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-rw-r--r--win/tclWinFile.c265
1 files changed, 264 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/win/tclWinFile.c b/win/tclWinFile.c
index 6113b4e..8406a3e 100644
--- a/win/tclWinFile.c
+++ b/win/tclWinFile.c
@@ -11,12 +11,13 @@
* See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
* of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
*
- * RCS: @(#) $Id: tclWinFile.c,v 1.66 2004/06/30 14:46:11 vincentdarley Exp $
+ * RCS: @(#) $Id: tclWinFile.c,v 1.67 2004/10/07 14:50:24 vincentdarley Exp $
*/
//#define _WIN32_WINNT 0x0500
#include "tclWinInt.h"
+#include "tclFileSystem.h"
#include <winioctl.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <shlobj.h>
@@ -2642,6 +2643,268 @@ TclpObjNormalizePath(interp, pathPtr, nextCheckpoint)
/*
*---------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
+ * TclWinVolumeRelativeNormalize --
+ *
+ * Only Windows has volume-relative paths. These paths are rather
+ * rare, but it is nice if Tcl can handle them. It is much better
+ * if we can handle them here, rather than in the native fs code,
+ * because we really need to have a real absolute path just below.
+ *
+ * We do not let this block compile on non-Windows platforms
+ * because the test suite's manual forcing of tclPlatform can
+ * otherwise cause this code path to be executed, causing various
+ * errors because volume-relative paths really do not exist.
+ *
+ * Results:
+ * A valid normalized path.
+ *
+ * Side effects:
+ * None.
+ *
+ *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ */
+Tcl_Obj*
+TclWinVolumeRelativeNormalize(interp, path, useThisCwdPtr)
+ Tcl_Interp *interp;
+ CONST char *path;
+ Tcl_Obj **useThisCwdPtr;
+{
+ Tcl_Obj *absolutePath, *useThisCwd;
+
+ useThisCwd = Tcl_FSGetCwd(interp);
+ if (useThisCwd == NULL) {
+ return NULL;
+ }
+
+ if (path[0] == '/') {
+ /*
+ * Path of form /foo/bar which is a path in the
+ * root directory of the current volume.
+ */
+ CONST char *drive = Tcl_GetString(useThisCwd);
+
+ absolutePath = Tcl_NewStringObj(drive,2);
+ Tcl_AppendToObj(absolutePath, path, -1);
+ Tcl_IncrRefCount(absolutePath);
+ /* We have a refCount on the cwd */
+ } else {
+ /*
+ * Path of form C:foo/bar, but this only makes
+ * sense if the cwd is also on drive C.
+ */
+
+ int cwdLen;
+ CONST char *drive =
+ Tcl_GetStringFromObj(useThisCwd, &cwdLen);
+ char drive_cur = path[0];
+
+ if (drive_cur >= 'a') {
+ drive_cur -= ('a' - 'A');
+ }
+ if (drive[0] == drive_cur) {
+ absolutePath = Tcl_DuplicateObj(useThisCwd);
+ /*
+ * We have a refCount on the cwd, which we
+ * will release later.
+ */
+
+ if (drive[cwdLen-1] != '/' && (path[2] != '\0')) {
+ /*
+ * Only add a trailing '/' if needed, which
+ * is if there isn't one already, and if we
+ * are going to be adding some more
+ * characters.
+ */
+ Tcl_AppendToObj(absolutePath, "/", 1);
+ }
+ } else {
+ Tcl_DecrRefCount(useThisCwd);
+ useThisCwd = NULL;
+ /*
+ * The path is not in the current drive, but
+ * is volume-relative. The way Tcl 8.3 handles
+ * this is that it treats such a path as
+ * relative to the root of the drive. We
+ * therefore behave the same here. This
+ * behaviour is, however, different to that
+ * of the windows command-line. If we want
+ * to fix this at some point in the future
+ * (at the expense of a behaviour change to
+ * Tcl), we could use the '_dgetdcwd' Win32
+ * API to get the drive's cwd.
+ */
+ absolutePath = Tcl_NewStringObj(path, 2);
+ Tcl_AppendToObj(absolutePath, "/", 1);
+ }
+ Tcl_IncrRefCount(absolutePath);
+ Tcl_AppendToObj(absolutePath, path+2, -1);
+ }
+ *useThisCwdPtr = useThisCwd;
+ return absolutePath;
+}
+
+/*
+ *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ *
+ * TclpNativeToNormalized --
+ *
+ * Convert native format to a normalized path object, with refCount
+ * of zero.
+ *
+ * Currently assumes all native paths are actually normalized
+ * already, so if the path given is not normalized this will
+ * actually just convert to a valid string path, but not
+ * necessarily a normalized one.
+ *
+ * Results:
+ * A valid normalized path.
+ *
+ * Side effects:
+ * None.
+ *
+ *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ */
+Tcl_Obj*
+TclpNativeToNormalized(clientData)
+ ClientData clientData;
+{
+ Tcl_DString ds;
+ Tcl_Obj *objPtr;
+ int len;
+
+ char *copy;
+ char *p;
+ Tcl_WinTCharToUtf((CONST char*)clientData, -1, &ds);
+
+ copy = Tcl_DStringValue(&ds);
+ len = Tcl_DStringLength(&ds);
+
+ /*
+ * Certain native path representations on Windows have this special
+ * prefix to indicate that they are to be treated specially. For
+ * example extremely long paths, or symlinks
+ */
+ if (*copy == '\\') {
+ if (0 == strncmp(copy,"\\??\\",4)) {
+ copy += 4;
+ len -= 4;
+ } else if (0 == strncmp(copy,"\\\\?\\",4)) {
+ copy += 4;
+ len -= 4;
+ }
+ }
+ /*
+ * Ensure we are using forward slashes only.
+ */
+ for (p = copy; *p != '\0'; p++) {
+ if (*p == '\\') {
+ *p = '/';
+ }
+ }
+
+ objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(copy,len);
+ Tcl_DStringFree(&ds);
+
+ return objPtr;
+}
+
+/*
+ *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ *
+ * TclNativeCreateNativeRep --
+ *
+ * Create a native representation for the given path.
+ *
+ * Results:
+ * The nativePath representation.
+ *
+ * Side effects:
+ * Memory will be allocated. The path may need to be normalized.
+ *
+ *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ */
+ClientData
+TclNativeCreateNativeRep(pathPtr)
+ Tcl_Obj* pathPtr;
+{
+ char *nativePathPtr;
+ Tcl_DString ds;
+ Tcl_Obj* validPathPtr;
+ int len;
+ char *str;
+
+ if (TclFSCwdIsNative()) {
+ /*
+ * The cwd is native, which means we can use the translated
+ * path without worrying about normalization (this will also
+ * usually be shorter so the utf-to-external conversion will
+ * be somewhat faster).
+ */
+ validPathPtr = Tcl_FSGetTranslatedPath(NULL, pathPtr);
+ } else {
+ /* Make sure the normalized path is set */
+ validPathPtr = Tcl_FSGetNormalizedPath(NULL, pathPtr);
+ Tcl_IncrRefCount(validPathPtr);
+ }
+
+ str = Tcl_GetStringFromObj(validPathPtr, &len);
+ Tcl_WinUtfToTChar(str, len, &ds);
+ if (tclWinProcs->useWide) {
+ len = Tcl_DStringLength(&ds) + sizeof(WCHAR);
+ } else {
+ len = Tcl_DStringLength(&ds) + sizeof(char);
+ }
+ Tcl_DecrRefCount(validPathPtr);
+ nativePathPtr = ckalloc((unsigned) len);
+ memcpy((VOID*)nativePathPtr, (VOID*)Tcl_DStringValue(&ds), (size_t) len);
+
+ Tcl_DStringFree(&ds);
+ return (ClientData)nativePathPtr;
+}
+
+/*
+ *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ *
+ * TclNativeDupInternalRep --
+ *
+ * Duplicate the native representation.
+ *
+ * Results:
+ * The copied native representation, or NULL if it is not possible
+ * to copy the representation.
+ *
+ * Side effects:
+ * Memory allocation for the copy.
+ *
+ *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ */
+ClientData
+TclNativeDupInternalRep(clientData)
+ ClientData clientData;
+{
+ char *copy;
+ size_t len;
+
+ if (clientData == NULL) {
+ return NULL;
+ }
+
+ if (tclWinProcs->useWide) {
+ /* unicode representation when running on NT/2K/XP */
+ len = sizeof(WCHAR) + (wcslen((CONST WCHAR*)clientData) * sizeof(WCHAR));
+ } else {
+ /* ansi representation when running on 95/98/ME */
+ len = sizeof(char) + (strlen((CONST char*)clientData) * sizeof(char));
+ }
+
+ copy = (char *) ckalloc(len);
+ memcpy((VOID*)copy, (VOID*)clientData, len);
+ return (ClientData)copy;
+}
+
+/*
+ *---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ *
* TclpUtime --
*
* Set the modification date for a file.