DockerCLI/vendor/github.com/containerd/continuity/sysx/file_posix.go

113 lines
3.4 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

package sysx
import (
"os"
"path/filepath"
"github.com/containerd/continuity/syscallx"
)
// Readlink returns the destination of the named symbolic link.
// If there is an error, it will be of type *PathError.
func Readlink(name string) (string, error) {
for len := 128; ; len *= 2 {
b := make([]byte, len)
n, e := fixCount(syscallx.Readlink(fixLongPath(name), b))
if e != nil {
return "", &os.PathError{Op: "readlink", Path: name, Err: e}
}
if n < len {
return string(b[0:n]), nil
}
}
}
// Many functions in package syscall return a count of -1 instead of 0.
// Using fixCount(call()) instead of call() corrects the count.
func fixCount(n int, err error) (int, error) {
if n < 0 {
n = 0
}
return n, err
}
// fixLongPath returns the extended-length (\\?\-prefixed) form of
// path when needed, in order to avoid the default 260 character file
// path limit imposed by Windows. If path is not easily converted to
// the extended-length form (for example, if path is a relative path
// or contains .. elements), or is short enough, fixLongPath returns
// path unmodified.
//
// See https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa365247(v=vs.85).aspx#maxpath
func fixLongPath(path string) string {
// Do nothing (and don't allocate) if the path is "short".
// Empirically (at least on the Windows Server 2013 builder),
// the kernel is arbitrarily okay with < 248 bytes. That
// matches what the docs above say:
// "When using an API to create a directory, the specified
// path cannot be so long that you cannot append an 8.3 file
// name (that is, the directory name cannot exceed MAX_PATH
// minus 12)." Since MAX_PATH is 260, 260 - 12 = 248.
//
// The MSDN docs appear to say that a normal path that is 248 bytes long
// will work; empirically the path must be less then 248 bytes long.
if len(path) < 248 {
// Don't fix. (This is how Go 1.7 and earlier worked,
// not automatically generating the \\?\ form)
return path
}
// The extended form begins with \\?\, as in
// \\?\c:\windows\foo.txt or \\?\UNC\server\share\foo.txt.
// The extended form disables evaluation of . and .. path
// elements and disables the interpretation of / as equivalent
// to \. The conversion here rewrites / to \ and elides
// . elements as well as trailing or duplicate separators. For
// simplicity it avoids the conversion entirely for relative
// paths or paths containing .. elements. For now,
// \\server\share paths are not converted to
// \\?\UNC\server\share paths because the rules for doing so
// are less well-specified.
if len(path) >= 2 && path[:2] == `\\` {
// Don't canonicalize UNC paths.
return path
}
if !filepath.IsAbs(path) {
// Relative path
return path
}
const prefix = `\\?`
pathbuf := make([]byte, len(prefix)+len(path)+len(`\`))
copy(pathbuf, prefix)
n := len(path)
r, w := 0, len(prefix)
for r < n {
switch {
case os.IsPathSeparator(path[r]):
// empty block
r++
case path[r] == '.' && (r+1 == n || os.IsPathSeparator(path[r+1])):
// /./
r++
case r+1 < n && path[r] == '.' && path[r+1] == '.' && (r+2 == n || os.IsPathSeparator(path[r+2])):
// /../ is currently unhandled
return path
default:
pathbuf[w] = '\\'
w++
for ; r < n && !os.IsPathSeparator(path[r]); r++ {
pathbuf[w] = path[r]
w++
}
}
}
// A drive's root directory needs a trailing \
if w == len(`\\?\c:`) {
pathbuf[w] = '\\'
w++
}
return string(pathbuf[:w])
}