# 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, see . package Dpkg::Source::Functions; use strict; use warnings; our $VERSION = "0.01"; use base qw(Exporter); our @EXPORT_OK = qw(erasedir fixperms fs_time is_binary); use Dpkg::ErrorHandling; use Dpkg::Gettext; use Dpkg::IPC; use POSIX; sub erasedir { my ($dir) = @_; if (not lstat($dir)) { return if $! == ENOENT; syserr(_g("cannot stat directory %s (before removal)"), $dir); } system 'rm','-rf','--',$dir; subprocerr("rm -rf $dir") if $?; if (not stat($dir)) { return if $! == ENOENT; syserr(_g("unable to check for removal of dir `%s'"), $dir); } error(_g("rm -rf failed to remove `%s'"), $dir); } sub fixperms { my ($dir) = @_; my ($mode, $modes_set, $i, $j); # Unfortunately tar insists on applying our umask _to the original # permissions_ rather than mostly-ignoring the original # permissions. We fix it up with chmod -R (which saves us some # work) but we have to construct a u+/- string which is a bit # of a palaver. (Numeric doesn't work because we need [ugo]+X # and [ugo]= doesn't work because that unsets sgid on dirs.) $mode = 0777 & ~umask; for ($i = 0; $i < 9; $i += 3) { $modes_set .= ',' if $i; $modes_set .= qw(u g o)[$i/3]; for ($j = 0; $j < 3; $j++) { $modes_set .= $mode & (0400 >> ($i+$j)) ? '+' : '-'; $modes_set .= qw(r w X)[$j]; } } system('chmod', '-R', '--', $modes_set, $dir); subprocerr("chmod -R -- $modes_set $dir") if $?; } # Touch the file and read the resulting mtime. # # If the file doesn't exist, create it, read the mtime and unlink it. # # Use this instead of time() when the timestamp is going to be # used to set file timestamps. This avoids confusion when an # NFS server and NFS client disagree about what time it is. sub fs_time($) { my ($file) = @_; my $is_temp = 0; if (not -e $file) { open(TEMP, ">", $file) or syserr(_g("cannot write %s")); close(TEMP); $is_temp = 1; } else { utime(undef, undef, $file) or syserr(_g("cannot change timestamp for %s"), $file); } stat($file) or syserr(_g("cannot read timestamp from %s"), $file); my $mtime = (stat(_))[9]; unlink($file) if $is_temp; return $mtime; } sub is_binary($) { my ($file) = @_; # TODO: might want to reimplement what diff does, aka checking if the # file contains \0 in the first 4Kb of data # Use diff to check if it's a binary file my $diffgen; my $diff_pid = spawn( 'exec' => [ 'diff', '-u', '--', '/dev/null', $file ], 'env' => { LC_ALL => 'C', LANG => 'C', TZ => 'UTC0' }, 'to_pipe' => \$diffgen ); my $result = 0; while (<$diffgen>) { if (m/^(?:binary|[^-+\@ ].*\bdiffer\b)/i) { $result = 1; last; } elsif (m/^[-+\@ ]/) { $result = 0; last; } } close($diffgen) or syserr("close on diff pipe"); wait_child($diff_pid, nocheck => 1, cmdline => "diff -u -- /dev/null $file"); return $result; } # vim: set et sw=4 ts=8 1;