view mercurial/exewrapper.c @ 31769:594dd384803c

test-serve: make the 'listening at *' lines optional The daemonized serve process doesn't print these lines out (see 448d0c452140). I was able to get it to with the following hack: diff --git a/mercurial/win32.py b/mercurial/win32.py --- a/mercurial/win32.py +++ b/mercurial/win32.py @@ -418,6 +418,11 @@ return str(ppid) def spawndetached(args): + + import subprocess + return subprocess.Popen(args, cwd=pycompat.getcwd(), env=encoding.environ, + creationflags=subprocess.CREATE_NEW_PROCESS_GROUP).pid + # No standard library function really spawns a fully detached # process under win32 because they allocate pipes or other objects # to handle standard streams communications. Passing these objects However, MSYS translates --prefixes starting with '/' to 'C:/MinGW/msys/1.0', which changes the output. The output isn't so important that I want to spend a bunch of time on this, and risk breaking some subtle behavior of `hg serve -d` with the more complicated code.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sun, 02 Apr 2017 00:56:52 -0400
parents 0241dd94ed38
children 31c6c4d27be7
line wrap: on
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/*
 exewrapper.c - wrapper for calling a python script on Windows

 Copyright 2012 Adrian Buehlmann <adrian@cadifra.com> and others

 This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
 GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
*/

#include <stdio.h>
#include <windows.h>

#include "hgpythonlib.h"

#ifdef __GNUC__
int strcat_s(char *d, size_t n, const char *s)
{
	return !strncat(d, s, n);
}
int strcpy_s(char *d, size_t n, const char *s)
{
	return !strncpy(d, s, n);
}
#endif


static char pyscript[MAX_PATH + 10];
static char pyhome[MAX_PATH + 10];
static char envpyhome[MAX_PATH + 10];
static char pydllfile[MAX_PATH + 10];

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
	char *p;
	int ret;
	int i;
	int n;
	char **pyargv;
	WIN32_FIND_DATA fdata;
	HANDLE hfind;
	const char *err;
	HMODULE pydll;
	void (__cdecl *Py_SetPythonHome)(char *home);
	int (__cdecl *Py_Main)(int argc, char *argv[]);

	if (GetModuleFileName(NULL, pyscript, sizeof(pyscript)) == 0)
	{
		err = "GetModuleFileName failed";
		goto bail;
	}

	p = strrchr(pyscript, '.');
	if (p == NULL) {
		err = "malformed module filename";
		goto bail;
	}
	*p = 0; /* cut trailing ".exe" */
	strcpy_s(pyhome, sizeof(pyhome), pyscript);

	hfind = FindFirstFile(pyscript, &fdata);
	if (hfind != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
		/* pyscript exists, close handle */
		FindClose(hfind);
	} else {
		/* file pyscript isn't there, take <pyscript>exe.py */
		strcat_s(pyscript, sizeof(pyscript), "exe.py");
	}

	pydll = NULL;

	p = strrchr(pyhome, '\\');
	if (p == NULL) {
		err = "can't find backslash in module filename";
		goto bail;
	}
	*p = 0; /* cut at directory */

	/* check for private Python of HackableMercurial */
	strcat_s(pyhome, sizeof(pyhome), "\\hg-python");

	hfind = FindFirstFile(pyhome, &fdata);
	if (hfind != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
		/* Path .\hg-python exists. We are probably in HackableMercurial
		scenario, so let's load python dll from this dir. */
		FindClose(hfind);
		strcpy_s(pydllfile, sizeof(pydllfile), pyhome);
		strcat_s(pydllfile, sizeof(pydllfile), "\\" HGPYTHONLIB ".dll");
		pydll = LoadLibrary(pydllfile);
		if (pydll == NULL) {
			err = "failed to load private Python DLL " HGPYTHONLIB ".dll";
			goto bail;
		}
		Py_SetPythonHome = (void*)GetProcAddress(pydll, "Py_SetPythonHome");
		if (Py_SetPythonHome == NULL) {
			err = "failed to get Py_SetPythonHome";
			goto bail;
		}
		Py_SetPythonHome(pyhome);
	}

	if (pydll == NULL) {
		pydll = LoadLibrary(HGPYTHONLIB ".dll");
		if (pydll == NULL) {
			err = "failed to load Python DLL " HGPYTHONLIB ".dll";
			goto bail;
		}
	}

	Py_Main = (void*)GetProcAddress(pydll, "Py_Main");
	if (Py_Main == NULL) {
		err = "failed to get Py_Main";
		goto bail;
	}

	/*
	Only add the pyscript to the args, if it's not already there. It may
	already be there, if the script spawned a child process of itself, in
	the same way as it got called, that is, with the pyscript already in
	place. So we optionally accept the pyscript as the first argument
	(argv[1]), letting our exe taking the role of the python interpreter.
	*/
	if (argc >= 2 && strcmp(argv[1], pyscript) == 0) {
		/*
		pyscript is already in the args, so there is no need to copy
		the args and we can directly call the python interpreter with
		the original args.
		*/
		return Py_Main(argc, argv);
	}

	/*
	Start assembling the args for the Python interpreter call. We put the
	name of our exe (argv[0]) in the position where the python.exe
	canonically is, and insert the pyscript next.
	*/
	pyargv = malloc((argc + 5) * sizeof(char*));
	if (pyargv == NULL) {
		err = "not enough memory";
		goto bail;
	}
	n = 0;
	pyargv[n++] = argv[0];
	pyargv[n++] = pyscript;

	/* copy remaining args from the command line */
	for (i = 1; i < argc; i++)
		pyargv[n++] = argv[i];
	/* argv[argc] is guaranteed to be NULL, so we forward that guarantee */
	pyargv[n] = NULL;

	ret = Py_Main(n, pyargv); /* The Python interpreter call */

	free(pyargv);
	return ret;

bail:
	fprintf(stderr, "abort: %s\n", err);
	return 255;
}