git/tempfile.h
Jeff King f5b4dc7668 tempfile: handle NULL tempfile pointers gracefully
The tempfile functions all take pointers to tempfile
objects, but do not check whether the argument is NULL.
This isn't a big deal in practice, since the lifetime of any
tempfile object is defined to last for the whole program. So
even if we try to call delete_tempfile() on an
already-deleted tempfile, our "active" check will tell us
that it's a noop.

In preparation for transitioning to a new system that
loosens the "tempfile objects can never be freed" rule,
let's tighten up our active checks:

  1. A NULL pointer is now defined as "inactive" (so it will
     BUG for most functions, but works as a silent noop for
     things like delete_tempfile).

  2. Functions should always do the "active" check before
     looking at any of the struct fields.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-09-06 17:19:53 +09:00

277 lines
9.6 KiB
C

#ifndef TEMPFILE_H
#define TEMPFILE_H
/*
* Handle temporary files.
*
* The tempfile API allows temporary files to be created, deleted, and
* atomically renamed. Temporary files that are still active when the
* program ends are cleaned up automatically. Lockfiles (see
* "lockfile.h") are built on top of this API.
*
*
* Calling sequence
* ----------------
*
* The caller:
*
* * Allocates a `struct tempfile` either as a static variable or on
* the heap, initialized to zeros. Once you use the structure to
* call `create_tempfile()`, it belongs to the tempfile subsystem
* and its storage must remain valid throughout the life of the
* program (i.e. you cannot use an on-stack variable to hold this
* structure).
*
* * Attempts to create a temporary file by calling
* `create_tempfile()`.
*
* * Writes new content to the file by either:
*
* * writing to the file descriptor returned by `create_tempfile()`
* (also available via `tempfile->fd`).
*
* * calling `fdopen_tempfile()` to get a `FILE` pointer for the
* open file and writing to the file using stdio.
*
* Note that the file descriptor returned by create_tempfile()
* is marked O_CLOEXEC, so the new contents must be written by
* the current process, not any spawned one.
*
* When finished writing, the caller can:
*
* * Close the file descriptor and remove the temporary file by
* calling `delete_tempfile()`.
*
* * Close the temporary file and rename it atomically to a specified
* filename by calling `rename_tempfile()`. This relinquishes
* control of the file.
*
* * Close the file descriptor without removing or renaming the
* temporary file by calling `close_tempfile_gently()`, and later call
* `delete_tempfile()` or `rename_tempfile()`.
*
* Even after the temporary file is renamed or deleted, the `tempfile`
* object must not be freed or altered by the caller. However, it may
* be reused; just pass it to another call of `create_tempfile()`.
*
* If the program exits before `rename_tempfile()` or
* `delete_tempfile()` is called, an `atexit(3)` handler will close
* and remove the temporary file.
*
* If you need to close the file descriptor yourself, do so by calling
* `close_tempfile_gently()`. You should never call `close(2)` or `fclose(3)`
* yourself, otherwise the `struct tempfile` structure would still
* think that the file descriptor needs to be closed, and a later
* cleanup would result in duplicate calls to `close(2)`. Worse yet,
* if you close and then later open another file descriptor for a
* completely different purpose, then the unrelated file descriptor
* might get closed.
*
*
* Error handling
* --------------
*
* `create_tempfile()` returns a file descriptor on success or -1 on
* failure. On errors, `errno` describes the reason for failure.
*
* `delete_tempfile()`, `rename_tempfile()`, and `close_tempfile_gently()`
* return 0 on success. On failure they set `errno` appropriately and return
* -1. `delete` and `rename` (but not `close`) do their best to delete the
* temporary file before returning.
*/
struct tempfile {
struct tempfile *volatile next;
volatile sig_atomic_t active;
volatile int fd;
FILE *volatile fp;
volatile pid_t owner;
char on_list;
struct strbuf filename;
};
/*
* Attempt to create a temporary file at the specified `path`. Return
* a file descriptor for writing to it, or -1 on error. It is an error
* if a file already exists at that path.
*/
extern int create_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile, const char *path);
/*
* Register an existing file as a tempfile, meaning that it will be
* deleted when the program exits. The tempfile is considered closed,
* but it can be worked with like any other closed tempfile (for
* example, it can be opened using reopen_tempfile()).
*/
extern void register_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile, const char *path);
/*
* mks_tempfile functions
*
* The following functions attempt to create and open temporary files
* with names derived automatically from a template, in the manner of
* mkstemps(), and arrange for them to be deleted if the program ends
* before they are deleted explicitly. There is a whole family of such
* functions, named according to the following pattern:
*
* x?mks_tempfile_t?s?m?()
*
* The optional letters have the following meanings:
*
* x - die if the temporary file cannot be created.
*
* t - create the temporary file under $TMPDIR (as opposed to
* relative to the current directory). When these variants are
* used, template should be the pattern for the filename alone,
* without a path.
*
* s - template includes a suffix that is suffixlen characters long.
*
* m - the temporary file should be created with the specified mode
* (otherwise, the mode is set to 0600).
*
* None of these functions modify template. If the caller wants to
* know the (absolute) path of the file that was created, it can be
* read from tempfile->filename.
*
* On success, the functions return a file descriptor that is open for
* writing the temporary file. On errors, they return -1 and set errno
* appropriately (except for the "x" variants, which die() on errors).
*/
/* See "mks_tempfile functions" above. */
extern int mks_tempfile_sm(struct tempfile *tempfile,
const char *template, int suffixlen, int mode);
/* See "mks_tempfile functions" above. */
static inline int mks_tempfile_s(struct tempfile *tempfile,
const char *template, int suffixlen)
{
return mks_tempfile_sm(tempfile, template, suffixlen, 0600);
}
/* See "mks_tempfile functions" above. */
static inline int mks_tempfile_m(struct tempfile *tempfile,
const char *template, int mode)
{
return mks_tempfile_sm(tempfile, template, 0, mode);
}
/* See "mks_tempfile functions" above. */
static inline int mks_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile,
const char *template)
{
return mks_tempfile_sm(tempfile, template, 0, 0600);
}
/* See "mks_tempfile functions" above. */
extern int mks_tempfile_tsm(struct tempfile *tempfile,
const char *template, int suffixlen, int mode);
/* See "mks_tempfile functions" above. */
static inline int mks_tempfile_ts(struct tempfile *tempfile,
const char *template, int suffixlen)
{
return mks_tempfile_tsm(tempfile, template, suffixlen, 0600);
}
/* See "mks_tempfile functions" above. */
static inline int mks_tempfile_tm(struct tempfile *tempfile,
const char *template, int mode)
{
return mks_tempfile_tsm(tempfile, template, 0, mode);
}
/* See "mks_tempfile functions" above. */
static inline int mks_tempfile_t(struct tempfile *tempfile,
const char *template)
{
return mks_tempfile_tsm(tempfile, template, 0, 0600);
}
/* See "mks_tempfile functions" above. */
extern int xmks_tempfile_m(struct tempfile *tempfile,
const char *template, int mode);
/* See "mks_tempfile functions" above. */
static inline int xmks_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile,
const char *template)
{
return xmks_tempfile_m(tempfile, template, 0600);
}
/*
* Associate a stdio stream with the temporary file (which must still
* be open). Return `NULL` (*without* deleting the file) on error. The
* stream is closed automatically when `close_tempfile_gently()` is called or
* when the file is deleted or renamed.
*/
extern FILE *fdopen_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile, const char *mode);
static inline int is_tempfile_active(struct tempfile *tempfile)
{
return tempfile && tempfile->active;
}
/*
* Return the path of the lockfile. The return value is a pointer to a
* field within the lock_file object and should not be freed.
*/
extern const char *get_tempfile_path(struct tempfile *tempfile);
extern int get_tempfile_fd(struct tempfile *tempfile);
extern FILE *get_tempfile_fp(struct tempfile *tempfile);
/*
* If the temporary file is still open, close it (and the file pointer
* too, if it has been opened using `fdopen_tempfile()`) without
* deleting the file. Return 0 upon success. On failure to `close(2)`,
* return a negative value. Usually `delete_tempfile()` or `rename_tempfile()`
* should eventually be called regardless of whether `close_tempfile_gently()`
* succeeds.
*/
extern int close_tempfile_gently(struct tempfile *tempfile);
/*
* Re-open a temporary file that has been closed using
* `close_tempfile_gently()` but not yet deleted or renamed. This can be used
* to implement a sequence of operations like the following:
*
* * Create temporary file.
*
* * Write new contents to file, then `close_tempfile_gently()` to cause the
* contents to be written to disk.
*
* * Pass the name of the temporary file to another program to allow
* it (and nobody else) to inspect or even modify the file's
* contents.
*
* * `reopen_tempfile()` to reopen the temporary file. Make further
* updates to the contents.
*
* * `rename_tempfile()` to move the file to its permanent location.
*/
extern int reopen_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile);
/*
* Close the file descriptor and/or file pointer and remove the
* temporary file associated with `tempfile`. It is a NOOP to call
* `delete_tempfile()` for a `tempfile` object that has already been
* deleted or renamed.
*/
extern void delete_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile);
/*
* Close the file descriptor and/or file pointer if they are still
* open, and atomically rename the temporary file to `path`. `path`
* must be on the same filesystem as the lock file. Return 0 on
* success. On failure, delete the temporary file and return -1, with
* `errno` set to the value from the failing call to `close(2)` or
* `rename(2)`. It is a bug to call `rename_tempfile()` for a
* `tempfile` object that is not currently active.
*/
extern int rename_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile, const char *path);
#endif /* TEMPFILE_H */