File:  [MW Coherent from dump] / coherent / g / usr / lib / uucp / tay104 / unix / lock.c
Revision 1.1.1.1 (vendor branch): download - view: text, annotated - select for diffs
Wed May 29 04:56:35 2019 UTC (7 years ago) by root
Branches: MarkWilliams, MAIN
CVS tags: relic, HEAD
coherent

/* lock.c
   Lock and unlock a file name.

   Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Ian Lance Taylor

   This file is part of the Taylor UUCP package.

   This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
   modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
   published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
   License, or (at your option) any later version.

   This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
   WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
   MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU
   General Public License for more details.

   You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
   along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
   Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

   The author of the program may be contacted at [email protected] or
   c/o Infinity Development Systems, P.O. Box 520, Waltham, MA 02254.
   */

#include "uucp.h"

#if USE_RCS_ID
const char lock_rcsid[] = "$Id: lock.c,v 1.1.1.1 2019/05/29 04:56:35 root Exp $";
#endif

#include "uudefs.h"
#include "sysdep.h"
#include "system.h"

#include <errno.h>

#if HAVE_FCNTL_H
#include <fcntl.h>
#else
#if HAVE_SYS_FILE_H
#include <sys/file.h>
#endif
#endif

#ifndef O_RDONLY
#define O_RDONLY 0
#define O_WRONLY 1
#define O_RDWR 2
#endif

#ifndef O_NOCTTY
#define O_NOCTTY 0
#endif

#ifndef SEEK_SET
#define SEEK_SET 0
#endif

/* Lock something.  If the fspooldir argument is TRUE, the argument is
   a file name relative to the spool directory; otherwise the argument
   is a simple file name which should be created in the system lock
   directory (under HDB this is /etc/locks).  */

boolean
fsdo_lock (zlock, fspooldir, pferr)
     const char *zlock;
     boolean fspooldir;
     boolean *pferr;
{
  char *zfree;
  const char *zpath, *zslash;
  size_t cslash;
  pid_t ime;
  char *ztempfile;
  char abtempfile[sizeof "TMP1234567890"];
  int o;
#if HAVE_V2_LOCKFILES
  int i;
#else
  char ab[12];
#endif
  int cwrote;
  const char *zerr;
  boolean fret;

  if (pferr != NULL)
    *pferr = TRUE;

  if (fspooldir)
    {
      zfree = NULL;
      zpath = zlock;
    }
  else
    {
      zfree = zsysdep_in_dir (zSlockdir, zlock);
      zpath = zfree;
    }

  ime = getpid ();

  /* We do the actual lock by creating a file and then linking it to
     the final file name we want.  This avoids race conditions due to
     one process checking the file before we have finished writing it,
     and also works even if we are somehow running as root.

     First, create the file in the right directory (we must create the
     file in the same directory since otherwise we might attempt a
     cross-device link).  */
  zslash = strrchr (zpath, '/');
  if (zslash == NULL)
    cslash = 0;
  else
    cslash = zslash - zpath + 1;

  sprintf (abtempfile, "TMP%010lx", (unsigned long) ime);
  ztempfile = zbufalc (cslash + sizeof abtempfile);
  memcpy (ztempfile, zpath, cslash);
  memcpy (ztempfile + cslash, abtempfile, sizeof abtempfile);

  o = creat (ztempfile, IPUBLIC_FILE_MODE);
  if (o < 0)
    {
      if (errno == ENOENT)
	{
	  if (! fsysdep_make_dirs (ztempfile, FALSE))
	    {
	      ubuffree (zfree);
	      ubuffree (ztempfile);
	      return FALSE;
	    }
	  o = creat (ztempfile, IPUBLIC_FILE_MODE);
	}
      if (o < 0)
	{
	  ulog (LOG_ERROR, "creat (%s): %s", ztempfile, strerror (errno));
	  ubuffree (zfree);
	  ubuffree (ztempfile);
	  return FALSE;
	}
    }

#if HAVE_V2_LOCKFILES
  i = ime;
  cwrote = write (o, &i, sizeof i);
#else
  sprintf (ab, "%10d\n", (int) ime);
  cwrote = write (o, ab, strlen (ab));
#endif

  zerr = NULL;
  if (cwrote < 0)
    zerr = "write";
  if (close (o) < 0)
    zerr = "close";
  if (zerr != NULL)
    {
      ulog (LOG_ERROR, "%s (%s): %s", zerr, ztempfile, strerror (errno));
      (void) remove (ztempfile);
      ubuffree (zfree);
      ubuffree (ztempfile);
      return FALSE;
    }

  /* Now try to link the file we just created to the lock file that we
     want.  If it fails, try reading the existing file to make sure
     the process that created it still exists.  We do this in a loop
     to make it easy to retry if the old locking process no longer
     exists.  */
  fret = TRUE;
  if (pferr != NULL)
    *pferr = FALSE;
  o = -1;
  zerr = NULL;

  while (link (ztempfile, zpath) != 0)
    {
      int cgot;
      int ipid;
      boolean freadonly;

      fret = FALSE;

      if (errno != EEXIST)
	{
	  ulog (LOG_ERROR, "link (%s, %s): %s", ztempfile, zpath,
		strerror (errno));
	  if (pferr != NULL)
	    *pferr = TRUE;
	  break;
	}

      freadonly = FALSE;
      o = open ((char *) zpath, O_RDWR | O_NOCTTY, 0);
      if (o < 0)
	{
	  if (errno == EACCES)
	    {
	      freadonly = TRUE;
	      o = open ((char *) zpath, O_RDONLY, 0);
	    }
	  if (o < 0)
	    {
	      if (errno == ENOENT)
		{
		  /* The file was presumably removed between the link
		     and the open.  Try the link again.  */
		  fret = TRUE;
		  continue;
		}
	      zerr = "open";
	      break;
	    }
	}

      /* The race starts here.  See below for a discussion.  */

#if HAVE_V2_LOCKFILES
      cgot = read (o, &i, sizeof i);
#else
      cgot = read (o, ab, sizeof ab - 1);
#endif

      if (cgot < 0)
	{
	  zerr = "read";
	  break;
	}

#if HAVE_V2_LOCKFILES
      ipid = i;
#else
      ab[cgot] = '\0';
      ipid = strtol (ab, (char **) NULL, 10);
#endif

      /* On NFS, the link might have actually succeeded even though we
	 got a failure return.  This can happen if the original
	 acknowledgement was lost or delayed and the operation was
	 retried.  In this case the pid will be our own.  This
	 introduces a rather improbable race condition: if a stale
	 lock was left with our process ID in it, and another process
	 just did the kill, below, but has not yet changed the lock
	 file to hold its own process ID, we could start up and make
	 it all the way to here and think we have the lock.  I'm not
	 going to worry about this possibility.  */
      if (ipid == ime)
	{
	  fret = TRUE;
	  break;
	}

      /* If the process still exists, we will get EPERM rather than
	 ESRCH.  We then return FALSE to indicate that we cannot make
	 the lock.  */
      if (kill (ipid, 0) == 0 || errno == EPERM)
	break;

      ulog (LOG_ERROR, "Found stale lock %s held by process %d",
	    zpath, ipid);

      /* This is a stale lock, created by a process that no longer
	 exists.

	 Now we could remove the file (and, if the file mode disallows
	 writing, that's what we have to do), but we try to avoid
	 doing so since it causes a race condition.  If we remove the
	 file, and are interrupted any time after we do the read until
	 we do the remove, another process could get in, open the
	 file, find that it was a stale lock, remove the file and
	 create a new one.  When we regained control we would remove
	 the file the other process just created.

	 These files are being generated partially for the benefit of
	 cu, and it would be nice to avoid the race however cu avoids
	 it, so that the programs remain compatible.  Unfortunately,
	 nobody seems to know how cu avoids the race, or even if it
	 tries to avoid it at all.

	 There are a few ways to avoid the race.  We could use kernel
	 locking primitives, but they may not be available.  We could
	 link to a special file name, but if that file were left lying
	 around then no stale lock could ever be broken (Henry Spencer
	 would think this was a good thing).

	 Instead I've implemented the following procedure: seek to the
	 start of the file, write our pid into it, sleep for five
	 seconds, and then make sure our pid is still there.  Anybody
	 who checks the file while we're asleep will find our pid
	 there and fail the lock.  The only race will come from
	 another process which has done the read by the time we do our
	 write.  That process will then have five seconds to do its
	 own write.  When we wake up, we'll notice that our pid is no
	 longer in the file, and retry the lock from the beginning.

	 This relies on the atomicity of write(2).  If it possible for
	 the writes of two processes to be interleaved, the two
	 processes could livelock.  POSIX unfortunately leaves this
	 case explicitly undefined; however, given that the write is
	 of less than a disk block, it's difficult to imagine an
	 interleave occurring.

	 Note that this is still a race.  If it takes the second
	 process more than five seconds to do the kill, the lseek, and
	 the write, both processes will think they have the lock.
	 Perhaps the length of time to sleep should be configurable.
	 Even better, perhaps I should add a configuration option to
	 use a permanent lock file, which eliminates any race and
	 forces the installer to be aware of the existence of the
	 permanent lock file.

	 We stat the file after the sleep, to make sure some other
	 program hasn't deleted it for us.  */
      if (freadonly)
	{
	  (void) close (o);
	  o = -1;
	  (void) remove (zpath);
	  continue;
	}

      if (lseek (o, (off_t) 0, SEEK_SET) != 0)
	{
	  zerr = "lseek";
	  break;
	}

#if HAVE_V2_LOCKFILES
      i = ime;
      cwrote = write (o, &i, sizeof i);
#else
      sprintf (ab, "%10d\n", (int) ime);
      cwrote = write (o, ab, strlen (ab));
#endif

      if (cwrote < 0)
	{
	  zerr = "write";
	  break;
	}

      (void) sleep (5);

      if (lseek (o, (off_t) 0, SEEK_SET) != 0)
	{
	  zerr = "lseek";
	  break;
	}

#if HAVE_V2_LOCKFILES
      cgot = read (o, &i, sizeof i);
#else
      cgot = read (o, ab, sizeof ab - 1);
#endif

      if (cgot < 0)
	{
	  zerr = "read";
	  break;
	}

#if HAVE_V2_LOCKFILES
      ipid = i;
#else
      ab[cgot] = '\0';
      ipid = strtol (ab, (char **) NULL, 10);
#endif

      if (ipid == ime)
	{
	  struct stat sfile, sdescriptor;

	  /* It looks like we have the lock.  Do the final stat
	     check.  */
	  if (stat ((char *) zpath, &sfile) < 0)
	    {
	      if (errno != ENOENT)
		{
		  zerr = "stat";
		  break;
		}
	      /* Loop around and try again.  */
	    }
	  else
	    {
	      if (fstat (o, &sdescriptor) < 0)
		{
		  zerr = "fstat";
		  break;
		}

	      if (sfile.st_ino == sdescriptor.st_ino
		  && sfile.st_dev == sdescriptor.st_dev)
		{
		  /* Close the file before assuming we've succeeded to
		     pick up any trailing errors.  */
		  if (close (o) < 0)
		    {
		      zerr = "close";
		      break;
		    }

		  o = -1;

		  /* We have the lock.  */
		  fret = TRUE;
		  break;
		}
	    }
	}

      /* Loop around and try the lock again.  We keep doing this until
	 the lock file holds a pid that exists.  */
      (void) close (o);
      o = -1;
      fret = TRUE;
    }

  if (zerr != NULL)
    {
      ulog (LOG_ERROR, "%s (%s): %s", zerr, zpath, strerror (errno));
      if (pferr != NULL)
	*pferr = TRUE;
    }

  if (o >= 0)
    (void) close (o);

  ubuffree (zfree);

  /* It would be nice if we could leave the temporary file around for
     future calls, but considering that we create lock files in
     various different directories it's probably more trouble than
     it's worth.  */
  if (remove (ztempfile) != 0)
    ulog (LOG_ERROR, "remove (%s): %s", ztempfile, strerror (errno));

  ubuffree (ztempfile);

  return fret;
}

/* Unlock something.  The fspooldir argument is as in fsdo_lock.  */

boolean
fsdo_unlock (zlock, fspooldir)
     const char *zlock;
     boolean fspooldir;
{
  char *zfree;
  const char *zpath;

  if (fspooldir)
    {
      zfree = NULL;
      zpath = zlock;
    }
  else
    {
      zfree = zsysdep_in_dir (zSlockdir, zlock);
      zpath = zfree;
    }

  if (remove (zpath) == 0
      || errno == ENOENT)
    {
      ubuffree (zfree);
      return TRUE;
    }
  else
    {
      ulog (LOG_ERROR, "remove (%s): %s", zpath, strerror (errno));
      ubuffree (zfree);
      return FALSE;
    }
}

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