/* zread - read data from file descriptor into buffer with retries */ /* Copyright (C) 1999-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Bash, the Bourne Again SHell. Bash 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. Bash 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 Bash. If not, see . */ #include #include #if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) # include #endif #include #include #if !defined (errno) extern int errno; #endif #ifndef SEEK_CUR # define SEEK_CUR 1 #endif #ifndef ZBUFSIZ # define ZBUFSIZ 4096 #endif extern int executing_builtin; extern void check_signals_and_traps (void); extern void check_signals (void); extern int signal_is_trapped (int); extern int read_builtin_timeout (int); /* Read LEN bytes from FD into BUF. Retry the read on EINTR. Any other error causes the loop to break. */ ssize_t zread (fd, buf, len) int fd; char *buf; size_t len; { ssize_t r; check_signals (); /* check for signals before a blocking read */ /* should generalize into a mechanism where different parts of the shell can `register' timeouts and have them checked here. */ while (((r = read_builtin_timeout (fd)) < 0 || (r = read (fd, buf, len)) < 0) && errno == EINTR) { int t; t = errno; /* XXX - bash-5.0 */ /* We check executing_builtin and run traps here for backwards compatibility */ if (executing_builtin) check_signals_and_traps (); /* XXX - should it be check_signals()? */ else check_signals (); errno = t; } return r; } /* Read LEN bytes from FD into BUF. Retry the read on EINTR, up to three interrupts. Any other error causes the loop to break. */ #ifdef NUM_INTR # undef NUM_INTR #endif #define NUM_INTR 3 ssize_t zreadretry (fd, buf, len) int fd; char *buf; size_t len; { ssize_t r; int nintr; for (nintr = 0; ; ) { r = read (fd, buf, len); if (r >= 0) return r; if (r == -1 && errno == EINTR) { if (++nintr >= NUM_INTR) return -1; continue; } return r; } } /* Call read(2) and allow it to be interrupted. Just a stub for now. */ ssize_t zreadintr (fd, buf, len) int fd; char *buf; size_t len; { check_signals (); return (read (fd, buf, len)); } /* Read one character from FD and return it in CP. Return values are as in read(2). This does some local buffering to avoid many one-character calls to read(2), like those the `read' builtin performs. */ static char lbuf[ZBUFSIZ]; static size_t lind, lused; ssize_t zreadc (fd, cp) int fd; char *cp; { ssize_t nr; if (lind == lused || lused == 0) { nr = zread (fd, lbuf, sizeof (lbuf)); lind = 0; if (nr <= 0) { lused = 0; return nr; } lused = nr; } if (cp) *cp = lbuf[lind++]; return 1; } /* Don't mix calls to zreadc and zreadcintr in the same function, since they use the same local buffer. */ ssize_t zreadcintr (fd, cp) int fd; char *cp; { ssize_t nr; if (lind == lused || lused == 0) { nr = zreadintr (fd, lbuf, sizeof (lbuf)); lind = 0; if (nr <= 0) { lused = 0; return nr; } lused = nr; } if (cp) *cp = lbuf[lind++]; return 1; } /* Like zreadc, but read a specified number of characters at a time. Used for `read -N'. */ ssize_t zreadn (fd, cp, len) int fd; char *cp; size_t len; { ssize_t nr; if (lind == lused || lused == 0) { if (len > sizeof (lbuf)) len = sizeof (lbuf); nr = zread (fd, lbuf, len); lind = 0; if (nr <= 0) { lused = 0; return nr; } lused = nr; } if (cp) *cp = lbuf[lind++]; return 1; } void zreset () { lind = lused = 0; } /* Sync the seek pointer for FD so that the kernel's idea of the last char read is the last char returned by zreadc. */ void zsyncfd (fd) int fd; { off_t off, r; off = lused - lind; r = 0; if (off > 0) r = lseek (fd, -off, SEEK_CUR); if (r != -1) lused = lind = 0; }