/* $NetBSD: ex_source.c,v 1.8 2001/03/31 11:37:50 aymeric Exp $ */ /*- * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993, 1994 * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996 * Keith Bostic. All rights reserved. * * See the LICENSE file for redistribution information. */ #include "config.h" #ifndef lint static const char sccsid[] = "@(#)ex_source.c 10.12 (Berkeley) 8/10/96"; #endif /* not lint */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "../common/common.h" /* * ex_source -- :source file * Execute ex commands from a file. * * PUBLIC: int ex_source __P((SCR *, EXCMD *)); */ int ex_source(sp, cmdp) SCR *sp; EXCMD *cmdp; { struct stat sb; int fd, len; char *bp, *name; name = cmdp->argv[0]->bp; if ((fd = open(name, O_RDONLY, 0)) < 0 || fstat(fd, &sb)) goto err; /* * XXX * I'd like to test to see if the file is too large to malloc. Since * we don't know what size or type off_t's or size_t's are, what the * largest unsigned integral type is, or what random insanity the local * C compiler will perpetrate, doing the comparison in a portable way * is flatly impossible. So, put an fairly unreasonable limit on it, * I don't want to be dropping core here. */ #define MEGABYTE 1048576 if (sb.st_size > MEGABYTE) { errno = ENOMEM; goto err; } MALLOC(sp, bp, char *, (size_t)sb.st_size + 1); if (bp == NULL) { (void)close(fd); return (1); } bp[sb.st_size] = '\0'; /* Read the file into memory. */ len = read(fd, bp, (int)sb.st_size); (void)close(fd); if (len == -1 || len != sb.st_size) { if (len != sb.st_size) errno = EIO; free(bp); err: msgq_str(sp, M_SYSERR, name, "%s"); return (1); } /* Put it on the ex queue. */ return (ex_run_str(sp, name, bp, (size_t)sb.st_size, 1, 1)); }