/* URL handling.
- Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ Copyright (C) 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GNU Wget.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Wget; if not, write to the Free Software
-Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
+Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
+
+In addition, as a special exception, the Free Software Foundation
+gives permission to link the code of its release of Wget with the
+OpenSSL project's "OpenSSL" library (or with modified versions of it
+that use the same license as the "OpenSSL" library), and distribute
+the linked executables. You must obey the GNU General Public License
+in all respects for all of the code used other than "OpenSSL". If you
+modify this file, you may extend this exception to your version of the
+file, but you are not obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do
+so, delete this exception statement from your version. */
#include <config.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
-#ifdef HAVE_STRING_H
-# include <string.h>
-#else
-# include <strings.h>
-#endif
-#include <sys/types.h>
+#include <string.h>
#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
# include <unistd.h>
#endif
#include "wget.h"
#include "utils.h"
#include "url.h"
-#include "host.h"
-#include "hash.h"
-
-#ifndef errno
-extern int errno;
-#endif
-
-/* Is X "."? */
-#define DOTP(x) ((*(x) == '.') && (!*(x + 1)))
-/* Is X ".."? */
-#define DDOTP(x) ((*(x) == '.') && (*(x + 1) == '.') && (!*(x + 2)))
+#include "host.h" /* for is_valid_ipv6_address */
struct scheme_data
{
- char *leading_string;
+ const char *name;
+ const char *leading_string;
int default_port;
- int enabled;
+ bool enabled;
};
/* Supported schemes: */
static struct scheme_data supported_schemes[] =
{
- { "http://", DEFAULT_HTTP_PORT, 1 },
+ { "http", "http://", DEFAULT_HTTP_PORT, 1 },
#ifdef HAVE_SSL
- { "https://", DEFAULT_HTTPS_PORT, 1 },
+ { "https", "https://", DEFAULT_HTTPS_PORT, 1 },
#endif
- { "ftp://", DEFAULT_FTP_PORT, 1 },
+ { "ftp", "ftp://", DEFAULT_FTP_PORT, 1 },
/* SCHEME_INVALID */
- { NULL, -1, 0 }
+ { NULL, NULL, -1, 0 }
};
/* Forward declarations: */
-static char *construct_relative PARAMS ((const char *, const char *));
-static int path_simplify PARAMS ((char *));
-
-
+static bool path_simplify (char *);
\f
-/* Support for encoding and decoding of URL strings. We determine
- whether a character is unsafe through static table lookup. This
- code assumes ASCII character set and 8-bit chars. */
+/* Support for escaping and unescaping of URL strings. */
+
+/* Table of "reserved" and "unsafe" characters. Those terms are
+ rfc1738-speak, as such largely obsoleted by rfc2396 and later
+ specs, but the general idea remains.
+
+ A reserved character is the one that you can't decode without
+ changing the meaning of the URL. For example, you can't decode
+ "/foo/%2f/bar" into "/foo///bar" because the number and contents of
+ path components is different. Non-reserved characters can be
+ changed, so "/foo/%78/bar" is safe to change to "/foo/x/bar". The
+ unsafe characters are loosely based on rfc1738, plus "$" and ",",
+ as recommended by rfc2396, and minus "~", which is very frequently
+ used (and sometimes unrecognized as %7E by broken servers).
+
+ An unsafe character is the one that should be encoded when URLs are
+ placed in foreign environments. E.g. space and newline are unsafe
+ in HTTP contexts because HTTP uses them as separator and line
+ terminator, so they must be encoded to %20 and %0A respectively.
+ "*" is unsafe in shell context, etc.
+
+ We determine whether a character is unsafe through static table
+ lookup. This code assumes ASCII character set and 8-bit chars. */
enum {
+ /* rfc1738 reserved chars + "$" and ",". */
urlchr_reserved = 1,
+
+ /* rfc1738 unsafe chars, plus non-printables. */
urlchr_unsafe = 2
};
+#define urlchr_test(c, mask) (urlchr_table[(unsigned char)(c)] & (mask))
+#define URL_RESERVED_CHAR(c) urlchr_test(c, urlchr_reserved)
+#define URL_UNSAFE_CHAR(c) urlchr_test(c, urlchr_unsafe)
+
+/* Shorthands for the table: */
#define R urlchr_reserved
#define U urlchr_unsafe
#define RU R|U
-#define urlchr_test(c, mask) (urlchr_table[(unsigned char)(c)] & (mask))
-
-/* rfc1738 reserved chars, preserved from encoding. */
-
-#define RESERVED_CHAR(c) urlchr_test(c, urlchr_reserved)
-
-/* rfc1738 unsafe chars, plus some more. */
-
-#define UNSAFE_CHAR(c) urlchr_test(c, urlchr_unsafe)
-
-const static unsigned char urlchr_table[256] =
+static const unsigned char urlchr_table[256] =
{
U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, /* NUL SOH STX ETX EOT ENQ ACK BEL */
U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, /* BS HT LF VT FF CR SO SI */
U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, /* DLE DC1 DC2 DC3 DC4 NAK SYN ETB */
U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, /* CAN EM SUB ESC FS GS RS US */
- U, 0, U, RU, 0, U, R, 0, /* SP ! " # $ % & ' */
- 0, 0, 0, R, 0, 0, 0, R, /* ( ) * + , - . / */
+ U, 0, U, RU, R, U, R, 0, /* SP ! " # $ % & ' */
+ 0, 0, 0, R, R, 0, 0, R, /* ( ) * + , - . / */
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 */
0, 0, RU, R, U, R, U, R, /* 8 9 : ; < = > ? */
RU, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* @ A B C D E F G */
U, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* ` a b c d e f g */
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* h i j k l m n o */
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* p q r s t u v w */
- 0, 0, 0, U, U, U, U, U, /* x y z { | } ~ DEL */
+ 0, 0, 0, U, U, U, 0, U, /* x y z { | } ~ DEL */
U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U,
U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U,
U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U,
U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U, U,
};
+#undef R
+#undef U
+#undef RU
-/* Decodes the forms %xy in a URL to the character the hexadecimal
- code of which is xy. xy are hexadecimal digits from
- [0123456789ABCDEF] (case-insensitive). If x or y are not
- hex-digits or `%' precedes `\0', the sequence is inserted
- literally. */
+/* URL-unescape the string S.
+
+ This is done by transforming the sequences "%HH" to the character
+ represented by the hexadecimal digits HH. If % is not followed by
+ two hexadecimal digits, it is inserted literally.
+
+ The transformation is done in place. If you need the original
+ string intact, make a copy before calling this function. */
static void
-decode_string (char *s)
+url_unescape (char *s)
{
char *t = s; /* t - tortoise */
char *h = s; /* h - hare */
}
else
{
+ char c;
/* Do nothing if '%' is not followed by two hex digits. */
- if (!*(h + 1) || !*(h + 2)
- || !(ISXDIGIT (*(h + 1)) && ISXDIGIT (*(h + 2))))
+ if (!h[1] || !h[2] || !(ISXDIGIT (h[1]) && ISXDIGIT (h[2])))
goto copychar;
- *t = (XCHAR_TO_XDIGIT (*(h + 1)) << 4) + XCHAR_TO_XDIGIT (*(h + 2));
+ c = X2DIGITS_TO_NUM (h[1], h[2]);
+ /* Don't unescape %00 because there is no way to insert it
+ into a C string without effectively truncating it. */
+ if (c == '\0')
+ goto copychar;
+ *t = c;
h += 2;
}
}
*t = '\0';
}
-/* Like encode_string, but return S if there are no unsafe chars. */
+/* The core of url_escape_* functions. Escapes the characters that
+ match the provided mask in urlchr_table.
+
+ If ALLOW_PASSTHROUGH is true, a string with no unsafe chars will be
+ returned unchanged. If ALLOW_PASSTHROUGH is false, a freshly
+ allocated string will be returned in all cases. */
static char *
-encode_string_maybe (const char *s)
+url_escape_1 (const char *s, unsigned char mask, bool allow_passthrough)
{
const char *p1;
char *p2, *newstr;
int addition = 0;
for (p1 = s; *p1; p1++)
- if (UNSAFE_CHAR (*p1))
+ if (urlchr_test (*p1, mask))
addition += 2; /* Two more characters (hex digits) */
if (!addition)
- return (char *)s;
+ return allow_passthrough ? (char *)s : xstrdup (s);
newlen = (p1 - s) + addition;
- newstr = (char *)xmalloc (newlen + 1);
+ newstr = xmalloc (newlen + 1);
p1 = s;
p2 = newstr;
while (*p1)
{
- if (UNSAFE_CHAR (*p1))
+ /* Quote the characters that match the test mask. */
+ if (urlchr_test (*p1, mask))
{
unsigned char c = *p1++;
*p2++ = '%';
- *p2++ = XDIGIT_TO_XCHAR (c >> 4);
- *p2++ = XDIGIT_TO_XCHAR (c & 0xf);
+ *p2++ = XNUM_TO_DIGIT (c >> 4);
+ *p2++ = XNUM_TO_DIGIT (c & 0xf);
}
else
*p2++ = *p1++;
}
- *p2 = '\0';
assert (p2 - newstr == newlen);
+ *p2 = '\0';
return newstr;
}
-/* Encode the unsafe characters (as determined by UNSAFE_CHAR) in a
- given string, returning a malloc-ed %XX encoded string. */
-
+/* URL-escape the unsafe characters (see urlchr_table) in a given
+ string, returning a freshly allocated string. */
+
char *
-encode_string (const char *s)
+url_escape (const char *s)
{
- char *encoded = encode_string_maybe (s);
- if (encoded != s)
- return encoded;
- else
- return xstrdup (s);
+ return url_escape_1 (s, urlchr_unsafe, false);
}
-/* Encode unsafe characters in PTR to %xx. If such encoding is done,
- the old value of PTR is freed and PTR is made to point to the newly
- allocated storage. */
-
-#define ENCODE(ptr) do { \
- char *e_new = encode_string_maybe (ptr); \
- if (e_new != ptr) \
- { \
- xfree (ptr); \
- ptr = e_new; \
- } \
-} while (0)
+/* URL-escape the unsafe characters (see urlchr_table) in a given
+ string. If no characters are unsafe, S is returned. */
+
+static char *
+url_escape_allow_passthrough (const char *s)
+{
+ return url_escape_1 (s, urlchr_unsafe, true);
+}
\f
-enum copy_method { CM_DECODE, CM_ENCODE, CM_PASSTHROUGH };
+/* Decide whether the char at position P needs to be encoded. (It is
+ not enough to pass a single char *P because the function may need
+ to inspect the surrounding context.)
-/* Decide whether to encode, decode, or pass through the char at P.
- This used to be a macro, but it got a little too convoluted. */
-static inline enum copy_method
-decide_copy_method (const char *p)
+ Return true if the char should be escaped as %XX, false otherwise. */
+
+static inline bool
+char_needs_escaping (const char *p)
{
if (*p == '%')
{
if (ISXDIGIT (*(p + 1)) && ISXDIGIT (*(p + 2)))
- {
- /* %xx sequence: decode it, unless it would decode to an
- unsafe or a reserved char; in that case, leave it as
- is. */
- char preempt = (XCHAR_TO_XDIGIT (*(p + 1)) << 4) +
- XCHAR_TO_XDIGIT (*(p + 2));
-
- if (UNSAFE_CHAR (preempt) || RESERVED_CHAR (preempt))
- return CM_PASSTHROUGH;
- else
- return CM_DECODE;
- }
+ return false;
else
/* Garbled %.. sequence: encode `%'. */
- return CM_ENCODE;
+ return true;
}
- else if (UNSAFE_CHAR (*p) && !RESERVED_CHAR (*p))
- return CM_ENCODE;
+ else if (URL_UNSAFE_CHAR (*p) && !URL_RESERVED_CHAR (*p))
+ return true;
else
- return CM_PASSTHROUGH;
+ return false;
}
-/* Translate a %-quoting (but possibly non-conformant) input string S
- into a %-quoting (and conformant) output string. If no characters
+/* Translate a %-escaped (but possibly non-conformant) input string S
+ into a %-escaped (and conformant) output string. If no characters
are encoded or decoded, return the same string S; otherwise, return
a freshly allocated string with the new contents.
After a URL has been run through this function, the protocols that
use `%' as the quote character can use the resulting string as-is,
- while those that don't call decode_string() to get to the intended
- data. This function is also stable: after an input string is
- transformed the first time, all further transformations of the
- result yield the same result string.
+ while those that don't can use url_unescape to get to the intended
+ data. This function is stable: once the input is transformed,
+ further transformations of the result yield the same output.
Let's discuss why this function is needed.
- Imagine Wget is to retrieve `http://abc.xyz/abc def'. Since a raw
- space character would mess up the HTTP request, it needs to be
- quoted, like this:
+ Imagine Wget is asked to retrieve `http://abc.xyz/abc def'. Since
+ a raw space character would mess up the HTTP request, it needs to
+ be quoted, like this:
GET /abc%20def HTTP/1.0
- So it appears that the unsafe chars need to be quoted, as with
- encode_string. But what if we're requested to download
- `abc%20def'? Remember that %-encoding is valid URL syntax, so what
- the user meant was a literal space, and he was kind enough to quote
- it. In that case, Wget should obviously leave the `%20' as is, and
- send the same request as above. So in this case we may not call
- encode_string.
-
- But what if the requested URI is `abc%20 def'? If we call
- encode_string, we end up with `/abc%2520%20def', which is almost
- certainly not intended. If we don't call encode_string, we are
- left with the embedded space and cannot send the request. What the
- user meant was for Wget to request `/abc%20%20def', and this is
- where reencode_string kicks in.
+ It would appear that the unsafe chars need to be quoted, for
+ example with url_escape. But what if we're requested to download
+ `abc%20def'? url_escape transforms "%" to "%25", which would leave
+ us with `abc%2520def'. This is incorrect -- since %-escapes are
+ part of URL syntax, "%20" is the correct way to denote a literal
+ space on the Wget command line. This leads to the conclusion that
+ in that case Wget should not call url_escape, but leave the `%20'
+ as is. This is clearly contradictory, but it only gets worse.
+
+ What if the requested URI is `abc%20 def'? If we call url_escape,
+ we end up with `/abc%2520%20def', which is almost certainly not
+ intended. If we don't call url_escape, we are left with the
+ embedded space and cannot complete the request. What the user
+ meant was for Wget to request `/abc%20%20def', and this is where
+ reencode_escapes kicks in.
Wget used to solve this by first decoding %-quotes, and then
encoding all the "unsafe" characters found in the resulting string.
is inevitable because by the second step we would lose information
on whether the `+' was originally encoded or not. Both results
were wrong because in CGI parameters + means space, while %2B means
- literal plus. reencode_string correctly translates the above to
+ literal plus. reencode_escapes correctly translates the above to
"a%2B+b", i.e. returns the original string.
- This function uses an algorithm proposed by Anon Sricharoenchai:
+ This function uses a modified version of the algorithm originally
+ proposed by Anon Sricharoenchai:
- 1. Encode all URL_UNSAFE and the "%" that are not followed by 2
- hexdigits.
+ * Encode all "unsafe" characters, except those that are also
+ "reserved", to %XX. See urlchr_table for which characters are
+ unsafe and reserved.
- 2. Decode all "%XX" except URL_UNSAFE, URL_RESERVED (";/?:@=&") and
- "+".
+ * Encode the "%" characters not followed by two hex digits to
+ "%25".
- ...except that this code conflates the two steps, and decides
- whether to encode, decode, or pass through each character in turn.
- The function still uses two passes, but their logic is the same --
- the first pass exists merely for the sake of allocation. Another
- small difference is that we include `+' to URL_RESERVED.
+ * Pass through all other characters and %XX escapes as-is. (Up to
+ Wget 1.10 this decoded %XX escapes corresponding to "safe"
+ characters, but that was obtrusive and broke some servers.)
Anon's test case:
"http://abc.xyz/%20%3F%%36%31%25aa% a?a=%61+a%2Ba&b=b%26c%3Dc"
->
- "http://abc.xyz/%20%3F%2561%25aa%25%20a?a=a+a%2Ba&b=b%26c%3Dc"
+ "http://abc.xyz/%20%3F%25%36%31%25aa%25%20a?a=%61+a%2Ba&b=b%26c%3Dc"
Simpler test cases:
"foo%2b+bar" -> "foo%2b+bar" */
static char *
-reencode_string (const char *s)
+reencode_escapes (const char *s)
{
const char *p1;
char *newstr, *p2;
int oldlen, newlen;
int encode_count = 0;
- int decode_count = 0;
- /* First, pass through the string to see if there's anything to do,
+ /* First pass: inspect the string to see if there's anything to do,
and to calculate the new length. */
for (p1 = s; *p1; p1++)
- {
- switch (decide_copy_method (p1))
- {
- case CM_ENCODE:
- ++encode_count;
- break;
- case CM_DECODE:
- ++decode_count;
- break;
- case CM_PASSTHROUGH:
- break;
- }
- }
+ if (char_needs_escaping (p1))
+ ++encode_count;
- if (!encode_count && !decode_count)
+ if (!encode_count)
/* The string is good as it is. */
- return (char *)s; /* C const model sucks. */
+ return (char *) s; /* C const model sucks. */
oldlen = p1 - s;
- /* Each encoding adds two characters (hex digits), while each
- decoding removes two characters. */
- newlen = oldlen + 2 * (encode_count - decode_count);
+ /* Each encoding adds two characters (hex digits). */
+ newlen = oldlen + 2 * encode_count;
newstr = xmalloc (newlen + 1);
+ /* Second pass: copy the string to the destination address, encoding
+ chars when needed. */
p1 = s;
p2 = newstr;
while (*p1)
- {
- switch (decide_copy_method (p1))
- {
- case CM_ENCODE:
- {
- unsigned char c = *p1++;
- *p2++ = '%';
- *p2++ = XDIGIT_TO_XCHAR (c >> 4);
- *p2++ = XDIGIT_TO_XCHAR (c & 0xf);
- }
- break;
- case CM_DECODE:
- *p2++ = ((XCHAR_TO_XDIGIT (*(p1 + 1)) << 4)
- + (XCHAR_TO_XDIGIT (*(p1 + 2))));
- p1 += 3; /* skip %xx */
- break;
- case CM_PASSTHROUGH:
- *p2++ = *p1++;
- }
- }
+ if (char_needs_escaping (p1))
+ {
+ unsigned char c = *p1++;
+ *p2++ = '%';
+ *p2++ = XNUM_TO_DIGIT (c >> 4);
+ *p2++ = XNUM_TO_DIGIT (c & 0xf);
+ }
+ else
+ *p2++ = *p1++;
+
*p2 = '\0';
assert (p2 - newstr == newlen);
return newstr;
}
-
-/* Run PTR_VAR through reencode_string. If a new string is consed,
- free PTR_VAR and make it point to the new storage. Obviously,
- PTR_VAR needs to be an lvalue. */
-
-#define REENCODE(ptr_var) do { \
- char *rf_new = reencode_string (ptr_var); \
- if (rf_new != ptr_var) \
- { \
- xfree (ptr_var); \
- ptr_var = rf_new; \
- } \
-} while (0)
\f
/* Returns the scheme type if the scheme is supported, or
SCHEME_INVALID if not. */
+
enum url_scheme
url_scheme (const char *url)
{
return SCHEME_INVALID;
}
-/* Return the number of characters needed to skip the scheme part of
- the URL, e.g. `http://'. If no scheme is found, returns 0. */
-int
-url_skip_scheme (const char *url)
-{
- const char *p = url;
-
- /* Skip the scheme name. We allow `-' and `+' because of `whois++',
- etc. */
- while (ISALNUM (*p) || *p == '-' || *p == '+')
- ++p;
- if (*p != ':')
- return 0;
- /* Skip ':'. */
- ++p;
-
- /* Skip "//" if found. */
- if (*p == '/' && *(p + 1) == '/')
- p += 2;
+#define SCHEME_CHAR(ch) (ISALNUM (ch) || (ch) == '-' || (ch) == '+')
- return p - url;
-}
+/* Return 1 if the URL begins with any "scheme", 0 otherwise. As
+ currently implemented, it returns true if URL begins with
+ [-+a-zA-Z0-9]+: . */
-/* Returns 1 if the URL begins with a scheme (supported or
- unsupported), 0 otherwise. */
-int
+bool
url_has_scheme (const char *url)
{
const char *p = url;
- while (ISALNUM (*p) || *p == '-' || *p == '+')
+
+ /* The first char must be a scheme char. */
+ if (!*p || !SCHEME_CHAR (*p))
+ return false;
+ ++p;
+ /* Followed by 0 or more scheme chars. */
+ while (*p && SCHEME_CHAR (*p))
++p;
+ /* Terminated by ':'. */
return *p == ':';
}
void
scheme_disable (enum url_scheme scheme)
{
- supported_schemes[scheme].enabled = 0;
+ supported_schemes[scheme].enabled = false;
}
-/* Skip the username and password, if present here. The function
- should be called *not* with the complete URL, but with the part
- right after the scheme.
+/* Skip the username and password, if present in the URL. The
+ function should *not* be called with the complete URL, but with the
+ portion after the scheme.
- If no username and password are found, return 0. */
-int
-url_skip_uname (const char *url)
-{
- const char *p;
+ If no username and password are found, return URL. */
- /* Look for '@' that comes before '/' or '?'. */
- p = (const char *)strpbrk (url, "/?@");
+static const char *
+url_skip_credentials (const char *url)
+{
+ /* Look for '@' that comes before terminators, such as '/', '?',
+ '#', or ';'. */
+ const char *p = (const char *)strpbrk (url, "@/?#;");
if (!p || *p != '@')
- return 0;
-
- return p - url + 1;
+ return url;
+ return p + 1;
}
-static int
-parse_uname (const char *str, int len, char **user, char **passwd)
+/* Parse credentials contained in [BEG, END). The region is expected
+ to have come from a URL and is unescaped. */
+
+static bool
+parse_credentials (const char *beg, const char *end, char **user, char **passwd)
{
char *colon;
+ const char *userend;
- if (len == 0)
- /* Empty user name not allowed. */
- return 0;
+ if (beg == end)
+ return false; /* empty user name */
- colon = memchr (str, ':', len);
- if (colon == str)
- /* Empty user name again. */
- return 0;
+ colon = memchr (beg, ':', end - beg);
+ if (colon == beg)
+ return false; /* again empty user name */
if (colon)
{
- int pwlen = len - (colon + 1 - str);
- *passwd = xmalloc (pwlen + 1);
- memcpy (*passwd, colon + 1, pwlen);
- (*passwd)[pwlen] = '\0';
- len -= pwlen + 1;
+ *passwd = strdupdelim (colon + 1, end);
+ userend = colon;
+ url_unescape (*passwd);
}
else
- *passwd = NULL;
-
- *user = xmalloc (len + 1);
- memcpy (*user, str, len);
- (*user)[len] = '\0';
-
- if (*user)
- decode_string (*user);
- if (*passwd)
- decode_string (*passwd);
-
- return 1;
+ {
+ *passwd = NULL;
+ userend = end;
+ }
+ *user = strdupdelim (beg, userend);
+ url_unescape (*user);
+ return true;
}
/* Used by main.c: detect URLs written using the "shorthand" URL forms
foo.bar.com:/absdir/file -> ftp://foo.bar.com//absdir/file
If the URL needs not or cannot be rewritten, return NULL. */
+
char *
rewrite_shorthand_url (const char *url)
{
const char *p;
- if (url_has_scheme (url))
+ if (url_scheme (url) != SCHEME_INVALID)
return NULL;
/* Look for a ':' or '/'. The former signifies NcFTP syntax, the
if (p == url)
return NULL;
+ /* If we're looking at "://", it means the URL uses a scheme we
+ don't support, which may include "https" when compiled without
+ SSL support. Don't bogusly rewrite such URLs. */
+ if (p[0] == ':' && p[1] == '/' && p[2] == '/')
+ return NULL;
+
if (*p == ':')
{
const char *pp;
}
}
\f
-static void parse_path PARAMS ((const char *, char **, char **));
+static void split_path (const char *, char **, char **);
-static char *
+/* Like strpbrk, with the exception that it returns the pointer to the
+ terminating zero (end-of-string aka "eos") if no matching character
+ is found.
+
+ Although I normally balk at Gcc-specific optimizations, it probably
+ makes sense here: glibc has optimizations that detect strpbrk being
+ called with literal string as ACCEPT and inline the search. That
+ optimization is defeated if strpbrk is hidden within the call to
+ another function. (And no, making strpbrk_or_eos inline doesn't
+ help because the check for literal accept is in the
+ preprocessor.) */
+
+#if defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ >= 3
+
+#define strpbrk_or_eos(s, accept) ({ \
+ char *SOE_p = strpbrk (s, accept); \
+ if (!SOE_p) \
+ SOE_p = strchr (s, '\0'); \
+ SOE_p; \
+})
+
+#else /* not __GNUC__ or old gcc */
+
+static inline char *
strpbrk_or_eos (const char *s, const char *accept)
{
char *p = strpbrk (s, accept);
if (!p)
- p = (char *)s + strlen (s);
+ p = strchr (s, '\0');
return p;
}
+#endif /* not __GNUC__ or old gcc */
-/* Turn STR into lowercase; return non-zero if a character was
- actually changed. */
+/* Turn STR into lowercase; return true if a character was actually
+ changed. */
-static int
+static bool
lowercase_str (char *str)
{
- int change = 0;
+ bool changed = false;
for (; *str; str++)
if (ISUPPER (*str))
{
- change = 1;
+ changed = true;
*str = TOLOWER (*str);
}
- return change;
+ return changed;
}
-static char *parse_errors[] = {
+static const char *parse_errors[] = {
#define PE_NO_ERROR 0
- "No error",
+ N_("No error"),
#define PE_UNSUPPORTED_SCHEME 1
- "Unsupported scheme",
+ N_("Unsupported scheme"),
#define PE_EMPTY_HOST 2
- "Empty host",
+ N_("Empty host"),
#define PE_BAD_PORT_NUMBER 3
- "Bad port number",
+ N_("Bad port number"),
#define PE_INVALID_USER_NAME 4
- "Invalid user name",
+ N_("Invalid user name"),
#define PE_UNTERMINATED_IPV6_ADDRESS 5
- "Unterminated IPv6 numeric address",
-#define PE_INVALID_IPV6_ADDRESS 6
- "Invalid char in IPv6 numeric address"
+ N_("Unterminated IPv6 numeric address"),
+#define PE_IPV6_NOT_SUPPORTED 6
+ N_("IPv6 addresses not supported"),
+#define PE_INVALID_IPV6_ADDRESS 7
+ N_("Invalid IPv6 numeric address")
};
-#define SETERR(p, v) do { \
- if (p) \
- *(p) = (v); \
-} while (0)
-
/* Parse a URL.
Return a new struct url if successful, NULL on error. In case of
{
struct url *u;
const char *p;
- int path_modified, host_modified;
+ bool path_modified, host_modified;
enum url_scheme scheme;
int port;
char *user = NULL, *passwd = NULL;
- char *url_encoded;
+ char *url_encoded = NULL;
+
+ int error_code;
scheme = url_scheme (url);
if (scheme == SCHEME_INVALID)
{
- SETERR (error, PE_UNSUPPORTED_SCHEME);
- return NULL;
+ error_code = PE_UNSUPPORTED_SCHEME;
+ goto error;
}
- url_encoded = reencode_string (url);
+ url_encoded = reencode_escapes (url);
p = url_encoded;
p += strlen (supported_schemes[scheme].leading_string);
uname_b = p;
- p += url_skip_uname (p);
+ p = url_skip_credentials (p);
uname_e = p;
/* scheme://user:pass@host[:port]... */
if (*p == '[')
{
- /* Support http://[::1]/ used by IPv6. */
- int invalid = 0;
- ++p;
- while (1)
+ /* Handle IPv6 address inside square brackets. Ideally we'd
+ just look for the terminating ']', but rfc2732 mandates
+ rejecting invalid IPv6 addresses. */
+
+ /* The address begins after '['. */
+ host_b = p + 1;
+ host_e = strchr (host_b, ']');
+
+ if (!host_e)
{
- char c = *p++;
- switch (c)
- {
- case ']':
- goto out;
- case '\0':
- SETERR (error, PE_UNTERMINATED_IPV6_ADDRESS);
- return NULL;
- case ':': case '.':
- break;
- default:
- if (ISXDIGIT (c))
- break;
- invalid = 1;
- }
+ error_code = PE_UNTERMINATED_IPV6_ADDRESS;
+ goto error;
}
- out:
- if (invalid)
+
+#ifdef ENABLE_IPV6
+ /* Check if the IPv6 address is valid. */
+ if (!is_valid_ipv6_address(host_b, host_e))
{
- SETERR (error, PE_INVALID_IPV6_ADDRESS);
- return NULL;
+ error_code = PE_INVALID_IPV6_ADDRESS;
+ goto error;
}
- /* Don't include brackets in [host_b, host_p). */
- ++host_b;
- host_e = p - 1;
+
+ /* Continue parsing after the closing ']'. */
+ p = host_e + 1;
+#else
+ error_code = PE_IPV6_NOT_SUPPORTED;
+ goto error;
+#endif
}
else
{
if (host_b == host_e)
{
- SETERR (error, PE_EMPTY_HOST);
- return NULL;
+ error_code = PE_EMPTY_HOST;
+ goto error;
}
port = scheme_default_port (scheme);
p = strpbrk_or_eos (p, "/;?#");
port_e = p;
- if (port_b == port_e)
- {
- /* http://host:/whatever */
- /* ^ */
- SETERR (error, PE_BAD_PORT_NUMBER);
- return NULL;
- }
-
- for (port = 0, pp = port_b; pp < port_e; pp++)
+ /* Allow empty port, as per rfc2396. */
+ if (port_b != port_e)
{
- if (!ISDIGIT (*pp))
+ for (port = 0, pp = port_b; pp < port_e; pp++)
{
- /* http://host:12randomgarbage/blah */
- /* ^ */
- SETERR (error, PE_BAD_PORT_NUMBER);
- return NULL;
+ if (!ISDIGIT (*pp))
+ {
+ /* http://host:12randomgarbage/blah */
+ /* ^ */
+ error_code = PE_BAD_PORT_NUMBER;
+ goto error;
+ }
+ port = 10 * port + (*pp - '0');
+ /* Check for too large port numbers here, before we have
+ a chance to overflow on bogus port values. */
+ if (port > 65535)
+ {
+ error_code = PE_BAD_PORT_NUMBER;
+ goto error;
+ }
}
- port = 10 * port + (*pp - '0');
}
}
/* http://user:pass@host */
/* ^ ^ */
/* uname_b uname_e */
- if (!parse_uname (uname_b, uname_e - uname_b - 1, &user, &passwd))
+ if (!parse_credentials (uname_b, uname_e - 1, &user, &passwd))
{
- SETERR (error, PE_INVALID_USER_NAME);
- return NULL;
+ error_code = PE_INVALID_USER_NAME;
+ goto error;
}
}
- u = (struct url *)xmalloc (sizeof (struct url));
- memset (u, 0, sizeof (*u));
-
+ u = xnew0 (struct url);
u->scheme = scheme;
u->host = strdupdelim (host_b, host_e);
u->port = port;
u->path = strdupdelim (path_b, path_e);
path_modified = path_simplify (u->path);
- parse_path (u->path, &u->dir, &u->file);
+ split_path (u->path, &u->dir, &u->file);
host_modified = lowercase_str (u->host);
+ /* Decode %HH sequences in host name. This is important not so much
+ to support %HH sequences in host names (which other browser
+ don't), but to support binary characters (which will have been
+ converted to %HH by reencode_escapes). */
+ if (strchr (u->host, '%'))
+ {
+ url_unescape (u->host);
+ host_modified = true;
+ }
+
if (params_b)
u->params = strdupdelim (params_b, params_e);
if (query_b)
/* If we suspect that a transformation has rendered what
url_string might return different from URL_ENCODED, rebuild
u->url using url_string. */
- u->url = url_string (u, 0);
+ u->url = url_string (u, false);
if (url_encoded != url)
xfree ((char *) url_encoded);
else
{
if (url_encoded == url)
- u->url = xstrdup (url);
+ u->url = xstrdup (url);
else
- u->url = url_encoded;
+ u->url = url_encoded;
}
- url_encoded = NULL;
return u;
+
+ error:
+ /* Cleanup in case of error: */
+ if (url_encoded && url_encoded != url)
+ xfree (url_encoded);
+
+ /* Transmit the error code to the caller, if the caller wants to
+ know. */
+ if (error)
+ *error = error_code;
+ return NULL;
}
+/* Return the error message string from ERROR_CODE, which should have
+ been retrieved from url_parse. The error message is translated. */
+
const char *
url_error (int error_code)
{
- assert (error_code >= 0 && error_code < ARRAY_SIZE (parse_errors));
- return parse_errors[error_code];
+ assert (error_code >= 0 && error_code < countof (parse_errors));
+ return _(parse_errors[error_code]);
}
-static void
-parse_path (const char *quoted_path, char **dir, char **file)
-{
- char *path, *last_slash;
+/* Split PATH into DIR and FILE. PATH comes from the URL and is
+ expected to be URL-escaped.
+
+ The path is split into directory (the part up to the last slash)
+ and file (the part after the last slash), which are subsequently
+ unescaped. Examples:
+
+ PATH DIR FILE
+ "foo/bar/baz" "foo/bar" "baz"
+ "foo/bar/" "foo/bar" ""
+ "foo" "" "foo"
+ "foo/bar/baz%2fqux" "foo/bar" "baz/qux" (!)
- STRDUP_ALLOCA (path, quoted_path);
- decode_string (path);
+ DIR and FILE are freshly allocated. */
- last_slash = strrchr (path, '/');
+static void
+split_path (const char *path, char **dir, char **file)
+{
+ char *last_slash = strrchr (path, '/');
if (!last_slash)
{
*dir = xstrdup ("");
*dir = strdupdelim (path, last_slash);
*file = xstrdup (last_slash + 1);
}
+ url_unescape (*dir);
+ url_unescape (*file);
}
/* Note: URL's "full path" is the path with the query string and
url_full_path (const struct url *url)
{
int length = full_path_length (url);
- char *full_path = (char *)xmalloc(length + 1);
+ char *full_path = xmalloc (length + 1);
full_path_write (url, full_path);
full_path[length] = '\0';
return full_path;
}
-/* Sync u->path and u->url with u->dir and u->file. */
+/* Unescape CHR in an otherwise escaped STR. Used to selectively
+ escaping of certain characters, such as "/" and ":". Returns a
+ count of unescaped chars. */
static void
-sync_path (struct url *url)
+unescape_single_char (char *str, char chr)
{
- char *newpath;
-
- xfree (url->path);
-
- if (!*url->dir)
+ const char c1 = XNUM_TO_DIGIT (chr >> 4);
+ const char c2 = XNUM_TO_DIGIT (chr & 0xf);
+ char *h = str; /* hare */
+ char *t = str; /* tortoise */
+ for (; *h; h++, t++)
{
- newpath = xstrdup (url->file);
- REENCODE (newpath);
+ if (h[0] == '%' && h[1] == c1 && h[2] == c2)
+ {
+ *t = chr;
+ h += 2;
+ }
+ else
+ *t = *h;
}
+ *t = '\0';
+}
+
+/* Escape unsafe and reserved characters, except for the slash
+ characters. */
+
+static char *
+url_escape_dir (const char *dir)
+{
+ char *newdir = url_escape_1 (dir, urlchr_unsafe | urlchr_reserved, 1);
+ if (newdir == dir)
+ return (char *)dir;
+
+ unescape_single_char (newdir, '/');
+ return newdir;
+}
+
+/* Sync u->path and u->url with u->dir and u->file. Called after
+ u->file or u->dir have been changed, typically by the FTP code. */
+
+static void
+sync_path (struct url *u)
+{
+ char *newpath, *efile, *edir;
+
+ xfree (u->path);
+
+ /* u->dir and u->file are not escaped. URL-escape them before
+ reassembling them into u->path. That way, if they contain
+ separators like '?' or even if u->file contains slashes, the
+ path will be correctly assembled. (u->file can contain slashes
+ if the URL specifies it with %2f, or if an FTP server returns
+ it.) */
+ edir = url_escape_dir (u->dir);
+ efile = url_escape_1 (u->file, urlchr_unsafe | urlchr_reserved, 1);
+
+ if (!*edir)
+ newpath = xstrdup (efile);
else
{
- int dirlen = strlen (url->dir);
- int filelen = strlen (url->file);
-
- newpath = xmalloc (dirlen + 1 + filelen + 1);
- memcpy (newpath, url->dir, dirlen);
- newpath[dirlen] = '/';
- memcpy (newpath + dirlen + 1, url->file, filelen);
- newpath[dirlen + 1 + filelen] = '\0';
- REENCODE (newpath);
+ int dirlen = strlen (edir);
+ int filelen = strlen (efile);
+
+ /* Copy "DIR/FILE" to newpath. */
+ char *p = newpath = xmalloc (dirlen + 1 + filelen + 1);
+ memcpy (p, edir, dirlen);
+ p += dirlen;
+ *p++ = '/';
+ memcpy (p, efile, filelen);
+ p += filelen;
+ *p = '\0';
}
- url->path = newpath;
+ u->path = newpath;
- /* Synchronize u->url. */
- xfree (url->url);
- url->url = url_string (url, 0);
+ if (edir != u->dir)
+ xfree (edir);
+ if (efile != u->file)
+ xfree (efile);
+
+ /* Regenerate u->url as well. */
+ xfree (u->url);
+ u->url = url_string (u, false);
}
/* Mutators. Code in ftp.c insists on changing u->dir and u->file.
xfree (url->path);
xfree (url->url);
- FREE_MAYBE (url->params);
- FREE_MAYBE (url->query);
- FREE_MAYBE (url->fragment);
- FREE_MAYBE (url->user);
- FREE_MAYBE (url->passwd);
+ xfree_null (url->params);
+ xfree_null (url->query);
+ xfree_null (url->fragment);
+ xfree_null (url->user);
+ xfree_null (url->passwd);
xfree (url->dir);
xfree (url->file);
xfree (url);
}
\f
-struct urlpos *
-get_urls_file (const char *file)
-{
- struct file_memory *fm;
- struct urlpos *head, *tail;
- const char *text, *text_end;
-
- /* Load the file. */
- fm = read_file (file);
- if (!fm)
- {
- logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, "%s: %s\n", file, strerror (errno));
- return NULL;
- }
- DEBUGP (("Loaded %s (size %ld).\n", file, fm->length));
-
- head = tail = NULL;
- text = fm->content;
- text_end = fm->content + fm->length;
- while (text < text_end)
- {
- const char *line_beg = text;
- const char *line_end = memchr (text, '\n', text_end - text);
- if (!line_end)
- line_end = text_end;
- else
- ++line_end;
- text = line_end;
-
- /* Strip whitespace from the beginning and end of line. */
- while (line_beg < line_end && ISSPACE (*line_beg))
- ++line_beg;
- while (line_end > line_beg && ISSPACE (*(line_end - 1)))
- --line_end;
-
- if (line_end > line_beg)
- {
- /* URL is in the [line_beg, line_end) region. */
-
- int up_error_code;
- char *url_text;
- struct urlpos *entry;
- struct url *url;
-
- /* We must copy the URL to a zero-terminated string, and we
- can't use alloca because we're in a loop. *sigh*. */
- url_text = strdupdelim (line_beg, line_end);
-
- if (opt.base_href)
- {
- /* Merge opt.base_href with URL. */
- char *merged = uri_merge (opt.base_href, url_text);
- xfree (url_text);
- url_text = merged;
- }
-
- url = url_parse (url_text, &up_error_code);
- if (!url)
- {
- logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, "%s: Invalid URL %s: %s\n",
- file, url_text, url_error (up_error_code));
- xfree (url_text);
- continue;
- }
- xfree (url_text);
-
- entry = (struct urlpos *)xmalloc (sizeof (struct urlpos));
- memset (entry, 0, sizeof (*entry));
- entry->next = NULL;
- entry->url = url;
-
- if (!head)
- head = entry;
- else
- tail->next = entry;
- tail = entry;
- }
- }
- read_file_free (fm);
- return head;
-}
-\f
-/* Free the linked list of urlpos. */
-void
-free_urlpos (struct urlpos *l)
-{
- while (l)
- {
- struct urlpos *next = l->next;
- if (l->url)
- url_free (l->url);
- FREE_MAYBE (l->local_name);
- xfree (l);
- l = next;
- }
-}
-
-/* Rotate FNAME opt.backups times */
-void
-rotate_backups(const char *fname)
-{
- int maxlen = strlen (fname) + 1 + numdigit (opt.backups) + 1;
- char *from = (char *)alloca (maxlen);
- char *to = (char *)alloca (maxlen);
- struct stat sb;
- int i;
-
- if (stat (fname, &sb) == 0)
- if (S_ISREG (sb.st_mode) == 0)
- return;
-
- for (i = opt.backups; i > 1; i--)
- {
- sprintf (from, "%s.%d", fname, i - 1);
- sprintf (to, "%s.%d", fname, i);
- /* #### This will fail on machines without the rename() system
- call. */
- rename (from, to);
- }
-
- sprintf (to, "%s.%d", fname, 1);
- rename(fname, to);
-}
-
/* Create all the necessary directories for PATH (a file). Calls
- mkdirhier() internally. */
+ make_directory internally. */
int
mkalldirs (const char *path)
{
const char *p;
char *t;
- struct stat st;
+ struct_stat st;
int res;
p = path + strlen (path);
- for (; *p != '/' && p != path; p--);
+ for (; *p != '/' && p != path; p--)
+ ;
+
/* Don't create if it's just a file. */
if ((p == path) && (*p != '/'))
return 0;
t = strdupdelim (path, p);
+
/* Check whether the directory exists. */
if ((stat (t, &st) == 0))
{
xfree (t);
return res;
}
+\f
+/* Functions for constructing the file name out of URL components. */
-static int
-count_slashes (const char *s)
+/* A growable string structure, used by url_file_name and friends.
+ This should perhaps be moved to utils.c.
+
+ The idea is to have a convenient and efficient way to construct a
+ string by having various functions append data to it. Instead of
+ passing the obligatory BASEVAR, SIZEVAR and TAILPOS to all the
+ functions in questions, we pass the pointer to this struct. */
+
+struct growable {
+ char *base;
+ int size;
+ int tail;
+};
+
+/* Ensure that the string can accept APPEND_COUNT more characters past
+ the current TAIL position. If necessary, this will grow the string
+ and update its allocated size. If the string is already large
+ enough to take TAIL+APPEND_COUNT characters, this does nothing. */
+#define GROW(g, append_size) do { \
+ struct growable *G_ = g; \
+ DO_REALLOC (G_->base, G_->size, G_->tail + append_size, char); \
+} while (0)
+
+/* Return the tail position of the string. */
+#define TAIL(r) ((r)->base + (r)->tail)
+
+/* Move the tail position by APPEND_COUNT characters. */
+#define TAIL_INCR(r, append_count) ((r)->tail += append_count)
+
+/* Append the string STR to DEST. NOTICE: the string in DEST is not
+ terminated. */
+
+static void
+append_string (const char *str, struct growable *dest)
{
- int i = 0;
- while (*s)
- if (*s++ == '/')
- ++i;
- return i;
+ int l = strlen (str);
+ GROW (dest, l);
+ memcpy (TAIL (dest), str, l);
+ TAIL_INCR (dest, l);
}
-/* Return the path name of the URL-equivalent file name, with a
- remote-like structure of directories. */
-static char *
-mkstruct (const struct url *u)
+/* Append CH to DEST. For example, append_char (0, DEST)
+ zero-terminates DEST. */
+
+static void
+append_char (char ch, struct growable *dest)
{
- char *dir, *file;
- char *res, *dirpref;
- int l;
+ GROW (dest, 1);
+ *TAIL (dest) = ch;
+ TAIL_INCR (dest, 1);
+}
- if (opt.cut_dirs)
- {
- char *ptr = u->dir + (*u->dir == '/');
- int slash_count = 1 + count_slashes (ptr);
- int cut = MINVAL (opt.cut_dirs, slash_count);
- for (; cut && *ptr; ptr++)
- if (*ptr == '/')
- --cut;
- STRDUP_ALLOCA (dir, ptr);
- }
- else
- dir = u->dir + (*u->dir == '/');
+enum {
+ filechr_not_unix = 1, /* unusable on Unix, / and \0 */
+ filechr_not_windows = 2, /* unusable on Windows, one of \|/<>?:*" */
+ filechr_control = 4 /* a control character, e.g. 0-31 */
+};
- /* Check for the true name (or at least a consistent name for saving
- to directory) of HOST, reusing the hlist if possible. */
- if (opt.add_hostdir)
- {
- /* Add dir_prefix and hostname (if required) to the beginning of
- dir. */
- dirpref = (char *)alloca (strlen (opt.dir_prefix) + 1
- + strlen (u->host)
- + 1 + numdigit (u->port)
- + 1);
- if (!DOTP (opt.dir_prefix))
- sprintf (dirpref, "%s/%s", opt.dir_prefix, u->host);
- else
- strcpy (dirpref, u->host);
+#define FILE_CHAR_TEST(c, mask) (filechr_table[(unsigned char)(c)] & (mask))
- if (u->port != scheme_default_port (u->scheme))
- {
- int len = strlen (dirpref);
- dirpref[len] = ':';
- number_to_string (dirpref + len + 1, u->port);
- }
- }
- else /* not add_hostdir */
- {
- if (!DOTP (opt.dir_prefix))
- dirpref = opt.dir_prefix;
- else
- dirpref = "";
- }
+/* Shorthands for the table: */
+#define U filechr_not_unix
+#define W filechr_not_windows
+#define C filechr_control
- /* If there is a prefix, prepend it. */
- if (*dirpref)
- {
- char *newdir = (char *)alloca (strlen (dirpref) + 1 + strlen (dir) + 2);
- sprintf (newdir, "%s%s%s", dirpref, *dir == '/' ? "" : "/", dir);
- dir = newdir;
- }
+#define UW U|W
+#define UWC U|W|C
- l = strlen (dir);
- if (l && dir[l - 1] == '/')
- dir[l - 1] = '\0';
+/* Table of characters unsafe under various conditions (see above).
- if (!*u->file)
- file = "index.html";
- else
- file = u->file;
+ Arguably we could also claim `%' to be unsafe, since we use it as
+ the escape character. If we ever want to be able to reliably
+ translate file name back to URL, this would become important
+ crucial. Right now, it's better to be minimal in escaping. */
- /* Finally, construct the full name. */
- res = (char *)xmalloc (strlen (dir) + 1 + strlen (file)
- + 1);
- sprintf (res, "%s%s%s", dir, *dir ? "/" : "", file);
+static const unsigned char filechr_table[256] =
+{
+UWC, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, /* NUL SOH STX ETX EOT ENQ ACK BEL */
+ C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, /* BS HT LF VT FF CR SO SI */
+ C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, /* DLE DC1 DC2 DC3 DC4 NAK SYN ETB */
+ C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, /* CAN EM SUB ESC FS GS RS US */
+ 0, 0, W, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* SP ! " # $ % & ' */
+ 0, 0, W, 0, 0, 0, 0, UW, /* ( ) * + , - . / */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 */
+ 0, 0, W, 0, W, 0, W, W, /* 8 9 : ; < = > ? */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* @ A B C D E F G */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* H I J K L M N O */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* P Q R S T U V W */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, W, 0, 0, 0, /* X Y Z [ \ ] ^ _ */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* ` a b c d e f g */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* h i j k l m n o */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* p q r s t u v w */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* x y z { | } ~ DEL */
- return res;
-}
+ C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, /* 128-143 */
+ C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, /* 144-159 */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
-/* Compose a file name out of BASE, an unescaped file name, and QUERY,
- an escaped query string. The trick is to make sure that unsafe
- characters in BASE are escaped, and that slashes in QUERY are also
- escaped. */
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
+ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
+};
+#undef U
+#undef W
+#undef C
+#undef UW
+#undef UWC
+
+/* FN_PORT_SEP is the separator between host and port in file names
+ for non-standard port numbers. On Unix this is normally ':', as in
+ "www.xemacs.org:4001/index.html". Under Windows, we set it to +
+ because Windows can't handle ':' in file names. */
+#define FN_PORT_SEP (opt.restrict_files_os != restrict_windows ? ':' : '+')
+
+/* FN_QUERY_SEP is the separator between the file name and the URL
+ query, normally '?'. Since Windows cannot handle '?' as part of
+ file name, we use '@' instead there. */
+#define FN_QUERY_SEP (opt.restrict_files_os != restrict_windows ? '?' : '@')
+
+/* Quote path element, characters in [b, e), as file name, and append
+ the quoted string to DEST. Each character is quoted as per
+ file_unsafe_char and the corresponding table.
+
+ If ESCAPED is true, the path element is considered to be
+ URL-escaped and will be unescaped prior to inspection. */
-static char *
-compose_file_name (char *base, char *query)
+static void
+append_uri_pathel (const char *b, const char *e, bool escaped,
+ struct growable *dest)
{
- char result[256];
- char *from;
- char *to = result;
+ const char *p;
+ int quoted, outlen;
+
+ int mask;
+ if (opt.restrict_files_os == restrict_unix)
+ mask = filechr_not_unix;
+ else
+ mask = filechr_not_windows;
+ if (opt.restrict_files_ctrl)
+ mask |= filechr_control;
- /* Copy BASE to RESULT and encode all unsafe characters. */
- from = base;
- while (*from && to - result < sizeof (result))
+ /* Copy [b, e) to PATHEL and URL-unescape it. */
+ if (escaped)
{
- if (UNSAFE_CHAR (*from))
- {
- unsigned char c = *from++;
- *to++ = '%';
- *to++ = XDIGIT_TO_XCHAR (c >> 4);
- *to++ = XDIGIT_TO_XCHAR (c & 0xf);
- }
- else
- *to++ = *from++;
+ char *unescaped;
+ BOUNDED_TO_ALLOCA (b, e, unescaped);
+ url_unescape (unescaped);
+ b = unescaped;
+ e = unescaped + strlen (unescaped);
}
- if (query && to - result < sizeof (result))
+ /* Defang ".." when found as component of path. Remember that path
+ comes from the URL and might contain malicious input. */
+ if (e - b == 2 && b[0] == '.' && b[1] == '.')
{
- *to++ = '?';
+ b = "%2E%2E";
+ e = b + 6;
+ }
+
+ /* Walk the PATHEL string and check how many characters we'll need
+ to quote. */
+ quoted = 0;
+ for (p = b; p < e; p++)
+ if (FILE_CHAR_TEST (*p, mask))
+ ++quoted;
- /* Copy QUERY to RESULT and encode all '/' characters. */
- from = query;
- while (*from && to - result < sizeof (result))
+ /* Calculate the length of the output string. e-b is the input
+ string length. Each quoted char introduces two additional
+ characters in the string, hence 2*quoted. */
+ outlen = (e - b) + (2 * quoted);
+ GROW (dest, outlen);
+
+ if (!quoted)
+ {
+ /* If there's nothing to quote, we can simply append the string
+ without processing it again. */
+ memcpy (TAIL (dest), b, outlen);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ char *q = TAIL (dest);
+ for (p = b; p < e; p++)
{
- if (*from == '/')
+ if (!FILE_CHAR_TEST (*p, mask))
+ *q++ = *p;
+ else
{
- *to++ = '%';
- *to++ = '2';
- *to++ = 'F';
- ++from;
+ unsigned char ch = *p;
+ *q++ = '%';
+ *q++ = XNUM_TO_DIGIT (ch >> 4);
+ *q++ = XNUM_TO_DIGIT (ch & 0xf);
}
- else
- *to++ = *from++;
}
+ assert (q - TAIL (dest) == outlen);
}
+ TAIL_INCR (dest, outlen);
+}
- if (to - result < sizeof (result))
- *to = '\0';
- else
- /* Truncate input which is too long, presumably due to a huge
- query string. */
- result[sizeof (result) - 1] = '\0';
+/* Append to DEST the directory structure that corresponds the
+ directory part of URL's path. For example, if the URL is
+ http://server/dir1/dir2/file, this appends "/dir1/dir2".
- return xstrdup (result);
-}
+ Each path element ("dir1" and "dir2" in the above example) is
+ examined, url-unescaped, and re-escaped as file name element.
-/* Create a unique filename, corresponding to a given URL. Calls
- mkstruct if necessary. Does *not* actually create any directories. */
-char *
-url_filename (const struct url *u)
+ Additionally, it cuts as many directories from the path as
+ specified by opt.cut_dirs. For example, if opt.cut_dirs is 1, it
+ will produce "bar" for the above example. For 2 or more, it will
+ produce "".
+
+ Each component of the path is quoted for use as file name. */
+
+static void
+append_dir_structure (const struct url *u, struct growable *dest)
{
- char *file, *name;
+ char *pathel, *next;
+ int cut = opt.cut_dirs;
- char *query = u->query && *u->query ? u->query : NULL;
+ /* Go through the path components, de-URL-quote them, and quote them
+ (if necessary) as file names. */
- if (opt.dirstruct)
+ pathel = u->path;
+ for (; (next = strchr (pathel, '/')) != NULL; pathel = next + 1)
{
- char *base = mkstruct (u);
- file = compose_file_name (base, query);
- xfree (base);
+ if (cut-- > 0)
+ continue;
+ if (pathel == next)
+ /* Ignore empty pathels. */
+ continue;
+
+ if (dest->tail)
+ append_char ('/', dest);
+ append_uri_pathel (pathel, next, true, dest);
}
- else
- {
- char *base = *u->file ? u->file : "index.html";
- file = compose_file_name (base, query);
+}
+
+/* Return a unique file name that matches the given URL as good as
+ possible. Does not create directories on the file system. */
+
+char *
+url_file_name (const struct url *u)
+{
+ struct growable fnres; /* stands for "file name result" */
+
+ const char *u_file, *u_query;
+ char *fname, *unique;
+
+ fnres.base = NULL;
+ fnres.size = 0;
+ fnres.tail = 0;
+
+ /* Start with the directory prefix, if specified. */
+ if (opt.dir_prefix)
+ append_string (opt.dir_prefix, &fnres);
- /* Check whether the prefix directory is something other than "."
- before prepending it. */
- if (!DOTP (opt.dir_prefix))
+ /* If "dirstruct" is turned on (typically the case with -r), add
+ the host and port (unless those have been turned off) and
+ directory structure. */
+ if (opt.dirstruct)
+ {
+ if (opt.protocol_directories)
{
- /* #### should just realloc FILE and prepend dir_prefix. */
- char *nfile = (char *)xmalloc (strlen (opt.dir_prefix)
- + 1 + strlen (file) + 1);
- sprintf (nfile, "%s/%s", opt.dir_prefix, file);
- xfree (file);
- file = nfile;
+ if (fnres.tail)
+ append_char ('/', &fnres);
+ append_string (supported_schemes[u->scheme].name, &fnres);
}
+ if (opt.add_hostdir)
+ {
+ if (fnres.tail)
+ append_char ('/', &fnres);
+ if (0 != strcmp (u->host, ".."))
+ append_string (u->host, &fnres);
+ else
+ /* Host name can come from the network; malicious DNS may
+ allow ".." to be resolved, causing us to write to
+ "../<file>". Defang such host names. */
+ append_string ("%2E%2E", &fnres);
+ if (u->port != scheme_default_port (u->scheme))
+ {
+ char portstr[24];
+ number_to_string (portstr, u->port);
+ append_char (FN_PORT_SEP, &fnres);
+ append_string (portstr, &fnres);
+ }
+ }
+
+ append_dir_structure (u, &fnres);
}
- /* DOS-ish file systems don't like `%' signs in them; we change it
- to `@'. */
-#ifdef WINDOWS
- {
- char *p = file;
- for (p = file; *p; p++)
- if (*p == '%')
- *p = '@';
- }
-#endif /* WINDOWS */
+ /* Add the file name. */
+ if (fnres.tail)
+ append_char ('/', &fnres);
+ u_file = *u->file ? u->file : "index.html";
+ append_uri_pathel (u_file, u_file + strlen (u_file), false, &fnres);
+
+ /* Append "?query" to the file name. */
+ u_query = u->query && *u->query ? u->query : NULL;
+ if (u_query)
+ {
+ append_char (FN_QUERY_SEP, &fnres);
+ append_uri_pathel (u_query, u_query + strlen (u_query), true, &fnres);
+ }
+
+ /* Zero-terminate the file name. */
+ append_char ('\0', &fnres);
+
+ fname = fnres.base;
/* Check the cases in which the unique extensions are not used:
1) Clobbering is turned off (-nc).
4) Hierarchy is built.
The exception is the case when file does exist and is a
- directory (actually support for bad httpd-s). */
- if ((opt.noclobber || opt.always_rest || opt.timestamping || opt.dirstruct)
- && !(file_exists_p (file) && !file_non_directory_p (file)))
- return file;
+ directory (see `mkalldirs' for explanation). */
- /* Find a unique name. */
- name = unique_name (file);
- xfree (file);
- return name;
-}
+ if ((opt.noclobber || opt.always_rest || opt.timestamping || opt.dirstruct)
+ && !(file_exists_p (fname) && !file_non_directory_p (fname)))
+ return fname;
-/* Return the langth of URL's path. Path is considered to be
- terminated by one of '?', ';', '#', or by the end of the
- string. */
-static int
-path_length (const char *url)
-{
- const char *q = strpbrk_or_eos (url, "?;#");
- return q - url;
-}
-
-/* Find the last occurrence of character C in the range [b, e), or
- NULL, if none are present. This is equivalent to strrchr(b, c),
- except that it accepts an END argument instead of requiring the
- string to be zero-terminated. Why is there no memrchr()? */
-static const char *
-find_last_char (const char *b, const char *e, char c)
-{
- for (; e > b; e--)
- if (*e == c)
- return e;
- return NULL;
+ unique = unique_name (fname, true);
+ if (unique != fname)
+ xfree (fname);
+ return unique;
}
\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.
+ PATH and return true if PATH has been modified, false otherwise.
- Return non-zero if any changes have been made.
+ The algorithm is in spirit similar to the one described in rfc1808,
+ although implemented differently, in one pass. To recap, path
+ elements containing only "." are removed, and ".." is taken to mean
+ "back up one element". Single leading and trailing slashes are
+ preserved.
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. */
+ test case. */
-static int
+static bool
path_simplify (char *path)
{
- int change = 0;
- char *p, *end;
-
- if (path[0] == '/')
- ++path; /* preserve the leading '/'. */
+ char *h = path; /* hare */
+ char *t = path; /* tortoise */
+ char *beg = path; /* boundary for backing the tortoise */
+ char *end = path + strlen (path);
- p = path;
- end = p + strlen (p) + 1; /* position past the terminating zero. */
-
- while (1)
+ while (h < end)
{
- again:
- /* P should point to the beginning of a path element. */
+ /* Hare should be at the beginning of a path element. */
- if (*p == '.' && (*(p + 1) == '/' || *(p + 1) == '\0'))
+ if (h[0] == '.' && (h[1] == '/' || h[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;
- }
+ /* Ignore "./". */
+ h += 2;
}
- else if (*p == '.' && *(p + 1) == '.'
- && (*(p + 2) == '/' || *(p + 2) == '\0'))
+ else if (h[0] == '.' && h[1] == '.' && (h[2] == '/' || h[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)
+ /* Handle "../" by retreating the tortoise by one path
+ element -- but not past beggining. */
+ if (t > beg)
{
- /* Move backwards until B hits the beginning of the
+ /* Move backwards until T hits the beginning of the
previous path element or the beginning of path. */
- for (--b; b > path && *(b - 1) != '/'; b--)
+ for (--t; t > beg && t[-1] != '/'; t--)
;
}
-
- change = 1;
- if (*(p + 2) == '/')
- {
- memmove (b, p + 3, end - (p + 3));
- end -= (p + 3) - b;
- p = b;
- }
else
{
- *b = '\0';
- break;
+ /* If we're at the beginning, copy the "../" literally
+ move the beginning so a later ".." doesn't remove
+ it. */
+ beg = t + 3;
+ goto regular;
}
-
- goto again;
+ h += 3;
}
- else if (*p == '/')
+ else
{
- /* 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')
+ regular:
+ /* A regular path element. If H hasn't advanced past T,
+ simply skip to the next path element. Otherwise, copy
+ the path element until the next slash. */
+ if (t == h)
+ {
+ /* Skip the path element, including the slash. */
+ while (h < end && *h != '/')
+ t++, h++;
+ if (h < end)
+ t++, h++;
+ }
+ else
{
- *p = '\0';
- break;
+ /* Copy the path element, including the final slash. */
+ while (h < end && *h != '/')
+ *t++ = *h++;
+ if (h < end)
+ *t++ = *h++;
}
- 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;
}
- return change;
+ if (t != h)
+ *t = '\0';
+
+ return t != h;
}
\f
-/* Resolve the result of "linking" a base URI (BASE) to a
- link-specified URI (LINK).
+/* Return the length of URL's path. Path is considered to be
+ terminated by one of '?', ';', '#', or by the end of the
+ string. */
+
+static int
+path_length (const char *url)
+{
+ const char *q = strpbrk_or_eos (url, "?;#");
+ return q - url;
+}
+
+/* Find the last occurrence of character C in the range [b, e), or
+ NULL, if none are present. We might want to use memrchr (a GNU
+ extension) under GNU libc. */
+
+static const char *
+find_last_char (const char *b, const char *e, char c)
+{
+ for (; e > b; e--)
+ if (*e == c)
+ return e;
+ return NULL;
+}
+
+/* Merge BASE with LINK and return the resulting URI.
Either of the URIs may be absolute or relative, complete with the
- host name, or path only. This tries to behave "reasonably" in all
- foreseeable cases. It employs little specific knowledge about
- schemes or URL-specific stuff -- it just works on strings.
+ host name, or path only. This tries to reasonably handle all
+ foreseeable cases. It only employs minimal URL parsing, without
+ knowledge of the specifics of schemes.
- The parameters LINKLENGTH is useful if LINK is not zero-terminated.
- See uri_merge for a gentler interface to this functionality.
+ I briefly considered making this function call path_simplify after
+ the merging process, as rfc1738 seems to suggest. This is a bad
+ idea for several reasons: 1) it complexifies the code, and 2)
+ url_parse has to simplify path anyway, so it's wasteful to boot. */
- Perhaps this function should call path_simplify so that the callers
- don't have to call url_parse unconditionally. */
-static char *
-uri_merge_1 (const char *base, const char *link, int linklength, int no_scheme)
+char *
+uri_merge (const char *base, const char *link)
{
- char *constr;
+ int linklength;
+ const char *end;
+ char *merge;
+
+ if (url_has_scheme (link))
+ return xstrdup (link);
+
+ /* We may not examine BASE past END. */
+ end = base + path_length (base);
+ linklength = strlen (link);
+
+ if (!*link)
+ {
+ /* Empty LINK points back to BASE, query string and all. */
+ return xstrdup (base);
+ }
+ else if (*link == '?')
+ {
+ /* LINK points to the same location, but changes the query
+ string. Examples: */
+ /* uri_merge("path", "?new") -> "path?new" */
+ /* uri_merge("path?foo", "?new") -> "path?new" */
+ /* uri_merge("path?foo#bar", "?new") -> "path?new" */
+ /* uri_merge("path#foo", "?new") -> "path?new" */
+ int baselength = end - base;
+ merge = xmalloc (baselength + linklength + 1);
+ memcpy (merge, base, baselength);
+ memcpy (merge + baselength, link, linklength);
+ merge[baselength + linklength] = '\0';
+ }
+ else if (*link == '#')
+ {
+ /* uri_merge("path", "#new") -> "path#new" */
+ /* uri_merge("path#foo", "#new") -> "path#new" */
+ /* uri_merge("path?foo", "#new") -> "path?foo#new" */
+ /* uri_merge("path?foo#bar", "#new") -> "path?foo#new" */
+ int baselength;
+ const char *end1 = strchr (base, '#');
+ if (!end1)
+ end1 = base + strlen (base);
+ baselength = end1 - base;
+ merge = xmalloc (baselength + linklength + 1);
+ memcpy (merge, base, baselength);
+ memcpy (merge + baselength, link, linklength);
+ merge[baselength + linklength] = '\0';
+ }
+ else if (*link == '/' && *(link + 1) == '/')
+ {
+ /* LINK begins with "//" and so is a net path: we need to
+ replace everything after (and including) the double slash
+ with LINK. */
+
+ /* uri_merge("foo", "//new/bar") -> "//new/bar" */
+ /* uri_merge("//old/foo", "//new/bar") -> "//new/bar" */
+ /* uri_merge("http://old/foo", "//new/bar") -> "http://new/bar" */
+
+ int span;
+ const char *slash;
+ const char *start_insert;
+
+ /* Look for first slash. */
+ slash = memchr (base, '/', end - base);
+ /* If found slash and it is a double slash, then replace
+ from this point, else default to replacing from the
+ beginning. */
+ if (slash && *(slash + 1) == '/')
+ start_insert = slash;
+ else
+ start_insert = base;
+
+ span = start_insert - base;
+ merge = xmalloc (span + linklength + 1);
+ if (span)
+ memcpy (merge, base, span);
+ memcpy (merge + span, link, linklength);
+ merge[span + linklength] = '\0';
+ }
+ else if (*link == '/')
+ {
+ /* LINK is an absolute path: we need to replace everything
+ after (and including) the FIRST slash with LINK.
+
+ So, if BASE is "http://host/whatever/foo/bar", and LINK is
+ "/qux/xyzzy", our result should be
+ "http://host/qux/xyzzy". */
+ int span;
+ const char *slash;
+ const char *start_insert = NULL; /* for gcc to shut up. */
+ const char *pos = base;
+ bool seen_slash_slash = false;
+ /* We're looking for the first slash, but want to ignore
+ double slash. */
+ again:
+ slash = memchr (pos, '/', end - pos);
+ if (slash && !seen_slash_slash)
+ if (*(slash + 1) == '/')
+ {
+ pos = slash + 2;
+ seen_slash_slash = true;
+ goto again;
+ }
- if (no_scheme)
+ /* At this point, SLASH is the location of the first / after
+ "//", or the first slash altogether. START_INSERT is the
+ pointer to the location where LINK will be inserted. When
+ examining the last two examples, keep in mind that LINK
+ begins with '/'. */
+
+ if (!slash && !seen_slash_slash)
+ /* example: "foo" */
+ /* ^ */
+ start_insert = base;
+ else if (!slash && seen_slash_slash)
+ /* example: "http://foo" */
+ /* ^ */
+ start_insert = end;
+ else if (slash && !seen_slash_slash)
+ /* example: "foo/bar" */
+ /* ^ */
+ start_insert = base;
+ else if (slash && seen_slash_slash)
+ /* example: "http://something/" */
+ /* ^ */
+ start_insert = slash;
+
+ span = start_insert - base;
+ merge = xmalloc (span + linklength + 1);
+ if (span)
+ memcpy (merge, base, span);
+ memcpy (merge + span, link, linklength);
+ merge[span + linklength] = '\0';
+ }
+ else
{
- const char *end = base + path_length (base);
+ /* LINK is a relative URL: we need to replace everything
+ after last slash (possibly empty) with LINK.
- if (!*link)
- {
- /* Empty LINK points back to BASE, query string and all. */
- constr = xstrdup (base);
- }
- else if (*link == '?')
+ So, if BASE is "whatever/foo/bar", and LINK is "qux/xyzzy",
+ our result should be "whatever/foo/qux/xyzzy". */
+ bool need_explicit_slash = false;
+ int span;
+ const char *start_insert;
+ const char *last_slash = find_last_char (base, end, '/');
+ if (!last_slash)
{
- /* LINK points to the same location, but changes the query
- string. Examples: */
- /* uri_merge("path", "?new") -> "path?new" */
- /* uri_merge("path?foo", "?new") -> "path?new" */
- /* uri_merge("path?foo#bar", "?new") -> "path?new" */
- /* uri_merge("path#foo", "?new") -> "path?new" */
- int baselength = end - base;
- constr = xmalloc (baselength + linklength + 1);
- memcpy (constr, base, baselength);
- memcpy (constr + baselength, link, linklength);
- constr[baselength + linklength] = '\0';
+ /* No slash found at all. Replace what we have with LINK. */
+ start_insert = base;
}
- else if (*link == '#')
+ else if (last_slash && last_slash >= base + 2
+ && last_slash[-2] == ':' && last_slash[-1] == '/')
{
- /* uri_merge("path", "#new") -> "path#new" */
- /* uri_merge("path#foo", "#new") -> "path#new" */
- /* uri_merge("path?foo", "#new") -> "path?foo#new" */
- /* uri_merge("path?foo#bar", "#new") -> "path?foo#new" */
- int baselength;
- const char *end1 = strchr (base, '#');
- if (!end1)
- end1 = base + strlen (base);
- baselength = end1 - base;
- constr = xmalloc (baselength + linklength + 1);
- memcpy (constr, base, baselength);
- memcpy (constr + baselength, link, linklength);
- constr[baselength + linklength] = '\0';
- }
- else if (linklength > 1 && *link == '/' && *(link + 1) == '/')
- {
- /* LINK begins with "//" and so is a net path: we need to
- replace everything after (and including) the double slash
- with LINK. */
-
- /* uri_merge("foo", "//new/bar") -> "//new/bar" */
- /* uri_merge("//old/foo", "//new/bar") -> "//new/bar" */
- /* uri_merge("http://old/foo", "//new/bar") -> "http://new/bar" */
-
- int span;
- const char *slash;
- const char *start_insert;
-
- /* Look for first slash. */
- slash = memchr (base, '/', end - base);
- /* If found slash and it is a double slash, then replace
- from this point, else default to replacing from the
- beginning. */
- if (slash && *(slash + 1) == '/')
- start_insert = slash;
- else
- start_insert = base;
-
- span = start_insert - base;
- constr = (char *)xmalloc (span + linklength + 1);
- if (span)
- memcpy (constr, base, span);
- memcpy (constr + span, link, linklength);
- constr[span + linklength] = '\0';
- }
- else if (*link == '/')
- {
- /* LINK is an absolute path: we need to replace everything
- after (and including) the FIRST slash with LINK.
-
- So, if BASE is "http://host/whatever/foo/bar", and LINK is
- "/qux/xyzzy", our result should be
- "http://host/qux/xyzzy". */
- int span;
- const char *slash;
- const char *start_insert = NULL; /* for gcc to shut up. */
- const char *pos = base;
- int seen_slash_slash = 0;
- /* We're looking for the first slash, but want to ignore
- double slash. */
- again:
- slash = memchr (pos, '/', end - pos);
- if (slash && !seen_slash_slash)
- if (*(slash + 1) == '/')
- {
- pos = slash + 2;
- seen_slash_slash = 1;
- goto again;
- }
-
- /* At this point, SLASH is the location of the first / after
- "//", or the first slash altogether. START_INSERT is the
- pointer to the location where LINK will be inserted. When
- examining the last two examples, keep in mind that LINK
- begins with '/'. */
-
- if (!slash && !seen_slash_slash)
- /* example: "foo" */
- /* ^ */
- start_insert = base;
- else if (!slash && seen_slash_slash)
- /* example: "http://foo" */
- /* ^ */
- start_insert = end;
- else if (slash && !seen_slash_slash)
- /* example: "foo/bar" */
- /* ^ */
- start_insert = base;
- else if (slash && seen_slash_slash)
- /* example: "http://something/" */
- /* ^ */
- start_insert = slash;
-
- span = start_insert - base;
- constr = (char *)xmalloc (span + linklength + 1);
- if (span)
- memcpy (constr, base, span);
- if (linklength)
- memcpy (constr + span, link, linklength);
- constr[span + linklength] = '\0';
+ /* example: http://host" */
+ /* ^ */
+ start_insert = end + 1;
+ need_explicit_slash = true;
}
else
{
- /* LINK is a relative URL: we need to replace everything
- after last slash (possibly empty) with LINK.
-
- So, if BASE is "whatever/foo/bar", and LINK is "qux/xyzzy",
- our result should be "whatever/foo/qux/xyzzy". */
- int need_explicit_slash = 0;
- int span;
- const char *start_insert;
- const char *last_slash = find_last_char (base, end, '/');
- if (!last_slash)
- {
- /* No slash found at all. Append LINK to what we have,
- but we'll need a slash as a separator.
-
- Example: if base == "foo" and link == "qux/xyzzy", then
- we cannot just append link to base, because we'd get
- "fooqux/xyzzy", whereas what we want is
- "foo/qux/xyzzy".
-
- To make sure the / gets inserted, we set
- need_explicit_slash to 1. We also set start_insert
- to end + 1, so that the length calculations work out
- correctly for one more (slash) character. Accessing
- that character is fine, since it will be the
- delimiter, '\0' or '?'. */
- /* example: "foo?..." */
- /* ^ ('?' gets changed to '/') */
- start_insert = end + 1;
- need_explicit_slash = 1;
- }
- else if (last_slash && last_slash != base && *(last_slash - 1) == '/')
- {
- /* example: http://host" */
- /* ^ */
- start_insert = end + 1;
- need_explicit_slash = 1;
- }
- else
- {
- /* example: "whatever/foo/bar" */
- /* ^ */
- start_insert = last_slash + 1;
- }
-
- span = start_insert - base;
- constr = (char *)xmalloc (span + linklength + 1);
- if (span)
- memcpy (constr, base, span);
- if (need_explicit_slash)
- constr[span - 1] = '/';
- if (linklength)
- memcpy (constr + span, link, linklength);
- constr[span + linklength] = '\0';
+ /* example: "whatever/foo/bar" */
+ /* ^ */
+ start_insert = last_slash + 1;
}
+
+ span = start_insert - base;
+ merge = xmalloc (span + linklength + 1);
+ if (span)
+ memcpy (merge, base, span);
+ if (need_explicit_slash)
+ merge[span - 1] = '/';
+ memcpy (merge + span, link, linklength);
+ merge[span + linklength] = '\0';
}
- else /* !no_scheme */
- {
- constr = strdupdelim (link, link + linklength);
- }
- return constr;
-}
-/* Merge BASE with LINK and return the resulting URI. This is an
- interface to uri_merge_1 that assumes that LINK is a
- zero-terminated string. */
-char *
-uri_merge (const char *base, const char *link)
-{
- return uri_merge_1 (base, link, strlen (link), !url_has_scheme (link));
+ return merge;
}
\f
#define APPEND(p, s) do { \
/* Recreate the URL string from the data in URL.
- If HIDE is non-zero (as it is when we're calling this on a URL we
- plan to print, but not when calling it to canonicalize a URL for
- use within the program), password will be hidden. Unsafe
- characters in the URL will be quoted. */
+ If HIDE is true (as it is when we're calling this on a URL we plan
+ to print, but not when calling it to canonicalize a URL for use
+ within the program), password will be hidden. Unsafe characters in
+ the URL will be quoted. */
char *
-url_string (const struct url *url, int hide_password)
+url_string (const struct url *url, bool hide_password)
{
int size;
char *result, *p;
- char *quoted_user = NULL, *quoted_passwd = NULL;
+ char *quoted_host, *quoted_user = NULL, *quoted_passwd = NULL;
- int scheme_port = supported_schemes[url->scheme].default_port;
- char *scheme_str = supported_schemes[url->scheme].leading_string;
+ int scheme_port = supported_schemes[url->scheme].default_port;
+ const char *scheme_str = supported_schemes[url->scheme].leading_string;
int fplen = full_path_length (url);
- int brackets_around_host = 0;
+ bool brackets_around_host;
assert (scheme_str != NULL);
/* Make sure the user name and password are quoted. */
if (url->user)
{
- quoted_user = encode_string_maybe (url->user);
+ quoted_user = url_escape_allow_passthrough (url->user);
if (url->passwd)
{
if (hide_password)
quoted_passwd = HIDDEN_PASSWORD;
else
- quoted_passwd = encode_string_maybe (url->passwd);
+ quoted_passwd = url_escape_allow_passthrough (url->passwd);
}
}
- if (strchr (url->host, ':'))
- brackets_around_host = 1;
+ /* In the unlikely event that the host name contains non-printable
+ characters, quote it for displaying to the user. */
+ quoted_host = url_escape_allow_passthrough (url->host);
+
+ /* Undo the quoting of colons that URL escaping performs. IPv6
+ addresses may legally contain colons, and in that case must be
+ placed in square brackets. */
+ if (quoted_host != url->host)
+ unescape_single_char (quoted_host, ':');
+ brackets_around_host = strchr (quoted_host, ':') != NULL;
size = (strlen (scheme_str)
- + strlen (url->host)
+ + strlen (quoted_host)
+ (brackets_around_host ? 2 : 0)
+ fplen
+ 1);
if (brackets_around_host)
*p++ = '[';
- APPEND (p, url->host);
+ APPEND (p, quoted_host);
if (brackets_around_host)
*p++ = ']';
if (url->port != scheme_port)
if (quoted_user && quoted_user != url->user)
xfree (quoted_user);
- if (quoted_passwd && !hide_password
- && quoted_passwd != url->passwd)
+ if (quoted_passwd && !hide_password && quoted_passwd != url->passwd)
xfree (quoted_passwd);
+ if (quoted_host != url->host)
+ xfree (quoted_host);
return result;
}
\f
-/* Return the URL of the proxy appropriate for url U. */
-char *
-getproxy (struct url *u)
+/* Return true if scheme a is similar to scheme b.
+
+ Schemes are similar if they are equal. If SSL is supported, schemes
+ are also similar if one is http (SCHEME_HTTP) and the other is https
+ (SCHEME_HTTPS). */
+bool
+schemes_are_similar_p (enum url_scheme a, enum url_scheme b)
{
- char *proxy = NULL;
- char *rewritten_url;
- static char rewritten_storage[1024];
-
- if (!opt.use_proxy)
- return NULL;
- if (!no_proxy_match (u->host, (const char **)opt.no_proxy))
- return NULL;
-
- switch (u->scheme)
- {
- case SCHEME_HTTP:
- proxy = opt.http_proxy ? opt.http_proxy : getenv ("http_proxy");
- break;
+ if (a == b)
+ return true;
#ifdef HAVE_SSL
- case SCHEME_HTTPS:
- proxy = opt.https_proxy ? opt.https_proxy : getenv ("https_proxy");
- break;
+ if ((a == SCHEME_HTTP && b == SCHEME_HTTPS)
+ || (a == SCHEME_HTTPS && b == SCHEME_HTTP))
+ return true;
#endif
- case SCHEME_FTP:
- proxy = opt.ftp_proxy ? opt.ftp_proxy : getenv ("ftp_proxy");
- break;
- case SCHEME_INVALID:
- break;
- }
- if (!proxy || !*proxy)
- return NULL;
-
- /* Handle shorthands. `rewritten_storage' is a kludge to allow
- getproxy() to return static storage. */
- rewritten_url = rewrite_shorthand_url (proxy);
- if (rewritten_url)
- {
- strncpy (rewritten_storage, rewritten_url, sizeof(rewritten_storage));
- rewritten_storage[sizeof (rewritten_storage) - 1] = '\0';
- proxy = rewritten_storage;
- }
-
- return proxy;
-}
-
-/* Should a host be accessed through proxy, concerning no_proxy? */
-int
-no_proxy_match (const char *host, const char **no_proxy)
-{
- if (!no_proxy)
- return 1;
- else
- return !sufmatch (no_proxy, host);
-}
-\f
-/* Support for converting links for local viewing in downloaded HTML
- files. This should be moved to another file, because it has
- nothing to do with processing URLs. */
-
-static void write_backup_file PARAMS ((const char *, downloaded_file_t));
-static const char *replace_attr PARAMS ((const char *, int, FILE *,
- const char *));
-static const char *replace_attr_refresh_hack PARAMS ((const char *, int, FILE *,
- const char *, int));
-static char *local_quote_string PARAMS ((const char *));
-
-/* Change the links in one HTML file. LINKS is a list of links in the
- document, along with their positions and the desired direction of
- the conversion. */
-void
-convert_links (const char *file, struct urlpos *links)
-{
- struct file_memory *fm;
- FILE *fp;
- const char *p;
- downloaded_file_t downloaded_file_return;
-
- struct urlpos *link;
- int to_url_count = 0, to_file_count = 0;
-
- logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("Converting %s... "), file);
-
- {
- /* First we do a "dry run": go through the list L and see whether
- any URL needs to be converted in the first place. If not, just
- leave the file alone. */
- int dry_count = 0;
- struct urlpos *dry = links;
- for (dry = links; dry; dry = dry->next)
- if (dry->convert != CO_NOCONVERT)
- ++dry_count;
- if (!dry_count)
- {
- logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, _("nothing to do.\n"));
- return;
- }
- }
-
- fm = read_file (file);
- if (!fm)
- {
- logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Cannot convert links in %s: %s\n"),
- file, strerror (errno));
- return;
- }
-
- downloaded_file_return = downloaded_file (CHECK_FOR_FILE, file);
- if (opt.backup_converted && downloaded_file_return)
- write_backup_file (file, downloaded_file_return);
-
- /* Before opening the file for writing, unlink the file. This is
- important if the data in FM is mmaped. In such case, nulling the
- file, which is what fopen() below does, would make us read all
- zeroes from the mmaped region. */
- if (unlink (file) < 0 && errno != ENOENT)
- {
- logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Unable to delete `%s': %s\n"),
- file, strerror (errno));
- read_file_free (fm);
- return;
- }
- /* Now open the file for writing. */
- fp = fopen (file, "wb");
- if (!fp)
- {
- logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Cannot convert links in %s: %s\n"),
- file, strerror (errno));
- read_file_free (fm);
- return;
- }
-
- /* Here we loop through all the URLs in file, replacing those of
- them that are downloaded with relative references. */
- p = fm->content;
- for (link = links; link; link = link->next)
- {
- char *url_start = fm->content + link->pos;
-
- if (link->pos >= fm->length)
- {
- DEBUGP (("Something strange is going on. Please investigate."));
- break;
- }
- /* If the URL is not to be converted, skip it. */
- if (link->convert == CO_NOCONVERT)
- {
- DEBUGP (("Skipping %s at position %d.\n", link->url->url, link->pos));
- continue;
- }
-
- /* Echo the file contents, up to the offending URL's opening
- quote, to the outfile. */
- fwrite (p, 1, url_start - p, fp);
- p = url_start;
-
- switch (link->convert)
- {
- case CO_CONVERT_TO_RELATIVE:
- /* Convert absolute URL to relative. */
- {
- char *newname = construct_relative (file, link->local_name);
- char *quoted_newname = local_quote_string (newname);
-
- if (!link->link_refresh_p)
- p = replace_attr (p, link->size, fp, quoted_newname);
- else
- p = replace_attr_refresh_hack (p, link->size, fp, quoted_newname,
- link->refresh_timeout);
-
- DEBUGP (("TO_RELATIVE: %s to %s at position %d in %s.\n",
- link->url->url, newname, link->pos, file));
- xfree (newname);
- xfree (quoted_newname);
- ++to_file_count;
- break;
- }
- case CO_CONVERT_TO_COMPLETE:
- /* Convert the link to absolute URL. */
- {
- char *newlink = link->url->url;
- char *quoted_newlink = html_quote_string (newlink);
-
- if (!link->link_refresh_p)
- p = replace_attr (p, link->size, fp, quoted_newlink);
- else
- p = replace_attr_refresh_hack (p, link->size, fp, quoted_newlink,
- link->refresh_timeout);
-
- DEBUGP (("TO_COMPLETE: <something> to %s at position %d in %s.\n",
- newlink, link->pos, file));
- xfree (quoted_newlink);
- ++to_url_count;
- break;
- }
- case CO_NULLIFY_BASE:
- /* Change the base href to "". */
- p = replace_attr (p, link->size, fp, "");
- break;
- case CO_NOCONVERT:
- abort ();
- break;
- }
- }
-
- /* Output the rest of the file. */
- if (p - fm->content < fm->length)
- fwrite (p, 1, fm->length - (p - fm->content), fp);
- fclose (fp);
- read_file_free (fm);
-
- logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, "%d-%d\n", to_file_count, to_url_count);
-}
-
-/* Construct and return a malloced copy of the relative link from two
- pieces of information: local name S1 of the referring file and
- local name S2 of the referred file.
-
- So, if S1 is "jagor.srce.hr/index.html" and S2 is
- "jagor.srce.hr/images/news.gif", the function will return
- "images/news.gif".
-
- Alternately, if S1 is "fly.cc.fer.hr/ioccc/index.html", and S2 is
- "fly.cc.fer.hr/images/fly.gif", the function will return
- "../images/fly.gif".
-
- Caveats: S1 should not begin with `/', unless S2 also begins with
- '/'. S1 should not contain things like ".." and such --
- construct_relative ("fly/ioccc/../index.html",
- "fly/images/fly.gif") will fail. (A workaround is to call
- something like path_simplify() on S1). */
-static char *
-construct_relative (const char *s1, const char *s2)
-{
- int i, cnt, sepdirs1;
- char *res;
-
- if (*s2 == '/')
- return xstrdup (s2);
- /* S1 should *not* be absolute, if S2 wasn't. */
- assert (*s1 != '/');
- i = cnt = 0;
- /* Skip the directories common to both strings. */
- while (1)
- {
- while (s1[i] && s2[i]
- && (s1[i] == s2[i])
- && (s1[i] != '/')
- && (s2[i] != '/'))
- ++i;
- if (s1[i] == '/' && s2[i] == '/')
- cnt = ++i;
- else
- break;
- }
- for (sepdirs1 = 0; s1[i]; i++)
- if (s1[i] == '/')
- ++sepdirs1;
- /* Now, construct the file as of:
- - ../ repeated sepdirs1 time
- - all the non-mutual directories of S2. */
- res = (char *)xmalloc (3 * sepdirs1 + strlen (s2 + cnt) + 1);
- for (i = 0; i < sepdirs1; i++)
- memcpy (res + 3 * i, "../", 3);
- strcpy (res + 3 * i, s2 + cnt);
- return res;
-}
-\f
-static void
-write_backup_file (const char *file, downloaded_file_t downloaded_file_return)
-{
- /* Rather than just writing over the original .html file with the
- converted version, save the former to *.orig. Note we only do
- this for files we've _successfully_ downloaded, so we don't
- clobber .orig files sitting around from previous invocations. */
-
- /* Construct the backup filename as the original name plus ".orig". */
- size_t filename_len = strlen(file);
- char* filename_plus_orig_suffix;
- boolean already_wrote_backup_file = FALSE;
- slist* converted_file_ptr;
- static slist* converted_files = NULL;
-
- if (downloaded_file_return == FILE_DOWNLOADED_AND_HTML_EXTENSION_ADDED)
- {
- /* Just write "orig" over "html". We need to do it this way
- because when we're checking to see if we've downloaded the
- file before (to see if we can skip downloading it), we don't
- know if it's a text/html file. Therefore we don't know yet
- at that stage that -E is going to cause us to tack on
- ".html", so we need to compare vs. the original URL plus
- ".orig", not the original URL plus ".html.orig". */
- filename_plus_orig_suffix = alloca (filename_len + 1);
- strcpy(filename_plus_orig_suffix, file);
- strcpy((filename_plus_orig_suffix + filename_len) - 4, "orig");
- }
- else /* downloaded_file_return == FILE_DOWNLOADED_NORMALLY */
- {
- /* Append ".orig" to the name. */
- filename_plus_orig_suffix = alloca (filename_len + sizeof(".orig"));
- strcpy(filename_plus_orig_suffix, file);
- strcpy(filename_plus_orig_suffix + filename_len, ".orig");
- }
-
- /* We can get called twice on the same URL thanks to the
- convert_all_links() call in main(). If we write the .orig file
- each time in such a case, it'll end up containing the first-pass
- conversion, not the original file. So, see if we've already been
- called on this file. */
- converted_file_ptr = converted_files;
- while (converted_file_ptr != NULL)
- if (strcmp(converted_file_ptr->string, file) == 0)
- {
- already_wrote_backup_file = TRUE;
- break;
- }
- else
- converted_file_ptr = converted_file_ptr->next;
-
- if (!already_wrote_backup_file)
- {
- /* Rename <file> to <file>.orig before former gets written over. */
- if (rename(file, filename_plus_orig_suffix) != 0)
- logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Cannot back up %s as %s: %s\n"),
- file, filename_plus_orig_suffix, strerror (errno));
-
- /* Remember that we've already written a .orig backup for this file.
- Note that we never free this memory since we need it till the
- convert_all_links() call, which is one of the last things the
- program does before terminating. BTW, I'm not sure if it would be
- safe to just set 'converted_file_ptr->string' to 'file' below,
- rather than making a copy of the string... Another note is that I
- thought I could just add a field to the urlpos structure saying
- that we'd written a .orig file for this URL, but that didn't work,
- so I had to make this separate list.
- -- Dan Harkless <wget@harkless.org>
-
- This [adding a field to the urlpos structure] didn't work
- because convert_file() is called from convert_all_links at
- the end of the retrieval with a freshly built new urlpos
- list.
- -- Hrvoje Niksic <hniksic@arsdigita.com>
- */
- converted_file_ptr = xmalloc(sizeof(*converted_file_ptr));
- converted_file_ptr->string = xstrdup(file); /* die on out-of-mem. */
- converted_file_ptr->next = converted_files;
- converted_files = converted_file_ptr;
- }
-}
-
-static int find_fragment PARAMS ((const char *, int, const char **,
- const char **));
-
-/* Replace an attribute's original text with NEW_TEXT. */
-
-static const char *
-replace_attr (const char *p, int size, FILE *fp, const char *new_text)
-{
- int quote_flag = 0;
- char quote_char = '\"'; /* use "..." for quoting, unless the
- original value is quoted, in which
- case reuse its quoting char. */
- const char *frag_beg, *frag_end;
-
- /* Structure of our string is:
- "...old-contents..."
- <--- size ---> (with quotes)
- OR:
- ...old-contents...
- <--- size --> (no quotes) */
-
- if (*p == '\"' || *p == '\'')
- {
- quote_char = *p;
- quote_flag = 1;
- ++p;
- size -= 2; /* disregard opening and closing quote */
- }
- putc (quote_char, fp);
- fputs (new_text, fp);
-
- /* Look for fragment identifier, if any. */
- if (find_fragment (p, size, &frag_beg, &frag_end))
- fwrite (frag_beg, 1, frag_end - frag_beg, fp);
- p += size;
- if (quote_flag)
- ++p;
- putc (quote_char, fp);
-
- return p;
-}
-
-/* The same as REPLACE_ATTR, but used when replacing
- <meta http-equiv=refresh content="new_text"> because we need to
- append "timeout_value; URL=" before the next_text. */
-
-static const char *
-replace_attr_refresh_hack (const char *p, int size, FILE *fp,
- const char *new_text, int timeout)
-{
- /* "0; URL=..." */
- char *new_with_timeout = (char *)alloca (numdigit (timeout)
- + 6 /* "; URL=" */
- + strlen (new_text)
- + 1);
- sprintf (new_with_timeout, "%d; URL=%s", timeout, new_text);
-
- return replace_attr (p, size, fp, new_with_timeout);
-}
-
-/* Find the first occurrence of '#' in [BEG, BEG+SIZE) that is not
- preceded by '&'. If the character is not found, return zero. If
- the character is found, return 1 and set BP and EP to point to the
- beginning and end of the region.
-
- This is used for finding the fragment indentifiers in URLs. */
-
-static int
-find_fragment (const char *beg, int size, const char **bp, const char **ep)
-{
- const char *end = beg + size;
- int saw_amp = 0;
- for (; beg < end; beg++)
- {
- switch (*beg)
- {
- case '&':
- saw_amp = 1;
- break;
- case '#':
- if (!saw_amp)
- {
- *bp = beg;
- *ep = end;
- return 1;
- }
- /* fallthrough */
- default:
- saw_amp = 0;
- }
- }
- return 0;
-}
-
-/* Quote FILE for use as local reference to an HTML file.
-
- We quote ? as %3F to avoid passing part of the file name as the
- parameter when browsing the converted file through HTTP. However,
- it is safe to do this only when `--html-extension' is turned on.
- This is because converting "index.html?foo=bar" to
- "index.html%3Ffoo=bar" would break local browsing, as the latter
- isn't even recognized as an HTML file! However, converting
- "index.html?foo=bar.html" to "index.html%3Ffoo=bar.html" should be
- safe for both local and HTTP-served browsing. */
-
-static char *
-local_quote_string (const char *file)
-{
- const char *file_sans_qmark;
- int qm;
-
- if (!opt.html_extension)
- return html_quote_string (file);
-
- qm = count_char (file, '?');
-
- if (qm)
- {
- const char *from = file;
- char *to, *newname;
-
- /* qm * 2 because we replace each question mark with "%3F",
- i.e. replace one char with three, hence two more. */
- int fsqlen = strlen (file) + qm * 2;
-
- to = newname = (char *)alloca (fsqlen + 1);
- for (; *from; from++)
- {
- if (*from != '?')
- *to++ = *from;
- else
- {
- *to++ = '%';
- *to++ = '3';
- *to++ = 'F';
- }
- }
- assert (to - newname == fsqlen);
- *to = '\0';
-
- file_sans_qmark = newname;
- }
- else
- file_sans_qmark = file;
-
- return html_quote_string (file_sans_qmark);
-}
-
-/* We're storing "modes" of type downloaded_file_t in the hash table.
- However, our hash tables only accept pointers for keys and values.
- So when we need a pointer, we use the address of a
- downloaded_file_t variable of static storage. */
-
-static downloaded_file_t *
-downloaded_mode_to_ptr (downloaded_file_t mode)
-{
- static downloaded_file_t
- v1 = FILE_NOT_ALREADY_DOWNLOADED,
- v2 = FILE_DOWNLOADED_NORMALLY,
- v3 = FILE_DOWNLOADED_AND_HTML_EXTENSION_ADDED,
- v4 = CHECK_FOR_FILE;
-
- switch (mode)
- {
- case FILE_NOT_ALREADY_DOWNLOADED:
- return &v1;
- case FILE_DOWNLOADED_NORMALLY:
- return &v2;
- case FILE_DOWNLOADED_AND_HTML_EXTENSION_ADDED:
- return &v3;
- case CHECK_FOR_FILE:
- return &v4;
- }
- return NULL;
-}
-
-/* This should really be merged with dl_file_url_map and
- downloaded_html_files in recur.c. This was originally a list, but
- I changed it to a hash table beause it was actually taking a lot of
- time to find things in it. */
-
-static struct hash_table *downloaded_files_hash;
-
-/* Remembers which files have been downloaded. In the standard case, should be
- called with mode == FILE_DOWNLOADED_NORMALLY for each file we actually
- download successfully (i.e. not for ones we have failures on or that we skip
- due to -N).
-
- When we've downloaded a file and tacked on a ".html" extension due to -E,
- call this function with FILE_DOWNLOADED_AND_HTML_EXTENSION_ADDED rather than
- FILE_DOWNLOADED_NORMALLY.
-
- If you just want to check if a file has been previously added without adding
- it, call with mode == CHECK_FOR_FILE. Please be sure to call this function
- with local filenames, not remote URLs. */
-downloaded_file_t
-downloaded_file (downloaded_file_t mode, const char *file)
-{
- downloaded_file_t *ptr;
-
- if (mode == CHECK_FOR_FILE)
- {
- if (!downloaded_files_hash)
- return FILE_NOT_ALREADY_DOWNLOADED;
- ptr = hash_table_get (downloaded_files_hash, file);
- if (!ptr)
- return FILE_NOT_ALREADY_DOWNLOADED;
- return *ptr;
- }
-
- if (!downloaded_files_hash)
- downloaded_files_hash = make_string_hash_table (0);
-
- ptr = hash_table_get (downloaded_files_hash, file);
- if (ptr)
- return *ptr;
-
- ptr = downloaded_mode_to_ptr (mode);
- hash_table_put (downloaded_files_hash, xstrdup (file), &ptr);
-
- return FILE_NOT_ALREADY_DOWNLOADED;
-}
-
-static int
-df_free_mapper (void *key, void *value, void *ignored)
-{
- xfree (key);
- return 0;
-}
-
-void
-downloaded_files_free (void)
-{
- if (downloaded_files_hash)
- {
- hash_table_map (downloaded_files_hash, df_free_mapper, NULL);
- hash_table_destroy (downloaded_files_hash);
- downloaded_files_hash = NULL;
- }
+ return false;
}
\f
#if 0
}
static void
-run_test (char *test, char *expected_result, int expected_change)
+run_test (char *test, char *expected_result, bool expected_change)
{
char *test_copy = xstrdup (test);
- int modified = path_simplify (test_copy);
+ bool modified = path_simplify (test_copy);
if (0 != strcmp (test_copy, expected_result))
{
}
if (modified != expected_change)
{
- if (expected_change == 1)
- printf ("Expected no modification with path_simplify(\"%s\").\n",
+ if (expected_change)
+ printf ("Expected modification with path_simplify(\"%s\").\n",
test);
else
- printf ("Expected modification with path_simplify(\"%s\").\n",
+ printf ("Expected no modification with path_simplify(\"%s\").\n",
test);
}
xfree (test_copy);
{
static struct {
char *test, *result;
- int should_modify;
+ bool should_modify;
} tests[] = {
- { "", "", 0 },
- { ".", "", 1 },
- { "..", "", 1 },
- { "foo", "foo", 0 },
- { "foo/bar", "foo/bar", 0 },
- { "foo///bar", "foo/bar", 1 },
- { "foo/.", "foo/", 1 },
- { "foo/./", "foo/", 1 },
- { "foo./", "foo./", 0 },
- { "foo/../bar", "bar", 1 },
- { "foo/../bar/", "bar/", 1 },
- { "foo/bar/..", "foo/", 1 },
- { "foo/bar/../x", "foo/x", 1 },
- { "foo/bar/../x/", "foo/x/", 1 },
- { "foo/..", "", 1 },
- { "foo/../..", "", 1 },
- { "a/b/../../c", "c", 1 },
- { "./a/../b", "b", 1 }
+ { "", "", false },
+ { ".", "", true },
+ { "./", "", true },
+ { "..", "..", false },
+ { "../", "../", false },
+ { "foo", "foo", false },
+ { "foo/bar", "foo/bar", false },
+ { "foo///bar", "foo///bar", false },
+ { "foo/.", "foo/", true },
+ { "foo/./", "foo/", true },
+ { "foo./", "foo./", false },
+ { "foo/../bar", "bar", true },
+ { "foo/../bar/", "bar/", true },
+ { "foo/bar/..", "foo/", true },
+ { "foo/bar/../x", "foo/x", true },
+ { "foo/bar/../x/", "foo/x/", true },
+ { "foo/..", "", true },
+ { "foo/../..", "..", true },
+ { "foo/../../..", "../..", true },
+ { "foo/../../bar/../../baz", "../../baz", true },
+ { "a/b/../../c", "c", true },
+ { "./a/../b", "b", true }
};
int i;
- for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (tests); i++)
+ for (i = 0; i < countof (tests); i++)
{
char *test = tests[i].test;
char *expected_result = tests[i].result;
- int expected_change = tests[i].should_modify;
+ bool expected_change = tests[i].should_modify;
run_test (test, expected_result, expected_change);
}
-
- /* Now run all the tests with a leading slash before the test case,
- to prove that the slash is being preserved. */
- for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (tests); i++)
- {
- char *test, *expected_result;
- int expected_change = tests[i].should_modify;
-
- test = xmalloc (1 + strlen (tests[i].test) + 1);
- sprintf (test, "/%s", tests[i].test);
-
- expected_result = xmalloc (1 + strlen (tests[i].result) + 1);
- sprintf (expected_result, "/%s", tests[i].result);
-
- run_test (test, expected_result, expected_change);
-
- xfree (test);
- xfree (expected_result);
- }
}
#endif