binutils-gdb/readline/histfile.c
Elena Zannoni 1b17e76665 readline:
2000-07-09  Elena Zannoni  <ezannoni@kwikemart.cygnus.com>

        * Import of readline 4.1.

        Locally modified files: Makefile.in, configure.in, configure
        (regenerated), config.h.in (regenerated), readline.h, rltty.c,
 	shell.c signals.c.

        Locally added files: acconfig.h, config/*, config.h.bot,
        cross-build/*, doc/inc-hit.texinfo.

        New files: USAGE, rlprivate.h, rlshell.h, xmalloc.h.
examples:
2000-07-09  Elena Zannoni  <ezannoni@kwikemart.cygnus.com>

        * Import of readline 4.1.

        New files: excallback.c, rlfe.c.
doc:
2000-07-09  Elena Zannoni  <ezannoni@kwikemart.cygnus.com>

        * Import of readline 4.1.

        Regenerated inc-hist.texinfo as copy of hsuser.texinfo, for
        inclusion in the gdb manual.

        New file: rluserman.texinfo
2000-07-09 17:20:00 +00:00

385 lines
9.5 KiB
C

/* histfile.c - functions to manipulate the history file. */
/* Copyright (C) 1989, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file contains the GNU History Library (the Library), a set of
routines for managing the text of previously typed lines.
The Library 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.
The 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
General Public License for more details.
The GNU General Public License is often shipped with GNU software, and
is generally kept in a file called COPYING or LICENSE. If you do not
have a copy of the license, write to the Free Software Foundation,
59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111 USA. */
/* The goal is to make the implementation transparent, so that you
don't have to know what data types are used, just what functions
you can call. I think I have done that. */
#define READLINE_LIBRARY
#if defined (HAVE_CONFIG_H)
# include <config.h>
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#ifndef _MINIX
# include <sys/file.h>
#endif
#include "posixstat.h"
#include <fcntl.h>
#if defined (HAVE_STDLIB_H)
# include <stdlib.h>
#else
# include "ansi_stdlib.h"
#endif /* HAVE_STDLIB_H */
#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H)
# include <unistd.h>
#endif
#if defined (HAVE_STRING_H)
# include <string.h>
#else
# include <strings.h>
#endif /* !HAVE_STRING_H */
/* If we're compiling for __EMX__ (OS/2) or __CYGWIN__ (cygwin32 environment
on win 95/98/nt), we want to open files with O_BINARY mode so that there
is no \n -> \r\n conversion performed. On other systems, we don't want to
mess around with O_BINARY at all, so we ensure that it's defined to 0. */
#if defined (__EMX__) || defined (__CYGWIN__)
# ifndef O_BINARY
# define O_BINARY 0
# endif
#else /* !__EMX__ && !__CYGWIN__ */
# undef O_BINARY
# define O_BINARY 0
#endif /* !__EMX__ && !__CYGWIN__ */
#include <errno.h>
#if !defined (errno)
extern int errno;
#endif /* !errno */
#include "history.h"
#include "histlib.h"
#include "rlshell.h"
#include "xmalloc.h"
/* Return the string that should be used in the place of this
filename. This only matters when you don't specify the
filename to read_history (), or write_history (). */
static char *
history_filename (filename)
char *filename;
{
char *return_val, *home;
int home_len;
return_val = filename ? savestring (filename) : (char *)NULL;
if (return_val)
return (return_val);
home = get_env_value ("HOME");
if (home == 0)
{
home = ".";
home_len = 1;
}
else
home_len = strlen (home);
return_val = xmalloc (2 + home_len + 8); /* strlen(".history") == 8 */
strcpy (return_val, home);
return_val[home_len] = '/';
#if defined (__MSDOS__)
strcpy (return_val + home_len + 1, "_history");
#else
strcpy (return_val + home_len + 1, ".history");
#endif
return (return_val);
}
/* Add the contents of FILENAME to the history list, a line at a time.
If FILENAME is NULL, then read from ~/.history. Returns 0 if
successful, or errno if not. */
int
read_history (filename)
char *filename;
{
return (read_history_range (filename, 0, -1));
}
/* Read a range of lines from FILENAME, adding them to the history list.
Start reading at the FROM'th line and end at the TO'th. If FROM
is zero, start at the beginning. If TO is less than FROM, read
until the end of the file. If FILENAME is NULL, then read from
~/.history. Returns 0 if successful, or errno if not. */
int
read_history_range (filename, from, to)
char *filename;
int from, to;
{
register int line_start, line_end;
char *input, *buffer;
int file, current_line, chars_read;
struct stat finfo;
size_t file_size;
buffer = (char *)NULL;
input = history_filename (filename);
file = open (input, O_RDONLY|O_BINARY, 0666);
if ((file < 0) || (fstat (file, &finfo) == -1))
goto error_and_exit;
file_size = (size_t)finfo.st_size;
/* check for overflow on very large files */
if (file_size != finfo.st_size || file_size + 1 < file_size)
{
#if defined (EFBIG)
errno = EFBIG;
#endif
goto error_and_exit;
}
buffer = xmalloc (file_size + 1);
chars_read = read (file, buffer, file_size);
if (chars_read < 0)
{
error_and_exit:
if (file >= 0)
close (file);
FREE (input);
FREE (buffer);
return (errno);
}
close (file);
/* Set TO to larger than end of file if negative. */
if (to < 0)
to = chars_read;
/* Start at beginning of file, work to end. */
line_start = line_end = current_line = 0;
/* Skip lines until we are at FROM. */
while (line_start < chars_read && current_line < from)
{
for (line_end = line_start; line_end < chars_read; line_end++)
if (buffer[line_end] == '\n')
{
current_line++;
line_start = line_end + 1;
if (current_line == from)
break;
}
}
/* If there are lines left to gobble, then gobble them now. */
for (line_end = line_start; line_end < chars_read; line_end++)
if (buffer[line_end] == '\n')
{
buffer[line_end] = '\0';
if (buffer[line_start])
add_history (buffer + line_start);
current_line++;
if (current_line >= to)
break;
line_start = line_end + 1;
}
FREE (input);
FREE (buffer);
return (0);
}
/* Truncate the history file FNAME, leaving only LINES trailing lines.
If FNAME is NULL, then use ~/.history. */
int
history_truncate_file (fname, lines)
char *fname;
int lines;
{
register int i;
int file, chars_read;
char *buffer, *filename;
struct stat finfo;
size_t file_size;
buffer = (char *)NULL;
filename = history_filename (fname);
file = open (filename, O_RDONLY|O_BINARY, 0666);
if (file == -1 || fstat (file, &finfo) == -1)
goto truncate_exit;
/* Don't try to truncate non-regular files. */
if (S_ISREG(finfo.st_mode) == 0)
goto truncate_exit;
file_size = (size_t)finfo.st_size;
/* check for overflow on very large files */
if (file_size != finfo.st_size || file_size + 1 < file_size)
{
close (file);
#if defined (EFBIG)
errno = EFBIG;
#endif
goto truncate_exit;
}
buffer = xmalloc (file_size + 1);
chars_read = read (file, buffer, file_size);
close (file);
if (chars_read <= 0)
goto truncate_exit;
/* Count backwards from the end of buffer until we have passed
LINES lines. */
for (i = chars_read - 1; lines && i; i--)
{
if (buffer[i] == '\n')
lines--;
}
/* If this is the first line, then the file contains exactly the
number of lines we want to truncate to, so we don't need to do
anything. It's the first line if we don't find a newline between
the current value of i and 0. Otherwise, write from the start of
this line until the end of the buffer. */
for ( ; i; i--)
if (buffer[i] == '\n')
{
i++;
break;
}
/* Write only if there are more lines in the file than we want to
truncate to. */
if (i && ((file = open (filename, O_WRONLY|O_TRUNC|O_BINARY, 0600)) != -1))
{
write (file, buffer + i, chars_read - i);
#if defined (__BEOS__)
/* BeOS ignores O_TRUNC. */
ftruncate (file, chars_read - i);
#endif
close (file);
}
truncate_exit:
FREE (buffer);
free (filename);
return 0;
}
/* Workhorse function for writing history. Writes NELEMENT entries
from the history list to FILENAME. OVERWRITE is non-zero if you
wish to replace FILENAME with the entries. */
static int
history_do_write (filename, nelements, overwrite)
char *filename;
int nelements, overwrite;
{
register int i;
char *output;
int file, mode;
mode = overwrite ? O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC|O_BINARY : O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_BINARY;
output = history_filename (filename);
if ((file = open (output, mode, 0600)) == -1)
{
FREE (output);
return (errno);
}
if (nelements > history_length)
nelements = history_length;
/* Build a buffer of all the lines to write, and write them in one syscall.
Suggested by Peter Ho (peter@robosts.oxford.ac.uk). */
{
HIST_ENTRY **the_history; /* local */
register int j;
int buffer_size;
char *buffer;
the_history = history_list ();
/* Calculate the total number of bytes to write. */
for (buffer_size = 0, i = history_length - nelements; i < history_length; i++)
buffer_size += 1 + strlen (the_history[i]->line);
/* Allocate the buffer, and fill it. */
buffer = xmalloc (buffer_size);
for (j = 0, i = history_length - nelements; i < history_length; i++)
{
strcpy (buffer + j, the_history[i]->line);
j += strlen (the_history[i]->line);
buffer[j++] = '\n';
}
write (file, buffer, buffer_size);
free (buffer);
}
close (file);
FREE (output);
return (0);
}
/* Append NELEMENT entries to FILENAME. The entries appended are from
the end of the list minus NELEMENTs up to the end of the list. */
int
append_history (nelements, filename)
int nelements;
char *filename;
{
return (history_do_write (filename, nelements, HISTORY_APPEND));
}
/* Overwrite FILENAME with the current history. If FILENAME is NULL,
then write the history list to ~/.history. Values returned
are as in read_history ().*/
int
write_history (filename)
char *filename;
{
return (history_do_write (filename, history_length, HISTORY_OVERWRITE));
}