/* Unix SMB/CIFS implementation. Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2005 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. */ /* a replacement for opendir/readdir/telldir/seekdir/closedir for BSD systems This is needed because the existing directory handling in FreeBSD and OpenBSD (and possibly NetBSD) doesn't correctly handle unlink() on files in a directory where telldir() has been used. On a block boundary it will occasionally miss a file when seekdir() is used to return to a position previously recorded with telldir(). This also fixes a severe performance and memory usage problem with telldir() on BSD systems. Each call to telldir() in BSD adds an entry to a linked list, and those entries are cleaned up on closedir(). This means with a large directory closedir() can take an arbitrary amount of time, causing network timeouts as millions of telldir() entries are freed Note! This replacement code is not portable. It relies on getdents() always leaving the file descriptor at a seek offset that is a multiple of DIR_BUF_SIZE. If the code detects that this doesn't happen then it will abort(). It also does not handle directories with offsets larger than can be stored in a long, This code is available under other free software licenses as well. Contact the author. */ #include <stdlib.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <errno.h> #include <fcntl.h> #include <dirent.h> #define DIR_BUF_BITS 9 #define DIR_BUF_SIZE (1<<DIR_BUF_BITS) struct dir_buf { int fd; int nbytes, ofs; off_t seekpos; char buf[DIR_BUF_SIZE]; }; DIR *opendir(const char *dname) { struct dir_buf *d; d = malloc(sizeof(*d)); if (d == NULL) { errno = ENOMEM; return NULL; } d->fd = open(dname, O_RDONLY); if (d->fd == -1) { free(d); return NULL; } d->ofs = 0; d->seekpos = 0; d->nbytes = 0; return (DIR *)d; } struct dirent *readdir(DIR *dir) { struct dir_buf *d = (struct dir_buf *)dir; struct dirent *de; if (d->ofs >= d->nbytes) { d->seekpos = lseek(d->fd, 0, SEEK_CUR); d->nbytes = getdents(d->fd, d->buf, DIR_BUF_SIZE); d->ofs = 0; } if (d->ofs >= d->nbytes) { return NULL; } de = (struct dirent *)&d->buf[d->ofs]; d->ofs += de->d_reclen; return de; } long telldir(DIR *dir) { struct dir_buf *d = (struct dir_buf *)dir; if (d->ofs >= d->nbytes) { d->seekpos = lseek(d->fd, 0, SEEK_CUR); d->ofs = 0; d->nbytes = 0; } /* this relies on seekpos always being a multiple of DIR_BUF_SIZE. Is that always true on BSD systems? */ if (d->seekpos & (DIR_BUF_SIZE-1)) { abort(); } return d->seekpos + d->ofs; } void seekdir(DIR *dir, long ofs) { struct dir_buf *d = (struct dir_buf *)dir; d->seekpos = lseek(d->fd, ofs & ~(DIR_BUF_SIZE-1), SEEK_SET); d->nbytes = getdents(d->fd, d->buf, DIR_BUF_SIZE); d->ofs = 0; while (d->ofs < (ofs & (DIR_BUF_SIZE-1))) { if (readdir(dir) == NULL) break; } } void rewinddir(DIR *dir) { seekdir(dir, 0); } int closedir(DIR *dir) { struct dir_buf *d = (struct dir_buf *)dir; int r = close(d->fd); if (r != 0) { return r; } free(d); return 0; } #ifndef dirfd /* darn, this is a macro on some systems. */ int dirfd(DIR *dir) { struct dir_buf *d = (struct dir_buf *)dir; return d->fd; } #endif