/* GLIB - Library of useful routines for C programming * Copyright (C) 2011 Red Hat, Inc. * * glib-unix.c: UNIX specific API wrappers and convenience functions * * 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 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, write to the * Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, * Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. * * Authors: Colin Walters */ #include "config.h" #include "glib-unix.h" #include "gmain-internal.h" #include /** * SECTION:gunix * @title: UNIX-specific utilities and integration * @short_description: pipes, signal handling * @include: glib-unix.h * * Most of GLib is intended to be portable; in contrast, this set of * functions is designed for programs which explicitly target UNIX, * or are using it to build higher level abstractions which would be * conditionally compiled if the platform matches G_OS_UNIX. * * To use these functions, you must explicitly include the * "glib-unix.h" header. */ GQuark g_unix_error_quark (void) { return g_quark_from_static_string ("g-unix-error-quark"); } static gboolean g_unix_set_error_from_errno (GError **error, gint saved_errno) { g_set_error_literal (error, G_UNIX_ERROR, 0, g_strerror (saved_errno)); errno = saved_errno; return FALSE; } /** * g_unix_open_pipe: * @fds: Array of two integers * @flags: Bitfield of file descriptor flags, see "man 2 fcntl" * @error: a #GError * * Similar to the UNIX pipe() call, but on modern systems like Linux * uses the pipe2() system call, which atomically creates a pipe with * the configured flags. The only supported flag currently is * FD_CLOEXEC. If for example you want to configure * O_NONBLOCK, that must still be done separately with * fcntl(). * * This function does *not* take O_CLOEXEC, it takes * FD_CLOEXEC as if for fcntl(); these are * different on Linux/glibc. * * Returns: %TRUE on success, %FALSE if not (and errno will be set). * * Since: 2.30 */ gboolean g_unix_open_pipe (int *fds, int flags, GError **error) { int ecode; /* We only support FD_CLOEXEC */ g_return_val_if_fail ((flags & (FD_CLOEXEC)) == flags, FALSE); #ifdef HAVE_PIPE2 { int pipe2_flags = 0; if (flags & FD_CLOEXEC) pipe2_flags |= O_CLOEXEC; /* Atomic */ ecode = pipe2 (fds, pipe2_flags); if (ecode == -1 && errno != ENOSYS) return g_unix_set_error_from_errno (error, errno); else if (ecode == 0) return TRUE; /* Fall through on -ENOSYS, we must be running on an old kernel */ } #endif ecode = pipe (fds); if (ecode == -1) return g_unix_set_error_from_errno (error, errno); ecode = fcntl (fds[0], flags); if (ecode == -1) { int saved_errno = errno; close (fds[0]); close (fds[1]); return g_unix_set_error_from_errno (error, saved_errno); } ecode = fcntl (fds[1], flags); if (ecode == -1) { int saved_errno = errno; close (fds[0]); close (fds[1]); return g_unix_set_error_from_errno (error, saved_errno); } return TRUE; } /** * g_unix_set_fd_nonblocking: * @fd: A file descriptor * @nonblock: If %TRUE, set the descriptor to be non-blocking * @error: a #GError * * Control the non-blocking state of the given file descriptor, * according to @nonblock. On most systems this uses O_NONBLOCK, but * on some older ones may use O_NDELAY. * * Returns: %TRUE if successful * * Since: 2.30 */ gboolean g_unix_set_fd_nonblocking (gint fd, gboolean nonblock, GError **error) { #ifdef F_GETFL glong fcntl_flags; fcntl_flags = fcntl (fd, F_GETFL); if (fcntl_flags == -1) return g_unix_set_error_from_errno (error, errno); if (nonblock) { #ifdef O_NONBLOCK fcntl_flags |= O_NONBLOCK; #else fcntl_flags |= O_NDELAY; #endif } else { #ifdef O_NONBLOCK fcntl_flags &= ~O_NONBLOCK; #else fcntl_flags &= ~O_NDELAY; #endif } if (fcntl (fd, F_SETFL, fcntl_flags) == -1) return g_unix_set_error_from_errno (error, errno); return TRUE; #else return g_unix_set_error_from_errno (error, EINVAL); #endif } /** * g_unix_signal_source_new: * @signum: A signal number * * Create a #GSource that will be dispatched upon delivery of the UNIX * signal @signum. Currently only SIGHUP, * SIGINT, and SIGTERM can * be monitored. Note that unlike the UNIX default, all sources which * have created a watch will be dispatched, regardless of which * underlying thread invoked g_unix_signal_source_new(). * * For example, an effective use of this function is to handle SIGTERM * cleanly; flushing any outstanding files, and then calling * g_main_loop_quit (). It is not safe to do any of this a regular * UNIX signal handler; your handler may be invoked while malloc() or * another library function is running, causing reentrancy if you * attempt to use it from the handler. None of the GLib/GObject API * is safe against this kind of reentrancy. * * The interaction of this source when combined with native UNIX * functions like sigprocmask() is not defined. * * The source will not initially be associated with any #GMainContext * and must be added to one with g_source_attach() before it will be * executed. * * Returns: A newly created #GSource * * Since: 2.30 */ GSource * g_unix_signal_source_new (int signum) { g_return_val_if_fail (signum == SIGHUP || signum == SIGINT || signum == SIGTERM, NULL); return _g_main_create_unix_signal_watch (signum); } /** * g_unix_signal_add_full: * @priority: the priority of the signal source. Typically this will be in * the range between #G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT and #G_PRIORITY_HIGH. * @signum: Signal number * @handler: Callback * @user_data: Data for @handler * @notify: #GDestroyNotify for @handler * * A convenience function for g_unix_signal_source_new(), which * attaches to the default #GMainContext. You can remove the watch * using g_source_remove(). * * Returns: An ID (greater than 0) for the event source * * Since: 2.30 */ guint g_unix_signal_add_full (int priority, int signum, GSourceFunc handler, gpointer user_data, GDestroyNotify notify) { guint id; GSource *source; source = g_unix_signal_source_new (signum); if (priority != G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT) g_source_set_priority (source, priority); g_source_set_callback (source, handler, user_data, notify); id = g_source_attach (source, NULL); g_source_unref (source); return id; } /** * g_unix_signal_add: * @signum: Signal number * @handler: Callback * @user_data: Data for @handler * * A convenience function for g_unix_signal_source_new(), which * attaches to the default #GMainContext. You can remove the watch * using g_source_remove(). * * Returns: An ID (greater than 0) for the event source * * Since: 2.30 */ guint g_unix_signal_add (int signum, GSourceFunc handler, gpointer user_data) { return g_unix_signal_add_full (G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT, signum, handler, user_data, NULL); }