postgresql/contrib/pg_upgrade/exec.c
Heikki Linnakangas a692ee5870 Replace SYSTEMQUOTEs with Windows-specific wrapper functions.
It's easy to forget using SYSTEMQUOTEs when constructing command strings
for system() or popen(). Even if we fix all the places missing it now, it is
bound to be forgotten again in the future. Introduce wrapper functions that
do the the extra quoting for you, and get rid of SYSTEMQUOTEs in all the
callers.

We previosly used SYSTEMQUOTEs in all the hard-coded command strings, and
this doesn't change the behavior of those. But user-supplied commands, like
archive_command, restore_command, COPY TO/FROM PROGRAM calls, as well as
pgbench's \shell, will now gain an extra pair of quotes. That is desirable,
but if you have existing scripts or config files that include an extra
pair of quotes, those might need to be adjusted.

Reviewed by Amit Kapila and Tom Lane
2014-05-05 16:07:40 +03:00

377 lines
9.6 KiB
C

/*
* exec.c
*
* execution functions
*
* Copyright (c) 2010-2014, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* contrib/pg_upgrade/exec.c
*/
#include "postgres_fe.h"
#include "pg_upgrade.h"
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
static void check_data_dir(const char *pg_data);
static void check_bin_dir(ClusterInfo *cluster);
static void validate_exec(const char *dir, const char *cmdName);
#ifdef WIN32
static int win32_check_directory_write_permissions(void);
#endif
/*
* exec_prog()
* Execute an external program with stdout/stderr redirected, and report
* errors
*
* Formats a command from the given argument list, logs it to the log file,
* and attempts to execute that command. If the command executes
* successfully, exec_prog() returns true.
*
* If the command fails, an error message is saved to the specified log_file.
* If throw_error is true, this raises a PG_FATAL error and pg_upgrade
* terminates; otherwise it is just reported as PG_REPORT and exec_prog()
* returns false.
*
* The code requires it be called first from the primary thread on Windows.
*/
bool
exec_prog(const char *log_file, const char *opt_log_file,
bool throw_error, const char *fmt,...)
{
int result = 0;
int written;
#define MAXCMDLEN (2 * MAXPGPATH)
char cmd[MAXCMDLEN];
FILE *log;
va_list ap;
#ifdef WIN32
static DWORD mainThreadId = 0;
/* We assume we are called from the primary thread first */
if (mainThreadId == 0)
mainThreadId = GetCurrentThreadId();
#endif
written = 0;
va_start(ap, fmt);
written += vsnprintf(cmd + written, MAXCMDLEN - written, fmt, ap);
va_end(ap);
if (written >= MAXCMDLEN)
pg_fatal("command too long\n");
written += snprintf(cmd + written, MAXCMDLEN - written,
" >> \"%s\" 2>&1", log_file);
if (written >= MAXCMDLEN)
pg_fatal("command too long\n");
pg_log(PG_VERBOSE, "%s\n", cmd);
#ifdef WIN32
/*
* For some reason, Windows issues a file-in-use error if we write data
* to the log file from a non-primary thread just before we create a
* subprocess that also writes to the same log file. One fix is to
* sleep for 100ms. A cleaner fix is to write to the log file _after_
* the subprocess has completed, so we do this only when writing from
* a non-primary thread. fflush(), running system() twice, and
* pre-creating the file do not see to help.
*/
if (mainThreadId != GetCurrentThreadId())
result = system(cmd);
#endif
log = fopen(log_file, "a");
#ifdef WIN32
{
/*
* "pg_ctl -w stop" might have reported that the server has stopped
* because the postmaster.pid file has been removed, but "pg_ctl -w
* start" might still be in the process of closing and might still be
* holding its stdout and -l log file descriptors open. Therefore,
* try to open the log file a few more times.
*/
int iter;
for (iter = 0; iter < 4 && log == NULL; iter++)
{
pg_usleep(1000000); /* 1 sec */
log = fopen(log_file, "a");
}
}
#endif
if (log == NULL)
pg_fatal("cannot write to log file %s\n", log_file);
#ifdef WIN32
/* Are we printing "command:" before its output? */
if (mainThreadId == GetCurrentThreadId())
fprintf(log, "\n\n");
#endif
fprintf(log, "command: %s\n", cmd);
#ifdef WIN32
/* Are we printing "command:" after its output? */
if (mainThreadId != GetCurrentThreadId())
fprintf(log, "\n\n");
#endif
/*
* In Windows, we must close the log file at this point so the file is not
* open while the command is running, or we get a share violation.
*/
fclose(log);
#ifdef WIN32
/* see comment above */
if (mainThreadId == GetCurrentThreadId())
#endif
result = system(cmd);
if (result != 0)
{
/* we might be in on a progress status line, so go to the next line */
report_status(PG_REPORT, "\n*failure*");
fflush(stdout);
pg_log(PG_VERBOSE, "There were problems executing \"%s\"\n", cmd);
if (opt_log_file)
pg_log(throw_error ? PG_FATAL : PG_REPORT,
"Consult the last few lines of \"%s\" or \"%s\" for\n"
"the probable cause of the failure.\n",
log_file, opt_log_file);
else
pg_log(throw_error ? PG_FATAL : PG_REPORT,
"Consult the last few lines of \"%s\" for\n"
"the probable cause of the failure.\n",
log_file);
}
#ifndef WIN32
/*
* We can't do this on Windows because it will keep the "pg_ctl start"
* output filename open until the server stops, so we do the \n\n above on
* that platform. We use a unique filename for "pg_ctl start" that is
* never reused while the server is running, so it works fine. We could
* log these commands to a third file, but that just adds complexity.
*/
if ((log = fopen(log_file, "a")) == NULL)
pg_fatal("cannot write to log file %s\n", log_file);
fprintf(log, "\n\n");
fclose(log);
#endif
return result == 0;
}
/*
* pid_lock_file_exists()
*
* Checks whether the postmaster.pid file exists.
*/
bool
pid_lock_file_exists(const char *datadir)
{
char path[MAXPGPATH];
int fd;
snprintf(path, sizeof(path), "%s/postmaster.pid", datadir);
if ((fd = open(path, O_RDONLY, 0)) < 0)
{
/* ENOTDIR means we will throw a more useful error later */
if (errno != ENOENT && errno != ENOTDIR)
pg_fatal("could not open file \"%s\" for reading: %s\n",
path, getErrorText(errno));
return false;
}
close(fd);
return true;
}
/*
* verify_directories()
*
* does all the hectic work of verifying directories and executables
* of old and new server.
*
* NOTE: May update the values of all parameters
*/
void
verify_directories(void)
{
#ifndef WIN32
if (access(".", R_OK | W_OK | X_OK) != 0)
#else
if (win32_check_directory_write_permissions() != 0)
#endif
pg_fatal("You must have read and write access in the current directory.\n");
check_bin_dir(&old_cluster);
check_data_dir(old_cluster.pgdata);
check_bin_dir(&new_cluster);
check_data_dir(new_cluster.pgdata);
}
#ifdef WIN32
/*
* win32_check_directory_write_permissions()
*
* access() on WIN32 can't check directory permissions, so we have to
* optionally create, then delete a file to check.
* http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/1w06ktdy%28v=vs.80%29.aspx
*/
static int
win32_check_directory_write_permissions(void)
{
int fd;
/*
* We open a file we would normally create anyway. We do this even in
* 'check' mode, which isn't ideal, but this is the best we can do.
*/
if ((fd = open(GLOBALS_DUMP_FILE, O_RDWR | O_CREAT, S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR)) < 0)
return -1;
close(fd);
return unlink(GLOBALS_DUMP_FILE);
}
#endif
/*
* check_data_dir()
*
* This function validates the given cluster directory - we search for a
* small set of subdirectories that we expect to find in a valid $PGDATA
* directory. If any of the subdirectories are missing (or secured against
* us) we display an error message and exit()
*
*/
static void
check_data_dir(const char *pg_data)
{
char subDirName[MAXPGPATH];
int subdirnum;
/* start check with top-most directory */
const char *requiredSubdirs[] = {"", "base", "global", "pg_clog",
"pg_multixact", "pg_subtrans", "pg_tblspc", "pg_twophase",
"pg_xlog"};
for (subdirnum = 0;
subdirnum < sizeof(requiredSubdirs) / sizeof(requiredSubdirs[0]);
++subdirnum)
{
struct stat statBuf;
snprintf(subDirName, sizeof(subDirName), "%s%s%s", pg_data,
/* Win32 can't stat() a directory with a trailing slash. */
*requiredSubdirs[subdirnum] ? "/" : "",
requiredSubdirs[subdirnum]);
if (stat(subDirName, &statBuf) != 0)
report_status(PG_FATAL, "check for \"%s\" failed: %s\n",
subDirName, getErrorText(errno));
else if (!S_ISDIR(statBuf.st_mode))
report_status(PG_FATAL, "%s is not a directory\n",
subDirName);
}
}
/*
* check_bin_dir()
*
* This function searches for the executables that we expect to find
* in the binaries directory. If we find that a required executable
* is missing (or secured against us), we display an error message and
* exit().
*/
static void
check_bin_dir(ClusterInfo *cluster)
{
struct stat statBuf;
/* check bindir */
if (stat(cluster->bindir, &statBuf) != 0)
report_status(PG_FATAL, "check for \"%s\" failed: %s\n",
cluster->bindir, getErrorText(errno));
else if (!S_ISDIR(statBuf.st_mode))
report_status(PG_FATAL, "%s is not a directory\n",
cluster->bindir);
validate_exec(cluster->bindir, "postgres");
validate_exec(cluster->bindir, "pg_ctl");
validate_exec(cluster->bindir, "pg_resetxlog");
if (cluster == &new_cluster)
{
/* these are only needed in the new cluster */
validate_exec(cluster->bindir, "psql");
validate_exec(cluster->bindir, "pg_dumpall");
}
}
/*
* validate_exec()
*
* validate "path" as an executable file
*/
static void
validate_exec(const char *dir, const char *cmdName)
{
char path[MAXPGPATH];
struct stat buf;
snprintf(path, sizeof(path), "%s/%s", dir, cmdName);
#ifdef WIN32
/* Windows requires a .exe suffix for stat() */
if (strlen(path) <= strlen(EXE_EXT) ||
pg_strcasecmp(path + strlen(path) - strlen(EXE_EXT), EXE_EXT) != 0)
strlcat(path, EXE_EXT, sizeof(path));
#endif
/*
* Ensure that the file exists and is a regular file.
*/
if (stat(path, &buf) < 0)
pg_fatal("check for \"%s\" failed: %s\n",
path, getErrorText(errno));
else if (!S_ISREG(buf.st_mode))
pg_fatal("check for \"%s\" failed: not an executable file\n",
path);
/*
* Ensure that the file is both executable and readable (required for
* dynamic loading).
*/
#ifndef WIN32
if (access(path, R_OK) != 0)
#else
if ((buf.st_mode & S_IRUSR) == 0)
#endif
pg_fatal("check for \"%s\" failed: cannot read file (permission denied)\n",
path);
#ifndef WIN32
if (access(path, X_OK) != 0)
#else
if ((buf.st_mode & S_IXUSR) == 0)
#endif
pg_fatal("check for \"%s\" failed: cannot execute (permission denied)\n",
path);
}