2003-09-02 13:00:35 +04:00
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/*
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* psftp.h: interface between psftp.c / scp.c and each
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* platform-specific SFTP module.
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*/
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#ifndef PUTTY_PSFTP_H
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#define PUTTY_PSFTP_H
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/*
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* psftp_getcwd returns the local current directory. The returned
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* string must be freed by the caller.
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*/
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char *psftp_getcwd(void);
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/*
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* psftp_lcd changes the local current directory. The return value
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* is NULL on success, or else an error message which must be freed
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* by the caller.
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*/
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char *psftp_lcd(char *newdir);
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/*
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* Retrieve file times on a local file. Must return two unsigned
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* longs in POSIX time_t format.
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*/
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void get_file_times(char *filename, unsigned long *mtime,
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unsigned long *atime);
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/*
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* One iteration of the PSFTP event loop: wait for network data and
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* process it, once.
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*/
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int ssh_sftp_loop_iteration(void);
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2004-11-27 16:20:21 +03:00
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/*
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* Read a command line for PSFTP from standard input. Caller must
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* free.
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2004-12-16 22:15:38 +03:00
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*
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* If `backend_required' is TRUE, should also listen for activity
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* at the backend (rekeys, clientalives, unexpected closures etc)
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* and respond as necessary, and if the backend closes it should
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* treat this as a failure condition. If `backend_required' is
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* FALSE, a back end is not (intentionally) active at all (e.g.
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* psftp before an `open' command).
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2004-11-27 16:20:21 +03:00
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*/
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2004-12-16 22:15:38 +03:00
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char *ssh_sftp_get_cmdline(char *prompt, int backend_required);
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2004-11-27 16:20:21 +03:00
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2003-09-02 13:00:35 +04:00
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/*
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* The main program in psftp.c. Called from main() in the platform-
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* specific code, after doing any platform-specific initialisation.
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*/
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int psftp_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
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/*
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* These functions are used by PSCP to transmit progress updates
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* and error information to a GUI window managing it. This will
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* probably only ever be supported on Windows, so these functions
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* can safely be stubs on all other platforms.
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*/
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void gui_update_stats(char *name, unsigned long size,
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int percentage, unsigned long elapsed,
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unsigned long done, unsigned long eta,
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unsigned long ratebs);
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void gui_send_errcount(int list, int errs);
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void gui_send_char(int is_stderr, int c);
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void gui_enable(char *arg);
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/*
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* It's likely that a given platform's implementation of file
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* transfer utilities is going to want to do things with them that
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* aren't present in stdio. Hence we supply an alternative
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* abstraction for file access functions.
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*
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* This abstraction tells you the size and access times when you
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* open an existing file (platforms may choose the meaning of the
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* file times if it's not clear; whatever they choose will be what
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* PSCP sends to the server as mtime and atime), and lets you set
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* the times when saving a new file.
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*
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* On the other hand, the abstraction is pretty simple: it supports
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* only opening a file and reading it, or creating a file and
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* writing it. (FIXME: to use this in PSFTP it will also need to
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* support seeking to a starting point for restarted transfers.)
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* None of this read-and-write, seeking-back-and-forth stuff.
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*/
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typedef struct RFile RFile;
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typedef struct WFile WFile;
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/* Output params size, mtime and atime can all be NULL if desired */
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RFile *open_existing_file(char *name, unsigned long *size,
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unsigned long *mtime, unsigned long *atime);
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/* Returns <0 on error, 0 on eof, or number of bytes read, as usual */
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int read_from_file(RFile *f, void *buffer, int length);
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/* Closes and frees the RFile */
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void close_rfile(RFile *f);
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WFile *open_new_file(char *name);
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/* Returns <0 on error, 0 on eof, or number of bytes written, as usual */
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int write_to_file(WFile *f, void *buffer, int length);
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void set_file_times(WFile *f, unsigned long mtime, unsigned long atime);
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/* Closes and frees the WFile */
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void close_wfile(WFile *f);
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/*
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* Determine the type of a file: nonexistent, file, directory or
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* weird. `weird' covers anything else - named pipes, Unix sockets,
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* device files, fish, badgers, you name it. Things marked `weird'
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* will be skipped over in recursive file transfers, so the only
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* real reason for not lumping them in with `nonexistent' is that
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* it allows a slightly more sane error message.
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*/
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enum {
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FILE_TYPE_NONEXISTENT, FILE_TYPE_FILE, FILE_TYPE_DIRECTORY, FILE_TYPE_WEIRD
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};
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int file_type(char *name);
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/*
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* Read all the file names out of a directory.
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*/
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typedef struct DirHandle DirHandle;
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DirHandle *open_directory(char *name);
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/* The string returned from this will need freeing if not NULL */
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char *read_filename(DirHandle *dir);
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void close_directory(DirHandle *dir);
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/*
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* Test a filespec to see whether it's a local wildcard or not.
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* Return values:
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*
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* - WCTYPE_WILDCARD (this is a wildcard).
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* - WCTYPE_FILENAME (this is a single file name).
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* - WCTYPE_NONEXISTENT (whichever it was, nothing of that name exists).
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*
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* Some platforms may choose not to support local wildcards when
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* they come from the command line; in this case they simply never
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* return WCTYPE_WILDCARD, but still test the file's existence.
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* (However, all platforms will probably want to support wildcards
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* inside the PSFTP CLI.)
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*/
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enum {
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WCTYPE_NONEXISTENT, WCTYPE_FILENAME, WCTYPE_WILDCARD
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};
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int test_wildcard(char *name, int cmdline);
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/*
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* Actually return matching file names for a local wildcard.
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*/
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typedef struct WildcardMatcher WildcardMatcher;
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WildcardMatcher *begin_wildcard_matching(char *name);
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/* The string returned from this will need freeing if not NULL */
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char *wildcard_get_filename(WildcardMatcher *dir);
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void finish_wildcard_matching(WildcardMatcher *dir);
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2004-12-16 22:36:47 +03:00
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/*
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* Vet a filename returned from the remote host, to ensure it isn't
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* in some way malicious. The idea is that this function is applied
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* to filenames returned from FXP_READDIR, which means we can panic
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* if we see _anything_ resembling a directory separator.
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*
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* Returns TRUE if the filename is kosher, FALSE if dangerous.
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*/
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int vet_filename(char *name);
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2003-09-02 13:00:35 +04:00
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/*
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* Create a directory. Returns 0 on error, !=0 on success.
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*/
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int create_directory(char *name);
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/*
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* Concatenate a directory name and a file name. The way this is
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* done will depend on the OS.
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*/
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char *dir_file_cat(char *dir, char *file);
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#endif /* PUTTY_PSFTP_H */
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