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+/* Messages logging.
+ Copyright (C) 1998-2011, 2015, 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+This file is part of GNU Wget.
+
+GNU Wget 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 3 of the License, or
+(at your option) any later version.
+
+GNU Wget 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 Wget. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+
+Additional permission under GNU GPL version 3 section 7
+
+If you modify this program, or any covered work, by linking or
+combining it with the OpenSSL project's OpenSSL library (or a
+modified version of that library), containing parts covered by the
+terms of the OpenSSL or SSLeay licenses, the Free Software Foundation
+grants you additional permission to convey the resulting work.
+Corresponding Source for a non-source form of such a combination
+shall include the source code for the parts of OpenSSL used as well
+as that of the covered work. */
+
+#include "wget.h"
+
+#include <stdio.h>
+#include <string.h>
+#include <stdlib.h>
+#include <stdarg.h>
+#include <unistd.h>
+#include <assert.h>
+#include <errno.h>
+
+#include "utils.h"
+#include "exits.h"
+#include "log.h"
+
+/* 2005-10-25 SMS.
+ VMS log files are often VFC record format, not stream, so fputs() can
+ produce multiple records, even when there's no newline terminator in
+ the buffer. The result is unsightly output with spurious newlines.
+ Using fprintf() instead of fputs(), along with inhibiting some
+ fflush() activity below, seems to solve the problem.
+*/
+#ifdef __VMS
+# define FPUTS( s, f) fprintf( (f), "%s", (s))
+#else /* def __VMS */
+# define FPUTS( s, f) fputs( (s), (f))
+#endif /* def __VMS [else] */
+
+/* This file implements support for "logging". Logging means printing
+ output, plus several additional features:
+
+ - Cataloguing output by importance. You can specify that a log
+ message is "verbose" or "debug", and it will not be printed unless
+ in verbose or debug mode, respectively.
+
+ - Redirecting the log to the file. When Wget's output goes to the
+ terminal, and Wget receives SIGHUP, all further output is
+ redirected to a log file. When this is the case, Wget can also
+ print the last several lines of "context" to the log file so that
+ it does not begin in the middle of a line. For this to work, the
+ logging code stores the last several lines of context. Callers may
+ request for certain output not to be stored.
+
+ - Inhibiting output. When Wget receives SIGHUP, but redirecting
+ the output fails, logging is inhibited. */
+
+
+/* The file descriptor used for logging. This is NULL before log_init
+ is called; logging functions log to stderr then. log_init sets it
+ either to stderr or to a file pointer obtained from fopen(). If
+ logging is inhibited, logfp is set back to NULL. */
+static FILE *logfp;
+
+/* Descriptor of the stdout|stderr */
+static FILE *stdlogfp;
+
+/* Descriptor of the wget.log* file (if created) */
+static FILE *filelogfp;
+
+/* Name of log file */
+static char *logfile;
+
+/* Is interactive shell ? */
+static int shell_is_interactive;
+
+/* A second file descriptor pointing to the temporary log file for the
+ WARC writer. If WARC writing is disabled, this is NULL. */
+static FILE *warclogfp;
+
+/* If true, it means logging is inhibited, i.e. nothing is printed or
+ stored. */
+static bool inhibit_logging;
+
+/* Whether the last output lines are stored for use as context. */
+static bool save_context_p;
+
+/* Whether the log is flushed after each command. */
+static bool flush_log_p = true;
+
+/* Whether any output has been received while flush_log_p was 0. */
+static bool needs_flushing;
+
+/* In the event of a hang-up, and if its output was on a TTY, Wget
+ redirects its output to `wget-log'.
+
+ For the convenience of reading this newly-created log, we store the
+ last several lines ("screenful", hence the choice of 24) of Wget
+ output, and dump them as context when the time comes. */
+#define SAVED_LOG_LINES 24
+
+/* log_lines is a circular buffer that stores SAVED_LOG_LINES lines of
+ output. log_line_current always points to the position in the
+ buffer that will be written to next. When log_line_current reaches
+ SAVED_LOG_LINES, it is reset to zero.
+
+ The problem here is that we'd have to either (re)allocate and free
+ strings all the time, or limit the lines to an arbitrary number of
+ characters. Instead of settling for either of these, we do both:
+ if the line is smaller than a certain "usual" line length (128
+ chars by default), a preallocated memory is used. The rare lines
+ that are longer than 128 characters are malloc'ed and freed
+ separately. This gives good performance with minimum memory
+ consumption and fragmentation. */
+
+#define STATIC_LENGTH 128
+
+static struct log_ln {
+ char static_line[STATIC_LENGTH + 1]; /* statically allocated
+ line. */
+ char *malloced_line; /* malloc'ed line, for lines of output
+ larger than 80 characters. */
+ char *content; /* this points either to malloced_line
+ or to the appropriate static_line.
+ If this is NULL, it means the line
+ has not yet been used. */
+} log_lines[SAVED_LOG_LINES];
+
+/* The current position in the ring. */
+static int log_line_current = -1;
+
+/* Whether the most recently written line was "trailing", i.e. did not
+ finish with \n. This is an important piece of information because
+ the code is always careful to append data to trailing lines, rather
+ than create new ones. */
+static bool trailing_line;
+
+static void check_redirect_output (void);
+
+#define ROT_ADVANCE(num) do { \
+ if (++num >= SAVED_LOG_LINES) \
+ num = 0; \
+} while (0)
+
+/* Free the log line index with NUM. This calls free on
+ ln->malloced_line if it's non-NULL, and it also resets
+ ln->malloced_line and ln->content to NULL. */
+
+static void
+free_log_line (int num)
+{
+ struct log_ln *ln = log_lines + num;
+ xfree (ln->malloced_line);
+ ln->content = NULL;
+}
+
+/* Append bytes in the range [start, end) to one line in the log. The
+ region is not supposed to contain newlines, except for the last
+ character (at end[-1]). */
+
+static void
+saved_append_1 (const char *start, const char *end)
+{
+ int len = end - start;
+ if (!len)
+ return;
+
+ /* First, check whether we need to append to an existing line or to
+ create a new one. */
+ if (!trailing_line)
+ {
+ /* Create a new line. */
+ struct log_ln *ln;
+
+ if (log_line_current == -1)
+ log_line_current = 0;
+ else
+ free_log_line (log_line_current);
+ ln = log_lines + log_line_current;
+ if (len > STATIC_LENGTH)
+ {
+ ln->malloced_line = strdupdelim (start, end);
+ ln->content = ln->malloced_line;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ memcpy (ln->static_line, start, len);
+ ln->static_line[len] = '\0';
+ ln->content = ln->static_line;
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* Append to the last line. If the line is malloc'ed, we just
+ call realloc and append the new string. If the line is
+ static, we have to check whether appending the new string
+ would make it exceed STATIC_LENGTH characters, and if so,
+ convert it to malloc(). */
+ struct log_ln *ln = log_lines + log_line_current;
+ if (ln->malloced_line)
+ {
+ /* Resize malloc'ed line and append. */
+ int old_len = strlen (ln->malloced_line);
+ ln->malloced_line = xrealloc (ln->malloced_line, old_len + len + 1);
+ memcpy (ln->malloced_line + old_len, start, len);
+ ln->malloced_line[old_len + len] = '\0';
+ /* might have changed due to realloc */
+ ln->content = ln->malloced_line;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ int old_len = strlen (ln->static_line);
+ if (old_len + len > STATIC_LENGTH)
+ {
+ /* Allocate memory and concatenate the old and the new
+ contents. */
+ ln->malloced_line = xmalloc (old_len + len + 1);
+ memcpy (ln->malloced_line, ln->static_line,
+ old_len);
+ memcpy (ln->malloced_line + old_len, start, len);
+ ln->malloced_line[old_len + len] = '\0';
+ ln->content = ln->malloced_line;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* Just append to the old, statically allocated
+ contents. */
+ memcpy (ln->static_line + old_len, start, len);
+ ln->static_line[old_len + len] = '\0';
+ ln->content = ln->static_line;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ trailing_line = !(end[-1] == '\n');
+ if (!trailing_line)
+ ROT_ADVANCE (log_line_current);
+}
+
+/* Log the contents of S, as explained above. If S consists of
+ multiple lines, they are logged separately. If S does not end with
+ a newline, it will form a "trailing" line, to which things will get
+ appended the next time this function is called. */
+
+static void
+saved_append (const char *s)
+{
+ while (*s)
+ {
+ const char *end = strchr (s, '\n');
+ if (!end)
+ end = s + strlen (s);
+ else
+ ++end;
+ saved_append_1 (s, end);
+ s = end;
+ }
+}
+
+/* Check X against opt.verbose and opt.quiet. The semantics is as
+ follows:
+
+ * LOG_ALWAYS - print the message unconditionally;
+
+ * LOG_NOTQUIET - print the message if opt.quiet is non-zero;
+
+ * LOG_NONVERBOSE - print the message if opt.verbose is zero;
+
+ * LOG_VERBOSE - print the message if opt.verbose is non-zero. */
+#define CHECK_VERBOSE(x) \
+ switch (x) \
+ { \
+ case LOG_PROGRESS: \
+ if (!opt.show_progress) \
+ return; \
+ break; \
+ case LOG_ALWAYS: \
+ break; \
+ case LOG_NOTQUIET: \
+ if (opt.quiet) \
+ return; \
+ break; \
+ case LOG_NONVERBOSE: \
+ if (opt.verbose || opt.quiet) \
+ return; \
+ break; \
+ case LOG_VERBOSE: \
+ if (!opt.verbose) \
+ return; \
+ }
+
+/* Returns the file descriptor for logging. This is LOGFP, except if
+ called before log_init, in which case it returns stderr. This is
+ useful in case someone calls a logging function before log_init.
+
+ If logging is inhibited, return NULL. */
+
+static FILE *
+get_log_fp (void)
+{
+ if (inhibit_logging)
+ return NULL;
+ if (logfp)
+ return logfp;
+ return stderr;
+}
+
+static FILE *
+get_progress_fp (void)
+{
+ if (opt.show_progress == true)
+ return stderr;
+ return get_log_fp();
+}
+
+/* Returns the file descriptor for the secondary log file. This is
+ WARCLOGFP, except if called before log_init, in which case it
+ returns stderr. This is useful in case someone calls a logging
+ function before log_init.
+
+ If logging is inhibited, return NULL. */
+
+static FILE *
+get_warc_log_fp (void)
+{
+ if (inhibit_logging)
+ return NULL;
+ if (warclogfp)
+ return warclogfp;
+ if (logfp)
+ return NULL;
+ return stderr;
+}
+
+/* Sets the file descriptor for the secondary log file. */
+
+void
+log_set_warc_log_fp (FILE * fp)
+{
+ warclogfp = fp;
+}
+
+/* Log a literal string S. The string is logged as-is, without a
+ newline appended. */
+
+void
+logputs (enum log_options o, const char *s)
+{
+ FILE *fp;
+ FILE *warcfp;
+ int errno_save = errno;
+
+ check_redirect_output ();
+ if (o == LOG_PROGRESS)
+ fp = get_progress_fp ();
+ else
+ fp = get_log_fp ();
+
+ errno = errno_save;
+
+ if (fp == NULL)
+ return;
+
+ warcfp = get_warc_log_fp ();
+ errno = errno_save;
+
+ CHECK_VERBOSE (o);
+
+ FPUTS (s, fp);
+ if (warcfp != NULL)
+ FPUTS (s, warcfp);
+ if (save_context_p)
+ saved_append (s);
+ if (flush_log_p)
+ logflush ();
+ else
+ needs_flushing = true;
+
+ errno = errno_save;
+}
+
+struct logvprintf_state {
+ char *bigmsg;
+ int expected_size;
+ int allocated;
+};
+
+/* Print a message to the log. A copy of message will be saved to
+ saved_log, for later reusal by log_dump_context().
+
+ Normally we'd want this function to loop around vsnprintf until
+ sufficient room is allocated, as the Linux man page recommends.
+ However each call to vsnprintf() must be preceded by va_start and
+ followed by va_end. Since calling va_start/va_end is possible only
+ in the function that contains the `...' declaration, we cannot call
+ vsnprintf more than once. Therefore this function saves its state
+ to logvprintf_state and signals the parent to call it again.
+
+ (An alternative approach would be to use va_copy, but that's not
+ portable.) */
+
+static bool GCC_FORMAT_ATTR (2, 0)
+log_vprintf_internal (struct logvprintf_state *state, const char *fmt,
+ va_list args)
+{
+ char smallmsg[128];
+ char *write_ptr = smallmsg;
+ int available_size = sizeof (smallmsg);
+ int numwritten;
+ FILE *fp = get_log_fp ();
+ FILE *warcfp = get_warc_log_fp ();
+
+ if (!save_context_p && warcfp == NULL)
+ {
+ /* In the simple case just call vfprintf(), to avoid needless
+ allocation and games with vsnprintf(). */
+ vfprintf (fp, fmt, args);
+ goto flush;
+ }
+
+ if (state->allocated != 0)
+ {
+ write_ptr = state->bigmsg;
+ available_size = state->allocated;
+ }
+
+ /* The GNU coding standards advise not to rely on the return value
+ of sprintf(). However, vsnprintf() is a relatively new function
+ missing from legacy systems. Therefore I consider it safe to
+ assume that its return value is meaningful. On the systems where
+ vsnprintf() is not available, we use the implementation from
+ snprintf.c which does return the correct value. */
+ numwritten = vsnprintf (write_ptr, available_size, fmt, args);
+
+ /* vsnprintf() will not step over the limit given by available_size.
+ If it fails, it returns either -1 (older implementations) or the
+ number of characters (not counting the terminating \0) that
+ *would have* been written if there had been enough room (C99).
+ In the former case, we double available_size and malloc to get a
+ larger buffer, and try again. In the latter case, we use the
+ returned information to build a buffer of the correct size. */
+
+ if (numwritten == -1)
+ {
+ /* Writing failed, and we don't know the needed size. Try
+ again with doubled size. */
+ int newsize = available_size << 1;
+ state->bigmsg = xrealloc (state->bigmsg, newsize);
+ state->allocated = newsize;
+ return false;
+ }
+ else if (numwritten >= available_size)
+ {
+ /* Writing failed, but we know exactly how much space we
+ need. */
+ int newsize = numwritten + 1;
+ state->bigmsg = xrealloc (state->bigmsg, newsize);
+ state->allocated = newsize;
+ return false;
+ }
+
+ /* Writing succeeded. */
+ if (save_context_p)
+ saved_append (write_ptr);
+ FPUTS (write_ptr, fp);
+ if (warcfp != NULL)
+ FPUTS (write_ptr, warcfp);
+ xfree (state->bigmsg);
+
+ flush:
+ if (flush_log_p)
+ logflush ();
+ else
+ needs_flushing = true;
+
+ return true;
+}
+
+/* Flush LOGFP. Useful while flushing is disabled. */
+void
+logflush (void)
+{
+ FILE *fp = get_log_fp ();
+ FILE *warcfp = get_warc_log_fp ();
+ if (fp)
+ {
+/* 2005-10-25 SMS.
+ On VMS, flush only for a terminal. See note at FPUTS macro, above.
+*/
+#ifdef __VMS
+ if (isatty( fileno( fp)))
+ {
+ fflush (fp);
+ }
+#else /* def __VMS */
+ fflush (fp);
+#endif /* def __VMS [else] */
+ }
+
+ if (warcfp != NULL)
+ fflush (warcfp);
+
+ needs_flushing = false;
+}
+
+/* Enable or disable log flushing. */
+void
+log_set_flush (bool flush)
+{
+ if (flush == flush_log_p)
+ return;
+
+ if (flush == false)
+ {
+ /* Disable flushing by setting flush_log_p to 0. */
+ flush_log_p = false;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* Re-enable flushing. If anything was printed in no-flush mode,
+ flush the log now. */
+ if (needs_flushing)
+ logflush ();
+ flush_log_p = true;
+ }
+}
+
+/* (Temporarily) disable storing log to memory. Returns the old
+ status of storing, with which this function can be called again to
+ reestablish storing. */
+
+bool
+log_set_save_context (bool savep)
+{
+ bool old = save_context_p;
+ save_context_p = savep;
+ return old;
+}
+
+/* Print a message to the screen or to the log. The first argument
+ defines the verbosity of the message, and the rest are as in
+ printf(3). */
+
+void
+logprintf (enum log_options o, const char *fmt, ...)
+{
+ va_list args;
+ struct logvprintf_state lpstate;
+ bool done;
+ int errno_saved = errno;
+
+ check_redirect_output ();
+ errno = errno_saved;
+ if (inhibit_logging)
+ return;
+ CHECK_VERBOSE (o);
+
+ xzero (lpstate);
+ errno = 0;
+ do
+ {
+ va_start (args, fmt);
+ done = log_vprintf_internal (&lpstate, fmt, args);
+ va_end (args);
+
+ if (done && errno == EPIPE)
+ exit (WGET_EXIT_GENERIC_ERROR);
+ }
+ while (!done);
+
+ errno = errno_saved;
+}
+
+#ifdef ENABLE_DEBUG
+/* The same as logprintf(), but does anything only if opt.debug is
+ true. */
+void
+debug_logprintf (const char *fmt, ...)
+{
+ if (opt.debug)
+ {
+ va_list args;
+ struct logvprintf_state lpstate;
+ bool done;
+
+#ifndef TESTING
+ check_redirect_output ();
+#endif
+ if (inhibit_logging)
+ return;
+
+ xzero (lpstate);
+ do
+ {
+ va_start (args, fmt);
+ done = log_vprintf_internal (&lpstate, fmt, args);
+ va_end (args);
+ }
+ while (!done);
+ }
+}
+#endif /* ENABLE_DEBUG */
+
+/* Open FILE and set up a logging stream. If FILE cannot be opened,
+ exit with status of 1. */
+void
+log_init (const char *file, bool appendp)
+{
+ if (file)
+ {
+ if (HYPHENP (file))
+ {
+ stdlogfp = stdout;
+ logfp = stdlogfp;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ filelogfp = fopen (file, appendp ? "a" : "w");
+ if (!filelogfp)
+ {
+ fprintf (stderr, "%s: %s: %s\n", exec_name, file, strerror (errno));
+ exit (WGET_EXIT_GENERIC_ERROR);
+ }
+ logfp = filelogfp;
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* The log goes to stderr to avoid collisions with the output if
+ the user specifies `-O -'. #### Francois Pinard suggests
+ that it's a better idea to print to stdout by default, and to
+ stderr only if the user actually specifies `-O -'. He says
+ this inconsistency is harder to document, but is overall
+ easier on the user. */
+ stdlogfp = stderr;
+ logfp = stdlogfp;
+
+ if (1
+#ifdef HAVE_ISATTY
+ && isatty (fileno (logfp))
+#endif
+ )
+ {
+ /* If the output is a TTY, enable save context, i.e. store
+ the most recent several messages ("context") and dump
+ them to a log file in case SIGHUP or SIGUSR1 is received
+ (or Ctrl+Break is pressed under Windows). */
+ save_context_p = true;
+ }
+ }
+
+#ifndef WINDOWS
+ /* Initialize this values so we don't have to ask every time we print line */
+ shell_is_interactive = isatty (STDIN_FILENO);
+#endif
+}
+
+/* Close LOGFP (only if we opened it, not if it's stderr), inhibit
+ further logging and free the memory associated with it. */
+void
+log_close (void)
+{
+ int i;
+
+ if (logfp && logfp != stderr && logfp != stdout)
+ {
+ if (logfp == stdlogfp)
+ stdlogfp = NULL;
+ if (logfp == filelogfp)
+ filelogfp = NULL;
+ fclose (logfp);
+ }
+ logfp = NULL;
+
+ inhibit_logging = true;
+ save_context_p = false;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < SAVED_LOG_LINES; i++)
+ free_log_line (i);
+ log_line_current = -1;
+ trailing_line = false;
+}
+
+/* Dump saved lines to logfp. */
+static void
+log_dump_context (void)
+{
+ int num = log_line_current;
+ FILE *fp = get_log_fp ();
+ FILE *warcfp = get_warc_log_fp ();
+ if (!fp)
+ return;
+
+ if (num == -1)
+ return;
+ if (trailing_line)
+ ROT_ADVANCE (num);
+ do
+ {
+ struct log_ln *ln = log_lines + num;
+ if (ln->content)
+ {
+ FPUTS (ln->content, fp);
+ if (warcfp != NULL)
+ FPUTS (ln->content, warcfp);
+ }
+ ROT_ADVANCE (num);
+ }
+ while (num != log_line_current);
+ if (trailing_line)
+ if (log_lines[log_line_current].content)
+ {
+ FPUTS (log_lines[log_line_current].content, fp);
+ if (warcfp != NULL)
+ FPUTS (log_lines[log_line_current].content, warcfp);
+ }
+ fflush (fp);
+ fflush (warcfp);
+}
+
+/* String escape functions. */
+
+/* Return the number of non-printable characters in SOURCE.
+ Non-printable characters are determined as per c-ctype.c. */
+
+static int
+count_nonprint (const char *source)
+{
+ const char *p;
+ int cnt;
+ for (p = source, cnt = 0; *p; p++)
+ if (!c_isprint (*p))
+ ++cnt;
+ return cnt;
+}
+
+/* Copy SOURCE to DEST, escaping non-printable characters.
+
+ Non-printable refers to anything outside the non-control ASCII
+ range (32-126) which means that, for example, CR, LF, and TAB are
+ considered non-printable along with ESC, BS, and other control
+ chars. This is by design: it makes sure that messages from remote
+ servers cannot be easily used to deceive the users by mimicking
+ Wget's output. Disallowing non-ASCII characters is another
+ necessary security measure, which makes sure that remote servers
+ cannot garble the screen or guess the local charset and perform
+ homographic attacks.
+
+ Of course, the above mandates that escnonprint only be used in
+ contexts expected to be ASCII, such as when printing host names,
+ URL components, HTTP headers, FTP server messages, and the like.
+
+ ESCAPE is the leading character of the escape sequence. BASE
+ should be the base of the escape sequence, and must be either 8 for
+ octal or 16 for hex.
+
+ DEST must point to a location with sufficient room to store an
+ encoded version of SOURCE. */
+
+static void
+copy_and_escape (const char *source, char *dest, char escape, int base)
+{
+ const char *from = source;
+ char *to = dest;
+ unsigned char c;
+
+ /* Copy chars from SOURCE to DEST, escaping non-printable ones. */
+ switch (base)
+ {
+ case 8:
+ while ((c = *from++) != '\0')
+ if (c_isprint (c))
+ *to++ = c;
+ else
+ {
+ *to++ = escape;
+ *to++ = '0' + (c >> 6);
+ *to++ = '0' + ((c >> 3) & 7);
+ *to++ = '0' + (c & 7);
+ }
+ break;
+ case 16:
+ while ((c = *from++) != '\0')
+ if (c_isprint (c))
+ *to++ = c;
+ else
+ {
+ *to++ = escape;
+ *to++ = XNUM_TO_DIGIT (c >> 4);
+ *to++ = XNUM_TO_DIGIT (c & 0xf);
+ }
+ break;
+ default:
+ abort ();
+ }
+ *to = '\0';
+}
+
+#define RING_SIZE 3
+struct ringel {
+ char *buffer;
+ int size;
+};
+static struct ringel ring[RING_SIZE]; /* ring data */
+
+static const char *
+escnonprint_internal (const char *str, char escape, int base)
+{
+ static int ringpos; /* current ring position */
+ int nprcnt;
+
+ assert (base == 8 || base == 16);
+
+ nprcnt = count_nonprint (str);
+ if (nprcnt == 0)
+ /* If there are no non-printable chars in STR, don't bother
+ copying anything, just return STR. */
+ return str;
+
+ {
+ /* Set up a pointer to the current ring position, so we can write
+ simply r->X instead of ring[ringpos].X. */
+ struct ringel *r = ring + ringpos;
+
+ /* Every non-printable character is replaced with the escape char
+ and three (or two, depending on BASE) *additional* chars. Size
+ must also include the length of the original string and one
+ additional char for the terminating \0. */
+ int needed_size = strlen (str) + 1 + (base == 8 ? 3 * nprcnt : 2 * nprcnt);
+
+ /* If the current buffer is uninitialized or too small,
+ (re)allocate it. */
+ if (r->buffer == NULL || r->size < needed_size)
+ {
+ r->buffer = xrealloc (r->buffer, needed_size);
+ r->size = needed_size;
+ }
+
+ copy_and_escape (str, r->buffer, escape, base);
+ ringpos = (ringpos + 1) % RING_SIZE;
+ return r->buffer;
+ }
+}
+
+/* Return a pointer to a static copy of STR with the non-printable
+ characters escaped as \ooo. If there are no non-printable
+ characters in STR, STR is returned. See copy_and_escape for more
+ information on which characters are considered non-printable.
+
+ DON'T call this function on translated strings because escaping
+ will break them. Don't call it on literal strings from the source,
+ which are by definition trusted. If newlines are allowed in the
+ string, escape and print it line by line because escaping the whole
+ string will convert newlines to \012. (This is so that expectedly
+ single-line messages cannot use embedded newlines to mimic Wget's
+ output and deceive the user.)
+
+ escnonprint doesn't quote its escape character because it is notf
+ meant as a general and reversible quoting mechanism, but as a quick
+ way to defang binary junk sent by malicious or buggy servers.
+
+ NOTE: since this function can return a pointer to static data, be
+ careful to copy its result before calling it again. However, to be
+ more useful with printf, it maintains an internal ring of static
+ buffers to return. Currently the ring size is 3, which means you
+ can print up to three values in the same printf; if more is needed,
+ bump RING_SIZE. */
+
+const char *
+escnonprint (const char *str)
+{
+ return escnonprint_internal (str, '\\', 8);
+}
+
+/* Return a pointer to a static copy of STR with the non-printable
+ characters escaped as %XX. If there are no non-printable
+ characters in STR, STR is returned.
+
+ See escnonprint for usage details. */
+
+const char *
+escnonprint_uri (const char *str)
+{
+ return escnonprint_internal (str, '%', 16);
+}
+
+void
+log_cleanup (void)
+{
+ size_t i;
+ for (i = 0; i < countof (ring); i++)
+ xfree (ring[i].buffer);
+}
+
+/* When SIGHUP or SIGUSR1 are received, the output is redirected
+ elsewhere. Such redirection is only allowed once. */
+static const char *redirect_request_signal_name;
+
+/* Redirect output to `wget-log' or back to stdout/stderr. */
+
+void
+redirect_output (bool to_file, const char *signal_name)
+{
+ if (to_file && logfp != filelogfp)
+ {
+ if (signal_name)
+ {
+ fprintf (stderr, "\n%s received.", signal_name);
+ }
+ if (!filelogfp)
+ {
+ filelogfp = unique_create (DEFAULT_LOGFILE, false, &logfile);
+ if (filelogfp)
+ {
+ fprintf (stderr, _("\nRedirecting output to %s.\n"),
+ quote (logfile));
+ /* Store signal name to tell wget it's permanent redirect to log file */
+ redirect_request_signal_name = signal_name;
+ logfp = filelogfp;
+ /* Dump the context output to the newly opened log. */
+ log_dump_context ();
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* Eek! Opening the alternate log file has failed. Nothing we
+ can do but disable printing completely. */
+ fprintf (stderr, _("%s: %s; disabling logging.\n"),
+ (logfile) ? logfile : DEFAULT_LOGFILE, strerror (errno));
+ inhibit_logging = true;
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ fprintf (stderr, _("\nRedirecting output to %s.\n"),
+ quote (logfile));
+ logfp = filelogfp;
+ log_dump_context ();
+ }
+ }
+ else if (!to_file && logfp != stdlogfp)
+ {
+ logfp = stdlogfp;
+ log_dump_context ();
+ }
+}
+
+/* Check whether there's a need to redirect output. */
+
+static void
+check_redirect_output (void)
+{
+#ifndef WINDOWS
+ /* If it was redirected already to log file by SIGHUP, SIGUSR1 or -o parameter,
+ * it was permanent.
+ * If there was no SIGHUP or SIGUSR1 and shell is interactive
+ * we check if process is fg or bg before every line is printed.*/
+ if (!redirect_request_signal_name && shell_is_interactive && !opt.lfilename)
+ {
+ pid_t foreground_pgrp = tcgetpgrp (STDIN_FILENO);
+
+ if (foreground_pgrp != -1 && foreground_pgrp != getpgrp () && !opt.quiet)
+ {
+ /* Process backgrounded */
+ redirect_output (true,NULL);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ /* Process foregrounded */
+ redirect_output (false,NULL);
+ }
+ }
+#endif /* WINDOWS */
+}