1#ifndef DIR_ITERATOR_H 2#define DIR_ITERATOR_H 3 4#include"strbuf.h" 5 6/* 7 * Iterate over a directory tree. 8 * 9 * Iterate over a directory tree, recursively, including paths of all 10 * types and hidden paths. Skip "." and ".." entries and don't follow 11 * symlinks except for the original path. Note that the original path 12 * is not included in the iteration. 13 * 14 * Every time dir_iterator_advance() is called, update the members of 15 * the dir_iterator structure to reflect the next path in the 16 * iteration. The order that paths are iterated over within a 17 * directory is undefined, directory paths are always given before 18 * their contents. 19 * 20 * A typical iteration looks like this: 21 * 22 * int ok; 23 * unsigned int flags = DIR_ITERATOR_PEDANTIC; 24 * struct dir_iterator *iter = dir_iterator_begin(path, flags); 25 * 26 * if (!iter) 27 * goto error_handler; 28 * 29 * while ((ok = dir_iterator_advance(iter)) == ITER_OK) { 30 * if (want_to_stop_iteration()) { 31 * ok = dir_iterator_abort(iter); 32 * break; 33 * } 34 * 35 * // Access information about the current path: 36 * if (S_ISDIR(iter->st.st_mode)) 37 * printf("%s is a directory\n", iter->relative_path); 38 * } 39 * 40 * if (ok != ITER_DONE) 41 * handle_error(); 42 * 43 * Callers are allowed to modify iter->path while they are working, 44 * but they must restore it to its original contents before calling 45 * dir_iterator_advance() again. 46 */ 47 48/* 49 * Flags for dir_iterator_begin: 50 * 51 * - DIR_ITERATOR_PEDANTIC: override dir-iterator's default behavior 52 * in case of an error at dir_iterator_advance(), which is to keep 53 * looking for a next valid entry. With this flag, resources are freed 54 * and ITER_ERROR is returned immediately. In both cases, a meaningful 55 * warning is emitted. Note: ENOENT errors are always ignored so that 56 * the API users may remove files during iteration. 57 * 58 * - DIR_ITERATOR_FOLLOW_SYMLINKS: make dir-iterator follow symlinks. 59 * i.e., linked directories' contents will be iterated over and 60 * iter->base.st will contain information on the referred files, 61 * not the symlinks themselves, which is the default behavior. Broken 62 * symlinks are ignored. 63 * 64 * Warning: circular symlinks are also followed when 65 * DIR_ITERATOR_FOLLOW_SYMLINKS is set. The iteration may end up with 66 * an ELOOP if they happen and DIR_ITERATOR_PEDANTIC is set. 67 */ 68#define DIR_ITERATOR_PEDANTIC (1 << 0) 69#define DIR_ITERATOR_FOLLOW_SYMLINKS (1 << 1) 70 71struct dir_iterator { 72/* The current path: */ 73struct strbuf path; 74 75/* 76 * The current path relative to the starting path. This part 77 * of the path always uses "/" characters to separate path 78 * components: 79 */ 80const char*relative_path; 81 82/* The current basename: */ 83const char*basename; 84 85/* 86 * The result of calling lstat() on path; or stat(), if the 87 * DIR_ITERATOR_FOLLOW_SYMLINKS flag was set at 88 * dir_iterator's initialization. 89 */ 90struct stat st; 91}; 92 93/* 94 * Start a directory iteration over path with the combination of 95 * options specified by flags. On success, return a dir_iterator 96 * that holds the internal state of the iteration. In case of 97 * failure, return NULL and set errno accordingly. 98 * 99 * The iteration includes all paths under path, not including path 100 * itself and not including "." or ".." entries. 101 * 102 * Parameters are: 103 * - path is the starting directory. An internal copy will be made. 104 * - flags is a combination of the possible flags to initialize a 105 * dir-iterator or 0 for default behavior. 106 */ 107struct dir_iterator *dir_iterator_begin(const char*path,unsigned int flags); 108 109/* 110 * Advance the iterator to the first or next item and return ITER_OK. 111 * If the iteration is exhausted, free the dir_iterator and any 112 * resources associated with it and return ITER_DONE. 113 * 114 * It is a bug to use iterator or call this function again after it 115 * has returned ITER_DONE or ITER_ERROR (which may be returned iff 116 * the DIR_ITERATOR_PEDANTIC flag was set). 117 */ 118intdir_iterator_advance(struct dir_iterator *iterator); 119 120/* 121 * End the iteration before it has been exhausted. Free the 122 * dir_iterator and any associated resources and return ITER_DONE. On 123 * error, free the dir_iterator and return ITER_ERROR. 124 */ 125intdir_iterator_abort(struct dir_iterator *iterator); 126 127#endif