minix/commands/tail/tail.c
Ben Gras 6a73e85ad1 retire _PROTOTYPE
. only good for obsolete K&R support
	. also remove a stray ansi.h and the proto cmd
2012-03-25 16:17:10 +02:00

362 lines
10 KiB
C

/* tail - copy the end of a file Author: Norbert Schlenker */
/* Syntax: tail [-f] [-c number | -n number] [file]
* tail -[number][c|l][f] [file] (obsolescent)
* tail +[number][c|l][f] [file] (obsolescent)
* Flags:
* -c number Measure starting point in bytes. If number begins
* with '+', the starting point is relative to the
* the file's beginning. If number begins with '-'
* or has no sign, the starting point is relative to
* the end of the file.
* -f Keep trying to read after EOF on files and FIFOs.
* -n number Measure starting point in lines. The number
* following the flag has significance similar to
* that described for the -c flag.
*
* If neither -c nor -n are specified, the default is tail -n 10.
*
* In the obsolescent syntax, an argument with a 'c' following the
* (optional) number is equivalent to "-c number" in the standard
* syntax, with number including the leading sign ('+' or '-') of the
* argument. An argument with 'l' following the number is equivalent
* to "-n number" in the standard syntax. If the number is not
* specified, 10 is used as the default. If neither 'c' nor 'l' are
* specified, 'l' is assumed. The character 'f' may be suffixed to
* the argument and is equivalent to specifying "-f" in the standard
* syntax. Look for lines marked "OBSOLESCENT".
*
* If no file is specified, standard input is assumed.
*
* P1003.2 does not specify tail's behavior when a count of 0 is given.
* It also does not specify clearly whether the first byte (line) of a
* file should be numbered 0 or 1. Historical behavior is that the
* first byte is actually number 1 (contrary to all Unix standards).
* Historically, a count of 0 (or -0) results in no output whatsoever,
* while a count of +0 results in the entire file being copied (just like
* +1). The implementor does not agree with these behaviors, but has
* copied them slavishly. Look for lines marked "HISTORICAL".
*
* Author: Norbert Schlenker
* Copyright: None. Released to the public domain.
* Reference: P1003.2 section 4.59 (draft 10)
* Notes: Under Minix, this program requires chmem =30000.
* Bugs: No internationalization support; all messages are in English.
*/
/* Force visible Posix names */
#ifndef _POSIX_SOURCE
#define _POSIX_SOURCE 1
#endif
/* External interfaces */
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
/* External interfaces that should have been standardized into <getopt.h> */
extern char *optarg;
extern int optind;
/* We expect this constant to be defined in <limits.h> in a Posix program,
* but we'll specify it here just in case it's been left out.
*/
#ifndef LINE_MAX
#define LINE_MAX 2048 /* minimum acceptable lower bound */
#endif
/* Magic numbers suggested or required by Posix specification */
#define SUCCESS 0 /* exit code in case of success */
#define FAILURE 1 /* or failure */
#define DEFAULT_COUNT 10 /* default number of lines or bytes */
#define MIN_BUFSIZE (LINE_MAX * DEFAULT_COUNT)
#define SLEEP_INTERVAL 1 /* sleep for one second intervals with -f */
#define FALSE 0
#define TRUE 1
/* Internal functions - prototyped under Minix */
int main(int argc, char **argv);
int tail(int count, int bytes, int read_until_killed);
int keep_reading(void);
void usage(void);
int main(argc, argv)
int argc;
char *argv[];
{
int cflag = FALSE;
int nflag = FALSE;
int fflag = FALSE;
int number = -DEFAULT_COUNT;
char *suffix;
int opt;
struct stat stat_buf;
/* Determining whether this invocation is via the standard syntax or
* via an obsolescent one is a nasty kludge. Here it is, but there is
* no pretense at elegance.
*/
if (argc == 1) { /* simple: default read of a pipe */
exit(tail(-DEFAULT_COUNT, 0, fflag));
}
if ((argv[1][0] == '+') || /* OBSOLESCENT */
(argv[1][0] == '-' && ((isdigit(argv[1][1])) ||
(argv[1][1] == 'l') ||
(argv[1][1] == 'c' && argv[1][2] == 'f')))) {
--argc; ++argv;
if (isdigit(argv[0][1])) {
number = (int)strtol(argv[0], &suffix, 10);
if (number == 0) { /* HISTORICAL */
if (argv[0][0] == '+')
number = 1;
else
exit(SUCCESS);
}
} else {
number = (argv[0][0] == '+') ? DEFAULT_COUNT : -DEFAULT_COUNT;
suffix = &(argv[0][1]);
}
if (*suffix != '\0') {
if (*suffix == 'c') {
cflag = TRUE;
++suffix;
}
else
if (*suffix == 'l') {
nflag = TRUE;
++suffix;
}
}
if (*suffix != '\0') {
if (*suffix == 'f') {
fflag = TRUE;
++suffix;
}
}
if (*suffix != '\0') { /* bad form: assume to be a file name */
number = -DEFAULT_COUNT;
cflag = nflag = FALSE;
fflag = FALSE;
} else {
--argc; ++argv;
}
} else { /* new standard syntax */
while ((opt = getopt(argc, argv, "c:fn:")) != EOF) {
switch (opt) {
case 'c':
cflag = TRUE;
if (*optarg == '+' || *optarg == '-')
number = atoi(optarg);
else
if (isdigit(*optarg))
number = -atoi(optarg);
else
usage();
if (number == 0) { /* HISTORICAL */
if (*optarg == '+')
number = 1;
else
exit(SUCCESS);
}
break;
case 'f':
fflag = TRUE;
break;
case 'n':
nflag = TRUE;
if (*optarg == '+' || *optarg == '-')
number = atoi(optarg);
else
if (isdigit(*optarg))
number = -atoi(optarg);
else
usage();
if (number == 0) { /* HISTORICAL */
if (*optarg == '+')
number = 1;
else
exit(SUCCESS);
}
break;
default:
usage();
/* NOTREACHED */
}
}
argc -= optind;
argv += optind;
}
if (argc > 1 || /* too many arguments */
(cflag && nflag)) { /* both bytes and lines specified */
usage();
}
if (argc > 0) { /* an actual file */
if (freopen(argv[0], "r", stdin) != stdin) {
fputs("tail: could not open ", stderr);
fputs(argv[0], stderr);
fputs("\n", stderr);
exit(FAILURE);
}
/* There is an optimization possibility here. If a file is being
* read, we need not look at the front of it. If we seek backwards
* from the end, we can (potentially) avoid looking at most of the
* file. Some systems fail when asked to seek backwards to a point
* before the start of the file, so we avoid that possibility.
*/
if (number < 0 && fstat(fileno(stdin), &stat_buf) == 0) {
long offset = cflag ? (long)number : (long)number * LINE_MAX;
if (-offset < stat_buf.st_size)
fseek(stdin, offset, SEEK_END);
}
} else {
fflag = FALSE; /* force -f off when reading a pipe */
}
exit(tail(number, cflag, fflag));
/* NOTREACHED */
}
int tail(count, bytes, read_until_killed)
int count; /* lines or bytes desired */
int bytes; /* TRUE if we want bytes */
int read_until_killed; /* keep reading at EOF */
{
int c;
char *buf; /* pointer to input buffer */
char *buf_end; /* and one past its end */
char *start; /* pointer to first desired character in buf */
char *finish; /* pointer past last desired character */
int wrapped_once = FALSE; /* TRUE after buf has been filled once */
/* This is magic. If count is positive, it means start at the count'th
* line or byte, with the first line or byte considered number 1. Thus,
* we want to SKIP one less line or byte than the number specified. In
* the negative case, we look backward from the end of the file for the
* (count + 1)'th newline or byte, so we really want the count to be one
* LARGER than was specified (in absolute value). In either case, the
* right thing to do is:
*/
--count;
/* Count is positive: skip the desired lines or bytes and then copy. */
if (count >= 0) {
while (count > 0 && (c = getchar()) != EOF) {
if (bytes || c == '\n')
--count;
}
while ((c = getchar()) != EOF) {
if (putchar(c) == EOF)
return FAILURE;
}
if (read_until_killed)
return keep_reading();
return ferror(stdin) ? FAILURE : SUCCESS;
}
/* Count is negative: allocate a reasonably large buffer. */
if ((buf = (char *)malloc(MIN_BUFSIZE + 1)) == (char *)NULL) {
fputs("tail: out of memory\n", stderr);
return FAILURE;
}
buf_end = buf + (MIN_BUFSIZE + 1);
/* Read the entire file into the buffer. */
finish = buf;
while ((c = getchar()) != EOF) {
*finish++ = c;
if (finish == buf_end) {
finish = buf;
wrapped_once = TRUE;
}
}
if (ferror(stdin))
return FAILURE;
/* Back up inside the buffer. The count has already been adjusted to
* back up exactly one character too far, so we will bump the buffer
* pointer once after we're done.
*
* BUG: For large line counts, the buffer may not be large enough to
* hold all the lines. The specification allows the program to
* fail in such a case - this program will simply dump the entire
* buffer's contents as its best attempt at the desired behavior.
*/
if (finish != buf || wrapped_once) { /* file was not empty */
start = (finish == buf) ? buf_end - 1 : finish - 1;
while (start != finish) {
if ((bytes || *start == '\n') && ++count == 0)
break;
if (start == buf) {
start = buf_end - 1;
if (!wrapped_once) /* never wrapped: stop now */
break;
} else {
--start;
}
}
if (++start == buf_end) { /* bump after going too far */
start = buf;
}
if (finish > start) {
fwrite(start, 1, finish - start, stdout);
} else {
fwrite(start, 1, buf_end - start, stdout);
fwrite(buf, 1, finish - buf, stdout);
}
}
if (read_until_killed)
return keep_reading();
return ferror(stdout) ? FAILURE : SUCCESS;
}
/* Wake at intervals to reread standard input. Copy anything read to
* standard output and then go to sleep again.
*/
int keep_reading()
{
char buf[1024];
int n;
int i;
off_t pos;
struct stat st;
fflush(stdout);
pos = lseek(0, (off_t) 0, SEEK_CUR);
for (;;) {
for (i = 0; i < 60; i++) {
while ((n = read(0, buf, sizeof(buf))) > 0) {
if (write(1, buf, n) < 0) return FAILURE;
}
if (n < 0) return FAILURE;
sleep(SLEEP_INTERVAL);
}
/* Rewind if suddenly truncated. */
if (pos != -1) {
if (fstat(0, &st) == -1) {
pos = -1;
} else
if (st.st_size < pos) {
pos = lseek(0, (off_t) 0, SEEK_SET);
} else {
pos = st.st_size;
}
}
}
}
/* Tell the user the standard syntax. */
void usage()
{
fputs("Usage: tail [-f] [-c number | -n number] [file]\n", stderr);
exit(FAILURE);
}