/* scandir.c Copyright (C) Codemist Ltd., 1994-2002 */ /* * * Directory scanning code for use in CSL-related utilities. * * A C Norman */ /* * This code may be used and modified, and redistributed in binary * or source form, subject to the "CCL Public License", which should * accompany it. This license is a variant on the BSD license, and thus * permits use of code derived from this in either open and commercial * projects: but it does require that updates to this code be made * available back to the originators of the package. * Before merging other code in with this or linking this code * with other packages or libraries please check that the license terms * of the other material are compatible with those of this. */ /* Signature: 163eeafe 10-Oct-2002 */ #include "sys.h" /* * If I am to process directories I need a set of routines that will * scan sub-directories for me. This is (necessarily?) dependent on * the operating system I am running under, hence the conditional compilation * here. The specification I want is: * void scan_directory(char *dir, * void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)); * * This is called with a file- or directory-name as its first argument * and a function as its second. * It calls the function for every directory and every file that can be found * rooted from the given place. If the file to scan is specified as NULL * the current directory is processed. I also arrange that an input string * "." (on Windows, DOS and Unix) or "@" (Archimedes) is treated as a request * to scan the whole of the current directory. * When a simple file is found the procedure is called with the name of the * file, why=0, and the length (in bytes) of the file. For a directory * the function is called with why=1, then the contents of the directory are * processed. For directories the size information will be 0. There is no * guarantee of useful behaviour if some of the files to be scanned are * flagged as "invisible" or "not readable" or if they are otherwise special. * * I also provide a similar function scan_files() with the same arguments that * does just the same except that it does not recurse into sub-directories, * but if the name originally passed is that of a directory then all the * files in it will be scanned. */ /* * When scan_directory calls the procedure it has been passed, it will have * set scan_leafstart to the offset in the passed filename where the * original directory ended and the new information starts. */ int scan_leafstart = 0; /* #define SCAN_FILE 0 */ /* In scandir.h - listed here for emphasis */ /* #define SCAN_STARTDIR 1 */ /* #define SCAN_ENDDIR 2 */ /* * I use a (static) flag to indicate how sub-directories should be * handled, and what to do about case. By default I fold to lower case * on windows. setting hostcase non-zero causes case to be preserved. */ static int recursive_scan, hostcase = 0; /* * The following is an expression of despair! ANSI C (all the way back from * 1989, and based on good practise from before then, mandates that * realloc should behave as malloc if its first arg is NULL. But STILL there * are C libraries out there which do not honour this and which crash * in such cases. Thus this veneer ought to be unnecessary but in reality * is a useful safety net! */ static void *my_realloc(void *p, int len) { if (p == NULL) return (*malloc_hook)(len); else return (*realloc_hook)(p, len); } void set_hostcase(int fg) { hostcase = fg; } #ifdef __LCC__ static char filename[LONGEST_LEGAL_FILENAME]; static struct _finddata_t *found_files = NULL; static int n_found_files = 0, max_found_files = 0; #define TABLE_INCREMENT 50 static int more_files(void) { if (n_found_files > max_found_files - 5) { struct _finddata_t *fnew = (struct _finddata_t *) my_realloc((void *)found_files, sizeof(struct _finddata_t) * (max_found_files + TABLE_INCREMENT)); if (fnew == NULL) return 1; /* failure flag */ found_files = fnew; max_found_files += TABLE_INCREMENT; } return 0; } int MS_CDECL alphasort_files(const void *a, const void *b) { const struct _finddata_t *fa = (const struct _finddata_t *)a, *fb = (const struct _finddata_t *)b; return strncmp(fb->name, fa->name, sizeof(fa->name)); } static void exall(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) /* * This procedure scans a directory-full of files, calling the given procedure * to process each one it finds. */ { int rootlen = namelength; long code; int first = n_found_files; long fh; struct _finddata_t found; fh = _findfirst(filename, &found); code = fh; while (code != -1) { if (more_files()) break; found_files[n_found_files++] = found; code = _findnext(fh, &found); } _findclose(fh); qsort((void *)&found_files[first], n_found_files-first, sizeof(struct _finddata_t), alphasort_files); while (rootlen>=0 && filename[rootlen]!='\\') rootlen--; while (n_found_files != first) { char *p = (char *)&found_files[--n_found_files].name; int c; namelength = rootlen+1; /* * I fold DOS filenames into lower case because it does not matter much * to DOS and I think it looks better - furthermore it helps when I move * archives to other systems. */ while ((c = *p++) != 0) { if (!hostcase) if (isupper(c)) c = tolower(c); filename[namelength++] = (char)c; } filename[namelength] = 0; if (found_files[n_found_files].attrib & _A_SUBDIR) { if (found_files[n_found_files].name[0] != '.') /* * I filter out directory names that start with '.'. * This is to avoid calamity with recursion though chains such as .\.\.\..... */ { proc(filename, SCAN_STARTDIR, 0); if (!recursive_scan) continue; strcpy(&filename[namelength], "\\*.*"); /* * Append "\*.*" to the directory-name and try again, thereby scanning * its contents. */ exall(namelength+4, proc); filename[namelength] = 0; proc(filename, SCAN_ENDDIR, 0); } } else proc(filename, SCAN_FILE, found_files[n_found_files].size); } return; } void scan_directory(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 1; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { dir = "*.*"; scan_leafstart = 0; } else scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); exall(strlen(filename), proc); } void scan_files(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 0; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { strcpy(filename, "*.*"); scan_leafstart = 0; } else { scan_leafstart = strlen(dir); strcpy(filename, dir); strcpy(filename+scan_leafstart, "\\*.*"); scan_leafstart++; } exall(strlen(filename), proc); } #define SCANDIR_KNOWN 1 #else #ifdef WINDOWS_NT /* * Note that I put the test for WINDOWS_NT before the test for MS_DOS * so that if it happens that the symbol MS_DOS is defined that fact will * not cause too much confusion. */ static char filename[LONGEST_LEGAL_FILENAME]; static WIN32_FIND_DATA *found_files = NULL; static int n_found_files = 0, max_found_files = 0; #define TABLE_INCREMENT 50 static int more_files(void) { if (n_found_files > max_found_files - 5) { WIN32_FIND_DATA *fnew = (WIN32_FIND_DATA *) my_realloc((void *)found_files, sizeof(WIN32_FIND_DATA)* (max_found_files + TABLE_INCREMENT)); if (fnew == NULL) return 1; /* failure flag */ found_files = fnew; max_found_files += TABLE_INCREMENT; } return 0; } /* * Anybody compiling using Microsoft Visual C++ had better note that * the type declared in the Microsoft header files for qsort insists * on a __cdecl here. Ugh. */ int MS_CDECL alphasort_files(const void *a, const void *b) { const WIN32_FIND_DATA *fa = (const WIN32_FIND_DATA *)a, *fb = (const WIN32_FIND_DATA *)b; return strncmp(fb->cFileName, fa->cFileName, sizeof(fa->cFileName)); } static void exall(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) /* * This procedure scans a directory-full of files, calling the given procedure * to process each one it finds. */ { WIN32_FIND_DATA found; int rootlen = namelength, first = n_found_files; HANDLE hSearch = FindFirstFile(filename, &found); if (hSearch == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) return; /* No files found at all */ for (;;) { if (more_files()) break; found_files[n_found_files++] = found; if (!FindNextFile(hSearch, &found)) break; } FindClose(hSearch); qsort((void *)&found_files[first], n_found_files-first, sizeof(WIN32_FIND_DATA), alphasort_files); while (rootlen>=0 && filename[rootlen]!='\\') rootlen--; while (n_found_files != first) { char *p = (char *)&found_files[--n_found_files].cFileName; int c; /* * Fill out filename with the actual name I grabbed, i.e. with * wild-cards expanded. */ namelength = rootlen+1; /* * I fold DOS filenames into lower case because it does not matter much * to DOS and I think it looks better - furthermore it helps when I move * archives to other systems. So I do the same on NT. */ while ((c = *p++) != 0) { if (!hostcase) if (isupper(c)) c = tolower(c); filename[namelength++] = (char)c; } filename[namelength] = 0; if (found_files[n_found_files].dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) { if (found_files[n_found_files].cFileName[0] != '.') /* * I filter out directory names that start with '.'. * This is to avoid calamity with recursion though chains such as .\.\.\..... */ { proc(filename, SCAN_STARTDIR, 0); if (!recursive_scan) continue; strcpy(&filename[namelength], "\\*.*"); /* * Append "\*.*" to the directory-name and try again, thereby scanning * its contents. */ exall(namelength+4, proc); filename[namelength] = 0; proc(filename, SCAN_ENDDIR, 0); } } else proc(filename, SCAN_FILE, found_files[n_found_files].nFileSizeLow); } return; } void scan_directory(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 1; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { dir = "*.*"; scan_leafstart = 0; } else scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); exall(strlen(filename), proc); } void scan_files(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 0; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { strcpy(filename, "*.*"); scan_leafstart = 0; } else { scan_leafstart = strlen(dir); strcpy(filename, dir); if (filename[scan_leafstart-1] == '\\') { /* Root directory */ strcpy(filename+scan_leafstart, "*.*"); --scan_leafstart; } else strcpy(filename+scan_leafstart, "\\*.*"); scan_leafstart++; } exall(strlen(filename), proc); } #define SCANDIR_KNOWN 1 #else /* WINDOWS_NT */ #ifdef MS_DOS /* * This will be OK for both Zortech and Watcom. The entry for GCCWIN refers * to Cygnus cygwin32 "Windows GCC" together with the windows32api header * files and libraries. However note well that the cygwin32 version of this * code has not yet been got working and the status of various bits of * Windows code in that environment remains slightly delicate as of 1Q97. */ #if defined __WATCOMC__ || defined _MSC_VER || defined GCCWIN static char filename[LONGEST_LEGAL_FILENAME]; static WIN32_FIND_DATA *found_files = NULL; static int n_found_files = 0, max_found_files = 0; #define TABLE_INCREMENT 50 static int more_files(void) { if (n_found_files > max_found_files - 5) { WIN32_FIND_DATA *fnew = (WIN32_FIND_DATA *) my_realloc((void *)found_files, sizeof(WIN32_FIND_DATA) * (max_found_files + TABLE_INCREMENT)); if (fnew == NULL) return 1; /* failure flag */ found_files = fnew; max_found_files += TABLE_INCREMENT; } return 0; } int MS_CDECL alphasort_files(const void *a, const void *b) { const WIN32_FIND_DATA *fa = (const WIN32_FIND_DATA *)a, *fb = (const WIN32_FIND_DATA *)b; return strncmp(fb->cFileName, fa->cFileName, sizeof(fa->cFileName)); } static void exall(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) /* * This procedure scans a directory-full of files, calling the given procedure * to process each one it finds. */ { int rootlen = namelength; int code, first = n_found_files; HANDLE fh; WIN32_FIND_DATA found; fh = FindFirstFile(filename, &found); code = (fh != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE); while (code) { if (more_files()) break; found_files[n_found_files++] = found; code = FindNextFile(fh, &found); } FindClose(fh); qsort((void *)&found_files[first], n_found_files-first, sizeof(WIN32_FIND_DATA), alphasort_files); while (rootlen>=0 && filename[rootlen]!='\\') rootlen--; while (n_found_files != first) { char *p = (char *)&found_files[--n_found_files].cFileName; int c; /* * Fill out filename with the actual name I grabbed, i.e. with * wild-cards expanded. */ namelength = rootlen+1; /* * I fold DOS filenames into lower case because it does not matter much * to DOS and I think it looks better - furthermore it helps when I move * archives to other systems. */ while ((c = *p++) != 0) { if (!hostcase) if (isupper(c)) c = tolower(c); filename[namelength++] = (char)c; } filename[namelength] = 0; if (found_files[n_found_files].dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) { if (found_files[n_found_files].cFileName[0] != '.') /* * I filter out directory names that start with '.'. * This is to avoid calamity with recursion though chains such as .\.\.\..... */ { proc(filename, SCAN_STARTDIR, 0); if (!recursive_scan) continue; strcpy(&filename[namelength], "\\*.*"); /* * Append "\*.*" to the directory-name and try again, thereby scanning * its contents. */ exall(namelength+4, proc); filename[namelength] = 0; proc(filename, SCAN_ENDDIR, 0); } } else proc(filename, SCAN_FILE, found_files[n_found_files].nFileSizeLow); } return; } void scan_directory(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 1; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { dir = "*.*"; scan_leafstart = 0; } else scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); exall(strlen(filename), proc); } void scan_files(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 0; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { strcpy(filename, "*.*"); scan_leafstart = 0; } else { scan_leafstart = strlen(dir); strcpy(filename, dir); strcpy(filename+scan_leafstart, "\\*.*"); scan_leafstart++; } exall(strlen(filename), proc); } #else #ifdef GCC386 /* * BEWARE: this version will not recognise Windows 95 long file-names * and so there is very real possibility of muddle. */ static char filename[LONGEST_LEGAL_FILENAME]; static struct ffblk *found_files = NULL; static int n_found_files = 0, max_found_files = 0; #define TABLE_INCREMENT 50 static int more_files(void) { if (n_found_files > max_found_files - 5) { struct ffblk *fnew = (struct ffblk *) my_realloc((void *)found_files, sizeof(struct ffblk) * (max_found_files + TABLE_INCREMENT)); if (fnew == NULL) return 1; /* failure flag */ found_files = fnew; max_found_files += TABLE_INCREMENT; } return 0; } int alphasort_files(const void *a, const void *b) { const struct ffblk *fa = (const struct ffblk *)a, *fb = (const struct ffblk *)b; return strncmp(fb->ff_name, fa->ff_name, sizeof(fa->ff_name)); } static void exall(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) /* * This procedure scans a directory-full of files, calling the given procedure * to process each one it finds. */ { int rootlen = namelength; int code, first = n_found_files; struct ffblk found; code = findfirst(filename, &found, FA_DIREC); while (code == 0) { if (more_files()) break; found_files[n_found_files++] = found; code = findnext(&found); } qsort((void *)&found_files[first], n_found_files-first, sizeof(struct ffblk), alphasort_files); while (rootlen>=0 && filename[rootlen]!='\\') rootlen--; while (n_found_files != first) { char *p = (char *)&found_files[--n_found_files].ff_name; int c; /* * Fill out filename with the actual name I grabbed, i.e. with * wild-cards expanded. */ namelength = rootlen+1; /* * I fold DOS filenames into lower case because it does not matter much * to DOS and I think it looks better - furthermore it helps when I move * archives to other systems. */ while ((c = *p++) != 0) { if (!hostcase) if (isupper(c)) c = tolower(c); filename[namelength++] = (char)c; } filename[namelength] = 0; if (found_files[n_found_files].ff_attrib & FA_DIREC) { if (found_files[n_found_files].ff_name[0] != '.') /* * I filter out directory names that start with '.'. * This is to avoid calamity with recursion though chains such as .\.\.\..... */ { proc(filename, SCAN_STARTDIR, 0); if (!recursive_scan) continue; strcpy(&filename[namelength], "\\*.*"); /* * Append "\*.*" to the directory-name and try again, thereby scanning * its contents. */ exall(namelength+4, proc); filename[namelength] = 0; proc(filename, SCAN_ENDDIR, 0); } } else proc(filename, SCAN_FILE, found_files[n_found_files].ff_fsize); } return; } void scan_directory(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 1; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { dir = "*.*"; scan_leafstart = 0; } else scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); exall(strlen(filename), proc); } void scan_files(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 0; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { strcpy(filename, "*.*"); scan_leafstart = 0; } else { scan_leafstart = strlen(dir); strcpy(filename, dir); strcpy(filename+scan_leafstart, "\\*.*"); scan_leafstart++; } exall(strlen(filename), proc); } #else /* __WATCOMC__ */ static char filename[LONGEST_LEGAL_FILENAME]; static struct find_t *found_files = NULL; static int n_found_files = 0, max_found_files = 0; #define TABLE_INCREMENT 50 static int more_files(void) { if (n_found_files > max_found_files - 5) { struct find_t *fnew = (struct find_t *) my_realloc((void *)found_files, sizeof(struct find_t) * (max_found_files + TABLE_INCREMENT)); if (fnew == NULL) return 1; /* failure flag */ found_files = fnew; max_found_files += TABLE_INCREMENT; } return 0; } int alphasort_files(const void *a, const void *b) { const struct find_t *fa = (const struct find_t *)a, *fb = (const struct find_t *)b; return strncmp(fb->name, fa->name, sizeof(fa->name)); } static void exall(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) /* * This procedure scans a directory-full of files, calling the given procedure * to process each one it finds. */ { int rootlen = namelength; int code, first = n_found_files; struct find_t found; #ifdef FA_DIREC code = _dos_findfirst(filename, FA_DIREC, &found); #else code = _dos_findfirst(filename, _A_SUBDIR, &found); #endif while (code == 0) { if (more_files()) break; found_files[n_found_files++] = found; code = _dos_findnext(&found); } qsort((void *)&found_files[first], n_found_files-first, sizeof(struct find_t), alphasort_files); while (rootlen>=0 && filename[rootlen]!='\\') rootlen--; while (n_found_files != first) { char *p = (char *)&found_files[--n_found_files].name; int c; /* * Fill out filename with the actual name I grabbed, i.e. with * wild-cards expanded. */ namelength = rootlen+1; /* * I fold DOS filenames into lower case because it does not matter much * to DOS and I think it looks better - furthermore it helps when I move * archives to other systems. */ while ((c = *p++) != 0) { if (!hostcase) if (isupper(c)) c = tolower(c); filename[namelength++] = (char)c; } filename[namelength] = 0; #ifdef FA_DIREC if (found_files[n_found_files].attribute & FA_DIREC) #else if (found_files[n_found_files].attrib & _A_SUBDIR) #endif { if (found_files[n_found_files].name[0] != '.') /* * I filter out directory names that start with '.'. * This is to avoid calamity with recursion though chains such as .\.\.\..... */ { proc(filename, SCAN_STARTDIR, 0); if (!recursive_scan) continue; strcpy(&filename[namelength], "\\*.*"); /* * Append "\*.*" to the directory-name and try again, thereby scanning * its contents. */ exall(namelength+4, proc); filename[namelength] = 0; proc(filename, SCAN_ENDDIR, 0); } } else proc(filename, SCAN_FILE, found_files[n_found_files].size); } return; } void scan_directory(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 1; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { dir = "*.*"; scan_leafstart = 0; } else scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); exall(strlen(filename), proc); } void scan_files(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 0; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { strcpy(filename, "*.*"); scan_leafstart = 0; } else { scan_leafstart = strlen(dir); strcpy(filename, dir); strcpy(filename+scan_leafstart, "\\*.*"); scan_leafstart++; } exall(strlen(filename), proc); } #endif /* __WATCOMC__ */ #endif /* GCC386 */ #define SCANDIR_KNOWN 1 #else /* MS_DOS */ #ifdef UNIX static char filename[LONGEST_LEGAL_FILENAME]; /* * The code here uses opendir, readdir and closedir and as such ought to * be Posix compatible. The macro USE_DIRECT_H can cause an older variant * on this idea to be used. BUt it may need adjustment for different * systems. */ #ifdef USE_DIRECT_H #include #include #else #include #endif static char **found_files = NULL; int n_found_files = 0, max_found_files = 0; #define TABLE_INCREMENT 50 static int more_files(void) { if (n_found_files > max_found_files - 5) { char **fnew = (char **) my_realloc((void *)found_files, sizeof(char *) * (max_found_files + TABLE_INCREMENT)); if (fnew == NULL) return 1; /* failure flag */ found_files = fnew; max_found_files += TABLE_INCREMENT; } return 0; } int alphasort_files(const void *a, const void *b) { const char *fa = *(const char **)a, *fb = *(const char **)b; return strcmp(fb, fa); } extern int stat(const char *, struct stat*); static void scan_file(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)); static void exall(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { DIR *d; #ifdef USE_DIRECT_H struct direct *dd; #else struct dirent *dd; #endif int i, j; int rootlen = namelength, first = n_found_files; proc(filename, SCAN_STARTDIR, 0); d = opendir(filename); if (d != NULL) { while ((dd = readdir(d)) != NULL) { char *leafname = dd->d_name; char *copyname; /* * readdir hands back both "." and ".." but I had better not recurse * into either! */ if (strcmp(leafname, ".") == 0 || strcmp(leafname, "..") == 0) continue; if (more_files()) break; copyname = (char *)malloc(1+strlen(leafname)); if (copyname == NULL) break; strcpy(copyname, leafname); found_files[n_found_files++] = copyname; } closedir(d); } qsort((void *)&found_files[first], n_found_files-first, sizeof(char *), alphasort_files); filename[rootlen] = '/'; while (n_found_files != first) { char *p = found_files[--n_found_files]; int c; namelength = rootlen+1; while ((c = *p++) != 0) filename[namelength++] = (char)c; free((void *)found_files[n_found_files]); filename[namelength] = 0; scan_file(namelength, proc); } filename[rootlen] = 0; proc(filename, SCAN_ENDDIR, 0); } #ifndef S_IFMT # ifdef __S_IFMT # define S_IFMT __S_IFMT # endif #endif #ifndef S_IFDIR # ifdef __S_IFDIR # define S_IFDIR __S_IFDIR # endif #endif #ifndef S_IFREG # ifdef __S_IFREG # define S_IFREG __S_IFREG # endif #endif static void scan_file(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { struct stat buf; stat(filename, &buf); if ((buf.st_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFDIR) { if (!recursive_scan) proc(filename, SCAN_STARTDIR, 0); else exall(namelength, proc); } else if ((buf.st_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFREG) proc(filename, SCAN_FILE, buf.st_size); /* else fprintf(stderr, "Mode of %s is %o\n", filename, buf.st_mode); */ } void scan_directory(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 1; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir, ".")==0) dir = "."; scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); scan_file(scan_leafstart-1, proc); } void scan_files(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 0; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir, ".")==0) dir = "."; scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); exall(scan_leafstart-1, proc); } #define SCANDIR_KNOWN 1 #else /* UNIX */ #ifdef __arm /* * I want to be able to find the currently-selected directory - if * only so I can restore it at the end of processing. Yes I do know * that RISCOS is moving away from the concept of a current directory, * but this is a command-line utility at present, at least. */ static void find_current_directory(char dir[]) { os_gbpbstr block; char drivename[64]; char name[32]; /* * osgbpb(5) reads the name of the current disc - which I need as the first * part of a full-rooted file-path. */ block.action = 5; block.file_handle = 0; block.data_addr = drivename; os_gbpb(&block); for (;;) { int len; /* * osgbpb(6) reads the name of the currently selected directory - but just * the trailing component. */ block.action = 6; block.file_handle = 0; block.data_addr = name; os_gbpb(&block); len = name[1]; /* Here I trim trailing blanks from the name */ while (name[len + 1] == ' ' && len > 0) len--; if (dir[0] == 0) { memcpy(dir, &name[2], len); dir[len] = 0; } else { memmove(&dir[1 + len], dir, strlen(dir) + 1); memcpy(dir, &name[2], len); dir[len] = '.'; } /* * When I find that the director name is '$' I conclude that I must be * at the top of the tree, and I exit. */ if (len == 1 && name[2] == '$') { len = drivename[0]; memmove(&dir[2 + len], dir, strlen(dir) + 1); memcpy(&dir[1], &drivename[1], len); dir[0] = ':'; dir[len+1] = '.'; return; } /* * Mostly I select the parent directory, and by reading names of * successive parents I build up a complete name. */ system("dir ^"); } } #define AT_ONCE 80 #define NAME_LENGTH 12 static char filename[LONGEST_LEGAL_FILENAME]; static char dirsave[LONGEST_LEGAL_FILENAME+4]; /* Original directory the user had selected */ static void exall(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) /* * This procedure scans a directory-full of files, calling the given procedure * to process each one it finds. */ { os_filestr file_status; /* * osfile(5) reads information about a file - in particular it allows me to * tell if I have a simple file or a directory. */ file_status.action = 5; file_status.name = filename; if (os_file(&file_status) != NULL) file_status.action = 99; switch (file_status.action) { default: /* fprintf(stderr, "\nBad return code from osfile\n"); */ return; /* case 0: fprintf(stderr, "\nFile %s not found\n", filename); */ /* exit(EXIT_FAILURE); */ case 0xff: /* Protected file */ case 1: proc(filename, SCAN_FILE, file_status.start); /* Simple file */ return; case 2: /* Here we have a directory to scan */ proc(filename, SCAN_STARTDIR, 0); if (!recursive_scan) return; { char workvec[NAME_LENGTH*AT_ONCE]; os_gbpbstr block; block.seq_point = 0; for (;;) { char *p = workvec; block.action = 9; block.file_handle = (int)filename;/* Scan given directory */ block.data_addr = workvec; block.number = AT_ONCE; block.buf_len = NAME_LENGTH*AT_ONCE; block.wild_fld = "*"; filename[namelength] = 0; /* * osgbpb(9) reads (several) file-names from the specified directory. */ os_gbpb(&block); if (block.number == 0) break; /* Nothing transfered */ while (block.number != 0) { int len = strlen(p); filename[namelength] = '.'; strcpy(&filename[namelength+1], p); p += len + 1; /* * I concatenate the name of the new directory on the end of my current path * and recurse into it. */ exall(namelength + len + 1, proc); block.number--; } if (block.seq_point == -1) break; } filename[namelength] = 0; } proc(filename, SCAN_ENDDIR, 0); return; } } void scan_directory(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 1; strcpy(dirsave, "dir "); find_current_directory(dirsave+4); /* Find initial directory */ system(dirsave); /* Restore initial directory */ strcpy(filename, dir==NULL ? "@" : dir); scan_leafstart = strcmp(dir, "@")==0 ? 2 : 0; exall(strlen(filename), proc); system(dirsave); /* Restore initial directory */ } void scan_files(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 0; strcpy(dirsave, "dir "); find_current_directory(dirsave+4); /* Find initial directory */ system(dirsave); /* Restore initial directory */ strcpy(filename, dir==NULL ? "@" : dir); scan_leafstart = strcmp(dir, "@")==0 ? 2 : 0; exall(strlen(filename), proc); system(dirsave); /* Restore initial directory */ } #define SCANDIR_KNOWN 1 #else /* __arm */ #ifdef ATARI static char filename[LONGEST_LEGAL_FILENAME]; static void exall(int32 namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) /* * This procedure scans a directory-full of files, calling the given procedure * to process each one it finds. */ { int32 rootlen = namelength; int code; struct FILEINFO found; code = dfind(&found, filename, FA_DIREC); while (rootlen>=0 && filename[rootlen]!='\\') rootlen--; /* * If I used _dos_findfirst I could allow recursion here, * and if I call findfirst(filename, FA_DIREC) then directories can * be found as well as just files. */ while (code == 0) { char *p = (char *)&found.name; int c; /* * Fill out filename with the actual name I grabbed, i.e. with * wild-cards expanded. */ namelength = rootlen+1; /* * I fold Atari filenames into lower case because it does not matter much * to Atari and I think it looks better - furthermore it helps when I move * archives to other systems. */ while ((c = *p++) != 0) { if (!hostcase) c = tolower(c); filename[namelength++] = (char)c; } filename[namelength] = 0; if (found.attr & FA_DIREC) { if (found.name[0]!='.') /* * I filter out directory names that start with '.'. * This is to avoid calamity with recursion though chains such as .\.\.\..... */ { proc(filename, SCAN_STARTDIR, 0); if (!recursive_scan) continue; strcpy(&filename[namelength], "\\*.*"); /* * Append "\*.*" to the directory-name and try again, thereby scanning * its contents. */ exall(namelength+4, proc); filename[namelength] = 0; proc(filename, SCAN_ENDDIR, 0); } } else proc(filename, SCAN_FILE, found.size); code = dnext(&found); } return; } void scan_directory(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 1; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { dir = "*.*"; scan_leafstart = 0; } else scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); exall(strlen(filename), proc); } void scan_files(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 0; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir,".")==0) { dir = "*.*"; scan_leafstart = 0; } else scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); exall(strlen(filename), proc); } #define SCANDIR_KNOWN 1 #else /* ATARI */ #ifdef macintosh /* * I have place-holder routines here, so that at some stage proper versions * can be written and installed. By leaving the Unix code in as comment I hope * to help whoever gets around to building the Macintosh-specific versions... */ static char filename[LONGEST_LEGAL_FILENAME]; #ifdef THIS_NEEDS_RE_WRITING_FOR_MACINTOSH static int remove_dot(struct direct *name) { if (strcmp(name->d_name, ".")==0 || strcmp(name->d_name, "..")==0) return 0; return 1; } #endif /* int alphasort(struct direct **, struct direct **); */ /* extern int stat(const char *, struct stat*); */ static void scan_file(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)); static void exall(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { #ifdef THIS_NEEDS_RE_WRITING_FOR_MACINTOSH struct direct **namelist; int i, j; proc(filename, SCAN_STARTDIR, 0); if (!recursive_scan) return; i = scandir(filename, &namelist, remove_dot, alphasort); for(j=0; jd_name; filename[namelength] = '/'; strcpy(&filename[namelength+1], leafname); scan_file(namelength+1+strlen(leafname), proc); free(namelist[j]); } free(namelist); filename[namelength] = 0; proc(filename, SCAN_ENDDIR, 0); #endif } static void scan_file(int namelength, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { #ifdef THIS_NEEDS_RE_WRITING_FOR_MACINTOSH struct stat buf; stat(filename, &buf); if ((buf.st_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFDIR) exall(namelength, proc); else if ((buf.st_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFREG) proc(filename, SCAN_FILE, buf.st_size); /* else fprintf(stderr, "Mode of %s is %o\n", filename, buf.st_mode); */ #endif } void scan_directory(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 1; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir, ".")==0) dir = "."; scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); scan_file(scan_leafstart-1, proc); } void scan_files(char *dir, void (*proc)(char *name, int why, long int size)) { recursive_scan = 0; if (dir==NULL || strcmp(dir, ".")==0) dir = "."; scan_leafstart = strlen(dir)+1; strcpy(filename, dir); scan_file(scan_leafstart-1, proc); } #define SCANDIR_KNOWN 1 #endif /* macintosh */ #endif /* ATARI */ #endif /* __arm */ #endif /* UNIX */ #endif /* MS_DOS */ #endif /* WINDOWS_NT */ #endif /* __LCC__ */ #ifndef SCANDIR_KNOWN #error "Directory scanning machine-specific code not present" #endif /* end of scandir.c */