/* gstdio.c - wrappers for C library functions * * Copyright 2004 Tor Lillqvist * * 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 "glibconfig.h" #define G_STDIO_NO_WRAP_ON_UNIX #include #include #include #ifdef G_OS_UNIX #include #endif #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 #include #include #include #include #include #include #else #include #include #endif #include "gstdio.h" #include "gstdioprivate.h" #if !defined (G_OS_UNIX) && !defined (G_OS_WIN32) #error Please port this to your operating system #endif #if defined (_MSC_VER) && !defined(_WIN64) #undef _wstat #define _wstat _wstat32 #endif #if defined (G_OS_WIN32) /* We can't include Windows DDK and Windows SDK simultaneously, * so let's copy this here from MinGW-w64 DDK. * The structure is ultimately documented here: * https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff552012(v=vs.85).aspx */ typedef struct _REPARSE_DATA_BUFFER { ULONG ReparseTag; USHORT ReparseDataLength; USHORT Reserved; union { struct { USHORT SubstituteNameOffset; USHORT SubstituteNameLength; USHORT PrintNameOffset; USHORT PrintNameLength; ULONG Flags; WCHAR PathBuffer[1]; } SymbolicLinkReparseBuffer; struct { USHORT SubstituteNameOffset; USHORT SubstituteNameLength; USHORT PrintNameOffset; USHORT PrintNameLength; WCHAR PathBuffer[1]; } MountPointReparseBuffer; struct { UCHAR DataBuffer[1]; } GenericReparseBuffer; }; } REPARSE_DATA_BUFFER, *PREPARSE_DATA_BUFFER; static int w32_error_to_errno (DWORD error_code) { switch (error_code) { case ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED: return EACCES; break; case ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE: return EBADF; break; case ERROR_INVALID_FUNCTION: return EFAULT; break; case ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND: return ENOENT; break; case ERROR_PATH_NOT_FOUND: return ENOENT; /* or ELOOP, or ENAMETOOLONG */ break; case ERROR_NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY: case ERROR_OUTOFMEMORY: return ENOMEM; break; default: return EIO; break; } } static int _g_win32_stat_utf16_no_trailing_slashes (const gunichar2 *filename, int fd, GWin32PrivateStat *buf, gboolean for_symlink) { HANDLE file_handle; gboolean succeeded_so_far; DWORD error_code; struct __stat64 statbuf; BY_HANDLE_FILE_INFORMATION handle_info; FILE_STANDARD_INFO std_info; WIN32_FIND_DATAW finddata; DWORD immediate_attributes; gboolean is_symlink = FALSE; gboolean is_directory; DWORD open_flags; wchar_t *filename_target = NULL; int result; if (fd < 0) { immediate_attributes = GetFileAttributesW (filename); if (immediate_attributes == INVALID_FILE_ATTRIBUTES) { error_code = GetLastError (); errno = w32_error_to_errno (error_code); return -1; } is_symlink = (immediate_attributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT) == FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT; is_directory = (immediate_attributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) == FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY; open_flags = FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL; if (for_symlink && is_symlink) open_flags |= FILE_FLAG_OPEN_REPARSE_POINT; if (is_directory) open_flags |= FILE_FLAG_BACKUP_SEMANTICS; file_handle = CreateFileW (filename, FILE_READ_ATTRIBUTES, FILE_SHARE_READ, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, open_flags, NULL); if (file_handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) { error_code = GetLastError (); errno = w32_error_to_errno (error_code); return -1; } } else { file_handle = (HANDLE) _get_osfhandle (fd); if (file_handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) return -1; } succeeded_so_far = GetFileInformationByHandle (file_handle, &handle_info); error_code = GetLastError (); if (succeeded_so_far) { succeeded_so_far = GetFileInformationByHandleEx (file_handle, FileStandardInfo, &std_info, sizeof (std_info)); error_code = GetLastError (); } if (!succeeded_so_far) { CloseHandle (file_handle); errno = w32_error_to_errno (error_code); return -1; } /* It's tempting to use GetFileInformationByHandleEx(FileAttributeTagInfo), * but it always reports that the ReparseTag is 0. */ if (fd < 0) { HANDLE tmp = FindFirstFileW (filename, &finddata); if (tmp == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) { error_code = GetLastError (); errno = w32_error_to_errno (error_code); CloseHandle (file_handle); return -1; } FindClose (tmp); if (is_symlink && !for_symlink) { /* If filename is a symlink, _wstat64 obtains information about * the symlink (except that st_size will be 0). * To get information about the target we need to resolve * the symlink first. And we need _wstat64() to get st_dev, * it's a bother to try finding it ourselves. */ DWORD filename_target_len; DWORD new_len; /* Just in case, give it a real memory location instead of NULL */ new_len = GetFinalPathNameByHandleW (file_handle, (wchar_t *) &filename_target_len, 0, FILE_NAME_NORMALIZED); #define SANE_LIMIT 1024 * 10 if (new_len >= SANE_LIMIT) #undef SANE_LIMIT { new_len = 0; error_code = ERROR_BUFFER_OVERFLOW; } else if (new_len == 0) { error_code = GetLastError (); } if (new_len > 0) { const wchar_t *extended_prefix = L"\\\\?\\"; const gsize extended_prefix_len = wcslen (extended_prefix); const gsize extended_prefix_len_bytes = sizeof (wchar_t) * extended_prefix_len; /* Pretend that new_len doesn't count the terminating NUL char, * and ask for a bit more space than is needed. */ filename_target_len = new_len + 5; filename_target = g_malloc (filename_target_len * sizeof (wchar_t)); new_len = GetFinalPathNameByHandleW (file_handle, filename_target, filename_target_len, FILE_NAME_NORMALIZED); /* filename_target_len is already larger than needed, * new_len should be smaller than that, even if the size * is off by 1 for some reason. */ if (new_len >= filename_target_len - 1) { new_len = 0; error_code = ERROR_BUFFER_OVERFLOW; g_clear_pointer (&filename_target, g_free); } /* GetFinalPathNameByHandle() is documented to return extended paths, * strip the extended prefix. */ else if (new_len > extended_prefix_len && memcmp (filename_target, extended_prefix, extended_prefix_len_bytes) == 0) { new_len -= extended_prefix_len; memmove (filename_target, filename_target + extended_prefix_len, (new_len + 1) * sizeof (wchar_t)); } } if (new_len == 0) succeeded_so_far = FALSE; } CloseHandle (file_handle); } /* else if fd >= 0 the file_handle was obtained via _get_osfhandle() * and must not be closed, it is owned by fd. */ if (!succeeded_so_far) { errno = w32_error_to_errno (error_code); return -1; } if (fd < 0) result = _wstat64 (filename_target != NULL ? filename_target : filename, &statbuf); else result = _fstat64 (fd, &statbuf); if (result != 0) { int errsv = errno; g_free (filename_target); errno = errsv; return -1; } g_free (filename_target); buf->st_dev = statbuf.st_dev; buf->st_mode = statbuf.st_mode; buf->volume_serial = handle_info.dwVolumeSerialNumber; buf->file_index = (((guint64) handle_info.nFileIndexHigh) << 32) | handle_info.nFileIndexLow; /* Note that immediate_attributes is for the symlink * (if it's a symlink), while handle_info contains info * about the symlink or the target, depending on the flags * we used earlier. */ buf->attributes = handle_info.dwFileAttributes; buf->st_nlink = handle_info.nNumberOfLinks; buf->st_size = (((guint64) handle_info.nFileSizeHigh) << 32) | handle_info.nFileSizeLow; buf->allocated_size = std_info.AllocationSize.QuadPart; if (fd < 0 && buf->attributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT) buf->reparse_tag = finddata.dwReserved0; else buf->reparse_tag = 0; buf->st_ctime = statbuf.st_ctime; buf->st_atime = statbuf.st_atime; buf->st_mtime = statbuf.st_mtime; return 0; } static int _g_win32_stat_utf8 (const gchar *filename, GWin32PrivateStat *buf, gboolean for_symlink) { wchar_t *wfilename; int result; gsize len; len = strlen (filename); while (len > 0 && G_IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (filename[len - 1])) len--; if (len <= 0 || (g_path_is_absolute (filename) && len <= g_path_skip_root (filename) - filename)) len = strlen (filename); wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, len, NULL, NULL, NULL); if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } result = _g_win32_stat_utf16_no_trailing_slashes (wfilename, -1, buf, for_symlink); g_free (wfilename); return result; } int g_win32_stat_utf8 (const gchar *filename, GWin32PrivateStat *buf) { return _g_win32_stat_utf8 (filename, buf, FALSE); } int g_win32_lstat_utf8 (const gchar *filename, GWin32PrivateStat *buf) { return _g_win32_stat_utf8 (filename, buf, TRUE); } int g_win32_fstat (int fd, GWin32PrivateStat *buf) { return _g_win32_stat_utf16_no_trailing_slashes (NULL, fd, buf, FALSE); } static int _g_win32_readlink_utf16_raw (const gunichar2 *filename, gunichar2 *buf, gsize buf_size) { DWORD returned_bytes; BYTE returned_data[MAXIMUM_REPARSE_DATA_BUFFER_SIZE]; /* This is 16k, by the way */ HANDLE h; DWORD attributes; REPARSE_DATA_BUFFER *rep_buf; DWORD to_copy; DWORD error_code; if (buf_size > G_MAXSIZE / sizeof (wchar_t)) { /* "buf_size * sizeof (wchar_t)" overflows */ errno = EFAULT; return -1; } if ((attributes = GetFileAttributesW (filename)) == 0) { error_code = GetLastError (); errno = w32_error_to_errno (error_code); return -1; } if ((attributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT) == 0) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } /* To read symlink target we need to open the file as a reparse * point and use DeviceIoControl() on it. */ h = CreateFileW (filename, FILE_READ_ATTRIBUTES | SYNCHRONIZE | GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_READ, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL | FILE_FLAG_OPEN_REPARSE_POINT | (attributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY ? FILE_FLAG_BACKUP_SEMANTICS : 0), NULL); if (h == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) { error_code = GetLastError (); errno = w32_error_to_errno (error_code); return -1; } if (!DeviceIoControl (h, FSCTL_GET_REPARSE_POINT, NULL, 0, returned_data, MAXIMUM_REPARSE_DATA_BUFFER_SIZE, &returned_bytes, NULL)) { error_code = GetLastError (); errno = w32_error_to_errno (error_code); CloseHandle (h); return -1; } rep_buf = (REPARSE_DATA_BUFFER *) returned_data; to_copy = 0; if (rep_buf->ReparseTag == IO_REPARSE_TAG_SYMLINK) { to_copy = rep_buf->SymbolicLinkReparseBuffer.SubstituteNameLength; if (to_copy > buf_size * sizeof (wchar_t)) to_copy = buf_size * sizeof (wchar_t); memcpy (buf, &((BYTE *) rep_buf->SymbolicLinkReparseBuffer.PathBuffer)[rep_buf->SymbolicLinkReparseBuffer.SubstituteNameOffset], to_copy); } else if (rep_buf->ReparseTag == IO_REPARSE_TAG_MOUNT_POINT) { to_copy = rep_buf->MountPointReparseBuffer.SubstituteNameLength; if (to_copy > buf_size * sizeof (wchar_t)) to_copy = buf_size * sizeof (wchar_t); memcpy (buf, &((BYTE *) rep_buf->MountPointReparseBuffer.PathBuffer)[rep_buf->MountPointReparseBuffer.SubstituteNameOffset], to_copy); } CloseHandle (h); return to_copy; } static int _g_win32_readlink_utf16 (const gunichar2 *filename, gunichar2 *buf, gsize buf_size) { const wchar_t *ntobjm_prefix = L"\\??\\"; const gsize ntobjm_prefix_len_unichar2 = wcslen (ntobjm_prefix); const gsize ntobjm_prefix_len_bytes = sizeof (gunichar2) * ntobjm_prefix_len_unichar2; int result = _g_win32_readlink_utf16_raw (filename, buf, buf_size); if (result <= 0) return result; /* Ensure that output is a multiple of sizeof (gunichar2), * cutting any trailing partial gunichar2, if present. */ result -= result % sizeof (gunichar2); if (result <= 0) return result; /* DeviceIoControl () tends to return filenames as NT Object Manager * names , i.e. "\\??\\C:\\foo\\bar". * Remove the leading 4-byte \??\ prefix, as glib (as well as many W32 API * functions) is unprepared to deal with it. */ if (result > ntobjm_prefix_len_bytes && memcmp (buf, ntobjm_prefix, ntobjm_prefix_len_bytes) == 0) { result -= ntobjm_prefix_len_bytes; memmove (buf, buf + ntobjm_prefix_len_unichar2, result); } return result; } int g_win32_readlink_utf8 (const gchar *filename, gchar *buf, gsize buf_size) { wchar_t *wfilename; int result; wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } result = _g_win32_readlink_utf16 (wfilename, (gunichar2 *) buf, buf_size); g_free (wfilename); if (result > 0) { glong tmp_len; gchar *tmp = g_utf16_to_utf8 ((const gunichar2 *) buf, result / sizeof (gunichar2), NULL, &tmp_len, NULL); if (tmp == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } if (tmp_len > buf_size - 1) tmp_len = buf_size - 1; memcpy (buf, tmp, tmp_len); /* readlink() doesn't NUL-terminate, but we do. * To be compliant, however, we return the * number of bytes without the NUL-terminator. */ buf[tmp_len] = '\0'; result = tmp_len; g_free (tmp); } return result; } #endif /** * g_access: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @mode: as in access() * * A wrapper for the POSIX access() function. This function is used to * test a pathname for one or several of read, write or execute * permissions, or just existence. * * On Windows, the file protection mechanism is not at all POSIX-like, * and the underlying function in the C library only checks the * FAT-style READONLY attribute, and does not look at the ACL of a * file at all. This function is this in practise almost useless on * Windows. Software that needs to handle file permissions on Windows * more exactly should use the Win32 API. * * See your C library manual for more details about access(). * * Returns: zero if the pathname refers to an existing file system * object that has all the tested permissions, or -1 otherwise * or on error. * * Since: 2.8 */ int g_access (const gchar *filename, int mode) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); int retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } #ifndef X_OK #define X_OK 1 #endif retval = _waccess (wfilename, mode & ~X_OK); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return access (filename, mode); #endif } /** * g_chmod: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @mode: as in chmod() * * A wrapper for the POSIX chmod() function. The chmod() function is * used to set the permissions of a file system object. * * On Windows the file protection mechanism is not at all POSIX-like, * and the underlying chmod() function in the C library just sets or * clears the FAT-style READONLY attribute. It does not touch any * ACL. Software that needs to manage file permissions on Windows * exactly should use the Win32 API. * * See your C library manual for more details about chmod(). * * Returns: 0 if the operation succeeded, -1 on error * * Since: 2.8 */ int g_chmod (const gchar *filename, int mode) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); int retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } retval = _wchmod (wfilename, mode); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return chmod (filename, mode); #endif } /** * g_open: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @flags: as in open() * @mode: as in open() * * A wrapper for the POSIX open() function. The open() function is * used to convert a pathname into a file descriptor. * * On POSIX systems file descriptors are implemented by the operating * system. On Windows, it's the C library that implements open() and * file descriptors. The actual Win32 API for opening files is quite * different, see MSDN documentation for CreateFile(). The Win32 API * uses file handles, which are more randomish integers, not small * integers like file descriptors. * * Because file descriptors are specific to the C library on Windows, * the file descriptor returned by this function makes sense only to * functions in the same C library. Thus if the GLib-using code uses a * different C library than GLib does, the file descriptor returned by * this function cannot be passed to C library functions like write() * or read(). * * See your C library manual for more details about open(). * * Returns: a new file descriptor, or -1 if an error occurred. * The return value can be used exactly like the return value * from open(). * * Since: 2.6 */ int g_open (const gchar *filename, int flags, int mode) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); int retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } retval = _wopen (wfilename, flags, mode); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else int fd; do fd = open (filename, flags, mode); while (G_UNLIKELY (fd == -1 && errno == EINTR)); return fd; #endif } /** * g_creat: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @mode: as in creat() * * A wrapper for the POSIX creat() function. The creat() function is * used to convert a pathname into a file descriptor, creating a file * if necessary. * * On POSIX systems file descriptors are implemented by the operating * system. On Windows, it's the C library that implements creat() and * file descriptors. The actual Windows API for opening files is * different, see MSDN documentation for CreateFile(). The Win32 API * uses file handles, which are more randomish integers, not small * integers like file descriptors. * * Because file descriptors are specific to the C library on Windows, * the file descriptor returned by this function makes sense only to * functions in the same C library. Thus if the GLib-using code uses a * different C library than GLib does, the file descriptor returned by * this function cannot be passed to C library functions like write() * or read(). * * See your C library manual for more details about creat(). * * Returns: a new file descriptor, or -1 if an error occurred. * The return value can be used exactly like the return value * from creat(). * * Since: 2.8 */ int g_creat (const gchar *filename, int mode) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); int retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } retval = _wcreat (wfilename, mode); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return creat (filename, mode); #endif } /** * g_rename: * @oldfilename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @newfilename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * * A wrapper for the POSIX rename() function. The rename() function * renames a file, moving it between directories if required. * * See your C library manual for more details about how rename() works * on your system. It is not possible in general on Windows to rename * a file that is open to some process. * * Returns: 0 if the renaming succeeded, -1 if an error occurred * * Since: 2.6 */ int g_rename (const gchar *oldfilename, const gchar *newfilename) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *woldfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (oldfilename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); wchar_t *wnewfilename; int retval; int save_errno = 0; if (woldfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } wnewfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (newfilename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); if (wnewfilename == NULL) { g_free (woldfilename); errno = EINVAL; return -1; } if (MoveFileExW (woldfilename, wnewfilename, MOVEFILE_REPLACE_EXISTING)) retval = 0; else { retval = -1; switch (GetLastError ()) { #define CASE(a,b) case ERROR_##a: save_errno = b; break CASE (FILE_NOT_FOUND, ENOENT); CASE (PATH_NOT_FOUND, ENOENT); CASE (ACCESS_DENIED, EACCES); CASE (NOT_SAME_DEVICE, EXDEV); CASE (LOCK_VIOLATION, EACCES); CASE (SHARING_VIOLATION, EACCES); CASE (FILE_EXISTS, EEXIST); CASE (ALREADY_EXISTS, EEXIST); #undef CASE default: save_errno = EIO; } } g_free (woldfilename); g_free (wnewfilename); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return rename (oldfilename, newfilename); #endif } /** * g_mkdir: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @mode: permissions to use for the newly created directory * * A wrapper for the POSIX mkdir() function. The mkdir() function * attempts to create a directory with the given name and permissions. * The mode argument is ignored on Windows. * * See your C library manual for more details about mkdir(). * * Returns: 0 if the directory was successfully created, -1 if an error * occurred * * Since: 2.6 */ int g_mkdir (const gchar *filename, int mode) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); int retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } retval = _wmkdir (wfilename); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return mkdir (filename, mode); #endif } /** * g_chdir: * @path: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * * A wrapper for the POSIX chdir() function. The function changes the * current directory of the process to @path. * * See your C library manual for more details about chdir(). * * Returns: 0 on success, -1 if an error occurred. * * Since: 2.8 */ int g_chdir (const gchar *path) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wpath = g_utf8_to_utf16 (path, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); int retval; int save_errno; if (wpath == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } retval = _wchdir (wpath); save_errno = errno; g_free (wpath); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return chdir (path); #endif } /** * GStatBuf: * * A type corresponding to the appropriate struct type for the stat() * system call, depending on the platform and/or compiler being used. * * See g_stat() for more information. */ /** * g_stat: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @buf: a pointer to a stat struct, which will be filled with the file * information * * A wrapper for the POSIX stat() function. The stat() function * returns information about a file. On Windows the stat() function in * the C library checks only the FAT-style READONLY attribute and does * not look at the ACL at all. Thus on Windows the protection bits in * the @st_mode field are a fabrication of little use. * * On Windows the Microsoft C libraries have several variants of the * stat struct and stat() function with names like _stat(), _stat32(), * _stat32i64() and _stat64i32(). The one used here is for 32-bit code * the one with 32-bit size and time fields, specifically called _stat32(). * * In Microsoft's compiler, by default struct stat means one with * 64-bit time fields while in MinGW struct stat is the legacy one * with 32-bit fields. To hopefully clear up this messs, the gstdio.h * header defines a type #GStatBuf which is the appropriate struct type * depending on the platform and/or compiler being used. On POSIX it * is just struct stat, but note that even on POSIX platforms, stat() * might be a macro. * * See your C library manual for more details about stat(). * * Returns: 0 if the information was successfully retrieved, * -1 if an error occurred * * Since: 2.6 */ int g_stat (const gchar *filename, GStatBuf *buf) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 GWin32PrivateStat w32_buf; int retval = g_win32_stat_utf8 (filename, &w32_buf); buf->st_dev = w32_buf.st_dev; buf->st_ino = w32_buf.st_ino; buf->st_mode = w32_buf.st_mode; buf->st_nlink = w32_buf.st_nlink; buf->st_uid = w32_buf.st_uid; buf->st_gid = w32_buf.st_gid; buf->st_rdev = w32_buf.st_dev; buf->st_size = w32_buf.st_size; buf->st_atime = w32_buf.st_atime; buf->st_mtime = w32_buf.st_mtime; buf->st_ctime = w32_buf.st_ctime; return retval; #else return stat (filename, buf); #endif } /** * g_lstat: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @buf: a pointer to a stat struct, which will be filled with the file * information * * A wrapper for the POSIX lstat() function. The lstat() function is * like stat() except that in the case of symbolic links, it returns * information about the symbolic link itself and not the file that it * refers to. If the system does not support symbolic links g_lstat() * is identical to g_stat(). * * See your C library manual for more details about lstat(). * * Returns: 0 if the information was successfully retrieved, * -1 if an error occurred * * Since: 2.6 */ int g_lstat (const gchar *filename, GStatBuf *buf) { #ifdef HAVE_LSTAT /* This can't be Win32, so don't do the widechar dance. */ return lstat (filename, buf); #elif defined (G_OS_WIN32) GWin32PrivateStat w32_buf; int retval = g_win32_lstat_utf8 (filename, &w32_buf); buf->st_dev = w32_buf.st_dev; buf->st_ino = w32_buf.st_ino; buf->st_mode = w32_buf.st_mode; buf->st_nlink = w32_buf.st_nlink; buf->st_uid = w32_buf.st_uid; buf->st_gid = w32_buf.st_gid; buf->st_rdev = w32_buf.st_dev; buf->st_size = w32_buf.st_size; buf->st_atime = w32_buf.st_atime; buf->st_mtime = w32_buf.st_mtime; buf->st_ctime = w32_buf.st_ctime; return retval; #else return g_stat (filename, buf); #endif } /** * g_unlink: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * * A wrapper for the POSIX unlink() function. The unlink() function * deletes a name from the filesystem. If this was the last link to the * file and no processes have it opened, the diskspace occupied by the * file is freed. * * See your C library manual for more details about unlink(). Note * that on Windows, it is in general not possible to delete files that * are open to some process, or mapped into memory. * * Returns: 0 if the name was successfully deleted, -1 if an error * occurred * * Since: 2.6 */ int g_unlink (const gchar *filename) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); int retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } retval = _wunlink (wfilename); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return unlink (filename); #endif } /** * g_remove: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * * A wrapper for the POSIX remove() function. The remove() function * deletes a name from the filesystem. * * See your C library manual for more details about how remove() works * on your system. On Unix, remove() removes also directories, as it * calls unlink() for files and rmdir() for directories. On Windows, * although remove() in the C library only works for files, this * function tries first remove() and then if that fails rmdir(), and * thus works for both files and directories. Note however, that on * Windows, it is in general not possible to remove a file that is * open to some process, or mapped into memory. * * If this function fails on Windows you can't infer too much from the * errno value. rmdir() is tried regardless of what caused remove() to * fail. Any errno value set by remove() will be overwritten by that * set by rmdir(). * * Returns: 0 if the file was successfully removed, -1 if an error * occurred * * Since: 2.6 */ int g_remove (const gchar *filename) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); int retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } retval = _wremove (wfilename); if (retval == -1) retval = _wrmdir (wfilename); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return remove (filename); #endif } /** * g_rmdir: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * * A wrapper for the POSIX rmdir() function. The rmdir() function * deletes a directory from the filesystem. * * See your C library manual for more details about how rmdir() works * on your system. * * Returns: 0 if the directory was successfully removed, -1 if an error * occurred * * Since: 2.6 */ int g_rmdir (const gchar *filename) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); int retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } retval = _wrmdir (wfilename); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return rmdir (filename); #endif } /** * g_fopen: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @mode: a string describing the mode in which the file should be opened * * A wrapper for the stdio fopen() function. The fopen() function * opens a file and associates a new stream with it. * * Because file descriptors are specific to the C library on Windows, * and a file descriptor is part of the FILE struct, the FILE* returned * by this function makes sense only to functions in the same C library. * Thus if the GLib-using code uses a different C library than GLib does, * the FILE* returned by this function cannot be passed to C library * functions like fprintf() or fread(). * * See your C library manual for more details about fopen(). * * Returns: A FILE* if the file was successfully opened, or %NULL if * an error occurred * * Since: 2.6 */ FILE * g_fopen (const gchar *filename, const gchar *mode) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); wchar_t *wmode; FILE *retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return NULL; } wmode = g_utf8_to_utf16 (mode, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); if (wmode == NULL) { g_free (wfilename); errno = EINVAL; return NULL; } retval = _wfopen (wfilename, wmode); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); g_free (wmode); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return fopen (filename, mode); #endif } /** * g_freopen: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @mode: a string describing the mode in which the file should be opened * @stream: (nullable): an existing stream which will be reused, or %NULL * * A wrapper for the POSIX freopen() function. The freopen() function * opens a file and associates it with an existing stream. * * See your C library manual for more details about freopen(). * * Returns: A FILE* if the file was successfully opened, or %NULL if * an error occurred. * * Since: 2.6 */ FILE * g_freopen (const gchar *filename, const gchar *mode, FILE *stream) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); wchar_t *wmode; FILE *retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return NULL; } wmode = g_utf8_to_utf16 (mode, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); if (wmode == NULL) { g_free (wfilename); errno = EINVAL; return NULL; } retval = _wfreopen (wfilename, wmode, stream); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); g_free (wmode); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return freopen (filename, mode, stream); #endif } /** * g_utime: * @filename: (type filename): a pathname in the GLib file name encoding * (UTF-8 on Windows) * @utb: a pointer to a struct utimbuf. * * A wrapper for the POSIX utime() function. The utime() function * sets the access and modification timestamps of a file. * * See your C library manual for more details about how utime() works * on your system. * * Returns: 0 if the operation was successful, -1 if an error occurred * * Since: 2.18 */ int g_utime (const gchar *filename, struct utimbuf *utb) { #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 wchar_t *wfilename = g_utf8_to_utf16 (filename, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); int retval; int save_errno; if (wfilename == NULL) { errno = EINVAL; return -1; } retval = _wutime (wfilename, (struct _utimbuf*) utb); save_errno = errno; g_free (wfilename); errno = save_errno; return retval; #else return utime (filename, utb); #endif } /** * g_close: * @fd: A file descriptor * @error: a #GError * * This wraps the close() call; in case of error, %errno will be * preserved, but the error will also be stored as a #GError in @error. * * Besides using #GError, there is another major reason to prefer this * function over the call provided by the system; on Unix, it will * attempt to correctly handle %EINTR, which has platform-specific * semantics. * * Returns: %TRUE on success, %FALSE if there was an error. * * Since: 2.36 */ gboolean g_close (gint fd, GError **error) { int res; res = close (fd); /* Just ignore EINTR for now; a retry loop is the wrong thing to do * on Linux at least. Anyone who wants to add a conditional check * for e.g. HP-UX is welcome to do so later... * * http://lkml.indiana.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0509.1/0877.html * https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682819 * http://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/unix/CloseEINTR * https://sites.google.com/site/michaelsafyan/software-engineering/checkforeintrwheninvokingclosethinkagain */ if (G_UNLIKELY (res == -1 && errno == EINTR)) return TRUE; else if (res == -1) { int errsv = errno; g_set_error_literal (error, G_FILE_ERROR, g_file_error_from_errno (errsv), g_strerror (errsv)); errno = errsv; return FALSE; } return TRUE; }