/* wc - print the number of lines, words, and bytes in files
Copyright (C) 1985-2017 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 . */
/* Written by Paul Rubin, phr@ocf.berkeley.edu
and David MacKenzie, djm@gnu.ai.mit.edu. */
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include "system.h"
#include "argv-iter.h"
#include "die.h"
#include "error.h"
#include "fadvise.h"
#include "mbchar.h"
#include "physmem.h"
#include "readtokens0.h"
#include "safe-read.h"
#include "stat-size.h"
#include "xfreopen.h"
#if !defined iswspace && !HAVE_ISWSPACE
# define iswspace(wc) \
((wc) == to_uchar (wc) && isspace (to_uchar (wc)))
#endif
/* The official name of this program (e.g., no 'g' prefix). */
#define PROGRAM_NAME "wc"
#define AUTHORS \
proper_name ("Paul Rubin"), \
proper_name ("David MacKenzie")
/* Size of atomic reads. */
#define BUFFER_SIZE (16 * 1024)
/* Cumulative number of lines, words, chars and bytes in all files so far.
max_line_length is the maximum over all files processed so far. */
static uintmax_t total_lines;
static uintmax_t total_words;
static uintmax_t total_chars;
static uintmax_t total_bytes;
static uintmax_t max_line_length;
/* Which counts to print. */
static bool print_lines, print_words, print_chars, print_bytes;
static bool print_linelength;
/* The print width of each count. */
static int number_width;
/* True if we have ever read the standard input. */
static bool have_read_stdin;
/* Used to determine if file size can be determined without reading. */
static size_t page_size;
/* The result of calling fstat or stat on a file descriptor or file. */
struct fstatus
{
/* If positive, fstat or stat has not been called yet. Otherwise,
this is the value returned from fstat or stat. */
int failed;
/* If FAILED is zero, this is the file's status. */
struct stat st;
};
/* For long options that have no equivalent short option, use a
non-character as a pseudo short option, starting with CHAR_MAX + 1. */
enum
{
FILES0_FROM_OPTION = CHAR_MAX + 1
};
static struct option const longopts[] =
{
{"bytes", no_argument, NULL, 'c'},
{"chars", no_argument, NULL, 'm'},
{"lines", no_argument, NULL, 'l'},
{"words", no_argument, NULL, 'w'},
{"files0-from", required_argument, NULL, FILES0_FROM_OPTION},
{"max-line-length", no_argument, NULL, 'L'},
{GETOPT_HELP_OPTION_DECL},
{GETOPT_VERSION_OPTION_DECL},
{NULL, 0, NULL, 0}
};
void
usage (int status)
{
if (status != EXIT_SUCCESS)
emit_try_help ();
else
{
printf (_("\
Usage: %s [OPTION]... [FILE]...\n\
or: %s [OPTION]... --files0-from=F\n\
"),
program_name, program_name);
fputs (_("\
Print newline, word, and byte counts for each FILE, and a total line if\n\
more than one FILE is specified. A word is a non-zero-length sequence of\n\
characters delimited by white space.\n\
"), stdout);
emit_stdin_note ();
fputs (_("\
\n\
The options below may be used to select which counts are printed, always in\n\
the following order: newline, word, character, byte, maximum line length.\n\
-c, --bytes print the byte counts\n\
-m, --chars print the character counts\n\
-l, --lines print the newline counts\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (_("\
--files0-from=F read input from the files specified by\n\
NUL-terminated names in file F;\n\
If F is - then read names from standard input\n\
-L, --max-line-length print the maximum display width\n\
-w, --words print the word counts\n\
"), stdout);
fputs (HELP_OPTION_DESCRIPTION, stdout);
fputs (VERSION_OPTION_DESCRIPTION, stdout);
emit_ancillary_info (PROGRAM_NAME);
}
exit (status);
}
/* FILE is the name of the file (or NULL for standard input)
associated with the specified counters. */
static void
write_counts (uintmax_t lines,
uintmax_t words,
uintmax_t chars,
uintmax_t bytes,
uintmax_t linelength,
const char *file)
{
static char const format_sp_int[] = " %*s";
char const *format_int = format_sp_int + 1;
char buf[INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND (uintmax_t)];
if (print_lines)
{
printf (format_int, number_width, umaxtostr (lines, buf));
format_int = format_sp_int;
}
if (print_words)
{
printf (format_int, number_width, umaxtostr (words, buf));
format_int = format_sp_int;
}
if (print_chars)
{
printf (format_int, number_width, umaxtostr (chars, buf));
format_int = format_sp_int;
}
if (print_bytes)
{
printf (format_int, number_width, umaxtostr (bytes, buf));
format_int = format_sp_int;
}
if (print_linelength)
{
printf (format_int, number_width, umaxtostr (linelength, buf));
}
if (file)
printf (" %s", strchr (file, '\n') ? quotef (file) : file);
putchar ('\n');
}
/* Count words. FILE_X is the name of the file (or NULL for standard
input) that is open on descriptor FD. *FSTATUS is its status.
CURRENT_POS is the current file offset if known, negative if unknown.
Return true if successful. */
static bool
wc (int fd, char const *file_x, struct fstatus *fstatus, off_t current_pos)
{
bool ok = true;
char buf[BUFFER_SIZE + 1];
size_t bytes_read;
uintmax_t lines, words, chars, bytes, linelength;
bool count_bytes, count_chars, count_complicated;
char const *file = file_x ? file_x : _("standard input");
lines = words = chars = bytes = linelength = 0;
/* If in the current locale, chars are equivalent to bytes, we prefer
counting bytes, because that's easier. */
#if MB_LEN_MAX > 1
if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1)
{
count_bytes = print_bytes;
count_chars = print_chars;
}
else
#endif
{
count_bytes = print_bytes || print_chars;
count_chars = false;
}
count_complicated = print_words || print_linelength;
/* Advise the kernel of our access pattern only if we will read(). */
if (!count_bytes || count_chars || print_lines || count_complicated)
fdadvise (fd, 0, 0, FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL);
/* When counting only bytes, save some line- and word-counting
overhead. If FD is a 'regular' Unix file, using lseek is enough
to get its 'size' in bytes. Otherwise, read blocks of BUFFER_SIZE
bytes at a time until EOF. Note that the 'size' (number of bytes)
that wc reports is smaller than stats.st_size when the file is not
positioned at its beginning. That's why the lseek calls below are
necessary. For example the command
'(dd ibs=99k skip=1 count=0; ./wc -c) < /etc/group'
should make wc report '0' bytes. */
if (count_bytes && !count_chars && !print_lines && !count_complicated)
{
bool skip_read = false;
if (0 < fstatus->failed)
fstatus->failed = fstat (fd, &fstatus->st);
/* For sized files, seek to one st_blksize before EOF rather than to EOF.
This works better for files in proc-like file systems where
the size is only approximate. */
if (! fstatus->failed && usable_st_size (&fstatus->st)
&& 0 <= fstatus->st.st_size)
{
size_t end_pos = fstatus->st.st_size;
if (current_pos < 0)
current_pos = lseek (fd, 0, SEEK_CUR);
if (end_pos % page_size)
{
/* We only need special handling of /proc and /sys files etc.
when they're a multiple of PAGE_SIZE. In the common case
for files with st_size not a multiple of PAGE_SIZE,
it's more efficient and accurate to use st_size.
Be careful here. The current position may actually be
beyond the end of the file. As in the example above. */
bytes = end_pos < current_pos ? 0 : end_pos - current_pos;
skip_read = true;
}
else
{
off_t hi_pos = end_pos - end_pos % (ST_BLKSIZE (fstatus->st) + 1);
if (0 <= current_pos && current_pos < hi_pos
&& 0 <= lseek (fd, hi_pos, SEEK_CUR))
bytes = hi_pos - current_pos;
}
}
if (! skip_read)
{
fdadvise (fd, 0, 0, FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL);
while ((bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buf, BUFFER_SIZE)) > 0)
{
if (bytes_read == SAFE_READ_ERROR)
{
error (0, errno, "%s", quotef (file));
ok = false;
break;
}
bytes += bytes_read;
}
}
}
else if (!count_chars && !count_complicated)
{
/* Use a separate loop when counting only lines or lines and bytes --
but not chars or words. */
bool long_lines = false;
while ((bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buf, BUFFER_SIZE)) > 0)
{
if (bytes_read == SAFE_READ_ERROR)
{
error (0, errno, "%s", quotef (file));
ok = false;
break;
}
bytes += bytes_read;
char *p = buf;
char *end = p + bytes_read;
uintmax_t plines = lines;
if (! long_lines)
{
/* Avoid function call overhead for shorter lines. */
while (p != end)
lines += *p++ == '\n';
}
else
{
/* memchr is more efficient with longer lines. */
while ((p = memchr (p, '\n', end - p)))
{
++p;
++lines;
}
}
/* If the average line length in the block is >= 15, then use
memchr for the next block, where system specific optimizations
may outweigh function call overhead.
FIXME: This line length was determined in 2015, on both
x86_64 and ppc64, but it's worth re-evaluating in future with
newer compilers, CPUs, or memchr() implementations etc. */
if (lines - plines <= bytes_read / 15)
long_lines = true;
else
long_lines = false;
}
}
#if MB_LEN_MAX > 1
# define SUPPORT_OLD_MBRTOWC 1
else if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1)
{
bool in_word = false;
uintmax_t linepos = 0;
mbstate_t state = { 0, };
bool in_shift = false;
# if SUPPORT_OLD_MBRTOWC
/* Back-up the state before each multibyte character conversion and
move the last incomplete character of the buffer to the front
of the buffer. This is needed because we don't know whether
the 'mbrtowc' function updates the state when it returns -2, --
this is the ISO C 99 and glibc-2.2 behaviour - or not - amended
ANSI C, glibc-2.1 and Solaris 5.7 behaviour. We don't have an
autoconf test for this, yet. */
size_t prev = 0; /* number of bytes carried over from previous round */
# else
const size_t prev = 0;
# endif
while ((bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buf + prev, BUFFER_SIZE - prev)) > 0)
{
const char *p;
# if SUPPORT_OLD_MBRTOWC
mbstate_t backup_state;
# endif
if (bytes_read == SAFE_READ_ERROR)
{
error (0, errno, "%s", quotef (file));
ok = false;
break;
}
bytes += bytes_read;
p = buf;
bytes_read += prev;
do
{
wchar_t wide_char;
size_t n;
if (!in_shift && is_basic (*p))
{
/* Handle most ASCII characters quickly, without calling
mbrtowc(). */
n = 1;
wide_char = *p;
}
else
{
in_shift = true;
# if SUPPORT_OLD_MBRTOWC
backup_state = state;
# endif
n = mbrtowc (&wide_char, p, bytes_read, &state);
if (n == (size_t) -2)
{
# if SUPPORT_OLD_MBRTOWC
state = backup_state;
# endif
break;
}
if (n == (size_t) -1)
{
/* Remember that we read a byte, but don't complain
about the error. Because of the decoding error,
this is a considered to be byte but not a
character (that is, chars is not incremented). */
p++;
bytes_read--;
continue;
}
if (mbsinit (&state))
in_shift = false;
if (n == 0)
{
wide_char = 0;
n = 1;
}
}
p += n;
bytes_read -= n;
chars++;
switch (wide_char)
{
case '\n':
lines++;
/* Fall through. */
case '\r':
case '\f':
if (linepos > linelength)
linelength = linepos;
linepos = 0;
goto mb_word_separator;
case '\t':
linepos += 8 - (linepos % 8);
goto mb_word_separator;
case ' ':
linepos++;
/* Fall through. */
case '\v':
mb_word_separator:
words += in_word;
in_word = false;
break;
default:
if (iswprint (wide_char))
{
int width = wcwidth (wide_char);
if (width > 0)
linepos += width;
if (iswspace (wide_char))
goto mb_word_separator;
in_word = true;
}
break;
}
}
while (bytes_read > 0);
# if SUPPORT_OLD_MBRTOWC
if (bytes_read > 0)
{
if (bytes_read == BUFFER_SIZE)
{
/* Encountered a very long redundant shift sequence. */
p++;
bytes_read--;
}
memmove (buf, p, bytes_read);
}
prev = bytes_read;
# endif
}
if (linepos > linelength)
linelength = linepos;
words += in_word;
}
#endif
else
{
bool in_word = false;
uintmax_t linepos = 0;
while ((bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buf, BUFFER_SIZE)) > 0)
{
const char *p = buf;
if (bytes_read == SAFE_READ_ERROR)
{
error (0, errno, "%s", quotef (file));
ok = false;
break;
}
bytes += bytes_read;
do
{
switch (*p++)
{
case '\n':
lines++;
/* Fall through. */
case '\r':
case '\f':
if (linepos > linelength)
linelength = linepos;
linepos = 0;
goto word_separator;
case '\t':
linepos += 8 - (linepos % 8);
goto word_separator;
case ' ':
linepos++;
/* Fall through. */
case '\v':
word_separator:
words += in_word;
in_word = false;
break;
default:
if (isprint (to_uchar (p[-1])))
{
linepos++;
if (isspace (to_uchar (p[-1])))
goto word_separator;
in_word = true;
}
break;
}
}
while (--bytes_read);
}
if (linepos > linelength)
linelength = linepos;
words += in_word;
}
if (count_chars < print_chars)
chars = bytes;
write_counts (lines, words, chars, bytes, linelength, file_x);
total_lines += lines;
total_words += words;
total_chars += chars;
total_bytes += bytes;
if (linelength > max_line_length)
max_line_length = linelength;
return ok;
}
static bool
wc_file (char const *file, struct fstatus *fstatus)
{
if (! file || STREQ (file, "-"))
{
have_read_stdin = true;
if (O_BINARY && ! isatty (STDIN_FILENO))
xfreopen (NULL, "rb", stdin);
return wc (STDIN_FILENO, file, fstatus, -1);
}
else
{
int fd = open (file, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY);
if (fd == -1)
{
error (0, errno, "%s", quotef (file));
return false;
}
else
{
bool ok = wc (fd, file, fstatus, 0);
if (close (fd) != 0)
{
error (0, errno, "%s", quotef (file));
return false;
}
return ok;
}
}
}
/* Return the file status for the NFILES files addressed by FILE.
Optimize the case where only one number is printed, for just one
file; in that case we can use a print width of 1, so we don't need
to stat the file. Handle the case of (nfiles == 0) in the same way;
that happens when we don't know how long the list of file names will be. */
static struct fstatus *
get_input_fstatus (size_t nfiles, char *const *file)
{
struct fstatus *fstatus = xnmalloc (nfiles ? nfiles : 1, sizeof *fstatus);
if (nfiles == 0
|| (nfiles == 1
&& ((print_lines + print_words + print_chars
+ print_bytes + print_linelength)
== 1)))
fstatus[0].failed = 1;
else
{
size_t i;
for (i = 0; i < nfiles; i++)
fstatus[i].failed = (! file[i] || STREQ (file[i], "-")
? fstat (STDIN_FILENO, &fstatus[i].st)
: stat (file[i], &fstatus[i].st));
}
return fstatus;
}
/* Return a print width suitable for the NFILES files whose status is
recorded in FSTATUS. Optimize the same special case that
get_input_fstatus optimizes. */
static int _GL_ATTRIBUTE_PURE
compute_number_width (size_t nfiles, struct fstatus const *fstatus)
{
int width = 1;
if (0 < nfiles && fstatus[0].failed <= 0)
{
int minimum_width = 1;
uintmax_t regular_total = 0;
size_t i;
for (i = 0; i < nfiles; i++)
if (! fstatus[i].failed)
{
if (S_ISREG (fstatus[i].st.st_mode))
regular_total += fstatus[i].st.st_size;
else
minimum_width = 7;
}
for (; 10 <= regular_total; regular_total /= 10)
width++;
if (width < minimum_width)
width = minimum_width;
}
return width;
}
int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
bool ok;
int optc;
size_t nfiles;
char **files;
char *files_from = NULL;
struct fstatus *fstatus;
struct Tokens tok;
initialize_main (&argc, &argv);
set_program_name (argv[0]);
setlocale (LC_ALL, "");
bindtextdomain (PACKAGE, LOCALEDIR);
textdomain (PACKAGE);
atexit (close_stdout);
page_size = getpagesize ();
/* Line buffer stdout to ensure lines are written atomically and immediately
so that processes running in parallel do not intersperse their output. */
setvbuf (stdout, NULL, _IOLBF, 0);
print_lines = print_words = print_chars = print_bytes = false;
print_linelength = false;
total_lines = total_words = total_chars = total_bytes = max_line_length = 0;
while ((optc = getopt_long (argc, argv, "clLmw", longopts, NULL)) != -1)
switch (optc)
{
case 'c':
print_bytes = true;
break;
case 'm':
print_chars = true;
break;
case 'l':
print_lines = true;
break;
case 'w':
print_words = true;
break;
case 'L':
print_linelength = true;
break;
case FILES0_FROM_OPTION:
files_from = optarg;
break;
case_GETOPT_HELP_CHAR;
case_GETOPT_VERSION_CHAR (PROGRAM_NAME, AUTHORS);
default:
usage (EXIT_FAILURE);
}
if (! (print_lines || print_words || print_chars || print_bytes
|| print_linelength))
print_lines = print_words = print_bytes = true;
bool read_tokens = false;
struct argv_iterator *ai;
if (files_from)
{
FILE *stream;
/* When using --files0-from=F, you may not specify any files
on the command-line. */
if (optind < argc)
{
error (0, 0, _("extra operand %s"), quoteaf (argv[optind]));
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n",
_("file operands cannot be combined with --files0-from"));
usage (EXIT_FAILURE);
}
if (STREQ (files_from, "-"))
stream = stdin;
else
{
stream = fopen (files_from, "r");
if (stream == NULL)
die (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, _("cannot open %s for reading"),
quoteaf (files_from));
}
/* Read the file list into RAM if we can detect its size and that
size is reasonable. Otherwise, we'll read a name at a time. */
struct stat st;
if (fstat (fileno (stream), &st) == 0
&& S_ISREG (st.st_mode)
&& st.st_size <= MIN (10 * 1024 * 1024, physmem_available () / 2))
{
read_tokens = true;
readtokens0_init (&tok);
if (! readtokens0 (stream, &tok) || fclose (stream) != 0)
die (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("cannot read file names from %s"),
quoteaf (files_from));
files = tok.tok;
nfiles = tok.n_tok;
ai = argv_iter_init_argv (files);
}
else
{
files = NULL;
nfiles = 0;
ai = argv_iter_init_stream (stream);
}
}
else
{
static char *stdin_only[] = { NULL };
files = (optind < argc ? argv + optind : stdin_only);
nfiles = (optind < argc ? argc - optind : 1);
ai = argv_iter_init_argv (files);
}
if (!ai)
xalloc_die ();
fstatus = get_input_fstatus (nfiles, files);
number_width = compute_number_width (nfiles, fstatus);
int i;
ok = true;
for (i = 0; /* */; i++)
{
bool skip_file = false;
enum argv_iter_err ai_err;
char *file_name = argv_iter (ai, &ai_err);
if (!file_name)
{
switch (ai_err)
{
case AI_ERR_EOF:
goto argv_iter_done;
case AI_ERR_READ:
error (0, errno, _("%s: read error"),
quotef (files_from));
ok = false;
goto argv_iter_done;
case AI_ERR_MEM:
xalloc_die ();
default:
assert (!"unexpected error code from argv_iter");
}
}
if (files_from && STREQ (files_from, "-") && STREQ (file_name, "-"))
{
/* Give a better diagnostic in an unusual case:
printf - | wc --files0-from=- */
error (0, 0, _("when reading file names from stdin, "
"no file name of %s allowed"),
quoteaf (file_name));
skip_file = true;
}
if (!file_name[0])
{
/* Diagnose a zero-length file name. When it's one
among many, knowing the record number may help.
FIXME: currently print the record number only with
--files0-from=FILE. Maybe do it for argv, too? */
if (files_from == NULL)
error (0, 0, "%s", _("invalid zero-length file name"));
else
{
/* Using the standard 'filename:line-number:' prefix here is
not totally appropriate, since NUL is the separator, not NL,
but it might be better than nothing. */
unsigned long int file_number = argv_iter_n_args (ai);
error (0, 0, "%s:%lu: %s", quotef (files_from),
file_number, _("invalid zero-length file name"));
}
skip_file = true;
}
if (skip_file)
ok = false;
else
ok &= wc_file (file_name, &fstatus[nfiles ? i : 0]);
if (! nfiles)
fstatus[0].failed = 1;
}
argv_iter_done:
/* No arguments on the command line is fine. That means read from stdin.
However, no arguments on the --files0-from input stream is an error
means don't read anything. */
if (ok && !files_from && argv_iter_n_args (ai) == 0)
ok &= wc_file (NULL, &fstatus[0]);
if (read_tokens)
readtokens0_free (&tok);
if (1 < argv_iter_n_args (ai))
write_counts (total_lines, total_words, total_chars, total_bytes,
max_line_length, _("total"));
argv_iter_free (ai);
free (fstatus);
if (have_read_stdin && close (STDIN_FILENO) != 0)
die (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, "-");
return ok ? EXIT_SUCCESS : EXIT_FAILURE;
}