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/usr/share/perl5/Unix/ConfigFile.pm is in libunix-configfile-perl 0.6-1.

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package Unix::ConfigFile;

# $Id: ConfigFile.pm,v 1.6 2000/05/02 15:49:19 ssnodgra Exp $

use 5.004;
use strict;
use vars qw($VERSION @ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK $LOCKEXT);
use Carp;
use IO::File;
use Fcntl qw(:flock);
use Text::Tabs;

require Exporter;

@ISA = qw(Exporter);
# Items to export into callers namespace by default. Note: do not export
# names by default without a very good reason. Use EXPORT_OK instead.
# Do not simply export all your public functions/methods/constants.
@EXPORT = qw(
	
);
$VERSION = '0.06';

# Package variables
my $SALTCHARS = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789/.";

# Preloaded methods go here.

# Create a new ConfigFile (or, more likely, a ConfigFile subclass) object.
# Opens the specified file and calls the read method (which will be located
# in the subclass package) to initialize the object data structures
sub new {
    my ($pkg, $filename, %opt) = @_;

    # Initialize the object reference
    my $this = {
	filename    =>	$filename,
	handle	    =>	undef,
	locked	    =>	0,
	lockfh	    =>	undef,
	lockfile    =>	"$filename.lock",
	locking	    =>	"dotlock",
	mode	    =>	"r+",
	seq	    =>	[ ]
    };
    bless $this, $pkg;

    # Set options
    $this->lockfile($opt{lockfile}) if defined $opt{lockfile};
    $this->locking($opt{locking}) if defined $opt{locking};
    $this->mode($opt{mode}) if defined $opt{mode};

    # Get a filehandle
    my $fh = new IO::File $this->filename, $this->mode;
    return undef unless defined($fh);
    $this->fh($fh);

    # Do file locking - this must happen before read is called or we could
    # end up with stale data in memory
    if ($this->mode eq "r") {
	$this->lock("shared") or return undef;
    }
    else {
	$this->lock() or return undef;
    }

    # Initialize object structure from the file
    if (exists $opt{readopts}) {
	$this->read($this->fh, $opt{readopts}) or return undef;
    }
    else {
	$this->read($this->fh) or return undef;
    }
    return $this;
}


# Commit in-memory changes to disk
sub commit {
    my ($this, %opt) = @_;

    return 0 if $this->mode eq "r";
    my $tempname = $this->filename . ".tmp." . $$;
    my $fh = new IO::File ">$tempname" or return 0;
    my ($mode, $uid, $gid) = (stat $this->fh)[2,4,5];
    chown $uid, $gid, $tempname;
    chmod $mode, $tempname;
    if (exists $opt{writeopts}) {
	$this->write($fh, $opt{writeopts}) or return 0;
    }
    else {
	$this->write($fh) or return 0;
    }
    undef $fh;
    if (defined $opt{backup}) {
	rename $this->filename, $this->filename . $opt{backup};
    }
    return rename $tempname, $this->filename;
}


# This method is absolutely necessary to prevent leftover lock files
sub DESTROY {
    my $this = shift;

    $this->unlock() or croak "Can't unlock file: $!";
    $this->fh->close();
}


# Filename accessor
sub filename {
    my $this = shift;
    @_ ? $this->{filename} = shift : $this->{filename};
}


# Filehandle accessor
sub fh {
    my $this = shift;
    @_ ? $this->{handle} = shift : $this->{handle};
}


# Locking method accessor
sub locking {
    my $this = shift;

    return $this->{locking} unless @_;
    my $lockmethod = shift;
    return undef unless grep { $lockmethod eq $_ } qw(flock dotlock none);
    $this->{locking} = $lockmethod;
}


# Lock filehandle accessor
sub lockfh {
    my $this = shift;
    @_ ? $this->{lockfh} = shift : $this->{lockfh};
}


# Lock file name accessor
sub lockfile {
    my $this = shift;
    @_ ? $this->{lockfile} = shift : $this->{lockfile};
}


# Mode accessor
sub mode {
    my $this = shift;
    return $this->{mode} unless @_;
    my $mode = shift;
    return undef unless grep { $mode eq $_ } qw(r r+ w);
    $this->{mode} = $mode;
}


# Obtain a lock on the file.  You can pass "shared" to request a shared lock;
# the default is exclusive.  This function is somewhat inconsistent at the
# moment since it will block with the flock method but return an error if the
# dotlock method fails.
sub lock {
    my $this = shift;

    return 1 if ($this->locking eq "none");
    return 0 if $this->{locked};
    if ($this->locking eq "flock") {
	@_ ? flock $this->fh, LOCK_SH : flock $this->fh, LOCK_EX;
    }
    elsif ($this->locking eq "dotlock") {
	# We only support exclusive locks with dotlock
	my $fh = new IO::File $this->lockfile, O_CREAT|O_EXCL|O_RDWR;
	return 0 unless defined($fh);
	$this->lockfh($fh);
    }
    $this->{locked} = 1;
}


# Unlock the file
sub unlock {
    my $this = shift;

    # NOTE: Originally I wasn't unlinking the lock file unless the lock
    # filehandle was defined.  This led to the rather unexpected discovery
    # the Perl would sometimes destroy the filehandle before destroying
    # the object during program shutdown.  Thus, we now check if locked
    # is set, which happens only if a lock is successfully acquired.
    # This also prevents us from unlinking someone else's lock file.

    return 1 if ($this->locking eq "none");
    return 0 unless $this->{locked};
    $this->{locked} = 0;
    if ($this->locking eq "flock") {
	flock $this->fh, LOCK_UN;
	return 1;
    }
    elsif ($this->locking eq "dotlock") {
	$this->lockfh->close() if defined($this->lockfh);
	my $result = unlink $this->lockfile;
	return ($result == 1);
    }
}


# Encrypts a plaintext password with a random salt
# This is provided for use with the subclasses
sub encpass {
    my ($this, $pass) = @_;

    my $salt = substr($SALTCHARS, int(rand(length($SALTCHARS))), 1) .
	       substr($SALTCHARS, int(rand(length($SALTCHARS))), 1);
    crypt($pass, $salt);
}


# Return the file sequence
sub sequence {
    my $this = shift;
    return @{$this->{seq}};
}


# Append information to the file sequence
sub seq_append {
    my $this = shift;
    push @{$this->{seq}}, @_;
}


# Insert information into the file sequence before the given data
sub seq_insert {
    my $this = shift;
    my $data = shift;

    for (my $i = 0; $i < @{$this->{seq}}; $i++) {
	if ($this->{seq}[$i] eq $data) {
	    splice @{$this->{seq}}, $i, 0, @_;
	    return 1;
	}
    }
    return 0;
}


# Remove the specified data from the file sequence
sub seq_remove {
    my ($this, $data) = @_;

    for (my $i = 0; $i < @{$this->{seq}}; $i++) {
	if ($this->{seq}[$i] eq $data) {
	    splice @{$this->{seq}}, $i, 1;
	    return 1;
	}
    }
    return 0;
}


# Joinwrap is a utility function that happens to be useful in several modules
# This thing was a bitch to get working 100% right, so use caution.  :-)
sub joinwrap {
    my ($this, $linelen, $head, $indent, $delim, $tail, @list) = @_;

    my $result = "";
    my $line = 0;
    $linelen -= length(expand($tail));
    while (@list) {
	my $curline = $result ? $indent : $head;
	$curline =~ s/%n/$line/;
	my $appended = 0;
	while (@list && length(expand($curline . $delim . $list[0])) <= $linelen) {
	    $curline .= $delim if $appended;
	    $curline .= shift @list;
	    $appended++;
	}
	# Special case - element is longer than linelen
	$curline .= shift @list unless $appended;
	# Append newline if this isn't the first line
	$result .= "\n" if $result;
	$result .= $curline;
	# Append tail unless this is the last line
	$result .= $tail if @list;
	$line++;
    }
    $result ? $result : $head;
}


# Autoload methods go after =cut, and are processed by the autosplit program.

1;
__END__

=head1 NAME

Unix::ConfigFile - Perl interface to various Unix configuration files

=head1 SYNOPSIS

  use Unix::ConfigFile;

=head1 DESCRIPTION

The Unix::ConfigFile module provides a base class from which the other
Unix::*File modules are derived.  It provides some basic facilities like file
opening, locking, and closing.  You do not need to use this module directly
unless you are developing a derived module for an unsupported configuration
file.  However, some of the methods documented here are intended for public
use by users of Unix::ConfigFile submodules, so you may find this
documentation useful even if you are not developing your own module.

The ConfigFile object also provides a sequencing API for modules that wish to
preserve the order of the configuration file they read and write.  The
sequencer maintains a list of arbitrary data that a submodule may append,
insert, and delete from.  Use of the sequencer is completely optional.

A module that subclasses from Unix::ConfigFile must, at a minimum, provide two
methods, called "read" and "write".  Both methods will receive a filehandle as
a parameter (besides the regular object parameter).  The read method is called
after the file is opened.  It is expected to read in the configuration file
and initialize the subclass-specific data structures associated with the
object.  The write method is called when an object is committed and is
expected to write out the new configuration to the supplied filehandle.

=head1 USER METHODS

=head2 commit( [%OPTIONS] )

This writes any changes you have made to the object back to disk.  If you do
not call commit, none of your changes will be reflected in the file you are
modifying.  Commit may not be called on files opened in read-only mode.  There
are some optional parameters that may be provided; these are passed in the form
of key => value pairs.  The "backup" option allows you to specify a file
extension that will be used to save a backup of the original file.  The
"writeopts" option passes module-specific options through to the write method.
It will accept any scalar for its value; typically this will be a list or hash
reference.  Commit returns 1 on success and 0 on failure.

=head2 encpass( PASSWORD )

This method encrypts the supplied plaintext password using a random salt and
returns the encrypted password.  Note that this method does not actually make
any use of the object that it is invoked on, and could be called as a class
method.

=head2 new( FILENAME [,%OPTIONS] )

The new method constructs a new ConfigFile (or subclass) object using the
specified FILENAME.  There are several optional parameters that may be
specified.  Options must be passed as keyed pairs in the form of option =>
value.  Valid options are "locking", "lockfile", "mode", and "readopts".  The
locking option determines what style of file locking is used; available styles
are "dotlock", "flock", and "none".  The default locking style is "dotlock".
The "none" locking style causes no locking to be done, and all lock and unlock
requests will return success.  The lockfile option can be used to specify the
lock filename used with dotlocking.  The default is "FILENAME.lock", where
FILENAME is the name of the file being opened.  The mode option allows the
file open mode to be specified.  The default mode is "r+" (read/write), but
"r" and "w" are accepted as well.  Finally, the readopts option allows
module-specific options to be passed through to the read method.  It will
accept any scalar for its value; typically this will be a list or hash
reference.

=head1 DEVELOPER METHODS

=head2 joinwrap( LENGTH, HEAD, INDENT, DELIM, TAIL, @LIST )

This is a utility function that may be called as an object or class method.
As the name suggests, this method is basically a version of the join function
that incorporates line wrapping.  The specified list will be joined together,
with each list element separated by the specified delimiter.  The first line
of output will be prefixed with the HEAD parameter.  If a line exceeds the
length parameter, output is wrapped to the next line and the INDENT parameter
is used to prefix the line.  In addition, the TAIL parameter will be added to
the end of every line generated except the final one.  There is one case where
the resulting string can exceed the specified line length - if a single list
element, plus HEAD or INDENT, exceeds that length.  One final feature is that
if the HEAD or INDENT parameters contain the text '%n', it will be replaced
with the current line number, beginning at 0.

=head2 sequence( )

Returns the current sequence list associated with the object.  This is a list
of arbitrary data maintained by a ConfigFile submodule.  The ConfigFile module
does not care what is contained in the list.

=head2 seq_append( @DATA )

Appends that specified data to the end of the sequence list.

=head2 seq_insert( KEY, @DATA )

Inserts the data into the sequence list before the data that matches the
specified key.

=head2 seq_remove( KEY )

Removes the data from the sequence list that matches the specified key.

=head1 AUTHOR

Steve Snodgrass, ssnodgra@fore.com

=head1 SEE ALSO

Unix::AliasFile, Unix::AutomountFile, Unix::GroupFile, Unix::PasswdFile

=cut