/* GLIB - Library of useful routines for C programming * gmappedfile.c: Simplified wrapper around the mmap() function. * * Copyright 2005 Matthias Clasen * * This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or * modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public * License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either * version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. * * This library 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 * Lesser General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public * License along with this library; if not, see . */ #include "config.h" #include #include #include #include #ifdef HAVE_MMAP #include #endif #include "glibconfig.h" #ifdef G_OS_UNIX #include #endif #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 #include #include #undef fstat #define fstat(a,b) _fstati64(a,b) #undef stat #define stat _stati64 #ifndef S_ISREG #define S_ISREG(m) (((m) & _S_IFMT) == _S_IFREG) #endif #endif #include "gconvert.h" #include "gerror.h" #include "gfileutils.h" #include "gmappedfile.h" #include "gmem.h" #include "gmessages.h" #include "gstdio.h" #include "gstrfuncs.h" #include "gatomic.h" #include "glibintl.h" #ifndef _O_BINARY #define _O_BINARY 0 #endif #ifndef MAP_FAILED #define MAP_FAILED ((void *) -1) #endif /** * GMappedFile: * * The #GMappedFile represents a file mapping created with * g_mapped_file_new(). It has only private members and should * not be accessed directly. */ struct _GMappedFile { gchar *contents; gsize length; gpointer free_func; int ref_count; #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 HANDLE mapping; #endif }; static void g_mapped_file_destroy (GMappedFile *file) { if (file->length) { #ifdef HAVE_MMAP munmap (file->contents, file->length); #endif #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 UnmapViewOfFile (file->contents); CloseHandle (file->mapping); #endif } g_slice_free (GMappedFile, file); } static GMappedFile* mapped_file_new_from_fd (int fd, gboolean writable, const gchar *filename, GError **error) { GMappedFile *file; struct stat st; file = g_slice_new0 (GMappedFile); file->ref_count = 1; file->free_func = g_mapped_file_destroy; if (fstat (fd, &st) == -1) { int save_errno = errno; gchar *display_filename = filename ? g_filename_display_name (filename) : NULL; g_set_error (error, G_FILE_ERROR, g_file_error_from_errno (save_errno), _("Failed to get attributes of file ā€œ%s%s%s%sā€: fstat() failed: %s"), display_filename ? display_filename : "fd", display_filename ? "' " : "", display_filename ? display_filename : "", display_filename ? "'" : "", g_strerror (save_errno)); g_free (display_filename); goto out; } /* mmap() on size 0 will fail with EINVAL, so we avoid calling mmap() * in that case -- but only if we have a regular file; we still want * attempts to mmap a character device to fail, for example. */ if (st.st_size == 0 && S_ISREG (st.st_mode)) { file->length = 0; file->contents = NULL; return file; } file->contents = MAP_FAILED; #ifdef HAVE_MMAP if (st.st_size > G_MAXSIZE) { errno = EINVAL; } else { file->length = (gsize) st.st_size; file->contents = (gchar *) mmap (NULL, file->length, writable ? PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE : PROT_READ, MAP_PRIVATE, fd, 0); } #endif #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 file->length = st.st_size; file->mapping = CreateFileMapping ((HANDLE) _get_osfhandle (fd), NULL, writable ? PAGE_WRITECOPY : PAGE_READONLY, 0, 0, NULL); if (file->mapping != NULL) { file->contents = MapViewOfFile (file->mapping, writable ? FILE_MAP_COPY : FILE_MAP_READ, 0, 0, 0); if (file->contents == NULL) { file->contents = MAP_FAILED; CloseHandle (file->mapping); file->mapping = NULL; } } #endif if (file->contents == MAP_FAILED) { int save_errno = errno; gchar *display_filename = filename ? g_filename_display_name (filename) : NULL; g_set_error (error, G_FILE_ERROR, g_file_error_from_errno (save_errno), _("Failed to map %s%s%s%s: mmap() failed: %s"), display_filename ? display_filename : "fd", display_filename ? "' " : "", display_filename ? display_filename : "", display_filename ? "'" : "", g_strerror (save_errno)); g_free (display_filename); goto out; } return file; out: g_slice_free (GMappedFile, file); return NULL; } /** * g_mapped_file_new: * @filename: (type filename): The path of the file to load, in the GLib * filename encoding * @writable: whether the mapping should be writable * @error: return location for a #GError, or %NULL * * Maps a file into memory. On UNIX, this is using the mmap() function. * * If @writable is %TRUE, the mapped buffer may be modified, otherwise * it is an error to modify the mapped buffer. Modifications to the buffer * are not visible to other processes mapping the same file, and are not * written back to the file. * * Note that modifications of the underlying file might affect the contents * of the #GMappedFile. Therefore, mapping should only be used if the file * will not be modified, or if all modifications of the file are done * atomically (e.g. using g_file_set_contents()). * * If @filename is the name of an empty, regular file, the function * will successfully return an empty #GMappedFile. In other cases of * size 0 (e.g. device files such as /dev/null), @error will be set * to the #GFileError value #G_FILE_ERROR_INVAL. * * Returns: a newly allocated #GMappedFile which must be unref'd * with g_mapped_file_unref(), or %NULL if the mapping failed. * * Since: 2.8 */ GMappedFile * g_mapped_file_new (const gchar *filename, gboolean writable, GError **error) { GMappedFile *file; int fd; g_return_val_if_fail (filename != NULL, NULL); g_return_val_if_fail (!error || *error == NULL, NULL); fd = g_open (filename, (writable ? O_RDWR : O_RDONLY) | _O_BINARY, 0); if (fd == -1) { int save_errno = errno; gchar *display_filename = g_filename_display_name (filename); g_set_error (error, G_FILE_ERROR, g_file_error_from_errno (save_errno), _("Failed to open file ā€œ%sā€: open() failed: %s"), display_filename, g_strerror (save_errno)); g_free (display_filename); return NULL; } file = mapped_file_new_from_fd (fd, writable, filename, error); close (fd); return file; } /** * g_mapped_file_new_from_fd: * @fd: The file descriptor of the file to load * @writable: whether the mapping should be writable * @error: return location for a #GError, or %NULL * * Maps a file into memory. On UNIX, this is using the mmap() function. * * If @writable is %TRUE, the mapped buffer may be modified, otherwise * it is an error to modify the mapped buffer. Modifications to the buffer * are not visible to other processes mapping the same file, and are not * written back to the file. * * Note that modifications of the underlying file might affect the contents * of the #GMappedFile. Therefore, mapping should only be used if the file * will not be modified, or if all modifications of the file are done * atomically (e.g. using g_file_set_contents()). * * Returns: a newly allocated #GMappedFile which must be unref'd * with g_mapped_file_unref(), or %NULL if the mapping failed. * * Since: 2.32 */ GMappedFile * g_mapped_file_new_from_fd (gint fd, gboolean writable, GError **error) { return mapped_file_new_from_fd (fd, writable, NULL, error); } /** * g_mapped_file_get_length: * @file: a #GMappedFile * * Returns the length of the contents of a #GMappedFile. * * Returns: the length of the contents of @file. * * Since: 2.8 */ gsize g_mapped_file_get_length (GMappedFile *file) { g_return_val_if_fail (file != NULL, 0); return file->length; } /** * g_mapped_file_get_contents: * @file: a #GMappedFile * * Returns the contents of a #GMappedFile. * * Note that the contents may not be zero-terminated, * even if the #GMappedFile is backed by a text file. * * If the file is empty then %NULL is returned. * * Returns: the contents of @file, or %NULL. * * Since: 2.8 */ gchar * g_mapped_file_get_contents (GMappedFile *file) { g_return_val_if_fail (file != NULL, NULL); return file->contents; } /** * g_mapped_file_free: * @file: a #GMappedFile * * This call existed before #GMappedFile had refcounting and is currently * exactly the same as g_mapped_file_unref(). * * Since: 2.8 * Deprecated:2.22: Use g_mapped_file_unref() instead. */ void g_mapped_file_free (GMappedFile *file) { g_mapped_file_unref (file); } /** * g_mapped_file_ref: * @file: a #GMappedFile * * Increments the reference count of @file by one. It is safe to call * this function from any thread. * * Returns: the passed in #GMappedFile. * * Since: 2.22 **/ GMappedFile * g_mapped_file_ref (GMappedFile *file) { g_return_val_if_fail (file != NULL, NULL); g_atomic_int_inc (&file->ref_count); return file; } /** * g_mapped_file_unref: * @file: a #GMappedFile * * Decrements the reference count of @file by one. If the reference count * drops to 0, unmaps the buffer of @file and frees it. * * It is safe to call this function from any thread. * * Since 2.22 **/ void g_mapped_file_unref (GMappedFile *file) { g_return_if_fail (file != NULL); if (g_atomic_int_dec_and_test (&file->ref_count)) g_mapped_file_destroy (file); } /** * g_mapped_file_get_bytes: * @file: a #GMappedFile * * Creates a new #GBytes which references the data mapped from @file. * The mapped contents of the file must not be modified after creating this * bytes object, because a #GBytes should be immutable. * * Returns: (transfer full): A newly allocated #GBytes referencing data * from @file * * Since: 2.34 **/ GBytes * g_mapped_file_get_bytes (GMappedFile *file) { g_return_val_if_fail (file != NULL, NULL); return g_bytes_new_with_free_func (file->contents, file->length, (GDestroyNotify) g_mapped_file_unref, g_mapped_file_ref (file)); }