# # Author:: Bryan McLellan # Copyright:: Copyright (c) 2014-2016 Chef Software, Inc. # License:: Apache License, Version 2.0 # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. # You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. # # Sourced from Chef::Util::PathHelper. # Should be removed when Chef 11 catches up or we stop supporting Chef 11 module Knife module Windows class PathHelper # Maximum characters in a standard Windows path (260 including drive letter and NUL) WIN_MAX_PATH = 259 def self.dirname(path) if Chef::Platform.windows? # Find the first slash, not counting trailing slashes end_slash = path.size while true slash = path.rindex(/[#{Regexp.escape(File::SEPARATOR)}#{Regexp.escape(path_separator)}]/, end_slash - 1) if !slash return end_slash == path.size ? '.' : path_separator elsif slash == end_slash - 1 end_slash = slash else return path[0..slash-1] end end else ::File.dirname(path) end end BACKSLASH = '\\'.freeze def self.path_separator if Chef::Platform.windows? File::ALT_SEPARATOR || BACKSLASH else File::SEPARATOR end end def self.join(*args) args.flatten.inject do |joined_path, component| # Joined path ends with / joined_path = joined_path.sub(/[#{Regexp.escape(File::SEPARATOR)}#{Regexp.escape(path_separator)}]+$/, '') component = component.sub(/^[#{Regexp.escape(File::SEPARATOR)}#{Regexp.escape(path_separator)}]+/, '') joined_path += "#{path_separator}#{component}" end end def self.validate_path(path) if Chef::Platform.windows? unless printable?(path) msg = "Path '#{path}' contains non-printable characters. Check that backslashes are escaped with another backslash (e.g. C:\\\\Windows) in double-quoted strings." Chef::Log.error(msg) raise Chef::Exceptions::ValidationFailed, msg end if windows_max_length_exceeded?(path) Chef::Log.debug("Path '#{path}' is longer than #{WIN_MAX_PATH}, prefixing with'\\\\?\\'") path.insert(0, "\\\\?\\") end end path end def self.windows_max_length_exceeded?(path) # Check to see if paths without the \\?\ prefix are over the maximum allowed length for the Windows API # http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa365247%28v=vs.85%29.aspx unless path =~ /^\\\\?\\/ if path.length > WIN_MAX_PATH return true end end false end def self.printable?(string) # returns true if string is free of non-printable characters (escape sequences) # this returns false for whitespace escape sequences as well, e.g. \n\t if string =~ /[^[:print:]]/ false else true end end # Produces a comparable path. def self.canonical_path(path, add_prefix=true) # Rather than find an equivalent for File.absolute_path on 1.8.7, just bail out raise NotImplementedError, "This feature is not supported on Ruby versions < 1.9" if RUBY_VERSION.to_f < 1.9 # First remove extra separators and resolve any relative paths abs_path = File.absolute_path(path) if Chef::Platform.windows? # Add the \\?\ API prefix on Windows unless add_prefix is false # Downcase on Windows where paths are still case-insensitive abs_path.gsub!(::File::SEPARATOR, path_separator) if add_prefix && abs_path !~ /^\\\\?\\/ abs_path.insert(0, "\\\\?\\") end abs_path.downcase! end abs_path end def self.cleanpath(path) path = Pathname.new(path).cleanpath.to_s # ensure all forward slashes are backslashes if Chef::Platform.windows? path = path.gsub(File::SEPARATOR, path_separator) end path end def self.paths_eql?(path1, path2) canonical_path(path1) == canonical_path(path2) end # Paths which may contain glob-reserved characters need # to be escaped before globbing can be done. # http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14127343 def self.escape_glob(*parts) path = cleanpath(join(*parts)) path.gsub(/[\\\{\}\[\]\*\?]/) { |x| "\\"+x } end def self.relative_path_from(from, to) pathname = Pathname.new(Chef::Util::PathHelper.cleanpath(to)).relative_path_from(Pathname.new(Chef::Util::PathHelper.cleanpath(from))) end # Retrieves the "home directory" of the current user while trying to ascertain the existence # of said directory. The path returned uses / for all separators (the ruby standard format). # If the home directory doesn't exist or an error is otherwise encountered, nil is returned. # # If a set of path elements is provided, they are appended as-is to the home path if the # homepath exists. # # If an optional block is provided, the joined path is passed to that block if the home path is # valid and the result of the block is returned instead. # # Home-path discovery is performed once. If a path is discovered, that value is memoized so # that subsequent calls to home_dir don't bounce around. # # See self.all_homes. def self.home(*args) @@home_dir ||= self.all_homes { |p| break p } if @@home_dir path = File.join(@@home_dir, *args) block_given? ? (yield path) : path end end # See self.home. This method performs a similar operation except that it yields all the different # possible values of 'HOME' that one could have on this platform. Hence, on windows, if # HOMEDRIVE\HOMEPATH and USERPROFILE are different, the provided block will be called twice. # This method goes out and checks the existence of each location at the time of the call. # # The return is a list of all the returned values from each block invocation or a list of paths # if no block is provided. def self.all_homes(*args) paths = [] if Chef::Platform.windows? # By default, Ruby uses the the following environment variables to determine Dir.home: # HOME # HOMEDRIVE HOMEPATH # USERPROFILE # Ruby only checks to see if the variable is specified - not if the directory actually exists. # On Windows, HOMEDRIVE HOMEPATH can point to a different location (such as an unavailable network mounted drive) # while USERPROFILE points to the location where the user application settings and profile are stored. HOME # is not defined as an environment variable (usually). If the home path actually uses UNC, then the prefix is # HOMESHARE instead of HOMEDRIVE. # # We instead walk down the following and only include paths that actually exist. # HOME # HOMEDRIVE HOMEPATH # HOMESHARE HOMEPATH # USERPROFILE paths << ENV['HOME'] paths << ENV['HOMEDRIVE'] + ENV['HOMEPATH'] if ENV['HOMEDRIVE'] && ENV['HOMEPATH'] paths << ENV['HOMESHARE'] + ENV['HOMEPATH'] if ENV['HOMESHARE'] && ENV['HOMEPATH'] paths << ENV['USERPROFILE'] end paths << Dir.home if ENV['HOME'] # Depending on what environment variables we're using, the slashes can go in any which way. # Just change them all to / to keep things consistent. # Note: Maybe this is a bad idea on some unixy systems where \ might be a valid character depending on # the particular brand of kool-aid you consume. This code assumes that \ and / are both # path separators on any system being used. paths = paths.map { |home_path| home_path.gsub(path_separator, ::File::SEPARATOR) if home_path } # Filter out duplicate paths and paths that don't exist. valid_paths = paths.select { |home_path| home_path && Dir.exists?(home_path) } valid_paths = valid_paths.uniq # Join all optional path elements at the end. # If a block is provided, invoke it - otherwise just return what we've got. joined_paths = valid_paths.map { |home_path| File.join(home_path, *args) } if block_given? joined_paths.each { |p| yield p } else joined_paths end end end end end # Break a require loop when require chef/util/path_helper require 'chef/platform' require 'chef/exceptions'