the magic '%' processing that is used for PATH and MAILPATH from corrupting CDPATH. The % magic (both variants) remains undocumented. Also, don't double the '/' if an entry in PATH or CDPATH ends in '/' (as in CDPATH=":/usr/src/"). A "cd usr.bin" used to do chdir("/usr/src//usr.bin"). No more. This is almost invisible, and relatively harmless, either way.... Also fix a bug where if a plausible destination directory in CDPATH was located, but the chdir() failed (eg: permission denied) and then a later "." or "" CDPATH entry succeeded, "print" mode was turned on. That is: cd /tmp; mkdir bin mkdir -p P/bin; chmod 0 P/bin CDPATH=/tmp/P: cd bin would cd to /tmp/bin (correctly) but print it (incorrectly). Also when in "cd dest replace" mode, if the result of the replacement generates '-' as the path named, as in: cd $PWD - then simply change to '-' (or attempt to, with CDPATH search), rather than having this being equivalent to "cd -") Because of these changes, the pwd command (and $PWD) essentially always acts as pwd -P, even when called as pwd -L (which is still the default.) That is, even more than it did before. Also fixed a (kind of minor) mem management error (CDPATH related) "whosoever shall padvance must stunalloc before repeating" (and the same for MAILPATH).
2017-06-04 23:27:14 +03:00
#if 0 /* no "cd -L" (ever) so all this is just a waste of time ... */
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char *p;
char *q;
char *component;
struct stat statb;
int first;
int badstat;
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/*
* Check each component of the path. If we find a symlink or
* something we can't stat, clear curdir to force a getcwd()
* next time we get the value of the current directory.
*/
badstat = 0;
cdcomppath = stalloc(strlen(dest) + 1);
scopy(dest, cdcomppath);
STARTSTACKSTR(p);
if (*dest == '/') {
STPUTC('/', p);
cdcomppath++;
}
first = 1;
while ((q = getcomponent()) != NULL) {
if (q[0] == '\0' || (q[0] == '.' && q[1] == '\0'))
continue;
if (! first)
STPUTC('/', p);
first = 0;
component = q;
while (*q)
STPUTC(*q++, p);
if (equal(component, ".."))
continue;
STACKSTRNUL(p);
if (lstat(stackblock(), &statb) < 0) {
badstat = 1;
break;
}
}
Make cd (really) do cd -P, and not just claim that is what it is doing while doing a half-hearted, broken, partial, version of cd -L instead. The latter (as the manual says) is not supported, what's more, it is an abomination, and should never be supported (anywhere.) Fix the doc so that the pretense that we notice when a path given crosses a symlink (and turns on printing of the destination directory) is claimed no more (that used to be true until late Dec 2016, but was changed). Now the print happens if -o cdprint is set, or if an entry from CDPATH that is not "" or "." is used (or if the "cd dest repl" cd cmd variant is used.) Fix CDPATH processing: avoid the magic '%' processing that is used for PATH and MAILPATH from corrupting CDPATH. The % magic (both variants) remains undocumented. Also, don't double the '/' if an entry in PATH or CDPATH ends in '/' (as in CDPATH=":/usr/src/"). A "cd usr.bin" used to do chdir("/usr/src//usr.bin"). No more. This is almost invisible, and relatively harmless, either way.... Also fix a bug where if a plausible destination directory in CDPATH was located, but the chdir() failed (eg: permission denied) and then a later "." or "" CDPATH entry succeeded, "print" mode was turned on. That is: cd /tmp; mkdir bin mkdir -p P/bin; chmod 0 P/bin CDPATH=/tmp/P: cd bin would cd to /tmp/bin (correctly) but print it (incorrectly). Also when in "cd dest replace" mode, if the result of the replacement generates '-' as the path named, as in: cd $PWD - then simply change to '-' (or attempt to, with CDPATH search), rather than having this being equivalent to "cd -") Because of these changes, the pwd command (and $PWD) essentially always acts as pwd -P, even when called as pwd -L (which is still the default.) That is, even more than it did before. Also fixed a (kind of minor) mem management error (CDPATH related) "whosoever shall padvance must stunalloc before repeating" (and the same for MAILPATH).
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#endif
CTRACE(DBG_CMDS, ("docd(\"%s\", %s, %s) called\n", dest,
print ? "true" : "false", eopt ? "true" : "false"));
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INTOFF;
if (chdir(dest) < 0) {
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INTON;
return -1;
}
gotpwd = updatepwd(NULL); /* only do cd -P, no "pretend" -L mode */
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INTON;
if (print && (iflag || posix))
out1fmt("%s\n", gotpwd ? curdir : dest);
return gotpwd || !eopt ? 0 : 1;
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}
/*
* Get the next component of the path name pointed to by cdcomppath.
* This routine overwrites the string pointed to by cdcomppath.
*/
STATIC char *
getcomponent(void)
{
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char *p;
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char *start;
if ((p = cdcomppath) == NULL)
return NULL;
start = cdcomppath;
while (*p != '/' && *p != '\0')
p++;
if (*p == '\0') {
cdcomppath = NULL;
} else {
*p++ = '\0';
cdcomppath = p;
}
return start;
}
/*
* Update curdir (the name of the current directory) in response to a
* cd command. We also call hashcd to let the routines in exec.c know
* that the current directory has changed.
*/
STATIC bool
updatepwd(const char *dir)
{
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char *new;
char *p;
hashcd(); /* update command hash table */
/*
* If our argument is NULL, we don't know the current directory
* any more because we traversed a symbolic link or something
* we couldn't stat(). Or we simply don't trust what we had.
*/
if (dir == NULL || curdir == NULL) {
if (prevdir)
ckfree(prevdir);
INTOFF;
prevdir = curdir;
curdir = NULL;
getpwd(1);
INTON;
if (curdir) {
setvar("OLDPWD", prevdir, VEXPORT);
setvar("PWD", curdir, VEXPORT);
return true;
} else
unsetvar("PWD", 0);
return false;
}
/* XXX none of the following code is ever executed any more */
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cdcomppath = stalloc(strlen(dir) + 1);
scopy(dir, cdcomppath);
STARTSTACKSTR(new);
if (*dir != '/') {
p = curdir;
while (*p)
STPUTC(*p++, new);
if (p[-1] == '/')
STUNPUTC(new);
}
while ((p = getcomponent()) != NULL) {
if (equal(p, "..")) {
while (new > stackblock() && (STUNPUTC(new), *new) != '/');
} else if (*p != '\0' && ! equal(p, ".")) {
STPUTC('/', new);
while (*p)
STPUTC(*p++, new);
}
}
if (new == stackblock())
STPUTC('/', new);
STACKSTRNUL(new);
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INTOFF;
if (prevdir)
ckfree(prevdir);
prevdir = curdir;
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curdir = savestr(stackblock());
setvar("OLDPWD", prevdir, VEXPORT);
setvar("PWD", curdir, VEXPORT);
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INTON;
return true;
}
/*
* Test whether we are currently in the direcory given
* (provided it is given, and is absolute)
* ie: determine if path is fully qualified pathname of "."
*/
STATIC bool
is_curdir(const char *path)
{
struct stat stdot, stpath;
return path != NULL &&
*path == '/' &&
stat(".", &stdot) != -1 &&
stat(path, &stpath) != -1 &&
stdot.st_dev == stpath.st_dev &&
stdot.st_ino == stpath.st_ino;
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}
/*
* Posix says the default should be 'pwd -L' (as below), however
* the 'cd' command (above) does something much nearer to the
* posix 'cd -P' (not the posix default of 'cd -L').
* If 'cd' is changed to support -P/L then the default here
* needs to be revisited if the historic behaviour is to be kept.
*/
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int
pwdcmd(int argc, char **argv)
{
int i;
char opt = 'L';
while ((i = nextopt("LP")) != '\0')
opt = i;
if (*argptr)
error("unexpected argument");
if (opt == 'L')
getpwd(0);
else
find_curdir(0);
#if 0 /* posix has been changed to forbid this */
setvar("OLDPWD", prevdir, VEXPORT);
setvar("PWD", curdir, VEXPORT);
#endif
if (!is_curdir(curdir)) {
find_curdir(1);
if (curdir == NULL)
error("Unable to find current directory");
}
flushout(out1); /* make sure buffer is empty */
clr_err(out1); /* and forget any earlier errors */
out1str(curdir);
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out1c('\n');
flushout(out1);
if (io_err(out1))
error("stdout: %s", strerror(errno));
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return 0;
}
void
initpwd(void)
{
getpwd(1);
if (curdir)
setvar("PWD", curdir, VEXPORT);
else
sh_warnx("Cannot determine current working directory");
}
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#define MAXPWD 256
/*
* Find out what the current directory is. If we already know the current
* directory, this routine returns immediately.
*/
void
getpwd(int noerror)
{
char *pwd;
static int first = 1;
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if (curdir)
return;
if (first) {
/*
* Note that this happens via the call from initpwd()
* just above, which is called early from main() during
* sh startup, so fetching PWD from the entry environment
* (which is what getenv() does) is acceptable. Here we
* could use normal sh var lookup functions instead, as
* the arriving environment has already been imported before
* we get here, but it makes little difference.
*
* XXX What would be better perhaps would be to move all of
* this into initpwd() instead of here, so we could get rid of
* this "first" static - that function is only ever called once.
* XXX Some other day.
*/
first = 0;
pwd = getenv("PWD");
if (is_curdir(pwd)) {
curdir = savestr(pwd);
return;
}
}
find_curdir(noerror);
return;
}
STATIC void
find_curdir(int noerror)
{
int i;
char *pwd;
/*
* Things are a bit complicated here; we could have just used
* getcwd, but traditionally getcwd is implemented using popen
* to /bin/pwd. This creates a problem for us, since we cannot
* keep track of the job if it is being ran behind our backs.
* XXX That's not actually the problem, a process created and
* XXX destroyed that we know nothing about is harmless. The
* XXX problem is that old popen() implementations would use
* XXX wait(2) to await completion of the command, and that might
* XXX collect (and ignore) our children. As long as we are
* XXX confident that popen() uses waitpid() (or the equv) there
* XXX would not be a problem. But how do we know that?
* So we re-implement getcwd(), and we suppress interrupts
* throughout the process. This is not completely safe, since
* the user can still break out of it by killing the pwd program.
* We still try to use getcwd for systems that we know have a
* c implementation of getcwd, that does not open a pipe to
* /bin/pwd.
*/
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#if defined(__NetBSD__) || defined(__SVR4)
for (i = MAXPWD;; i *= 2) {
pwd = stalloc(i);
if (getcwd(pwd, i) != NULL) {
curdir = savestr(pwd);
stunalloc(pwd);
return;
}
stunalloc(pwd);
if (errno == ERANGE)
continue;
if (!noerror)
error("getcwd() failed: %s", strerror(errno));
return;
}
#else
{
char *p;
int status;
struct job *jp;
int pip[2];
pwd = stalloc(MAXPWD);
INTOFF;
if (pipe(pip) < 0)
error("Pipe call failed");
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jp = makejob(NULL, 1);
if (forkshell(jp, NULL, FORK_NOJOB) == 0) {
(void) close(pip[0]);
movefd(pip[1], 1);
(void) execl("/bin/pwd", "pwd", (char *)0);
error("Cannot exec /bin/pwd");
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}
(void) close(pip[1]);
pip[1] = -1;
p = pwd;
while ((i = read(pip[0], p, pwd + MAXPWD - p)) > 0
|| (i == -1 && errno == EINTR)) {
if (i > 0)
p += i;
}
(void) close(pip[0]);
pip[0] = -1;
status = waitforjob(jp);
if (status != 0)
error((char *)0);
if (i < 0 || p == pwd || p[-1] != '\n') {
if (noerror) {
INTON;
return;
}
error("pwd command failed");
}
p[-1] = '\0';
INTON;
curdir = savestr(pwd);
stunalloc(pwd);
return;
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}
#endif
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}