Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view nt/minitar.c @ 1279:cd0abfdb9e9d
[xemacs-hg @ 2003-02-09 09:33:42 by ben]
walk-windows, redisplay fixes
console-stream.c: Abort when any attempts to output a stream console are made.
Should be caught sooner.
event-msw.c: Don't redisplay() during sizing when the frame has not yet been
initialized completely.
event-stream.c, menubar-msw.c, menubar-x.c, menubar.c, menubar.h: Restore in_menu_callback. Bind it in menubar-{msw,x}.c when
calling filter functions and the like. Conditionalize on it, not
in_modal_loop, when issuing error in `next-event', otherwise we
bite the dust immediately -- event-msw.c purposely calls
Fnext_event() in a modal loop, and knows what it's doing.
redisplay-output.c: Formatting fixes.
redisplay.c, window.c, winslots.h: Delete lots of carcasses of attempts to add redisplay support for
font-lock -- `pre/post-redisplay-hook', unimplemented junk from
FSF (redisplay-end-trigger, `window-scroll-functions',
`window-size-change-functions'). If we want to port some
redisplay support from FSF, port the `fontified' property.
redisplay.c: Put in a check here (as well as redisplay_device()) for a stream
frame. We can get here directly through Lisp fun
`redisplay-frame'. Abort if frame not initialized.
redisplay.c: Check for stream frames/devices.
window.el: walk-windows was broken when a frame was given to WHICH-FRAMES.
it would loop forever. The FSF version fixes this but i didn't
sync to them because (a) it conses (bad for lazy-lock), (b) it
calls select-window.
author | ben |
---|---|
date | Sun, 09 Feb 2003 09:33:48 +0000 |
parents | f846c2ef930d |
children | d4c017f833e2 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Minitar: extract .tar.gz files on Win32 platforms. Uses zlib for decompression. This is very simple-minded, it ignores checksums, and any type of file that is not a plain file or a directory. Nonetheless it is useful. Author: Charles G. Waldman (cgw@pgt.com), Aug 4 1998 This file is placed in the public domain; you can do whatever you like with it. There is NO WARRANTY. If it breaks, you get to keep both pieces */ #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <errno.h> #include <string.h> #include <io.h> #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE # include <direct.h> /* For mkdir */ #endif #include <zlib.h> static int Usage (char *name) { fprintf (stderr, "Usage: %s file.tar.gz [base-dir]\n", name); fprintf (stderr, "\tExtracts the contents compressed tar file to base-dir\n"); exit (-1); return 0; } #define BLOCKSIZE 512 #define MAXNAMELEN 1024 static int octal (char *str) { int ret = -1; sscanf (str, "%o", &ret); return ret; } /* this is like mkdir -p, except if there is no trailing slash, the final component is assumed to be a file, rather than a path component, so it is not created as a directory */ static int makepath (char *path) { char tmp[MAXNAMELEN]; char *cp; for (cp=path; cp; cp = (char*)strchr (cp+1, '/')) { if (!*cp) break; if (*cp != '/') continue; strncpy (tmp, path, cp-path); tmp[cp-path] = '\0'; if (strlen (tmp) == 0) continue; #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE if (mkdir (tmp)) #else if (mkdir (tmp, 0777)) #endif { if (errno == EEXIST) continue; else return -1; } } return 0; } int main (int argc, char **argv) { char fullname[MAXNAMELEN]; char *basedir = "."; char *tarfile; int size; char osize[13]; char name[101]; char magic[7]; char type; gzFile *infile = (gzFile*)0; FILE *outfile = (FILE*)0; char block[BLOCKSIZE]; int nbytes, nread, nwritten; int in_block = 0; int directory = 0; if (argc < 2 || argc > 3) Usage (argv[0]); tarfile = argv[1]; if (argc==3) basedir = argv[2]; if (! (infile = gzopen (tarfile, "rb"))) { fprintf (stderr, "Cannot open %s\n", tarfile); exit (-2); } while (1) { nread = gzread (infile, block, 512); if (!in_block && nread == 0) break; if (nread != BLOCKSIZE) { fprintf (stderr, "Error: incomplete block read. Exiting.\n"); exit (-2); } if (!in_block) { if (block[0]=='\0') /* We're done */ break; strncpy (magic, block+257, 6); magic[6] = '\0'; if (strcmp (magic, "ustar ")) { fprintf (stderr, "Error: incorrect magic number in tar header. Exiting\n"); } strncpy (name, block, 100); name[100] = '\0'; sprintf (fullname, "%s/%s", basedir, name); printf ("%s\n", fullname); type = block[156]; switch (type) { case '0': case '\0': directory = 0; break; case '5': directory = 1; break; default: fprintf (stderr, "Error: unknown type flag %c. Exiting.\n", type); break; } if (directory) { in_block = 0; /* makepath will ignore the final path component, so make sure dirnames have a trailing slash */ if (fullname[strlen (fullname)-1] != '/') strcat (fullname, "/"); if (makepath (fullname)) { fprintf (stderr, "Error: cannot create directory %s. Exiting.\n", fullname); exit (-2); } continue; } else { /*file */ in_block = 1; if (outfile) { if (fclose (outfile)) { fprintf (stderr, "Error: cannot close file %s. Exiting.\n", fullname); exit (-2); } outfile = (FILE*)0; } if (!(outfile = fopen (fullname, "wb"))) { /*try creating the directory, maybe it's not there */ if (makepath (fullname)) { fprintf (stderr, "Error: cannot create file %s. Exiting.\n", fullname); exit (-2); } /* now try again to open the file */ if (!(outfile = fopen (fullname, "wb"))) { fprintf (stderr, "Error: cannot create file %s. Exiting.\n", fullname); exit (-2); } } strncpy (osize, block+124, 12); osize[12] = '\0'; size = octal (osize); if (size<0) { fprintf (stderr, "Error: invalid size in tar header. Exiting.\n"); exit (-2); } } } else { /* write or continue writing file contents */ nbytes = size>512? 512:size; nwritten = fwrite (block, 1, nbytes, outfile); if (nwritten != nbytes) { fprintf (stderr, "Error: only wrote %d bytes to file %s. Exiting.\n", nwritten, fullname); } size -= nbytes; if (size==0) in_block = 0; } } return 0; }