freebsd-dev/contrib/kyua/utils/fs/directory.cpp
Brooks Davis b0d29bc47d Import the kyua test framework.
Having kyua in the base system will simplify automated testing in CI and
eliminates bootstrapping issues on new platforms.

The build of kyua is controlled by WITH(OUT)_TESTS_SUPPORT.

Reviewed by:	emaste
Obtained from:	CheriBSD
Sponsored by:	DARPA
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24103
2020-03-23 19:01:23 +00:00

361 lines
10 KiB
C++

// Copyright 2015 The Kyua Authors.
// All rights reserved.
//
// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
// met:
//
// * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
// * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
// documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
// * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its contributors
// may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
// without specific prior written permission.
//
// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
#include "utils/fs/directory.hpp"
extern "C" {
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <dirent.h>
}
#include <cerrno>
#include <memory>
#include "utils/format/macros.hpp"
#include "utils/fs/exceptions.hpp"
#include "utils/fs/path.hpp"
#include "utils/noncopyable.hpp"
#include "utils/sanity.hpp"
#include "utils/text/operations.ipp"
namespace detail = utils::fs::detail;
namespace fs = utils::fs;
namespace text = utils::text;
/// Constructs a new directory entry.
///
/// \param name_ Name of the directory entry.
fs::directory_entry::directory_entry(const std::string& name_) : name(name_)
{
}
/// Checks if two directory entries are equal.
///
/// \param other The entry to compare to.
///
/// \return True if the two entries are equal; false otherwise.
bool
fs::directory_entry::operator==(const directory_entry& other) const
{
return name == other.name;
}
/// Checks if two directory entries are different.
///
/// \param other The entry to compare to.
///
/// \return True if the two entries are different; false otherwise.
bool
fs::directory_entry::operator!=(const directory_entry& other) const
{
return !(*this == other);
}
/// Checks if this entry sorts before another entry.
///
/// \param other The entry to compare to.
///
/// \return True if this entry sorts before the other entry; false otherwise.
bool
fs::directory_entry::operator<(const directory_entry& other) const
{
return name < other.name;
}
/// Formats a directory entry.
///
/// \param output Stream into which to inject the formatted entry.
/// \param entry The entry to format.
///
/// \return A reference to output.
std::ostream&
fs::operator<<(std::ostream& output, const directory_entry& entry)
{
output << F("directory_entry{name=%s}") % text::quote(entry.name, '\'');
return output;
}
/// Internal implementation details for the directory_iterator.
///
/// In order to support multiple concurrent iterators over the same directory
/// object, this class is the one that performs all directory-level accesses.
/// In particular, even if it may seem surprising, this is the class that
/// handles the DIR object for the directory.
///
/// Note that iterators implemented by this class do not rely on the container
/// directory class at all. This should not be relied on for object lifecycle
/// purposes.
struct utils::fs::detail::directory_iterator::impl : utils::noncopyable {
/// Path of the directory accessed by this iterator.
const fs::path _path;
/// Raw pointer to the system representation of the directory.
///
/// We also use this to determine if the iterator is valid (at the end) or
/// not. A null pointer means an invalid iterator.
::DIR* _dirp;
/// Raw representation of the system directory entry.
///
/// We need to keep this at the class level so that we can use the
/// readdir_r(3) function.
::dirent _dirent;
/// Custom representation of the directory entry.
///
/// This is separate from _dirent because this is the type we return to the
/// user. We must keep this as a pointer so that we can support the common
/// operators (* and ->) over iterators.
std::auto_ptr< directory_entry > _entry;
/// Constructs an iterator pointing to the "end" of the directory.
impl(void) : _path("invalid-directory-entry"), _dirp(NULL)
{
}
/// Constructs a new iterator to start scanning a directory.
///
/// \param path The directory that will be scanned.
///
/// \throw system_error If there is a problem opening the directory.
explicit impl(const path& path) : _path(path)
{
DIR* dirp = ::opendir(_path.c_str());
if (dirp == NULL) {
const int original_errno = errno;
throw fs::system_error(F("opendir(%s) failed") % _path,
original_errno);
}
_dirp = dirp;
// Initialize our first directory entry. Note that this may actually
// close the directory we just opened if the directory happens to be
// empty -- but directories are never empty because they at least have
// '.' and '..' entries.
next();
}
/// Destructor.
///
/// This closes the directory if still open.
~impl(void)
{
if (_dirp != NULL)
close();
}
/// Closes the directory and invalidates the iterator.
void
close(void)
{
PRE(_dirp != NULL);
if (::closedir(_dirp) == -1) {
UNREACHABLE_MSG("Invalid dirp provided to closedir(3)");
}
_dirp = NULL;
}
/// Advances the directory entry to the next one.
///
/// It is possible to use this function on a new directory_entry object to
/// initialize the first entry.
///
/// \throw system_error If the call to readdir_r fails.
void
next(void)
{
::dirent* result;
if (::readdir_r(_dirp, &_dirent, &result) == -1) {
const int original_errno = errno;
throw fs::system_error(F("readdir_r(%s) failed") % _path,
original_errno);
}
if (result == NULL) {
_entry.reset(NULL);
close();
} else {
_entry.reset(new directory_entry(_dirent.d_name));
}
}
};
/// Constructs a new directory iterator.
///
/// \param pimpl The constructed internal implementation structure to use.
detail::directory_iterator::directory_iterator(std::shared_ptr< impl > pimpl) :
_pimpl(pimpl)
{
}
/// Destructor.
detail::directory_iterator::~directory_iterator(void)
{
}
/// Creates a new directory iterator for a directory.
///
/// \return The directory iterator. Note that the result may be invalid.
///
/// \throw system_error If opening the directory or reading its first entry
/// fails.
detail::directory_iterator
detail::directory_iterator::new_begin(const path& path)
{
return directory_iterator(std::shared_ptr< impl >(new impl(path)));
}
/// Creates a new invalid directory iterator.
///
/// \return The invalid directory iterator.
detail::directory_iterator
detail::directory_iterator::new_end(void)
{
return directory_iterator(std::shared_ptr< impl >(new impl()));
}
/// Checks if two iterators are equal.
///
/// We consider two iterators to be equal if both of them are invalid or,
/// otherwise, if they have the exact same internal representation (as given by
/// equality of the pimpl pointers).
///
/// \param other The object to compare to.
///
/// \return True if the two iterators are equal; false otherwise.
bool
detail::directory_iterator::operator==(const directory_iterator& other) const
{
return (_pimpl->_dirp == NULL && other._pimpl->_dirp == NULL) ||
_pimpl == other._pimpl;
}
/// Checks if two iterators are different.
///
/// \param other The object to compare to.
///
/// \return True if the two iterators are different; false otherwise.
bool
detail::directory_iterator::operator!=(const directory_iterator& other) const
{
return !(*this == other);
}
/// Moves the iterator one element forward.
///
/// \return A reference to the iterator.
///
/// \throw system_error If advancing the iterator fails.
detail::directory_iterator&
detail::directory_iterator::operator++(void)
{
_pimpl->next();
return *this;
}
/// Dereferences the iterator to its contents.
///
/// \return A reference to the directory entry pointed to by the iterator.
const fs::directory_entry&
detail::directory_iterator::operator*(void) const
{
PRE(_pimpl->_entry.get() != NULL);
return *_pimpl->_entry;
}
/// Dereferences the iterator to its contents.
///
/// \return A pointer to the directory entry pointed to by the iterator.
const fs::directory_entry*
detail::directory_iterator::operator->(void) const
{
PRE(_pimpl->_entry.get() != NULL);
return _pimpl->_entry.get();
}
/// Internal implementation details for the directory.
struct utils::fs::directory::impl : utils::noncopyable {
/// Path to the directory to scan.
fs::path _path;
/// Constructs a new directory.
///
/// \param path_ Path to the directory to scan.
impl(const fs::path& path_) : _path(path_)
{
}
};
/// Constructs a new directory.
///
/// \param path_ Path to the directory to scan.
fs::directory::directory(const path& path_) : _pimpl(new impl(path_))
{
}
/// Returns an iterator to start scanning the directory.
///
/// \return An iterator on the directory.
///
/// \throw system_error If the directory cannot be opened to obtain its first
/// entry.
fs::directory::const_iterator
fs::directory::begin(void) const
{
return const_iterator::new_begin(_pimpl->_path);
}
/// Returns an invalid iterator to check for the end of an scan.
///
/// \return An invalid iterator.
fs::directory::const_iterator
fs::directory::end(void) const
{
return const_iterator::new_end();
}