- exit (0);
- }
- /* child: keep running */
-}
-#endif /* not WINDOWS */
-\f
-/* Resolve "." and ".." elements of PATH by destructively modifying
- PATH. "." is resolved by removing that path element, and ".." is
- resolved by removing the preceding path element. Leading and
- trailing slashes are preserved.
-
- Return non-zero if any changes have been made.
-
- For example, "a/b/c/./../d/.." will yield "a/b/". More exhaustive
- test examples are provided below. If you change anything in this
- function, run test_path_simplify to make sure you haven't broken a
- test case.
-
- A previous version of this function was based on path_simplify()
- from GNU Bash, but it has been rewritten for Wget 1.8.1. */
-
-int
-path_simplify (char *path)
-{
- int change = 0;
- char *p, *end;
-
- if (path[0] == '/')
- ++path; /* preserve the leading '/'. */
-
- p = path;
- end = p + strlen (p) + 1; /* position past the terminating zero. */
-
- while (1)
- {
- again:
- /* P should point to the beginning of a path element. */
-
- if (*p == '.' && (*(p + 1) == '/' || *(p + 1) == '\0'))
- {
- /* Handle "./foo" by moving "foo" two characters to the
- left. */
- if (*(p + 1) == '/')
- {
- change = 1;
- memmove (p, p + 2, end - p);
- end -= 2;
- goto again;
- }
- else
- {
- change = 1;
- *p = '\0';
- break;
- }
- }
- else if (*p == '.' && *(p + 1) == '.'
- && (*(p + 2) == '/' || *(p + 2) == '\0'))
- {
- /* Handle "../foo" by moving "foo" one path element to the
- left. */
- char *b = p; /* not p-1 because P can equal PATH */
-
- /* Backtrack by one path element, but not past the beginning
- of PATH. */
-
- /* foo/bar/../baz */
- /* ^ p */
- /* ^ b */
-
- if (b > path)
- {
- /* Move backwards until B hits the beginning of the
- previous path element or the beginning of path. */
- for (--b; b > path && *(b - 1) != '/'; b--)
- ;
- }
-
- change = 1;
- if (*(p + 2) == '/')
- {
- memmove (b, p + 3, end - (p + 3));
- end -= (p + 3) - b;
- p = b;
- }
- else
- {
- *b = '\0';
- break;
- }
-
- goto again;
- }
- else if (*p == '/')
- {
- /* Remove empty path elements. Not mandated by rfc1808 et
- al, but empty path elements are not all that useful, and
- the rest of Wget might not deal with them well. */
- char *q = p;
- while (*q == '/')
- ++q;
- change = 1;
- if (*q == '\0')
- {
- *p = '\0';
- break;
- }
- memmove (p, q, end - q);
- end -= q - p;
- goto again;
- }
-
- /* Skip to the next path element. */
- while (*p && *p != '/')
- ++p;
- if (*p == '\0')
- break;
-
- /* Make sure P points to the beginning of the next path element,
- which is location after the slash. */
- ++p;