/* filesystem.c * Filesystem utility routines * * $Id: filesystem.c 27718 2009-03-13 22:06:48Z stig $ * * Wireshark - Network traffic analyzer * By Gerald Combs * Copyright 1998 Gerald Combs * * 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 * of the License, 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, write to the Free Software * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ #ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H # include "config.h" #endif #ifdef HAVE_DIRENT_H #include #endif #include #include #include #include #include #include #ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H #include #endif #ifdef HAVE_FCNTL_H #include #endif #ifdef HAVE_SYS_STAT_H #include #endif #ifdef _WIN32 #include #include #include #include #else #include #endif #include "filesystem.h" #include "report_err.h" #include #include #include /* for WTAP_ERR_SHORT_WRITE */ #define PROFILES_DIR "profiles" #define U3_MY_CAPTURES "\\My Captures" char *persconffile_dir = NULL; char *persdatafile_dir = NULL; char *persconfprofile = NULL; /* * Given a pathname, return a pointer to the last pathname separator * character in the pathname, or NULL if the pathname contains no * separators. */ static char * find_last_pathname_separator(const char *path) { char *separator; #ifdef _WIN32 char c; /* * We have to scan for '\' or '/'. * Get to the end of the string. */ separator = strchr(path, '\0'); /* points to ending '\0' */ while (separator > path) { c = *--separator; if (c == '\\' || c == '/') return separator; /* found it */ } /* * OK, we didn't find any, so no directories - but there might * be a drive letter.... */ return strchr(path, ':'); #else separator = strrchr(path, '/'); #endif return separator; } /* * Given a pathname, return the last component. */ const char * get_basename(const char *path) { const char *filename; g_assert(path != NULL); filename = find_last_pathname_separator(path); if (filename == NULL) { /* * There're no directories, drive letters, etc. in the * name; the pathname *is* the file name. */ filename = path; } else { /* * Skip past the pathname or drive letter separator. */ filename++; } return filename; } /* * Given a pathname, return a string containing everything but the * last component. NOTE: this overwrites the pathname handed into * it.... */ char * get_dirname(char *path) { char *separator; g_assert(path != NULL); separator = find_last_pathname_separator(path); if (separator == NULL) { /* * There're no directories, drive letters, etc. in the * name; there is no directory path to return. */ return NULL; } /* * Get rid of the last pathname separator and the final file * name following it. */ *separator = '\0'; /* * "path" now contains the pathname of the directory containing * the file/directory to which it referred. */ return path; } /* * Given a pathname, return: * * the errno, if an attempt to "stat()" the file fails; * * EISDIR, if the attempt succeeded and the file turned out * to be a directory; * * 0, if the attempt succeeded and the file turned out not * to be a directory. */ /* * Visual C++ on Win32 systems doesn't define these. (Old UNIX systems don't * define them either.) * * Visual C++ on Win32 systems doesn't define S_IFIFO, it defines _S_IFIFO. */ #ifndef S_ISREG #define S_ISREG(mode) (((mode) & S_IFMT) == S_IFREG) #endif #ifndef S_IFIFO #define S_IFIFO _S_IFIFO #endif #ifndef S_ISFIFO #define S_ISFIFO(mode) (((mode) & S_IFMT) == S_IFIFO) #endif #ifndef S_ISDIR #define S_ISDIR(mode) (((mode) & S_IFMT) == S_IFDIR) #endif int test_for_directory(const char *path) { struct stat statb; if (ws_stat(path, &statb) < 0) return errno; if (S_ISDIR(statb.st_mode)) return EISDIR; else return 0; } int test_for_fifo(const char *path) { struct stat statb; if (ws_stat(path, &statb) < 0) return errno; if (S_ISFIFO(statb.st_mode)) return ESPIPE; else return 0; } /* * Directory from which the executable came. */ static char *progfile_dir; /* * TRUE if we're running from the build directory and we aren't running * with special privileges. */ static gboolean running_in_build_directory_flag = FALSE; /* * Get the pathname of the directory from which the executable came, * and save it for future use. Returns NULL on success, and a * g_mallocated string containing an error on failure. */ char * init_progfile_dir(const char *arg0 #ifdef _WIN32 _U_ #endif ) { char *dir_end; char *path; #ifdef _WIN32 TCHAR prog_pathname_w[_MAX_PATH+2]; size_t progfile_dir_len; char *prog_pathname; DWORD error; TCHAR *msg_w; guchar *msg; size_t msglen; /* * Attempt to get the full pathname of the currently running * program. */ if (GetModuleFileName(NULL, prog_pathname_w, sizeof prog_pathname_w) != 0) { /* * XXX - Should we use g_utf16_to_utf8(), as in * getenv_utf8()? */ prog_pathname = utf_16to8(prog_pathname_w); /* * We got it; strip off the last component, which would be * the file name of the executable, giving us the pathname * of the directory where the executable resies * * First, find the last "\" in the directory, as that * marks the end of the directory pathname. * * XXX - Can the pathname be something such as * "C:wireshark.exe"? Or is it always a full pathname * beginning with "\" after the drive letter? */ dir_end = strrchr(prog_pathname, '\\'); if (dir_end != NULL) { /* * Found it - now figure out how long the program * directory pathname will be. */ progfile_dir_len = (dir_end - prog_pathname); /* * Allocate a buffer for the program directory * pathname, and construct it. */ path = g_malloc(progfile_dir_len + 1); strncpy(path, prog_pathname, progfile_dir_len); path[progfile_dir_len] = '\0'; progfile_dir = path; return NULL; /* we succeeded */ } else { /* * OK, no \ - what do we do now? */ return g_strdup_printf("No \\ in executable pathname \"%s\"", prog_pathname); } } else { /* * Oh, well. Return an indication of the error. */ error = GetLastError(); if (FormatMessage(FORMAT_MESSAGE_ALLOCATE_BUFFER|FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM, NULL, error, 0, (LPTSTR) &msg_w, 0, NULL) == 0) { /* * Gak. We can't format the message. */ return g_strdup_printf("GetModuleFileName failed: %u (FormatMessage failed: %u)", error, GetLastError()); } msg = utf_16to8(msg_w); LocalFree(msg_w); /* * "FormatMessage()" "helpfully" sticks CR/LF at the * end of the message. Get rid of it. */ msglen = strlen(msg); if (msglen >= 2) { msg[msglen - 1] = '\0'; msg[msglen - 2] = '\0'; } return g_strdup_printf("GetModuleFileName failed: %s (%u)", msg, error); } #else char *prog_pathname; char *curdir; long path_max; char *pathstr; char *path_start, *path_end; size_t path_component_len; char *retstr; /* * Check whether WIRESHARK_RUN_FROM_BUILD_DIRECTORY is set in the * environment; if so, set running_in_build_directory_flag if we * weren't started with special privileges. (If we were started * with special privileges, it's not safe to allow the user to point * us to some other directory; running_in_build_directory_flag, when * set, causes us to look for plugins and the like in the build * directory.) */ if (getenv("WIRESHARK_RUN_FROM_BUILD_DIRECTORY") != NULL && !started_with_special_privs()) running_in_build_directory_flag = TRUE; /* * Try to figure out the directory in which the currently running * program resides, given the argv[0] it was started with. That * might be the absolute path of the program, or a path relative * to the current directory of the process that started it, or * just a name for the program if it was started from the command * line and was searched for in $PATH. It's not guaranteed to be * any of those, however, so there are no guarantees.... */ if (arg0[0] == '/') { /* * It's an absolute path. */ prog_pathname = g_strdup(arg0); } else if (strchr(arg0, '/') != NULL) { /* * It's a relative path, with a directory in it. * Get the current directory, and combine it * with that directory. */ path_max = pathconf(".", _PC_PATH_MAX); if (path_max == -1) { /* * We have no idea how big a buffer to * allocate for the current directory. */ return g_strdup_printf("pathconf failed: %s\n", strerror(errno)); } curdir = g_malloc(path_max); if (getcwd(curdir, path_max) == NULL) { /* * It failed - give up, and just stick * with DATAFILE_DIR. */ g_free(curdir); return g_strdup_printf("getcwd failed: %s\n", strerror(errno)); } path = g_strdup_printf("%s/%s", curdir, arg0); g_free(curdir); prog_pathname = path; } else { /* * It's just a file name. * Search the path for a file with that name * that's executable. */ prog_pathname = NULL; /* haven't found it yet */ pathstr = getenv("PATH"); path_start = pathstr; if (path_start != NULL) { while (*path_start != '\0') { path_end = strchr(path_start, ':'); if (path_end == NULL) path_end = path_start + strlen(path_start); path_component_len = path_end - path_start; path = g_malloc(path_component_len + 1 + strlen(arg0) + 1); memcpy(path, path_start, path_component_len); path[path_component_len] = '\0'; strncat(path, "/", 2); strncat(path, arg0, strlen(arg0) + 1); if (access(path, X_OK) == 0) { /* * Found it! */ prog_pathname = path; break; } /* * That's not it. If there are more * path components to test, try them. */ if (*path_end == '\0') { /* * There's nothing more to try. */ break; } if (*path_end == ':') path_end++; path_start = path_end; g_free(path); } if (prog_pathname == NULL) { /* * Program not found in path. */ return g_strdup_printf("\"%s\" not found in \"%s\"", arg0, pathstr); } } else { /* * PATH isn't set. * XXX - should we pick a default? */ return g_strdup("PATH isn't set"); } } /* * OK, we have what we think is the pathname * of the program. * * First, find the last "/" in the directory, * as that marks the end of the directory pathname. */ dir_end = strrchr(prog_pathname, '/'); if (dir_end != NULL) { /* * Found it. Strip off the last component, * as that's the path of the program. */ *dir_end = '\0'; /* * Is there a "/.libs" at the end? */ dir_end = strrchr(prog_pathname, '/'); if (dir_end != NULL) { if (strcmp(dir_end, "/.libs") == 0) { /* * Yup, it's ".libs". * Strip that off; it's an * artifact of libtool. */ *dir_end = '\0'; /* * This presumably means we're run from * the libtool wrapper, which probably * means we're being run from the build * directory. If we weren't started * with special privileges, set * running_in_build_directory_flag. * * XXX - should we check whether what * follows ".libs/" begins with "lt-"? */ if (!started_with_special_privs()) running_in_build_directory_flag = TRUE; } } /* * OK, we have the path we want. */ progfile_dir = prog_pathname; return NULL; } else { /* * This "shouldn't happen"; we apparently * have no "/" in the pathname. * Just free up prog_pathname. */ retstr = g_strdup_printf("No / found in \"%s\"", prog_pathname); g_free(prog_pathname); return retstr; } #endif } /* * Get the directory in which the program resides. */ const char * get_progfile_dir(void) { return progfile_dir; } /* * Get the directory in which the global configuration and data files are * stored. * * On Windows, we use the directory in which the executable for this * process resides. * * On UN*X, we use the DATAFILE_DIR value supplied by the configure * script, unless we think we're being run from the build directory, * in which case we use the directory in which the executable for this * process resides. * * XXX - if we ever make libwireshark a real library, used by multiple * applications (more than just TShark and versions of Wireshark with * various UIs), should the configuration files belong to the library * (and be shared by all those applications) or to the applications? * * If they belong to the library, that could be done on UNIX by the * configure script, but it's trickier on Windows, as you can't just * use the pathname of the executable. * * If they belong to the application, that could be done on Windows * by using the pathname of the executable, but we'd have to have it * passed in as an argument, in some call, on UNIX. * * Note that some of those configuration files might be used by code in * libwireshark, some of them might be used by dissectors (would they * belong to libwireshark, the application, or a separate library?), * and some of them might be used by other code (the Wireshark preferences * file includes resolver preferences that control the behavior of code * in libwireshark, dissector preferences, and UI preferences, for * example). */ const char * get_datafile_dir(void) { #ifdef _WIN32 char *u3deviceexecpath; #endif static char *datafile_dir = NULL; if (datafile_dir != NULL) return datafile_dir; #ifdef _WIN32 /* * See if we are running in a U3 environment. */ u3deviceexecpath = getenv_utf8("U3_DEVICE_EXEC_PATH"); if (u3deviceexecpath != NULL) { /* * We are; use the U3 device executable path. */ datafile_dir = u3deviceexecpath; } else { /* * Do we have the pathname of the program? If so, assume we're * running an installed version of the program. If we fail, * we don't change "datafile_dir", and thus end up using the * default. * * XXX - does NSIS put the installation directory into * "\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wireshark\InstallDir"? * If so, perhaps we should read that from the registry, * instead. */ if (progfile_dir != NULL) { /* * Yes, we do; use that. */ datafile_dir = progfile_dir; } else { /* * No, we don't. * Fall back on the default installation directory. */ datafile_dir = "C:\\Program Files\\Wireshark\\"; } } #else if (running_in_build_directory_flag && progfile_dir != NULL) { /* * We're (probably) being run from the build directory and * weren't started with special privileges, and we were * able to determine the directory in which the program * was found, so use that. */ datafile_dir = progfile_dir; } else { /* * Return the directory specified when the build was * configured, prepending the run path prefix if it exists. */ if (getenv("WIRESHARK_DATA_DIR") && !started_with_special_privs()) { /* * The user specified a different directory for data files * and we aren't running with special privileges. * XXX - We might be able to dispense with the priv check */ datafile_dir = g_strdup(getenv("WIRESHARK_DATA_DIR")); } else { datafile_dir = DATAFILE_DIR; } } #endif return datafile_dir; } #ifdef HAVE_PLUGINS /* * Find the directory where the plugins are stored. * * On Windows, we use the "plugin" subdirectory of the datafile directory. * * On UN*X, we use the PLUGIN_DIR value supplied by the configure * script, unless we think we're being run from the build directory, * in which case we use the "plugin" subdirectory of the datafile directory. * * In both cases, we then use the subdirectory of that directory whose * name is the version number. * * XXX - if we think we're being run from the build directory, perhaps we * should have the plugin code not look in the version subdirectory * of the plugin directory, but look in all of the subdirectories * of the plugin directory, so it can just fetch the plugins built * as part of the build process. */ static const char *plugin_dir = NULL; static void init_plugin_dir(void) { #ifdef _WIN32 /* * On Windows, the data file directory is the installation * directory; the plugins are stored under it. * * Assume we're running the installed version of Wireshark; * on Windows, the data file directory is the directory * in which the Wireshark binary resides. */ plugin_dir = g_strdup_printf("%s\\plugins\\%s", get_datafile_dir(), VERSION); /* * Make sure that pathname refers to a directory. */ if (test_for_directory(plugin_dir) != EISDIR) { /* * Either it doesn't refer to a directory or it * refers to something that doesn't exist. * * Assume that means we're running a version of * Wireshark we've built in a build directory, * in which case {datafile dir}\plugins is the * top-level plugins source directory, and use * that directory and set the "we're running in * a build directory" flag, so the plugin * scanner will check all subdirectories of that * directory for plugins. */ g_free( (gpointer) plugin_dir); plugin_dir = g_strdup_printf("%s\\plugins", get_datafile_dir()); running_in_build_directory_flag = TRUE; } #else if (running_in_build_directory_flag) { /* * We're (probably) being run from the build directory and * weren't started with special privileges, so we'll use * the "plugins" subdirectory of the datafile directory * (the datafile directory is the build directory). */ plugin_dir = g_strdup_printf("%s/plugins", get_datafile_dir()); } else { if (getenv("WIRESHARK_PLUGIN_DIR") && !started_with_special_privs()) { /* * The user specified a different directory for plugins * and we aren't running with special privileges. */ plugin_dir = g_strdup(getenv("WIRESHARK_PLUGIN_DIR")); } else { plugin_dir = PLUGIN_DIR; } } #endif } #endif /* HAVE_PLUGINS */ /* * Get the directory in which the plugins are stored. */ const char * get_plugin_dir(void) { #ifdef HAVE_PLUGINS if (!plugin_dir) init_plugin_dir(); return plugin_dir; #else return NULL; #endif } /* * Get the flag indicating whether we're running from a build * directory. */ gboolean running_in_build_directory(void) { return running_in_build_directory_flag; } /* * Get the directory in which files that, at least on UNIX, are * system files (such as "/etc/ethers") are stored; on Windows, * there's no "/etc" directory, so we get them from the global * configuration and data file directory. */ const char * get_systemfile_dir(void) { #ifdef _WIN32 return get_datafile_dir(); #else return "/etc"; #endif } /* * Name of directory, under the user's home directory, in which * personal configuration files are stored. */ #ifdef _WIN32 #define PF_DIR "Wireshark" #else /* * XXX - should this be ".libepan"? For backwards-compatibility, I'll keep * it ".wireshark" for now. */ #define PF_DIR ".wireshark" #endif #ifdef _WIN32 /* utf8 version of getenv, needed to get win32 filename paths */ char *getenv_utf8(const char *varname) { char *envvar; wchar_t *envvarw; wchar_t *varnamew; envvar = getenv(varname); /* since GLib 2.6 we need an utf8 version of the filename */ #if GLIB_CHECK_VERSION(2,6,0) /* using the wide char version of getenv should work under all circumstances */ /* convert given varname to utf16, needed by _wgetenv */ varnamew = g_utf8_to_utf16(varname, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); if (varnamew == NULL) { return envvar; } /* use wide char version of getenv */ envvarw = _wgetenv(varnamew); g_free(varnamew); if (envvarw == NULL) { return envvar; } /* convert value to utf8 */ envvar = g_utf16_to_utf8(envvarw, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL); /* XXX - memleak */ #endif return envvar; } #endif void set_profile_name(const gchar *profilename) { g_free (persconfprofile); if (profilename && strlen(profilename) > 0 && strcmp(profilename, DEFAULT_PROFILE) != 0) { persconfprofile = g_strdup (profilename); } else { /* Default Profile */ persconfprofile = NULL; } } const char * get_profile_name(void) { if (persconfprofile) { return persconfprofile; } else { return DEFAULT_PROFILE; } } /* * Get the directory in which personal configuration files reside; * in UNIX-compatible systems, it's ".wireshark", under the user's home * directory, and on Windows systems, it's "Wireshark", under %APPDATA% * or, if %APPDATA% isn't set, it's "%USERPROFILE%\Application Data" * (which is what %APPDATA% normally is on Windows 2000). */ static const char * get_persconffile_dir_no_profile(void) { #ifdef _WIN32 char *appdatadir; char *userprofiledir; char *u3appdatapath; #else const char *homedir; struct passwd *pwd; #endif /* Return the cached value, if available */ if (persconffile_dir != NULL) return persconffile_dir; #ifdef _WIN32 /* * See if we are running in a U3 environment. */ u3appdatapath = getenv_utf8("U3_APP_DATA_PATH"); if (u3appdatapath != NULL) { /* * We are; use the U3 application data path. */ persconffile_dir = u3appdatapath; } else { /* * Use %APPDATA% or %USERPROFILE%, so that configuration * files are stored in the user profile, rather than in * the home directory. The Windows convention is to store * configuration information in the user profile, and doing * so means you can use Wireshark even if the home directory * is an inaccessible network drive. */ appdatadir = getenv_utf8("APPDATA"); if (appdatadir != NULL) { /* * Concatenate %APPDATA% with "\Wireshark". */ persconffile_dir = g_strdup_printf("%s" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "%s", appdatadir, PF_DIR); } else { /* * OK, %APPDATA% wasn't set, so use * %USERPROFILE%\Application Data. */ userprofiledir = getenv_utf8("USERPROFILE"); if (userprofiledir != NULL) { persconffile_dir = g_strdup_printf( "%s" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "Application Data" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "%s", userprofiledir, PF_DIR); } else { /* * Give up and use "C:". */ persconffile_dir = g_strdup_printf("C:" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "%s", PF_DIR); } } } #else /* * If $HOME is set, use that. */ homedir = getenv("HOME"); if (homedir == NULL) { /* * Get their home directory from the password file. * If we can't even find a password file entry for them, * use "/tmp". */ pwd = getpwuid(getuid()); if (pwd != NULL) { /* * This is cached, so we don't need to worry * about allocating multiple ones of them. */ homedir = g_strdup(pwd->pw_dir); } else homedir = "/tmp"; } persconffile_dir = g_strdup_printf("%s" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "%s", homedir, PF_DIR); #endif return persconffile_dir; } const char * get_profiles_dir(void) { static char *profiles_dir = NULL; g_free (profiles_dir); profiles_dir = g_strdup_printf ("%s%s%s", get_persconffile_dir_no_profile (), G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S, PROFILES_DIR); return profiles_dir; } static const char * get_persconffile_dir(const gchar *profilename) { static char *persconffile_profile_dir = NULL; g_free (persconffile_profile_dir); if (profilename && strlen(profilename) > 0 && strcmp(profilename, DEFAULT_PROFILE) != 0) { persconffile_profile_dir = g_strdup_printf ("%s%s%s", get_profiles_dir (), G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S, profilename); } else { persconffile_profile_dir = g_strdup (get_persconffile_dir_no_profile ()); } return persconffile_profile_dir; } gboolean profile_exists(const gchar *profilename) { if (test_for_directory (get_persconffile_dir (profilename)) == EISDIR) { return TRUE; } return FALSE; } static int delete_directory (const char *directory, char **pf_dir_path_return) { WS_DIR *dir; WS_DIRENT *file; gchar *filename; int ret = 0; if ((dir = ws_dir_open(directory, 0, NULL)) != NULL) { while ((file = ws_dir_read_name(dir)) != NULL) { filename = g_strdup_printf ("%s%s%s", directory, G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S, ws_dir_get_name(file)); if (test_for_directory(filename) != EISDIR) { ret = ws_remove(filename); #if 0 } else { /* The user has manually created a directory in the profile directory */ /* I do not want to delete the directory recursively yet */ ret = delete_directory (filename, pf_dir_path_return); #endif } if (ret != 0) { *pf_dir_path_return = filename; break; } g_free (filename); } ws_dir_close(dir); } if (ret == 0 && (ret = ws_remove(directory)) != 0) { *pf_dir_path_return = g_strdup (directory); } return ret; } int delete_persconffile_profile(const char *profilename, char **pf_dir_path_return) { const char *profile_dir = get_persconffile_dir(profilename); int ret = 0; if (test_for_directory (profile_dir) == EISDIR) { ret = delete_directory (profile_dir, pf_dir_path_return); } return ret; } int rename_persconffile_profile(const char *fromname, const char *toname, char **pf_from_dir_path_return, char **pf_to_dir_path_return) { char *from_dir = g_strdup (get_persconffile_dir(fromname)); char *to_dir = g_strdup (get_persconffile_dir(toname)); int ret = 0; ret = ws_rename (from_dir, to_dir); if (ret != 0) { *pf_from_dir_path_return = g_strdup (from_dir); *pf_to_dir_path_return = g_strdup (to_dir); } g_free (from_dir); g_free (to_dir); return ret; } /* * Create the directory that holds personal configuration files, if * necessary. If we attempted to create it, and failed, return -1 and * set "*pf_dir_path_return" to the pathname of the directory we failed * to create (it's g_mallocated, so our caller should free it); otherwise, * return 0. */ int create_persconffile_profile(const char *profilename, char **pf_dir_path_return) { const char *pf_dir_path; #ifdef _WIN32 char *pf_dir_path_copy, *pf_dir_parent_path; size_t pf_dir_parent_path_len; #endif struct stat s_buf; int ret; if (profilename) { /* * Check if profiles directory exists. * If not then create it. */ pf_dir_path = get_profiles_dir (); if (ws_stat(pf_dir_path, &s_buf) != 0 && errno == ENOENT) { ret = ws_mkdir(pf_dir_path, 0755); if (ret == -1) { *pf_dir_path_return = g_strdup(pf_dir_path); return ret; } } } pf_dir_path = get_persconffile_dir(profilename); if (ws_stat(pf_dir_path, &s_buf) != 0 && errno == ENOENT) { #ifdef _WIN32 /* * Does the parent directory of that directory * exist? %APPDATA% may not exist even though * %USERPROFILE% does. * * We check for the existence of the directory * by first checking whether the parent directory * is just a drive letter and, if it's not, by * doing a "stat()" on it. If it's a drive letter, * or if the "stat()" succeeds, we assume it exists. */ pf_dir_path_copy = g_strdup(pf_dir_path); pf_dir_parent_path = get_dirname(pf_dir_path_copy); pf_dir_parent_path_len = strlen(pf_dir_parent_path); if (pf_dir_parent_path_len > 0 && pf_dir_parent_path[pf_dir_parent_path_len - 1] != ':' && ws_stat(pf_dir_parent_path, &s_buf) != 0) { /* * No, it doesn't exist - make it first. */ ret = ws_mkdir(pf_dir_parent_path, 0755); if (ret == -1) { *pf_dir_path_return = pf_dir_parent_path; return -1; } } g_free(pf_dir_path_copy); ret = ws_mkdir(pf_dir_path, 0755); #else ret = ws_mkdir(pf_dir_path, 0755); #endif } else { /* * Something with that pathname exists; if it's not * a directory, we'll get an error if we try to put * something in it, so we don't fail here, we wait * for that attempt fo fail. */ ret = 0; } if (ret == -1) *pf_dir_path_return = g_strdup(pf_dir_path); return ret; } int create_persconffile_dir(char **pf_dir_path_return) { return create_persconffile_profile(persconfprofile, pf_dir_path_return); } /* * Get the (default) directory in which personal data is stored. * * On Win32, this is the "My Documents" folder in the personal profile. * On UNIX this is simply the current directory. * On a U3 device this is "$U3_DEVICE_DOCUMENT_PATH\My Captures" folder. */ /* XXX - should this and the get_home_dir() be merged? */ extern char * get_persdatafile_dir(void) { #ifdef _WIN32 char *u3devicedocumentpath; TCHAR tszPath[MAX_PATH]; char *szPath; BOOL bRet; /* Return the cached value, if available */ if (persdatafile_dir != NULL) return persdatafile_dir; /* * See if we are running in a U3 environment. */ u3devicedocumentpath = getenv_utf8("U3_DEVICE_DOCUMENT_PATH"); if (u3devicedocumentpath != NULL) { /* the "My Captures" sub-directory is created (if it doesn't exist) by u3util.exe when the U3 Wireshark is first run */ szPath = g_strdup_printf("%s%s", u3devicedocumentpath, U3_MY_CAPTURES); persdatafile_dir = szPath; return szPath; } else { /* Hint: SHGetFolderPath is not available on MSVC 6 - without Platform SDK */ bRet = SHGetSpecialFolderPath(NULL, tszPath, CSIDL_PERSONAL, FALSE); if(bRet == TRUE) { szPath = utf_16to8(tszPath); persdatafile_dir = szPath; return szPath; } else { return ""; } } #else return ""; #endif } #ifdef _WIN32 /* * Returns the user's home directory on Win32. */ static const char * get_home_dir(void) { static const char *home = NULL; char *homedrive, *homepath; char *homestring; char *lastsep; /* Return the cached value, if available */ if (home) return home; /* * XXX - should we use USERPROFILE anywhere in this process? * Is there a chance that it might be set but one or more of * HOMEDRIVE or HOMEPATH isn't set? */ homedrive = getenv_utf8("HOMEDRIVE"); if (homedrive != NULL) { homepath = getenv_utf8("HOMEPATH"); if (homepath != NULL) { /* * This is cached, so we don't need to worry about * allocating multiple ones of them. */ homestring = g_strdup_printf("%s%s", homedrive, homepath); /* * Trim off any trailing slash or backslash. */ lastsep = find_last_pathname_separator(homestring); if (lastsep != NULL && *(lastsep + 1) == '\0') { /* * Last separator is the last character * in the string. Nuke it. */ *lastsep = '\0'; } home = homestring; } else home = homedrive; } else { /* * Give up and use C:. */ home = "C:"; } return home; } #endif /* * Construct the path name of a personal configuration file, given the * file name. * * On Win32, if "for_writing" is FALSE, we check whether the file exists * and, if not, construct a path name relative to the ".wireshark" * subdirectory of the user's home directory, and check whether that * exists; if it does, we return that, so that configuration files * from earlier versions can be read. * * The returned file name was g_malloc()'d so it must be g_free()d when the * caller is done with it. */ char * get_persconffile_path(const char *filename, gboolean from_profile, gboolean for_writing #ifndef _WIN32 _U_ #endif ) { char *path; #ifdef _WIN32 struct stat s_buf; char *old_path; #endif if (from_profile) { path = g_strdup_printf("%s" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "%s", get_persconffile_dir(persconfprofile), filename); } else { path = g_strdup_printf("%s" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "%s", get_persconffile_dir(NULL), filename); } #ifdef _WIN32 if (!for_writing) { if (ws_stat(path, &s_buf) != 0 && errno == ENOENT) { /* * OK, it's not in the personal configuration file * directory; is it in the ".wireshark" subdirectory * of their home directory? */ old_path = g_strdup_printf( "%s" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S ".wireshark" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "%s", get_home_dir(), filename); if (ws_stat(old_path, &s_buf) == 0) { /* * OK, it exists; return it instead. */ g_free(path); path = old_path; } } } #endif return path; } /* * process command line option belonging to the filesystem settings * (move this e.g. to main.c and have set_persconffile_dir() instead in this file?) */ int filesystem_opt(int opt _U_, const char *optstr) { gchar *p, *colonp; colonp = strchr(optstr, ':'); if (colonp == NULL) { return 1; } p = colonp; *p++ = '\0'; /* * Skip over any white space (there probably won't be any, but * as we allow it in the preferences file, we might as well * allow it here). */ while (isspace((guchar)*p)) p++; if (*p == '\0') { /* * Put the colon back, so if our caller uses, in an * error message, the string they passed us, the message * looks correct. */ *colonp = ':'; return 1; } /* directory should be existing */ /* XXX - is this a requirement? */ if(test_for_directory(p) != EISDIR) { /* * Put the colon back, so if our caller uses, in an * error message, the string they passed us, the message * looks correct. */ *colonp = ':'; return 1; } if (strcmp(optstr,"persconf") == 0) { persconffile_dir = p; } else if (strcmp(optstr,"persdata") == 0) { persdatafile_dir = p; /* XXX - might need to add the temp file path */ } else { return 1; } *colonp = ':'; /* put the colon back */ return 0; } /* * Construct the path name of a global configuration file, given the * file name. * * The returned file name was g_malloc()'d so it must be g_free()d when the * caller is done with it. */ char * get_datafile_path(const char *filename) { return g_strdup_printf("%s" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "%s", get_datafile_dir(), filename); } /* Delete a file */ gboolean deletefile(const char *path) { return ws_unlink(path) == 0; } /* * Construct and return the path name of a file in the * appropriate temporary file directory. */ char *get_tempfile_path(const char *filename) { return g_strdup_printf("%s" G_DIR_SEPARATOR_S "%s", g_get_tmp_dir(), filename); } /* * Return an error message for UNIX-style errno indications on open or * create operations. */ const char * file_open_error_message(int err, gboolean for_writing) { const char *errmsg; static char errmsg_errno[1024+1]; switch (err) { case ENOENT: if (for_writing) errmsg = "The path to the file \"%s\" doesn't exist."; else errmsg = "The file \"%s\" doesn't exist."; break; case EACCES: if (for_writing) errmsg = "You don't have permission to create or write to the file \"%s\"."; else errmsg = "You don't have permission to read the file \"%s\"."; break; case EISDIR: errmsg = "\"%s\" is a directory (folder), not a file."; break; case ENOSPC: errmsg = "The file \"%s\" could not be created because there is no space left on the file system."; break; #ifdef EDQUOT case EDQUOT: errmsg = "The file \"%s\" could not be created because you are too close to, or over, your disk quota."; break; #endif case EINVAL: errmsg = "The file \"%s\" could not be created because an invalid filename was specified."; break; default: g_snprintf(errmsg_errno, sizeof(errmsg_errno), "The file \"%%s\" could not be %s: %s.", for_writing ? "created" : "opened", strerror(err)); errmsg = errmsg_errno; break; } return errmsg; } /* * Return an error message for UNIX-style errno indications on write * operations. */ const char * file_write_error_message(int err) { const char *errmsg; static char errmsg_errno[1024+1]; switch (err) { case ENOSPC: errmsg = "The file \"%s\" could not be saved because there is no space left on the file system."; break; #ifdef EDQUOT case EDQUOT: errmsg = "The file \"%s\" could not be saved because you are too close to, or over, your disk quota."; break; #endif default: g_snprintf(errmsg_errno, sizeof(errmsg_errno), "An error occurred while writing to the file \"%%s\": %s.", strerror(err)); errmsg = errmsg_errno; break; } return errmsg; } gboolean file_exists(const char *fname) { struct stat file_stat; #ifdef _WIN32 /* * This is a bit tricky on win32. The st_ino field is documented as: * "The inode, and therefore st_ino, has no meaning in the FAT, ..." * but it *is* set to zero if stat() returns without an error, * so this is working, but maybe not quite the way expected. ULFL */ file_stat.st_ino = 1; /* this will make things work if an error occured */ ws_stat(fname, &file_stat); if (file_stat.st_ino == 0) { return TRUE; } else { return FALSE; } #else if (ws_stat(fname, &file_stat) != 0 && errno == ENOENT) { return FALSE; } else { return TRUE; } #endif } /* * Check that the from file is not the same as to file * We do it here so we catch all cases ... * Unfortunately, the file requester gives us an absolute file * name and the read file name may be relative (if supplied on * the command line), so we can't just compare paths. From Joerg Mayer. */ gboolean files_identical(const char *fname1, const char *fname2) { /* Two different implementations, because: * * - _fullpath is not available on UN*X, so we can't get full * paths and compare them (which wouldn't work with hard links * in any case); * * - st_ino isn't filled in with a meaningful value on Windows. */ #ifdef _WIN32 char full1[MAX_PATH], full2[MAX_PATH]; /* * Get the absolute full paths of the file and compare them. * That won't work if you have hard links, but those aren't * much used on Windows, even though NTFS supports them. * * XXX - will _fullpath work with UNC? */ if( _fullpath( full1, fname1, MAX_PATH ) == NULL ) { return FALSE; } if( _fullpath( full2, fname2, MAX_PATH ) == NULL ) { return FALSE; } if(strcmp(full1, full2) == 0) { return TRUE; } else { return FALSE; } #else struct stat filestat1, filestat2; /* * Compare st_dev and st_ino. */ if (ws_stat(fname1, &filestat1) == -1) return FALSE; /* can't get info about the first file */ if (ws_stat(fname2, &filestat2) == -1) return FALSE; /* can't get info about the second file */ return (filestat1.st_dev == filestat2.st_dev && filestat1.st_ino == filestat2.st_ino); #endif } /* * Copy a file in binary mode, for those operating systems that care about * such things. This should be OK for all files, even text files, as * we'll copy the raw bytes, and we don't look at the bytes as we copy * them. * * Returns TRUE on success, FALSE on failure. If a failure, it also * displays a simple dialog window with the error message. */ gboolean copy_file_binary_mode(const char *from_filename, const char *to_filename) { int from_fd, to_fd, nread, nwritten, err; guint8 pd[65536]; /* Copy the raw bytes of the file. */ from_fd = ws_open(from_filename, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY, 0000 /* no creation so don't matter */); if (from_fd < 0) { report_open_failure(from_filename, errno, FALSE); goto done; } /* Use open() instead of creat() so that we can pass the O_BINARY flag, which is relevant on Win32; it appears that "creat()" may open the file in text mode, not binary mode, but we want to copy the raw bytes of the file, so we need the output file to be open in binary mode. */ to_fd = ws_open(to_filename, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC | O_BINARY, 0644); if (to_fd < 0) { report_open_failure(to_filename, errno, TRUE); ws_close(from_fd); goto done; } while ((nread = ws_read(from_fd, pd, sizeof pd)) > 0) { nwritten = ws_write(to_fd, pd, nread); if (nwritten < nread) { if (nwritten < 0) err = errno; else err = WTAP_ERR_SHORT_WRITE; report_write_failure(to_filename, err); ws_close(from_fd); ws_close(to_fd); goto done; } } if (nread < 0) { err = errno; report_read_failure(from_filename, err); ws_close(from_fd); ws_close(to_fd); goto done; } ws_close(from_fd); if (ws_close(to_fd) < 0) { report_write_failure(to_filename, errno); goto done; } return TRUE; done: return FALSE; } /* * Editor modelines * * Local Variables: * c-basic-offset: 4 * tab-width: 4 * indent-tabs-mode: t * End: * * ex: set shiftwidth=4 tabstop=4 noexpandtab * :indentSize=4:tabSize=4:noTabs=false: */