-/*
- Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 1996
+/* -*- c-file-style: "linux" -*-
+
+ Copyright (C) 1996-2001 by Andrew Tridgell
Copyright (C) Paul Mackerras 1996
+ Copyright (C) 2001 by Martin Pool <mbp@samba.org>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
/* if no timeout is specified then use a 60 second select timeout */
#define SELECT_TIMEOUT 60
-extern int bwlimit;
-
static int io_multiplexing_out;
static int io_multiplexing_in;
static int multiplex_in_fd;
static int multiplex_out_fd;
static time_t last_io;
-static int eof_error=1;
+static int no_flush;
+
+extern int bwlimit;
extern int verbose;
extern int io_timeout;
extern struct stats stats;
+
+/** Ignore EOF errors while reading a module listing if the remote
+ version is 24 or less. */
+int kludge_around_eof = False;
+
+
static int io_error_fd = -1;
static void read_loop(int fd, char *buf, int len);
{
extern int am_server, am_daemon;
time_t t;
+
+ err_list_push();
if (!io_timeout) return;
if (last_io && io_timeout && (t-last_io) >= io_timeout) {
if (!am_server && !am_daemon) {
- rprintf(FERROR,"io timeout after %d second - exiting\n",
+ rprintf(FERROR,"io timeout after %d seconds - exiting\n",
(int)(t-last_io));
}
exit_cleanup(RERR_TIMEOUT);
int fd = io_error_fd;
int tag, len;
+ /* io_error_fd is temporarily disabled -- is this meant to
+ * prevent indefinite recursion? */
io_error_fd = -1;
read_loop(fd, buf, 4);
}
-static int no_flush;
+static void whine_about_eof (void)
+{
+ /**
+ It's almost always an error to get an EOF when we're trying
+ to read from the network, because the protocol is
+ self-terminating.
+
+ However, there is one unfortunate cases where it is not,
+ which is rsync <2.4.6 sending a list of modules on a
+ server, since the list is terminated by closing the socket.
+ So, for the section of the program where that is a problem
+ (start_socket_client), kludge_around_eof is True and we
+ just exit.
+ */
+
+ if (kludge_around_eof)
+ exit_cleanup (0);
+ else {
+ rprintf (FERROR,
+ "%s: connection unexpectedly closed "
+ "(%.0f bytes read so far)\n",
+ RSYNC_NAME, (double)stats.total_read);
+
+ exit_cleanup (RERR_STREAMIO);
+ }
+}
+
-/* read from a socket with IO timeout. return the number of
- bytes read. If no bytes can be read then exit, never return
- a number <= 0 */
-static int read_timeout(int fd, char *buf, int len)
+static void die_from_readerr (int err)
+{
+ /* this prevents us trying to write errors on a dead socket */
+ io_multiplexing_close();
+
+ rprintf(FERROR, "%s: read error: %s\n",
+ RSYNC_NAME, strerror (err));
+ exit_cleanup(RERR_STREAMIO);
+}
+
+
+/*!
+ * Read from a socket with IO timeout. return the number of bytes
+ * read. If no bytes can be read then exit, never return a number <= 0.
+ *
+ * TODO: If the remote shell connection fails, then current versions
+ * actually report an "unexpected EOF" error here. Since it's a
+ * fairly common mistake to try to use rsh when ssh is required, we
+ * should trap that: if we fail to read any data at all, we should
+ * give a better explanation. We can tell whether the connection has
+ * started by looking e.g. at whether the remote version is known yet.
+ */
+static int read_timeout (int fd, char *buf, int len)
{
int n, ret=0;
io_flush();
while (ret == 0) {
+ /* until we manage to read *something* */
fd_set fds;
struct timeval tv;
int fd_count = fd+1;
+ int count;
FD_ZERO(&fds);
FD_SET(fd, &fds);
errno = 0;
- if (select(fd_count, &fds, NULL, NULL, &tv) < 1) {
+ count = select(fd_count, &fds, NULL, NULL, &tv);
+
+ if (count == 0) {
+ check_timeout();
+ }
+
+ if (count <= 0) {
if (errno == EBADF) {
exit_cleanup(RERR_SOCKETIO);
}
- check_timeout();
continue;
}
if (io_timeout)
last_io = time(NULL);
continue;
+ } else if (n == 0) {
+ whine_about_eof ();
+ return -1; /* doesn't return */
+ } else if (n == -1) {
+ if (errno == EINTR || errno == EWOULDBLOCK ||
+ errno == EAGAIN)
+ continue;
+ else
+ die_from_readerr (errno);
}
-
- if (n == -1 && errno == EINTR) {
- continue;
- }
-
- if (n == -1 &&
- (errno == EWOULDBLOCK || errno == EAGAIN)) {
- continue;
- }
-
-
- if (n == 0) {
- if (eof_error) {
- rprintf(FERROR,"unexpected EOF in read_timeout\n");
- }
- exit_cleanup(RERR_STREAMIO);
- }
-
- /* this prevents us trying to write errors on a dead socket */
- io_multiplexing_close();
-
- rprintf(FERROR,"read error: %s\n", strerror(errno));
- exit_cleanup(RERR_STREAMIO);
}
return ret;
}
-/* continue trying to read len bytes - don't return until len
- has been read */
-static void read_loop(int fd, char *buf, int len)
+
+
+
+/*! Continue trying to read len bytes - don't return until len has
+ been read. */
+static void read_loop (int fd, char *buf, int len)
{
while (len) {
int n = read_timeout(fd, buf, len);
}
}
-/* read from the file descriptor handling multiplexing -
- return number of bytes read
- never return <= 0 */
+
+/**
+ * Read from the file descriptor handling multiplexing - return number
+ * of bytes read.
+ *
+ * Never returns <= 0.
+ */
static int read_unbuffered(int fd, char *buf, int len)
{
static int remaining;
int tag, ret=0;
char line[1024];
- if (!io_multiplexing_in || fd != multiplex_in_fd)
+ if (!io_multiplexing_in || fd != multiplex_in_fd)
return read_timeout(fd, buf, len);
while (ret == 0) {
continue;
}
- read_loop(fd, line, 4);
+ read_loop (fd, line, 4);
tag = IVAL(line, 0);
remaining = tag & 0xFFFFFF;
/* do a buffered read from fd. don't return until all N bytes
have been read. If all N can't be read then exit with an error */
-static void readfd(int fd,char *buffer,int N)
+static void readfd (int fd, char *buffer, int N)
{
int ret;
int total=0;
while (total < N) {
io_flush();
- ret = read_unbuffered(fd,buffer + total,N-total);
+ ret = read_unbuffered (fd, buffer + total, N-total);
total += ret;
}
void read_sbuf(int f,char *buf,int len)
{
- read_buf(f,buf,len);
+ read_buf (f,buf,len);
buf[len] = 0;
}
unsigned char read_byte(int f)
{
unsigned char c;
- read_buf(f,(char *)&c,1);
+ read_buf (f, (char *)&c, 1);
return c;
}
int fd_count, count;
struct timeval tv;
+ err_list_push();
+
no_flush++;
while (total < len) {
&w_fds,NULL,
&tv);
+ if (count == 0) {
+ check_timeout();
+ }
+
if (count <= 0) {
if (errno == EBADF) {
exit_cleanup(RERR_SOCKETIO);
}
- check_timeout();
continue;
}
if (FD_ISSET(fd, &w_fds)) {
int ret, n = len-total;
-
ret = write(fd,buf+total,n);
if (ret == -1 && errno == EINTR) {
if (ret == -1 &&
(errno == EWOULDBLOCK || errno == EAGAIN)) {
+ msleep(1);
continue;
}
if (ret <= 0) {
- rprintf(FERROR,"erroring writing %d bytes - exiting\n", len);
+ rprintf(FERROR,
+ "error writing %d unbuffered bytes"
+ " - exiting: %s\n", len,
+ strerror(errno));
exit_cleanup(RERR_STREAMIO);
}
void io_flush(void)
{
int fd = multiplex_out_fd;
+
+ err_list_push();
+
if (!io_buffer_count || no_flush) return;
if (io_multiplexing_out) {
io_buffer_count = 0;
}
+
+/* XXX: fd is ignored, which seems a little strange. */
void io_end_buffering(int fd)
{
io_flush();
{
stats.total_written += len;
+ err_list_push();
+
if (!io_buffer || fd != multiplex_out_fd) {
writefd_unbuffered(fd, buf, len);
return;
writefd(f,b,4);
}
+
+/*
+ * Note: int64 may actually be a 32-bit type if ./configure couldn't find any
+ * 64-bit types on this platform.
+ */
void write_longint(int f, int64 x)
{
extern int remote_version;
write_buf(f,(char *)&c,1);
}
+
+
int read_line(int f, char *buf, int maxlen)
{
- eof_error = 0;
-
while (maxlen) {
buf[0] = 0;
read_buf(f, buf, 1);
return 0;
}
- eof_error = 1;
-
return 1;
}
int len;
va_start(ap, format);
- len = vslprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), format, ap);
+ len = vsnprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), format, ap);
va_end(ap);
if (len < 0) exit_cleanup(RERR_STREAMIO);
return 1;
}
-/* write a message to the special error fd */
-int io_error_write(int f, enum logcode code, char *buf, int len)
-{
- if (f == -1) return 0;
- mplex_write(f, code, buf, len);
- return 1;
-}
-
/* stop output multiplexing */
void io_multiplexing_close(void)
{