You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
567 lines
18 KiB
567 lines
18 KiB
#ifndef RUN_COMMAND_H |
|
#define RUN_COMMAND_H |
|
|
|
#include "thread-utils.h" |
|
|
|
#include "strvec.h" |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* The run-command API offers a versatile tool to run sub-processes with |
|
* redirected input and output as well as with a modified environment |
|
* and an alternate current directory. |
|
* |
|
* A similar API offers the capability to run a function asynchronously, |
|
* which is primarily used to capture the output that the function |
|
* produces in the caller in order to process it. |
|
*/ |
|
|
|
|
|
/** |
|
* This describes the arguments, redirections, and environment of a |
|
* command to run in a sub-process. |
|
* |
|
* The caller: |
|
* |
|
* 1. allocates and clears (using child_process_init() or |
|
* CHILD_PROCESS_INIT) a struct child_process variable; |
|
* 2. initializes the members; |
|
* 3. calls start_command(); |
|
* 4. processes the data; |
|
* 5. closes file descriptors (if necessary; see below); |
|
* 6. calls finish_command(). |
|
* |
|
* Special forms of redirection are available by setting these members |
|
* to 1: |
|
* |
|
* .no_stdin, .no_stdout, .no_stderr: The respective channel is |
|
* redirected to /dev/null. |
|
* |
|
* .stdout_to_stderr: stdout of the child is redirected to its |
|
* stderr. This happens after stderr is itself redirected. |
|
* So stdout will follow stderr to wherever it is |
|
* redirected. |
|
*/ |
|
struct child_process { |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* The .args is a `struct strvec', use that API to manipulate |
|
* it, e.g. strvec_pushv() to add an existing "const char **" |
|
* vector. |
|
* |
|
* If the command to run is a git command, set the first |
|
* element in the strvec to the command name without the |
|
* 'git-' prefix and set .git_cmd = 1. |
|
* |
|
* The memory in .args will be cleaned up automatically during |
|
* `finish_command` (or during `start_command` when it is unsuccessful). |
|
*/ |
|
struct strvec args; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Like .args the .env is a `struct strvec'. |
|
* |
|
* To modify the environment of the sub-process, specify an array of |
|
* environment settings. Each string in the array manipulates the |
|
* environment. |
|
* |
|
* - If the string is of the form "VAR=value", i.e. it contains '=' |
|
* the variable is added to the child process's environment. |
|
* |
|
* - If the string does not contain '=', it names an environment |
|
* variable that will be removed from the child process's environment. |
|
* |
|
* The memory in .env will be cleaned up automatically during |
|
* `finish_command` (or during `start_command` when it is unsuccessful). |
|
*/ |
|
struct strvec env; |
|
pid_t pid; |
|
|
|
int trace2_child_id; |
|
uint64_t trace2_child_us_start; |
|
const char *trace2_child_class; |
|
const char *trace2_hook_name; |
|
|
|
/* |
|
* Using .in, .out, .err: |
|
* - Specify 0 for no redirections. No new file descriptor is allocated. |
|
* (child inherits stdin, stdout, stderr from parent). |
|
* - Specify -1 to have a pipe allocated as follows: |
|
* .in: returns the writable pipe end; parent writes to it, |
|
* the readable pipe end becomes child's stdin |
|
* .out, .err: returns the readable pipe end; parent reads from |
|
* it, the writable pipe end becomes child's stdout/stderr |
|
* The caller of start_command() must close the returned FDs |
|
* after it has completed reading from/writing to it! |
|
* - Specify > 0 to set a channel to a particular FD as follows: |
|
* .in: a readable FD, becomes child's stdin |
|
* .out: a writable FD, becomes child's stdout/stderr |
|
* .err: a writable FD, becomes child's stderr |
|
* The specified FD is closed by start_command(), even in case |
|
* of errors! |
|
*/ |
|
int in; |
|
int out; |
|
int err; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* To specify a new initial working directory for the sub-process, |
|
* specify it in the .dir member. |
|
*/ |
|
const char *dir; |
|
|
|
unsigned no_stdin:1; |
|
unsigned no_stdout:1; |
|
unsigned no_stderr:1; |
|
unsigned git_cmd:1; /* if this is to be git sub-command */ |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* If the program cannot be found, the functions return -1 and set |
|
* errno to ENOENT. Normally, an error message is printed, but if |
|
* .silent_exec_failure is set to 1, no message is printed for this |
|
* special error condition. |
|
*/ |
|
unsigned silent_exec_failure:1; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Run the command from argv[0] using a shell (but note that we may |
|
* still optimize out the shell call if the command contains no |
|
* metacharacters). Note that further arguments to the command in |
|
* argv[1], etc, do not need to be shell-quoted. |
|
*/ |
|
unsigned use_shell:1; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Release any open file handles to the object store before running |
|
* the command; This is necessary e.g. when the spawned process may |
|
* want to repack because that would delete `.pack` files (and on |
|
* Windows, you cannot delete files that are still in use). |
|
*/ |
|
unsigned close_object_store:1; |
|
|
|
unsigned stdout_to_stderr:1; |
|
unsigned clean_on_exit:1; |
|
unsigned wait_after_clean:1; |
|
void (*clean_on_exit_handler)(struct child_process *process); |
|
}; |
|
|
|
#define CHILD_PROCESS_INIT { \ |
|
.args = STRVEC_INIT, \ |
|
.env = STRVEC_INIT, \ |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* The functions: start_command, finish_command, run_command do the following: |
|
* |
|
* - If a system call failed, errno is set and -1 is returned. A diagnostic |
|
* is printed. |
|
* |
|
* - If the program was not found, then -1 is returned and errno is set to |
|
* ENOENT; a diagnostic is printed only if .silent_exec_failure is 0. |
|
* |
|
* - Otherwise, the program is run. If it terminates regularly, its exit |
|
* code is returned. No diagnostic is printed, even if the exit code is |
|
* non-zero. |
|
* |
|
* - If the program terminated due to a signal, then the return value is the |
|
* signal number + 128, ie. the same value that a POSIX shell's $? would |
|
* report. A diagnostic is printed. |
|
* |
|
*/ |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Initialize a struct child_process variable. |
|
*/ |
|
void child_process_init(struct child_process *); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Release the memory associated with the struct child_process. |
|
* Most users of the run-command API don't need to call this |
|
* function explicitly because `start_command` invokes it on |
|
* failure and `finish_command` calls it automatically already. |
|
*/ |
|
void child_process_clear(struct child_process *); |
|
|
|
int is_executable(const char *name); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Check if the command exists on $PATH. This emulates the path search that |
|
* execvp would perform, without actually executing the command so it |
|
* can be used before fork() to prepare to run a command using |
|
* execve() or after execvp() to diagnose why it failed. |
|
* |
|
* The caller should ensure that command contains no directory separators. |
|
* |
|
* Returns 1 if it is found in $PATH or 0 if the command could not be found. |
|
*/ |
|
int exists_in_PATH(const char *command); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Start a sub-process. Takes a pointer to a `struct child_process` |
|
* that specifies the details and returns pipe FDs (if requested). |
|
* See below for details. |
|
*/ |
|
int start_command(struct child_process *); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Wait for the completion of a sub-process that was started with |
|
* start_command(). |
|
*/ |
|
int finish_command(struct child_process *); |
|
|
|
int finish_command_in_signal(struct child_process *); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* A convenience function that encapsulates a sequence of |
|
* start_command() followed by finish_command(). Takes a pointer |
|
* to a `struct child_process` that specifies the details. |
|
*/ |
|
int run_command(struct child_process *); |
|
|
|
/* |
|
* Trigger an auto-gc |
|
*/ |
|
int run_auto_maintenance(int quiet); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Execute the given command, sending "in" to its stdin, and capturing its |
|
* stdout and stderr in the "out" and "err" strbufs. Any of the three may |
|
* be NULL to skip processing. |
|
* |
|
* Returns -1 if starting the command fails or reading fails, and otherwise |
|
* returns the exit code of the command. Any output collected in the |
|
* buffers is kept even if the command returns a non-zero exit. The hint fields |
|
* gives starting sizes for the strbuf allocations. |
|
* |
|
* The fields of "cmd" should be set up as they would for a normal run_command |
|
* invocation. But note that there is no need to set the in, out, or err |
|
* fields; pipe_command handles that automatically. |
|
*/ |
|
int pipe_command(struct child_process *cmd, |
|
const char *in, size_t in_len, |
|
struct strbuf *out, size_t out_hint, |
|
struct strbuf *err, size_t err_hint); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Convenience wrapper around pipe_command for the common case |
|
* of capturing only stdout. |
|
*/ |
|
static inline int capture_command(struct child_process *cmd, |
|
struct strbuf *out, |
|
size_t hint) |
|
{ |
|
return pipe_command(cmd, NULL, 0, out, hint, NULL, 0); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/* |
|
* The purpose of the following functions is to feed a pipe by running |
|
* a function asynchronously and providing output that the caller reads. |
|
* |
|
* It is expected that no synchronization and mutual exclusion between |
|
* the caller and the feed function is necessary so that the function |
|
* can run in a thread without interfering with the caller. |
|
* |
|
* The caller: |
|
* |
|
* 1. allocates and clears (memset(&asy, 0, sizeof(asy));) a |
|
* struct async variable; |
|
* 2. initializes .proc and .data; |
|
* 3. calls start_async(); |
|
* 4. processes communicates with proc through .in and .out; |
|
* 5. closes .in and .out; |
|
* 6. calls finish_async(). |
|
* |
|
* There are serious restrictions on what the asynchronous function can do |
|
* because this facility is implemented by a thread in the same address |
|
* space on most platforms (when pthreads is available), but by a pipe to |
|
* a forked process otherwise: |
|
* |
|
* - It cannot change the program's state (global variables, environment, |
|
* etc.) in a way that the caller notices; in other words, .in and .out |
|
* are the only communication channels to the caller. |
|
* |
|
* - It must not change the program's state that the caller of the |
|
* facility also uses. |
|
* |
|
*/ |
|
struct async { |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* The function pointer in .proc has the following signature: |
|
* |
|
* int proc(int in, int out, void *data); |
|
* |
|
* - in, out specifies a set of file descriptors to which the function |
|
* must read/write the data that it needs/produces. The function |
|
* *must* close these descriptors before it returns. A descriptor |
|
* may be -1 if the caller did not configure a descriptor for that |
|
* direction. |
|
* |
|
* - data is the value that the caller has specified in the .data member |
|
* of struct async. |
|
* |
|
* - The return value of the function is 0 on success and non-zero |
|
* on failure. If the function indicates failure, finish_async() will |
|
* report failure as well. |
|
* |
|
*/ |
|
int (*proc)(int in, int out, void *data); |
|
|
|
void *data; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* The members .in, .out are used to provide a set of fd's for |
|
* communication between the caller and the callee as follows: |
|
* |
|
* - Specify 0 to have no file descriptor passed. The callee will |
|
* receive -1 in the corresponding argument. |
|
* |
|
* - Specify < 0 to have a pipe allocated; start_async() replaces |
|
* with the pipe FD in the following way: |
|
* |
|
* .in: Returns the writable pipe end into which the caller |
|
* writes; the readable end of the pipe becomes the function's |
|
* in argument. |
|
* |
|
* .out: Returns the readable pipe end from which the caller |
|
* reads; the writable end of the pipe becomes the function's |
|
* out argument. |
|
* |
|
* The caller of start_async() must close the returned FDs after it |
|
* has completed reading from/writing from them. |
|
* |
|
* - Specify a file descriptor > 0 to be used by the function: |
|
* |
|
* .in: The FD must be readable; it becomes the function's in. |
|
* .out: The FD must be writable; it becomes the function's out. |
|
* |
|
* The specified FD is closed by start_async(), even if it fails to |
|
* run the function. |
|
*/ |
|
int in; /* caller writes here and closes it */ |
|
int out; /* caller reads from here and closes it */ |
|
#ifdef NO_PTHREADS |
|
pid_t pid; |
|
#else |
|
pthread_t tid; |
|
int proc_in; |
|
int proc_out; |
|
#endif |
|
int isolate_sigpipe; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Run a function asynchronously. Takes a pointer to a `struct |
|
* async` that specifies the details and returns a set of pipe FDs |
|
* for communication with the function. See below for details. |
|
*/ |
|
int start_async(struct async *async); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Wait for the completion of an asynchronous function that was |
|
* started with start_async(). |
|
*/ |
|
int finish_async(struct async *async); |
|
|
|
int in_async(void); |
|
int async_with_fork(void); |
|
void check_pipe(int err); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* This callback should initialize the child process and preload the |
|
* error channel if desired. The preloading of is useful if you want to |
|
* have a message printed directly before the output of the child process. |
|
* pp_cb is the callback cookie as passed to run_processes_parallel. |
|
* You can store a child process specific callback cookie in pp_task_cb. |
|
* |
|
* See run_processes_parallel() below for a discussion of the "struct |
|
* strbuf *out" parameter. |
|
* |
|
* Even after returning 0 to indicate that there are no more processes, |
|
* this function will be called again until there are no more running |
|
* child processes. |
|
* |
|
* Return 1 if the next child is ready to run. |
|
* Return 0 if there are currently no more tasks to be processed. |
|
* To send a signal to other child processes for abortion, |
|
* return the negative signal number. |
|
*/ |
|
typedef int (*get_next_task_fn)(struct child_process *cp, |
|
struct strbuf *out, |
|
void *pp_cb, |
|
void **pp_task_cb); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* This callback is called whenever there are problems starting |
|
* a new process. |
|
* |
|
* See run_processes_parallel() below for a discussion of the "struct |
|
* strbuf *out" parameter. |
|
* |
|
* pp_cb is the callback cookie as passed into run_processes_parallel, |
|
* pp_task_cb is the callback cookie as passed into get_next_task_fn. |
|
* |
|
* Return 0 to continue the parallel processing. To abort return non zero. |
|
* To send a signal to other child processes for abortion, return |
|
* the negative signal number. |
|
*/ |
|
typedef int (*start_failure_fn)(struct strbuf *out, |
|
void *pp_cb, |
|
void *pp_task_cb); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* This callback is called on every child process that finished processing. |
|
* |
|
* See run_processes_parallel() below for a discussion of the "struct |
|
* strbuf *out" parameter. |
|
* |
|
* pp_cb is the callback cookie as passed into run_processes_parallel, |
|
* pp_task_cb is the callback cookie as passed into get_next_task_fn. |
|
* |
|
* Return 0 to continue the parallel processing. To abort return non zero. |
|
* To send a signal to other child processes for abortion, return |
|
* the negative signal number. |
|
*/ |
|
typedef int (*task_finished_fn)(int result, |
|
struct strbuf *out, |
|
void *pp_cb, |
|
void *pp_task_cb); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Option used by run_processes_parallel(), { 0 }-initialized means no |
|
* options. |
|
*/ |
|
struct run_process_parallel_opts |
|
{ |
|
/** |
|
* tr2_category & tr2_label: sets the trace2 category and label for |
|
* logging. These must either be unset, or both of them must be set. |
|
*/ |
|
const char *tr2_category; |
|
const char *tr2_label; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* processes: see 'processes' in run_processes_parallel() below. |
|
*/ |
|
size_t processes; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* ungroup: see 'ungroup' in run_processes_parallel() below. |
|
*/ |
|
unsigned int ungroup:1; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* get_next_task: See get_next_task_fn() above. This must be |
|
* specified. |
|
*/ |
|
get_next_task_fn get_next_task; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* start_failure: See start_failure_fn() above. This can be |
|
* NULL to omit any special handling. |
|
*/ |
|
start_failure_fn start_failure; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* task_finished: See task_finished_fn() above. This can be |
|
* NULL to omit any special handling. |
|
*/ |
|
task_finished_fn task_finished; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* data: user data, will be passed as "pp_cb" to the callback |
|
* parameters. |
|
*/ |
|
void *data; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Options are passed via the "struct run_process_parallel_opts" above. |
|
* |
|
* Runs N 'processes' at the same time. Whenever a process can be |
|
* started, the callback opts.get_next_task is called to obtain the data |
|
* required to start another child process. |
|
* |
|
* The children started via this function run in parallel. Their output |
|
* (both stdout and stderr) is routed to stderr in a manner that output |
|
* from different tasks does not interleave (but see "ungroup" below). |
|
* |
|
* If the "ungroup" option isn't specified, the API will set the |
|
* "stdout_to_stderr" parameter in "struct child_process" and provide |
|
* the callbacks with a "struct strbuf *out" parameter to write output |
|
* to. In this case the callbacks must not write to stdout or |
|
* stderr as such output will mess up the output of the other parallel |
|
* processes. If "ungroup" option is specified callbacks will get a |
|
* NULL "struct strbuf *out" parameter, and are responsible for |
|
* emitting their own output, including dealing with any race |
|
* conditions due to writing in parallel to stdout and stderr. |
|
*/ |
|
void run_processes_parallel(const struct run_process_parallel_opts *opts); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Convenience function which prepares env for a command to be run in a |
|
* new repo. This adds all GIT_* environment variables to env with the |
|
* exception of GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS and GIT_CONFIG_COUNT (which cause the |
|
* corresponding environment variables to be unset in the subprocess) and adds |
|
* an environment variable pointing to new_git_dir. See local_repo_env in |
|
* cache.h for more information. |
|
*/ |
|
void prepare_other_repo_env(struct strvec *env, const char *new_git_dir); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Possible return values for start_bg_command(). |
|
*/ |
|
enum start_bg_result { |
|
/* child process is "ready" */ |
|
SBGR_READY = 0, |
|
|
|
/* child process could not be started */ |
|
SBGR_ERROR, |
|
|
|
/* callback error when testing for "ready" */ |
|
SBGR_CB_ERROR, |
|
|
|
/* timeout expired waiting for child to become "ready" */ |
|
SBGR_TIMEOUT, |
|
|
|
/* child process exited or was signalled before becomming "ready" */ |
|
SBGR_DIED, |
|
}; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Callback used by start_bg_command() to ask whether the |
|
* child process is ready or needs more time to become "ready". |
|
* |
|
* The callback will receive the cmd and cb_data arguments given to |
|
* start_bg_command(). |
|
* |
|
* Returns 1 is child needs more time (subject to the requested timeout). |
|
* Returns 0 if child is "ready". |
|
* Returns -1 on any error and cause start_bg_command() to also error out. |
|
*/ |
|
typedef int(start_bg_wait_cb)(const struct child_process *cmd, void *cb_data); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Start a command in the background. Wait long enough for the child |
|
* to become "ready" (as defined by the provided callback). Capture |
|
* immediate errors (like failure to start) and any immediate exit |
|
* status (such as a shutdown/signal before the child became "ready") |
|
* and return this like start_command(). |
|
* |
|
* We run a custom wait loop using the provided callback to wait for |
|
* the child to start and become "ready". This is limited by the given |
|
* timeout value. |
|
* |
|
* If the child does successfully start and become "ready", we orphan |
|
* it into the background. |
|
* |
|
* The caller must not call finish_command(). |
|
* |
|
* The opaque cb_data argument will be forwarded to the callback for |
|
* any instance data that it might require. This may be NULL. |
|
*/ |
|
enum start_bg_result start_bg_command(struct child_process *cmd, |
|
start_bg_wait_cb *wait_cb, |
|
void *cb_data, |
|
unsigned int timeout_sec); |
|
|
|
#endif
|
|
|