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authorMichael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>2015-08-10 11:47:41 +0200
committerJunio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2015-08-10 12:57:14 -0700
commit1a9d15db25487bb3fc009a88375cc206a60e0e3b (patch)
tree0e844584aa81b7137e813813ca32f8fa84eddb8f /tempfile.h
parent9c77381d6a495e102b811df954d0fa14e62250ab (diff)
downloadgit-1a9d15db25487bb3fc009a88375cc206a60e0e3b.tar.gz
tempfile: a new module for handling temporary files
A lot of work went into defining the state diagram for lockfiles and ensuring correct, race-resistant cleanup in all circumstances. Most of that infrastructure can be applied directly to *any* temporary file. So extract a new "tempfile" module from the "lockfile" module. Reimplement lockfile on top of tempfile. Subsequent commits will add more users of the new module. Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'tempfile.h')
-rw-r--r--tempfile.h167
1 files changed, 167 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tempfile.h b/tempfile.h
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+#ifndef TEMPFILE_H
+#define TEMPFILE_H
+
+/*
+ * Handle temporary files.
+ *
+ * The tempfile API allows temporary files to be created, deleted, and
+ * atomically renamed. Temporary files that are still active when the
+ * program ends are cleaned up automatically. Lockfiles (see
+ * "lockfile.h") are built on top of this API.
+ *
+ *
+ * Calling sequence
+ * ----------------
+ *
+ * The caller:
+ *
+ * * Allocates a `struct tempfile` either as a static variable or on
+ * the heap, initialized to zeros. Once you use the structure to
+ * call `create_tempfile()`, it belongs to the tempfile subsystem
+ * and its storage must remain valid throughout the life of the
+ * program (i.e. you cannot use an on-stack variable to hold this
+ * structure).
+ *
+ * * Attempts to create a temporary file by calling
+ * `create_tempfile()`.
+ *
+ * * Writes new content to the file by either:
+ *
+ * * writing to the file descriptor returned by `create_tempfile()`
+ * (also available via `tempfile->fd`).
+ *
+ * * calling `fdopen_tempfile()` to get a `FILE` pointer for the
+ * open file and writing to the file using stdio.
+ *
+ * When finished writing, the caller can:
+ *
+ * * Close the file descriptor and remove the temporary file by
+ * calling `delete_tempfile()`.
+ *
+ * * Close the temporary file and rename it atomically to a specified
+ * filename by calling `rename_tempfile()`. This relinquishes
+ * control of the file.
+ *
+ * * Close the file descriptor without removing or renaming the
+ * temporary file by calling `close_tempfile()`, and later call
+ * `delete_tempfile()` or `rename_tempfile()`.
+ *
+ * Even after the temporary file is renamed or deleted, the `tempfile`
+ * object must not be freed or altered by the caller. However, it may
+ * be reused; just pass it to another call of `create_tempfile()`.
+ *
+ * If the program exits before `rename_tempfile()` or
+ * `delete_tempfile()` is called, an `atexit(3)` handler will close
+ * and remove the temporary file.
+ *
+ * If you need to close the file descriptor yourself, do so by calling
+ * `close_tempfile()`. You should never call `close(2)` or `fclose(3)`
+ * yourself, otherwise the `struct tempfile` structure would still
+ * think that the file descriptor needs to be closed, and a later
+ * cleanup would result in duplicate calls to `close(2)`. Worse yet,
+ * if you close and then later open another file descriptor for a
+ * completely different purpose, then the unrelated file descriptor
+ * might get closed.
+ *
+ *
+ * Error handling
+ * --------------
+ *
+ * `create_tempfile()` returns a file descriptor on success or -1 on
+ * failure. On errors, `errno` describes the reason for failure.
+ *
+ * `delete_tempfile()`, `rename_tempfile()`, and `close_tempfile()`
+ * return 0 on success. On failure they set `errno` appropriately, do
+ * their best to delete the temporary file, and return -1.
+ */
+
+struct tempfile {
+ struct tempfile *volatile next;
+ volatile sig_atomic_t active;
+ volatile int fd;
+ FILE *volatile fp;
+ volatile pid_t owner;
+ char on_list;
+ struct strbuf filename;
+};
+
+/*
+ * Attempt to create a temporary file at the specified `path`. Return
+ * a file descriptor for writing to it, or -1 on error. It is an error
+ * if a file already exists at that path.
+ */
+extern int create_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile, const char *path);
+
+/*
+ * Associate a stdio stream with the temporary file (which must still
+ * be open). Return `NULL` (*without* deleting the file) on error. The
+ * stream is closed automatically when `close_tempfile()` is called or
+ * when the file is deleted or renamed.
+ */
+extern FILE *fdopen_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile, const char *mode);
+
+static inline int is_tempfile_active(struct tempfile *tempfile)
+{
+ return tempfile->active;
+}
+
+/*
+ * Return the path of the lockfile. The return value is a pointer to a
+ * field within the lock_file object and should not be freed.
+ */
+extern const char *get_tempfile_path(struct tempfile *tempfile);
+
+extern int get_tempfile_fd(struct tempfile *tempfile);
+extern FILE *get_tempfile_fp(struct tempfile *tempfile);
+
+/*
+ * If the temporary file is still open, close it (and the file pointer
+ * too, if it has been opened using `fdopen_tempfile()`) without
+ * deleting the file. Return 0 upon success. On failure to `close(2)`,
+ * return a negative value and delete the file. Usually
+ * `delete_tempfile()` or `rename_tempfile()` should eventually be
+ * called if `close_tempfile()` succeeds.
+ */
+extern int close_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile);
+
+/*
+ * Re-open a temporary file that has been closed using
+ * `close_tempfile()` but not yet deleted or renamed. This can be used
+ * to implement a sequence of operations like the following:
+ *
+ * * Create temporary file.
+ *
+ * * Write new contents to file, then `close_tempfile()` to cause the
+ * contents to be written to disk.
+ *
+ * * Pass the name of the temporary file to another program to allow
+ * it (and nobody else) to inspect or even modify the file's
+ * contents.
+ *
+ * * `reopen_tempfile()` to reopen the temporary file. Make further
+ * updates to the contents.
+ *
+ * * `rename_tempfile()` to move the file to its permanent location.
+ */
+extern int reopen_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile);
+
+/*
+ * Close the file descriptor and/or file pointer and remove the
+ * temporary file associated with `tempfile`. It is a NOOP to call
+ * `delete_tempfile()` for a `tempfile` object that has already been
+ * deleted or renamed.
+ */
+extern void delete_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile);
+
+/*
+ * Close the file descriptor and/or file pointer if they are still
+ * open, and atomically rename the temporary file to `path`. `path`
+ * must be on the same filesystem as the lock file. Return 0 on
+ * success. On failure, delete the temporary file and return -1, with
+ * `errno` set to the value from the failing call to `close(2)` or
+ * `rename(2)`. It is a bug to call `rename_tempfile()` for a
+ * `tempfile` object that is not currently active.
+ */
+extern int rename_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile, const char *path);
+
+#endif /* TEMPFILE_H */