automake/lib/Automake/XFile.pm
Paul Eggert 199e7a4450 Prefer https: URLs
In Gnulib, Emacs, etc. we are changing ftp: and http: URLs to use
https:, to discourage man-in-the-middle attacks when downloading
software. The attached patch propagates these changes upstream to
Automake.  This patch does not affect files that Automake is
downstream of, which I'll patch separately.

Althouth the resources are not secret, plain HTTP is vulnerable to
malicious routers that tamper with responses from GNU servers,
and this sort of thing is all too common when people in some other
countries browse US-based websites. See, for example:

Aceto G, Botta A, Pescapé A, Awan MF, Ahmad T, Qaisar
S. Analyzing internet censorship in Pakistan. RTSI
2016. https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/RTSI.2016.7740626

HTTPS is not a complete solution here, but it can be a significant
help. The GNU project regularly serves up code to users, so we should
take some care here.
2017-09-16 13:25:44 -07:00

325 lines
7.8 KiB
Perl

# Copyright (C) 2001-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
# any later version.
# This program 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 General Public License for more details.
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# Written by Akim Demaille <akim@freefriends.org>.
###############################################################
# The main copy of this file is in Automake's git repository. #
# Updates should be sent to automake-patches@gnu.org. #
###############################################################
package Automake::XFile;
=head1 NAME
Automake::XFile - supply object methods for filehandles with error handling
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Automake::XFile;
$fh = new Automake::XFile;
$fh->open ("file", "<");
# No need to check $FH: we died if open failed.
print <$fh>;
$fh->close;
# No need to check the return value of close: we died if it failed.
$fh = new Automake::XFile "file", ">";
# No need to check $FH: we died if new failed.
print $fh "bar\n";
$fh->close;
$fh = new Automake::XFile "file", "r";
# No need to check $FH: we died if new failed.
defined $fh
print <$fh>;
undef $fh; # automatically closes the file and checks for errors.
$fh = new Automake::XFile "file", O_WRONLY | O_APPEND;
# No need to check $FH: we died if new failed.
print $fh "corge\n";
$pos = $fh->getpos;
$fh->setpos ($pos);
undef $fh; # automatically closes the file and checks for errors.
autoflush STDOUT 1;
=head1 DESCRIPTION
C<Automake::XFile> inherits from C<IO::File>. It provides the method
C<name> returning the file name. It provides dying versions of the
methods C<close>, C<lock> (corresponding to C<flock>), C<new>,
C<open>, C<seek>, and C<truncate>. It also overrides the C<getline>
and C<getlines> methods to translate C<\r\n> to C<\n>.
=cut
use 5.006;
use strict;
use vars qw($VERSION @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK $AUTOLOAD @ISA);
use Carp;
use Errno;
use IO::File;
use File::Basename;
use Automake::ChannelDefs;
use Automake::Channels qw(msg);
use Automake::FileUtils;
require Exporter;
require DynaLoader;
@ISA = qw(IO::File Exporter DynaLoader);
$VERSION = "1.2";
@EXPORT = @IO::File::EXPORT;
eval {
# Make all Fcntl O_XXX and LOCK_XXX constants available for importing
require Fcntl;
my @O = grep /^(LOCK|O)_/, @Fcntl::EXPORT, @Fcntl::EXPORT_OK;
Fcntl->import (@O); # first we import what we want to export
push (@EXPORT, @O);
};
=head2 Methods
=over
=item C<$fh = new Automake::XFile ([$expr, ...]>
Constructor a new XFile object. Additional arguments
are passed to C<open>, if any.
=cut
sub new
{
my $type = shift;
my $class = ref $type || $type || "Automake::XFile";
my $fh = $class->SUPER::new ();
if (@_)
{
$fh->open (@_);
}
$fh;
}
=item C<$fh-E<gt>open ([$file, ...])>
Open a file, passing C<$file> and further arguments to C<IO::File::open>.
Die if opening fails. Store the name of the file. Use binmode for writing.
=cut
sub open
{
my $fh = shift;
my ($file, $mode) = @_;
# WARNING: Gross hack: $FH is a typeglob: use its hash slot to store
# the 'name' of the file we are opening. See the example with
# io_socket_timeout in IO::Socket for more, and read Graham's
# comment in IO::Handle.
${*$fh}{'autom4te_xfile_file'} = "$file";
if (!$fh->SUPER::open (@_))
{
fatal "cannot open $file: $!";
}
# In case we're running under MSWindows, don't write with CRLF.
# (This circumvents a bug in at least Cygwin bash where the shell
# parsing fails on lines ending with the continuation character '\'
# and CRLF).
# Correctly recognize usages like:
# - open ($file, "w")
# - open ($file, "+<")
# - open (" >$file")
binmode $fh
if (defined $mode && $mode =~ /^[+>wa]/ or $file =~ /^\s*>/);
}
=item C<$fh-E<gt>close>
Close the file, handling errors.
=cut
sub close
{
my $fh = shift;
if (!$fh->SUPER::close (@_))
{
my $file = $fh->name;
Automake::FileUtils::handle_exec_errors $file
unless $!;
fatal "cannot close $file: $!";
}
}
=item C<$line = $fh-E<gt>getline>
Read and return a line from the file. Ensure C<\r\n> is translated to
C<\n> on input files.
=cut
# Some native Windows/perl installations fail to translate \r\n to \n on
# input so we do that here.
sub getline
{
local $_ = $_[0]->SUPER::getline;
# Perform a _global_ replacement: $_ may can contains many lines
# in slurp mode ($/ = undef).
s/\015\012/\n/gs if defined $_;
return $_;
}
=item C<@lines = $fh-E<gt>getlines>
Slurp lines from the files.
=cut
sub getlines
{
my @res = ();
my $line;
push @res, $line while $line = $_[0]->getline;
return @res;
}
=item C<$name = $fh-E<gt>name>
Return the name of the file.
=cut
sub name
{
my $fh = shift;
return ${*$fh}{'autom4te_xfile_file'};
}
=item C<$fh-E<gt>lock>
Lock the file using C<flock>. If locking fails for reasons other than
C<flock> being unsupported, then error out if C<$ENV{'MAKEFLAGS'}> indicates
that we are spawned from a parallel C<make>.
=cut
sub lock
{
my ($fh, $mode) = @_;
# Cannot use @_ here.
# Unless explicitly configured otherwise, Perl implements its 'flock' with the
# first of flock(2), fcntl(2), or lockf(3) that works. These can fail on
# NFS-backed files, with ENOLCK (GNU/Linux) or EOPNOTSUPP (FreeBSD); we
# usually ignore these errors. If $ENV{MAKEFLAGS} suggests that a parallel
# invocation of 'make' has invoked the tool we serve, report all locking
# failures and abort.
#
# On Unicos, flock(2) and fcntl(2) over NFS hang indefinitely when 'lockd' is
# not running. NetBSD NFS clients silently grant all locks. We do not
# attempt to defend against these dangers.
#
# -j is for parallel BSD make, -P is for parallel HP-UX make.
if (!flock ($fh, $mode))
{
my $make_j = (exists $ENV{'MAKEFLAGS'}
&& " -$ENV{'MAKEFLAGS'}" =~ / (-[BdeikrRsSw]*[jP]|--[jP]|---?jobs)/);
my $note = "\nforgo \"make -j\" or use a file system that supports locks";
my $file = $fh->name;
msg ($make_j ? 'fatal' : 'unsupported',
"cannot lock $file with mode $mode: $!" . ($make_j ? $note : ""))
if $make_j || !($!{ENOLCK} || $!{EOPNOTSUPP});
}
}
=item C<$fh-E<gt>seek ($position, [$whence])>
Seek file to C<$position>. Die if seeking fails.
=cut
sub seek
{
my $fh = shift;
# Cannot use @_ here.
if (!seek ($fh, $_[0], $_[1]))
{
my $file = $fh->name;
fatal "cannot rewind $file with @_: $!";
}
}
=item C<$fh-E<gt>truncate ($len)>
Truncate the file to length C<$len>. Die on failure.
=cut
sub truncate
{
my ($fh, $len) = @_;
if (!truncate ($fh, $len))
{
my $file = $fh->name;
fatal "cannot truncate $file at $len: $!";
}
}
=back
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<perlfunc>,
L<perlop/"I/O Operators">,
L<IO::File>
L<IO::Handle>
L<IO::Seekable>
=head1 HISTORY
Derived from IO::File.pm by Akim Demaille E<lt>F<akim@freefriends.org>E<gt>.
=cut
1;
### Setup "GNU" style for perl-mode and cperl-mode.
## Local Variables:
## perl-indent-level: 2
## perl-continued-statement-offset: 2
## perl-continued-brace-offset: 0
## perl-brace-offset: 0
## perl-brace-imaginary-offset: 0
## perl-label-offset: -2
## cperl-indent-level: 2
## cperl-brace-offset: 0
## cperl-continued-brace-offset: 0
## cperl-label-offset: -2
## cperl-extra-newline-before-brace: t
## cperl-merge-trailing-else: nil
## cperl-continued-statement-offset: 2
## End: