Current Path : /usr/src/contrib/cvs/contrib/ |
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Current File : //usr/src/contrib/cvs/contrib/rcslock.in |
#! @PERL@ -T # -*-Perl-*- # Copyright (C) 1994-2005 The 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. ############################################################################### ############################################################################### ############################################################################### # # THIS SCRIPT IS PROBABLY BROKEN. REMOVING THE -T SWITCH ON THE #! LINE ABOVE # WOULD FIX IT, BUT THIS IS INSECURE. WE RECOMMEND FIXING THE ERRORS WHICH THE # -T SWITCH WILL CAUSE PERL TO REPORT BEFORE RUNNING THIS SCRIPT FROM A CVS # SERVER TRIGGER. PLEASE SEND PATCHES CONTAINING THE CHANGES YOU FIND # NECESSARY TO RUN THIS SCRIPT WITH THE TAINT-CHECKING ENABLED BACK TO THE # <@PACKAGE_BUGREPORT@> MAILING LIST. # # For more on general Perl security and taint-checking, please try running the # `perldoc perlsec' command. # ############################################################################### ############################################################################### ############################################################################### # Author: John Rouillard (rouilj@cs.umb.edu) # Supported: Yeah right. (Well what do you expect for 2 hours work?) # Blame-to: rouilj@cs.umb.edu # Complaints to: Anybody except Brian Berliner, he's blameless for # this script. # Acknowlegements: The base code for this script has been acquired # from the log.pl script. # rcslock.pl - A program to prevent commits when a file to be ckecked # in is locked in the repository. # There are times when you need exclusive access to a file. This # often occurs when binaries are checked into the repository, since # cvs's (actually rcs's) text based merging mechanism won't work. This # script allows you to use the rcs lock mechanism (rcs -l) to make # sure that no changes to a repository are able to be committed if # those changes would result in a locked file being changed. # WARNING: # This script will work only if locking is set to strict. # # Setup: # Add the following line to the commitinfo file: # ALL /local/location/for/script/lockcheck [options] # Where ALL is replaced by any suitable regular expression. # Options are -v for verbose info, or -d for debugging info. # The %s will provide the repository directory name and the names of # all changed files. # Use: # When a developer needs exclusive access to a version of a file, s/he # should use "rcs -l" in the repository tree to lock the version they # are working on. CVS will automagically release the lock when the # commit is performed. # Method: # An "rlog -h" is exec'ed to give info on all about to be # committed files. This (header) information is parsed to determine # if any locks are outstanding and what versions of the file are # locked. This filename, version number info is used to index an # associative array. All of the files to be committed are checked to # see if any locks are outstanding. If locks are outstanding, the # version number of the current file (taken from the CVS/Entries # subdirectory) is used in the key to determine if that version is # locked. If the file being checked in is locked by the person doing # the checkin, the commit is allowed, but if the lock is held on that # version of a file by another person, the commit is not allowed. $ext = ",v"; # The extension on your rcs files. $\="\n"; # I hate having to put \n's at the end of my print statements $,=' '; # Spaces should occur between arguments to print when printed # turn off setgid # $) = $(; # # parse command line arguments # require 'getopts.pl'; &Getopts("vd"); # verbose or debugging # Verbose is useful when debugging $opt_v = $opt_d if defined $opt_d; # $files[0] is really the name of the subdirectory. # @files = split(/ /,$ARGV[0]); @files = @ARGV[0..$#ARGV]; $cvsroot = $ENV{'CVSROOT'}; # # get login name # $login = getlogin || (getpwuid($<))[0] || "nobody"; # # save the current directory since we have to return here to parse the # CVS/Entries file if a lock is found. # $pwd = `/bin/pwd`; chop $pwd; print "Starting directory is $pwd" if defined $opt_d ; # # cd to the repository directory and check on the files. # print "Checking directory ", $files[0] if defined $opt_v ; if ( $files[0] =~ /^\// ) { print "Directory path is $files[0]" if defined $opt_d ; chdir $files[0] || die "Can't change to repository directory $files[0]" ; } else { print "Directory path is $cvsroot/$files[0]" if defined $opt_d ; chdir ($cvsroot . "/" . $files[0]) || die "Can't change to repository directory $files[0] in $cvsroot" ; } # Open the rlog process and apss all of the file names to that one # process to cut down on exec overhead. This may backfire if there # are too many files for the system buffer to handle, but if there are # that many files, chances are that the cvs repository is not set up # cleanly. print "opening rlog -h @files[1..$#files] |" if defined $opt_d; open( RLOG, "rlog -h @files[1..$#files] |") || die "Can't run rlog command" ; # Create the locks associative array. The elements in the array are # of two types: # # The name of the RCS file with a value of the total number of locks found # for that file, # or # # The name of the rcs file concatenated with the version number of the lock. # The value of this element is the name of the locker. # The regular expressions used to split the rcs info may have to be changed. # The current ones work for rcs 5.6. $lock = 0; while (<RLOG>) { chop; next if /^$/; # ditch blank lines if ( $_ =~ /^RCS file: (.*)$/ ) { $curfile = $1; next; } if ( $_ =~ /^locks: strict$/ ) { $lock = 1 ; next; } if ( $lock ) { # access list: is the line immediately following the list of locks. if ( /^access list:/ ) { # we are done getting lock info for this file. $lock = 0; } else { # We are accumulating lock info. # increment the lock count $locks{$curfile}++; # save the info on the version that is locked. $2 is the # version number $1 is the name of the locker. $locks{"$curfile" . "$2"} = $1 if /[ ]*([a-zA-Z._]*): ([0-9.]*)$/; print "lock by $1 found on $curfile version $2" if defined $opt_d; } } } # Lets go back to the starting directory and see if any locked files # are ones we are interested in. chdir $pwd; # fo all of the file names (remember $files[0] is the directory name foreach $i (@files[1..$#files]) { if ( defined $locks{$i . $ext} ) { # well the file has at least one lock outstanding # find the base version number of our file &parse_cvs_entry($i,*entry); # is our version of this file locked? if ( defined $locks{$i . $ext . $entry{"version"}} ) { # if so, it is by us? if ( $login ne ($by = $locks{$i . $ext . $entry{"version"}}) ) {# crud somebody else has it locked. $outstanding_lock++ ; print "$by has file $i locked for version " , $entry{"version"}; } else { # yeah I have it locked. print "You have a lock on file $i for version " , $entry{"version"} if defined $opt_v; } } } } exit $outstanding_lock; ### End of main program sub parse_cvs_entry { # a very simple minded hack at parsing an entries file. local ( $file, *entry ) = @_; local ( @pp ); open(ENTRIES, "< CVS/Entries") || die "Can't open entries file"; while (<ENTRIES>) { if ( $_ =~ /^\/$file\// ) { @pp = split('/'); $entry{"name"} = $pp[1]; $entry{"version"} = $pp[2]; $entry{"dates"} = $pp[3]; $entry{"name"} = $pp[4]; $entry{"name"} = $pp[5]; $entry{"sticky"} = $pp[6]; return; } } }