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1 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
2 | // Name: src/mac/corefoundation/utilsexec_cf.cpp | |
3 | // Purpose: Execution-related utilities for Darwin | |
4 | // Author: David Elliott, Ryan Norton (wxMacExecute) | |
5 | // Modified by: Stefan Csomor (added necessary wxT for unicode builds) | |
6 | // Created: 2004-11-04 | |
7 | // RCS-ID: $Id$ | |
8 | // Copyright: (c) David Elliott, Ryan Norton | |
9 | // Licence: wxWindows licence | |
10 | // Notes: This code comes from src/mac/carbon/utilsexc.cpp,1.11 | |
11 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
12 | ||
13 | #include "wx/wxprec.h" | |
14 | #ifndef WX_PRECOMP | |
15 | #include "wx/log.h" | |
16 | #include "wx/utils.h" | |
17 | #endif //ndef WX_PRECOMP | |
18 | #include "wx/unix/execute.h" | |
19 | #include "wx/stdpaths.h" | |
20 | #include "wx/app.h" | |
21 | #include "wx/apptrait.h" | |
22 | #include "wx/thread.h" | |
23 | #include "wx/process.h" | |
24 | ||
25 | #include <sys/wait.h> | |
26 | ||
27 | // Use polling instead of Mach ports, which doesn't work on Intel | |
28 | // due to task_for_pid security issues. | |
29 | ||
30 | // http://developer.apple.com/technotes/tn/tn2050.html | |
31 | ||
32 | // What's a better test for Intel vs PPC? | |
33 | #ifdef WORDS_BIGENDIAN | |
34 | #define USE_POLLING 0 | |
35 | #else | |
36 | #define USE_POLLING 1 | |
37 | #endif | |
38 | ||
39 | #if USE_POLLING | |
40 | ||
41 | #if wxUSE_THREADS | |
42 | class wxProcessTerminationEventHandler: public wxEvtHandler | |
43 | { | |
44 | public: | |
45 | wxProcessTerminationEventHandler(wxEndProcessData* data) | |
46 | { | |
47 | m_data = data; | |
48 | Connect(-1, wxEVT_END_PROCESS, wxProcessEventHandler(wxProcessTerminationEventHandler::OnTerminate)); | |
49 | } | |
50 | ||
51 | void OnTerminate(wxProcessEvent& event) | |
52 | { | |
53 | Disconnect(-1, wxEVT_END_PROCESS, wxProcessEventHandler(wxProcessTerminationEventHandler::OnTerminate)); | |
54 | wxHandleProcessTermination(m_data); | |
55 | ||
56 | // NOTE: We don't use this to delay destruction until the next idle run but rather to | |
57 | // avoid killing ourselves while our caller (which is our wxEvtHandler superclass | |
58 | // ProcessPendingEvents) still needs our m_eventsLocker to be valid. | |
59 | // Since we're in the GUI library we can guarantee that ScheduleForDestroy is using | |
60 | // the GUI implementation which delays destruction and not the base implementation | |
61 | // which does it immediately. | |
62 | wxTheApp->GetTraits()->ScheduleForDestroy(this); | |
63 | } | |
64 | ||
65 | wxEndProcessData* m_data; | |
66 | }; | |
67 | ||
68 | class wxProcessTerminationThread: public wxThread | |
69 | { | |
70 | public: | |
71 | wxProcessTerminationThread(wxEndProcessData* data, wxProcessTerminationEventHandler* handler): wxThread(wxTHREAD_DETACHED) | |
72 | { | |
73 | m_data = data; | |
74 | m_handler = handler; | |
75 | } | |
76 | ||
77 | virtual void* Entry(); | |
78 | ||
79 | wxProcessTerminationEventHandler* m_handler; | |
80 | wxEndProcessData* m_data; | |
81 | }; | |
82 | ||
83 | // The problem with this is that we may be examining the | |
84 | // process e.g. in OnIdle at the point this cleans up the process, | |
85 | // so we need to delay until it's safe. | |
86 | ||
87 | void* wxProcessTerminationThread::Entry() | |
88 | { | |
89 | while (true) | |
90 | { | |
91 | usleep(100); | |
92 | int status = 0; | |
93 | int rc = waitpid(abs(m_data->pid), & status, 0); | |
94 | if (rc != 0) | |
95 | { | |
96 | if ((rc != -1) && WIFEXITED(status)) | |
97 | m_data->exitcode = WEXITSTATUS(status); | |
98 | else | |
99 | m_data->exitcode = -1; | |
100 | ||
101 | wxProcessEvent event; | |
102 | wxPostEvent(m_handler, event); | |
103 | ||
104 | break; | |
105 | } | |
106 | } | |
107 | ||
108 | return NULL; | |
109 | } | |
110 | ||
111 | int wxAddProcessCallbackForPid(wxEndProcessData *proc_data, int pid) | |
112 | { | |
113 | if (pid < 1) | |
114 | return -1; | |
115 | ||
116 | wxProcessTerminationEventHandler* handler = new wxProcessTerminationEventHandler(proc_data); | |
117 | wxProcessTerminationThread* thread = new wxProcessTerminationThread(proc_data, handler); | |
118 | ||
119 | if (thread->Create() != wxTHREAD_NO_ERROR) | |
120 | { | |
121 | wxLogDebug(wxT("Could not create termination detection thread.")); | |
122 | delete thread; | |
123 | delete handler; | |
124 | return -1; | |
125 | } | |
126 | ||
127 | thread->Run(); | |
128 | ||
129 | return 0; | |
130 | } | |
131 | #else // !wxUSE_THREADS | |
132 | int wxAddProcessCallbackForPid(wxEndProcessData*, int) | |
133 | { | |
134 | wxLogDebug(wxT("Could not create termination detection thread.")); | |
135 | return -1; | |
136 | } | |
137 | #endif // wxUSE_THREADS/!wxUSE_THREADS | |
138 | ||
139 | #else // !USE_POLLING | |
140 | ||
141 | #include <CoreFoundation/CFMachPort.h> | |
142 | extern "C" { | |
143 | #include <mach/mach.h> | |
144 | } | |
145 | ||
146 | void wxMAC_MachPortEndProcessDetect(CFMachPortRef port, void *data) | |
147 | { | |
148 | wxEndProcessData *proc_data = (wxEndProcessData*)data; | |
149 | wxLogDebug(wxT("Process ended")); | |
150 | int status = 0; | |
151 | int rc = waitpid(abs(proc_data->pid), &status, WNOHANG); | |
152 | if(!rc) | |
153 | { | |
154 | wxLogDebug(wxT("Mach port was invalidated, but process hasn't terminated!")); | |
155 | return; | |
156 | } | |
157 | if((rc != -1) && WIFEXITED(status)) | |
158 | proc_data->exitcode = WEXITSTATUS(status); | |
159 | else | |
160 | proc_data->exitcode = -1; | |
161 | wxHandleProcessTermination(proc_data); | |
162 | } | |
163 | ||
164 | int wxAddProcessCallbackForPid(wxEndProcessData *proc_data, int pid) | |
165 | { | |
166 | if(pid < 1) | |
167 | return -1; | |
168 | kern_return_t kernResult; | |
169 | mach_port_t taskOfOurProcess; | |
170 | mach_port_t machPortForProcess; | |
171 | taskOfOurProcess = mach_task_self(); | |
172 | if(taskOfOurProcess == MACH_PORT_NULL) | |
173 | { | |
174 | wxLogDebug(wxT("No mach_task_self()")); | |
175 | return -1; | |
176 | } | |
177 | wxLogDebug(wxT("pid=%d"),pid); | |
178 | kernResult = task_for_pid(taskOfOurProcess,pid, &machPortForProcess); | |
179 | if(kernResult != KERN_SUCCESS) | |
180 | { | |
181 | wxLogDebug(wxT("no task_for_pid()")); | |
182 | // try seeing if it is already dead or something | |
183 | // FIXME: a better method would be to call the callback function | |
184 | // from idle time until the process terminates. Of course, how | |
185 | // likely is it that it will take more than 0.1 seconds for the | |
186 | // mach terminate event to make its way to the BSD subsystem? | |
187 | usleep(100); // sleep for 0.1 seconds | |
188 | wxMAC_MachPortEndProcessDetect(NULL, (void*)proc_data); | |
189 | return -1; | |
190 | } | |
191 | CFMachPortContext termcb_contextinfo; | |
192 | termcb_contextinfo.version = 0; | |
193 | termcb_contextinfo.info = (void*)proc_data; | |
194 | termcb_contextinfo.retain = NULL; | |
195 | termcb_contextinfo.release = NULL; | |
196 | termcb_contextinfo.copyDescription = NULL; | |
197 | CFMachPortRef CFMachPortForProcess; | |
198 | Boolean ShouldFreePort; | |
199 | CFMachPortForProcess = CFMachPortCreateWithPort(NULL, machPortForProcess, NULL, &termcb_contextinfo, &ShouldFreePort); | |
200 | if(!CFMachPortForProcess) | |
201 | { | |
202 | wxLogDebug(wxT("No CFMachPortForProcess")); | |
203 | mach_port_deallocate(taskOfOurProcess, machPortForProcess); | |
204 | return -1; | |
205 | } | |
206 | if(ShouldFreePort) | |
207 | { | |
208 | kernResult = mach_port_deallocate(taskOfOurProcess, machPortForProcess); | |
209 | if(kernResult!=KERN_SUCCESS) | |
210 | { | |
211 | wxLogDebug(wxT("Couldn't deallocate mach port")); | |
212 | return -1; | |
213 | } | |
214 | } | |
215 | CFMachPortSetInvalidationCallBack(CFMachPortForProcess, &wxMAC_MachPortEndProcessDetect); | |
216 | CFRunLoopSourceRef runloopsource; | |
217 | runloopsource = CFMachPortCreateRunLoopSource(NULL,CFMachPortForProcess, (CFIndex)0); | |
218 | if(!runloopsource) | |
219 | { | |
220 | wxLogDebug(wxT("Couldn't create runloopsource")); | |
221 | return -1; | |
222 | } | |
223 | ||
224 | CFRelease(CFMachPortForProcess); | |
225 | ||
226 | CFRunLoopAddSource(CFRunLoopGetCurrent(),runloopsource,kCFRunLoopDefaultMode); | |
227 | CFRelease(runloopsource); | |
228 | wxLogDebug(wxT("Successfully added notification to the runloop")); | |
229 | return 0; | |
230 | } | |
231 | ||
232 | #endif // USE_POLLING/!USE_POLLING | |
233 | ||
234 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
235 | // New implementation avoiding mach ports entirely. | |
236 | ||
237 | #include <CoreFoundation/CFSocket.h> | |
238 | ||
239 | /*! | |
240 | Called due to source signal detected by the CFRunLoop. | |
241 | This is nearly identical to the wxGTK equivalent. | |
242 | */ | |
243 | extern "C" void WXCF_EndProcessDetector(CFSocketRef s, CFSocketCallBackType callbackType, CFDataRef address, void const *data, void *info) | |
244 | { | |
245 | wxEndProcessData * const proc_data = static_cast<wxEndProcessData*>(info); | |
246 | ||
247 | /// This code could reasonably be shared between wxMac/wxCocoa and wxGTK /// | |
248 | // PID is always positive on UNIX but wx uses the sign bit as a flag. | |
249 | int pid = (proc_data->pid > 0) ? proc_data->pid : -proc_data->pid; | |
250 | int status = 0; | |
251 | int rc = waitpid(pid, &status, WNOHANG); | |
252 | if(rc == 0) | |
253 | { | |
254 | // Keep waiting in case we got a spurious notification | |
255 | // NOTE: In my limited testing, this doesn't happen. | |
256 | return; | |
257 | } | |
258 | ||
259 | if(rc == -1) | |
260 | { // Error.. really shouldn't happen but try to gracefully handle it | |
261 | wxLogLastError(_T("waitpid")); | |
262 | proc_data->exitcode = -1; | |
263 | } | |
264 | else | |
265 | { // Process ended for some reason | |
266 | wxASSERT_MSG(rc == pid, _T("unexpected waitpid() return value")); | |
267 | ||
268 | if(WIFEXITED(status)) | |
269 | proc_data->exitcode = WEXITSTATUS(status); | |
270 | else if(WIFSIGNALED(status)) | |
271 | // wxGTK doesn't do this but why not? | |
272 | proc_data->exitcode = -WTERMSIG(status); | |
273 | else | |
274 | { // Should NEVER happen according to waitpid docs | |
275 | wxLogError(wxT("waitpid indicates process exited but not due to exiting or signalling")); | |
276 | proc_data->exitcode = -1; | |
277 | } | |
278 | } | |
279 | /// The above code could reasonably be shared between wxMac/wxCocoa and wxGTK /// | |
280 | ||
281 | /* | |
282 | Either waitpid failed or the process ended successfully. Either way, | |
283 | we're done. It's not if waitpid is going to magically succeed when | |
284 | we get fired again. CFSocketInvalidate closes the fd for us and also | |
285 | invalidates the run loop source for us which should cause it to | |
286 | release the CFSocket (thus causing it to be deallocated) and remove | |
287 | itself from the runloop which should release it and cause it to also | |
288 | be deallocated. Of course, it's possible the RunLoop hangs onto | |
289 | one or both of them by retaining/releasing them within its stack | |
290 | frame. However, that shouldn't be depended on. Assume that s is | |
291 | deallocated due to the following call. | |
292 | */ | |
293 | CFSocketInvalidate(s); | |
294 | ||
295 | // Now tell wx that the process has ended. | |
296 | wxHandleProcessTermination(proc_data); | |
297 | } | |
298 | ||
299 | /*! | |
300 | Implements the GUI-specific wxAddProcessCallback for both wxMac and | |
301 | wxCocoa using the CFSocket/CFRunLoop API which is available to both. | |
302 | Takes advantage of the fact that sockets on UNIX are just regular | |
303 | file descriptors and thus even a non-socket file descriptor can | |
304 | apparently be used with CFSocket so long as you only tell CFSocket | |
305 | to do things with it that would be valid for a non-socket fd. | |
306 | */ | |
307 | int wxAddProcessCallback(wxEndProcessData *proc_data, int fd) | |
308 | { | |
309 | static int s_last_tag = 0; | |
310 | CFSocketContext context = | |
311 | { 0 | |
312 | , static_cast<void*>(proc_data) | |
313 | , NULL | |
314 | , NULL | |
315 | , NULL | |
316 | }; | |
317 | CFSocketRef cfSocket = CFSocketCreateWithNative(kCFAllocatorDefault,fd,kCFSocketReadCallBack,&WXCF_EndProcessDetector,&context); | |
318 | if(cfSocket == NULL) | |
319 | { | |
320 | wxLogError(wxT("Failed to create socket for end process detection")); | |
321 | return 0; | |
322 | } | |
323 | CFRunLoopSourceRef runLoopSource = CFSocketCreateRunLoopSource(kCFAllocatorDefault, cfSocket, /*highest priority:*/0); | |
324 | if(runLoopSource == NULL) | |
325 | { | |
326 | wxLogError(wxT("Failed to create CFRunLoopSource from CFSocket for end process detection")); | |
327 | // closes the fd.. we can't really stop it, nor do we necessarily want to. | |
328 | CFSocketInvalidate(cfSocket); | |
329 | CFRelease(cfSocket); | |
330 | return 0; | |
331 | } | |
332 | // Now that the run loop source has the socket retained and we no longer | |
333 | // need to refer to it within this method, we can release it. | |
334 | CFRelease(cfSocket); | |
335 | ||
336 | CFRunLoopAddSource(CFRunLoopGetCurrent(), runLoopSource, kCFRunLoopCommonModes); | |
337 | // Now that the run loop has the source retained we can release it. | |
338 | CFRelease(runLoopSource); | |
339 | ||
340 | /* | |
341 | Feed wx some bullshit.. we don't use it since CFSocket helpfully passes | |
342 | itself into our callback and that's enough to be able to | |
343 | CFSocketInvalidate it which is all we need to do to get everything we | |
344 | just created to be deallocated. | |
345 | */ | |
346 | return ++s_last_tag; | |
347 | } | |
348 | ||
349 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
350 | ||
351 | // NOTE: This doesn't really belong here but this was a handy file to | |
352 | // put it in because it's already compiled for wxCocoa and wxMac GUI lib. | |
353 | #if wxUSE_GUI | |
354 | ||
355 | #if wxUSE_STDPATHS | |
356 | static wxStandardPathsCF gs_stdPaths; | |
357 | wxStandardPathsBase& wxGUIAppTraits::GetStandardPaths() | |
358 | { | |
359 | return gs_stdPaths; | |
360 | } | |
361 | #endif | |
362 | ||
363 | #endif // wxUSE_GUI | |
364 |