/* * tclUnixInit.c -- * * Contains the Unix-specific interpreter initialization functions. * * Copyright (c) 1995-1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc. * Copyright (c) 1999 by Scriptics Corporation. * All rights reserved. * * RCS: @(#) $Id: tclUnixInit.c,v 1.26 2001/11/16 23:40:41 hobbs Exp $ */ #include "tclInt.h" #include "tclPort.h" #include #ifdef HAVE_LANGINFO #include #endif #if defined(__FreeBSD__) # include #endif #if defined(__bsdi__) # include # if _BSDI_VERSION > 199501 # include # endif #endif /* * The Init script (common to Windows and Unix platforms) is * defined in tkInitScript.h */ #include "tclInitScript.h" /* Used to store the encoding used for binary files */ static Tcl_Encoding binaryEncoding = NULL; /* Has the basic library path encoding issue been fixed */ static int libraryPathEncodingFixed = 0; /* * Default directory in which to look for Tcl library scripts. The * symbol is defined by Makefile. */ static char defaultLibraryDir[sizeof(TCL_LIBRARY)+200] = TCL_LIBRARY; /* * Directory in which to look for packages (each package is typically * installed as a subdirectory of this directory). The symbol is * defined by Makefile. */ static char pkgPath[sizeof(TCL_PACKAGE_PATH)+200] = TCL_PACKAGE_PATH; /* * The following table is used to map from Unix locale strings to * encoding files. If HAVE_LANGINFO is defined, then this is a fallback * table when the result from nl_langinfo isn't a recognized encoding. * Otherwise this is the first list checked for a mapping from env * encoding to Tcl encoding name. */ typedef struct LocaleTable { CONST char *lang; CONST char *encoding; } LocaleTable; static CONST LocaleTable localeTable[] = { #ifdef HAVE_LANGINFO {"gb2312-1980", "gb2312"}, #else {"ja_JP.SJIS", "shiftjis"}, {"ja_JP.EUC", "euc-jp"}, {"ja_JP.eucJP", "euc-jp"}, {"ja_JP.JIS", "iso2022-jp"}, {"ja_JP.mscode", "shiftjis"}, {"ja_JP.ujis", "euc-jp"}, {"ja_JP", "euc-jp"}, {"Ja_JP", "shiftjis"}, {"Jp_JP", "shiftjis"}, {"japan", "euc-jp"}, #ifdef hpux {"japanese", "shiftjis"}, {"ja", "shiftjis"}, #else {"japanese", "euc-jp"}, {"ja", "euc-jp"}, #endif {"japanese.sjis", "shiftjis"}, {"japanese.euc", "euc-jp"}, {"japanese-sjis", "shiftjis"}, {"japanese-ujis", "euc-jp"}, {"ko", "euc-kr"}, {"ko_KR", "euc-kr"}, {"ko_KR.EUC", "euc-kr"}, {"ko_KR.euc", "euc-kr"}, {"ko_KR.eucKR", "euc-kr"}, {"korean", "euc-kr"}, {"ru", "iso8859-5"}, {"ru_RU", "iso8859-5"}, {"ru_SU", "iso8859-5"}, {"zh", "cp936"}, #endif /* !HAVE_LANGINFO */ {NULL, NULL} }; /* *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclpInitPlatform -- * * Initialize all the platform-dependant things like signals and * floating-point error handling. * * Called at process initialization time. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * None. * *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclpInitPlatform() { tclPlatform = TCL_PLATFORM_UNIX; /* * The code below causes SIGPIPE (broken pipe) errors to * be ignored. This is needed so that Tcl processes don't * die if they create child processes (e.g. using "exec" or * "open") that terminate prematurely. The signal handler * is only set up when the first interpreter is created; * after this the application can override the handler with * a different one of its own, if it wants. */ #ifdef SIGPIPE (void) signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN); #endif /* SIGPIPE */ #ifdef __FreeBSD__ fpsetround(FP_RN); fpsetmask(0L); #endif #if defined(__bsdi__) && (_BSDI_VERSION > 199501) /* * Find local symbols. Don't report an error if we fail. */ (void) dlopen (NULL, RTLD_NOW); /* INTL: Native. */ #endif } /* *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclpInitLibraryPath -- * * Initialize the library path at startup. We have a minor * metacircular problem that we don't know the encoding of the * operating system but we may need to talk to operating system * to find the library directories so that we know how to talk to * the operating system. * * We do not know the encoding of the operating system. * We do know that the encoding is some multibyte encoding. * In that multibyte encoding, the characters 0..127 are equivalent * to ascii. * * So although we don't know the encoding, it's safe: * to look for the last slash character in a path in the encoding. * to append an ascii string to a path. * to pass those strings back to the operating system. * * But any strings that we remembered before we knew the encoding of * the operating system must be translated to UTF-8 once we know the * encoding so that the rest of Tcl can use those strings. * * This call sets the library path to strings in the unknown native * encoding. TclpSetInitialEncodings() will translate the library * path from the native encoding to UTF-8 as soon as it determines * what the native encoding actually is. * * Called at process initialization time. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * None. * *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclpInitLibraryPath(path) CONST char *path; /* Path to the executable in native * multi-byte encoding. */ { #define LIBRARY_SIZE 32 Tcl_Obj *pathPtr, *objPtr; char *str; Tcl_DString buffer, ds; int pathc; char **pathv; char installLib[LIBRARY_SIZE], developLib[LIBRARY_SIZE]; Tcl_DStringInit(&ds); pathPtr = Tcl_NewObj(); /* * Initialize the substrings used when locating an executable. The * installLib variable computes the path as though the executable * is installed. The developLib computes the path as though the * executable is run from a develpment directory. */ sprintf(installLib, "lib/tcl%s", TCL_VERSION); sprintf(developLib, "tcl%s/library", TCL_PATCH_LEVEL); /* * Look for the library relative to default encoding dir. */ str = Tcl_GetDefaultEncodingDir(); if ((str != NULL) && (str[0] != '\0')) { objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(str, -1); Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(NULL, pathPtr, objPtr); } /* * Look for the library relative to the TCL_LIBRARY env variable. * If the last dirname in the TCL_LIBRARY path does not match the * last dirname in the installLib variable, use the last dir name * of installLib in addition to the orginal TCL_LIBRARY path. */ str = getenv("TCL_LIBRARY"); /* INTL: Native. */ Tcl_ExternalToUtfDString(NULL, str, -1, &buffer); str = Tcl_DStringValue(&buffer); if ((str != NULL) && (str[0] != '\0')) { /* * If TCL_LIBRARY is set, search there. */ objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(str, -1); Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(NULL, pathPtr, objPtr); Tcl_SplitPath(str, &pathc, &pathv); if ((pathc > 0) && (strcasecmp(installLib + 4, pathv[pathc-1]) != 0)) { /* * If TCL_LIBRARY is set but refers to a different tcl * installation than the current version, try fiddling with the * specified directory to make it refer to this installation by * removing the old "tclX.Y" and substituting the current * version string. */ pathv[pathc - 1] = installLib + 4; str = Tcl_JoinPath(pathc, pathv, &ds); objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(str, Tcl_DStringLength(&ds)); Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(NULL, pathPtr, objPtr); Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); } ckfree((char *) pathv); } /* * Look for the library relative to the executable. This algorithm * should be the same as the one in the tcl_findLibrary procedure. * * This code looks in the following directories: * * /../ * (e.g. /usr/local/bin/../lib/tcl8.4) * /../../ * (e.g. /usr/local/TclPro/solaris-sparc/bin/../../lib/tcl8.4) * /../library * (e.g. /usr/src/tcl8.4.0/unix/../library) * /../../library * (e.g. /usr/src/tcl8.4.0/unix/solaris-sparc/../../library) * /../../ * (e.g. /usr/src/tcl8.4.0/unix/../../tcl8.4.0/library) * /../../../ * (e.g. /usr/src/tcl8.4.0/unix/solaris-sparc/../../../tcl8.4.0/library) */ /* * The variable path holds an absolute path. Take care not to * overwrite pathv[0] since that might produce a relative path. */ if (path != NULL) { Tcl_SplitPath(path, &pathc, &pathv); if (pathc > 2) { str = pathv[pathc - 2]; pathv[pathc - 2] = installLib; path = Tcl_JoinPath(pathc - 1, pathv, &ds); pathv[pathc - 2] = str; objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(path, Tcl_DStringLength(&ds)); Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(NULL, pathPtr, objPtr); Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); } if (pathc > 3) { str = pathv[pathc - 3]; pathv[pathc - 3] = installLib; path = Tcl_JoinPath(pathc - 2, pathv, &ds); pathv[pathc - 3] = str; objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(path, Tcl_DStringLength(&ds)); Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(NULL, pathPtr, objPtr); Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); } if (pathc > 2) { str = pathv[pathc - 2]; pathv[pathc - 2] = "library"; path = Tcl_JoinPath(pathc - 1, pathv, &ds); pathv[pathc - 2] = str; objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(path, Tcl_DStringLength(&ds)); Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(NULL, pathPtr, objPtr); Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); } if (pathc > 3) { str = pathv[pathc - 3]; pathv[pathc - 3] = "library"; path = Tcl_JoinPath(pathc - 2, pathv, &ds); pathv[pathc - 3] = str; objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(path, Tcl_DStringLength(&ds)); Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(NULL, pathPtr, objPtr); Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); } if (pathc > 3) { str = pathv[pathc - 3]; pathv[pathc - 3] = developLib; path = Tcl_JoinPath(pathc - 2, pathv, &ds); pathv[pathc - 3] = str; objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(path, Tcl_DStringLength(&ds)); Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(NULL, pathPtr, objPtr); Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); } if (pathc > 4) { str = pathv[pathc - 4]; pathv[pathc - 4] = developLib; path = Tcl_JoinPath(pathc - 3, pathv, &ds); pathv[pathc - 4] = str; objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(path, Tcl_DStringLength(&ds)); Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(NULL, pathPtr, objPtr); Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); } ckfree((char *) pathv); } /* * Finally, look for the library relative to the compiled-in path. * This is needed when users install Tcl with an exec-prefix that * is different from the prtefix. */ str = defaultLibraryDir; if (str[0] != '\0') { objPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(str, -1); Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(NULL, pathPtr, objPtr); } TclSetLibraryPath(pathPtr); Tcl_DStringFree(&buffer); } /* *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclpSetInitialEncodings -- * * Based on the locale, determine the encoding of the operating * system and the default encoding for newly opened files. * * Called at process initialization time, and part way through * startup, we verify that the initial encodings were correctly * setup. Depending on Tcl's environment, there may not have been * enough information first time through (above). * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * The Tcl library path is converted from native encoding to UTF-8, * on the first call, and the encodings may be changed on first or * second call. * *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclpSetInitialEncodings() { if (libraryPathEncodingFixed == 0) { CONST char *encoding; int i; Tcl_Obj *pathPtr; /* * Determine the current encoding from the LC_* or LANG environment * variables. We previously used setlocale() to determine the locale, * but this does not work on some systems (e.g. Linux/i386 RH 5.0). */ #ifdef HAVE_LANGINFO Tcl_DString ds; int code; setlocale(LC_CTYPE,""); Tcl_DStringInit(&ds); Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, nl_langinfo(CODESET), -1); encoding = Tcl_DStringValue(&ds); Tcl_UtfToLower(Tcl_DStringValue(&ds)); if (encoding[0] == 'i' && encoding[1] == 's' && encoding[2] == 'o' && encoding[3] == '-') { char *p, *q; /* need to strip extra - from ISO-* encoding */ for(p = Tcl_DStringValue(&ds)+3, q = Tcl_DStringValue(&ds)+4; *p; *p++ = *q++); } else if (encoding[0] == 'i' && encoding[1] == 'b' && encoding[2] == 'm' && encoding[3] >= '0' && encoding[3] <= '9') { char *p, *q; /* if langinfo reports IBMxxx we should use cpXXX*/ p = Tcl_DStringValue(&ds); *p++='c'; *p++='p'; for(q=p+1;*p;*p++= *q++); } else if (!strcmp(encoding, "ansi_x3.4-1968") || *encoding == '\0') { /* * Use iso8859-1 for empty or 'ansi_x3.4-1968' encoding. */ Tcl_DStringSetLength(&ds, 0); Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, "iso8859-1", -1); } code = Tcl_SetSystemEncoding(NULL, encoding); if (code != TCL_OK) { for (i = 0; localeTable[i].lang != NULL; i++) { if (strcmp(localeTable[i].lang, encoding) == 0) { encoding = localeTable[i].encoding; code = Tcl_SetSystemEncoding(NULL, encoding); break; } } } if (code != TCL_OK) { Tcl_Channel errChannel = Tcl_GetStdChannel(TCL_STDERR); if (errChannel) { char msg[100]; sprintf(msg, "Couldn't set encoding to '%.50s'\n", encoding); Tcl_Write(errChannel, msg, -1); } encoding = "iso8859-1"; Tcl_SetSystemEncoding(NULL, encoding); } Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); #else char *langEnv; langEnv = getenv("LC_ALL"); if (langEnv == NULL || langEnv[0] == '\0') { langEnv = getenv("LC_CTYPE"); } if (langEnv == NULL || langEnv[0] == '\0') { langEnv = getenv("LANG"); } if (langEnv == NULL || langEnv[0] == '\0') { langEnv = NULL; } encoding = NULL; if (langEnv != NULL) { for (i = 0; localeTable[i].lang != NULL; i++) { if (strcmp(localeTable[i].lang, langEnv) == 0) { encoding = localeTable[i].encoding; break; } } /* * There was no mapping in the locale table. If there is an * encoding subfield, we can try to guess from that. */ if (encoding == NULL) { char *p; for (p = langEnv; *p != '\0'; p++) { if (*p == '.') { p++; break; } } if (*p != '\0') { Tcl_DString ds; Tcl_DStringInit(&ds); Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, p, -1); encoding = Tcl_DStringValue(&ds); Tcl_UtfToLower(Tcl_DStringValue(&ds)); if (Tcl_SetSystemEncoding(NULL, encoding) == TCL_OK) { Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); goto resetPath; } Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); encoding = NULL; } } } if (encoding == NULL) { encoding = "iso8859-1"; } Tcl_SetSystemEncoding(NULL, encoding); resetPath: /* * Initialize the C library's locale subsystem. This is required * for input methods to work properly on X11. We only do this for * LC_CTYPE because that's the necessary one, and we don't want to * affect LC_TIME here. The side effect of setting the default locale * should be to load any locale specific modules that are needed by X. * [BUG: 5422 3345 4236 2522 2521]. */ setlocale(LC_CTYPE, ""); #endif /* HAVE_LANGINFO */ /* * In case the initial locale is not "C", ensure that the numeric * processing is done in "C" locale regardless. This is needed because * Tcl relies on routines like strtod, but should not have locale * dependent behavior. */ setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, "C"); /* * Until the system encoding was actually set, the library path was * actually in the native multi-byte encoding, and not really UTF-8 * as advertised. We cheated as follows: * * 1. It was safe to allow the Tcl_SetSystemEncoding() call to * append the ASCII chars that make up the encoding's filename to * the names (in the native encoding) of directories in the library * path, since all Unix multi-byte encodings have ASCII in the * beginning. * * 2. To open the encoding file, the native bytes in the file name * were passed to the OS, without translating from UTF-8 to native, * because the name was already in the native encoding. * * Now that the system encoding was actually successfully set, * translate all the names in the library path to UTF-8. That way, * next time we search the library path, we'll translate the names * from UTF-8 to the system encoding which will be the native * encoding. */ pathPtr = TclGetLibraryPath(); if (pathPtr != NULL) { int objc; Tcl_Obj **objv; objc = 0; Tcl_ListObjGetElements(NULL, pathPtr, &objc, &objv); for (i = 0; i < objc; i++) { int length; char *string; Tcl_DString ds; string = Tcl_GetStringFromObj(objv[i], &length); Tcl_ExternalToUtfDString(NULL, string, length, &ds); Tcl_SetStringObj(objv[i], Tcl_DStringValue(&ds), Tcl_DStringLength(&ds)); Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); } } libraryPathEncodingFixed = 1; } /* This is only ever called from the startup thread */ if (binaryEncoding == NULL) { /* * Keep the iso8859-1 encoding preloaded. The IO package uses * it for gets on a binary channel. */ binaryEncoding = Tcl_GetEncoding(NULL, "iso8859-1"); } } /* *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclpSetVariables -- * * Performs platform-specific interpreter initialization related to * the tcl_library and tcl_platform variables, and other platform- * specific things. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Sets "tclDefaultLibrary", "tcl_pkgPath", and "tcl_platform" Tcl * variables. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclpSetVariables(interp) Tcl_Interp *interp; { #ifndef NO_UNAME struct utsname name; #endif int unameOK; char *user; Tcl_DString ds; Tcl_SetVar(interp, "tclDefaultLibrary", defaultLibraryDir, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); Tcl_SetVar(interp, "tcl_pkgPath", pkgPath, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "platform", "unix", TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); unameOK = 0; #ifndef NO_UNAME if (uname(&name) >= 0) { char *native; unameOK = 1; native = Tcl_ExternalToUtfDString(NULL, name.sysname, -1, &ds); Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "os", native, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); /* * The following code is a special hack to handle differences in * the way version information is returned by uname. On most * systems the full version number is available in name.release. * However, under AIX the major version number is in * name.version and the minor version number is in name.release. */ if ((strchr(name.release, '.') != NULL) || !isdigit(UCHAR(name.version[0]))) { /* INTL: digit */ Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "osVersion", name.release, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); } else { Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "osVersion", name.version, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "osVersion", ".", TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY|TCL_APPEND_VALUE); Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "osVersion", name.release, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY|TCL_APPEND_VALUE); } Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "machine", name.machine, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); } #endif if (!unameOK) { Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "os", "", TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "osVersion", "", TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "machine", "", TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); } /* * Copy USER or LOGNAME environment variable into tcl_platform(user) */ Tcl_DStringInit(&ds); user = TclGetEnv("USER", &ds); if (user == NULL) { user = TclGetEnv("LOGNAME", &ds); if (user == NULL) { user = ""; } } Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "user", user, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); Tcl_DStringFree(&ds); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclpFindVariable -- * * Locate the entry in environ for a given name. On Unix this * routine is case sensetive, on Windows this matches mixed case. * * Results: * The return value is the index in environ of an entry with the * name "name", or -1 if there is no such entry. The integer at * *lengthPtr is filled in with the length of name (if a matching * entry is found) or the length of the environ array (if no matching * entry is found). * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclpFindVariable(name, lengthPtr) CONST char *name; /* Name of desired environment variable * (native). */ int *lengthPtr; /* Used to return length of name (for * successful searches) or number of non-NULL * entries in environ (for unsuccessful * searches). */ { int i, result = -1; register CONST char *env, *p1, *p2; Tcl_DString envString; Tcl_DStringInit(&envString); for (i = 0, env = environ[i]; env != NULL; i++, env = environ[i]) { p1 = Tcl_ExternalToUtfDString(NULL, env, -1, &envString); p2 = name; for (; *p2 == *p1; p1++, p2++) { /* NULL loop body. */ } if ((*p1 == '=') && (*p2 == '\0')) { *lengthPtr = p2 - name; result = i; goto done; } Tcl_DStringFree(&envString); } *lengthPtr = i; done: Tcl_DStringFree(&envString); return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_Init -- * * This procedure is typically invoked by Tcl_AppInit procedures * to find and source the "init.tcl" script, which should exist * somewhere on the Tcl library path. * * Results: * Returns a standard Tcl completion code and sets the interp's * result if there is an error. * * Side effects: * Depends on what's in the init.tcl script. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_Init(interp) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to initialize. */ { Tcl_Obj *pathPtr; if (tclPreInitScript != NULL) { if (Tcl_Eval(interp, tclPreInitScript) == TCL_ERROR) { return (TCL_ERROR); }; } pathPtr = TclGetLibraryPath(); if (pathPtr == NULL) { pathPtr = Tcl_NewObj(); } Tcl_SetVar2Ex(interp, "tcl_libPath", NULL, pathPtr, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); return Tcl_Eval(interp, initScript); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_SourceRCFile -- * * This procedure is typically invoked by Tcl_Main of Tk_Main * procedure to source an application specific rc file into the * interpreter at startup time. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Depends on what's in the rc script. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_SourceRCFile(interp) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to source rc file into. */ { Tcl_DString temp; char *fileName; Tcl_Channel errChannel; fileName = Tcl_GetVar(interp, "tcl_rcFileName", TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); if (fileName != NULL) { Tcl_Channel c; char *fullName; Tcl_DStringInit(&temp); fullName = Tcl_TranslateFileName(interp, fileName, &temp); if (fullName == NULL) { /* * Couldn't translate the file name (e.g. it referred to a * bogus user or there was no HOME environment variable). * Just do nothing. */ } else { /* * Test for the existence of the rc file before trying to read it. */ c = Tcl_OpenFileChannel(NULL, fullName, "r", 0); if (c != (Tcl_Channel) NULL) { Tcl_Close(NULL, c); if (Tcl_EvalFile(interp, fullName) != TCL_OK) { errChannel = Tcl_GetStdChannel(TCL_STDERR); if (errChannel) { Tcl_WriteObj(errChannel, Tcl_GetObjResult(interp)); Tcl_WriteChars(errChannel, "\n", 1); } } } } Tcl_DStringFree(&temp); } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclpCheckStackSpace -- * * Detect if we are about to blow the stack. Called before an * evaluation can happen when nesting depth is checked. * * Results: * 1 if there is enough stack space to continue; 0 if not. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclpCheckStackSpace() { /* * This function is unimplemented on Unix platforms. */ return 1; }