1 |
/* $Header$ */
|
2 |
|
3 |
/*
|
4 |
* tclWinPipe.c --
|
5 |
*
|
6 |
* This file implements the Windows-specific exec pipeline functions,
|
7 |
* the "pipe" channel driver, and the "pid" Tcl command.
|
8 |
*
|
9 |
* Copyright (c) 1996-1997 by Sun Microsystems, Inc.
|
10 |
*
|
11 |
* See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
|
12 |
* of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
|
13 |
*
|
14 |
* RCS: @(#) $Id: tclwinpipe.c,v 1.1.1.1 2001/06/13 04:49:50 dtashley Exp $
|
15 |
*/
|
16 |
|
17 |
#include "tclWinInt.h"
|
18 |
|
19 |
#include <dos.h>
|
20 |
#include <fcntl.h>
|
21 |
#include <io.h>
|
22 |
#include <sys/stat.h>
|
23 |
|
24 |
/*
|
25 |
* The following variable is used to tell whether this module has been
|
26 |
* initialized.
|
27 |
*/
|
28 |
|
29 |
static int initialized = 0;
|
30 |
|
31 |
/*
|
32 |
* The pipeMutex locks around access to the initialized and procList variables,
|
33 |
* and it is used to protect background threads from being terminated while
|
34 |
* they are using APIs that hold locks.
|
35 |
*/
|
36 |
|
37 |
TCL_DECLARE_MUTEX(pipeMutex)
|
38 |
|
39 |
/*
|
40 |
* The following defines identify the various types of applications that
|
41 |
* run under windows. There is special case code for the various types.
|
42 |
*/
|
43 |
|
44 |
#define APPL_NONE 0
|
45 |
#define APPL_DOS 1
|
46 |
#define APPL_WIN3X 2
|
47 |
#define APPL_WIN32 3
|
48 |
|
49 |
/*
|
50 |
* The following constants and structures are used to encapsulate the state
|
51 |
* of various types of files used in a pipeline.
|
52 |
* This used to have a 1 && 2 that supported Win32s.
|
53 |
*/
|
54 |
|
55 |
#define WIN_FILE 3 /* Basic Win32 file. */
|
56 |
|
57 |
/*
|
58 |
* This structure encapsulates the common state associated with all file
|
59 |
* types used in a pipeline.
|
60 |
*/
|
61 |
|
62 |
typedef struct WinFile {
|
63 |
int type; /* One of the file types defined above. */
|
64 |
HANDLE handle; /* Open file handle. */
|
65 |
} WinFile;
|
66 |
|
67 |
/*
|
68 |
* This list is used to map from pids to process handles.
|
69 |
*/
|
70 |
|
71 |
typedef struct ProcInfo {
|
72 |
HANDLE hProcess;
|
73 |
DWORD dwProcessId;
|
74 |
struct ProcInfo *nextPtr;
|
75 |
} ProcInfo;
|
76 |
|
77 |
static ProcInfo *procList;
|
78 |
|
79 |
/*
|
80 |
* Bit masks used in the flags field of the PipeInfo structure below.
|
81 |
*/
|
82 |
|
83 |
#define PIPE_PENDING (1<<0) /* Message is pending in the queue. */
|
84 |
#define PIPE_ASYNC (1<<1) /* Channel is non-blocking. */
|
85 |
|
86 |
/*
|
87 |
* Bit masks used in the sharedFlags field of the PipeInfo structure below.
|
88 |
*/
|
89 |
|
90 |
#define PIPE_EOF (1<<2) /* Pipe has reached EOF. */
|
91 |
#define PIPE_EXTRABYTE (1<<3) /* The reader thread has consumed one byte. */
|
92 |
|
93 |
/*
|
94 |
* This structure describes per-instance data for a pipe based channel.
|
95 |
*/
|
96 |
|
97 |
typedef struct PipeInfo {
|
98 |
struct PipeInfo *nextPtr; /* Pointer to next registered pipe. */
|
99 |
Tcl_Channel channel; /* Pointer to channel structure. */
|
100 |
int validMask; /* OR'ed combination of TCL_READABLE,
|
101 |
* TCL_WRITABLE, or TCL_EXCEPTION: indicates
|
102 |
* which operations are valid on the file. */
|
103 |
int watchMask; /* OR'ed combination of TCL_READABLE,
|
104 |
* TCL_WRITABLE, or TCL_EXCEPTION: indicates
|
105 |
* which events should be reported. */
|
106 |
int flags; /* State flags, see above for a list. */
|
107 |
TclFile readFile; /* Output from pipe. */
|
108 |
TclFile writeFile; /* Input from pipe. */
|
109 |
TclFile errorFile; /* Error output from pipe. */
|
110 |
int numPids; /* Number of processes attached to pipe. */
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111 |
Tcl_Pid *pidPtr; /* Pids of attached processes. */
|
112 |
Tcl_ThreadId threadId; /* Thread to which events should be reported.
|
113 |
* This value is used by the reader/writer
|
114 |
* threads. */
|
115 |
HANDLE writeThread; /* Handle to writer thread. */
|
116 |
HANDLE readThread; /* Handle to reader thread. */
|
117 |
HANDLE writable; /* Manual-reset event to signal when the
|
118 |
* writer thread has finished waiting for
|
119 |
* the current buffer to be written. */
|
120 |
HANDLE readable; /* Manual-reset event to signal when the
|
121 |
* reader thread has finished waiting for
|
122 |
* input. */
|
123 |
HANDLE startWriter; /* Auto-reset event used by the main thread to
|
124 |
* signal when the writer thread should attempt
|
125 |
* to write to the pipe. */
|
126 |
HANDLE startReader; /* Auto-reset event used by the main thread to
|
127 |
* signal when the reader thread should attempt
|
128 |
* to read from the pipe. */
|
129 |
DWORD writeError; /* An error caused by the last background
|
130 |
* write. Set to 0 if no error has been
|
131 |
* detected. This word is shared with the
|
132 |
* writer thread so access must be
|
133 |
* synchronized with the writable object.
|
134 |
*/
|
135 |
char *writeBuf; /* Current background output buffer.
|
136 |
* Access is synchronized with the writable
|
137 |
* object. */
|
138 |
int writeBufLen; /* Size of write buffer. Access is
|
139 |
* synchronized with the writable
|
140 |
* object. */
|
141 |
int toWrite; /* Current amount to be written. Access is
|
142 |
* synchronized with the writable object. */
|
143 |
int readFlags; /* Flags that are shared with the reader
|
144 |
* thread. Access is synchronized with the
|
145 |
* readable object. */
|
146 |
char extraByte; /* Buffer for extra character consumed by
|
147 |
* reader thread. This byte is shared with
|
148 |
* the reader thread so access must be
|
149 |
* synchronized with the readable object. */
|
150 |
} PipeInfo;
|
151 |
|
152 |
typedef struct ThreadSpecificData {
|
153 |
/*
|
154 |
* The following pointer refers to the head of the list of pipes
|
155 |
* that are being watched for file events.
|
156 |
*/
|
157 |
|
158 |
PipeInfo *firstPipePtr;
|
159 |
} ThreadSpecificData;
|
160 |
|
161 |
static Tcl_ThreadDataKey dataKey;
|
162 |
|
163 |
/*
|
164 |
* The following structure is what is added to the Tcl event queue when
|
165 |
* pipe events are generated.
|
166 |
*/
|
167 |
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168 |
typedef struct PipeEvent {
|
169 |
Tcl_Event header; /* Information that is standard for
|
170 |
* all events. */
|
171 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr; /* Pointer to pipe info structure. Note
|
172 |
* that we still have to verify that the
|
173 |
* pipe exists before dereferencing this
|
174 |
* pointer. */
|
175 |
} PipeEvent;
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176 |
|
177 |
/*
|
178 |
* Declarations for functions used only in this file.
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*/
|
180 |
|
181 |
static int ApplicationType(Tcl_Interp *interp,
|
182 |
const char *fileName, char *fullName);
|
183 |
static void BuildCommandLine(const char *executable, int argc,
|
184 |
char **argv, Tcl_DString *linePtr);
|
185 |
static BOOL HasConsole(void);
|
186 |
static int PipeBlockModeProc(ClientData instanceData, int mode);
|
187 |
static void PipeCheckProc(ClientData clientData, int flags);
|
188 |
static int PipeClose2Proc(ClientData instanceData,
|
189 |
Tcl_Interp *interp, int flags);
|
190 |
static int PipeEventProc(Tcl_Event *evPtr, int flags);
|
191 |
static void PipeExitHandler(ClientData clientData);
|
192 |
static int PipeGetHandleProc(ClientData instanceData,
|
193 |
int direction, ClientData *handlePtr);
|
194 |
static void PipeInit(void);
|
195 |
static int PipeInputProc(ClientData instanceData, char *buf,
|
196 |
int toRead, int *errorCode);
|
197 |
static int PipeOutputProc(ClientData instanceData, char *buf,
|
198 |
int toWrite, int *errorCode);
|
199 |
static DWORD WINAPI PipeReaderThread(LPVOID arg);
|
200 |
static void PipeSetupProc(ClientData clientData, int flags);
|
201 |
static void PipeWatchProc(ClientData instanceData, int mask);
|
202 |
static DWORD WINAPI PipeWriterThread(LPVOID arg);
|
203 |
static void ProcExitHandler(ClientData clientData);
|
204 |
static int TempFileName(WCHAR name[MAX_PATH]);
|
205 |
static int WaitForRead(PipeInfo *infoPtr, int blocking);
|
206 |
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207 |
/*
|
208 |
* This structure describes the channel type structure for command pipe
|
209 |
* based IO.
|
210 |
*/
|
211 |
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212 |
static Tcl_ChannelType pipeChannelType = {
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213 |
"pipe", /* Type name. */
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PipeBlockModeProc, /* Set blocking or non-blocking mode.*/
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TCL_CLOSE2PROC, /* Close proc. */
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216 |
PipeInputProc, /* Input proc. */
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217 |
PipeOutputProc, /* Output proc. */
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218 |
NULL, /* Seek proc. */
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219 |
NULL, /* Set option proc. */
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220 |
NULL, /* Get option proc. */
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221 |
PipeWatchProc, /* Set up notifier to watch the channel. */
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222 |
PipeGetHandleProc, /* Get an OS handle from channel. */
|
223 |
PipeClose2Proc
|
224 |
};
|
225 |
|
226 |
/*
|
227 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
228 |
*
|
229 |
* PipeInit --
|
230 |
*
|
231 |
* This function initializes the static variables for this file.
|
232 |
*
|
233 |
* Results:
|
234 |
* None.
|
235 |
*
|
236 |
* Side effects:
|
237 |
* Creates a new event source.
|
238 |
*
|
239 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
240 |
*/
|
241 |
|
242 |
static void
|
243 |
PipeInit()
|
244 |
{
|
245 |
ThreadSpecificData *tsdPtr;
|
246 |
|
247 |
/*
|
248 |
* Check the initialized flag first, then check again in the mutex.
|
249 |
* This is a speed enhancement.
|
250 |
*/
|
251 |
|
252 |
if (!initialized) {
|
253 |
Tcl_MutexLock(&pipeMutex);
|
254 |
if (!initialized) {
|
255 |
initialized = 1;
|
256 |
procList = NULL;
|
257 |
Tcl_CreateExitHandler(ProcExitHandler, NULL);
|
258 |
}
|
259 |
Tcl_MutexUnlock(&pipeMutex);
|
260 |
}
|
261 |
|
262 |
tsdPtr = (ThreadSpecificData *)TclThreadDataKeyGet(&dataKey);
|
263 |
if (tsdPtr == NULL) {
|
264 |
tsdPtr = TCL_TSD_INIT(&dataKey);
|
265 |
tsdPtr->firstPipePtr = NULL;
|
266 |
Tcl_CreateEventSource(PipeSetupProc, PipeCheckProc, NULL);
|
267 |
Tcl_CreateThreadExitHandler(PipeExitHandler, NULL);
|
268 |
}
|
269 |
}
|
270 |
|
271 |
/*
|
272 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
273 |
*
|
274 |
* PipeExitHandler --
|
275 |
*
|
276 |
* This function is called to cleanup the pipe module before
|
277 |
* Tcl is unloaded.
|
278 |
*
|
279 |
* Results:
|
280 |
* None.
|
281 |
*
|
282 |
* Side effects:
|
283 |
* Removes the pipe event source.
|
284 |
*
|
285 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
286 |
*/
|
287 |
|
288 |
static void
|
289 |
PipeExitHandler(
|
290 |
ClientData clientData) /* Old window proc */
|
291 |
{
|
292 |
Tcl_DeleteEventSource(PipeSetupProc, PipeCheckProc, NULL);
|
293 |
}
|
294 |
|
295 |
/*
|
296 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
297 |
*
|
298 |
* ProcExitHandler --
|
299 |
*
|
300 |
* This function is called to cleanup the process list before
|
301 |
* Tcl is unloaded.
|
302 |
*
|
303 |
* Results:
|
304 |
* None.
|
305 |
*
|
306 |
* Side effects:
|
307 |
* Resets the process list.
|
308 |
*
|
309 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
310 |
*/
|
311 |
|
312 |
static void
|
313 |
ProcExitHandler(
|
314 |
ClientData clientData) /* Old window proc */
|
315 |
{
|
316 |
Tcl_MutexLock(&pipeMutex);
|
317 |
initialized = 0;
|
318 |
Tcl_MutexUnlock(&pipeMutex);
|
319 |
}
|
320 |
|
321 |
/*
|
322 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
323 |
*
|
324 |
* PipeSetupProc --
|
325 |
*
|
326 |
* This procedure is invoked before Tcl_DoOneEvent blocks waiting
|
327 |
* for an event.
|
328 |
*
|
329 |
* Results:
|
330 |
* None.
|
331 |
*
|
332 |
* Side effects:
|
333 |
* Adjusts the block time if needed.
|
334 |
*
|
335 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
336 |
*/
|
337 |
|
338 |
void
|
339 |
PipeSetupProc(
|
340 |
ClientData data, /* Not used. */
|
341 |
int flags) /* Event flags as passed to Tcl_DoOneEvent. */
|
342 |
{
|
343 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr;
|
344 |
Tcl_Time blockTime = { 0, 0 };
|
345 |
int block = 1;
|
346 |
WinFile *filePtr;
|
347 |
ThreadSpecificData *tsdPtr = TCL_TSD_INIT(&dataKey);
|
348 |
|
349 |
if (!(flags & TCL_FILE_EVENTS)) {
|
350 |
return;
|
351 |
}
|
352 |
|
353 |
/*
|
354 |
* Look to see if any events are already pending. If they are, poll.
|
355 |
*/
|
356 |
|
357 |
for (infoPtr = tsdPtr->firstPipePtr; infoPtr != NULL;
|
358 |
infoPtr = infoPtr->nextPtr) {
|
359 |
if (infoPtr->watchMask & TCL_WRITABLE) {
|
360 |
filePtr = (WinFile*) infoPtr->writeFile;
|
361 |
if (WaitForSingleObject(infoPtr->writable, 0) != WAIT_TIMEOUT) {
|
362 |
block = 0;
|
363 |
}
|
364 |
}
|
365 |
if (infoPtr->watchMask & TCL_READABLE) {
|
366 |
filePtr = (WinFile*) infoPtr->readFile;
|
367 |
if (WaitForRead(infoPtr, 0) >= 0) {
|
368 |
block = 0;
|
369 |
}
|
370 |
}
|
371 |
}
|
372 |
if (!block) {
|
373 |
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime(&blockTime);
|
374 |
}
|
375 |
}
|
376 |
|
377 |
/*
|
378 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
379 |
*
|
380 |
* PipeCheckProc --
|
381 |
*
|
382 |
* This procedure is called by Tcl_DoOneEvent to check the pipe
|
383 |
* event source for events.
|
384 |
*
|
385 |
* Results:
|
386 |
* None.
|
387 |
*
|
388 |
* Side effects:
|
389 |
* May queue an event.
|
390 |
*
|
391 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
392 |
*/
|
393 |
|
394 |
static void
|
395 |
PipeCheckProc(
|
396 |
ClientData data, /* Not used. */
|
397 |
int flags) /* Event flags as passed to Tcl_DoOneEvent. */
|
398 |
{
|
399 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr;
|
400 |
PipeEvent *evPtr;
|
401 |
WinFile *filePtr;
|
402 |
int needEvent;
|
403 |
ThreadSpecificData *tsdPtr = TCL_TSD_INIT(&dataKey);
|
404 |
|
405 |
if (!(flags & TCL_FILE_EVENTS)) {
|
406 |
return;
|
407 |
}
|
408 |
|
409 |
/*
|
410 |
* Queue events for any ready pipes that don't already have events
|
411 |
* queued.
|
412 |
*/
|
413 |
|
414 |
for (infoPtr = tsdPtr->firstPipePtr; infoPtr != NULL;
|
415 |
infoPtr = infoPtr->nextPtr) {
|
416 |
if (infoPtr->flags & PIPE_PENDING) {
|
417 |
continue;
|
418 |
}
|
419 |
|
420 |
/*
|
421 |
* Queue an event if the pipe is signaled for reading or writing.
|
422 |
*/
|
423 |
|
424 |
needEvent = 0;
|
425 |
filePtr = (WinFile*) infoPtr->writeFile;
|
426 |
if ((infoPtr->watchMask & TCL_WRITABLE) &&
|
427 |
(WaitForSingleObject(infoPtr->writable, 0) != WAIT_TIMEOUT)) {
|
428 |
needEvent = 1;
|
429 |
}
|
430 |
|
431 |
filePtr = (WinFile*) infoPtr->readFile;
|
432 |
if ((infoPtr->watchMask & TCL_READABLE) &&
|
433 |
(WaitForRead(infoPtr, 0) >= 0)) {
|
434 |
needEvent = 1;
|
435 |
}
|
436 |
|
437 |
if (needEvent) {
|
438 |
infoPtr->flags |= PIPE_PENDING;
|
439 |
evPtr = (PipeEvent *) ckalloc(sizeof(PipeEvent));
|
440 |
evPtr->header.proc = PipeEventProc;
|
441 |
evPtr->infoPtr = infoPtr;
|
442 |
Tcl_QueueEvent((Tcl_Event *) evPtr, TCL_QUEUE_TAIL);
|
443 |
}
|
444 |
}
|
445 |
}
|
446 |
|
447 |
/*
|
448 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
449 |
*
|
450 |
* TclWinMakeFile --
|
451 |
*
|
452 |
* This function constructs a new TclFile from a given data and
|
453 |
* type value.
|
454 |
*
|
455 |
* Results:
|
456 |
* Returns a newly allocated WinFile as a TclFile.
|
457 |
*
|
458 |
* Side effects:
|
459 |
* None.
|
460 |
*
|
461 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
462 |
*/
|
463 |
|
464 |
TclFile
|
465 |
TclWinMakeFile(
|
466 |
HANDLE handle) /* Type-specific data. */
|
467 |
{
|
468 |
WinFile *filePtr;
|
469 |
|
470 |
filePtr = (WinFile *) ckalloc(sizeof(WinFile));
|
471 |
filePtr->type = WIN_FILE;
|
472 |
filePtr->handle = handle;
|
473 |
|
474 |
return (TclFile)filePtr;
|
475 |
}
|
476 |
|
477 |
/*
|
478 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
479 |
*
|
480 |
* TempFileName --
|
481 |
*
|
482 |
* Gets a temporary file name and deals with the fact that the
|
483 |
* temporary file path provided by Windows may not actually exist
|
484 |
* if the TMP or TEMP environment variables refer to a
|
485 |
* non-existent directory.
|
486 |
*
|
487 |
* Results:
|
488 |
* 0 if error, non-zero otherwise. If non-zero is returned, the
|
489 |
* name buffer will be filled with a name that can be used to
|
490 |
* construct a temporary file.
|
491 |
*
|
492 |
* Side effects:
|
493 |
* None.
|
494 |
*
|
495 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
496 |
*/
|
497 |
|
498 |
static int
|
499 |
TempFileName(name)
|
500 |
WCHAR name[MAX_PATH]; /* Buffer in which name for temporary
|
501 |
* file gets stored. */
|
502 |
{
|
503 |
TCHAR *prefix;
|
504 |
|
505 |
prefix = (tclWinProcs->useWide) ? (TCHAR *) L"TCL" : (TCHAR *) "TCL";
|
506 |
if ((*tclWinProcs->getTempPathProc)(MAX_PATH, name) != 0) {
|
507 |
if ((*tclWinProcs->getTempFileNameProc)((TCHAR *) name, prefix, 0,
|
508 |
name) != 0) {
|
509 |
return 1;
|
510 |
}
|
511 |
}
|
512 |
if (tclWinProcs->useWide) {
|
513 |
((WCHAR *) name)[0] = '.';
|
514 |
((WCHAR *) name)[1] = '\0';
|
515 |
} else {
|
516 |
((char *) name)[0] = '.';
|
517 |
((char *) name)[1] = '\0';
|
518 |
}
|
519 |
return (*tclWinProcs->getTempFileNameProc)((TCHAR *) name, prefix, 0,
|
520 |
name);
|
521 |
}
|
522 |
|
523 |
/*
|
524 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
525 |
*
|
526 |
* TclpMakeFile --
|
527 |
*
|
528 |
* Make a TclFile from a channel.
|
529 |
*
|
530 |
* Results:
|
531 |
* Returns a new TclFile or NULL on failure.
|
532 |
*
|
533 |
* Side effects:
|
534 |
* None.
|
535 |
*
|
536 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
537 |
*/
|
538 |
|
539 |
TclFile
|
540 |
TclpMakeFile(channel, direction)
|
541 |
Tcl_Channel channel; /* Channel to get file from. */
|
542 |
int direction; /* Either TCL_READABLE or TCL_WRITABLE. */
|
543 |
{
|
544 |
HANDLE handle;
|
545 |
|
546 |
if (Tcl_GetChannelHandle(channel, direction,
|
547 |
(ClientData *) &handle) == TCL_OK) {
|
548 |
return TclWinMakeFile(handle);
|
549 |
} else {
|
550 |
return (TclFile) NULL;
|
551 |
}
|
552 |
}
|
553 |
|
554 |
/*
|
555 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
556 |
*
|
557 |
* TclpOpenFile --
|
558 |
*
|
559 |
* This function opens files for use in a pipeline.
|
560 |
*
|
561 |
* Results:
|
562 |
* Returns a newly allocated TclFile structure containing the
|
563 |
* file handle.
|
564 |
*
|
565 |
* Side effects:
|
566 |
* None.
|
567 |
*
|
568 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
569 |
*/
|
570 |
|
571 |
TclFile
|
572 |
TclpOpenFile(path, mode)
|
573 |
CONST char *path; /* The name of the file to open. */
|
574 |
int mode; /* In what mode to open the file? */
|
575 |
{
|
576 |
HANDLE handle;
|
577 |
DWORD accessMode, createMode, shareMode, flags;
|
578 |
Tcl_DString ds;
|
579 |
TCHAR *nativePath;
|
580 |
|
581 |
/*
|
582 |
* Map the access bits to the NT access mode.
|
583 |
*/
|
584 |
|
585 |
switch (mode & (O_RDONLY | O_WRONLY | O_RDWR)) {
|
586 |
case O_RDONLY:
|
587 |
accessMode = GENERIC_READ;
|
588 |
break;
|
589 |
case O_WRONLY:
|
590 |
accessMode = GENERIC_WRITE;
|
591 |
break;
|
592 |
case O_RDWR:
|
593 |
accessMode = (GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE);
|
594 |
break;
|
595 |
default:
|
596 |
TclWinConvertError(ERROR_INVALID_FUNCTION);
|
597 |
return NULL;
|
598 |
}
|
599 |
|
600 |
/*
|
601 |
* Map the creation flags to the NT create mode.
|
602 |
*/
|
603 |
|
604 |
switch (mode & (O_CREAT | O_EXCL | O_TRUNC)) {
|
605 |
case (O_CREAT | O_EXCL):
|
606 |
case (O_CREAT | O_EXCL | O_TRUNC):
|
607 |
createMode = CREATE_NEW;
|
608 |
break;
|
609 |
case (O_CREAT | O_TRUNC):
|
610 |
createMode = CREATE_ALWAYS;
|
611 |
break;
|
612 |
case O_CREAT:
|
613 |
createMode = OPEN_ALWAYS;
|
614 |
break;
|
615 |
case O_TRUNC:
|
616 |
case (O_TRUNC | O_EXCL):
|
617 |
createMode = TRUNCATE_EXISTING;
|
618 |
break;
|
619 |
default:
|
620 |
createMode = OPEN_EXISTING;
|
621 |
break;
|
622 |
}
|
623 |
|
624 |
nativePath = Tcl_WinUtfToTChar(path, -1, &ds);
|
625 |
|
626 |
/*
|
627 |
* If the file is not being created, use the existing file attributes.
|
628 |
*/
|
629 |
|
630 |
flags = 0;
|
631 |
if (!(mode & O_CREAT)) {
|
632 |
flags = (*tclWinProcs->getFileAttributesProc)(nativePath);
|
633 |
if (flags == 0xFFFFFFFF) {
|
634 |
flags = 0;
|
635 |
}
|
636 |
}
|
637 |
|
638 |
/*
|
639 |
* Set up the file sharing mode. We want to allow simultaneous access.
|
640 |
*/
|
641 |
|
642 |
shareMode = FILE_SHARE_READ | FILE_SHARE_WRITE;
|
643 |
|
644 |
/*
|
645 |
* Now we get to create the file.
|
646 |
*/
|
647 |
|
648 |
handle = (*tclWinProcs->createFileProc)(nativePath, accessMode,
|
649 |
shareMode, NULL, createMode, flags, NULL);
|
650 |
Tcl_DStringFree(&ds);
|
651 |
|
652 |
if (handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
653 |
DWORD err;
|
654 |
|
655 |
err = GetLastError();
|
656 |
if ((err & 0xffffL) == ERROR_OPEN_FAILED) {
|
657 |
err = (mode & O_CREAT) ? ERROR_FILE_EXISTS : ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND;
|
658 |
}
|
659 |
TclWinConvertError(err);
|
660 |
return NULL;
|
661 |
}
|
662 |
|
663 |
/*
|
664 |
* Seek to the end of file if we are writing.
|
665 |
*/
|
666 |
|
667 |
if (mode & O_WRONLY) {
|
668 |
SetFilePointer(handle, 0, NULL, FILE_END);
|
669 |
}
|
670 |
|
671 |
return TclWinMakeFile(handle);
|
672 |
}
|
673 |
|
674 |
/*
|
675 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
676 |
*
|
677 |
* TclpCreateTempFile --
|
678 |
*
|
679 |
* This function opens a unique file with the property that it
|
680 |
* will be deleted when its file handle is closed. The temporary
|
681 |
* file is created in the system temporary directory.
|
682 |
*
|
683 |
* Results:
|
684 |
* Returns a valid TclFile, or NULL on failure.
|
685 |
*
|
686 |
* Side effects:
|
687 |
* Creates a new temporary file.
|
688 |
*
|
689 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
690 |
*/
|
691 |
|
692 |
TclFile
|
693 |
TclpCreateTempFile(contents)
|
694 |
CONST char *contents; /* String to write into temp file, or NULL. */
|
695 |
{
|
696 |
WCHAR name[MAX_PATH];
|
697 |
CONST char *native;
|
698 |
Tcl_DString dstring;
|
699 |
HANDLE handle;
|
700 |
|
701 |
if (TempFileName(name) == 0) {
|
702 |
return NULL;
|
703 |
}
|
704 |
|
705 |
handle = (*tclWinProcs->createFileProc)((TCHAR *) name,
|
706 |
GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE, 0, NULL, CREATE_ALWAYS,
|
707 |
FILE_ATTRIBUTE_TEMPORARY|FILE_FLAG_DELETE_ON_CLOSE, NULL);
|
708 |
if (handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
709 |
goto error;
|
710 |
}
|
711 |
|
712 |
/*
|
713 |
* Write the file out, doing line translations on the way.
|
714 |
*/
|
715 |
|
716 |
if (contents != NULL) {
|
717 |
DWORD result, length;
|
718 |
CONST char *p;
|
719 |
|
720 |
/*
|
721 |
* Convert the contents from UTF to native encoding
|
722 |
*/
|
723 |
native = Tcl_UtfToExternalDString(NULL, contents, -1, &dstring);
|
724 |
|
725 |
for (p = native; *p != '\0'; p++) {
|
726 |
if (*p == '\n') {
|
727 |
length = p - native;
|
728 |
if (length > 0) {
|
729 |
if (!WriteFile(handle, native, length, &result, NULL)) {
|
730 |
goto error;
|
731 |
}
|
732 |
}
|
733 |
if (!WriteFile(handle, "\r\n", 2, &result, NULL)) {
|
734 |
goto error;
|
735 |
}
|
736 |
native = p+1;
|
737 |
}
|
738 |
}
|
739 |
length = p - native;
|
740 |
if (length > 0) {
|
741 |
if (!WriteFile(handle, native, length, &result, NULL)) {
|
742 |
goto error;
|
743 |
}
|
744 |
}
|
745 |
Tcl_DStringFree(&dstring);
|
746 |
if (SetFilePointer(handle, 0, NULL, FILE_BEGIN) == 0xFFFFFFFF) {
|
747 |
goto error;
|
748 |
}
|
749 |
}
|
750 |
|
751 |
return TclWinMakeFile(handle);
|
752 |
|
753 |
error:
|
754 |
/* Free the native representation of the contents if necessary */
|
755 |
if (contents != NULL) {
|
756 |
Tcl_DStringFree(&dstring);
|
757 |
}
|
758 |
|
759 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
760 |
CloseHandle(handle);
|
761 |
(*tclWinProcs->deleteFileProc)((TCHAR *) name);
|
762 |
return NULL;
|
763 |
}
|
764 |
|
765 |
/*
|
766 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
767 |
*
|
768 |
* TclpCreatePipe --
|
769 |
*
|
770 |
* Creates an anonymous pipe.
|
771 |
*
|
772 |
* Results:
|
773 |
* Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure.
|
774 |
*
|
775 |
* Side effects:
|
776 |
* Creates a pipe.
|
777 |
*
|
778 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
779 |
*/
|
780 |
|
781 |
int
|
782 |
TclpCreatePipe(
|
783 |
TclFile *readPipe, /* Location to store file handle for
|
784 |
* read side of pipe. */
|
785 |
TclFile *writePipe) /* Location to store file handle for
|
786 |
* write side of pipe. */
|
787 |
{
|
788 |
HANDLE readHandle, writeHandle;
|
789 |
|
790 |
if (CreatePipe(&readHandle, &writeHandle, NULL, 0) != 0) {
|
791 |
*readPipe = TclWinMakeFile(readHandle);
|
792 |
*writePipe = TclWinMakeFile(writeHandle);
|
793 |
return 1;
|
794 |
}
|
795 |
|
796 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
797 |
return 0;
|
798 |
}
|
799 |
|
800 |
/*
|
801 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
802 |
*
|
803 |
* TclpCloseFile --
|
804 |
*
|
805 |
* Closes a pipeline file handle. These handles are created by
|
806 |
* TclpOpenFile, TclpCreatePipe, or TclpMakeFile.
|
807 |
*
|
808 |
* Results:
|
809 |
* 0 on success, -1 on failure.
|
810 |
*
|
811 |
* Side effects:
|
812 |
* The file is closed and deallocated.
|
813 |
*
|
814 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
815 |
*/
|
816 |
|
817 |
int
|
818 |
TclpCloseFile(
|
819 |
TclFile file) /* The file to close. */
|
820 |
{
|
821 |
WinFile *filePtr = (WinFile *) file;
|
822 |
|
823 |
switch (filePtr->type) {
|
824 |
case WIN_FILE:
|
825 |
/*
|
826 |
* Don't close the Win32 handle if the handle is a standard channel
|
827 |
* during the exit process. Otherwise, one thread may kill the
|
828 |
* stdio of another.
|
829 |
*/
|
830 |
|
831 |
if (!TclInExit()
|
832 |
|| ((GetStdHandle(STD_INPUT_HANDLE) != filePtr->handle)
|
833 |
&& (GetStdHandle(STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE) != filePtr->handle)
|
834 |
&& (GetStdHandle(STD_ERROR_HANDLE) != filePtr->handle))) {
|
835 |
if (CloseHandle(filePtr->handle) == FALSE) {
|
836 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
837 |
ckfree((char *) filePtr);
|
838 |
return -1;
|
839 |
}
|
840 |
}
|
841 |
break;
|
842 |
|
843 |
default:
|
844 |
panic("TclpCloseFile: unexpected file type");
|
845 |
}
|
846 |
|
847 |
ckfree((char *) filePtr);
|
848 |
return 0;
|
849 |
}
|
850 |
|
851 |
/*
|
852 |
*--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
853 |
*
|
854 |
* TclpGetPid --
|
855 |
*
|
856 |
* Given a HANDLE to a child process, return the process id for that
|
857 |
* child process.
|
858 |
*
|
859 |
* Results:
|
860 |
* Returns the process id for the child process. If the pid was not
|
861 |
* known by Tcl, either because the pid was not created by Tcl or the
|
862 |
* child process has already been reaped, -1 is returned.
|
863 |
*
|
864 |
* Side effects:
|
865 |
* None.
|
866 |
*
|
867 |
*--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
868 |
*/
|
869 |
|
870 |
unsigned long
|
871 |
TclpGetPid(
|
872 |
Tcl_Pid pid) /* The HANDLE of the child process. */
|
873 |
{
|
874 |
ProcInfo *infoPtr;
|
875 |
|
876 |
Tcl_MutexLock(&pipeMutex);
|
877 |
for (infoPtr = procList; infoPtr != NULL; infoPtr = infoPtr->nextPtr) {
|
878 |
if (infoPtr->hProcess == (HANDLE) pid) {
|
879 |
Tcl_MutexUnlock(&pipeMutex);
|
880 |
return infoPtr->dwProcessId;
|
881 |
}
|
882 |
}
|
883 |
Tcl_MutexUnlock(&pipeMutex);
|
884 |
return (unsigned long) -1;
|
885 |
}
|
886 |
|
887 |
/*
|
888 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
889 |
*
|
890 |
* TclpCreateProcess --
|
891 |
*
|
892 |
* Create a child process that has the specified files as its
|
893 |
* standard input, output, and error. The child process runs
|
894 |
* asynchronously under Windows NT and Windows 9x, and runs
|
895 |
* with the same environment variables as the creating process.
|
896 |
*
|
897 |
* The complete Windows search path is searched to find the specified
|
898 |
* executable. If an executable by the given name is not found,
|
899 |
* automatically tries appending ".com", ".exe", and ".bat" to the
|
900 |
* executable name.
|
901 |
*
|
902 |
* Results:
|
903 |
* The return value is TCL_ERROR and an error message is left in
|
904 |
* the interp's result if there was a problem creating the child
|
905 |
* process. Otherwise, the return value is TCL_OK and *pidPtr is
|
906 |
* filled with the process id of the child process.
|
907 |
*
|
908 |
* Side effects:
|
909 |
* A process is created.
|
910 |
*
|
911 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
912 |
*/
|
913 |
|
914 |
int
|
915 |
TclpCreateProcess(
|
916 |
Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Interpreter in which to leave errors that
|
917 |
* occurred when creating the child process.
|
918 |
* Error messages from the child process
|
919 |
* itself are sent to errorFile. */
|
920 |
int argc, /* Number of arguments in following array. */
|
921 |
char **argv, /* Array of argument strings. argv[0]
|
922 |
* contains the name of the executable
|
923 |
* converted to native format (using the
|
924 |
* Tcl_TranslateFileName call). Additional
|
925 |
* arguments have not been converted. */
|
926 |
TclFile inputFile, /* If non-NULL, gives the file to use as
|
927 |
* input for the child process. If inputFile
|
928 |
* file is not readable or is NULL, the child
|
929 |
* will receive no standard input. */
|
930 |
TclFile outputFile, /* If non-NULL, gives the file that
|
931 |
* receives output from the child process. If
|
932 |
* outputFile file is not writeable or is
|
933 |
* NULL, output from the child will be
|
934 |
* discarded. */
|
935 |
TclFile errorFile, /* If non-NULL, gives the file that
|
936 |
* receives errors from the child process. If
|
937 |
* errorFile file is not writeable or is NULL,
|
938 |
* errors from the child will be discarded.
|
939 |
* errorFile may be the same as outputFile. */
|
940 |
Tcl_Pid *pidPtr) /* If this procedure is successful, pidPtr
|
941 |
* is filled with the process id of the child
|
942 |
* process. */
|
943 |
{
|
944 |
int result, applType, createFlags;
|
945 |
Tcl_DString cmdLine; /* Complete command line (TCHAR). */
|
946 |
STARTUPINFOA startInfo;
|
947 |
PROCESS_INFORMATION procInfo;
|
948 |
SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES secAtts;
|
949 |
HANDLE hProcess, h, inputHandle, outputHandle, errorHandle;
|
950 |
char execPath[MAX_PATH * TCL_UTF_MAX];
|
951 |
WinFile *filePtr;
|
952 |
|
953 |
PipeInit();
|
954 |
|
955 |
applType = ApplicationType(interp, argv[0], execPath);
|
956 |
if (applType == APPL_NONE) {
|
957 |
return TCL_ERROR;
|
958 |
}
|
959 |
|
960 |
result = TCL_ERROR;
|
961 |
Tcl_DStringInit(&cmdLine);
|
962 |
hProcess = GetCurrentProcess();
|
963 |
|
964 |
/*
|
965 |
* STARTF_USESTDHANDLES must be used to pass handles to child process.
|
966 |
* Using SetStdHandle() and/or dup2() only works when a console mode
|
967 |
* parent process is spawning an attached console mode child process.
|
968 |
*/
|
969 |
|
970 |
ZeroMemory(&startInfo, sizeof(startInfo));
|
971 |
startInfo.cb = sizeof(startInfo);
|
972 |
startInfo.dwFlags = STARTF_USESTDHANDLES;
|
973 |
startInfo.hStdInput = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
|
974 |
startInfo.hStdOutput= INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
|
975 |
startInfo.hStdError = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
|
976 |
|
977 |
secAtts.nLength = sizeof(SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES);
|
978 |
secAtts.lpSecurityDescriptor = NULL;
|
979 |
secAtts.bInheritHandle = TRUE;
|
980 |
|
981 |
/*
|
982 |
* We have to check the type of each file, since we cannot duplicate
|
983 |
* some file types.
|
984 |
*/
|
985 |
|
986 |
inputHandle = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
|
987 |
if (inputFile != NULL) {
|
988 |
filePtr = (WinFile *)inputFile;
|
989 |
if (filePtr->type == WIN_FILE) {
|
990 |
inputHandle = filePtr->handle;
|
991 |
}
|
992 |
}
|
993 |
outputHandle = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
|
994 |
if (outputFile != NULL) {
|
995 |
filePtr = (WinFile *)outputFile;
|
996 |
if (filePtr->type == WIN_FILE) {
|
997 |
outputHandle = filePtr->handle;
|
998 |
}
|
999 |
}
|
1000 |
errorHandle = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
|
1001 |
if (errorFile != NULL) {
|
1002 |
filePtr = (WinFile *)errorFile;
|
1003 |
if (filePtr->type == WIN_FILE) {
|
1004 |
errorHandle = filePtr->handle;
|
1005 |
}
|
1006 |
}
|
1007 |
|
1008 |
/*
|
1009 |
* Duplicate all the handles which will be passed off as stdin, stdout
|
1010 |
* and stderr of the child process. The duplicate handles are set to
|
1011 |
* be inheritable, so the child process can use them.
|
1012 |
*/
|
1013 |
|
1014 |
if (inputHandle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1015 |
/*
|
1016 |
* If handle was not set, stdin should return immediate EOF.
|
1017 |
* Under Windows95, some applications (both 16 and 32 bit!)
|
1018 |
* cannot read from the NUL device; they read from console
|
1019 |
* instead. When running tk, this is fatal because the child
|
1020 |
* process would hang forever waiting for EOF from the unmapped
|
1021 |
* console window used by the helper application.
|
1022 |
*
|
1023 |
* Fortunately, the helper application detects a closed pipe
|
1024 |
* as an immediate EOF and can pass that information to the
|
1025 |
* child process.
|
1026 |
*/
|
1027 |
|
1028 |
if (CreatePipe(&startInfo.hStdInput, &h, &secAtts, 0) != FALSE) {
|
1029 |
CloseHandle(h);
|
1030 |
}
|
1031 |
} else {
|
1032 |
DuplicateHandle(hProcess, inputHandle, hProcess, &startInfo.hStdInput,
|
1033 |
0, TRUE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS);
|
1034 |
}
|
1035 |
if (startInfo.hStdInput == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1036 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
1037 |
Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "couldn't duplicate input handle: ",
|
1038 |
Tcl_PosixError(interp), (char *) NULL);
|
1039 |
goto end;
|
1040 |
}
|
1041 |
|
1042 |
if (outputHandle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1043 |
/*
|
1044 |
* If handle was not set, output should be sent to an infinitely
|
1045 |
* deep sink. Under Windows 95, some 16 bit applications cannot
|
1046 |
* have stdout redirected to NUL; they send their output to
|
1047 |
* the console instead. Some applications, like "more" or "dir /p",
|
1048 |
* when outputting multiple pages to the console, also then try and
|
1049 |
* read from the console to go the next page. When running tk, this
|
1050 |
* is fatal because the child process would hang forever waiting
|
1051 |
* for input from the unmapped console window used by the helper
|
1052 |
* application.
|
1053 |
*
|
1054 |
* Fortunately, the helper application will detect a closed pipe
|
1055 |
* as a sink.
|
1056 |
*/
|
1057 |
|
1058 |
if ((TclWinGetPlatformId() == VER_PLATFORM_WIN32_WINDOWS)
|
1059 |
&& (applType == APPL_DOS)) {
|
1060 |
if (CreatePipe(&h, &startInfo.hStdOutput, &secAtts, 0) != FALSE) {
|
1061 |
CloseHandle(h);
|
1062 |
}
|
1063 |
} else {
|
1064 |
startInfo.hStdOutput = CreateFileA("NUL:", GENERIC_WRITE, 0,
|
1065 |
&secAtts, OPEN_ALWAYS, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, NULL);
|
1066 |
}
|
1067 |
} else {
|
1068 |
DuplicateHandle(hProcess, outputHandle, hProcess, &startInfo.hStdOutput,
|
1069 |
0, TRUE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS);
|
1070 |
}
|
1071 |
if (startInfo.hStdOutput == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1072 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
1073 |
Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "couldn't duplicate output handle: ",
|
1074 |
Tcl_PosixError(interp), (char *) NULL);
|
1075 |
goto end;
|
1076 |
}
|
1077 |
|
1078 |
if (errorHandle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1079 |
/*
|
1080 |
* If handle was not set, errors should be sent to an infinitely
|
1081 |
* deep sink.
|
1082 |
*/
|
1083 |
|
1084 |
startInfo.hStdError = CreateFileA("NUL:", GENERIC_WRITE, 0,
|
1085 |
&secAtts, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, NULL);
|
1086 |
} else {
|
1087 |
DuplicateHandle(hProcess, errorHandle, hProcess, &startInfo.hStdError,
|
1088 |
0, TRUE, DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS);
|
1089 |
}
|
1090 |
if (startInfo.hStdError == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1091 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
1092 |
Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "couldn't duplicate error handle: ",
|
1093 |
Tcl_PosixError(interp), (char *) NULL);
|
1094 |
goto end;
|
1095 |
}
|
1096 |
/*
|
1097 |
* If we do not have a console window, then we must run DOS and
|
1098 |
* WIN32 console mode applications as detached processes. This tells
|
1099 |
* the loader that the child application should not inherit the
|
1100 |
* console, and that it should not create a new console window for
|
1101 |
* the child application. The child application should get its stdio
|
1102 |
* from the redirection handles provided by this application, and run
|
1103 |
* in the background.
|
1104 |
*
|
1105 |
* If we are starting a GUI process, they don't automatically get a
|
1106 |
* console, so it doesn't matter if they are started as foreground or
|
1107 |
* detached processes. The GUI window will still pop up to the
|
1108 |
* foreground.
|
1109 |
*/
|
1110 |
|
1111 |
if (TclWinGetPlatformId() == VER_PLATFORM_WIN32_NT) {
|
1112 |
if (HasConsole()) {
|
1113 |
createFlags = 0;
|
1114 |
} else if (applType == APPL_DOS) {
|
1115 |
/*
|
1116 |
* Under NT, 16-bit DOS applications will not run unless they
|
1117 |
* can be attached to a console. If we are running without a
|
1118 |
* console, run the 16-bit program as an normal process inside
|
1119 |
* of a hidden console application, and then run that hidden
|
1120 |
* console as a detached process.
|
1121 |
*/
|
1122 |
|
1123 |
startInfo.wShowWindow = SW_HIDE;
|
1124 |
startInfo.dwFlags |= STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW;
|
1125 |
createFlags = CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE;
|
1126 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&cmdLine, "cmd.exe /c ", -1);
|
1127 |
} else {
|
1128 |
createFlags = DETACHED_PROCESS;
|
1129 |
}
|
1130 |
} else {
|
1131 |
if (HasConsole()) {
|
1132 |
createFlags = 0;
|
1133 |
} else {
|
1134 |
createFlags = DETACHED_PROCESS;
|
1135 |
}
|
1136 |
|
1137 |
if (applType == APPL_DOS) {
|
1138 |
/*
|
1139 |
* Under Windows 95, 16-bit DOS applications do not work well
|
1140 |
* with pipes:
|
1141 |
*
|
1142 |
* 1. EOF on a pipe between a detached 16-bit DOS application
|
1143 |
* and another application is not seen at the other
|
1144 |
* end of the pipe, so the listening process blocks forever on
|
1145 |
* reads. This inablity to detect EOF happens when either a
|
1146 |
* 16-bit app or the 32-bit app is the listener.
|
1147 |
*
|
1148 |
* 2. If a 16-bit DOS application (detached or not) blocks when
|
1149 |
* writing to a pipe, it will never wake up again, and it
|
1150 |
* eventually brings the whole system down around it.
|
1151 |
*
|
1152 |
* The 16-bit application is run as a normal process inside
|
1153 |
* of a hidden helper console app, and this helper may be run
|
1154 |
* as a detached process. If any of the stdio handles is
|
1155 |
* a pipe, the helper application accumulates information
|
1156 |
* into temp files and forwards it to or from the DOS
|
1157 |
* application as appropriate. This means that DOS apps
|
1158 |
* must receive EOF from a stdin pipe before they will actually
|
1159 |
* begin, and must finish generating stdout or stderr before
|
1160 |
* the data will be sent to the next stage of the pipe.
|
1161 |
*
|
1162 |
* The helper app should be located in the same directory as
|
1163 |
* the tcl dll.
|
1164 |
*/
|
1165 |
|
1166 |
if (createFlags != 0) {
|
1167 |
startInfo.wShowWindow = SW_HIDE;
|
1168 |
startInfo.dwFlags |= STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW;
|
1169 |
createFlags = CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE;
|
1170 |
}
|
1171 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&cmdLine, "tclpip" STRINGIFY(TCL_MAJOR_VERSION)
|
1172 |
STRINGIFY(TCL_MINOR_VERSION) ".dll ", -1);
|
1173 |
}
|
1174 |
}
|
1175 |
|
1176 |
/*
|
1177 |
* cmdLine gets the full command line used to invoke the executable,
|
1178 |
* including the name of the executable itself. The command line
|
1179 |
* arguments in argv[] are stored in cmdLine separated by spaces.
|
1180 |
* Special characters in individual arguments from argv[] must be
|
1181 |
* quoted when being stored in cmdLine.
|
1182 |
*
|
1183 |
* When calling any application, bear in mind that arguments that
|
1184 |
* specify a path name are not converted. If an argument contains
|
1185 |
* forward slashes as path separators, it may or may not be
|
1186 |
* recognized as a path name, depending on the program. In general,
|
1187 |
* most applications accept forward slashes only as option
|
1188 |
* delimiters and backslashes only as paths.
|
1189 |
*
|
1190 |
* Additionally, when calling a 16-bit dos or windows application,
|
1191 |
* all path names must use the short, cryptic, path format (e.g.,
|
1192 |
* using ab~1.def instead of "a b.default").
|
1193 |
*/
|
1194 |
|
1195 |
BuildCommandLine(execPath, argc, argv, &cmdLine);
|
1196 |
|
1197 |
if ((*tclWinProcs->createProcessProc)(NULL,
|
1198 |
(TCHAR *) Tcl_DStringValue(&cmdLine), NULL, NULL, TRUE,
|
1199 |
createFlags, NULL, NULL, &startInfo, &procInfo) == 0) {
|
1200 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
1201 |
Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "couldn't execute \"", argv[0],
|
1202 |
"\": ", Tcl_PosixError(interp), (char *) NULL);
|
1203 |
goto end;
|
1204 |
}
|
1205 |
|
1206 |
/*
|
1207 |
* This wait is used to force the OS to give some time to the DOS
|
1208 |
* process.
|
1209 |
*/
|
1210 |
|
1211 |
if (applType == APPL_DOS) {
|
1212 |
WaitForSingleObject(procInfo.hProcess, 50);
|
1213 |
}
|
1214 |
|
1215 |
/*
|
1216 |
* "When an application spawns a process repeatedly, a new thread
|
1217 |
* instance will be created for each process but the previous
|
1218 |
* instances may not be cleaned up. This results in a significant
|
1219 |
* virtual memory loss each time the process is spawned. If there
|
1220 |
* is a WaitForInputIdle() call between CreateProcess() and
|
1221 |
* CloseHandle(), the problem does not occur." PSS ID Number: Q124121
|
1222 |
*/
|
1223 |
|
1224 |
WaitForInputIdle(procInfo.hProcess, 5000);
|
1225 |
CloseHandle(procInfo.hThread);
|
1226 |
|
1227 |
*pidPtr = (Tcl_Pid) procInfo.hProcess;
|
1228 |
if (*pidPtr != 0) {
|
1229 |
TclWinAddProcess(procInfo.hProcess, procInfo.dwProcessId);
|
1230 |
}
|
1231 |
result = TCL_OK;
|
1232 |
|
1233 |
end:
|
1234 |
Tcl_DStringFree(&cmdLine);
|
1235 |
if (startInfo.hStdInput != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1236 |
CloseHandle(startInfo.hStdInput);
|
1237 |
}
|
1238 |
if (startInfo.hStdOutput != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1239 |
CloseHandle(startInfo.hStdOutput);
|
1240 |
}
|
1241 |
if (startInfo.hStdError != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1242 |
CloseHandle(startInfo.hStdError);
|
1243 |
}
|
1244 |
return result;
|
1245 |
}
|
1246 |
|
1247 |
|
1248 |
/*
|
1249 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1250 |
*
|
1251 |
* HasConsole --
|
1252 |
*
|
1253 |
* Determines whether the current application is attached to a
|
1254 |
* console.
|
1255 |
*
|
1256 |
* Results:
|
1257 |
* Returns TRUE if this application has a console, else FALSE.
|
1258 |
*
|
1259 |
* Side effects:
|
1260 |
* None.
|
1261 |
*
|
1262 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1263 |
*/
|
1264 |
|
1265 |
static BOOL
|
1266 |
HasConsole()
|
1267 |
{
|
1268 |
HANDLE handle;
|
1269 |
|
1270 |
handle = CreateFileA("CONOUT$", GENERIC_WRITE, FILE_SHARE_WRITE,
|
1271 |
NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, NULL);
|
1272 |
|
1273 |
if (handle != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1274 |
CloseHandle(handle);
|
1275 |
return TRUE;
|
1276 |
} else {
|
1277 |
return FALSE;
|
1278 |
}
|
1279 |
}
|
1280 |
|
1281 |
/*
|
1282 |
*--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1283 |
*
|
1284 |
* ApplicationType --
|
1285 |
*
|
1286 |
* Search for the specified program and identify if it refers to a DOS,
|
1287 |
* Windows 3.X, or Win32 program. Used to determine how to invoke
|
1288 |
* a program, or if it can even be invoked.
|
1289 |
*
|
1290 |
* It is possible to almost positively identify DOS and Windows
|
1291 |
* applications that contain the appropriate magic numbers. However,
|
1292 |
* DOS .com files do not seem to contain a magic number; if the program
|
1293 |
* name ends with .com and could not be identified as a Windows .com
|
1294 |
* file, it will be assumed to be a DOS application, even if it was
|
1295 |
* just random data. If the program name does not end with .com, no
|
1296 |
* such assumption is made.
|
1297 |
*
|
1298 |
* The Win32 procedure GetBinaryType incorrectly identifies any
|
1299 |
* junk file that ends with .exe as a dos executable and some
|
1300 |
* executables that don't end with .exe as not executable. Plus it
|
1301 |
* doesn't exist under win95, so I won't feel bad about reimplementing
|
1302 |
* functionality.
|
1303 |
*
|
1304 |
* Results:
|
1305 |
* The return value is one of APPL_DOS, APPL_WIN3X, or APPL_WIN32
|
1306 |
* if the filename referred to the corresponding application type.
|
1307 |
* If the file name could not be found or did not refer to any known
|
1308 |
* application type, APPL_NONE is returned and an error message is
|
1309 |
* left in interp. .bat files are identified as APPL_DOS.
|
1310 |
*
|
1311 |
* Side effects:
|
1312 |
* None.
|
1313 |
*
|
1314 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1315 |
*/
|
1316 |
|
1317 |
static int
|
1318 |
ApplicationType(interp, originalName, fullName)
|
1319 |
Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interp, for error message. */
|
1320 |
const char *originalName; /* Name of the application to find. */
|
1321 |
char fullName[]; /* Filled with complete path to
|
1322 |
* application. */
|
1323 |
{
|
1324 |
int applType, i, nameLen, found;
|
1325 |
HANDLE hFile;
|
1326 |
TCHAR *rest;
|
1327 |
char *ext;
|
1328 |
char buf[2];
|
1329 |
DWORD attr, read;
|
1330 |
IMAGE_DOS_HEADER header;
|
1331 |
Tcl_DString nameBuf, ds;
|
1332 |
TCHAR *nativeName;
|
1333 |
WCHAR nativeFullPath[MAX_PATH];
|
1334 |
static char extensions[][5] = {"", ".com", ".exe", ".bat"};
|
1335 |
|
1336 |
/* Look for the program as an external program. First try the name
|
1337 |
* as it is, then try adding .com, .exe, and .bat, in that order, to
|
1338 |
* the name, looking for an executable.
|
1339 |
*
|
1340 |
* Using the raw SearchPath() procedure doesn't do quite what is
|
1341 |
* necessary. If the name of the executable already contains a '.'
|
1342 |
* character, it will not try appending the specified extension when
|
1343 |
* searching (in other words, SearchPath will not find the program
|
1344 |
* "a.b.exe" if the arguments specified "a.b" and ".exe").
|
1345 |
* So, first look for the file as it is named. Then manually append
|
1346 |
* the extensions, looking for a match.
|
1347 |
*/
|
1348 |
|
1349 |
applType = APPL_NONE;
|
1350 |
Tcl_DStringInit(&nameBuf);
|
1351 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&nameBuf, originalName, -1);
|
1352 |
nameLen = Tcl_DStringLength(&nameBuf);
|
1353 |
|
1354 |
for (i = 0; i < (int) (sizeof(extensions) / sizeof(extensions[0])); i++) {
|
1355 |
Tcl_DStringSetLength(&nameBuf, nameLen);
|
1356 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&nameBuf, extensions[i], -1);
|
1357 |
nativeName = Tcl_WinUtfToTChar(Tcl_DStringValue(&nameBuf),
|
1358 |
Tcl_DStringLength(&nameBuf), &ds);
|
1359 |
found = (*tclWinProcs->searchPathProc)(NULL, nativeName, NULL,
|
1360 |
MAX_PATH, nativeFullPath, &rest);
|
1361 |
Tcl_DStringFree(&ds);
|
1362 |
if (found == 0) {
|
1363 |
continue;
|
1364 |
}
|
1365 |
|
1366 |
/*
|
1367 |
* Ignore matches on directories or data files, return if identified
|
1368 |
* a known type.
|
1369 |
*/
|
1370 |
|
1371 |
attr = (*tclWinProcs->getFileAttributesProc)((TCHAR *) nativeFullPath);
|
1372 |
if ((attr == 0xffffffff) || (attr & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY)) {
|
1373 |
continue;
|
1374 |
}
|
1375 |
strcpy(fullName, Tcl_WinTCharToUtf((TCHAR *) nativeFullPath, -1, &ds));
|
1376 |
Tcl_DStringFree(&ds);
|
1377 |
|
1378 |
ext = strrchr(fullName, '.');
|
1379 |
if ((ext != NULL) && (stricmp(ext, ".bat") == 0)) {
|
1380 |
applType = APPL_DOS;
|
1381 |
break;
|
1382 |
}
|
1383 |
|
1384 |
hFile = (*tclWinProcs->createFileProc)((TCHAR *) nativeFullPath,
|
1385 |
GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_READ, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING,
|
1386 |
FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, NULL);
|
1387 |
if (hFile == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
|
1388 |
continue;
|
1389 |
}
|
1390 |
|
1391 |
header.e_magic = 0;
|
1392 |
ReadFile(hFile, (void *) &header, sizeof(header), &read, NULL);
|
1393 |
if (header.e_magic != IMAGE_DOS_SIGNATURE) {
|
1394 |
/*
|
1395 |
* Doesn't have the magic number for relocatable executables. If
|
1396 |
* filename ends with .com, assume it's a DOS application anyhow.
|
1397 |
* Note that we didn't make this assumption at first, because some
|
1398 |
* supposed .com files are really 32-bit executables with all the
|
1399 |
* magic numbers and everything.
|
1400 |
*/
|
1401 |
|
1402 |
CloseHandle(hFile);
|
1403 |
if ((ext != NULL) && (strcmp(ext, ".com") == 0)) {
|
1404 |
applType = APPL_DOS;
|
1405 |
break;
|
1406 |
}
|
1407 |
continue;
|
1408 |
}
|
1409 |
if (header.e_lfarlc != sizeof(header)) {
|
1410 |
/*
|
1411 |
* All Windows 3.X and Win32 and some DOS programs have this value
|
1412 |
* set here. If it doesn't, assume that since it already had the
|
1413 |
* other magic number it was a DOS application.
|
1414 |
*/
|
1415 |
|
1416 |
CloseHandle(hFile);
|
1417 |
applType = APPL_DOS;
|
1418 |
break;
|
1419 |
}
|
1420 |
|
1421 |
/*
|
1422 |
* The DWORD at header.e_lfanew points to yet another magic number.
|
1423 |
*/
|
1424 |
|
1425 |
buf[0] = '\0';
|
1426 |
SetFilePointer(hFile, header.e_lfanew, NULL, FILE_BEGIN);
|
1427 |
ReadFile(hFile, (void *) buf, 2, &read, NULL);
|
1428 |
CloseHandle(hFile);
|
1429 |
|
1430 |
if ((buf[0] == 'N') && (buf[1] == 'E')) {
|
1431 |
applType = APPL_WIN3X;
|
1432 |
} else if ((buf[0] == 'P') && (buf[1] == 'E')) {
|
1433 |
applType = APPL_WIN32;
|
1434 |
} else {
|
1435 |
/*
|
1436 |
* Strictly speaking, there should be a test that there
|
1437 |
* is an 'L' and 'E' at buf[0..1], to identify the type as
|
1438 |
* DOS, but of course we ran into a DOS executable that
|
1439 |
* _doesn't_ have the magic number -- specifically, one
|
1440 |
* compiled using the Lahey Fortran90 compiler.
|
1441 |
*/
|
1442 |
|
1443 |
applType = APPL_DOS;
|
1444 |
}
|
1445 |
break;
|
1446 |
}
|
1447 |
Tcl_DStringFree(&nameBuf);
|
1448 |
|
1449 |
if (applType == APPL_NONE) {
|
1450 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
1451 |
Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "couldn't execute \"", originalName,
|
1452 |
"\": ", Tcl_PosixError(interp), (char *) NULL);
|
1453 |
return APPL_NONE;
|
1454 |
}
|
1455 |
|
1456 |
if ((applType == APPL_DOS) || (applType == APPL_WIN3X)) {
|
1457 |
/*
|
1458 |
* Replace long path name of executable with short path name for
|
1459 |
* 16-bit applications. Otherwise the application may not be able
|
1460 |
* to correctly parse its own command line to separate off the
|
1461 |
* application name from the arguments.
|
1462 |
*/
|
1463 |
|
1464 |
(*tclWinProcs->getShortPathNameProc)((TCHAR *) nativeFullPath,
|
1465 |
nativeFullPath, MAX_PATH);
|
1466 |
strcpy(fullName, Tcl_WinTCharToUtf((TCHAR *) nativeFullPath, -1, &ds));
|
1467 |
Tcl_DStringFree(&ds);
|
1468 |
}
|
1469 |
return applType;
|
1470 |
}
|
1471 |
|
1472 |
/*
|
1473 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1474 |
*
|
1475 |
* BuildCommandLine --
|
1476 |
*
|
1477 |
* The command line arguments are stored in linePtr separated
|
1478 |
* by spaces, in a form that CreateProcess() understands. Special
|
1479 |
* characters in individual arguments from argv[] must be quoted
|
1480 |
* when being stored in cmdLine.
|
1481 |
*
|
1482 |
* Results:
|
1483 |
* None.
|
1484 |
*
|
1485 |
* Side effects:
|
1486 |
* None.
|
1487 |
*
|
1488 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1489 |
*/
|
1490 |
|
1491 |
static void
|
1492 |
BuildCommandLine(
|
1493 |
CONST char *executable, /* Full path of executable (including
|
1494 |
* extension). Replacement for argv[0]. */
|
1495 |
int argc, /* Number of arguments. */
|
1496 |
char **argv, /* Argument strings in UTF. */
|
1497 |
Tcl_DString *linePtr) /* Initialized Tcl_DString that receives the
|
1498 |
* command line (TCHAR). */
|
1499 |
{
|
1500 |
CONST char *arg, *start, *special;
|
1501 |
int quote, i;
|
1502 |
Tcl_DString ds;
|
1503 |
|
1504 |
Tcl_DStringInit(&ds);
|
1505 |
|
1506 |
/*
|
1507 |
* Prime the path.
|
1508 |
*/
|
1509 |
|
1510 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, Tcl_DStringValue(linePtr), -1);
|
1511 |
|
1512 |
for (i = 0; i < argc; i++) {
|
1513 |
if (i == 0) {
|
1514 |
arg = executable;
|
1515 |
} else {
|
1516 |
arg = argv[i];
|
1517 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, " ", 1);
|
1518 |
}
|
1519 |
|
1520 |
quote = 0;
|
1521 |
if (argv[i][0] == '\0') {
|
1522 |
quote = 1;
|
1523 |
} else {
|
1524 |
for (start = argv[i]; *start != '\0'; start++) {
|
1525 |
if (isspace(*start)) { /* INTL: ISO space. */
|
1526 |
quote = 1;
|
1527 |
break;
|
1528 |
}
|
1529 |
}
|
1530 |
}
|
1531 |
if (quote) {
|
1532 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, "\"", 1);
|
1533 |
}
|
1534 |
|
1535 |
start = arg;
|
1536 |
for (special = arg; ; ) {
|
1537 |
if ((*special == '\\') &&
|
1538 |
(special[1] == '\\' || special[1] == '"')) {
|
1539 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, start, special - start);
|
1540 |
start = special;
|
1541 |
while (1) {
|
1542 |
special++;
|
1543 |
if (*special == '"') {
|
1544 |
/*
|
1545 |
* N backslashes followed a quote -> insert
|
1546 |
* N * 2 + 1 backslashes then a quote.
|
1547 |
*/
|
1548 |
|
1549 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, start, special - start);
|
1550 |
break;
|
1551 |
}
|
1552 |
if (*special != '\\') {
|
1553 |
break;
|
1554 |
}
|
1555 |
}
|
1556 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, start, special - start);
|
1557 |
start = special;
|
1558 |
}
|
1559 |
if (*special == '"') {
|
1560 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, start, special - start);
|
1561 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, "\\\"", 2);
|
1562 |
start = special + 1;
|
1563 |
}
|
1564 |
if (*special == '\0') {
|
1565 |
break;
|
1566 |
}
|
1567 |
special++;
|
1568 |
}
|
1569 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, start, special - start);
|
1570 |
if (quote) {
|
1571 |
Tcl_DStringAppend(&ds, "\"", 1);
|
1572 |
}
|
1573 |
}
|
1574 |
Tcl_WinUtfToTChar(Tcl_DStringValue(&ds), Tcl_DStringLength(&ds), linePtr);
|
1575 |
Tcl_DStringFree(&ds);
|
1576 |
}
|
1577 |
|
1578 |
/*
|
1579 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1580 |
*
|
1581 |
* TclpCreateCommandChannel --
|
1582 |
*
|
1583 |
* This function is called by Tcl_OpenCommandChannel to perform
|
1584 |
* the platform specific channel initialization for a command
|
1585 |
* channel.
|
1586 |
*
|
1587 |
* Results:
|
1588 |
* Returns a new channel or NULL on failure.
|
1589 |
*
|
1590 |
* Side effects:
|
1591 |
* Allocates a new channel.
|
1592 |
*
|
1593 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1594 |
*/
|
1595 |
|
1596 |
Tcl_Channel
|
1597 |
TclpCreateCommandChannel(
|
1598 |
TclFile readFile, /* If non-null, gives the file for reading. */
|
1599 |
TclFile writeFile, /* If non-null, gives the file for writing. */
|
1600 |
TclFile errorFile, /* If non-null, gives the file where errors
|
1601 |
* can be read. */
|
1602 |
int numPids, /* The number of pids in the pid array. */
|
1603 |
Tcl_Pid *pidPtr) /* An array of process identifiers. */
|
1604 |
{
|
1605 |
char channelName[16 + TCL_INTEGER_SPACE];
|
1606 |
int channelId;
|
1607 |
DWORD id;
|
1608 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr = (PipeInfo *) ckalloc((unsigned) sizeof(PipeInfo));
|
1609 |
|
1610 |
PipeInit();
|
1611 |
|
1612 |
infoPtr->watchMask = 0;
|
1613 |
infoPtr->flags = 0;
|
1614 |
infoPtr->readFlags = 0;
|
1615 |
infoPtr->readFile = readFile;
|
1616 |
infoPtr->writeFile = writeFile;
|
1617 |
infoPtr->errorFile = errorFile;
|
1618 |
infoPtr->numPids = numPids;
|
1619 |
infoPtr->pidPtr = pidPtr;
|
1620 |
infoPtr->writeBuf = 0;
|
1621 |
infoPtr->writeBufLen = 0;
|
1622 |
infoPtr->writeError = 0;
|
1623 |
|
1624 |
/*
|
1625 |
* Use one of the fds associated with the channel as the
|
1626 |
* channel id.
|
1627 |
*/
|
1628 |
|
1629 |
if (readFile) {
|
1630 |
channelId = (int) ((WinFile*)readFile)->handle;
|
1631 |
} else if (writeFile) {
|
1632 |
channelId = (int) ((WinFile*)writeFile)->handle;
|
1633 |
} else if (errorFile) {
|
1634 |
channelId = (int) ((WinFile*)errorFile)->handle;
|
1635 |
} else {
|
1636 |
channelId = 0;
|
1637 |
}
|
1638 |
|
1639 |
infoPtr->validMask = 0;
|
1640 |
|
1641 |
infoPtr->threadId = Tcl_GetCurrentThread();
|
1642 |
|
1643 |
if (readFile != NULL) {
|
1644 |
/*
|
1645 |
* Start the background reader thread.
|
1646 |
*/
|
1647 |
|
1648 |
infoPtr->readable = CreateEvent(NULL, TRUE, TRUE, NULL);
|
1649 |
infoPtr->startReader = CreateEvent(NULL, FALSE, FALSE, NULL);
|
1650 |
infoPtr->readThread = CreateThread(NULL, 8000, PipeReaderThread,
|
1651 |
infoPtr, 0, &id);
|
1652 |
SetThreadPriority(infoPtr->readThread, THREAD_PRIORITY_HIGHEST);
|
1653 |
infoPtr->validMask |= TCL_READABLE;
|
1654 |
} else {
|
1655 |
infoPtr->readThread = 0;
|
1656 |
}
|
1657 |
if (writeFile != NULL) {
|
1658 |
/*
|
1659 |
* Start the background writeer thwrite.
|
1660 |
*/
|
1661 |
|
1662 |
infoPtr->writable = CreateEvent(NULL, TRUE, TRUE, NULL);
|
1663 |
infoPtr->startWriter = CreateEvent(NULL, FALSE, FALSE, NULL);
|
1664 |
infoPtr->writeThread = CreateThread(NULL, 8000, PipeWriterThread,
|
1665 |
infoPtr, 0, &id);
|
1666 |
SetThreadPriority(infoPtr->readThread, THREAD_PRIORITY_HIGHEST);
|
1667 |
infoPtr->validMask |= TCL_WRITABLE;
|
1668 |
}
|
1669 |
|
1670 |
/*
|
1671 |
* For backward compatibility with previous versions of Tcl, we
|
1672 |
* use "file%d" as the base name for pipes even though it would
|
1673 |
* be more natural to use "pipe%d".
|
1674 |
* Use the pointer to keep the channel names unique, in case
|
1675 |
* channels share handles (stdin/stdout).
|
1676 |
*/
|
1677 |
|
1678 |
wsprintfA(channelName, "file%lx", infoPtr);
|
1679 |
infoPtr->channel = Tcl_CreateChannel(&pipeChannelType, channelName,
|
1680 |
(ClientData) infoPtr, infoPtr->validMask);
|
1681 |
|
1682 |
/*
|
1683 |
* Pipes have AUTO translation mode on Windows and ^Z eof char, which
|
1684 |
* means that a ^Z will be appended to them at close. This is needed
|
1685 |
* for Windows programs that expect a ^Z at EOF.
|
1686 |
*/
|
1687 |
|
1688 |
Tcl_SetChannelOption((Tcl_Interp *) NULL, infoPtr->channel,
|
1689 |
"-translation", "auto");
|
1690 |
Tcl_SetChannelOption((Tcl_Interp *) NULL, infoPtr->channel,
|
1691 |
"-eofchar", "\032 {}");
|
1692 |
return infoPtr->channel;
|
1693 |
}
|
1694 |
|
1695 |
/*
|
1696 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1697 |
*
|
1698 |
* TclGetAndDetachPids --
|
1699 |
*
|
1700 |
* Stores a list of the command PIDs for a command channel in
|
1701 |
* the interp's result.
|
1702 |
*
|
1703 |
* Results:
|
1704 |
* None.
|
1705 |
*
|
1706 |
* Side effects:
|
1707 |
* Modifies the interp's result.
|
1708 |
*
|
1709 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1710 |
*/
|
1711 |
|
1712 |
void
|
1713 |
TclGetAndDetachPids(
|
1714 |
Tcl_Interp *interp,
|
1715 |
Tcl_Channel chan)
|
1716 |
{
|
1717 |
PipeInfo *pipePtr;
|
1718 |
Tcl_ChannelType *chanTypePtr;
|
1719 |
int i;
|
1720 |
char buf[TCL_INTEGER_SPACE];
|
1721 |
|
1722 |
/*
|
1723 |
* Punt if the channel is not a command channel.
|
1724 |
*/
|
1725 |
|
1726 |
chanTypePtr = Tcl_GetChannelType(chan);
|
1727 |
if (chanTypePtr != &pipeChannelType) {
|
1728 |
return;
|
1729 |
}
|
1730 |
|
1731 |
pipePtr = (PipeInfo *) Tcl_GetChannelInstanceData(chan);
|
1732 |
for (i = 0; i < pipePtr->numPids; i++) {
|
1733 |
wsprintfA(buf, "%lu", TclpGetPid(pipePtr->pidPtr[i]));
|
1734 |
Tcl_AppendElement(interp, buf);
|
1735 |
Tcl_DetachPids(1, &(pipePtr->pidPtr[i]));
|
1736 |
}
|
1737 |
if (pipePtr->numPids > 0) {
|
1738 |
ckfree((char *) pipePtr->pidPtr);
|
1739 |
pipePtr->numPids = 0;
|
1740 |
}
|
1741 |
}
|
1742 |
|
1743 |
/*
|
1744 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1745 |
*
|
1746 |
* PipeBlockModeProc --
|
1747 |
*
|
1748 |
* Set blocking or non-blocking mode on channel.
|
1749 |
*
|
1750 |
* Results:
|
1751 |
* 0 if successful, errno when failed.
|
1752 |
*
|
1753 |
* Side effects:
|
1754 |
* Sets the device into blocking or non-blocking mode.
|
1755 |
*
|
1756 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1757 |
*/
|
1758 |
|
1759 |
static int
|
1760 |
PipeBlockModeProc(
|
1761 |
ClientData instanceData, /* Instance data for channel. */
|
1762 |
int mode) /* TCL_MODE_BLOCKING or
|
1763 |
* TCL_MODE_NONBLOCKING. */
|
1764 |
{
|
1765 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr = (PipeInfo *) instanceData;
|
1766 |
|
1767 |
/*
|
1768 |
* Pipes on Windows can not be switched between blocking and nonblocking,
|
1769 |
* hence we have to emulate the behavior. This is done in the input
|
1770 |
* function by checking against a bit in the state. We set or unset the
|
1771 |
* bit here to cause the input function to emulate the correct behavior.
|
1772 |
*/
|
1773 |
|
1774 |
if (mode == TCL_MODE_NONBLOCKING) {
|
1775 |
infoPtr->flags |= PIPE_ASYNC;
|
1776 |
} else {
|
1777 |
infoPtr->flags &= ~(PIPE_ASYNC);
|
1778 |
}
|
1779 |
return 0;
|
1780 |
}
|
1781 |
|
1782 |
/*
|
1783 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1784 |
*
|
1785 |
* PipeClose2Proc --
|
1786 |
*
|
1787 |
* Closes a pipe based IO channel.
|
1788 |
*
|
1789 |
* Results:
|
1790 |
* 0 on success, errno otherwise.
|
1791 |
*
|
1792 |
* Side effects:
|
1793 |
* Closes the physical channel.
|
1794 |
*
|
1795 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1796 |
*/
|
1797 |
|
1798 |
static int
|
1799 |
PipeClose2Proc(
|
1800 |
ClientData instanceData, /* Pointer to PipeInfo structure. */
|
1801 |
Tcl_Interp *interp, /* For error reporting. */
|
1802 |
int flags) /* Flags that indicate which side to close. */
|
1803 |
{
|
1804 |
PipeInfo *pipePtr = (PipeInfo *) instanceData;
|
1805 |
Tcl_Channel errChan;
|
1806 |
int errorCode, result;
|
1807 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr, **nextPtrPtr;
|
1808 |
ThreadSpecificData *tsdPtr = TCL_TSD_INIT(&dataKey);
|
1809 |
|
1810 |
errorCode = 0;
|
1811 |
if ((!flags || (flags == TCL_CLOSE_READ))
|
1812 |
&& (pipePtr->readFile != NULL)) {
|
1813 |
/*
|
1814 |
* Clean up the background thread if necessary. Note that this
|
1815 |
* must be done before we can close the file, since the
|
1816 |
* thread may be blocking trying to read from the pipe.
|
1817 |
*/
|
1818 |
|
1819 |
if (pipePtr->readThread) {
|
1820 |
/*
|
1821 |
* Forcibly terminate the background thread. We cannot rely on the
|
1822 |
* thread to cleanly terminate itself because we have no way of
|
1823 |
* closing the pipe handle without blocking in the case where the
|
1824 |
* thread is in the middle of an I/O operation. Note that we need
|
1825 |
* to guard against terminating the thread while it is in the
|
1826 |
* middle of Tcl_ThreadAlert because it won't be able to release
|
1827 |
* the notifier lock.
|
1828 |
*/
|
1829 |
|
1830 |
Tcl_MutexLock(&pipeMutex);
|
1831 |
TerminateThread(pipePtr->readThread, 0);
|
1832 |
|
1833 |
/*
|
1834 |
* Wait for the thread to terminate. This ensures that we are
|
1835 |
* completely cleaned up before we leave this function.
|
1836 |
*/
|
1837 |
|
1838 |
WaitForSingleObject(pipePtr->readThread, INFINITE);
|
1839 |
Tcl_MutexUnlock(&pipeMutex);
|
1840 |
|
1841 |
CloseHandle(pipePtr->readThread);
|
1842 |
CloseHandle(pipePtr->readable);
|
1843 |
CloseHandle(pipePtr->startReader);
|
1844 |
pipePtr->readThread = NULL;
|
1845 |
}
|
1846 |
if (TclpCloseFile(pipePtr->readFile) != 0) {
|
1847 |
errorCode = errno;
|
1848 |
}
|
1849 |
pipePtr->validMask &= ~TCL_READABLE;
|
1850 |
pipePtr->readFile = NULL;
|
1851 |
}
|
1852 |
if ((!flags || (flags & TCL_CLOSE_WRITE))
|
1853 |
&& (pipePtr->writeFile != NULL)) {
|
1854 |
/*
|
1855 |
* Wait for the writer thread to finish the current buffer, then
|
1856 |
* terminate the thread and close the handles. If the channel is
|
1857 |
* nonblocking, there should be no pending write operations.
|
1858 |
*/
|
1859 |
|
1860 |
if (pipePtr->writeThread) {
|
1861 |
WaitForSingleObject(pipePtr->writable, INFINITE);
|
1862 |
|
1863 |
/*
|
1864 |
* Forcibly terminate the background thread. We cannot rely on the
|
1865 |
* thread to cleanly terminate itself because we have no way of
|
1866 |
* closing the pipe handle without blocking in the case where the
|
1867 |
* thread is in the middle of an I/O operation. Note that we need
|
1868 |
* to guard against terminating the thread while it is in the
|
1869 |
* middle of Tcl_ThreadAlert because it won't be able to release
|
1870 |
* the notifier lock.
|
1871 |
*/
|
1872 |
|
1873 |
Tcl_MutexLock(&pipeMutex);
|
1874 |
TerminateThread(pipePtr->writeThread, 0);
|
1875 |
|
1876 |
/*
|
1877 |
* Wait for the thread to terminate. This ensures that we are
|
1878 |
* completely cleaned up before we leave this function.
|
1879 |
*/
|
1880 |
|
1881 |
WaitForSingleObject(pipePtr->writeThread, INFINITE);
|
1882 |
Tcl_MutexUnlock(&pipeMutex);
|
1883 |
|
1884 |
|
1885 |
CloseHandle(pipePtr->writeThread);
|
1886 |
CloseHandle(pipePtr->writable);
|
1887 |
CloseHandle(pipePtr->startWriter);
|
1888 |
pipePtr->writeThread = NULL;
|
1889 |
}
|
1890 |
if (TclpCloseFile(pipePtr->writeFile) != 0) {
|
1891 |
if (errorCode == 0) {
|
1892 |
errorCode = errno;
|
1893 |
}
|
1894 |
}
|
1895 |
pipePtr->validMask &= ~TCL_WRITABLE;
|
1896 |
pipePtr->writeFile = NULL;
|
1897 |
}
|
1898 |
|
1899 |
pipePtr->watchMask &= pipePtr->validMask;
|
1900 |
|
1901 |
/*
|
1902 |
* Don't free the channel if any of the flags were set.
|
1903 |
*/
|
1904 |
|
1905 |
if (flags) {
|
1906 |
return errorCode;
|
1907 |
}
|
1908 |
|
1909 |
/*
|
1910 |
* Remove the file from the list of watched files.
|
1911 |
*/
|
1912 |
|
1913 |
for (nextPtrPtr = &(tsdPtr->firstPipePtr), infoPtr = *nextPtrPtr;
|
1914 |
infoPtr != NULL;
|
1915 |
nextPtrPtr = &infoPtr->nextPtr, infoPtr = *nextPtrPtr) {
|
1916 |
if (infoPtr == (PipeInfo *)pipePtr) {
|
1917 |
*nextPtrPtr = infoPtr->nextPtr;
|
1918 |
break;
|
1919 |
}
|
1920 |
}
|
1921 |
|
1922 |
/*
|
1923 |
* Wrap the error file into a channel and give it to the cleanup
|
1924 |
* routine.
|
1925 |
*/
|
1926 |
|
1927 |
if (pipePtr->errorFile) {
|
1928 |
WinFile *filePtr;
|
1929 |
|
1930 |
filePtr = (WinFile*)pipePtr->errorFile;
|
1931 |
errChan = Tcl_MakeFileChannel((ClientData) filePtr->handle,
|
1932 |
TCL_READABLE);
|
1933 |
ckfree((char *) filePtr);
|
1934 |
} else {
|
1935 |
errChan = NULL;
|
1936 |
}
|
1937 |
|
1938 |
result = TclCleanupChildren(interp, pipePtr->numPids, pipePtr->pidPtr,
|
1939 |
errChan);
|
1940 |
|
1941 |
if (pipePtr->numPids > 0) {
|
1942 |
ckfree((char *) pipePtr->pidPtr);
|
1943 |
}
|
1944 |
|
1945 |
if (pipePtr->writeBuf != NULL) {
|
1946 |
ckfree(pipePtr->writeBuf);
|
1947 |
}
|
1948 |
|
1949 |
ckfree((char*) pipePtr);
|
1950 |
|
1951 |
if (errorCode == 0) {
|
1952 |
return result;
|
1953 |
}
|
1954 |
return errorCode;
|
1955 |
}
|
1956 |
|
1957 |
/*
|
1958 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1959 |
*
|
1960 |
* PipeInputProc --
|
1961 |
*
|
1962 |
* Reads input from the IO channel into the buffer given. Returns
|
1963 |
* count of how many bytes were actually read, and an error indication.
|
1964 |
*
|
1965 |
* Results:
|
1966 |
* A count of how many bytes were read is returned and an error
|
1967 |
* indication is returned in an output argument.
|
1968 |
*
|
1969 |
* Side effects:
|
1970 |
* Reads input from the actual channel.
|
1971 |
*
|
1972 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1973 |
*/
|
1974 |
|
1975 |
static int
|
1976 |
PipeInputProc(
|
1977 |
ClientData instanceData, /* Pipe state. */
|
1978 |
char *buf, /* Where to store data read. */
|
1979 |
int bufSize, /* How much space is available
|
1980 |
* in the buffer? */
|
1981 |
int *errorCode) /* Where to store error code. */
|
1982 |
{
|
1983 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr = (PipeInfo *) instanceData;
|
1984 |
WinFile *filePtr = (WinFile*) infoPtr->readFile;
|
1985 |
DWORD count, bytesRead = 0;
|
1986 |
int result;
|
1987 |
|
1988 |
*errorCode = 0;
|
1989 |
/*
|
1990 |
* Synchronize with the reader thread.
|
1991 |
*/
|
1992 |
|
1993 |
result = WaitForRead(infoPtr, (infoPtr->flags & PIPE_ASYNC) ? 0 : 1);
|
1994 |
|
1995 |
/*
|
1996 |
* If an error occurred, return immediately.
|
1997 |
*/
|
1998 |
|
1999 |
if (result == -1) {
|
2000 |
*errorCode = errno;
|
2001 |
return -1;
|
2002 |
}
|
2003 |
|
2004 |
if (infoPtr->readFlags & PIPE_EXTRABYTE) {
|
2005 |
/*
|
2006 |
* The reader thread consumed 1 byte as a side effect of
|
2007 |
* waiting so we need to move it into the buffer.
|
2008 |
*/
|
2009 |
|
2010 |
*buf = infoPtr->extraByte;
|
2011 |
infoPtr->readFlags &= ~PIPE_EXTRABYTE;
|
2012 |
buf++;
|
2013 |
bufSize--;
|
2014 |
bytesRead = 1;
|
2015 |
|
2016 |
/*
|
2017 |
* If further read attempts would block, return what we have.
|
2018 |
*/
|
2019 |
|
2020 |
if (result == 0) {
|
2021 |
return bytesRead;
|
2022 |
}
|
2023 |
}
|
2024 |
|
2025 |
/*
|
2026 |
* Attempt to read bufSize bytes. The read will return immediately
|
2027 |
* if there is any data available. Otherwise it will block until
|
2028 |
* at least one byte is available or an EOF occurs.
|
2029 |
*/
|
2030 |
|
2031 |
if (ReadFile(filePtr->handle, (LPVOID) buf, (DWORD) bufSize, &count,
|
2032 |
(LPOVERLAPPED) NULL) == TRUE) {
|
2033 |
return bytesRead + count;
|
2034 |
} else if (bytesRead) {
|
2035 |
/*
|
2036 |
* Ignore errors if we have data to return.
|
2037 |
*/
|
2038 |
|
2039 |
return bytesRead;
|
2040 |
}
|
2041 |
|
2042 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
2043 |
if (errno == EPIPE) {
|
2044 |
infoPtr->readFlags |= PIPE_EOF;
|
2045 |
return 0;
|
2046 |
}
|
2047 |
*errorCode = errno;
|
2048 |
return -1;
|
2049 |
}
|
2050 |
|
2051 |
/*
|
2052 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2053 |
*
|
2054 |
* PipeOutputProc --
|
2055 |
*
|
2056 |
* Writes the given output on the IO channel. Returns count of how
|
2057 |
* many characters were actually written, and an error indication.
|
2058 |
*
|
2059 |
* Results:
|
2060 |
* A count of how many characters were written is returned and an
|
2061 |
* error indication is returned in an output argument.
|
2062 |
*
|
2063 |
* Side effects:
|
2064 |
* Writes output on the actual channel.
|
2065 |
*
|
2066 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2067 |
*/
|
2068 |
|
2069 |
static int
|
2070 |
PipeOutputProc(
|
2071 |
ClientData instanceData, /* Pipe state. */
|
2072 |
char *buf, /* The data buffer. */
|
2073 |
int toWrite, /* How many bytes to write? */
|
2074 |
int *errorCode) /* Where to store error code. */
|
2075 |
{
|
2076 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr = (PipeInfo *) instanceData;
|
2077 |
WinFile *filePtr = (WinFile*) infoPtr->writeFile;
|
2078 |
DWORD bytesWritten, timeout;
|
2079 |
|
2080 |
*errorCode = 0;
|
2081 |
timeout = (infoPtr->flags & PIPE_ASYNC) ? 0 : INFINITE;
|
2082 |
if (WaitForSingleObject(infoPtr->writable, timeout) == WAIT_TIMEOUT) {
|
2083 |
/*
|
2084 |
* The writer thread is blocked waiting for a write to complete
|
2085 |
* and the channel is in non-blocking mode.
|
2086 |
*/
|
2087 |
|
2088 |
errno = EAGAIN;
|
2089 |
goto error;
|
2090 |
}
|
2091 |
|
2092 |
/*
|
2093 |
* Check for a background error on the last write.
|
2094 |
*/
|
2095 |
|
2096 |
if (infoPtr->writeError) {
|
2097 |
TclWinConvertError(infoPtr->writeError);
|
2098 |
infoPtr->writeError = 0;
|
2099 |
goto error;
|
2100 |
}
|
2101 |
|
2102 |
if (infoPtr->flags & PIPE_ASYNC) {
|
2103 |
/*
|
2104 |
* The pipe is non-blocking, so copy the data into the output
|
2105 |
* buffer and restart the writer thread.
|
2106 |
*/
|
2107 |
|
2108 |
if (toWrite > infoPtr->writeBufLen) {
|
2109 |
/*
|
2110 |
* Reallocate the buffer to be large enough to hold the data.
|
2111 |
*/
|
2112 |
|
2113 |
if (infoPtr->writeBuf) {
|
2114 |
ckfree(infoPtr->writeBuf);
|
2115 |
}
|
2116 |
infoPtr->writeBufLen = toWrite;
|
2117 |
infoPtr->writeBuf = ckalloc(toWrite);
|
2118 |
}
|
2119 |
memcpy(infoPtr->writeBuf, buf, toWrite);
|
2120 |
infoPtr->toWrite = toWrite;
|
2121 |
ResetEvent(infoPtr->writable);
|
2122 |
SetEvent(infoPtr->startWriter);
|
2123 |
bytesWritten = toWrite;
|
2124 |
} else {
|
2125 |
/*
|
2126 |
* In the blocking case, just try to write the buffer directly.
|
2127 |
* This avoids an unnecessary copy.
|
2128 |
*/
|
2129 |
|
2130 |
if (WriteFile(filePtr->handle, (LPVOID) buf, (DWORD) toWrite,
|
2131 |
&bytesWritten, (LPOVERLAPPED) NULL) == FALSE) {
|
2132 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
2133 |
goto error;
|
2134 |
}
|
2135 |
}
|
2136 |
return bytesWritten;
|
2137 |
|
2138 |
error:
|
2139 |
*errorCode = errno;
|
2140 |
return -1;
|
2141 |
|
2142 |
}
|
2143 |
|
2144 |
/*
|
2145 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2146 |
*
|
2147 |
* PipeEventProc --
|
2148 |
*
|
2149 |
* This function is invoked by Tcl_ServiceEvent when a file event
|
2150 |
* reaches the front of the event queue. This procedure invokes
|
2151 |
* Tcl_NotifyChannel on the pipe.
|
2152 |
*
|
2153 |
* Results:
|
2154 |
* Returns 1 if the event was handled, meaning it should be removed
|
2155 |
* from the queue. Returns 0 if the event was not handled, meaning
|
2156 |
* it should stay on the queue. The only time the event isn't
|
2157 |
* handled is if the TCL_FILE_EVENTS flag bit isn't set.
|
2158 |
*
|
2159 |
* Side effects:
|
2160 |
* Whatever the notifier callback does.
|
2161 |
*
|
2162 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2163 |
*/
|
2164 |
|
2165 |
static int
|
2166 |
PipeEventProc(
|
2167 |
Tcl_Event *evPtr, /* Event to service. */
|
2168 |
int flags) /* Flags that indicate what events to
|
2169 |
* handle, such as TCL_FILE_EVENTS. */
|
2170 |
{
|
2171 |
PipeEvent *pipeEvPtr = (PipeEvent *)evPtr;
|
2172 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr;
|
2173 |
WinFile *filePtr;
|
2174 |
int mask;
|
2175 |
ThreadSpecificData *tsdPtr = TCL_TSD_INIT(&dataKey);
|
2176 |
|
2177 |
if (!(flags & TCL_FILE_EVENTS)) {
|
2178 |
return 0;
|
2179 |
}
|
2180 |
|
2181 |
/*
|
2182 |
* Search through the list of watched pipes for the one whose handle
|
2183 |
* matches the event. We do this rather than simply dereferencing
|
2184 |
* the handle in the event so that pipes can be deleted while the
|
2185 |
* event is in the queue.
|
2186 |
*/
|
2187 |
|
2188 |
for (infoPtr = tsdPtr->firstPipePtr; infoPtr != NULL;
|
2189 |
infoPtr = infoPtr->nextPtr) {
|
2190 |
if (pipeEvPtr->infoPtr == infoPtr) {
|
2191 |
infoPtr->flags &= ~(PIPE_PENDING);
|
2192 |
break;
|
2193 |
}
|
2194 |
}
|
2195 |
|
2196 |
/*
|
2197 |
* Remove stale events.
|
2198 |
*/
|
2199 |
|
2200 |
if (!infoPtr) {
|
2201 |
return 1;
|
2202 |
}
|
2203 |
|
2204 |
/*
|
2205 |
* Check to see if the pipe is readable. Note
|
2206 |
* that we can't tell if a pipe is writable, so we always report it
|
2207 |
* as being writable unless we have detected EOF.
|
2208 |
*/
|
2209 |
|
2210 |
filePtr = (WinFile*) ((PipeInfo*)infoPtr)->writeFile;
|
2211 |
mask = 0;
|
2212 |
if ((infoPtr->watchMask & TCL_WRITABLE) &&
|
2213 |
(WaitForSingleObject(infoPtr->writable, 0) != WAIT_TIMEOUT)) {
|
2214 |
mask = TCL_WRITABLE;
|
2215 |
}
|
2216 |
|
2217 |
filePtr = (WinFile*) ((PipeInfo*)infoPtr)->readFile;
|
2218 |
if ((infoPtr->watchMask & TCL_READABLE) &&
|
2219 |
(WaitForRead(infoPtr, 0) >= 0)) {
|
2220 |
if (infoPtr->readFlags & PIPE_EOF) {
|
2221 |
mask = TCL_READABLE;
|
2222 |
} else {
|
2223 |
mask |= TCL_READABLE;
|
2224 |
}
|
2225 |
}
|
2226 |
|
2227 |
/*
|
2228 |
* Inform the channel of the events.
|
2229 |
*/
|
2230 |
|
2231 |
Tcl_NotifyChannel(infoPtr->channel, infoPtr->watchMask & mask);
|
2232 |
return 1;
|
2233 |
}
|
2234 |
|
2235 |
/*
|
2236 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2237 |
*
|
2238 |
* PipeWatchProc --
|
2239 |
*
|
2240 |
* Called by the notifier to set up to watch for events on this
|
2241 |
* channel.
|
2242 |
*
|
2243 |
* Results:
|
2244 |
* None.
|
2245 |
*
|
2246 |
* Side effects:
|
2247 |
* None.
|
2248 |
*
|
2249 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2250 |
*/
|
2251 |
|
2252 |
static void
|
2253 |
PipeWatchProc(
|
2254 |
ClientData instanceData, /* Pipe state. */
|
2255 |
int mask) /* What events to watch for, OR-ed
|
2256 |
* combination of TCL_READABLE,
|
2257 |
* TCL_WRITABLE and TCL_EXCEPTION. */
|
2258 |
{
|
2259 |
PipeInfo **nextPtrPtr, *ptr;
|
2260 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr = (PipeInfo *) instanceData;
|
2261 |
int oldMask = infoPtr->watchMask;
|
2262 |
ThreadSpecificData *tsdPtr = TCL_TSD_INIT(&dataKey);
|
2263 |
|
2264 |
/*
|
2265 |
* Since most of the work is handled by the background threads,
|
2266 |
* we just need to update the watchMask and then force the notifier
|
2267 |
* to poll once.
|
2268 |
*/
|
2269 |
|
2270 |
infoPtr->watchMask = mask & infoPtr->validMask;
|
2271 |
if (infoPtr->watchMask) {
|
2272 |
Tcl_Time blockTime = { 0, 0 };
|
2273 |
if (!oldMask) {
|
2274 |
infoPtr->nextPtr = tsdPtr->firstPipePtr;
|
2275 |
tsdPtr->firstPipePtr = infoPtr;
|
2276 |
}
|
2277 |
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime(&blockTime);
|
2278 |
} else {
|
2279 |
if (oldMask) {
|
2280 |
/*
|
2281 |
* Remove the pipe from the list of watched pipes.
|
2282 |
*/
|
2283 |
|
2284 |
for (nextPtrPtr = &(tsdPtr->firstPipePtr), ptr = *nextPtrPtr;
|
2285 |
ptr != NULL;
|
2286 |
nextPtrPtr = &ptr->nextPtr, ptr = *nextPtrPtr) {
|
2287 |
if (infoPtr == ptr) {
|
2288 |
*nextPtrPtr = ptr->nextPtr;
|
2289 |
break;
|
2290 |
}
|
2291 |
}
|
2292 |
}
|
2293 |
}
|
2294 |
}
|
2295 |
|
2296 |
/*
|
2297 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2298 |
*
|
2299 |
* PipeGetHandleProc --
|
2300 |
*
|
2301 |
* Called from Tcl_GetChannelHandle to retrieve OS handles from
|
2302 |
* inside a command pipeline based channel.
|
2303 |
*
|
2304 |
* Results:
|
2305 |
* Returns TCL_OK with the fd in handlePtr, or TCL_ERROR if
|
2306 |
* there is no handle for the specified direction.
|
2307 |
*
|
2308 |
* Side effects:
|
2309 |
* None.
|
2310 |
*
|
2311 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2312 |
*/
|
2313 |
|
2314 |
static int
|
2315 |
PipeGetHandleProc(
|
2316 |
ClientData instanceData, /* The pipe state. */
|
2317 |
int direction, /* TCL_READABLE or TCL_WRITABLE */
|
2318 |
ClientData *handlePtr) /* Where to store the handle. */
|
2319 |
{
|
2320 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr = (PipeInfo *) instanceData;
|
2321 |
WinFile *filePtr;
|
2322 |
|
2323 |
if (direction == TCL_READABLE && infoPtr->readFile) {
|
2324 |
filePtr = (WinFile*) infoPtr->readFile;
|
2325 |
*handlePtr = (ClientData) filePtr->handle;
|
2326 |
return TCL_OK;
|
2327 |
}
|
2328 |
if (direction == TCL_WRITABLE && infoPtr->writeFile) {
|
2329 |
filePtr = (WinFile*) infoPtr->writeFile;
|
2330 |
*handlePtr = (ClientData) filePtr->handle;
|
2331 |
return TCL_OK;
|
2332 |
}
|
2333 |
return TCL_ERROR;
|
2334 |
}
|
2335 |
|
2336 |
/*
|
2337 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2338 |
*
|
2339 |
* Tcl_WaitPid --
|
2340 |
*
|
2341 |
* Emulates the waitpid system call.
|
2342 |
*
|
2343 |
* Results:
|
2344 |
* Returns 0 if the process is still alive, -1 on an error, or
|
2345 |
* the pid on a clean close.
|
2346 |
*
|
2347 |
* Side effects:
|
2348 |
* Unless WNOHANG is set and the wait times out, the process
|
2349 |
* information record will be deleted and the process handle
|
2350 |
* will be closed.
|
2351 |
*
|
2352 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2353 |
*/
|
2354 |
|
2355 |
Tcl_Pid
|
2356 |
Tcl_WaitPid(
|
2357 |
Tcl_Pid pid,
|
2358 |
int *statPtr,
|
2359 |
int options)
|
2360 |
{
|
2361 |
ProcInfo *infoPtr, **prevPtrPtr;
|
2362 |
int flags;
|
2363 |
Tcl_Pid result;
|
2364 |
DWORD ret;
|
2365 |
|
2366 |
PipeInit();
|
2367 |
|
2368 |
/*
|
2369 |
* If no pid is specified, do nothing.
|
2370 |
*/
|
2371 |
|
2372 |
if (pid == 0) {
|
2373 |
*statPtr = 0;
|
2374 |
return 0;
|
2375 |
}
|
2376 |
|
2377 |
/*
|
2378 |
* Find the process on the process list.
|
2379 |
*/
|
2380 |
|
2381 |
Tcl_MutexLock(&pipeMutex);
|
2382 |
prevPtrPtr = &procList;
|
2383 |
for (infoPtr = procList; infoPtr != NULL;
|
2384 |
prevPtrPtr = &infoPtr->nextPtr, infoPtr = infoPtr->nextPtr) {
|
2385 |
if (infoPtr->hProcess == (HANDLE) pid) {
|
2386 |
break;
|
2387 |
}
|
2388 |
}
|
2389 |
Tcl_MutexUnlock(&pipeMutex);
|
2390 |
|
2391 |
/*
|
2392 |
* If the pid is not one of the processes we know about (we started it)
|
2393 |
* then do nothing.
|
2394 |
*/
|
2395 |
|
2396 |
if (infoPtr == NULL) {
|
2397 |
*statPtr = 0;
|
2398 |
return 0;
|
2399 |
}
|
2400 |
|
2401 |
/*
|
2402 |
* Officially "wait" for it to finish. We either poll (WNOHANG) or
|
2403 |
* wait for an infinite amount of time.
|
2404 |
*/
|
2405 |
|
2406 |
if (options & WNOHANG) {
|
2407 |
flags = 0;
|
2408 |
} else {
|
2409 |
flags = INFINITE;
|
2410 |
}
|
2411 |
ret = WaitForSingleObject(infoPtr->hProcess, flags);
|
2412 |
if (ret == WAIT_TIMEOUT) {
|
2413 |
*statPtr = 0;
|
2414 |
if (options & WNOHANG) {
|
2415 |
return 0;
|
2416 |
} else {
|
2417 |
result = 0;
|
2418 |
}
|
2419 |
} else if (ret != WAIT_FAILED) {
|
2420 |
GetExitCodeProcess(infoPtr->hProcess, (DWORD*)statPtr);
|
2421 |
*statPtr = ((*statPtr << 8) & 0xff00);
|
2422 |
result = pid;
|
2423 |
} else {
|
2424 |
errno = ECHILD;
|
2425 |
*statPtr = ECHILD;
|
2426 |
result = (Tcl_Pid) -1;
|
2427 |
}
|
2428 |
|
2429 |
/*
|
2430 |
* Remove the process from the process list and close the process handle.
|
2431 |
*/
|
2432 |
|
2433 |
CloseHandle(infoPtr->hProcess);
|
2434 |
*prevPtrPtr = infoPtr->nextPtr;
|
2435 |
ckfree((char*)infoPtr);
|
2436 |
|
2437 |
return result;
|
2438 |
}
|
2439 |
|
2440 |
/*
|
2441 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2442 |
*
|
2443 |
* TclWinAddProcess --
|
2444 |
*
|
2445 |
* Add a process to the process list so that we can use
|
2446 |
* Tcl_WaitPid on the process.
|
2447 |
*
|
2448 |
* Results:
|
2449 |
* None
|
2450 |
*
|
2451 |
* Side effects:
|
2452 |
* Adds the specified process handle to the process list so
|
2453 |
* Tcl_WaitPid knows about it.
|
2454 |
*
|
2455 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2456 |
*/
|
2457 |
|
2458 |
void
|
2459 |
TclWinAddProcess(hProcess, id)
|
2460 |
HANDLE hProcess; /* Handle to process */
|
2461 |
DWORD id; /* Global process identifier */
|
2462 |
{
|
2463 |
ProcInfo *procPtr = (ProcInfo *) ckalloc(sizeof(ProcInfo));
|
2464 |
procPtr->hProcess = hProcess;
|
2465 |
procPtr->dwProcessId = id;
|
2466 |
Tcl_MutexLock(&pipeMutex);
|
2467 |
procPtr->nextPtr = procList;
|
2468 |
procList = procPtr;
|
2469 |
Tcl_MutexUnlock(&pipeMutex);
|
2470 |
}
|
2471 |
|
2472 |
/*
|
2473 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2474 |
*
|
2475 |
* Tcl_PidObjCmd --
|
2476 |
*
|
2477 |
* This procedure is invoked to process the "pid" Tcl command.
|
2478 |
* See the user documentation for details on what it does.
|
2479 |
*
|
2480 |
* Results:
|
2481 |
* A standard Tcl result.
|
2482 |
*
|
2483 |
* Side effects:
|
2484 |
* See the user documentation.
|
2485 |
*
|
2486 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2487 |
*/
|
2488 |
|
2489 |
/* ARGSUSED */
|
2490 |
int
|
2491 |
Tcl_PidObjCmd(
|
2492 |
ClientData dummy, /* Not used. */
|
2493 |
Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Current interpreter. */
|
2494 |
int objc, /* Number of arguments. */
|
2495 |
Tcl_Obj *CONST *objv) /* Argument strings. */
|
2496 |
{
|
2497 |
Tcl_Channel chan;
|
2498 |
Tcl_ChannelType *chanTypePtr;
|
2499 |
PipeInfo *pipePtr;
|
2500 |
int i;
|
2501 |
Tcl_Obj *resultPtr;
|
2502 |
char buf[TCL_INTEGER_SPACE];
|
2503 |
|
2504 |
if (objc > 2) {
|
2505 |
Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "?channelId?");
|
2506 |
return TCL_ERROR;
|
2507 |
}
|
2508 |
if (objc == 1) {
|
2509 |
resultPtr = Tcl_GetObjResult(interp);
|
2510 |
wsprintfA(buf, "%lu", (unsigned long) getpid());
|
2511 |
Tcl_SetStringObj(resultPtr, buf, -1);
|
2512 |
} else {
|
2513 |
chan = Tcl_GetChannel(interp, Tcl_GetStringFromObj(objv[1], NULL),
|
2514 |
NULL);
|
2515 |
if (chan == (Tcl_Channel) NULL) {
|
2516 |
return TCL_ERROR;
|
2517 |
}
|
2518 |
chanTypePtr = Tcl_GetChannelType(chan);
|
2519 |
if (chanTypePtr != &pipeChannelType) {
|
2520 |
return TCL_OK;
|
2521 |
}
|
2522 |
|
2523 |
pipePtr = (PipeInfo *) Tcl_GetChannelInstanceData(chan);
|
2524 |
resultPtr = Tcl_GetObjResult(interp);
|
2525 |
for (i = 0; i < pipePtr->numPids; i++) {
|
2526 |
wsprintfA(buf, "%lu", TclpGetPid(pipePtr->pidPtr[i]));
|
2527 |
Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(/*interp*/ NULL, resultPtr,
|
2528 |
Tcl_NewStringObj(buf, -1));
|
2529 |
}
|
2530 |
}
|
2531 |
return TCL_OK;
|
2532 |
}
|
2533 |
|
2534 |
/*
|
2535 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2536 |
*
|
2537 |
* WaitForRead --
|
2538 |
*
|
2539 |
* Wait until some data is available, the pipe is at
|
2540 |
* EOF or the reader thread is blocked waiting for data (if the
|
2541 |
* channel is in non-blocking mode).
|
2542 |
*
|
2543 |
* Results:
|
2544 |
* Returns 1 if pipe is readable. Returns 0 if there is no data
|
2545 |
* on the pipe, but there is buffered data. Returns -1 if an
|
2546 |
* error occurred. If an error occurred, the threads may not
|
2547 |
* be synchronized.
|
2548 |
*
|
2549 |
* Side effects:
|
2550 |
* Updates the shared state flags and may consume 1 byte of data
|
2551 |
* from the pipe. If no error occurred, the reader thread is
|
2552 |
* blocked waiting for a signal from the main thread.
|
2553 |
*
|
2554 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2555 |
*/
|
2556 |
|
2557 |
static int
|
2558 |
WaitForRead(
|
2559 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr, /* Pipe state. */
|
2560 |
int blocking) /* Indicates whether call should be
|
2561 |
* blocking or not. */
|
2562 |
{
|
2563 |
DWORD timeout, count;
|
2564 |
HANDLE *handle = ((WinFile *) infoPtr->readFile)->handle;
|
2565 |
|
2566 |
while (1) {
|
2567 |
/*
|
2568 |
* Synchronize with the reader thread.
|
2569 |
*/
|
2570 |
|
2571 |
timeout = blocking ? INFINITE : 0;
|
2572 |
if (WaitForSingleObject(infoPtr->readable, timeout) == WAIT_TIMEOUT) {
|
2573 |
/*
|
2574 |
* The reader thread is blocked waiting for data and the channel
|
2575 |
* is in non-blocking mode.
|
2576 |
*/
|
2577 |
|
2578 |
errno = EAGAIN;
|
2579 |
return -1;
|
2580 |
}
|
2581 |
|
2582 |
/*
|
2583 |
* At this point, the two threads are synchronized, so it is safe
|
2584 |
* to access shared state.
|
2585 |
*/
|
2586 |
|
2587 |
|
2588 |
/*
|
2589 |
* If the pipe has hit EOF, it is always readable.
|
2590 |
*/
|
2591 |
|
2592 |
if (infoPtr->readFlags & PIPE_EOF) {
|
2593 |
return 1;
|
2594 |
}
|
2595 |
|
2596 |
/*
|
2597 |
* Check to see if there is any data sitting in the pipe.
|
2598 |
*/
|
2599 |
|
2600 |
if (PeekNamedPipe(handle, (LPVOID) NULL, (DWORD) 0,
|
2601 |
(LPDWORD) NULL, &count, (LPDWORD) NULL) != TRUE) {
|
2602 |
TclWinConvertError(GetLastError());
|
2603 |
/*
|
2604 |
* Check to see if the peek failed because of EOF.
|
2605 |
*/
|
2606 |
|
2607 |
if (errno == EPIPE) {
|
2608 |
infoPtr->readFlags |= PIPE_EOF;
|
2609 |
return 1;
|
2610 |
}
|
2611 |
|
2612 |
/*
|
2613 |
* Ignore errors if there is data in the buffer.
|
2614 |
*/
|
2615 |
|
2616 |
if (infoPtr->readFlags & PIPE_EXTRABYTE) {
|
2617 |
return 0;
|
2618 |
} else {
|
2619 |
return -1;
|
2620 |
}
|
2621 |
}
|
2622 |
|
2623 |
/*
|
2624 |
* We found some data in the pipe, so it must be readable.
|
2625 |
*/
|
2626 |
|
2627 |
if (count > 0) {
|
2628 |
return 1;
|
2629 |
}
|
2630 |
|
2631 |
/*
|
2632 |
* The pipe isn't readable, but there is some data sitting
|
2633 |
* in the buffer, so return immediately.
|
2634 |
*/
|
2635 |
|
2636 |
if (infoPtr->readFlags & PIPE_EXTRABYTE) {
|
2637 |
return 0;
|
2638 |
}
|
2639 |
|
2640 |
/*
|
2641 |
* There wasn't any data available, so reset the thread and
|
2642 |
* try again.
|
2643 |
*/
|
2644 |
|
2645 |
ResetEvent(infoPtr->readable);
|
2646 |
SetEvent(infoPtr->startReader);
|
2647 |
}
|
2648 |
}
|
2649 |
|
2650 |
/*
|
2651 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2652 |
*
|
2653 |
* PipeReaderThread --
|
2654 |
*
|
2655 |
* This function runs in a separate thread and waits for input
|
2656 |
* to become available on a pipe.
|
2657 |
*
|
2658 |
* Results:
|
2659 |
* None.
|
2660 |
*
|
2661 |
* Side effects:
|
2662 |
* Signals the main thread when input become available. May
|
2663 |
* cause the main thread to wake up by posting a message. May
|
2664 |
* consume one byte from the pipe for each wait operation.
|
2665 |
*
|
2666 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2667 |
*/
|
2668 |
|
2669 |
static DWORD WINAPI
|
2670 |
PipeReaderThread(LPVOID arg)
|
2671 |
{
|
2672 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr = (PipeInfo *)arg;
|
2673 |
HANDLE *handle = ((WinFile *) infoPtr->readFile)->handle;
|
2674 |
DWORD count, err;
|
2675 |
int done = 0;
|
2676 |
|
2677 |
while (!done) {
|
2678 |
/*
|
2679 |
* Wait for the main thread to signal before attempting to wait.
|
2680 |
*/
|
2681 |
|
2682 |
WaitForSingleObject(infoPtr->startReader, INFINITE);
|
2683 |
|
2684 |
/*
|
2685 |
* Try waiting for 0 bytes. This will block until some data is
|
2686 |
* available on NT, but will return immediately on Win 95. So,
|
2687 |
* if no data is available after the first read, we block until
|
2688 |
* we can read a single byte off of the pipe.
|
2689 |
*/
|
2690 |
|
2691 |
if ((ReadFile(handle, NULL, 0, &count, NULL) == FALSE)
|
2692 |
|| (PeekNamedPipe(handle, NULL, 0, NULL, &count,
|
2693 |
NULL) == FALSE)) {
|
2694 |
/*
|
2695 |
* The error is a result of an EOF condition, so set the
|
2696 |
* EOF bit before signalling the main thread.
|
2697 |
*/
|
2698 |
|
2699 |
err = GetLastError();
|
2700 |
if (err == ERROR_BROKEN_PIPE) {
|
2701 |
infoPtr->readFlags |= PIPE_EOF;
|
2702 |
done = 1;
|
2703 |
} else if (err == ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE) {
|
2704 |
break;
|
2705 |
}
|
2706 |
} else if (count == 0) {
|
2707 |
if (ReadFile(handle, &(infoPtr->extraByte), 1, &count, NULL)
|
2708 |
!= FALSE) {
|
2709 |
/*
|
2710 |
* One byte was consumed as a side effect of waiting
|
2711 |
* for the pipe to become readable.
|
2712 |
*/
|
2713 |
|
2714 |
infoPtr->readFlags |= PIPE_EXTRABYTE;
|
2715 |
} else {
|
2716 |
err = GetLastError();
|
2717 |
if (err == ERROR_BROKEN_PIPE) {
|
2718 |
/*
|
2719 |
* The error is a result of an EOF condition, so set the
|
2720 |
* EOF bit before signalling the main thread.
|
2721 |
*/
|
2722 |
|
2723 |
infoPtr->readFlags |= PIPE_EOF;
|
2724 |
done = 1;
|
2725 |
} else if (err == ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE) {
|
2726 |
break;
|
2727 |
}
|
2728 |
}
|
2729 |
}
|
2730 |
|
2731 |
|
2732 |
/*
|
2733 |
* Signal the main thread by signalling the readable event and
|
2734 |
* then waking up the notifier thread.
|
2735 |
*/
|
2736 |
|
2737 |
SetEvent(infoPtr->readable);
|
2738 |
|
2739 |
/*
|
2740 |
* Alert the foreground thread. Note that we need to treat this like
|
2741 |
* a critical section so the foreground thread does not terminate
|
2742 |
* this thread while we are holding a mutex in the notifier code.
|
2743 |
*/
|
2744 |
|
2745 |
Tcl_MutexLock(&pipeMutex);
|
2746 |
Tcl_ThreadAlert(infoPtr->threadId);
|
2747 |
Tcl_MutexUnlock(&pipeMutex);
|
2748 |
}
|
2749 |
return 0;
|
2750 |
}
|
2751 |
|
2752 |
/*
|
2753 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2754 |
*
|
2755 |
* PipeWriterThread --
|
2756 |
*
|
2757 |
* This function runs in a separate thread and writes data
|
2758 |
* onto a pipe.
|
2759 |
*
|
2760 |
* Results:
|
2761 |
* Always returns 0.
|
2762 |
*
|
2763 |
* Side effects:
|
2764 |
* Signals the main thread when an output operation is completed.
|
2765 |
* May cause the main thread to wake up by posting a message.
|
2766 |
*
|
2767 |
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
2768 |
*/
|
2769 |
|
2770 |
static DWORD WINAPI
|
2771 |
PipeWriterThread(LPVOID arg)
|
2772 |
{
|
2773 |
|
2774 |
PipeInfo *infoPtr = (PipeInfo *)arg;
|
2775 |
HANDLE *handle = ((WinFile *) infoPtr->writeFile)->handle;
|
2776 |
DWORD count, toWrite;
|
2777 |
char *buf;
|
2778 |
int done = 0;
|
2779 |
|
2780 |
while (!done) {
|
2781 |
/*
|
2782 |
* Wait for the main thread to signal before attempting to write.
|
2783 |
*/
|
2784 |
|
2785 |
WaitForSingleObject(infoPtr->startWriter, INFINITE);
|
2786 |
|
2787 |
buf = infoPtr->writeBuf;
|
2788 |
toWrite = infoPtr->toWrite;
|
2789 |
|
2790 |
/*
|
2791 |
* Loop until all of the bytes are written or an error occurs.
|
2792 |
*/
|
2793 |
|
2794 |
while (toWrite > 0) {
|
2795 |
if (WriteFile(handle, buf, toWrite, &count, NULL) == FALSE) {
|
2796 |
infoPtr->writeError = GetLastError();
|
2797 |
done = 1;
|
2798 |
break;
|
2799 |
} else {
|
2800 |
toWrite -= count;
|
2801 |
buf += count;
|
2802 |
}
|
2803 |
}
|
2804 |
|
2805 |
/*
|
2806 |
* Signal the main thread by signalling the writable event and
|
2807 |
* then waking up the notifier thread.
|
2808 |
*/
|
2809 |
|
2810 |
SetEvent(infoPtr->writable);
|
2811 |
|
2812 |
/*
|
2813 |
* Alert the foreground thread. Note that we need to treat this like
|
2814 |
* a critical section so the foreground thread does not terminate
|
2815 |
* this thread while we are holding a mutex in the notifier code.
|
2816 |
*/
|
2817 |
|
2818 |
Tcl_MutexLock(&pipeMutex);
|
2819 |
Tcl_ThreadAlert(infoPtr->threadId);
|
2820 |
Tcl_MutexUnlock(&pipeMutex);
|
2821 |
}
|
2822 |
return 0;
|
2823 |
}
|
2824 |
|
2825 |
|
2826 |
/* $History: tclwinpipe.c $
|
2827 |
*
|
2828 |
* ***************** Version 1 *****************
|
2829 |
* User: Dtashley Date: 1/02/01 Time: 12:27a
|
2830 |
* Created in $/IjuScripter, IjuConsole/Source/Tcl Base
|
2831 |
* Initial check-in.
|
2832 |
*/
|
2833 |
|
2834 |
/* End of TCLWINPIPE.C */ |