freebsd-nq/usr.sbin/bsdconfig/share/variable.subr

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if [ ! "$_VARIABLE_SUBR" ]; then _VARIABLE_SUBR=1
#
Import media selection/preparation framework (sysinstall inspired). Makes accessing files from various types of media nice and abstracted away from the wet-work involved in preparing, validating, and initializing those types of media. This will be used for the package management system module and other modules that need access to files and want to allow the user to decide where those files come from (either in a scripted fashion, prompted fashion, or any combination thereof). Heavily inspired by sysinstall and even uses the same reserved words so that scripts are portable. Coded over months, tested continuously through- out, and reviewed several times. Some notes about the changes: - Move network-setting acquisition/validation routines to media/tcpip.subr - The options screen from sysinstall has been converted to a dialog menu - The "UFS" media choice is renamed to "Directory" to reflect how sysinstall treats the choice and a new [true] "UFS" media choice has been added that acts on real UFS partitions (such as external disks with disklabels). - Many more help files have been resurrected from sysinstall (I noticed that some of the content seems a bit dated; I gave them a once-over but they could really use an update). - A total of 10 media choices are presented (via mediaGetType) including: CD/DVD, FTP, FTP Passive, HTTP Proxy, Directory, NFS, DOS, UFS, Floppy, USB - Novel struct/device management layer for managing the issue of passing more information than can comfortably fit in an argument list.
2013-02-25 19:55:32 +00:00
# Copyright (c) 2012-2013 Devin Teske
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
# are met:
# 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
# 2. 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.
#
# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR 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 AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
# FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
# DAMAGES (INLUDING, 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.
#
# $FreeBSD$
#
############################################################ INCLUDES
BSDCFG_SHARE="/usr/share/bsdconfig"
. $BSDCFG_SHARE/common.subr || exit 1
f_dprintf "%s: loading includes..." variable.subr
f_include $BSDCFG_SHARE/dialog.subr
############################################################ GLOBALS
VARIABLES=
#
# Default behavior is to call f_variable_set_defaults() when loaded.
#
: ${VARIABLE_SELF_INITIALIZE=1}
#
# File to write when f_dump_variables() is called.
#
: ${VARIABLE_DUMPFILE:=/etc/bsdconfig.vars}
############################################################ FUNCTIONS
# f_variable_new $handle $variable
#
# Register a new variable named $variable with the given reference-handle
# $handle. The environment variable $handle is set to $variable allowing you to
# use the f_getvar() function (from common.subr) with $handle to get the value
# of environment variable $variable. For example:
#
# f_variable_new VAR_ABC abc
#
# allows the later indirection:
#
# f_getvar $VAR_ABC
#
# to return the value of environment variable `abc'. Variables registered in
# this manner are recorded in the $VARIABLES environment variable for later
# allowing dynamic enumeration of so-called `registered/advertised' variables.
#
f_variable_new()
{
local handle="$1" variable="$2"
[ "$handle" ] || return $FAILURE
f_dprintf "variable.subr: New variable %s -> %s" "$handle" "$variable"
setvar $handle $variable
VARIABLES="$VARIABLES${VARIABLES:+ }$handle"
}
# f_variable_get_value $var [ $fmt [ $opts ... ] ]
#
# Unless nonInteractive is set, prompt the user with a given value (pre-filled
# with the value of $var) and give them the chance to change the value.
#
# Unlike f_getvar() (from common.subr) which can return a variable to the
# caller on standard output, this function has no [meaningful] output.
#
# Returns success unless $var is either NULL or missing.
#
f_variable_get_value()
{
local var="$1" cp
[ "$var" ] || return $FAILURE
if ! { f_getvar $var cp && ! f_interactive; }; then
shift 1 # var
Similar to r251236, improve the portion of dialog(1) API in dialog.subr responsible for retrieving stored input (for the --inputbox and --password widgets). When we (Ron McDowell and I) developed the first version of bsdconfig, it used temporary files to store responses from dialog(1). That hasn't been true for a very long time, so the need to always execute some clean-up function is long-deprecated. The function that used to perform these clean- up routines for these widgets was f_dialog_inputstr(). We really don't need f_dialog_inputstr() for its originally designed purpose as all dialog invocations no longer require temporary files. Just as in r251236, redesign f_dialog_inputstr() in the following four ways: 1. Rename f_dialog_inputstr() to f_dialog_inputstr_fetch() 2. Introduce the new first-argument of $var_to_set to reduce forking 3. Create a corresponding f_dialog_inputstr_store() to abstract storage 4. Offload the sanitization to a new function, f_dialog_line_sanitize() It should be noted that f_dialog_line_sanitize() -- unlike its cousin from SVN r251236, f_dialog_data_sanitize() -- trims leading/trailing whitespace from the user's input. This helps prevent errors and common mistakes caused by the fact that the new cdialog implementation allows the right-arrow cursor key to go beyond the last byte of realtime input (adding whitespace at the end of the typed value). While we're centralizing the sanitization, let's rewrite f_dialog_input() while we're here to likewise reduce forking. The f_dialog_input() function now expects the first argument of $var_to_set instead of producing results on standard-out. These changes greatly improve readability and also improve performance.
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f_dialog_input cp "$( printf "$@" )" "$cp" && setvar $var "$cp"
fi
return $SUCCESS
}
# f_variable_set_defaults
#
# Installs sensible defaults for registered/advertised variables.
#
f_variable_set_defaults()
{
#
# Initialize various user-edittable values to their defaults
#
Import media selection/preparation framework (sysinstall inspired). Makes accessing files from various types of media nice and abstracted away from the wet-work involved in preparing, validating, and initializing those types of media. This will be used for the package management system module and other modules that need access to files and want to allow the user to decide where those files come from (either in a scripted fashion, prompted fashion, or any combination thereof). Heavily inspired by sysinstall and even uses the same reserved words so that scripts are portable. Coded over months, tested continuously through- out, and reviewed several times. Some notes about the changes: - Move network-setting acquisition/validation routines to media/tcpip.subr - The options screen from sysinstall has been converted to a dialog menu - The "UFS" media choice is renamed to "Directory" to reflect how sysinstall treats the choice and a new [true] "UFS" media choice has been added that acts on real UFS partitions (such as external disks with disklabels). - Many more help files have been resurrected from sysinstall (I noticed that some of the content seems a bit dated; I gave them a once-over but they could really use an update). - A total of 10 media choices are presented (via mediaGetType) including: CD/DVD, FTP, FTP Passive, HTTP Proxy, Directory, NFS, DOS, UFS, Floppy, USB - Novel struct/device management layer for managing the issue of passing more information than can comfortably fit in an argument list.
2013-02-25 19:55:32 +00:00
setvar $VAR_EDITOR "${EDITOR:-/usr/bin/ee}"
setvar $VAR_FTP_STATE "passive"
setvar $VAR_FTP_USER "ftp"
setvar $VAR_HOSTNAME "$( hostname )"
setvar $VAR_MEDIA_TIMEOUT "300"
setvar $VAR_NFS_SECURE "NO"
setvar $VAR_NFS_TCP "NO"
setvar $VAR_NFS_V3 "YES"
setvar $VAR_PKG_TMPDIR "/var/tmp"
Import media selection/preparation framework (sysinstall inspired). Makes accessing files from various types of media nice and abstracted away from the wet-work involved in preparing, validating, and initializing those types of media. This will be used for the package management system module and other modules that need access to files and want to allow the user to decide where those files come from (either in a scripted fashion, prompted fashion, or any combination thereof). Heavily inspired by sysinstall and even uses the same reserved words so that scripts are portable. Coded over months, tested continuously through- out, and reviewed several times. Some notes about the changes: - Move network-setting acquisition/validation routines to media/tcpip.subr - The options screen from sysinstall has been converted to a dialog menu - The "UFS" media choice is renamed to "Directory" to reflect how sysinstall treats the choice and a new [true] "UFS" media choice has been added that acts on real UFS partitions (such as external disks with disklabels). - Many more help files have been resurrected from sysinstall (I noticed that some of the content seems a bit dated; I gave them a once-over but they could really use an update). - A total of 10 media choices are presented (via mediaGetType) including: CD/DVD, FTP, FTP Passive, HTTP Proxy, Directory, NFS, DOS, UFS, Floppy, USB - Novel struct/device management layer for managing the issue of passing more information than can comfortably fit in an argument list.
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setvar $VAR_RELNAME "$UNAME_R"
f_dprintf "f_variable_set_defaults: Defaults initialized."
}
# f_dump_variables
#
# Dump a list of registered/advertised variables and their respective values to
# $VARIABLE_DUMPFILE. Returns success unless the file couldn't be written. If
# an error occurs, it is displayed using f_dialog_msgbox() (from dialog.subr).
#
f_dump_variables()
{
local err sanitize_awk="{ gsub(/'/, \"'\\\\''\"); print }"
if ! err=$(
( for handle in $VARIABLES; do
f_getvar $handle var || continue
f_getvar $var value || continue
value=$( echo "$value" | awk "$sanitize_awk" )
printf "%s='%s'\n" "$var" "$value"
done > "$VARIABLE_DUMPFILE" ) 2>&1
); then
f_dialog_msgbox "$err"
return $FAILURE
fi
}
# f_debugging
#
# Are we in debug mode? Returns success if extra DEBUG information has been
# requested (by setting $debug to non-NULL), otherwise false.
#
f_debugging()
{
local value
f_getvar $VAR_DEBUG value && [ "$value" ]
}
# f_interactive()
#
# Are we running interactively? Return error if $nonInteractive is set and non-
# NULL, otherwise return success.
#
f_interactive()
{
local value
! f_getvar $VAR_NONINTERACTIVE value || [ ! "$value" ]
}
Import media selection/preparation framework (sysinstall inspired). Makes accessing files from various types of media nice and abstracted away from the wet-work involved in preparing, validating, and initializing those types of media. This will be used for the package management system module and other modules that need access to files and want to allow the user to decide where those files come from (either in a scripted fashion, prompted fashion, or any combination thereof). Heavily inspired by sysinstall and even uses the same reserved words so that scripts are portable. Coded over months, tested continuously through- out, and reviewed several times. Some notes about the changes: - Move network-setting acquisition/validation routines to media/tcpip.subr - The options screen from sysinstall has been converted to a dialog menu - The "UFS" media choice is renamed to "Directory" to reflect how sysinstall treats the choice and a new [true] "UFS" media choice has been added that acts on real UFS partitions (such as external disks with disklabels). - Many more help files have been resurrected from sysinstall (I noticed that some of the content seems a bit dated; I gave them a once-over but they could really use an update). - A total of 10 media choices are presented (via mediaGetType) including: CD/DVD, FTP, FTP Passive, HTTP Proxy, Directory, NFS, DOS, UFS, Floppy, USB - Novel struct/device management layer for managing the issue of passing more information than can comfortably fit in an argument list.
2013-02-25 19:55:32 +00:00
# f_netinteractive()
#
# Has the user specifically requested the network-portion of configuration and
# setup to be performed interactively? Returns success if the user has asked
# for the network configuration to be done interactively even if perhaps over-
# all non-interactive mode has been requested (by setting nonInteractive).
#
# Returns success if $netInteractive is set and non-NULL.
#
f_netinteractive()
{
local value
f_getvar $VAR_NETINTERACTIVE value && [ "$value" ]
}
############################################################ MAIN
#
# Variables that can be tweaked from config files
#
Import media selection/preparation framework (sysinstall inspired). Makes accessing files from various types of media nice and abstracted away from the wet-work involved in preparing, validating, and initializing those types of media. This will be used for the package management system module and other modules that need access to files and want to allow the user to decide where those files come from (either in a scripted fashion, prompted fashion, or any combination thereof). Heavily inspired by sysinstall and even uses the same reserved words so that scripts are portable. Coded over months, tested continuously through- out, and reviewed several times. Some notes about the changes: - Move network-setting acquisition/validation routines to media/tcpip.subr - The options screen from sysinstall has been converted to a dialog menu - The "UFS" media choice is renamed to "Directory" to reflect how sysinstall treats the choice and a new [true] "UFS" media choice has been added that acts on real UFS partitions (such as external disks with disklabels). - Many more help files have been resurrected from sysinstall (I noticed that some of the content seems a bit dated; I gave them a once-over but they could really use an update). - A total of 10 media choices are presented (via mediaGetType) including: CD/DVD, FTP, FTP Passive, HTTP Proxy, Directory, NFS, DOS, UFS, Floppy, USB - Novel struct/device management layer for managing the issue of passing more information than can comfortably fit in an argument list.
2013-02-25 19:55:32 +00:00
# Handle Variable Name
f_variable_new VAR_CONFIG_FILE configFile
f_variable_new VAR_DEBUG debug
f_variable_new VAR_DEBUG_FILE debugFile
Import media selection/preparation framework (sysinstall inspired). Makes accessing files from various types of media nice and abstracted away from the wet-work involved in preparing, validating, and initializing those types of media. This will be used for the package management system module and other modules that need access to files and want to allow the user to decide where those files come from (either in a scripted fashion, prompted fashion, or any combination thereof). Heavily inspired by sysinstall and even uses the same reserved words so that scripts are portable. Coded over months, tested continuously through- out, and reviewed several times. Some notes about the changes: - Move network-setting acquisition/validation routines to media/tcpip.subr - The options screen from sysinstall has been converted to a dialog menu - The "UFS" media choice is renamed to "Directory" to reflect how sysinstall treats the choice and a new [true] "UFS" media choice has been added that acts on real UFS partitions (such as external disks with disklabels). - Many more help files have been resurrected from sysinstall (I noticed that some of the content seems a bit dated; I gave them a once-over but they could really use an update). - A total of 10 media choices are presented (via mediaGetType) including: CD/DVD, FTP, FTP Passive, HTTP Proxy, Directory, NFS, DOS, UFS, Floppy, USB - Novel struct/device management layer for managing the issue of passing more information than can comfortably fit in an argument list.
2013-02-25 19:55:32 +00:00
f_variable_new VAR_DIRECTORY_PATH _directoryPath
f_variable_new VAR_DOMAINNAME domainname
f_variable_new VAR_EDITOR editor
f_variable_new VAR_EXTRAS ifconfig_
f_variable_new VAR_FTP_DIR ftpDirectory
f_variable_new VAR_FTP_HOST ftpHost
f_variable_new VAR_FTP_PASS ftpPass
f_variable_new VAR_FTP_PATH _ftpPath
f_variable_new VAR_FTP_PORT ftpPort
f_variable_new VAR_FTP_STATE ftpState
f_variable_new VAR_FTP_USER ftpUser
f_variable_new VAR_GATEWAY defaultrouter
f_variable_new VAR_HOSTNAME hostname
f_variable_new VAR_HTTP_FTP_MODE httpFtpMode
f_variable_new VAR_HTTP_PROXY httpProxy
f_variable_new VAR_HTTP_PROXY_HOST httpProxyHost
f_variable_new VAR_HTTP_PROXY_PATH _httpProxyPath
f_variable_new VAR_HTTP_PROXY_PORT httpProxyPort
f_variable_new VAR_IFCONFIG ifconfig_
f_variable_new VAR_IPADDR ipaddr
f_variable_new VAR_IPV6ADDR ipv6addr
f_variable_new VAR_IPV6_ENABLE ipv6_activate_all_interfaces
f_variable_new VAR_MEDIA_TIMEOUT MEDIA_TIMEOUT
f_variable_new VAR_MEDIA_TYPE mediaType
f_variable_new VAR_NAMESERVER nameserver
f_variable_new VAR_NETINTERACTIVE netInteractive
f_variable_new VAR_NETMASK netmask
f_variable_new VAR_NETWORK_DEVICE netDev
f_variable_new VAR_NFS_HOST nfsHost
f_variable_new VAR_NFS_PATH nfsPath
f_variable_new VAR_NFS_SECURE nfs_reserved_port_only
f_variable_new VAR_NFS_TCP nfs_use_tcp
f_variable_new VAR_NFS_V3 nfs_use_v3
f_variable_new VAR_NONINTERACTIVE nonInteractive
f_variable_new VAR_NO_CONFIRM noConfirm
Import media selection/preparation framework (sysinstall inspired). Makes accessing files from various types of media nice and abstracted away from the wet-work involved in preparing, validating, and initializing those types of media. This will be used for the package management system module and other modules that need access to files and want to allow the user to decide where those files come from (either in a scripted fashion, prompted fashion, or any combination thereof). Heavily inspired by sysinstall and even uses the same reserved words so that scripts are portable. Coded over months, tested continuously through- out, and reviewed several times. Some notes about the changes: - Move network-setting acquisition/validation routines to media/tcpip.subr - The options screen from sysinstall has been converted to a dialog menu - The "UFS" media choice is renamed to "Directory" to reflect how sysinstall treats the choice and a new [true] "UFS" media choice has been added that acts on real UFS partitions (such as external disks with disklabels). - Many more help files have been resurrected from sysinstall (I noticed that some of the content seems a bit dated; I gave them a once-over but they could really use an update). - A total of 10 media choices are presented (via mediaGetType) including: CD/DVD, FTP, FTP Passive, HTTP Proxy, Directory, NFS, DOS, UFS, Floppy, USB - Novel struct/device management layer for managing the issue of passing more information than can comfortably fit in an argument list.
2013-02-25 19:55:32 +00:00
f_variable_new VAR_NO_ERROR noError
f_variable_new VAR_NO_INET6 noInet6
f_variable_new VAR_PACKAGE package
f_variable_new VAR_PKG_TMPDIR PKG_TMPDIR
f_variable_new VAR_PORTS_PATH ports
f_variable_new VAR_RELNAME releaseName
Import media selection/preparation framework (sysinstall inspired). Makes accessing files from various types of media nice and abstracted away from the wet-work involved in preparing, validating, and initializing those types of media. This will be used for the package management system module and other modules that need access to files and want to allow the user to decide where those files come from (either in a scripted fashion, prompted fashion, or any combination thereof). Heavily inspired by sysinstall and even uses the same reserved words so that scripts are portable. Coded over months, tested continuously through- out, and reviewed several times. Some notes about the changes: - Move network-setting acquisition/validation routines to media/tcpip.subr - The options screen from sysinstall has been converted to a dialog menu - The "UFS" media choice is renamed to "Directory" to reflect how sysinstall treats the choice and a new [true] "UFS" media choice has been added that acts on real UFS partitions (such as external disks with disklabels). - Many more help files have been resurrected from sysinstall (I noticed that some of the content seems a bit dated; I gave them a once-over but they could really use an update). - A total of 10 media choices are presented (via mediaGetType) including: CD/DVD, FTP, FTP Passive, HTTP Proxy, Directory, NFS, DOS, UFS, Floppy, USB - Novel struct/device management layer for managing the issue of passing more information than can comfortably fit in an argument list.
2013-02-25 19:55:32 +00:00
f_variable_new VAR_SLOW_ETHER slowEthernetCard
f_variable_new VAR_TRY_DHCP tryDHCP
f_variable_new VAR_TRY_RTSOL tryRTSOL
f_variable_new VAR_UFS_PATH ufs
#
# Self-initialize unless requested otherwise
#
f_dprintf "%s: VARIABLE_SELF_INITIALIZE=[%s]" \
variable.subr "$VARIABLE_SELF_INITIALIZE"
case "$VARIABLE_SELF_INITIALIZE" in
""|0|[Nn][Oo]|[Oo][Ff][Ff]|[Ff][Aa][Ll][Ss][Ee]) : do nothing ;;
*) f_variable_set_defaults
esac
f_dprintf "%s: Successfully loaded." variable.subr
fi # ! $_VARIABLE_SUBR