| /* tail -- output the last part of file(s) |
| Copyright (C) 89, 90, 91, 95, 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| 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 |
| the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) |
| any later version. |
| |
| This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
| GNU General Public License for more details. |
| |
| You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software |
| Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ |
| |
| /* Can display any amount of data, unlike the Unix version, which uses |
| a fixed size buffer and therefore can only deliver a limited number |
| of lines. |
| |
| Options: |
| -b Tail by N 512-byte blocks. |
| -c, --bytes=N[bkm] Tail by N bytes |
| [or 512-byte blocks, kilobytes, or megabytes]. |
| -f, --follow Loop forever trying to read more characters at the |
| end of the file, on the assumption that the file |
| is growing. Ignored if reading from a pipe. |
| -n, --lines=N Tail by N lines. |
| -q, --quiet, --silent Never print filename headers. |
| -v, --verbose Always print filename headers. |
| |
| If a number (N) starts with a `+', begin printing with the Nth item |
| from the start of each file, instead of from the end. |
| |
| Reads from standard input if no files are given or when a filename of |
| ``-'' is encountered. |
| By default, filename headers are printed only more than one file |
| is given. |
| By default, prints the last 10 lines (tail -n 10). |
| |
| Original version by Paul Rubin <phr@ocf.berkeley.edu>. |
| Extensions by David MacKenzie <djm@gnu.ai.mit.edu>. |
| tail -f for multiple files by Ian Lance Taylor <ian@airs.com>. */ |
| |
| #include "internal.h" |
| |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| #include <assert.h> |
| #include <errno.h> |
| #include <sys/types.h> |
| |
| |
| /* Disable assertions. Some systems have broken assert macros. */ |
| #define NDEBUG 1 |
| |
| |
| static void error(int i, int errnum, char* fmt, const char *msg) |
| { |
| fprintf(stderr, fmt, msg); |
| perror( errnum); |
| exit(i); |
| } |
| |
| |
| #define XWRITE(fd, buffer, n_bytes) \ |
| do \ |
| { \ |
| assert ((fd) == 1); \ |
| assert ((n_bytes) >= 0); \ |
| if (n_bytes > 0 && fwrite ((buffer), 1, (n_bytes), stdout) == 0) \ |
| error (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, "write error", NULL); \ |
| } \ |
| while (0) |
| |
| /* Number of items to tail. */ |
| #define DEFAULT_N_LINES 10 |
| |
| /* Size of atomic reads. */ |
| #ifndef BUFSIZ |
| #define BUFSIZ (512 * 8) |
| #endif |
| |
| /* If nonzero, interpret the numeric argument as the number of lines. |
| Otherwise, interpret it as the number of bytes. */ |
| static int count_lines; |
| |
| /* If nonzero, read from the end of one file until killed. */ |
| static int forever; |
| |
| /* If nonzero, read from the end of multiple files until killed. */ |
| static int forever_multiple; |
| |
| /* Array of file descriptors if forever_multiple is 1. */ |
| static int *file_descs; |
| |
| /* Array of file sizes if forever_multiple is 1. */ |
| static off_t *file_sizes; |
| |
| /* If nonzero, count from start of file instead of end. */ |
| static int from_start; |
| |
| /* If nonzero, print filename headers. */ |
| static int print_headers; |
| |
| /* When to print the filename banners. */ |
| enum header_mode |
| { |
| multiple_files, always, never |
| }; |
| |
| char *xmalloc (); |
| int safe_read (); |
| |
| /* The name this program was run with. */ |
| char *program_name; |
| |
| /* Nonzero if we have ever read standard input. */ |
| static int have_read_stdin; |
| |
| /* If nonzero, display usage information and exit. */ |
| static int show_help; |
| |
| /* If nonzero, print the version on standard output then exit. */ |
| static int show_version; |
| |
| static const char tail_usage[] = |
| "tail [OPTION]... [FILE]...\n\ |
| Print last 10 lines of each FILE to standard output.\n\ |
| With more than one FILE, precede each with a header giving the file name.\n\ |
| With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input.\n\ |
| \n\ |
| -c, --bytes=N output the last N bytes\n\ |
| -f, --follow output appended data as the file grows\n\ |
| -n, --lines=N output the last N lines, instead of last 10\n\ |
| -q, --quiet, --silent never output headers giving file names\n\ |
| -v, --verbose always output headers giving file names\n\ |
| --help display this help and exit\n\ |
| --version output version information and exit\n\ |
| \n\ |
| If the first character of N (the number of bytes or lines) is a `+',\n\ |
| print beginning with the Nth item from the start of each file, otherwise,\n\ |
| print the last N items in the file. N may have a multiplier suffix:\n\ |
| b for 512, k for 1024, m for 1048576 (1 Meg). A first OPTION of -VALUE\n\ |
| or +VALUE is treated like -n VALUE or -n +VALUE unless VALUE has one of\n\ |
| the [bkm] suffix multipliers, in which case it is treated like -c VALUE\n\ |
| or -c +VALUE.\n"; |
| |
| static void |
| write_header (const char *filename, const char *comment) |
| { |
| static int first_file = 1; |
| |
| printf ("%s==> %s%s%s <==\n", (first_file ? "" : "\n"), filename, |
| (comment ? ": " : ""), |
| (comment ? comment : "")); |
| first_file = 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Print the last N_LINES lines from the end of file FD. |
| Go backward through the file, reading `BUFSIZ' bytes at a time (except |
| probably the first), until we hit the start of the file or have |
| read NUMBER newlines. |
| POS starts out as the length of the file (the offset of the last |
| byte of the file + 1). |
| Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ |
| |
| static int |
| file_lines (const char *filename, int fd, long int n_lines, off_t pos) |
| { |
| char buffer[BUFSIZ]; |
| int bytes_read; |
| int i; /* Index into `buffer' for scanning. */ |
| |
| if (n_lines == 0) |
| return 0; |
| |
| /* Set `bytes_read' to the size of the last, probably partial, buffer; |
| 0 < `bytes_read' <= `BUFSIZ'. */ |
| bytes_read = pos % BUFSIZ; |
| if (bytes_read == 0) |
| bytes_read = BUFSIZ; |
| /* Make `pos' a multiple of `BUFSIZ' (0 if the file is short), so that all |
| reads will be on block boundaries, which might increase efficiency. */ |
| pos -= bytes_read; |
| lseek (fd, pos, SEEK_SET); |
| bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buffer, bytes_read); |
| if (bytes_read == -1) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* Count the incomplete line on files that don't end with a newline. */ |
| if (bytes_read && buffer[bytes_read - 1] != '\n') |
| --n_lines; |
| |
| do |
| { |
| /* Scan backward, counting the newlines in this bufferfull. */ |
| for (i = bytes_read - 1; i >= 0; i--) |
| { |
| /* Have we counted the requested number of newlines yet? */ |
| if (buffer[i] == '\n' && n_lines-- == 0) |
| { |
| /* If this newline wasn't the last character in the buffer, |
| print the text after it. */ |
| if (i != bytes_read - 1) |
| XWRITE (STDOUT_FILENO, &buffer[i + 1], bytes_read - (i + 1)); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| } |
| /* Not enough newlines in that bufferfull. */ |
| if (pos == 0) |
| { |
| /* Not enough lines in the file; print the entire file. */ |
| lseek (fd, (off_t) 0, SEEK_SET); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| pos -= BUFSIZ; |
| lseek (fd, pos, SEEK_SET); |
| } |
| while ((bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0); |
| if (bytes_read == -1) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| return 1; |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Print the last N_LINES lines from the end of the standard input, |
| open for reading as pipe FD. |
| Buffer the text as a linked list of LBUFFERs, adding them as needed. |
| Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occured. */ |
| |
| static int |
| pipe_lines (const char *filename, int fd, long int n_lines) |
| { |
| struct linebuffer |
| { |
| int nbytes, nlines; |
| char buffer[BUFSIZ]; |
| struct linebuffer *next; |
| }; |
| typedef struct linebuffer LBUFFER; |
| LBUFFER *first, *last, *tmp; |
| int i; /* Index into buffers. */ |
| int total_lines = 0; /* Total number of newlines in all buffers. */ |
| int errors = 0; |
| |
| first = last = (LBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (LBUFFER)); |
| first->nbytes = first->nlines = 0; |
| first->next = NULL; |
| tmp = (LBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (LBUFFER)); |
| |
| /* Input is always read into a fresh buffer. */ |
| while ((tmp->nbytes = safe_read (fd, tmp->buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0) |
| { |
| tmp->nlines = 0; |
| tmp->next = NULL; |
| |
| /* Count the number of newlines just read. */ |
| for (i = 0; i < tmp->nbytes; i++) |
| if (tmp->buffer[i] == '\n') |
| ++tmp->nlines; |
| total_lines += tmp->nlines; |
| |
| /* If there is enough room in the last buffer read, just append the new |
| one to it. This is because when reading from a pipe, `nbytes' can |
| often be very small. */ |
| if (tmp->nbytes + last->nbytes < BUFSIZ) |
| { |
| memcpy (&last->buffer[last->nbytes], tmp->buffer, tmp->nbytes); |
| last->nbytes += tmp->nbytes; |
| last->nlines += tmp->nlines; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* If there's not enough room, link the new buffer onto the end of |
| the list, then either free up the oldest buffer for the next |
| read if that would leave enough lines, or else malloc a new one. |
| Some compaction mechanism is possible but probably not |
| worthwhile. */ |
| last = last->next = tmp; |
| if (total_lines - first->nlines > n_lines) |
| { |
| tmp = first; |
| total_lines -= first->nlines; |
| first = first->next; |
| } |
| else |
| tmp = (LBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (LBUFFER)); |
| } |
| } |
| if (tmp->nbytes == -1) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| errors = 1; |
| free ((char *) tmp); |
| goto free_lbuffers; |
| } |
| |
| free ((char *) tmp); |
| |
| /* This prevents a core dump when the pipe contains no newlines. */ |
| if (n_lines == 0) |
| goto free_lbuffers; |
| |
| /* Count the incomplete line on files that don't end with a newline. */ |
| if (last->buffer[last->nbytes - 1] != '\n') |
| { |
| ++last->nlines; |
| ++total_lines; |
| } |
| |
| /* Run through the list, printing lines. First, skip over unneeded |
| buffers. */ |
| for (tmp = first; total_lines - tmp->nlines > n_lines; tmp = tmp->next) |
| total_lines -= tmp->nlines; |
| |
| /* Find the correct beginning, then print the rest of the file. */ |
| if (total_lines > n_lines) |
| { |
| char *cp; |
| |
| /* Skip `total_lines' - `n_lines' newlines. We made sure that |
| `total_lines' - `n_lines' <= `tmp->nlines'. */ |
| cp = tmp->buffer; |
| for (i = total_lines - n_lines; i; --i) |
| while (*cp++ != '\n') |
| /* Do nothing. */ ; |
| i = cp - tmp->buffer; |
| } |
| else |
| i = 0; |
| XWRITE (STDOUT_FILENO, &tmp->buffer[i], tmp->nbytes - i); |
| |
| for (tmp = tmp->next; tmp; tmp = tmp->next) |
| XWRITE (STDOUT_FILENO, tmp->buffer, tmp->nbytes); |
| |
| free_lbuffers: |
| while (first) |
| { |
| tmp = first->next; |
| free ((char *) first); |
| first = tmp; |
| } |
| return errors; |
| } |
| |
| /* Print the last N_BYTES characters from the end of pipe FD. |
| This is a stripped down version of pipe_lines. |
| Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ |
| |
| static int |
| pipe_bytes (const char *filename, int fd, off_t n_bytes) |
| { |
| struct charbuffer |
| { |
| int nbytes; |
| char buffer[BUFSIZ]; |
| struct charbuffer *next; |
| }; |
| typedef struct charbuffer CBUFFER; |
| CBUFFER *first, *last, *tmp; |
| int i; /* Index into buffers. */ |
| int total_bytes = 0; /* Total characters in all buffers. */ |
| int errors = 0; |
| |
| first = last = (CBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (CBUFFER)); |
| first->nbytes = 0; |
| first->next = NULL; |
| tmp = (CBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (CBUFFER)); |
| |
| /* Input is always read into a fresh buffer. */ |
| while ((tmp->nbytes = safe_read (fd, tmp->buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0) |
| { |
| tmp->next = NULL; |
| |
| total_bytes += tmp->nbytes; |
| /* If there is enough room in the last buffer read, just append the new |
| one to it. This is because when reading from a pipe, `nbytes' can |
| often be very small. */ |
| if (tmp->nbytes + last->nbytes < BUFSIZ) |
| { |
| memcpy (&last->buffer[last->nbytes], tmp->buffer, tmp->nbytes); |
| last->nbytes += tmp->nbytes; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* If there's not enough room, link the new buffer onto the end of |
| the list, then either free up the oldest buffer for the next |
| read if that would leave enough characters, or else malloc a new |
| one. Some compaction mechanism is possible but probably not |
| worthwhile. */ |
| last = last->next = tmp; |
| if (total_bytes - first->nbytes > n_bytes) |
| { |
| tmp = first; |
| total_bytes -= first->nbytes; |
| first = first->next; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| tmp = (CBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (CBUFFER)); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| if (tmp->nbytes == -1) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| errors = 1; |
| free ((char *) tmp); |
| goto free_cbuffers; |
| } |
| |
| free ((char *) tmp); |
| |
| /* Run through the list, printing characters. First, skip over unneeded |
| buffers. */ |
| for (tmp = first; total_bytes - tmp->nbytes > n_bytes; tmp = tmp->next) |
| total_bytes -= tmp->nbytes; |
| |
| /* Find the correct beginning, then print the rest of the file. |
| We made sure that `total_bytes' - `n_bytes' <= `tmp->nbytes'. */ |
| if (total_bytes > n_bytes) |
| i = total_bytes - n_bytes; |
| else |
| i = 0; |
| XWRITE (STDOUT_FILENO, &tmp->buffer[i], tmp->nbytes - i); |
| |
| for (tmp = tmp->next; tmp; tmp = tmp->next) |
| XWRITE (STDOUT_FILENO, tmp->buffer, tmp->nbytes); |
| |
| free_cbuffers: |
| while (first) |
| { |
| tmp = first->next; |
| free ((char *) first); |
| first = tmp; |
| } |
| return errors; |
| } |
| |
| /* Skip N_BYTES characters from the start of pipe FD, and print |
| any extra characters that were read beyond that. |
| Return 1 on error, 0 if ok. */ |
| |
| static int |
| start_bytes (const char *filename, int fd, off_t n_bytes) |
| { |
| char buffer[BUFSIZ]; |
| int bytes_read = 0; |
| |
| while (n_bytes > 0 && (bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0) |
| n_bytes -= bytes_read; |
| if (bytes_read == -1) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| return 1; |
| } |
| else if (n_bytes < 0) |
| XWRITE (STDOUT_FILENO, &buffer[bytes_read + n_bytes], -n_bytes); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Skip N_LINES lines at the start of file or pipe FD, and print |
| any extra characters that were read beyond that. |
| Return 1 on error, 0 if ok. */ |
| |
| static int |
| start_lines (const char *filename, int fd, long int n_lines) |
| { |
| char buffer[BUFSIZ]; |
| int bytes_read = 0; |
| int bytes_to_skip = 0; |
| |
| while (n_lines && (bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0) |
| { |
| bytes_to_skip = 0; |
| while (bytes_to_skip < bytes_read) |
| if (buffer[bytes_to_skip++] == '\n' && --n_lines == 0) |
| break; |
| } |
| if (bytes_read == -1) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| return 1; |
| } |
| else if (bytes_to_skip < bytes_read) |
| { |
| XWRITE (STDOUT_FILENO, &buffer[bytes_to_skip], |
| bytes_read - bytes_to_skip); |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Display file FILENAME from the current position in FD to the end. |
| If `forever' is nonzero, keep reading from the end of the file |
| until killed. Return the number of bytes read from the file. */ |
| |
| static long |
| dump_remainder (const char *filename, int fd) |
| { |
| char buffer[BUFSIZ]; |
| int bytes_read; |
| long total; |
| |
| total = 0; |
| output: |
| while ((bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0) |
| { |
| XWRITE (STDOUT_FILENO, buffer, bytes_read); |
| total += bytes_read; |
| } |
| if (bytes_read == -1) |
| error (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, "%s", filename); |
| if (forever) |
| { |
| fflush (stdout); |
| sleep (1); |
| goto output; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (forever_multiple) |
| fflush (stdout); |
| } |
| |
| return total; |
| } |
| |
| /* Tail NFILES (>1) files forever until killed. The file names are in |
| NAMES. The open file descriptors are in `file_descs', and the size |
| at which we stopped tailing them is in `file_sizes'. We loop over |
| each of them, doing an fstat to see if they have changed size. If |
| none of them have changed size in one iteration, we sleep for a |
| second and try again. We do this until the user interrupts us. */ |
| |
| static void |
| tail_forever (char **names, int nfiles) |
| { |
| int last; |
| |
| last = -1; |
| |
| while (1) |
| { |
| int i; |
| int changed; |
| |
| changed = 0; |
| for (i = 0; i < nfiles; i++) |
| { |
| struct stat stats; |
| |
| if (file_descs[i] < 0) |
| continue; |
| if (fstat (file_descs[i], &stats) < 0) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", names[i]); |
| file_descs[i] = -1; |
| continue; |
| } |
| if (stats.st_size == file_sizes[i]) |
| continue; |
| |
| /* This file has changed size. Print out what we can, and |
| then keep looping. */ |
| |
| changed = 1; |
| |
| if (stats.st_size < file_sizes[i]) |
| { |
| write_header (names[i], "file truncated"); |
| last = i; |
| lseek (file_descs[i], stats.st_size, SEEK_SET); |
| file_sizes[i] = stats.st_size; |
| continue; |
| } |
| |
| if (i != last) |
| { |
| if (print_headers) |
| write_header (names[i], NULL); |
| last = i; |
| } |
| file_sizes[i] += dump_remainder (names[i], file_descs[i]); |
| } |
| |
| /* If none of the files changed size, sleep. */ |
| if (! changed) |
| sleep (1); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Output the last N_BYTES bytes of file FILENAME open for reading in FD. |
| Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ |
| |
| static int |
| tail_bytes (const char *filename, int fd, off_t n_bytes) |
| { |
| struct stat stats; |
| |
| /* FIXME: resolve this like in dd.c. */ |
| /* Use fstat instead of checking for errno == ESPIPE because |
| lseek doesn't work on some special files but doesn't return an |
| error, either. */ |
| if (fstat (fd, &stats)) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| if (from_start) |
| { |
| if (S_ISREG (stats.st_mode)) |
| lseek (fd, n_bytes, SEEK_CUR); |
| else if (start_bytes (filename, fd, n_bytes)) |
| return 1; |
| dump_remainder (filename, fd); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (S_ISREG (stats.st_mode)) |
| { |
| off_t current_pos, end_pos; |
| size_t bytes_remaining; |
| |
| if ((current_pos = lseek (fd, (off_t) 0, SEEK_CUR)) != -1 |
| && (end_pos = lseek (fd, (off_t) 0, SEEK_END)) != -1) |
| { |
| off_t diff; |
| /* Be careful here. The current position may actually be |
| beyond the end of the file. */ |
| bytes_remaining = (diff = end_pos - current_pos) < 0 ? 0 : diff; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| if (bytes_remaining <= n_bytes) |
| { |
| /* From the current position to end of file, there are no |
| more bytes than have been requested. So reposition the |
| file pointer to the incoming current position and print |
| everything after that. */ |
| lseek (fd, current_pos, SEEK_SET); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* There are more bytes remaining than were requested. |
| Back up. */ |
| lseek (fd, -n_bytes, SEEK_END); |
| } |
| dump_remainder (filename, fd); |
| } |
| else |
| return pipe_bytes (filename, fd, n_bytes); |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Output the last N_LINES lines of file FILENAME open for reading in FD. |
| Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ |
| |
| static int |
| tail_lines (const char *filename, int fd, long int n_lines) |
| { |
| struct stat stats; |
| off_t length; |
| |
| if (fstat (fd, &stats)) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| if (from_start) |
| { |
| if (start_lines (filename, fd, n_lines)) |
| return 1; |
| dump_remainder (filename, fd); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* Use file_lines only if FD refers to a regular file with |
| its file pointer positioned at beginning of file. */ |
| /* FIXME: adding the lseek conjunct is a kludge. |
| Once there's a reasonable test suite, fix the true culprit: |
| file_lines. file_lines shouldn't presume that the input |
| file pointer is initially positioned to beginning of file. */ |
| if (S_ISREG (stats.st_mode) |
| && lseek (fd, (off_t) 0, SEEK_CUR) == (off_t) 0) |
| { |
| length = lseek (fd, (off_t) 0, SEEK_END); |
| if (length != 0 && file_lines (filename, fd, n_lines, length)) |
| return 1; |
| dump_remainder (filename, fd); |
| } |
| else |
| return pipe_lines (filename, fd, n_lines); |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Display the last N_UNITS units of file FILENAME, open for reading |
| in FD. |
| Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ |
| |
| static int |
| tail (const char *filename, int fd, off_t n_units) |
| { |
| if (count_lines) |
| return tail_lines (filename, fd, (long) n_units); |
| else |
| return tail_bytes (filename, fd, n_units); |
| } |
| |
| /* Display the last N_UNITS units of file FILENAME. |
| "-" for FILENAME means the standard input. |
| FILENUM is this file's index in the list of files the user gave. |
| Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ |
| |
| static int |
| tail_file (const char *filename, off_t n_units, int filenum) |
| { |
| int fd, errors; |
| struct stat stats; |
| |
| if (!strcmp (filename, "-") |
| { |
| have_read_stdin = 1; |
| filename = "standard input"; |
| if (print_headers) |
| write_header (filename, NULL); |
| errors = tail (filename, 0, n_units); |
| if (forever_multiple) |
| { |
| if (fstat (0, &stats) < 0) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "standard input"); |
| errors = 1; |
| } |
| else if (!S_ISREG (stats.st_mode)) |
| { |
| error (0, 0, |
| "standard input: cannot follow end of non-regular file"); |
| errors = 1; |
| } |
| if (errors) |
| file_descs[filenum] = -1; |
| else |
| { |
| file_descs[filenum] = 0; |
| file_sizes[filenum] = stats.st_size; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* Not standard input. */ |
| fd = open (filename, O_RDONLY); |
| if (fd == -1) |
| { |
| if (forever_multiple) |
| file_descs[filenum] = -1; |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| errors = 1; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (print_headers) |
| write_header (filename, NULL); |
| errors = tail (filename, fd, n_units); |
| if (forever_multiple) |
| { |
| if (fstat (fd, &stats) < 0) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| errors = 1; |
| } |
| else if (!S_ISREG (stats.st_mode)) |
| { |
| error (0, 0, "%s: cannot follow end of non-regular file", |
| filename); |
| errors = 1; |
| } |
| if (errors) |
| { |
| close (fd); |
| file_descs[filenum] = -1; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| file_descs[filenum] = fd; |
| file_sizes[filenum] = stats.st_size; |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (close (fd)) |
| { |
| error (0, errno, "%s", filename); |
| errors = 1; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return errors; |
| } |
| |
| extern int |
| tai_main (int argc, char **argv) |
| { |
| enum header_mode header_mode = multiple_files; |
| int exit_status = 0; |
| /* If from_start, the number of items to skip before printing; otherwise, |
| the number of items at the end of the file to print. Initially, -1 |
| means the value has not been set. */ |
| off_t n_units = -1; |
| long int tmp_long; |
| int c; /* Option character. */ |
| int n_files; |
| char **file; |
| |
| program_name = argv[0]; |
| have_read_stdin = 0; |
| count_lines = 1; |
| forever = forever_multiple = from_start = print_headers = 0; |
| |
| if (argc > 1 |
| && ((argv[1][0] == '-' && ISDIGIT (argv[1][1])) |
| || (argv[1][0] == '+' && (ISDIGIT (argv[1][1]) |
| || argv[1][1] == 0)))) |
| { |
| /* Old option syntax: a dash or plus, one or more digits (zero digits |
| are acceptable with a plus), and one or more option letters. */ |
| if (argv[1][0] == '+') |
| from_start = 1; |
| if (argv[1][1] != '\0') |
| { |
| strtol_error s_err; |
| char *p; |
| |
| s_err = xstrtol (++argv[1], &p, 0, &tmp_long, "bkm"); |
| n_units = tmp_long; |
| if (s_err == LONGINT_OVERFLOW) |
| { |
| STRTOL_FATAL_ERROR (argv[1], "argument", s_err); |
| } |
| |
| /* If a [bkm] suffix was given then count bytes, not lines. */ |
| if (p[-1] == 'b' || p[-1] == 'k' || p[-1] == 'm') |
| count_lines = 0; |
| |
| /* Parse any appended option letters. */ |
| while (*p) |
| { |
| switch (*p) |
| { |
| case 'c': |
| /* Interpret N_UNITS as # of bytes. */ |
| count_lines = 0; |
| break; |
| |
| case 'f': |
| forever = 1; |
| break; |
| |
| case 'l': |
| count_lines = 1; |
| break; |
| |
| case 'q': |
| header_mode = never; |
| break; |
| |
| case 'v': |
| header_mode = always; |
| break; |
| |
| default: |
| error (0, 0, "unrecognized option '%c'", *p); |
| usage (tail_usage); |
| } |
| ++p; |
| } |
| } |
| /* Make the options we just parsed invisible to getopt. */ |
| argv[1] = argv[0]; |
| argv++; |
| argc--; |
| } |
| |
| if (show_version) |
| { |
| printf ("tail - %s\n", PACKAGE_VERSION); |
| exit (EXIT_SUCCESS); |
| } |
| |
| if (show_help) |
| usage (tail_usage); |
| |
| if (n_units == -1) |
| n_units = DEFAULT_N_LINES; |
| |
| /* To start printing with item N_UNITS from the start of the file, skip |
| N_UNITS - 1 items. `tail +0' is actually meaningless, but for Unix |
| compatibility it's treated the same as `tail +1'. */ |
| if (from_start) |
| { |
| if (n_units) |
| --n_units; |
| } |
| |
| n_files = argc - optind; |
| file = argv + optind; |
| |
| if (n_files > 1 && forever) |
| { |
| forever_multiple = 1; |
| forever = 0; |
| file_descs = (int *) xmalloc (n_files * sizeof (int)); |
| file_sizes = (off_t *) xmalloc (n_files * sizeof (off_t)); |
| } |
| |
| if (header_mode == always |
| || (header_mode == multiple_files && n_files > 1)) |
| print_headers = 1; |
| |
| if (n_files == 0) |
| { |
| exit_status |= tail_file ("-", n_units, 0); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| int i; |
| for (i = 0; i < n_files; i++) |
| exit_status |= tail_file (file[i], n_units, i); |
| |
| if (forever_multiple) |
| tail_forever (file, n_files); |
| } |
| |
| if (have_read_stdin && close (0) < 0) |
| error (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, "-"); |
| if (fclose (stdout) == EOF) |
| error (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, "write error"); |
| exit (exit_status == 0 ? EXIT_SUCCESS : EXIT_FAILURE); |
| } |