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mirror of https://github.com/python/cpython.git synced 2024-12-01 11:15:56 +01:00
cpython/Modules/fcntlmodule.c
Christian Heimes e25f35ecd8 Merged revisions 61644,61646-61647,61649-61652,61656-61658,61663,61665,61667 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

........
  r61644 | trent.nelson | 2008-03-19 22:51:16 +0100 (Mi, 19 Mär 2008) | 1 line

  Force a clean of the tcltk/tcltk64 directories now that we've completely changed the tcl/tk build environment.
........
  r61646 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-03-19 23:23:51 +0100 (Mi, 19 Mär 2008) | 2 lines

  Improve the error message when the CRCs don't match.
........
  r61647 | trent.nelson | 2008-03-19 23:41:10 +0100 (Mi, 19 Mär 2008) | 1 line

  Comment out tcltk/tcltk64 removal.
........
  r61649 | raymond.hettinger | 2008-03-19 23:47:48 +0100 (Mi, 19 Mär 2008) | 1 line

  Remove unnecessary traceback save/restore pair.
........
  r61650 | trent.nelson | 2008-03-19 23:51:42 +0100 (Mi, 19 Mär 2008) | 1 line

  Bump the SIGALM delay from 3 seconds to 20 seconds, mainly in an effort to see if it fixes the alarm failures in this test experienced by some of the buildbots.
........
  r61651 | brett.cannon | 2008-03-20 00:01:17 +0100 (Do, 20 Mär 2008) | 5 lines

  Make sure that the warnings filter is not reset or changed beyond the current
  running test file.

  Closes issue2407. Thanks Jerry Seutter.
........
  r61652 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-03-20 00:03:25 +0100 (Do, 20 Mär 2008) | 10 lines

  Prevent ioctl op codes from being sign extended from int to unsigned long
  when used on platforms that actually define ioctl as taking an unsigned long.
  (the BSDs and OS X / Darwin)

  Adds a unittest for fcntl.ioctl that tests what happens with both positive and
  negative numbers.

  This was done because of issue1471 but I'm not able to reproduce -that- problem
  in the first place on Linux 32bit or 64bit or OS X 10.4 & 10.5 32bit or 64 bit.
........
  r61656 | sean.reifschneider | 2008-03-20 01:46:50 +0100 (Do, 20 Mär 2008) | 2 lines

  Issue #2143: Fix embedded readline() hang on SSL socket EOF.
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  r61657 | sean.reifschneider | 2008-03-20 01:50:07 +0100 (Do, 20 Mär 2008) | 2 lines

  Forgot to add NEWS item about smtplib SSL readline hang fix.
........
  r61658 | trent.nelson | 2008-03-20 01:58:44 +0100 (Do, 20 Mär 2008) | 1 line

  Revert r61650; the intent of this commit was to try and address alarm failures on some of the build slaves.  As Neal points out, it's called after test_main(), so it's not going to factor into the test when run via regrtest.py (and removes the original functionality that Jeffrey wanted that would kill the test if it took longer than 3 seconds to run when executing it directly during development).
........
  r61663 | sean.reifschneider | 2008-03-20 04:20:48 +0100 (Do, 20 Mär 2008) | 2 lines

  Issue 2188: Documentation hint about disabling proxy detection.
........
  r61665 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-03-20 06:41:53 +0100 (Do, 20 Mär 2008) | 7 lines

  Attempt to fix the Solaris Sparc 10 buildbot.  It was failing with an invalid
  argument error on ioctl.  This was caused by the added test_fcntl ioctl test
  that hard coded 0 as the fd to use.  Without a terminal, this fails on solaris.
  (it passed from the command line on sol 10, both 32 and 64 bit)

  Also, test_ioctl exists so I moved the test into there where it belongs.
........
  r61667 | georg.brandl | 2008-03-20 08:25:55 +0100 (Do, 20 Mär 2008) | 2 lines

  #2383: remove obsolete XXX comment in stat.py.
........
2008-03-20 10:49:03 +00:00

613 lines
16 KiB
C

/* fcntl module */
#define PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN
#include "Python.h"
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_FILE_H
#include <sys/file.h>
#endif
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#ifdef HAVE_STROPTS_H
#include <stropts.h>
#endif
static int
conv_descriptor(PyObject *object, int *target)
{
int fd = PyObject_AsFileDescriptor(object);
if (fd < 0)
return 0;
*target = fd;
return 1;
}
/* fcntl(fd, opt, [arg]) */
static PyObject *
fcntl_fcntl(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)
{
int fd;
int code;
int arg;
int ret;
char *str;
Py_ssize_t len;
char buf[1024];
if (PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O&is#:fcntl",
conv_descriptor, &fd, &code, &str, &len)) {
if (len > sizeof buf) {
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError,
"fcntl string arg too long");
return NULL;
}
memcpy(buf, str, len);
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
ret = fcntl(fd, code, buf);
Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
if (ret < 0) {
PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError);
return NULL;
}
return PyString_FromStringAndSize(buf, len);
}
PyErr_Clear();
arg = 0;
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args,
"O&i|i;fcntl requires a file or file descriptor,"
" an integer and optionally a third integer or a string",
conv_descriptor, &fd, &code, &arg)) {
return NULL;
}
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
ret = fcntl(fd, code, arg);
Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
if (ret < 0) {
PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError);
return NULL;
}
return PyLong_FromLong((long)ret);
}
PyDoc_STRVAR(fcntl_doc,
"fcntl(fd, opt, [arg])\n\
\n\
Perform the requested operation on file descriptor fd. The operation\n\
is defined by op and is operating system dependent. These constants are\n\
available from the fcntl module. The argument arg is optional, and\n\
defaults to 0; it may be an int or a string. If arg is given as a string,\n\
the return value of fcntl is a string of that length, containing the\n\
resulting value put in the arg buffer by the operating system.The length\n\
of the arg string is not allowed to exceed 1024 bytes. If the arg given\n\
is an integer or if none is specified, the result value is an integer\n\
corresponding to the return value of the fcntl call in the C code.");
/* ioctl(fd, opt, [arg]) */
static PyObject *
fcntl_ioctl(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)
{
#define IOCTL_BUFSZ 1024
int fd;
/* In PyArg_ParseTuple below, we use the unsigned non-checked 'I'
format for the 'code' parameter because Python turns 0x8000000
into either a large positive number (PyLong or PyInt on 64-bit
platforms) or a negative number on others (32-bit PyInt)
whereas the system expects it to be a 32bit bit field value
regardless of it being passed as an int or unsigned long on
various platforms. See the termios.TIOCSWINSZ constant across
platforms for an example of thise.
If any of the 64bit platforms ever decide to use more than 32bits
in their unsigned long ioctl codes this will break and need
special casing based on the platform being built on.
*/
unsigned int code;
int arg;
int ret;
char *str;
Py_ssize_t len;
int mutate_arg = 1;
char buf[IOCTL_BUFSZ+1]; /* argument plus NUL byte */
if (PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O&Iw#|i:ioctl",
conv_descriptor, &fd, &code,
&str, &len, &mutate_arg)) {
char *arg;
if (mutate_arg) {
if (len <= IOCTL_BUFSZ) {
memcpy(buf, str, len);
buf[len] = '\0';
arg = buf;
}
else {
arg = str;
}
}
else {
if (len > IOCTL_BUFSZ) {
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError,
"ioctl string arg too long");
return NULL;
}
else {
memcpy(buf, str, len);
buf[len] = '\0';
arg = buf;
}
}
if (buf == arg) {
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS /* think array.resize() */
ret = ioctl(fd, code, arg);
Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
}
else {
ret = ioctl(fd, code, arg);
}
if (mutate_arg && (len < IOCTL_BUFSZ)) {
memcpy(str, buf, len);
}
if (ret < 0) {
PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError);
return NULL;
}
if (mutate_arg) {
return PyLong_FromLong(ret);
}
else {
return PyString_FromStringAndSize(buf, len);
}
}
PyErr_Clear();
if (PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O&Is#:ioctl",
conv_descriptor, &fd, &code, &str, &len)) {
if (len > IOCTL_BUFSZ) {
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError,
"ioctl string arg too long");
return NULL;
}
memcpy(buf, str, len);
buf[len] = '\0';
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
ret = ioctl(fd, code, buf);
Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
if (ret < 0) {
PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError);
return NULL;
}
return PyString_FromStringAndSize(buf, len);
}
PyErr_Clear();
arg = 0;
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args,
"O&I|i;ioctl requires a file or file descriptor,"
" an integer and optionally an integer or buffer argument",
conv_descriptor, &fd, &code, &arg)) {
return NULL;
}
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
#ifdef __VMS
ret = ioctl(fd, code, (void *)arg);
#else
ret = ioctl(fd, code, arg);
#endif
Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
if (ret < 0) {
PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError);
return NULL;
}
return PyLong_FromLong((long)ret);
#undef IOCTL_BUFSZ
}
PyDoc_STRVAR(ioctl_doc,
"ioctl(fd, opt[, arg[, mutate_flag]])\n\
\n\
Perform the requested operation on file descriptor fd. The operation is\n\
defined by opt and is operating system dependent. Typically these codes are\n\
retrieved from the fcntl or termios library modules.\n\
\n\
The argument arg is optional, and defaults to 0; it may be an int or a\n\
buffer containing character data (most likely a string or an array). \n\
\n\
If the argument is a mutable buffer (such as an array) and if the\n\
mutate_flag argument (which is only allowed in this case) is true then the\n\
buffer is (in effect) passed to the operating system and changes made by\n\
the OS will be reflected in the contents of the buffer after the call has\n\
returned. The return value is the integer returned by the ioctl system\n\
call.\n\
\n\
If the argument is a mutable buffer and the mutable_flag argument is not\n\
passed or is false, the behavior is as if a string had been passed. This\n\
behavior will change in future releases of Python.\n\
\n\
If the argument is an immutable buffer (most likely a string) then a copy\n\
of the buffer is passed to the operating system and the return value is a\n\
string of the same length containing whatever the operating system put in\n\
the buffer. The length of the arg buffer in this case is not allowed to\n\
exceed 1024 bytes.\n\
\n\
If the arg given is an integer or if none is specified, the result value is\n\
an integer corresponding to the return value of the ioctl call in the C\n\
code.");
/* flock(fd, operation) */
static PyObject *
fcntl_flock(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)
{
int fd;
int code;
int ret;
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O&i:flock",
conv_descriptor, &fd, &code))
return NULL;
#ifdef HAVE_FLOCK
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
ret = flock(fd, code);
Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
#else
#ifndef LOCK_SH
#define LOCK_SH 1 /* shared lock */
#define LOCK_EX 2 /* exclusive lock */
#define LOCK_NB 4 /* don't block when locking */
#define LOCK_UN 8 /* unlock */
#endif
{
struct flock l;
if (code == LOCK_UN)
l.l_type = F_UNLCK;
else if (code & LOCK_SH)
l.l_type = F_RDLCK;
else if (code & LOCK_EX)
l.l_type = F_WRLCK;
else {
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError,
"unrecognized flock argument");
return NULL;
}
l.l_whence = l.l_start = l.l_len = 0;
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
ret = fcntl(fd, (code & LOCK_NB) ? F_SETLK : F_SETLKW, &l);
Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
}
#endif /* HAVE_FLOCK */
if (ret < 0) {
PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError);
return NULL;
}
Py_INCREF(Py_None);
return Py_None;
}
PyDoc_STRVAR(flock_doc,
"flock(fd, operation)\n\
\n\
Perform the lock operation op on file descriptor fd. See the Unix \n\
manual page for flock(3) for details. (On some systems, this function is\n\
emulated using fcntl().)");
/* lockf(fd, operation) */
static PyObject *
fcntl_lockf(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)
{
int fd, code, ret, whence = 0;
PyObject *lenobj = NULL, *startobj = NULL;
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O&i|OOi:lockf",
conv_descriptor, &fd, &code,
&lenobj, &startobj, &whence))
return NULL;
#if defined(PYOS_OS2) && defined(PYCC_GCC)
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_NotImplementedError,
"lockf not supported on OS/2 (EMX)");
return NULL;
#else
#ifndef LOCK_SH
#define LOCK_SH 1 /* shared lock */
#define LOCK_EX 2 /* exclusive lock */
#define LOCK_NB 4 /* don't block when locking */
#define LOCK_UN 8 /* unlock */
#endif /* LOCK_SH */
{
struct flock l;
if (code == LOCK_UN)
l.l_type = F_UNLCK;
else if (code & LOCK_SH)
l.l_type = F_RDLCK;
else if (code & LOCK_EX)
l.l_type = F_WRLCK;
else {
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError,
"unrecognized lockf argument");
return NULL;
}
l.l_start = l.l_len = 0;
if (startobj != NULL) {
#if !defined(HAVE_LARGEFILE_SUPPORT)
l.l_start = PyLong_AsLong(startobj);
#else
l.l_start = PyLong_Check(startobj) ?
PyLong_AsLongLong(startobj) :
PyLong_AsLong(startobj);
#endif
if (PyErr_Occurred())
return NULL;
}
if (lenobj != NULL) {
#if !defined(HAVE_LARGEFILE_SUPPORT)
l.l_len = PyLong_AsLong(lenobj);
#else
l.l_len = PyLong_Check(lenobj) ?
PyLong_AsLongLong(lenobj) :
PyLong_AsLong(lenobj);
#endif
if (PyErr_Occurred())
return NULL;
}
l.l_whence = whence;
Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
ret = fcntl(fd, (code & LOCK_NB) ? F_SETLK : F_SETLKW, &l);
Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
}
if (ret < 0) {
PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError);
return NULL;
}
Py_INCREF(Py_None);
return Py_None;
#endif /* defined(PYOS_OS2) && defined(PYCC_GCC) */
}
PyDoc_STRVAR(lockf_doc,
"lockf (fd, operation, length=0, start=0, whence=0)\n\
\n\
This is essentially a wrapper around the fcntl() locking calls. fd is the\n\
file descriptor of the file to lock or unlock, and operation is one of the\n\
following values:\n\
\n\
LOCK_UN - unlock\n\
LOCK_SH - acquire a shared lock\n\
LOCK_EX - acquire an exclusive lock\n\
\n\
When operation is LOCK_SH or LOCK_EX, it can also be bitwise ORed with\n\
LOCK_NB to avoid blocking on lock acquisition. If LOCK_NB is used and the\n\
lock cannot be acquired, an IOError will be raised and the exception will\n\
have an errno attribute set to EACCES or EAGAIN (depending on the operating\n\
system -- for portability, check for either value).\n\
\n\
length is the number of bytes to lock, with the default meaning to lock to\n\
EOF. start is the byte offset, relative to whence, to that the lock\n\
starts. whence is as with fileobj.seek(), specifically:\n\
\n\
0 - relative to the start of the file (SEEK_SET)\n\
1 - relative to the current buffer position (SEEK_CUR)\n\
2 - relative to the end of the file (SEEK_END)");
/* List of functions */
static PyMethodDef fcntl_methods[] = {
{"fcntl", fcntl_fcntl, METH_VARARGS, fcntl_doc},
{"ioctl", fcntl_ioctl, METH_VARARGS, ioctl_doc},
{"flock", fcntl_flock, METH_VARARGS, flock_doc},
{"lockf", fcntl_lockf, METH_VARARGS, lockf_doc},
{NULL, NULL} /* sentinel */
};
PyDoc_STRVAR(module_doc,
"This module performs file control and I/O control on file \n\
descriptors. It is an interface to the fcntl() and ioctl() Unix\n\
routines. File descriptors can be obtained with the fileno() method of\n\
a file or socket object.");
/* Module initialisation */
static int
ins(PyObject* d, char* symbol, long value)
{
PyObject* v = PyLong_FromLong(value);
if (!v || PyDict_SetItemString(d, symbol, v) < 0)
return -1;
Py_DECREF(v);
return 0;
}
#define INS(x) if (ins(d, #x, (long)x)) return -1
static int
all_ins(PyObject* d)
{
if (ins(d, "LOCK_SH", (long)LOCK_SH)) return -1;
if (ins(d, "LOCK_EX", (long)LOCK_EX)) return -1;
if (ins(d, "LOCK_NB", (long)LOCK_NB)) return -1;
if (ins(d, "LOCK_UN", (long)LOCK_UN)) return -1;
/* GNU extensions, as of glibc 2.2.4 */
#ifdef LOCK_MAND
if (ins(d, "LOCK_MAND", (long)LOCK_MAND)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef LOCK_READ
if (ins(d, "LOCK_READ", (long)LOCK_READ)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef LOCK_WRITE
if (ins(d, "LOCK_WRITE", (long)LOCK_WRITE)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef LOCK_RW
if (ins(d, "LOCK_RW", (long)LOCK_RW)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_DUPFD
if (ins(d, "F_DUPFD", (long)F_DUPFD)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_GETFD
if (ins(d, "F_GETFD", (long)F_GETFD)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_SETFD
if (ins(d, "F_SETFD", (long)F_SETFD)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_GETFL
if (ins(d, "F_GETFL", (long)F_GETFL)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_SETFL
if (ins(d, "F_SETFL", (long)F_SETFL)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_GETLK
if (ins(d, "F_GETLK", (long)F_GETLK)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_SETLK
if (ins(d, "F_SETLK", (long)F_SETLK)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_SETLKW
if (ins(d, "F_SETLKW", (long)F_SETLKW)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_GETOWN
if (ins(d, "F_GETOWN", (long)F_GETOWN)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_SETOWN
if (ins(d, "F_SETOWN", (long)F_SETOWN)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_GETSIG
if (ins(d, "F_GETSIG", (long)F_GETSIG)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_SETSIG
if (ins(d, "F_SETSIG", (long)F_SETSIG)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_RDLCK
if (ins(d, "F_RDLCK", (long)F_RDLCK)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_WRLCK
if (ins(d, "F_WRLCK", (long)F_WRLCK)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_UNLCK
if (ins(d, "F_UNLCK", (long)F_UNLCK)) return -1;
#endif
/* LFS constants */
#ifdef F_GETLK64
if (ins(d, "F_GETLK64", (long)F_GETLK64)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_SETLK64
if (ins(d, "F_SETLK64", (long)F_SETLK64)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_SETLKW64
if (ins(d, "F_SETLKW64", (long)F_SETLKW64)) return -1;
#endif
/* GNU extensions, as of glibc 2.2.4. */
#ifdef F_SETLEASE
if (ins(d, "F_SETLEASE", (long)F_SETLEASE)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_GETLEASE
if (ins(d, "F_GETLEASE", (long)F_GETLEASE)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_NOTIFY
if (ins(d, "F_NOTIFY", (long)F_NOTIFY)) return -1;
#endif
/* Old BSD flock(). */
#ifdef F_EXLCK
if (ins(d, "F_EXLCK", (long)F_EXLCK)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef F_SHLCK
if (ins(d, "F_SHLCK", (long)F_SHLCK)) return -1;
#endif
/* For F_{GET|SET}FL */
#ifdef FD_CLOEXEC
if (ins(d, "FD_CLOEXEC", (long)FD_CLOEXEC)) return -1;
#endif
/* For F_NOTIFY */
#ifdef DN_ACCESS
if (ins(d, "DN_ACCESS", (long)DN_ACCESS)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef DN_MODIFY
if (ins(d, "DN_MODIFY", (long)DN_MODIFY)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef DN_CREATE
if (ins(d, "DN_CREATE", (long)DN_CREATE)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef DN_DELETE
if (ins(d, "DN_DELETE", (long)DN_DELETE)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef DN_RENAME
if (ins(d, "DN_RENAME", (long)DN_RENAME)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef DN_ATTRIB
if (ins(d, "DN_ATTRIB", (long)DN_ATTRIB)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef DN_MULTISHOT
if (ins(d, "DN_MULTISHOT", (long)DN_MULTISHOT)) return -1;
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_STROPTS_H
/* Unix 98 guarantees that these are in stropts.h. */
INS(I_PUSH);
INS(I_POP);
INS(I_LOOK);
INS(I_FLUSH);
INS(I_FLUSHBAND);
INS(I_SETSIG);
INS(I_GETSIG);
INS(I_FIND);
INS(I_PEEK);
INS(I_SRDOPT);
INS(I_GRDOPT);
INS(I_NREAD);
INS(I_FDINSERT);
INS(I_STR);
INS(I_SWROPT);
#ifdef I_GWROPT
/* despite the comment above, old-ish glibcs miss a couple... */
INS(I_GWROPT);
#endif
INS(I_SENDFD);
INS(I_RECVFD);
INS(I_LIST);
INS(I_ATMARK);
INS(I_CKBAND);
INS(I_GETBAND);
INS(I_CANPUT);
INS(I_SETCLTIME);
#ifdef I_GETCLTIME
INS(I_GETCLTIME);
#endif
INS(I_LINK);
INS(I_UNLINK);
INS(I_PLINK);
INS(I_PUNLINK);
#endif
return 0;
}
PyMODINIT_FUNC
initfcntl(void)
{
PyObject *m, *d;
/* Create the module and add the functions and documentation */
m = Py_InitModule3("fcntl", fcntl_methods, module_doc);
if (m == NULL)
return;
/* Add some symbolic constants to the module */
d = PyModule_GetDict(m);
all_ins(d);
}