/* pr -- convert text files for printing.
Copyright (C) 1988-2016 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 3 of the License, 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, see . */
/* By Pete TerMaat, with considerable refinement by Roland Huebner. */
/* Things to watch: Sys V screws up on ...
pr -n -3 -s: /usr/dict/words
pr -m -o10 -n /usr/dict/words{,,,}
pr -6 -a -n -o5 /usr/dict/words
Ideas:
Keep a things_to_do list of functions to call when we know we have
something to print. Cleaner than current series of checks.
Improve the printing of control prefixes.
Expand the file name in the centered header line to a full file name.
Concept:
If the input_tab_char differs from the default value TAB
('-e[CHAR[...]]' is used), any input text tab is expanded to the
default width of 8 spaces (compare char_to_clump). - Same as SunOS
does.
The treatment of the number_separator (compare add_line_number):
The default value TAB of the number_separator ('-n[SEP[...]]') doesn't
be thought to be an input character. An optional '-e'-input has no
effect.
- With single column output
only one POSIX requirement has to be met:
The default n-separator should be a TAB. The consequence is a
different width between the number and the text if the output position
of the separator changes, i.e., it depends upon the left margin used.
That's not nice but easy-to-use together with the defaults of other
utilities, e.g. sort or cut. - Same as SunOS does.
- With multicolumn output
two conflicting POSIX requirements exist:
First "default n-separator is TAB", second "output text columns shall
be of equal width". Moreover POSIX specifies the number+separator a
part of the column, together with '-COLUMN' and '-a -COLUMN'.
(With -m output the number shall occupy each line only once. Exactly
the same situation as single column output exists.)
GNU pr gives priority to the 2nd requirement and observes POSIX
column definition. The n-separator TAB is expanded to the same number
of spaces in each column using the default value 8. Tabification is
only performed if it is compatible with the output position.
Consequence: The output text columns are of equal width. The layout
of a page does not change if the left margin varies. - Looks better
than the SunOS approach.
SunOS pr gives priority to the 1st requirement. n-separator TAB
width varies with each column. Only the width of text part of the
column is fixed.
Consequence: The output text columns don't have equal width. The
widths and the layout of the whole page varies with the left margin.
An overflow of the line length (without margin) over the input value
PAGE_WIDTH may occur.
The interference of the POSIX-compliant small letter options -w and -s:
("interference" means "setting a _separator_ with -s switches off the
column structure and the default - not generally - page_width,
acts on -w option")
options: text form / separator: equivalent new options:
-w l -s[x]
--------------------------------------------------------------------
1. -- -- columns / space --
trunc. to page_width = 72
2. -- -s[:] full lines / TAB[:] -J --sep-string[=""|:]
no truncation
3. -w l -- columns / space -W l
trunc. to page_width = l
4. -w l -s[:] columns / no sep.[:] -W l --sep-string[=:]
trunc. to page_width = l
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Options:
Including version 1.22i:
Some SMALL LETTER options have been redefined with the object of a
better POSIX compliance. The output of some further cases has been
adapted to other UNIXes. A violation of downward compatibility has to
be accepted.
Some NEW CAPITAL LETTER options ( -J, -S, -W) has been introduced to
turn off unexpected interferences of small letter options (-s and -w
together with the three column options).
-N option and the second argument LAST_PAGE of +FIRST_PAGE offer more
flexibility; The detailed handling of form feeds set in the input
files requires -T option.
Capital letter options dominate small letter ones.
Some of the option-arguments cannot be specified as separate arguments
from the preceding option letter (already stated in POSIX specification).
Form feeds in the input cause page breaks in the output. Multiple
form feeds produce empty pages.
+FIRST_PAGE[:LAST_PAGE], --pages=FIRST_PAGE[:LAST_PAGE]
begin [stop] printing with page FIRST_[LAST_]PAGE
-COLUMN, --columns=COLUMN
Produce output that is COLUMN columns wide and
print columns down, unless -a is used. Balance number of
lines in the columns on each page.
-a, --across Print columns across rather than down, used
together with -COLUMN. The input
one
two
three
four
will be printed with '-a -3' as
one two three
four
-b Balance columns on the last page.
-b is no longer an independent option. It's always used
together with -COLUMN (unless -a is used) to get a
consistent formulation with "FF set by hand" in input
files. Each formfeed found terminates the number of lines
to be read with the actual page. The situation for
printing columns down is equivalent to that on the last
page. So we need a balancing.
Keeping -b as an underground option guarantees some
downward compatibility. Utilities using pr with -b
(a most frequently used form) still work as usual.
-c, --show-control-chars
Print unprintable characters as control prefixes.
Control-g is printed as ^G (use hat notation) and
octal backslash notation.
-d, --double-space Double space the output.
-D FORMAT, --date-format=FORMAT Use FORMAT for the header date.
-e[CHAR[WIDTH]], --expand-tabs[=CHAR[WIDTH]]
Expand tabs to spaces on input. Optional argument CHAR
is the input TAB character. (Default is TAB). Optional
argument WIDTH is the input TAB character's width.
(Default is 8.)
-F, -f, --form-feed Use formfeeds instead of newlines to separate
pages. A three line HEADER is used, no TRAILER with -F,
without -F both HEADER and TRAILER are made of five lines.
-h HEADER, --header=HEADER
Replace the filename in the header with the string HEADER.
A centered header is used.
-i[CHAR[WIDTH]], --output-tabs[=CHAR[WIDTH]]
Replace spaces with tabs on output. Optional argument
CHAR is the output TAB character. (Default is TAB).
Optional argument WIDTH is the output TAB character's
width. (Default is 8)
-J, --join-lines Merge lines of full length, turns off -W/-w
line truncation, no column alignment, --sep-string[=STRING]
sets separators, works with all column options
(-COLUMN | -a -COLUMN | -m).
-J has been introduced (together with -W and --sep-string) to
disentangle the old (POSIX compliant) options -w, -s
along with the 3 column options.
-l PAGE_LENGTH, --length=PAGE_LENGTH
Set the page length to PAGE_LENGTH lines. Default is 66,
including 5 lines of HEADER and 5 lines of TRAILER
without -F, but only 3 lines of HEADER and no TRAILER
with -F (i.e the number of text lines defaults to 56 or
63 respectively).
-m, --merge Print files in parallel; pad_across_to align
columns; truncate lines and print separator strings;
Do it also with empty columns to get a continuous line
numbering and column marking by separators throughout
the whole merged file.
Empty pages in some input files produce empty columns
[marked by separators] in the merged pages. Completely
empty merged pages show no column separators at all.
The layout of a merged page is ruled by the largest form
feed distance of the single pages at that page. Shorter
columns will be filled up with empty lines.
Together with -J option join lines of full length and
set separators when -S option is used.
-n[SEP[DIGITS]], --number-lines[=SEP[DIGITS]]
Provide DIGITS digit line numbering (default for DIGITS
is 5). With multicolumn output the number occupies the
first DIGITS column positions of each text column or only
each line of -m output.
With single column output the number precedes each line
just as -m output.
Optional argument SEP is the character appended to the
line number to separate it from the text followed.
The default separator is a TAB. In a strict sense a TAB
is always printed with single column output only. The
TAB-width varies with the TAB-position, e.g. with the
left margin specified by -o option.
With multicolumn output priority is given to "equal width
of output columns" (a POSIX specification). The TAB-width
is fixed to the value of the 1st column and does not
change with different values of left margin. That means a
fixed number of spaces is always printed in the place of
a TAB. The tabification depends upon the output
position.
Default counting of the line numbers starts with 1st
line of the input file (not the 1st line printed,
compare the --page option and -N option).
-N NUMBER, --first-line-number=NUMBER
Start line counting with the number NUMBER at the 1st
line of first page printed (mostly not the 1st line of
the input file).
-o MARGIN, --indent=MARGIN
Offset each line with a margin MARGIN spaces wide.
Total page width is the size of the margin plus the
PAGE_WIDTH set with -W/-w option.
-r, --no-file-warnings
Omit warning when a file cannot be opened.
-s[CHAR], --separator[=CHAR]
Separate columns by a single character CHAR, default for
CHAR is the TAB character without -w and 'no char' with -w.
Without '-s' default separator 'space' is set.
-s[CHAR] turns off line truncation of all 3 column options
(-COLUMN|-a -COLUMN|-m) except -w is set. That is a POSIX
compliant formulation. The source code translates -s into
the new options -S and -J, also -W if required.
-S[STRING], --sep-string[=STRING]
Separate columns by any string STRING. The -S option
doesn't react upon the -W/-w option (unlike -s option
does). It defines a separator nothing else.
Without -S: Default separator TAB is used with -J and
'space' otherwise (same as -S" ").
With -S "": No separator is used.
Quotes should be used with blanks and some shell active
characters.
-S is problematic because in its obsolete form you
cannot use -S "STRING", but in its standard form you
must use -S "STRING" if STRING is empty. Use
--sep-string to avoid the ambiguity.
-t, --omit-header Do not print headers or footers but retain form
feeds set in the input files.
-T, --omit-pagination
Do not print headers or footers, eliminate any pagination
by form feeds set in the input files.
-v, --show-nonprinting
Print unprintable characters as escape sequences. Use
octal backslash notation. Control-G becomes \007.
-w PAGE_WIDTH, --width=PAGE_WIDTH
Set page width to PAGE_WIDTH characters for multiple
text-column output only (default for PAGE_WIDTH is 72).
-s[CHAR] turns off the default page width and any line
truncation. Lines of full length will be merged,
regardless of the column options set. A POSIX compliant
formulation.
-W PAGE_WIDTH, --page-width=PAGE_WIDTH
Set the page width to PAGE_WIDTH characters. That's valid
with and without a column option. Text lines will be
truncated, unless -J is used. Together with one of the
column options (-COLUMN| -a -COLUMN| -m) column alignment
is always used.
Default is 72 characters.
Without -W PAGE_WIDTH
- but with one of the column options default truncation of
72 characters is used (to keep downward compatibility
and to simplify most frequently met column tasks).
Column alignment and column separators are used.
- and without any of the column options NO line truncation
is used (to keep downward compatibility and to meet most
frequent tasks). That's equivalent to -W 72 -J .
With/without -W PAGE_WIDTH the header line is always
truncated to avoid line overflow.
(In pr versions newer than 1.14 -S option does no longer
affect -W option.)
*/
#include
#include
#include
#include "system.h"
#include "die.h"
#include "error.h"
#include "fadvise.h"
#include "hard-locale.h"
#include "mbswidth.h"
#include "quote.h"
#include "stat-time.h"
#include "stdio--.h"
#include "strftime.h"
#include "xstrtol.h"
#include "xdectoint.h"
/* The official name of this program (e.g., no 'g' prefix). */
#define PROGRAM_NAME "pr"
#define AUTHORS \
proper_name ("Pete TerMaat"), \
proper_name ("Roland Huebner")
/* Used with start_position in the struct COLUMN described below.
If start_position == ANYWHERE, we aren't truncating columns and
can begin printing a column anywhere. Otherwise we must pad to
the horizontal position start_position. */
#define ANYWHERE 0
/* Each column has one of these structures allocated for it.
If we're only dealing with one file, fp is the same for all
columns.
The general strategy is to spend time setting up these column
structures (storing columns if necessary), after which printing
is a matter of flitting from column to column and calling
print_func.
Parallel files, single files printing across in multiple
columns, and single files printing down in multiple columns all
fit the same printing loop.
print_func Function used to print lines in this column.
If we're storing this column it will be
print_stored(), Otherwise it will be read_line().
char_func Function used to process characters in this column.
If we're storing this column it will be store_char(),
otherwise it will be print_char().
current_line Index of the current entry in line_vector, which
contains the index of the first character of the
current line in buff[].
lines_stored Number of lines in this column which are stored in
buff.
lines_to_print If we're storing this column, lines_to_print is
the number of stored_lines which remain to be
printed. Otherwise it is the number of lines
we can print without exceeding lines_per_body.
start_position The horizontal position we want to be in before we
print the first character in this column.
numbered True means precede this column with a line number. */
/* FIXME: There are many unchecked integer overflows in this file,
that will cause this command to misbehave given large inputs or
options. Many of the "int" values below should be "size_t" or
something else like that. */
struct COLUMN;
struct COLUMN
{
FILE *fp; /* Input stream for this column. */
char const *name; /* File name. */
enum
{
OPEN,
FF_FOUND, /* used with -b option, set with \f, changed
to ON_HOLD after print_header */
ON_HOLD, /* Hit a form feed. */
CLOSED
}
status; /* Status of the file pointer. */
/* Func to print lines in this col. */
bool (*print_func) (struct COLUMN *);
/* Func to print/store chars in this col. */
void (*char_func) (char);
int current_line; /* Index of current place in line_vector. */
int lines_stored; /* Number of lines stored in buff. */
int lines_to_print; /* No. lines stored or space left on page. */
int start_position; /* Horizontal position of first char. */
bool numbered;
bool full_page_printed; /* True means printed without a FF found. */
/* p->full_page_printed controls a special case of "FF set by hand":
True means a full page has been printed without FF found. To avoid an
additional empty page we have to ignore a FF immediately following in
the next line. */
};
typedef struct COLUMN COLUMN;
static int char_to_clump (char c);
static bool read_line (COLUMN *p);
static bool print_page (void);
static bool print_stored (COLUMN *p);
static bool open_file (char *name, COLUMN *p);
static bool skip_to_page (uintmax_t page);
static void print_header (void);
static void pad_across_to (int position);
static void add_line_number (COLUMN *p);
static void getoptnum (const char *n_str, int min, int *num,
const char *errfmt);
static void getoptarg (char *arg, char switch_char, char *character,
int *number);
static void print_files (int number_of_files, char **av);
static void init_parameters (int number_of_files);
static void init_header (char const *filename, int desc);
static bool init_fps (int number_of_files, char **av);
static void init_funcs (void);
static void init_store_cols (void);
static void store_columns (void);
static void balance (int total_stored);
static void store_char (char c);
static void pad_down (unsigned int lines);
static void read_rest_of_line (COLUMN *p);
static void skip_read (COLUMN *p, int column_number);
static void print_char (char c);
static void cleanup (void);
static void print_sep_string (void);
static void separator_string (const char *optarg_S);
/* All of the columns to print. */
static COLUMN *column_vector;
/* When printing a single file in multiple downward columns,
we store the leftmost columns contiguously in buff.
To print a line from buff, get the index of the first character
from line_vector[i], and print up to line_vector[i + 1]. */
static char *buff;
/* Index of the position in buff where the next character
will be stored. */
static unsigned int buff_current;
/* The number of characters in buff.
Used for allocation of buff and to detect overflow of buff. */
static size_t buff_allocated;
/* Array of indices into buff.
Each entry is an index of the first character of a line.
This is used when storing lines to facilitate shuffling when
we do column balancing on the last page. */
static int *line_vector;
/* Array of horizontal positions.
For each line in line_vector, end_vector[line] is the horizontal
position we are in after printing that line. We keep track of this
so that we know how much we need to pad to prepare for the next
column. */
static int *end_vector;
/* (-m) True means we're printing multiple files in parallel. */
static bool parallel_files = false;
/* (-m) True means a line starts with some empty columns (some files
already CLOSED or ON_HOLD) which we have to align. */
static bool align_empty_cols;
/* (-m) True means we have not yet found any printable column in a line.
align_empty_cols = true has to be maintained. */
static bool empty_line;
/* (-m) False means printable column output precedes a form feed found.
Column alignment is done only once. No additional action with that form
feed.
True means we found only a form feed in a column. Maybe we have to do
some column alignment with that form feed. */
static bool FF_only;
/* (-[0-9]+) True means we're given an option explicitly specifying
number of columns. Used to detect when this option is used with -m
and when translating old options to new/long options. */
static bool explicit_columns = false;
/* (-t|-T) False means we aren't printing headers and footers. */
static bool extremities = true;
/* (-t) True means we retain all FF set by hand in input files.
False is set with -T option. */
static bool keep_FF = false;
static bool print_a_FF = false;
/* True means we need to print a header as soon as we know we've got input
to print after it. */
static bool print_a_header;
/* (-f) True means use formfeeds instead of newlines to separate pages. */
static bool use_form_feed = false;
/* True means we have read the standard input. */
static bool have_read_stdin = false;
/* True means the -a flag has been given. */
static bool print_across_flag = false;
/* True means we're printing one file in multiple (>1) downward columns. */
static bool storing_columns = true;
/* (-b) True means balance columns on the last page as Sys V does. */
/* That's no longer an independent option. With storing_columns = true
balance_columns = true is used too (s. function init_parameters).
We get a consistent formulation with "FF set by hand" in input files. */
static bool balance_columns = false;
/* (-l) Number of lines on a page, including header and footer lines. */
static int lines_per_page = 66;
/* Number of lines in the header and footer can be reset to 0 using
the -t flag. */
enum { lines_per_header = 5 };
static int lines_per_body;
enum { lines_per_footer = 5 };
/* (-w|-W) Width in characters of the page. Does not include the width of
the margin. */
static int chars_per_line = 72;
/* (-w|W) True means we truncate lines longer than chars_per_column. */
static bool truncate_lines = false;
/* (-J) True means we join lines without any line truncation. -J
dominates -w option. */
static bool join_lines = false;
/* Number of characters in a column. Based on col_sep_length and
page width. */
static int chars_per_column;
/* (-e) True means convert tabs to spaces on input. */
static bool untabify_input = false;
/* (-e) The input tab character. */
static char input_tab_char = '\t';
/* (-e) Tabstops are at chars_per_tab, 2*chars_per_tab, 3*chars_per_tab, ...
where the leftmost column is 1. */
static int chars_per_input_tab = 8;
/* (-i) True means convert spaces to tabs on output. */
static bool tabify_output = false;
/* (-i) The output tab character. */
static char output_tab_char = '\t';
/* (-i) The width of the output tab. */
static int chars_per_output_tab = 8;
/* Keeps track of pending white space. When we hit a nonspace
character after some whitespace, we print whitespace, tabbing
if necessary to get to output_position + spaces_not_printed. */
static int spaces_not_printed;
/* (-o) Number of spaces in the left margin (tabs used when possible). */
static int chars_per_margin = 0;
/* Position where the next character will fall.
Leftmost position is 0 + chars_per_margin.
Rightmost position is chars_per_margin + chars_per_line - 1.
This is important for converting spaces to tabs on output. */
static int output_position;
/* Horizontal position relative to the current file.
(output_position depends on where we are on the page;
input_position depends on where we are in the file.)
Important for converting tabs to spaces on input. */
static int input_position;
/* True if there were any failed opens so we can exit with nonzero
status. */
static bool failed_opens = false;
/* The number of spaces taken up if we print a tab character with width
c_ from position h_. */
#define TAB_WIDTH(c_, h_) ((c_) - ((h_) % (c_)))
/* The horizontal position we'll be at after printing a tab character
of width c_ from the position h_. */
#define POS_AFTER_TAB(c_, h_) ((h_) + TAB_WIDTH (c_, h_))
/* (-NNN) Number of columns of text to print. */
static int columns = 1;
/* (+NNN:MMM) Page numbers on which to begin and stop printing.
first_page_number = 0 will be used to check input only. */
static uintmax_t first_page_number = 0;
static uintmax_t last_page_number = UINTMAX_MAX;
/* Number of files open (not closed, not on hold). */
static int files_ready_to_read = 0;
/* Current page number. Displayed in header. */
static uintmax_t page_number;
/* Current line number. Displayed when -n flag is specified.
When printing files in parallel (-m flag), line numbering is as follows:
1 foo goo moo
2 hoo too zoo
When printing files across (-a flag), ...
1 foo 2 moo 3 goo
4 hoo 5 too 6 zoo
Otherwise, line numbering is as follows:
1 foo 3 goo 5 too
2 moo 4 hoo 6 zoo */
static int line_number;
/* (-n) True means lines should be preceded by numbers. */
static bool numbered_lines = false;
/* (-n) Character which follows each line number. */
static char number_separator = '\t';
/* (-n) line counting starts with 1st line of input file (not with 1st
line of 1st page printed). */
static int line_count = 1;
/* (-n) True means counting of skipped lines starts with 1st line of
input file. False means -N option is used in addition, counting of
skipped lines not required. */
static bool skip_count = true;
/* (-N) Counting starts with start_line_number = NUMBER at 1st line of
first page printed, usually not 1st page of input file. */
static int start_line_num = 1;
/* (-n) Width in characters of a line number. */
static int chars_per_number = 5;
/* Used when widening the first column to accommodate numbers -- only
needed when printing files in parallel. Includes width of both the
number and the number_separator. */
static int number_width;
/* Buffer sprintf uses to format a line number. */
static char *number_buff;
/* (-v) True means unprintable characters are printed as escape sequences.
control-g becomes \007. */
static bool use_esc_sequence = false;
/* (-c) True means unprintable characters are printed as control prefixes.
control-g becomes ^G. */
static bool use_cntrl_prefix = false;
/* (-d) True means output is double spaced. */
static bool double_space = false;
/* Number of files opened initially in init_files. Should be 1
unless we're printing multiple files in parallel. */
static int total_files = 0;
/* (-r) True means don't complain if we can't open a file. */
static bool ignore_failed_opens = false;
/* (-S) True means we separate columns with a specified string.
-S option does not affect line truncation nor column alignment. */
static bool use_col_separator = false;
/* String used to separate columns if the -S option has been specified.
Default without -S but together with one of the column options
-a|COLUMN|-m is a 'space' and with the -J option a 'tab'. */
static char const *col_sep_string = "";
static int col_sep_length = 0;
static char *column_separator = (char *) " ";
static char *line_separator = (char *) "\t";
/* Number of separator characters waiting to be printed as soon as we
know that we have any input remaining to be printed. */
static int separators_not_printed;
/* Position we need to pad to, as soon as we know that we have input
remaining to be printed. */
static int padding_not_printed;
/* True means we should pad the end of the page. Remains false until we
know we have a page to print. */
static bool pad_vertically;
/* (-h) String of characters used in place of the filename in the header. */
static char *custom_header;
/* (-D) Date format for the header. */
static char const *date_format;
/* The local time zone rules, as per the TZ environment variable. */
static timezone_t localtz;
/* Date and file name for the header. */
static char *date_text;
static char const *file_text;
/* Output columns available, not counting the date and file name. */
static int header_width_available;
static char *clump_buff;
/* True means we read the line no. lines_per_body in skip_read
called by skip_to_page. That variable controls the coincidence of a
"FF set by hand" and "full_page_printed", see above the definition of
structure COLUMN. */
static bool last_line = false;
/* For long options that have no equivalent short option, use a
non-character as a pseudo short option, starting with CHAR_MAX + 1. */
enum
{
COLUMNS_OPTION = CHAR_MAX + 1,
PAGES_OPTION
};
static char const short_options[] =
"-0123456789D:FJN:S::TW:abcde::fh:i::l:mn::o:rs::tvw:";
static struct option const long_options[] =
{
{"pages", required_argument, NULL, PAGES_OPTION},
{"columns", required_argument, NULL, COLUMNS_OPTION},
{"across", no_argument, NULL, 'a'},
{"show-control-chars", no_argument, NULL, 'c'},
{"double-space", no_argument, NULL, 'd'},
{"date-format", required_argument, NULL, 'D'},
{"expand-tabs", optional_argument, NULL, 'e'},
{"form-feed", no_argument, NULL, 'f'},
{"header", required_argument, NULL, 'h'},
{"output-tabs", optional_argument, NULL, 'i'},
{"join-lines", no_argument, NULL, 'J'},
{"length", required_argument, NULL, 'l'},
{"merge", no_argument, NULL, 'm'},
{"number-lines", optional_argument, NULL, 'n'},
{"first-line-number", required_argument, NULL, 'N'},
{"indent", required_argument, NULL, 'o'},
{"no-file-warnings", no_argument, NULL, 'r'},
{"separator", optional_argument, NULL, 's'},
{"sep-string", optional_argument, NULL, 'S'},
{"omit-header", no_argument, NULL, 't'},
{"omit-pagination", no_argument, NULL, 'T'},
{"show-nonprinting", no_argument, NULL, 'v'},
{"width", required_argument, NULL, 'w'},
{"page-width", required_argument, NULL, 'W'},
{GETOPT_HELP_OPTION_DECL},
{GETOPT_VERSION_OPTION_DECL},
{NULL, 0, NULL, 0}
};
static void
integer_overflow (void)
{
die (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("integer overflow"));
}
/* Return the number of columns that have either an open file or
stored lines. */
static unsigned int _GL_ATTRIBUTE_PURE
cols_ready_to_print (void)
{
COLUMN *q;
unsigned int i;
unsigned int n;
n = 0;
for (q = column_vector, i = 0; i < columns; ++q, ++i)
if (q->status == OPEN
|| q->status == FF_FOUND /* With -b: To print a header only */
|| (storing_columns && q->lines_stored > 0 && q->lines_to_print > 0))
++n;
return n;
}
/* Estimate first_ / last_page_number
using option +FIRST_PAGE:LAST_PAGE */
static bool
first_last_page (int oi, char c, char const *pages)
{
char *p;
uintmax_t first;
uintmax_t last = UINTMAX_MAX;
strtol_error err = xstrtoumax (pages, &p, 10, &first, "");
if (err != LONGINT_OK && err != LONGINT_INVALID_SUFFIX_CHAR)
xstrtol_fatal (err, oi, c, long_options, pages);
if (p == pages || !first)
return false;
if (*p == ':')
{
char const *p1 = p + 1;
err = xstrtoumax (p1, &p, 10, &last, "");
if (err != LONGINT_OK)
xstrtol_fatal (err, oi, c, long_options, pages);
if (p1 == p || last < first)
return false;
}
if (*p)
return false;
first_page_number = first;
last_page_number = last;
return true;
}
/* Parse column count string S, and if it's valid (1 or larger and
within range of the type of 'columns') set the global variables
columns and explicit_columns. Otherwise, exit with a diagnostic. */
static void
parse_column_count (char const *s)
{
getoptnum (s, 1, &columns, _("invalid number of columns"));
explicit_columns = true;
}
/* Estimate length of col_sep_string with option -S. */
static void
separator_string (const char *optarg_S)
{
size_t len = strlen (optarg_S);
if (INT_MAX < len)
integer_overflow ();
col_sep_length = len;
col_sep_string = optarg_S;
}
int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
unsigned int n_files;
bool old_options = false;
bool old_w = false;
bool old_s = false;
char **file_names;
/* Accumulate the digits of old-style options like -99. */
char *column_count_string = NULL;
size_t n_digits = 0;
size_t n_alloc = 0;
initialize_main (&argc, &argv);
set_program_name (argv[0]);
setlocale (LC_ALL, "");
bindtextdomain (PACKAGE, LOCALEDIR);
textdomain (PACKAGE);
atexit (close_stdout);
n_files = 0;
file_names = (argc > 1
? xnmalloc (argc - 1, sizeof (char *))
: NULL);
while (true)
{
int oi = -1;
int c = getopt_long (argc, argv, short_options, long_options, &oi);
if (c == -1)
break;
if (ISDIGIT (c))
{
/* Accumulate column-count digits specified via old-style options. */
if (n_digits + 1 >= n_alloc)
column_count_string
= X2REALLOC (column_count_string, &n_alloc);
column_count_string[n_digits++] = c;
column_count_string[n_digits] = '\0';
continue;
}
n_digits = 0;
switch (c)
{
case 1: /* Non-option argument. */
/* long option --page dominates old '+FIRST_PAGE ...'. */
if (! (first_page_number == 0
&& *optarg == '+' && first_last_page (-2, '+', optarg + 1)))
file_names[n_files++] = optarg;
break;
case PAGES_OPTION: /* --pages=FIRST_PAGE[:LAST_PAGE] */
{ /* dominates old opt +... */
if (! optarg)
die (EXIT_FAILURE, 0,
_("'--pages=FIRST_PAGE[:LAST_PAGE]' missing argument"));
else if (! first_last_page (oi, 0, optarg))
die (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("invalid page range %s"),
quote (optarg));
break;
}
case COLUMNS_OPTION: /* --columns=COLUMN */
{
parse_column_count (optarg);
/* If there was a prior column count specified via the
short-named option syntax, e.g., -9, ensure that this
long-name-specified value overrides it. */
free (column_count_string);
column_count_string = NULL;
n_alloc = 0;
break;
}
case 'a':
print_across_flag = true;
storing_columns = false;
break;
case 'b':
balance_columns = true;
break;
case 'c':
use_cntrl_prefix = true;
break;
case 'd':
double_space = true;
break;
case 'D':
date_format = optarg;
break;
case 'e':
if (optarg)
getoptarg (optarg, 'e', &input_tab_char,
&chars_per_input_tab);
/* Could check tab width > 0. */
untabify_input = true;
break;
case 'f':
case 'F':
use_form_feed = true;
break;
case 'h':
custom_header = optarg;
break;
case 'i':
if (optarg)
getoptarg (optarg, 'i', &output_tab_char,
&chars_per_output_tab);
/* Could check tab width > 0. */
tabify_output = true;
break;
case 'J':
join_lines = true;
break;
case 'l':
getoptnum (optarg, 1, &lines_per_page,
_("'-l PAGE_LENGTH' invalid number of lines"));
break;
case 'm':
parallel_files = true;
storing_columns = false;
break;
case 'n':
numbered_lines = true;
if (optarg)
getoptarg (optarg, 'n', &number_separator,
&chars_per_number);
break;
case 'N':
skip_count = false;
getoptnum (optarg, INT_MIN, &start_line_num,
_("'-N NUMBER' invalid starting line number"));
break;
case 'o':
getoptnum (optarg, 0, &chars_per_margin,
_("'-o MARGIN' invalid line offset"));
break;
case 'r':
ignore_failed_opens = true;
break;
case 's':
old_options = true;
old_s = true;
if (!use_col_separator && optarg)
separator_string (optarg);
break;
case 'S':
old_s = false;
/* Reset an additional input of -s, -S dominates -s */
col_sep_string = "";
col_sep_length = 0;
use_col_separator = true;
if (optarg)
separator_string (optarg);
break;
case 't':
extremities = false;
keep_FF = true;
break;
case 'T':
extremities = false;
keep_FF = false;
break;
case 'v':
use_esc_sequence = true;
break;
case 'w':
old_options = true;
old_w = true;
{
int tmp_cpl;
getoptnum (optarg, 1, &tmp_cpl,
_("'-w PAGE_WIDTH' invalid number of characters"));
if (! truncate_lines)
chars_per_line = tmp_cpl;
}
break;
case 'W':
old_w = false; /* dominates -w */
truncate_lines = true;
getoptnum (optarg, 1, &chars_per_line,
_("'-W PAGE_WIDTH' invalid number of characters"));
break;
case_GETOPT_HELP_CHAR;
case_GETOPT_VERSION_CHAR (PROGRAM_NAME, AUTHORS);
default:
usage (EXIT_FAILURE);
break;
}
}
if (column_count_string)
{
parse_column_count (column_count_string);
free (column_count_string);
}
if (! date_format)
date_format = (getenv ("POSIXLY_CORRECT") && !hard_locale (LC_TIME)
? "%b %e %H:%M %Y"
: "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M");
localtz = tzalloc (getenv ("TZ"));
/* Now we can set a reasonable initial value: */
if (first_page_number == 0)
first_page_number = 1;
if (parallel_files && explicit_columns)
die (EXIT_FAILURE, 0,
_("cannot specify number of columns when printing in parallel"));
if (parallel_files && print_across_flag)
die (EXIT_FAILURE, 0,
_("cannot specify both printing across and printing in parallel"));
/* Translate some old short options to new/long options.
To meet downward compatibility with other UNIX pr utilities
and some POSIX specifications. */
if (old_options)
{
if (old_w)
{
if (parallel_files || explicit_columns)
{
/* activate -W */
truncate_lines = true;
if (old_s)
/* adapt HP-UX and SunOS: -s = no separator;
activate -S */
use_col_separator = true;
}
else
/* old -w sets width with columns only
activate -J */
join_lines = true;
}
else if (!use_col_separator)
{
/* No -S option read */
if (old_s && (parallel_files || explicit_columns))
{
if (!truncate_lines)
{
/* old -s (without -w and -W) annuls column alignment,
uses fields, activate -J */
join_lines = true;
if (col_sep_length > 0)
/* activate -S */
use_col_separator = true;
}
else
/* with -W */
/* adapt HP-UX and SunOS: -s = no separator;
activate -S */
use_col_separator = true;
}
}
}
for (; optind < argc; optind++)
{
file_names[n_files++] = argv[optind];
}
if (n_files == 0)
{
/* No file arguments specified; read from standard input. */
print_files (0, NULL);
}
else
{
if (parallel_files)
print_files (n_files, file_names);
else
{
unsigned int i;
for (i = 0; i < n_files; i++)
print_files (1, &file_names[i]);
}
}
cleanup ();
IF_LINT (free (file_names));
if (have_read_stdin && fclose (stdin) == EOF)
die (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, _("standard input"));
return failed_opens ? EXIT_FAILURE : EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
/* Parse numeric arguments, ensuring MIN <= number <= INT_MAX. */
static void
getoptnum (const char *n_str, int min, int *num, const char *err)
{
intmax_t tnum = xdectoimax (n_str, min, INT_MAX, "", err, 0);
*num = tnum;
}
/* Parse options of the form -scNNN.
Example: -nck, where 'n' is the option, c is the optional number
separator, and k is the optional width of the field used when printing
a number. */
static void
getoptarg (char *arg, char switch_char, char *character, int *number)
{
if (!ISDIGIT (*arg))
*character = *arg++;
if (*arg)
{
long int tmp_long;
if (xstrtol (arg, NULL, 10, &tmp_long, "") != LONGINT_OK
|| tmp_long <= 0 || INT_MAX < tmp_long)
{
error (0, INT_MAX < tmp_long ? EOVERFLOW : errno,
_("'-%c' extra characters or invalid number in the argument: %s"),
switch_char, quote (arg));
usage (EXIT_FAILURE);
}
*number = tmp_long;
}
}
/* Set parameters related to formatting. */
static void
init_parameters (int number_of_files)
{
int chars_used_by_number = 0;
lines_per_body = lines_per_page - lines_per_header - lines_per_footer;
if (lines_per_body <= 0)
{
extremities = false;
keep_FF = true;
}
if (extremities == false)
lines_per_body = lines_per_page;
if (double_space)
lines_per_body = lines_per_body / 2;
/* If input is stdin, cannot print parallel files. BSD dumps core
on this. */
if (number_of_files == 0)
parallel_files = false;
if (parallel_files)
columns = number_of_files;
/* One file, multi columns down: -b option is set to get a consistent
formulation with "FF set by hand" in input files. */
if (storing_columns)
balance_columns = true;
/* Tabification is assumed for multiple columns. */
if (columns > 1)
{
if (!use_col_separator)
{
/* Use default separator */
if (join_lines)
col_sep_string = line_separator;
else
col_sep_string = column_separator;
col_sep_length = 1;
use_col_separator = true;
}
/* It's rather pointless to define a TAB separator with column
alignment */
else if (!join_lines && col_sep_length == 1 && *col_sep_string == '\t')
col_sep_string = column_separator;
truncate_lines = true;
tabify_output = true;
}
else
storing_columns = false;
/* -J dominates -w in any case */
if (join_lines)
truncate_lines = false;
if (numbered_lines)
{
int chars_per_default_tab = 8;
line_count = start_line_num;
/* To allow input tab-expansion (-e sensitive) use:
if (number_separator == input_tab_char)
number_width = chars_per_number
+ TAB_WIDTH (chars_per_input_tab, chars_per_number); */
/* Estimate chars_per_text without any margin and keep it constant. */
if (number_separator == '\t')
number_width = (chars_per_number
+ TAB_WIDTH (chars_per_default_tab, chars_per_number));
else
number_width = chars_per_number + 1;
/* The number is part of the column width unless we are
printing files in parallel. */
if (parallel_files)
chars_used_by_number = number_width;
}
int sep_chars, useful_chars;
if (INT_MULTIPLY_WRAPV (columns - 1, col_sep_length, &sep_chars))
sep_chars = INT_MAX;
if (INT_SUBTRACT_WRAPV (chars_per_line - chars_used_by_number, sep_chars,
&useful_chars))
useful_chars = 0;
chars_per_column = useful_chars / columns;
if (chars_per_column < 1)
die (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("page width too narrow"));
if (numbered_lines)
{
free (number_buff);
number_buff = xmalloc (MAX (chars_per_number,
INT_STRLEN_BOUND (line_number)) + 1);
}
/* Pick the maximum between the tab width and the width of an
escape sequence.
The width of an escape sequence (4) isn't the lower limit any longer.
We've to use 8 as the lower limit, if we use chars_per_default_tab = 8
to expand a tab which is not an input_tab-char. */
free (clump_buff);
clump_buff = xmalloc (MAX (8, chars_per_input_tab));
}
/* Open the necessary files,
maintaining a COLUMN structure for each column.
With multiple files, each column p has a different p->fp.
With single files, each column p has the same p->fp.
Return false if (number_of_files > 0) and no files can be opened,
true otherwise.
With each column/file p, p->full_page_printed is initialized,
see also open_file. */
static bool
init_fps (int number_of_files, char **av)
{
int i, files_left;
COLUMN *p;
FILE *firstfp;
char const *firstname;
total_files = 0;
free (column_vector);
column_vector = xnmalloc (columns, sizeof (COLUMN));
if (parallel_files)
{
files_left = number_of_files;
for (p = column_vector; files_left--; ++p, ++av)
{
if (! open_file (*av, p))
{
--p;
--columns;
}
}
if (columns == 0)
return false;
init_header ("", -1);
}
else
{
p = column_vector;
if (number_of_files > 0)
{
if (! open_file (*av, p))
return false;
init_header (*av, fileno (p->fp));
p->lines_stored = 0;
}
else
{
p->name = _("standard input");
p->fp = stdin;
have_read_stdin = true;
p->status = OPEN;
p->full_page_printed = false;
++total_files;
init_header ("", -1);
p->lines_stored = 0;
}
firstname = p->name;
firstfp = p->fp;
for (i = columns - 1, ++p; i; --i, ++p)
{
p->name = firstname;
p->fp = firstfp;
p->status = OPEN;
p->full_page_printed = false;
p->lines_stored = 0;
}
}
files_ready_to_read = total_files;
return true;
}
/* Determine print_func and char_func, the functions
used by each column for printing and/or storing.
Determine the horizontal position desired when we begin
printing a column (p->start_position). */
static void
init_funcs (void)
{
int i, h, h_next;
COLUMN *p;
h = chars_per_margin;
if (!truncate_lines)
h_next = ANYWHERE;
else
{
/* When numbering lines of parallel files, we enlarge the
first column to accommodate the number. Looks better than
the Sys V approach. */
if (parallel_files && numbered_lines)
h_next = h + chars_per_column + number_width;
else
h_next = h + chars_per_column;
}
/* Enlarge p->start_position of first column to use the same form of
padding_not_printed with all columns. */
h = h + col_sep_length;
/* This loop takes care of all but the rightmost column. */
for (p = column_vector, i = 1; i < columns; ++p, ++i)
{
if (storing_columns) /* One file, multi columns down. */
{
p->char_func = store_char;
p->print_func = print_stored;
}
else
/* One file, multi columns across; or parallel files. */
{
p->char_func = print_char;
p->print_func = read_line;
}
/* Number only the first column when printing files in
parallel. */
p->numbered = numbered_lines && (!parallel_files || i == 1);
p->start_position = h;
/* If we don't truncate lines, all start_positions are
ANYWHERE, except the first column's start_position when
using a margin. */
if (!truncate_lines)
{
h = ANYWHERE;
h_next = ANYWHERE;
}
else
{
h = h_next + col_sep_length;
h_next = h + chars_per_column;
}
}
/* The rightmost column.
Doesn't need to be stored unless we intend to balance
columns on the last page. */
if (storing_columns && balance_columns)
{
p->char_func = store_char;
p->print_func = print_stored;
}
else
{
p->char_func = print_char;
p->print_func = read_line;
}
p->numbered = numbered_lines && (!parallel_files || i == 1);
p->start_position = h;
}
/* Open a file. Return true if successful.
With each file p, p->full_page_printed is initialized,
see also init_fps. */
static bool
open_file (char *name, COLUMN *p)
{
if (STREQ (name, "-"))
{
p->name = _("standard input");
p->fp = stdin;
have_read_stdin = true;
}
else
{
p->name = name;
p->fp = fopen (name, "r");
}
if (p->fp == NULL)
{
failed_opens = true;
if (!ignore_failed_opens)
error (0, errno, "%s", quotef (name));
return false;
}
fadvise (p->fp, FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL);
p->status = OPEN;
p->full_page_printed = false;
++total_files;
return true;
}
/* Close the file in P.
If we aren't dealing with multiple files in parallel, we change
the status of all columns in the column list to reflect the close. */
static void
close_file (COLUMN *p)
{
COLUMN *q;
int i;
if (p->status == CLOSED)
return;
if (ferror (p->fp))
die (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, "%s", quotef (p->name));
if (fileno (p->fp) != STDIN_FILENO && fclose (p->fp) != 0)
die (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, "%s", quotef (p->name));
if (!parallel_files)
{
for (q = column_vector, i = columns; i; ++q, --i)
{
q->status = CLOSED;
if (q->lines_stored == 0)
{
q->lines_to_print = 0;
}
}
}
else
{
p->status = CLOSED;
p->lines_to_print = 0;
}
--files_ready_to_read;
}
/* Put a file on hold until we start a new page,
since we've hit a form feed.
If we aren't dealing with parallel files, we must change the
status of all columns in the column list. */
static void
hold_file (COLUMN *p)
{
COLUMN *q;
int i;
if (!parallel_files)
for (q = column_vector, i = columns; i; ++q, --i)
{
if (storing_columns)
q->status = FF_FOUND;
else
q->status = ON_HOLD;
}
else
p->status = ON_HOLD;
p->lines_to_print = 0;
--files_ready_to_read;
}
/* Undo hold_file -- go through the column list and change any
ON_HOLD columns to OPEN. Used at the end of each page. */
static void
reset_status (void)
{
int i = columns;
COLUMN *p;
for (p = column_vector; i; --i, ++p)
if (p->status == ON_HOLD)
{
p->status = OPEN;
files_ready_to_read++;
}
if (storing_columns)
{
if (column_vector->status == CLOSED)
/* We use the info to output an error message in skip_to_page. */
files_ready_to_read = 0;
else
files_ready_to_read = 1;
}
}
/* Print a single file, or multiple files in parallel.
Set up the list of columns, opening the necessary files.
Allocate space for storing columns, if necessary.
Skip to first_page_number, if user has asked to skip leading pages.
Determine which functions are appropriate to store/print lines
in each column.
Print the file(s). */
static void
print_files (int number_of_files, char **av)
{
init_parameters (number_of_files);
if (! init_fps (number_of_files, av))
return;
if (storing_columns)
init_store_cols ();
if (first_page_number > 1)
{
if (!skip_to_page (first_page_number))
return;
else
page_number = first_page_number;
}
else
page_number = 1;
init_funcs ();
line_number = line_count;
while (print_page ())
;
}
/* Initialize header information.
If DESC is non-negative, it is a file descriptor open to
FILENAME for reading. */
static void
init_header (char const *filename, int desc)
{
char *buf = NULL;
struct stat st;
struct timespec t;
int ns;
struct tm tm;
/* If parallel files or standard input, use current date. */
if (STREQ (filename, "-"))
desc = -1;
if (0 <= desc && fstat (desc, &st) == 0)
t = get_stat_mtime (&st);
else
{
static struct timespec timespec;
if (! timespec.tv_sec)
gettime (×pec);
t = timespec;
}
ns = t.tv_nsec;
if (localtime_rz (localtz, &t.tv_sec, &tm))
{
size_t bufsize
= nstrftime (NULL, SIZE_MAX, date_format, &tm, localtz, ns) + 1;
buf = xmalloc (bufsize);
nstrftime (buf, bufsize, date_format, &tm, localtz, ns);
}
else
{
char secbuf[INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND (intmax_t)];
buf = xmalloc (sizeof secbuf + MAX (10, INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND (int)));
sprintf (buf, "%s.%09d", timetostr (t.tv_sec, secbuf), ns);
}
free (date_text);
date_text = buf;
file_text = custom_header ? custom_header : desc < 0 ? "" : filename;
header_width_available = (chars_per_line
- mbswidth (date_text, 0)
- mbswidth (file_text, 0));
}
/* Set things up for printing a page
Scan through the columns ...
Determine which are ready to print
(i.e., which have lines stored or open files)
Set p->lines_to_print appropriately
(to p->lines_stored if we're storing, or lines_per_body
if we're reading straight from the file)
Keep track of this total so we know when to stop printing */
static void
init_page (void)
{
int j;
COLUMN *p;
if (storing_columns)
{
store_columns ();
for (j = columns - 1, p = column_vector; j; --j, ++p)
{
p->lines_to_print = p->lines_stored;
}
/* Last column. */
if (balance_columns)
{
p->lines_to_print = p->lines_stored;
}
/* Since we're not balancing columns, we don't need to store
the rightmost column. Read it straight from the file. */
else
{
if (p->status == OPEN)
{
p->lines_to_print = lines_per_body;
}
else
p->lines_to_print = 0;
}
}
else
for (j = columns, p = column_vector; j; --j, ++p)
if (p->status == OPEN)
{
p->lines_to_print = lines_per_body;
}
else
p->lines_to_print = 0;
}
/* Align empty columns and print separators.
Empty columns will be formed by files with status ON_HOLD or CLOSED
when printing multiple files in parallel. */
static void
align_column (COLUMN *p)
{
padding_not_printed = p->start_position;
if (col_sep_length < padding_not_printed)
{
pad_across_to (padding_not_printed - col_sep_length);
padding_not_printed = ANYWHERE;
}
if (use_col_separator)
print_sep_string ();
if (p->numbered)
add_line_number (p);
}
/* Print one page.
As long as there are lines left on the page and columns ready to print,
Scan across the column list
if the column has stored lines or the file is open
pad to the appropriate spot
print the column
pad the remainder of the page with \n or \f as requested
reset the status of all files -- any files which where on hold because
of formfeeds are now put back into the lineup. */
static bool
print_page (void)
{
int j;
int lines_left_on_page;
COLUMN *p;
/* Used as an accumulator (with | operator) of successive values of
pad_vertically. The trick is to set pad_vertically
to false before each run through the inner loop, then after that
loop, it tells us whether a line was actually printed (whether a
newline needs to be output -- or two for double spacing). But those
values have to be accumulated (in pv) so we can invoke pad_down
properly after the outer loop completes. */
bool pv;
init_page ();
if (cols_ready_to_print () == 0)
return false;
if (extremities)
print_a_header = true;
/* Don't pad unless we know a page was printed. */
pad_vertically = false;
pv = false;
lines_left_on_page = lines_per_body;
if (double_space)
lines_left_on_page *= 2;
while (lines_left_on_page > 0 && cols_ready_to_print () > 0)
{
output_position = 0;
spaces_not_printed = 0;
separators_not_printed = 0;
pad_vertically = false;
align_empty_cols = false;
empty_line = true;
for (j = 1, p = column_vector; j <= columns; ++j, ++p)
{
input_position = 0;
if (p->lines_to_print > 0 || p->status == FF_FOUND)
{
FF_only = false;
padding_not_printed = p->start_position;
if (!(p->print_func) (p))
read_rest_of_line (p);
pv |= pad_vertically;
--p->lines_to_print;
if (p->lines_to_print <= 0)
{
if (cols_ready_to_print () == 0)
break;
}
/* File p changed its status to ON_HOLD or CLOSED */
if (parallel_files && p->status != OPEN)
{
if (empty_line)
align_empty_cols = true;
else if (p->status == CLOSED
|| (p->status == ON_HOLD && FF_only))
align_column (p);
}
}
else if (parallel_files)
{
/* File status ON_HOLD or CLOSED */
if (empty_line)
align_empty_cols = true;
else
align_column (p);
}
/* We need it also with an empty column */
if (use_col_separator)
++separators_not_printed;
}
if (pad_vertically)
{
putchar ('\n');
--lines_left_on_page;
}
if (cols_ready_to_print () == 0 && !extremities)
break;
if (double_space && pv)
{
putchar ('\n');
--lines_left_on_page;
}
}
if (lines_left_on_page == 0)
for (j = 1, p = column_vector; j <= columns; ++j, ++p)
if (p->status == OPEN)
p->full_page_printed = true;
pad_vertically = pv;
if (pad_vertically && extremities)
pad_down (lines_left_on_page + lines_per_footer);
else if (keep_FF && print_a_FF)
{
putchar ('\f');
print_a_FF = false;
}
if (last_page_number < ++page_number)
return false; /* Stop printing with LAST_PAGE */
reset_status (); /* Change ON_HOLD to OPEN. */
return true; /* More pages to go. */
}
/* Allocate space for storing columns.
This is necessary when printing multiple columns from a single file.
Lines are stored consecutively in buff, separated by '\0'.
The following doesn't apply any longer - any tuning possible?
(We can't use a fixed offset since with the '-s' flag lines aren't
truncated.)
We maintain a list (line_vector) of pointers to the beginnings
of lines in buff. We allocate one more than the number of lines
because the last entry tells us the index of the last character,
which we need to know in order to print the last line in buff. */
static void
init_store_cols (void)
{
int total_lines, total_lines_1, chars_per_column_1, chars_if_truncate;
if (INT_MULTIPLY_WRAPV (lines_per_body, columns, &total_lines)
|| INT_ADD_WRAPV (total_lines, 1, &total_lines_1)
|| INT_ADD_WRAPV (chars_per_column, 1, &chars_per_column_1)
|| INT_MULTIPLY_WRAPV (total_lines, chars_per_column_1,
&chars_if_truncate))
integer_overflow ();
free (line_vector);
/* FIXME: here's where it was allocated. */
line_vector = xnmalloc (total_lines_1, sizeof *line_vector);
free (end_vector);
end_vector = xnmalloc (total_lines, sizeof *end_vector);
free (buff);
buff = xnmalloc (chars_if_truncate, use_col_separator + 1);
buff_allocated = chars_if_truncate; /* Tune this. */
buff_allocated *= use_col_separator + 1;
}
/* Store all but the rightmost column.
(Used when printing a single file in multiple downward columns)
For each column
set p->current_line to be the index in line_vector of the
first line in the column
For each line in the column
store the line in buff
add to line_vector the index of the line's first char
buff_start is the index in buff of the first character in the
current line. */
static void
store_columns (void)
{
int i, j;
unsigned int line = 0;
unsigned int buff_start;
int last_col; /* The rightmost column which will be saved in buff */
COLUMN *p;
buff_current = 0;
buff_start = 0;
if (balance_columns)
last_col = columns;
else
last_col = columns - 1;
for (i = 1, p = column_vector; i <= last_col; ++i, ++p)
p->lines_stored = 0;
for (i = 1, p = column_vector; i <= last_col && files_ready_to_read;
++i, ++p)
{
p->current_line = line;
for (j = lines_per_body; j && files_ready_to_read; --j)
if (p->status == OPEN) /* Redundant. Clean up. */
{
input_position = 0;
if (!read_line (p))
read_rest_of_line (p);
if (p->status == OPEN
|| buff_start != buff_current)
{
++p->lines_stored;
line_vector[line] = buff_start;
end_vector[line++] = input_position;
buff_start = buff_current;
}
}
}
/* Keep track of the location of the last char in buff. */
line_vector[line] = buff_start;
if (balance_columns)
balance (line);
}
static void
balance (int total_stored)
{
COLUMN *p;
int i, lines;
int first_line = 0;
for (i = 1, p = column_vector; i <= columns; ++i, ++p)
{
lines = total_stored / columns;
if (i <= total_stored % columns)
++lines;
p->lines_stored = lines;
p->current_line = first_line;
first_line += lines;
}
}
/* Store a character in the buffer. */
static void
store_char (char c)
{
if (buff_current >= buff_allocated)
{
/* May be too generous. */
buff = X2REALLOC (buff, &buff_allocated);
}
buff[buff_current++] = c;
}
static void
add_line_number (COLUMN *p)
{
int i;
char *s;
int num_width;
/* Cutting off the higher-order digits is more informative than
lower-order cut off. */
num_width = sprintf (number_buff, "%*d", chars_per_number, line_number);
line_number++;
s = number_buff + (num_width - chars_per_number);
for (i = chars_per_number; i > 0; i--)
(p->char_func) (*s++);
if (columns > 1)
{
/* Tabification is assumed for multiple columns, also for n-separators,
but 'default n-separator = TAB' hasn't been given priority over
equal column_width also specified by POSIX. */
if (number_separator == '\t')
{
i = number_width - chars_per_number;
while (i-- > 0)
(p->char_func) (' ');
}
else
(p->char_func) (number_separator);
}
else
/* To comply with POSIX, we avoid any expansion of default TAB
separator with a single column output. No column_width requirement
has to be considered. */
{
(p->char_func) (number_separator);
if (number_separator == '\t')
output_position = POS_AFTER_TAB (chars_per_output_tab,
output_position);
}
if (truncate_lines && !parallel_files)
input_position += number_width;
}
/* Print (or store) padding until the current horizontal position
is position. */
static void
pad_across_to (int position)
{
int h = output_position;
if (tabify_output)
spaces_not_printed = position - output_position;
else
{
while (++h <= position)
putchar (' ');
output_position = position;
}
}
/* Pad to the bottom of the page.
If the user has requested a formfeed, use one.
Otherwise, use newlines. */
static void
pad_down (unsigned int lines)
{
unsigned int i;
if (use_form_feed)
putchar ('\f');
else
for (i = lines; i; --i)
putchar ('\n');
}
/* Read the rest of the line.
Read from the current column's file until an end of line is
hit. Used when we've truncated a line and we no longer need
to print or store its characters. */
static void
read_rest_of_line (COLUMN *p)
{
int c;
FILE *f = p->fp;
while ((c = getc (f)) != '\n')
{
if (c == '\f')
{
if ((c = getc (f)) != '\n')
ungetc (c, f);
if (keep_FF)
print_a_FF = true;
hold_file (p);
break;
}
else if (c == EOF)
{
close_file (p);
break;
}
}
}
/* Read a line with skip_to_page.
Read from the current column's file until an end of line is
hit. Used when we read full lines to skip pages.
With skip_to_page we have to check for FF-coincidence which is done
in function read_line otherwise.
Count lines of skipped pages to find the line number of 1st page
printed relative to 1st line of input file (start_line_num). */
static void
skip_read (COLUMN *p, int column_number)
{
int c;
FILE *f = p->fp;
int i;
bool single_ff = false;
COLUMN *q;
/* Read 1st character in a line or any character succeeding a FF */
if ((c = getc (f)) == '\f' && p->full_page_printed)
/* A FF-coincidence with a previous full_page_printed.
To avoid an additional empty page, eliminate the FF */
if ((c = getc (f)) == '\n')
c = getc (f);
p->full_page_printed = false;
/* 1st character a FF means a single FF without any printable
characters. Don't count it as a line with -n option. */
if (c == '\f')
single_ff = true;
/* Preparing for a FF-coincidence: Maybe we finish that page
without a FF found */
if (last_line)
p->full_page_printed = true;
while (c != '\n')
{
if (c == '\f')
{
/* No FF-coincidence possible,
no catching up of a FF-coincidence with next page */
if (last_line)
{
if (!parallel_files)
for (q = column_vector, i = columns; i; ++q, --i)
q->full_page_printed = false;
else
p->full_page_printed = false;
}
if ((c = getc (f)) != '\n')
ungetc (c, f);
hold_file (p);
break;
}
else if (c == EOF)
{
close_file (p);
break;
}
c = getc (f);
}
if (skip_count)
if ((!parallel_files || column_number == 1) && !single_ff)
++line_count;
}
/* If we're tabifying output,
When print_char encounters white space it keeps track
of our desired horizontal position and delays printing
until this function is called. */
static void
print_white_space (void)
{
int h_new;
int h_old = output_position;
int goal = h_old + spaces_not_printed;
while (goal - h_old > 1
&& (h_new = POS_AFTER_TAB (chars_per_output_tab, h_old)) <= goal)
{
putchar (output_tab_char);
h_old = h_new;
}
while (++h_old <= goal)
putchar (' ');
output_position = goal;
spaces_not_printed = 0;
}
/* Print column separators.
We keep a count until we know that we'll be printing a line,
then print_sep_string() is called. */
static void
print_sep_string (void)
{
char const *s = col_sep_string;
int l = col_sep_length;
if (separators_not_printed <= 0)
{
/* We'll be starting a line with chars_per_margin, anything else? */
if (spaces_not_printed > 0)
print_white_space ();
}
else
{
for (; separators_not_printed > 0; --separators_not_printed)
{
while (l-- > 0)
{
/* 3 types of sep_strings: spaces only, spaces and chars,
chars only */
if (*s == ' ')
{
/* We're tabifying output; consecutive spaces in
sep_string may have to be converted to tabs */
s++;
++spaces_not_printed;
}
else
{
if (spaces_not_printed > 0)
print_white_space ();
putchar (*s++);
++output_position;
}
}
/* sep_string ends with some spaces */
if (spaces_not_printed > 0)
print_white_space ();
}
}
}
/* Print (or store, depending on p->char_func) a clump of N
characters. */
static void
print_clump (COLUMN *p, int n, char *clump)
{
while (n--)
(p->char_func) (*clump++);
}
/* Print a character.
Update the following comment: process-char hasn't been used any
longer.
If we're tabifying, all tabs have been converted to spaces by
process_char(). Keep a count of consecutive spaces, and when
a nonspace is encountered, call print_white_space() to print the
required number of tabs and spaces. */
static void
print_char (char c)
{
if (tabify_output)
{
if (c == ' ')
{
++spaces_not_printed;
return;
}
else if (spaces_not_printed > 0)
print_white_space ();
/* Nonprintables are assumed to have width 0, except '\b'. */
if (! isprint (to_uchar (c)))
{
if (c == '\b')
--output_position;
}
else
++output_position;
}
putchar (c);
}
/* Skip to page PAGE before printing.
PAGE may be larger than total number of pages. */
static bool
skip_to_page (uintmax_t page)
{
uintmax_t n;
int i;
int j;
COLUMN *p;
for (n = 1; n < page; ++n)
{
for (i = 1; i < lines_per_body; ++i)
{
for (j = 1, p = column_vector; j <= columns; ++j, ++p)
if (p->status == OPEN)
skip_read (p, j);
}
last_line = true;
for (j = 1, p = column_vector; j <= columns; ++j, ++p)
if (p->status == OPEN)
skip_read (p, j);
if (storing_columns) /* change FF_FOUND to ON_HOLD */
for (j = 1, p = column_vector; j <= columns; ++j, ++p)
if (p->status != CLOSED)
p->status = ON_HOLD;
reset_status ();
last_line = false;
if (files_ready_to_read < 1)
{
/* It's very helpful, normally the total number of pages is
not known in advance. */
error (0, 0,
_("starting page number %"PRIuMAX
" exceeds page count %"PRIuMAX),
page, n);
break;
}
}
return files_ready_to_read > 0;
}
/* Print a header.
Formfeeds are assumed to use up two lines at the beginning of
the page. */
static void
print_header (void)
{
char page_text[256 + INT_STRLEN_BOUND (page_number)];
int available_width;
int lhs_spaces;
int rhs_spaces;
output_position = 0;
pad_across_to (chars_per_margin);
print_white_space ();
if (page_number == 0)
die (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("page number overflow"));
/* The translator must ensure that formatting the translation of
"Page %"PRIuMAX does not generate more than (sizeof page_text - 1)
bytes. */
sprintf (page_text, _("Page %"PRIuMAX), page_number);
available_width = header_width_available - mbswidth (page_text, 0);
available_width = MAX (0, available_width);
lhs_spaces = available_width >> 1;
rhs_spaces = available_width - lhs_spaces;
printf ("\n\n%*s%s%*s%s%*s%s\n\n\n",
chars_per_margin, "",
date_text, lhs_spaces, " ",
file_text, rhs_spaces, " ", page_text);
print_a_header = false;
output_position = 0;
}
/* Print (or store, if p->char_func is store_char()) a line.
Read a character to determine whether we have a line or not.
(We may hit EOF, \n, or \f)
Once we know we have a line,
set pad_vertically = true, meaning it's safe
to pad down at the end of the page, since we do have a page.
print a header if needed.
pad across to padding_not_printed if needed.
print any separators which need to be printed.
print a line number if it needs to be printed.
Print the clump which corresponds to the first character.
Enter a loop and keep printing until an end of line condition
exists, or until we exceed chars_per_column.
Return false if we exceed chars_per_column before reading
an end of line character, true otherwise. */
static bool
read_line (COLUMN *p)
{
int c;
int chars IF_LINT ( = 0);
int last_input_position;
int j, k;
COLUMN *q;
/* read 1st character in each line or any character succeeding a FF: */
c = getc (p->fp);
last_input_position = input_position;
if (c == '\f' && p->full_page_printed)
if ((c = getc (p->fp)) == '\n')
c = getc (p->fp);
p->full_page_printed = false;
switch (c)
{
case '\f':
if ((c = getc (p->fp)) != '\n')
ungetc (c, p->fp);
FF_only = true;
if (print_a_header && !storing_columns)
{
pad_vertically = true;
print_header ();
}
else if (keep_FF)
print_a_FF = true;
hold_file (p);
return true;
case EOF:
close_file (p);
return true;
case '\n':
break;
default:
chars = char_to_clump (c);
}
if (truncate_lines && input_position > chars_per_column)
{
input_position = last_input_position;
return false;
}
if (p->char_func != store_char)
{
pad_vertically = true;
if (print_a_header && !storing_columns)
print_header ();
if (parallel_files && align_empty_cols)
{
/* We have to align empty columns at the beginning of a line. */
k = separators_not_printed;
separators_not_printed = 0;
for (j = 1, q = column_vector; j <= k; ++j, ++q)
{
align_column (q);
separators_not_printed += 1;
}
padding_not_printed = p->start_position;
if (truncate_lines)
spaces_not_printed = chars_per_column;
else
spaces_not_printed = 0;
align_empty_cols = false;
}
if (col_sep_length < padding_not_printed)
{
pad_across_to (padding_not_printed - col_sep_length);
padding_not_printed = ANYWHERE;
}
if (use_col_separator)
print_sep_string ();
}
if (p->numbered)
add_line_number (p);
empty_line = false;
if (c == '\n')
return true;
print_clump (p, chars, clump_buff);
while (true)
{
c = getc (p->fp);
switch (c)
{
case '\n':
return true;
case '\f':
if ((c = getc (p->fp)) != '\n')
ungetc (c, p->fp);
if (keep_FF)
print_a_FF = true;
hold_file (p);
return true;
case EOF:
close_file (p);
return true;
}
last_input_position = input_position;
chars = char_to_clump (c);
if (truncate_lines && input_position > chars_per_column)
{
input_position = last_input_position;
return false;
}
print_clump (p, chars, clump_buff);
}
}
/* Print a line from buff.
If this function has been called, we know we have "something to
print". But it remains to be seen whether we have a real text page
or an empty page (a single form feed) with/without a header only.
Therefore first we set pad_vertically to true and print a header
if necessary.
If FF_FOUND and we are using -t|-T option we omit any newline by
setting pad_vertically to false (see print_page).
Otherwise we pad across if necessary, print separators if necessary
and text of COLUMN *p.
Return true, meaning there is no need to call read_rest_of_line. */
static bool
print_stored (COLUMN *p)
{
COLUMN *q;
int i;
int line = p->current_line++;
char *first = &buff[line_vector[line]];
/* FIXME
UMR: Uninitialized memory read:
* This is occurring while in:
print_stored [pr.c:2239]
* Reading 4 bytes from 0x5148c in the heap.
* Address 0x5148c is 4 bytes into a malloc'd block at 0x51488 of 676 bytes
* This block was allocated from:
malloc [rtlib.o]
xmalloc [xmalloc.c:94]
init_store_cols [pr.c:1648]
*/
char *last = &buff[line_vector[line + 1]];
pad_vertically = true;
if (print_a_header)
print_header ();
if (p->status == FF_FOUND)
{
for (i = 1, q = column_vector; i <= columns; ++i, ++q)
q->status = ON_HOLD;
if (column_vector->lines_to_print <= 0)
{
if (!extremities)
pad_vertically = false;
return true; /* print a header only */
}
}
if (col_sep_length < padding_not_printed)
{
pad_across_to (padding_not_printed - col_sep_length);
padding_not_printed = ANYWHERE;
}
if (use_col_separator)
print_sep_string ();
while (first != last)
print_char (*first++);
if (spaces_not_printed == 0)
{
output_position = p->start_position + end_vector[line];
if (p->start_position - col_sep_length == chars_per_margin)
output_position -= col_sep_length;
}
return true;
}
/* Convert a character to the proper format and return the number of
characters in the resulting clump. Increment input_position by
the width of the clump.
Tabs are converted to clumps of spaces.
Nonprintable characters may be converted to clumps of escape
sequences or control prefixes.
Note: the width of a clump is not necessarily equal to the number of
characters in clump_buff. (e.g, the width of '\b' is -1, while the
number of characters is 1.) */
static int
char_to_clump (char c)
{
unsigned char uc = c;
char *s = clump_buff;
int i;
char esc_buff[4];
int width;
int chars;
int chars_per_c = 8;
if (c == input_tab_char)
chars_per_c = chars_per_input_tab;
if (c == input_tab_char || c == '\t')
{
width = TAB_WIDTH (chars_per_c, input_position);
if (untabify_input)
{
for (i = width; i; --i)
*s++ = ' ';
chars = width;
}
else
{
*s = c;
chars = 1;
}
}
else if (! isprint (uc))
{
if (use_esc_sequence)
{
width = 4;
chars = 4;
*s++ = '\\';
sprintf (esc_buff, "%03o", uc);
for (i = 0; i <= 2; ++i)
*s++ = esc_buff[i];
}
else if (use_cntrl_prefix)
{
if (uc < 0200)
{
width = 2;
chars = 2;
*s++ = '^';
*s = c ^ 0100;
}
else
{
width = 4;
chars = 4;
*s++ = '\\';
sprintf (esc_buff, "%03o", uc);
for (i = 0; i <= 2; ++i)
*s++ = esc_buff[i];
}
}
else if (c == '\b')
{
width = -1;
chars = 1;
*s = c;
}
else
{
width = 0;
chars = 1;
*s = c;
}
}
else
{
width = 1;
chars = 1;
*s = c;
}
/* Too many backspaces must put us in position 0 -- never negative. */
if (width < 0 && input_position == 0)
{
chars = 0;
input_position = 0;
}
else if (width < 0 && input_position <= -width)
input_position = 0;
else
input_position += width;
return chars;
}
/* We've just printed some files and need to clean up things before
looking for more options and printing the next batch of files.
Free everything we've xmalloc'ed, except 'header'. */
static void
cleanup (void)
{
free (number_buff);
free (clump_buff);
free (column_vector);
free (line_vector);
free (end_vector);
free (buff);
}
/* Complain, print a usage message, and die. */
void
usage (int status)
{
if (status != EXIT_SUCCESS)
emit_try_help ();
else
{
printf (_("\
Usage: %s [OPTION]... [FILE]...\n\
"),
program_name);
fputs (_("\
Paginate or columnate FILE(s) for printing.\n\
"), stdout);
emit_stdin_note ();
emit_mandatory_arg_note ();
fputs (_("\
+FIRST_PAGE[:LAST_PAGE], --pages=FIRST_PAGE[:LAST_PAGE]\n\
begin [stop] printing with page FIRST_[LAST_]PAGE\n\
-COLUMN, --columns=COLUMN\n\
output COLUMN columns and print columns down,\n\
unless -a is used. Balance number of lines in the\n\
columns on each page\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-a, --across print columns across rather than down, used together\n\
with -COLUMN\n\
-c, --show-control-chars\n\
use hat notation (^G) and octal backslash notation\n\
-d, --double-space\n\
double space the output\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-D, --date-format=FORMAT\n\
use FORMAT for the header date\n\
-e[CHAR[WIDTH]], --expand-tabs[=CHAR[WIDTH]]\n\
expand input CHARs (TABs) to tab WIDTH (8)\n\
-F, -f, --form-feed\n\
use form feeds instead of newlines to separate pages\n\
(by a 3-line page header with -F or a 5-line header\n\
and trailer without -F)\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-h, --header=HEADER\n\
use a centered HEADER instead of filename in page header,\n\
-h \"\" prints a blank line, don't use -h\"\"\n\
-i[CHAR[WIDTH]], --output-tabs[=CHAR[WIDTH]]\n\
replace spaces with CHARs (TABs) to tab WIDTH (8)\n\
-J, --join-lines merge full lines, turns off -W line truncation, no column\n\
alignment, --sep-string[=STRING] sets separators\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-l, --length=PAGE_LENGTH\n\
set the page length to PAGE_LENGTH (66) lines\n\
(default number of lines of text 56, and with -F 63).\n\
implies -t if PAGE_LENGTH <= 10\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-m, --merge print all files in parallel, one in each column,\n\
truncate lines, but join lines of full length with -J\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-n[SEP[DIGITS]], --number-lines[=SEP[DIGITS]]\n\
number lines, use DIGITS (5) digits, then SEP (TAB),\n\
default counting starts with 1st line of input file\n\
-N, --first-line-number=NUMBER\n\
start counting with NUMBER at 1st line of first\n\
page printed (see +FIRST_PAGE)\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-o, --indent=MARGIN\n\
offset each line with MARGIN (zero) spaces, do not\n\
affect -w or -W, MARGIN will be added to PAGE_WIDTH\n\
-r, --no-file-warnings\n\
omit warning when a file cannot be opened\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-s[CHAR], --separator[=CHAR]\n\
separate columns by a single character, default for CHAR\n\
is the character without -w and \'no char\' with -w.\
\n\
-s[CHAR] turns off line truncation of all 3 column\n\
options (-COLUMN|-a -COLUMN|-m) except -w is set\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-S[STRING], --sep-string[=STRING]\n\
separate columns by STRING,\n\
without -S: Default separator with -J and \n\
otherwise (same as -S\" \"), no effect on column options\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-t, --omit-header omit page headers and trailers;\n\
implied if PAGE_LENGTH <= 10\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-T, --omit-pagination\n\
omit page headers and trailers, eliminate any pagination\n\
by form feeds set in input files\n\
-v, --show-nonprinting\n\
use octal backslash notation\n\
-w, --width=PAGE_WIDTH\n\
set page width to PAGE_WIDTH (72) characters for\n\
multiple text-column output only, -s[char] turns off (72)\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
-W, --page-width=PAGE_WIDTH\n\
set page width to PAGE_WIDTH (72) characters always,\n\
truncate lines, except -J option is set, no interference\n\
with -S or -s\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (HELP_OPTION_DESCRIPTION, stdout);
fputs (VERSION_OPTION_DESCRIPTION, stdout);
emit_ancillary_info (PROGRAM_NAME);
}
exit (status);
}