@@ -67,19 +67,15 @@ static void get_root_part(struct strbuf *resolved, struct strbuf *remaining)
#endif
/*
- * Return the real path (i.e., absolute path, with symlinks resolved
- * and extra slashes removed) equivalent to the specified path. (If
- * you want an absolute path but don't mind links, use
- * absolute_path().) Places the resolved realpath in the provided strbuf.
- *
- * The directory part of path (i.e., everything up to the last
- * dir_sep) must denote a valid, existing directory, but the last
- * component need not exist. If die_on_error is set, then die with an
- * informative error message if there is a problem. Otherwise, return
- * NULL on errors (without generating any output).
+ * If set, any number of trailing components may be missing; otherwise, only one
+ * may be.
*/
-char *strbuf_realpath(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
- int die_on_error)
+#define REALPATH_MANY_MISSING (1 << 0)
+/* Should we die if there's an error? */
+#define REALPATH_DIE_ON_ERROR (1 << 1)
+
+static char *strbuf_realpath_1(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
+ int flags)
{
struct strbuf remaining = STRBUF_INIT;
struct strbuf next = STRBUF_INIT;
@@ -89,7 +85,7 @@ char *strbuf_realpath(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
struct stat st;
if (!*path) {
- if (die_on_error)
+ if (flags & REALPATH_DIE_ON_ERROR)
die("The empty string is not a valid path");
else
goto error_out;
@@ -101,7 +97,7 @@ char *strbuf_realpath(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
if (!resolved->len) {
/* relative path; can use CWD as the initial resolved path */
if (strbuf_getcwd(resolved)) {
- if (die_on_error)
+ if (flags & REALPATH_DIE_ON_ERROR)
die_errno("unable to get current working directory");
else
goto error_out;
@@ -129,8 +125,9 @@ char *strbuf_realpath(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
if (lstat(resolved->buf, &st)) {
/* error out unless this was the last component */
- if (errno != ENOENT || remaining.len) {
- if (die_on_error)
+ if (errno != ENOENT ||
+ (!(flags & REALPATH_MANY_MISSING) && remaining.len)) {
+ if (flags & REALPATH_DIE_ON_ERROR)
die_errno("Invalid path '%s'",
resolved->buf);
else
@@ -143,7 +140,7 @@ char *strbuf_realpath(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
if (num_symlinks++ > MAXSYMLINKS) {
errno = ELOOP;
- if (die_on_error)
+ if (flags & REALPATH_DIE_ON_ERROR)
die("More than %d nested symlinks "
"on path '%s'", MAXSYMLINKS, path);
else
@@ -153,7 +150,7 @@ char *strbuf_realpath(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
len = strbuf_readlink(&symlink, resolved->buf,
st.st_size);
if (len < 0) {
- if (die_on_error)
+ if (flags & REALPATH_DIE_ON_ERROR)
die_errno("Invalid symlink '%s'",
resolved->buf);
else
@@ -202,6 +199,37 @@ char *strbuf_realpath(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
return retval;
}
+/*
+ * Return the real path (i.e., absolute path, with symlinks resolved
+ * and extra slashes removed) equivalent to the specified path. (If
+ * you want an absolute path but don't mind links, use
+ * absolute_path().) Places the resolved realpath in the provided strbuf.
+ *
+ * The directory part of path (i.e., everything up to the last
+ * dir_sep) must denote a valid, existing directory, but the last
+ * component need not exist. If die_on_error is set, then die with an
+ * informative error message if there is a problem. Otherwise, return
+ * NULL on errors (without generating any output).
+ */
+char *strbuf_realpath(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
+ int die_on_error)
+{
+ return strbuf_realpath_1(resolved, path,
+ die_on_error ? REALPATH_DIE_ON_ERROR : 0);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Just like strbuf_realpath, but allows an arbitrary number of path
+ * components to be missing.
+ */
+char *strbuf_realpath_forgiving(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
+ int die_on_error)
+{
+ return strbuf_realpath_1(resolved, path,
+ ((die_on_error ? REALPATH_DIE_ON_ERROR : 0) |
+ REALPATH_MANY_MISSING));
+}
+
char *real_pathdup(const char *path, int die_on_error)
{
struct strbuf realpath = STRBUF_INIT;
@@ -1325,6 +1325,8 @@ static inline int is_absolute_path(const char *path)
int is_directory(const char *);
char *strbuf_realpath(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
int die_on_error);
+char *strbuf_realpath_forgiving(struct strbuf *resolved, const char *path,
+ int die_on_error);
char *real_pathdup(const char *path, int die_on_error);
const char *absolute_path(const char *path);
char *absolute_pathdup(const char *path);
Currently, we have a function to resolve paths, strbuf_realpath. This function canonicalizes paths like realpath(3), but permits a trailing component to be absent from the file system. In other words, this is the behavior of the GNU realpath(1) without any arguments. In the future, we'll need this same behavior, except that we want to allow for any number of missing trailing components, which is the behavior of GNU realpath(1) with the -m option. This is useful because we'll want to canonicalize a path that may point to a not yet present path under the .git directory. For example, a user may want to know where an arbitrary ref would be stored if it existed in the file system. Let's refactor strbuf_realpath to move most of the code to an internal function and then pass it two flags to control its behavior. We'll add a strbuf_realpath_forgiving function that has our new behavior, and leave strbuf_realpath with the older, stricter behavior. Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> --- abspath.c | 64 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---------------- cache.h | 2 ++ 2 files changed, 48 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-)