diff options
author | Jim Meyering <meyering@redhat.com> | 2011-01-27 20:57:17 +0100 |
---|---|---|
committer | Jim Meyering <meyering@redhat.com> | 2011-01-30 20:44:12 +0100 |
commit | 82c7f192bde285bcf5f8d25e0ec1996534382315 (patch) | |
tree | e41806b85dda25cd3d3c23fa414dc8f4cf071ef6 | |
parent | f5743a6f20269b22e513132d3a561b8de2122401 (diff) | |
download | coreutils-82c7f192bde285bcf5f8d25e0ec1996534382315.tar.xz |
copy: factor sparse-copying code into its own function, because
we're going to have to use it from within extent_copy, too.
* src/copy.c (sparse_copy): New function, factored out of...
(copy_reg): ...here.
Remove now-unused locals.
-rw-r--r-- | src/copy.c | 212 |
1 files changed, 114 insertions, 98 deletions
diff --git a/src/copy.c b/src/copy.c index 208e4635d..cc8f68f14 100644 --- a/src/copy.c +++ b/src/copy.c @@ -134,6 +134,116 @@ utimens_symlink (char const *file, struct timespec const *timespec) return err; } +/* Copy the regular file open on SRC_FD/SRC_NAME to DST_FD/DST_NAME, + honoring the MAKE_HOLES setting and using the BUF_SIZE-byte buffer + BUF for temporary storage. Return true upon successful completion; + print a diagnostic and return false upon error. */ +static bool +sparse_copy (int src_fd, int dest_fd, char *buf, size_t buf_size, + bool make_holes, + char const *src_name, char const *dst_name) +{ + typedef uintptr_t word; + off_t n_read_total = 0; + bool last_write_made_hole = false; + + while (true) + { + word *wp = NULL; + + ssize_t n_read = read (src_fd, buf, buf_size); + if (n_read < 0) + { +#ifdef EINTR + if (errno == EINTR) + continue; +#endif + error (0, errno, _("reading %s"), quote (src_name)); + return false; + } + if (n_read == 0) + break; + + n_read_total += n_read; + + if (make_holes) + { + char *cp; + + /* Sentinel to stop loop. */ + buf[n_read] = '\1'; +#ifdef lint + /* Usually, buf[n_read] is not the byte just before a "word" + (aka uintptr_t) boundary. In that case, the word-oriented + test below (*wp++ == 0) would read some uninitialized bytes + after the sentinel. To avoid false-positive reports about + this condition (e.g., from a tool like valgrind), set the + remaining bytes -- to any value. */ + memset (buf + n_read + 1, 0, sizeof (word) - 1); +#endif + + /* Find first nonzero *word*, or the word with the sentinel. */ + + wp = (word *) buf; + while (*wp++ == 0) + continue; + + /* Find the first nonzero *byte*, or the sentinel. */ + + cp = (char *) (wp - 1); + while (*cp++ == 0) + continue; + + if (cp <= buf + n_read) + /* Clear to indicate that a normal write is needed. */ + wp = NULL; + else + { + /* We found the sentinel, so the whole input block was zero. + Make a hole. */ + if (lseek (dest_fd, n_read, SEEK_CUR) < 0) + { + error (0, errno, _("cannot lseek %s"), quote (dst_name)); + return false; + } + last_write_made_hole = true; + } + } + + if (!wp) + { + size_t n = n_read; + if (full_write (dest_fd, buf, n) != n) + { + error (0, errno, _("writing %s"), quote (dst_name)); + return false; + } + last_write_made_hole = false; + + /* It is tempting to return early here upon a short read from a + regular file. That would save the final read syscall for each + file. Unfortunately that doesn't work for certain files in + /proc with linux kernels from at least 2.6.9 .. 2.6.29. */ + } + } + + /* If the file ends with a `hole', we need to do something to record + the length of the file. On modern systems, calling ftruncate does + the job. On systems without native ftruncate support, we have to + write a byte at the ending position. Otherwise the kernel would + truncate the file at the end of the last write operation. */ + if (last_write_made_hole) + { + if (ftruncate (dest_fd, n_read_total) < 0) + { + error (0, errno, _("truncating %s"), quote (dst_name)); + return false; + } + } + + return true; +} + /* Perform the O(1) btrfs clone operation, if possible. Upon success, return 0. Otherwise, return -1 and set errno. */ static inline int @@ -824,7 +934,6 @@ copy_reg (char const *src_name, char const *dst_name, if (data_copy_required) { typedef uintptr_t word; - off_t n_read_total = 0; /* Choose a suitable buffer size; it may be adjusted later. */ size_t buf_alignment = lcm (getpagesize (), sizeof (word)); @@ -832,7 +941,6 @@ copy_reg (char const *src_name, char const *dst_name, size_t buf_size = io_blksize (sb); /* Deal with sparse files. */ - bool last_write_made_hole = false; bool make_holes = false; if (S_ISREG (sb.st_mode)) @@ -897,103 +1005,11 @@ copy_reg (char const *src_name, char const *dst_name, goto close_src_and_dst_desc; } - while (true) + if ( ! sparse_copy (source_desc, dest_desc, buf, buf_size, + make_holes, src_name, dst_name)) { - word *wp = NULL; - - ssize_t n_read = read (source_desc, buf, buf_size); - if (n_read < 0) - { -#ifdef EINTR - if (errno == EINTR) - continue; -#endif - error (0, errno, _("reading %s"), quote (src_name)); - return_val = false; - goto close_src_and_dst_desc; - } - if (n_read == 0) - break; - - n_read_total += n_read; - - if (make_holes) - { - char *cp; - - /* Sentinel to stop loop. */ - buf[n_read] = '\1'; -#ifdef lint - /* Usually, buf[n_read] is not the byte just before a "word" - (aka uintptr_t) boundary. In that case, the word-oriented - test below (*wp++ == 0) would read some uninitialized bytes - after the sentinel. To avoid false-positive reports about - this condition (e.g., from a tool like valgrind), set the - remaining bytes -- to any value. */ - memset (buf + n_read + 1, 0, sizeof (word) - 1); -#endif - - /* Find first nonzero *word*, or the word with the sentinel. */ - - wp = (word *) buf; - while (*wp++ == 0) - continue; - - /* Find the first nonzero *byte*, or the sentinel. */ - - cp = (char *) (wp - 1); - while (*cp++ == 0) - continue; - - if (cp <= buf + n_read) - /* Clear to indicate that a normal write is needed. */ - wp = NULL; - else - { - /* We found the sentinel, so the whole input block was zero. - Make a hole. */ - if (lseek (dest_desc, n_read, SEEK_CUR) < 0) - { - error (0, errno, _("cannot lseek %s"), quote (dst_name)); - return_val = false; - goto close_src_and_dst_desc; - } - last_write_made_hole = true; - } - } - - if (!wp) - { - size_t n = n_read; - if (full_write (dest_desc, buf, n) != n) - { - error (0, errno, _("writing %s"), quote (dst_name)); - return_val = false; - goto close_src_and_dst_desc; - } - last_write_made_hole = false; - - /* It is tempting to return early here upon a short read from a - regular file. That would save the final read syscall for each - file. Unfortunately that doesn't work for certain files in - /proc with linux kernels from at least 2.6.9 .. 2.6.29. */ - } - } - - /* If the file ends with a `hole', we need to do something to record - the length of the file. On modern systems, calling ftruncate does - the job. On systems without native ftruncate support, we have to - write a byte at the ending position. Otherwise the kernel would - truncate the file at the end of the last write operation. */ - - if (last_write_made_hole) - { - if (ftruncate (dest_desc, n_read_total) < 0) - { - error (0, errno, _("truncating %s"), quote (dst_name)); - return_val = false; - goto close_src_and_dst_desc; - } + return_val = false; + goto close_src_and_dst_desc; } } |