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ruby--ruby/lib/tempfile.rb
shyouhei f2a91397fd Add uplevel keyword to Kernel#warn and use it
If uplevel keyword is given, the warning message is prepended
with caller file and line information and the string "warning: ".
The use of the uplevel keyword makes Kernel#warn format output
similar to how rb_warn formats output.

This patch modifies net/ftp and net/imap to use Kernel#warn
instead of $stderr.puts or $stderr.printf, since they are used
for printing warnings.

This makes lib/cgi/core and tempfile use $stderr.puts instead of
warn for debug logging, since they are used for debug printing
and not for warning.

This does not modify bundler, rubygems, or rdoc, as those are
maintained outside of ruby and probably wish to remain backwards
compatible with older ruby versions.

rb_warn_m code is originally from nobu, but I've changed it
so that it only includes the path and lineno from uplevel
(not the method), and also prepends the string "warning: ",
to make it more similar to rb_warn.

From: Jeremy Evans code@jeremyevans.net
Signed-off-by: Urabe Shyouhei shyouhei@ruby-lang.org


git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61155 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-12-12 11:56:25 +00:00

354 lines
11 KiB
Ruby

# frozen_string_literal: true
#
# tempfile - manipulates temporary files
#
# $Id$
#
require 'delegate'
require 'tmpdir'
# A utility class for managing temporary files. When you create a Tempfile
# object, it will create a temporary file with a unique filename. A Tempfile
# objects behaves just like a File object, and you can perform all the usual
# file operations on it: reading data, writing data, changing its permissions,
# etc. So although this class does not explicitly document all instance methods
# supported by File, you can in fact call any File instance method on a
# Tempfile object.
#
# == Synopsis
#
# require 'tempfile'
#
# file = Tempfile.new('foo')
# file.path # => A unique filename in the OS's temp directory,
# # e.g.: "/tmp/foo.24722.0"
# # This filename contains 'foo' in its basename.
# file.write("hello world")
# file.rewind
# file.read # => "hello world"
# file.close
# file.unlink # deletes the temp file
#
# == Good practices
#
# === Explicit close
#
# When a Tempfile object is garbage collected, or when the Ruby interpreter
# exits, its associated temporary file is automatically deleted. This means
# that's it's unnecessary to explicitly delete a Tempfile after use, though
# it's good practice to do so: not explicitly deleting unused Tempfiles can
# potentially leave behind large amounts of tempfiles on the filesystem
# until they're garbage collected. The existence of these temp files can make
# it harder to determine a new Tempfile filename.
#
# Therefore, one should always call #unlink or close in an ensure block, like
# this:
#
# file = Tempfile.new('foo')
# begin
# ...do something with file...
# ensure
# file.close
# file.unlink # deletes the temp file
# end
#
# === Unlink after creation
#
# On POSIX systems, it's possible to unlink a file right after creating it,
# and before closing it. This removes the filesystem entry without closing
# the file handle, so it ensures that only the processes that already had
# the file handle open can access the file's contents. It's strongly
# recommended that you do this if you do not want any other processes to
# be able to read from or write to the Tempfile, and you do not need to
# know the Tempfile's filename either.
#
# For example, a practical use case for unlink-after-creation would be this:
# you need a large byte buffer that's too large to comfortably fit in RAM,
# e.g. when you're writing a web server and you want to buffer the client's
# file upload data.
#
# Please refer to #unlink for more information and a code example.
#
# == Minor notes
#
# Tempfile's filename picking method is both thread-safe and inter-process-safe:
# it guarantees that no other threads or processes will pick the same filename.
#
# Tempfile itself however may not be entirely thread-safe. If you access the
# same Tempfile object from multiple threads then you should protect it with a
# mutex.
class Tempfile < DelegateClass(File)
# call-seq:
# new(basename = "", [tmpdir = Dir.tmpdir], [options])
#
# Creates a temporary file with permissions 0600 (= only readable and
# writable by the owner) and opens it with mode "w+".
#
# The +basename+ parameter is used to determine the name of the
# temporary file. You can either pass a String or an Array with
# 2 String elements. In the former form, the temporary file's base
# name will begin with the given string. In the latter form,
# the temporary file's base name will begin with the array's first
# element, and end with the second element. For example:
#
# file = Tempfile.new('hello')
# file.path # => something like: "/tmp/hello2843-8392-92849382--0"
#
# # Use the Array form to enforce an extension in the filename:
# file = Tempfile.new(['hello', '.jpg'])
# file.path # => something like: "/tmp/hello2843-8392-92849382--0.jpg"
#
# The temporary file will be placed in the directory as specified
# by the +tmpdir+ parameter. By default, this is +Dir.tmpdir+.
# When $SAFE > 0 and the given +tmpdir+ is tainted, it uses
# '/tmp' as the temporary directory. Please note that ENV values
# are tainted by default, and +Dir.tmpdir+'s return value might
# come from environment variables (e.g. <tt>$TMPDIR</tt>).
#
# file = Tempfile.new('hello', '/home/aisaka')
# file.path # => something like: "/home/aisaka/hello2843-8392-92849382--0"
#
# You can also pass an options hash. Under the hood, Tempfile creates
# the temporary file using +File.open+. These options will be passed to
# +File.open+. This is mostly useful for specifying encoding
# options, e.g.:
#
# Tempfile.new('hello', '/home/aisaka', :encoding => 'ascii-8bit')
#
# # You can also omit the 'tmpdir' parameter:
# Tempfile.new('hello', :encoding => 'ascii-8bit')
#
# === Exceptions
#
# If Tempfile.new cannot find a unique filename within a limited
# number of tries, then it will raise an exception.
def initialize(basename="", tmpdir=nil, mode: 0, **options)
warn "Tempfile.new doesn't call the given block.", uplevel: 1 if block_given?
@unlinked = false
@mode = mode|File::RDWR|File::CREAT|File::EXCL
::Dir::Tmpname.create(basename, tmpdir, options) do |tmpname, n, opts|
opts[:perm] = 0600
@tmpfile = File.open(tmpname, @mode, opts)
@opts = opts.freeze
end
ObjectSpace.define_finalizer(self, Remover.new(@tmpfile))
super(@tmpfile)
end
# Opens or reopens the file with mode "r+".
def open
_close
mode = @mode & ~(File::CREAT|File::EXCL)
@tmpfile = File.open(@tmpfile.path, mode, @opts)
__setobj__(@tmpfile)
end
def _close # :nodoc:
@tmpfile.close
end
protected :_close
# Closes the file. If +unlink_now+ is true, then the file will be unlinked
# (deleted) after closing. Of course, you can choose to later call #unlink
# if you do not unlink it now.
#
# If you don't explicitly unlink the temporary file, the removal
# will be delayed until the object is finalized.
def close(unlink_now=false)
_close
unlink if unlink_now
end
# Closes and unlinks (deletes) the file. Has the same effect as called
# <tt>close(true)</tt>.
def close!
close(true)
end
# Unlinks (deletes) the file from the filesystem. One should always unlink
# the file after using it, as is explained in the "Explicit close" good
# practice section in the Tempfile overview:
#
# file = Tempfile.new('foo')
# begin
# ...do something with file...
# ensure
# file.close
# file.unlink # deletes the temp file
# end
#
# === Unlink-before-close
#
# On POSIX systems it's possible to unlink a file before closing it. This
# practice is explained in detail in the Tempfile overview (section
# "Unlink after creation"); please refer there for more information.
#
# However, unlink-before-close may not be supported on non-POSIX operating
# systems. Microsoft Windows is the most notable case: unlinking a non-closed
# file will result in an error, which this method will silently ignore. If
# you want to practice unlink-before-close whenever possible, then you should
# write code like this:
#
# file = Tempfile.new('foo')
# file.unlink # On Windows this silently fails.
# begin
# ... do something with file ...
# ensure
# file.close! # Closes the file handle. If the file wasn't unlinked
# # because #unlink failed, then this method will attempt
# # to do so again.
# end
def unlink
return if @unlinked
begin
File.unlink(@tmpfile.path)
rescue Errno::ENOENT
rescue Errno::EACCES
# may not be able to unlink on Windows; just ignore
return
end
ObjectSpace.undefine_finalizer(self)
@unlinked = true
end
alias delete unlink
# Returns the full path name of the temporary file.
# This will be nil if #unlink has been called.
def path
@unlinked ? nil : @tmpfile.path
end
# Returns the size of the temporary file. As a side effect, the IO
# buffer is flushed before determining the size.
def size
if !@tmpfile.closed?
@tmpfile.size # File#size calls rb_io_flush_raw()
else
File.size(@tmpfile.path)
end
end
alias length size
# :stopdoc:
def inspect
if closed?
"#<#{self.class}:#{path} (closed)>"
else
"#<#{self.class}:#{path}>"
end
end
class Remover
def initialize(tmpfile)
@pid = Process.pid
@tmpfile = tmpfile
end
def call(*args)
return if @pid != Process.pid
$stderr.puts "removing #{@tmpfile.path}..." if $DEBUG
@tmpfile.close
begin
File.unlink(@tmpfile.path)
rescue Errno::ENOENT
end
$stderr.puts "done" if $DEBUG
end
end
class << self
# :startdoc:
# Creates a new Tempfile.
#
# If no block is given, this is a synonym for Tempfile.new.
#
# If a block is given, then a Tempfile object will be constructed,
# and the block is run with said object as argument. The Tempfile
# object will be automatically closed after the block terminates.
# The call returns the value of the block.
#
# In any case, all arguments (<code>*args</code>) will be passed to Tempfile.new.
#
# Tempfile.open('foo', '/home/temp') do |f|
# ... do something with f ...
# end
#
# # Equivalent:
# f = Tempfile.open('foo', '/home/temp')
# begin
# ... do something with f ...
# ensure
# f.close
# end
def open(*args)
tempfile = new(*args)
if block_given?
begin
yield(tempfile)
ensure
tempfile.close
end
else
tempfile
end
end
end
end
# Creates a temporary file as usual File object (not Tempfile).
# It doesn't use finalizer and delegation.
#
# If no block is given, this is similar to Tempfile.new except
# creating File instead of Tempfile.
# The created file is not removed automatically.
# You should use File.unlink to remove it.
#
# If a block is given, then a File object will be constructed,
# and the block is invoked with the object as the argument.
# The File object will be automatically closed and
# the temporary file is removed after the block terminates.
# The call returns the value of the block.
#
# In any case, all arguments (+basename+, +tmpdir+, +mode+, and
# <code>**options</code>) will be treated as Tempfile.new.
#
# Tempfile.create('foo', '/home/temp') do |f|
# ... do something with f ...
# end
#
def Tempfile.create(basename="", tmpdir=nil, mode: 0, **options)
tmpfile = nil
Dir::Tmpname.create(basename, tmpdir, options) do |tmpname, n, opts|
mode |= File::RDWR|File::CREAT|File::EXCL
opts[:perm] = 0600
tmpfile = File.open(tmpname, mode, opts)
end
if block_given?
begin
yield tmpfile
ensure
unless tmpfile.closed?
if File.identical?(tmpfile, tmpfile.path)
unlinked = File.unlink tmpfile.path rescue nil
end
tmpfile.close
end
unless unlinked
begin
File.unlink tmpfile.path
rescue Errno::ENOENT
end
end
end
else
tmpfile
end
end