// Copyright 2016 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. package tar import ( "bytes" "fmt" "strconv" "strings" "time" ) func isASCII(s string) bool { for _, c := range s { if c >= 0x80 { return false } } return true } func toASCII(s string) string { if isASCII(s) { return s } var buf bytes.Buffer for _, c := range s { if c < 0x80 { buf.WriteByte(byte(c)) } } return buf.String() } type parser struct { err error // Last error seen } type formatter struct { err error // Last error seen } // parseString parses bytes as a NUL-terminated C-style string. // If a NUL byte is not found then the whole slice is returned as a string. func (*parser) parseString(b []byte) string { n := 0 for n < len(b) && b[n] != 0 { n++ } return string(b[0:n]) } // Write s into b, terminating it with a NUL if there is room. func (f *formatter) formatString(b []byte, s string) { if len(s) > len(b) { f.err = ErrFieldTooLong return } ascii := toASCII(s) copy(b, ascii) if len(ascii) < len(b) { b[len(ascii)] = 0 } } // fitsInBase256 reports whether x can be encoded into n bytes using base-256 // encoding. Unlike octal encoding, base-256 encoding does not require that the // string ends with a NUL character. Thus, all n bytes are available for output. // // If operating in binary mode, this assumes strict GNU binary mode; which means // that the first byte can only be either 0x80 or 0xff. Thus, the first byte is // equivalent to the sign bit in two's complement form. func fitsInBase256(n int, x int64) bool { var binBits = uint(n-1) * 8 return n >= 9 || (x >= -1< 0 && b[0]&0x80 != 0 { // Handling negative numbers relies on the following identity: // -a-1 == ^a // // If the number is negative, we use an inversion mask to invert the // data bytes and treat the value as an unsigned number. var inv byte // 0x00 if positive or zero, 0xff if negative if b[0]&0x40 != 0 { inv = 0xff } var x uint64 for i, c := range b { c ^= inv // Inverts c only if inv is 0xff, otherwise does nothing if i == 0 { c &= 0x7f // Ignore signal bit in first byte } if (x >> 56) > 0 { p.err = ErrHeader // Integer overflow return 0 } x = x<<8 | uint64(c) } if (x >> 63) > 0 { p.err = ErrHeader // Integer overflow return 0 } if inv == 0xff { return ^int64(x) } return int64(x) } // Normal case is base-8 (octal) format. return p.parseOctal(b) } // Write x into b, as binary (GNUtar/star extension). func (f *formatter) formatNumeric(b []byte, x int64) { if fitsInBase256(len(b), x) { for i := len(b) - 1; i >= 0; i-- { b[i] = byte(x) x >>= 8 } b[0] |= 0x80 // Highest bit indicates binary format return } f.formatOctal(b, 0) // Last resort, just write zero f.err = ErrFieldTooLong } func (p *parser) parseOctal(b []byte) int64 { // Because unused fields are filled with NULs, we need // to skip leading NULs. Fields may also be padded with // spaces or NULs. // So we remove leading and trailing NULs and spaces to // be sure. b = bytes.Trim(b, " \x00") if len(b) == 0 { return 0 } x, perr := strconv.ParseUint(p.parseString(b), 8, 64) if perr != nil { p.err = ErrHeader } return int64(x) } func (f *formatter) formatOctal(b []byte, x int64) { s := strconv.FormatInt(x, 8) // Add leading zeros, but leave room for a NUL. if n := len(b) - len(s) - 1; n > 0 { s = strings.Repeat("0", n) + s } f.formatString(b, s) } // parsePAXTime takes a string of the form %d.%d as described in the PAX // specification. Note that this implementation allows for negative timestamps, // which is allowed for by the PAX specification, but not always portable. func parsePAXTime(s string) (time.Time, error) { const maxNanoSecondDigits = 9 // Split string into seconds and sub-seconds parts. ss, sn := s, "" if pos := strings.IndexByte(s, '.'); pos >= 0 { ss, sn = s[:pos], s[pos+1:] } // Parse the seconds. secs, err := strconv.ParseInt(ss, 10, 64) if err != nil { return time.Time{}, ErrHeader } if len(sn) == 0 { return time.Unix(secs, 0), nil // No sub-second values } // Parse the nanoseconds. if strings.Trim(sn, "0123456789") != "" { return time.Time{}, ErrHeader } if len(sn) < maxNanoSecondDigits { sn += strings.Repeat("0", maxNanoSecondDigits-len(sn)) // Right pad } else { sn = sn[:maxNanoSecondDigits] // Right truncate } nsecs, _ := strconv.ParseInt(sn, 10, 64) // Must succeed if len(ss) > 0 && ss[0] == '-' { return time.Unix(secs, -1*int64(nsecs)), nil // Negative correction } return time.Unix(secs, int64(nsecs)), nil } // TODO(dsnet): Implement formatPAXTime. // parsePAXRecord parses the input PAX record string into a key-value pair. // If parsing is successful, it will slice off the currently read record and // return the remainder as r. // // A PAX record is of the following form: // "%d %s=%s\n" % (size, key, value) func parsePAXRecord(s string) (k, v, r string, err error) { // The size field ends at the first space. sp := strings.IndexByte(s, ' ') if sp == -1 { return "", "", s, ErrHeader } // Parse the first token as a decimal integer. n, perr := strconv.ParseInt(s[:sp], 10, 0) // Intentionally parse as native int if perr != nil || n < 5 || int64(len(s)) < n { return "", "", s, ErrHeader } // Extract everything between the space and the final newline. rec, nl, rem := s[sp+1:n-1], s[n-1:n], s[n:] if nl != "\n" { return "", "", s, ErrHeader } // The first equals separates the key from the value. eq := strings.IndexByte(rec, '=') if eq == -1 { return "", "", s, ErrHeader } return rec[:eq], rec[eq+1:], rem, nil } // formatPAXRecord formats a single PAX record, prefixing it with the // appropriate length. func formatPAXRecord(k, v string) string { const padding = 3 // Extra padding for ' ', '=', and '\n' size := len(k) + len(v) + padding size += len(strconv.Itoa(size)) record := fmt.Sprintf("%d %s=%s\n", size, k, v) // Final adjustment if adding size field increased the record size. if len(record) != size { size = len(record) record = fmt.Sprintf("%d %s=%s\n", size, k, v) } return record }