/* general.c -- Stuff that is used by all files. */
/* Copyright (C) 1987-2009 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 "config.h"
#include "bashtypes.h"
#ifndef _MINIX
# include
#endif
#include "posixstat.h"
#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H)
# include
#endif
#include "filecntl.h"
#include "bashansi.h"
#include
#include "chartypes.h"
#include
#include "bashintl.h"
#include "shell.h"
#include "test.h"
#include
#if !defined (errno)
extern int errno;
#endif /* !errno */
extern int expand_aliases;
extern int interactive_comments;
extern int check_hashed_filenames;
extern int source_uses_path;
extern int source_searches_cwd;
static char *bash_special_tilde_expansions __P((char *));
static int unquoted_tilde_word __P((const char *));
static void initialize_group_array __P((void));
/* A standard error message to use when getcwd() returns NULL. */
const char * const bash_getcwd_errstr = N_("getcwd: cannot access parent directories");
/* Do whatever is necessary to initialize `Posix mode'. */
void
posix_initialize (on)
int on;
{
/* Things that should be turned on when posix mode is enabled. */
if (on != 0)
{
interactive_comments = source_uses_path = expand_aliases = 1;
source_searches_cwd = 0;
}
/* Things that should be turned on when posix mode is disabled. */
if (on == 0)
{
source_searches_cwd = 1;
expand_aliases = interactive_shell;
}
}
/* **************************************************************** */
/* */
/* Functions to convert to and from and display non-standard types */
/* */
/* **************************************************************** */
#if defined (RLIMTYPE)
RLIMTYPE
string_to_rlimtype (s)
char *s;
{
RLIMTYPE ret;
int neg;
ret = 0;
neg = 0;
while (s && *s && whitespace (*s))
s++;
if (s && (*s == '-' || *s == '+'))
{
neg = *s == '-';
s++;
}
for ( ; s && *s && DIGIT (*s); s++)
ret = (ret * 10) + TODIGIT (*s);
return (neg ? -ret : ret);
}
void
print_rlimtype (n, addnl)
RLIMTYPE n;
int addnl;
{
char s[INT_STRLEN_BOUND (RLIMTYPE) + 1], *p;
p = s + sizeof(s);
*--p = '\0';
if (n < 0)
{
do
*--p = '0' - n % 10;
while ((n /= 10) != 0);
*--p = '-';
}
else
{
do
*--p = '0' + n % 10;
while ((n /= 10) != 0);
}
printf ("%s%s", p, addnl ? "\n" : "");
}
#endif /* RLIMTYPE */
/* **************************************************************** */
/* */
/* Input Validation Functions */
/* */
/* **************************************************************** */
/* Return non-zero if all of the characters in STRING are digits. */
int
all_digits (string)
char *string;
{
register char *s;
for (s = string; *s; s++)
if (DIGIT (*s) == 0)
return (0);
return (1);
}
/* Return non-zero if the characters pointed to by STRING constitute a
valid number. Stuff the converted number into RESULT if RESULT is
not null. */
int
legal_number (string, result)
const char *string;
intmax_t *result;
{
intmax_t value;
char *ep;
if (result)
*result = 0;
errno = 0;
value = strtoimax (string, &ep, 10);
if (errno || ep == string)
return 0; /* errno is set on overflow or underflow */
/* Skip any trailing whitespace, since strtoimax does not. */
while (whitespace (*ep))
ep++;
/* If *string is not '\0' but *ep is '\0' on return, the entire string
is valid. */
if (string && *string && *ep == '\0')
{
if (result)
*result = value;
/* The SunOS4 implementation of strtol() will happily ignore
overflow conditions, so this cannot do overflow correctly
on those systems. */
return 1;
}
return (0);
}
/* Return 1 if this token is a legal shell `identifier'; that is, it consists
solely of letters, digits, and underscores, and does not begin with a
digit. */
int
legal_identifier (name)
char *name;
{
register char *s;
unsigned char c;
if (!name || !(c = *name) || (legal_variable_starter (c) == 0))
return (0);
for (s = name + 1; (c = *s) != 0; s++)
{
if (legal_variable_char (c) == 0)
return (0);
}
return (1);
}
/* Make sure that WORD is a valid shell identifier, i.e.
does not contain a dollar sign, nor is quoted in any way. Nor
does it consist of all digits. If CHECK_WORD is non-zero,
the word is checked to ensure that it consists of only letters,
digits, and underscores. */
int
check_identifier (word, check_word)
WORD_DESC *word;
int check_word;
{
if ((word->flags & (W_HASDOLLAR|W_QUOTED)) || all_digits (word->word))
{
internal_error (_("`%s': not a valid identifier"), word->word);
return (0);
}
else if (check_word && legal_identifier (word->word) == 0)
{
internal_error (_("`%s': not a valid identifier"), word->word);
return (0);
}
else
return (1);
}
/* Return 1 if STRING comprises a valid alias name. The shell accepts
essentially all characters except those which must be quoted to the
parser (which disqualifies them from alias expansion anyway) and `/'. */
int
legal_alias_name (string, flags)
char *string;
int flags;
{
register char *s;
for (s = string; *s; s++)
if (shellbreak (*s) || shellxquote (*s) || shellexp (*s) || (*s == '/'))
return 0;
return 1;
}
/* Returns non-zero if STRING is an assignment statement. The returned value
is the index of the `=' sign. */
int
assignment (string, flags)
const char *string;
int flags;
{
register unsigned char c;
register int newi, indx;
c = string[indx = 0];
#if defined (ARRAY_VARS)
if ((legal_variable_starter (c) == 0) && (flags == 0 || c != '[')) /* ] */
#else
if (legal_variable_starter (c) == 0)
#endif
return (0);
while (c = string[indx])
{
/* The following is safe. Note that '=' at the start of a word
is not an assignment statement. */
if (c == '=')
return (indx);
#if defined (ARRAY_VARS)
if (c == '[')
{
newi = skipsubscript (string, indx, 0);
if (string[newi++] != ']')
return (0);
if (string[newi] == '+' && string[newi+1] == '=')
return (newi + 1);
return ((string[newi] == '=') ? newi : 0);
}
#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */
/* Check for `+=' */
if (c == '+' && string[indx+1] == '=')
return (indx + 1);
/* Variable names in assignment statements may contain only letters,
digits, and `_'. */
if (legal_variable_char (c) == 0)
return (0);
indx++;
}
return (0);
}
/* **************************************************************** */
/* */
/* Functions to manage files and file descriptors */
/* */
/* **************************************************************** */
/* A function to unset no-delay mode on a file descriptor. Used in shell.c
to unset it on the fd passed as stdin. Should be called on stdin if
readline gets an EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK when trying to read input. */
#if !defined (O_NDELAY)
# if defined (FNDELAY)
# define O_NDELAY FNDELAY
# endif
#endif /* O_NDELAY */
/* Make sure no-delay mode is not set on file descriptor FD. */
int
sh_unset_nodelay_mode (fd)
int fd;
{
int flags, bflags;
if ((flags = fcntl (fd, F_GETFL, 0)) < 0)
return -1;
bflags = 0;
/* This is defined to O_NDELAY in filecntl.h if O_NONBLOCK is not present
and O_NDELAY is defined. */
#ifdef O_NONBLOCK
bflags |= O_NONBLOCK;
#endif
#ifdef O_NDELAY
bflags |= O_NDELAY;
#endif
if (flags & bflags)
{
flags &= ~bflags;
return (fcntl (fd, F_SETFL, flags));
}
return 0;
}
/* Return 1 if file descriptor FD is valid; 0 otherwise. */
int
sh_validfd (fd)
int fd;
{
return (fcntl (fd, F_GETFD, 0) >= 0);
}
/* There is a bug in the NeXT 2.1 rlogind that causes opens
of /dev/tty to fail. */
#if defined (__BEOS__)
/* On BeOS, opening in non-blocking mode exposes a bug in BeOS, so turn it
into a no-op. This should probably go away in the future. */
# undef O_NONBLOCK
# define O_NONBLOCK 0
#endif /* __BEOS__ */
void
check_dev_tty ()
{
int tty_fd;
char *tty;
tty_fd = open ("/dev/tty", O_RDWR|O_NONBLOCK);
if (tty_fd < 0)
{
tty = (char *)ttyname (fileno (stdin));
if (tty == 0)
return;
tty_fd = open (tty, O_RDWR|O_NONBLOCK);
}
close (tty_fd);
}
/* Return 1 if PATH1 and PATH2 are the same file. This is kind of
expensive. If non-NULL STP1 and STP2 point to stat structures
corresponding to PATH1 and PATH2, respectively. */
int
same_file (path1, path2, stp1, stp2)
char *path1, *path2;
struct stat *stp1, *stp2;
{
struct stat st1, st2;
if (stp1 == NULL)
{
if (stat (path1, &st1) != 0)
return (0);
stp1 = &st1;
}
if (stp2 == NULL)
{
if (stat (path2, &st2) != 0)
return (0);
stp2 = &st2;
}
return ((stp1->st_dev == stp2->st_dev) && (stp1->st_ino == stp2->st_ino));
}
/* Move FD to a number close to the maximum number of file descriptors
allowed in the shell process, to avoid the user stepping on it with
redirection and causing us extra work. If CHECK_NEW is non-zero,
we check whether or not the file descriptors are in use before
duplicating FD onto them. MAXFD says where to start checking the
file descriptors. If it's less than 20, we get the maximum value
available from getdtablesize(2). */
int
move_to_high_fd (fd, check_new, maxfd)
int fd, check_new, maxfd;
{
int script_fd, nfds, ignore;
if (maxfd < 20)
{
nfds = getdtablesize ();
if (nfds <= 0)
nfds = 20;
if (nfds > HIGH_FD_MAX)
nfds = HIGH_FD_MAX; /* reasonable maximum */
}
else
nfds = maxfd;
for (nfds--; check_new && nfds > 3; nfds--)
if (fcntl (nfds, F_GETFD, &ignore) == -1)
break;
if (nfds > 3 && fd != nfds && (script_fd = dup2 (fd, nfds)) != -1)
{
if (check_new == 0 || fd != fileno (stderr)) /* don't close stderr */
close (fd);
return (script_fd);
}
/* OK, we didn't find one less than our artificial maximum; return the
original file descriptor. */
return (fd);
}
/* Return non-zero if the characters from SAMPLE are not all valid
characters to be found in the first line of a shell script. We
check up to the first newline, or SAMPLE_LEN, whichever comes first.
All of the characters must be printable or whitespace. */
int
check_binary_file (sample, sample_len)
char *sample;
int sample_len;
{
register int i;
unsigned char c;
for (i = 0; i < sample_len; i++)
{
c = sample[i];
if (c == '\n')
return (0);
if (c == '\0')
return (1);
}
return (0);
}
/* **************************************************************** */
/* */
/* Functions to manipulate pipes */
/* */
/* **************************************************************** */
int
sh_openpipe (pv)
int *pv;
{
int r;
if ((r = pipe (pv)) < 0)
return r;
pv[0] = move_to_high_fd (pv[0], 1, 64);
pv[1] = move_to_high_fd (pv[1], 1, 64);
return 0;
}
int
sh_closepipe (pv)
int *pv;
{
if (pv[0] >= 0)
close (pv[0]);
if (pv[1] >= 0)
close (pv[1]);
pv[0] = pv[1] = -1;
return 0;
}
/* **************************************************************** */
/* */
/* Functions to inspect pathnames */
/* */
/* **************************************************************** */
int
file_exists (fn)
char *fn;
{
struct stat sb;
return (stat (fn, &sb) == 0);
}
int
file_isdir (fn)
char *fn;
{
struct stat sb;
return ((stat (fn, &sb) == 0) && S_ISDIR (sb.st_mode));
}
int
file_iswdir (fn)
char *fn;
{
return (file_isdir (fn) && sh_eaccess (fn, W_OK) == 0);
}
/* Return 1 if STRING contains an absolute pathname, else 0. Used by `cd'
to decide whether or not to look up a directory name in $CDPATH. */
int
absolute_pathname (string)
const char *string;
{
if (string == 0 || *string == '\0')
return (0);
if (ABSPATH(string))
return (1);
if (string[0] == '.' && PATHSEP(string[1])) /* . and ./ */
return (1);
if (string[0] == '.' && string[1] == '.' && PATHSEP(string[2])) /* .. and ../ */
return (1);
return (0);
}
/* Return 1 if STRING is an absolute program name; it is absolute if it
contains any slashes. This is used to decide whether or not to look
up through $PATH. */
int
absolute_program (string)
const char *string;
{
return ((char *)mbschr (string, '/') != (char *)NULL);
}
/* **************************************************************** */
/* */
/* Functions to manipulate pathnames */
/* */
/* **************************************************************** */
/* Turn STRING (a pathname) into an absolute pathname, assuming that
DOT_PATH contains the symbolic location of `.'. This always
returns a new string, even if STRING was an absolute pathname to
begin with. */
char *
make_absolute (string, dot_path)
char *string, *dot_path;
{
char *result;
if (dot_path == 0 || ABSPATH(string))
#ifdef __CYGWIN__
{
char pathbuf[PATH_MAX + 1];
cygwin_conv_to_full_posix_path (string, pathbuf);
result = savestring (pathbuf);
}
#else
result = savestring (string);
#endif
else
result = sh_makepath (dot_path, string, 0);
return (result);
}
/* Return the `basename' of the pathname in STRING (the stuff after the
last '/'). If STRING is `/', just return it. */
char *
base_pathname (string)
char *string;
{
char *p;
#if 0
if (absolute_pathname (string) == 0)
return (string);
#endif
if (string[0] == '/' && string[1] == 0)
return (string);
p = (char *)strrchr (string, '/');
return (p ? ++p : string);
}
/* Return the full pathname of FILE. Easy. Filenames that begin
with a '/' are returned as themselves. Other filenames have
the current working directory prepended. A new string is
returned in either case. */
char *
full_pathname (file)
char *file;
{
char *ret;
file = (*file == '~') ? bash_tilde_expand (file, 0) : savestring (file);
if (ABSPATH(file))
return (file);
ret = sh_makepath ((char *)NULL, file, (MP_DOCWD|MP_RMDOT));
free (file);
return (ret);
}
/* A slightly related function. Get the prettiest name of this
directory possible. */
static char tdir[PATH_MAX];
/* Return a pretty pathname. If the first part of the pathname is
the same as $HOME, then replace that with `~'. */
char *
polite_directory_format (name)
char *name;
{
char *home;
int l;
home = get_string_value ("HOME");
l = home ? strlen (home) : 0;
if (l > 1 && strncmp (home, name, l) == 0 && (!name[l] || name[l] == '/'))
{
strncpy (tdir + 1, name + l, sizeof(tdir) - 2);
tdir[0] = '~';
tdir[sizeof(tdir) - 1] = '\0';
return (tdir);
}
else
return (name);
}
/* Trim NAME. If NAME begins with `~/', skip over tilde prefix. Trim to
keep any tilde prefix and PROMPT_DIRTRIM trailing directory components
and replace the intervening characters with `...' */
char *
trim_pathname (name, maxlen)
char *name;
int maxlen;
{
int nlen, ndirs;
intmax_t nskip;
char *nbeg, *nend, *ntail, *v;
if (name == 0 || (nlen = strlen (name)) == 0)
return name;
nend = name + nlen;
v = get_string_value ("PROMPT_DIRTRIM");
if (v == 0 || *v == 0)
return name;
if (legal_number (v, &nskip) == 0 || nskip <= 0)
return name;
/* Skip over tilde prefix */
nbeg = name;
if (name[0] == '~')
for (nbeg = name; *nbeg; nbeg++)
if (*nbeg == '/')
{
nbeg++;
break;
}
if (*nbeg == 0)
return name;
for (ndirs = 0, ntail = nbeg; *ntail; ntail++)
if (*ntail == '/')
ndirs++;
if (ndirs < nskip)
return name;
for (ntail = (*nend == '/') ? nend : nend - 1; ntail > nbeg; ntail--)
{
if (*ntail == '/')
nskip--;
if (nskip == 0)
break;
}
if (ntail == nbeg)
return name;
/* Now we want to return name[0..nbeg]+"..."+ntail, modifying name in place */
nlen = ntail - nbeg;
if (nlen <= 3)
return name;
*nbeg++ = '.';
*nbeg++ = '.';
*nbeg++ = '.';
nlen = nend - ntail;
memcpy (nbeg, ntail, nlen);
nbeg[nlen] = '\0';
return name;
}
/* Given a string containing units of information separated by colons,
return the next one pointed to by (P_INDEX), or NULL if there are no more.
Advance (P_INDEX) to the character after the colon. */
char *
extract_colon_unit (string, p_index)
char *string;
int *p_index;
{
int i, start, len;
char *value;
if (string == 0)
return (string);
len = strlen (string);
if (*p_index >= len)
return ((char *)NULL);
i = *p_index;
/* Each call to this routine leaves the index pointing at a colon if
there is more to the path. If I is > 0, then increment past the
`:'. If I is 0, then the path has a leading colon. Trailing colons
are handled OK by the `else' part of the if statement; an empty
string is returned in that case. */
if (i && string[i] == ':')
i++;
for (start = i; string[i] && string[i] != ':'; i++)
;
*p_index = i;
if (i == start)
{
if (string[i])
(*p_index)++;
/* Return "" in the case of a trailing `:'. */
value = (char *)xmalloc (1);
value[0] = '\0';
}
else
value = substring (string, start, i);
return (value);
}
/* **************************************************************** */
/* */
/* Tilde Initialization and Expansion */
/* */
/* **************************************************************** */
#if defined (PUSHD_AND_POPD)
extern char *get_dirstack_from_string __P((char *));
#endif
static char **bash_tilde_prefixes;
static char **bash_tilde_prefixes2;
static char **bash_tilde_suffixes;
static char **bash_tilde_suffixes2;
/* If tilde_expand hasn't been able to expand the text, perhaps it
is a special shell expansion. This function is installed as the
tilde_expansion_preexpansion_hook. It knows how to expand ~- and ~+.
If PUSHD_AND_POPD is defined, ~[+-]N expands to directories from the
directory stack. */
static char *
bash_special_tilde_expansions (text)
char *text;
{
char *result;
result = (char *)NULL;
if (text[0] == '+' && text[1] == '\0')
result = get_string_value ("PWD");
else if (text[0] == '-' && text[1] == '\0')
result = get_string_value ("OLDPWD");
#if defined (PUSHD_AND_POPD)
else if (DIGIT (*text) || ((*text == '+' || *text == '-') && DIGIT (text[1])))
result = get_dirstack_from_string (text);
#endif
return (result ? savestring (result) : (char *)NULL);
}
/* Initialize the tilde expander. In Bash, we handle `~-' and `~+', as
well as handling special tilde prefixes; `:~" and `=~' are indications
that we should do tilde expansion. */
void
tilde_initialize ()
{
static int times_called = 0;
/* Tell the tilde expander that we want a crack first. */
tilde_expansion_preexpansion_hook = bash_special_tilde_expansions;
/* Tell the tilde expander about special strings which start a tilde
expansion, and the special strings that end one. Only do this once.
tilde_initialize () is called from within bashline_reinitialize (). */
if (times_called++ == 0)
{
bash_tilde_prefixes = strvec_create (3);
bash_tilde_prefixes[0] = "=~";
bash_tilde_prefixes[1] = ":~";
bash_tilde_prefixes[2] = (char *)NULL;
bash_tilde_prefixes2 = strvec_create (2);
bash_tilde_prefixes2[0] = ":~";
bash_tilde_prefixes2[1] = (char *)NULL;
tilde_additional_prefixes = bash_tilde_prefixes;
bash_tilde_suffixes = strvec_create (3);
bash_tilde_suffixes[0] = ":";
bash_tilde_suffixes[1] = "=~"; /* XXX - ?? */
bash_tilde_suffixes[2] = (char *)NULL;
tilde_additional_suffixes = bash_tilde_suffixes;
bash_tilde_suffixes2 = strvec_create (2);
bash_tilde_suffixes2[0] = ":";
bash_tilde_suffixes2[1] = (char *)NULL;
}
}
/* POSIX.2, 3.6.1: A tilde-prefix consists of an unquoted tilde character
at the beginning of the word, followed by all of the characters preceding
the first unquoted slash in the word, or all the characters in the word
if there is no slash...If none of the characters in the tilde-prefix are
quoted, the characters in the tilde-prefix following the tilde shell be
treated as a possible login name. */
#define TILDE_END(c) ((c) == '\0' || (c) == '/' || (c) == ':')
static int
unquoted_tilde_word (s)
const char *s;
{
const char *r;
for (r = s; TILDE_END(*r) == 0; r++)
{
switch (*r)
{
case '\\':
case '\'':
case '"':
return 0;
}
}
return 1;
}
/* Find the end of the tilde-prefix starting at S, and return the tilde
prefix in newly-allocated memory. Return the length of the string in
*LENP. FLAGS tells whether or not we're in an assignment context --
if so, `:' delimits the end of the tilde prefix as well. */
char *
bash_tilde_find_word (s, flags, lenp)
const char *s;
int flags, *lenp;
{
const char *r;
char *ret;
int l;
for (r = s; *r && *r != '/'; r++)
{
/* Short-circuit immediately if we see a quote character. Even though
POSIX says that `the first unquoted slash' (or `:') terminates the
tilde-prefix, in practice, any quoted portion of the tilde prefix
will cause it to not be expanded. */
if (*r == '\\' || *r == '\'' || *r == '"')
{
ret = savestring (s);
if (lenp)
*lenp = 0;
return ret;
}
else if (flags && *r == ':')
break;
}
l = r - s;
ret = xmalloc (l + 1);
strncpy (ret, s, l);
ret[l] = '\0';
if (lenp)
*lenp = l;
return ret;
}
/* Tilde-expand S by running it through the tilde expansion library.
ASSIGN_P is 1 if this is a variable assignment, so the alternate
tilde prefixes should be enabled (`=~' and `:~', see above). If
ASSIGN_P is 2, we are expanding the rhs of an assignment statement,
so `=~' is not valid. */
char *
bash_tilde_expand (s, assign_p)
const char *s;
int assign_p;
{
int old_immed, old_term, r;
char *ret;
old_immed = interrupt_immediately;
old_term = terminate_immediately;
interrupt_immediately = terminate_immediately = 1;
tilde_additional_prefixes = assign_p == 0 ? (char **)0
: (assign_p == 2 ? bash_tilde_prefixes2 : bash_tilde_prefixes);
if (assign_p == 2)
tilde_additional_suffixes = bash_tilde_suffixes2;
r = (*s == '~') ? unquoted_tilde_word (s) : 1;
ret = r ? tilde_expand (s) : savestring (s);
interrupt_immediately = old_immed;
terminate_immediately = old_term;
return (ret);
}
/* **************************************************************** */
/* */
/* Functions to manipulate and search the group list */
/* */
/* **************************************************************** */
static int ngroups, maxgroups;
/* The set of groups that this user is a member of. */
static GETGROUPS_T *group_array = (GETGROUPS_T *)NULL;
#if !defined (NOGROUP)
# define NOGROUP (gid_t) -1
#endif
static void
initialize_group_array ()
{
register int i;
if (maxgroups == 0)
maxgroups = getmaxgroups ();
ngroups = 0;
group_array = (GETGROUPS_T *)xrealloc (group_array, maxgroups * sizeof (GETGROUPS_T));
#if defined (HAVE_GETGROUPS)
ngroups = getgroups (maxgroups, group_array);
#endif
/* If getgroups returns nothing, or the OS does not support getgroups(),
make sure the groups array includes at least the current gid. */
if (ngroups == 0)
{
group_array[0] = current_user.gid;
ngroups = 1;
}
/* If the primary group is not in the groups array, add it as group_array[0]
and shuffle everything else up 1, if there's room. */
for (i = 0; i < ngroups; i++)
if (current_user.gid == (gid_t)group_array[i])
break;
if (i == ngroups && ngroups < maxgroups)
{
for (i = ngroups; i > 0; i--)
group_array[i] = group_array[i - 1];
group_array[0] = current_user.gid;
ngroups++;
}
/* If the primary group is not group_array[0], swap group_array[0] and
whatever the current group is. The vast majority of systems should
not need this; a notable exception is Linux. */
if (group_array[0] != current_user.gid)
{
for (i = 0; i < ngroups; i++)
if (group_array[i] == current_user.gid)
break;
if (i < ngroups)
{
group_array[i] = group_array[0];
group_array[0] = current_user.gid;
}
}
}
/* Return non-zero if GID is one that we have in our groups list. */
int
#if defined (__STDC__) || defined ( _MINIX)
group_member (gid_t gid)
#else
group_member (gid)
gid_t gid;
#endif /* !__STDC__ && !_MINIX */
{
#if defined (HAVE_GETGROUPS)
register int i;
#endif
/* Short-circuit if possible, maybe saving a call to getgroups(). */
if (gid == current_user.gid || gid == current_user.egid)
return (1);
#if defined (HAVE_GETGROUPS)
if (ngroups == 0)
initialize_group_array ();
/* In case of error, the user loses. */
if (ngroups <= 0)
return (0);
/* Search through the list looking for GID. */
for (i = 0; i < ngroups; i++)
if (gid == (gid_t)group_array[i])
return (1);
#endif
return (0);
}
char **
get_group_list (ngp)
int *ngp;
{
static char **group_vector = (char **)NULL;
register int i;
if (group_vector)
{
if (ngp)
*ngp = ngroups;
return group_vector;
}
if (ngroups == 0)
initialize_group_array ();
if (ngroups <= 0)
{
if (ngp)
*ngp = 0;
return (char **)NULL;
}
group_vector = strvec_create (ngroups);
for (i = 0; i < ngroups; i++)
group_vector[i] = itos (group_array[i]);
if (ngp)
*ngp = ngroups;
return group_vector;
}
int *
get_group_array (ngp)
int *ngp;
{
int i;
static int *group_iarray = (int *)NULL;
if (group_iarray)
{
if (ngp)
*ngp = ngroups;
return (group_iarray);
}
if (ngroups == 0)
initialize_group_array ();
if (ngroups <= 0)
{
if (ngp)
*ngp = 0;
return (int *)NULL;
}
group_iarray = (int *)xmalloc (ngroups * sizeof (int));
for (i = 0; i < ngroups; i++)
group_iarray[i] = (int)group_array[i];
if (ngp)
*ngp = ngroups;
return group_iarray;
}