mirror of
https://git.tartarus.org/simon/putty.git
synced 2025-01-09 17:38:00 +00:00
8ec55ef25f
It actually doesn't seem to be necessary: running 'otool -L' on the real binary in the application bundle (Pterm-bin or PuTTY-bin) lists a lot of paths starting with "@executable_path/../Resources/", which I take to mean that the application is already set up to automatically load the GTK shared libraries out of its own bundle directory, without me having to give it the extra hint of DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH. Moreover, I just got round to upgrading my Mac to High Sierra, and now the version of osxlaunch _with_ DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH is causing a crash at program load time, when the libpng in the MacOS system library directory tries to use the libz in the application bundle and finds that it doesn't provide an entry point it was expecting ('inflateValidate'). I could try to fix that by updating the libz version in my OS X PuTTY build environment, but that seems to me to set a precedent of running to keep up with any further dependencies the system libraries happen to acquire in later releases. Better to reset DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH so that the system libpng will load the system libz and not get confused in the first place.
472 lines
15 KiB
C
472 lines
15 KiB
C
/*
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* Launcher program for OS X application bundles of PuTTY.
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*/
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/*
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* The 'gtk-mac-bundler' utility arranges to build an OS X application
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* bundle containing a program compiled against the Quartz GTK
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* backend. It does this by including all the necessary GTK shared
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* libraries and data files inside the bundle as well as the binary.
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*
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* But the GTK program won't start up unless all those shared
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* libraries etc are already pointed to by environment variables like
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* GTK_PATH and PANGO_LIBDIR and things like that, which won't be set
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* up when the bundle is launched.
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*
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* Hence, gtk-mac-bundler expects to install the program in the bundle
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* under a name like 'Contents/MacOS/Program-bin'; and the file called
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* 'Contents/MacOS/Program', which is the one actually executed when
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* the bundle is launched, is a wrapper script that sets up the
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* environment before running the actual GTK-using program.
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*
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* In our case, however, that's not good enough. pterm will want to
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* launch subprocesses with general-purpose shell sessions in them,
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* and those subprocesses _won't_ want the random stuff dumped in the
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* environment by the gtk-mac-bundler standard wrapper script. So I
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* have to provide my own wrapper, which has a more complicated job:
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* not only setting up the environment for the GTK app, but also
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* preserving all details of the _previous_ environment, so that when
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* pterm forks off a subprocess to run in a terminal session, it can
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* restore the environment that was in force before the wrapper
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* started messing about. This source file implements that wrapper,
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* and does it in C so as to make string processing more reliable and
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* less annoying.
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*
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* My strategy for saving the old environment is to pick a prefix
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* that's unused by anything currently in the environment; let's
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* suppose it's "P" for this discussion. Any environment variable I
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* overwrite, say "VAR", I will either set "PsVAR=old value", or
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* "PuVAR=" ("s" and "u" for "set" and "unset"). Then I pass the
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* prefix itself as a command-line argument to the main GTK
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* application binary, which then knows how to restore the original
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* environment in pterm subprocesses.
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*/
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#include <assert.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <stdint.h>
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <string.h>
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#if !defined __APPLE__ && !defined TEST_COMPILE_ON_LINUX
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/* When we're not compiling for OS X, it's easier to just turn this
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* program into a trivial hello-world by ifdef in the source than it
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* is to remove it in the makefile edifice. */
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int main(int argc, char **argv)
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{
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fprintf(stderr, "launcher does nothing on non-OSX platforms\n");
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return 1;
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}
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#else /* __APPLE__ */
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#include <unistd.h>
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#include <libgen.h>
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#ifdef __APPLE__
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#include <mach-o/dyld.h>
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#else
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/* For Linux, a bodge to let as much of this code still run as
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* possible, so that you can run it under friendly debugging tools
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* like valgrind. */
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int _NSGetExecutablePath(char *out, uint32_t *outlen)
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{
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static const char toret[] = "/proc/self/exe";
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if (out != NULL && *outlen < sizeof(toret))
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return -1;
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*outlen = sizeof(toret);
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if (out)
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memcpy(out, toret, sizeof(toret));
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return 0;
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}
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#endif
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* Find an alphabetic prefix unused by any environment variable name.
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*/
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/*
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* This linked-list based system is a bit overkill, but I enjoy an
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* algorithmic challenge. We essentially do an incremental radix sort
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* of all the existing environment variable names: initially divide
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* them into 26 buckets by their first letter (discarding those that
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* don't have a letter at that position), then subdivide each bucket
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* in turn into 26 sub-buckets, and so on. We maintain each bucket as
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* a linked list, and link their heads together into a secondary list
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* that functions as a queue (meaning that we go breadth-first,
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* processing all the buckets of a given depth before moving on to the
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* next depth down). At any stage, if we find one of our 26
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* sub-buckets is empty, that's our unused prefix.
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*
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* The running time is O(number of strings * length of output), and I
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* doubt it's possible to do better.
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*/
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#define FANOUT 26
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int char_index(int ch)
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{
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if (ch >= 'A' && ch <= 'Z')
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return ch - 'A';
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else if (ch >= 'a' && ch <= 'z')
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return ch - 'a';
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else
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return -1;
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}
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struct bucket {
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int prefixlen;
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struct bucket *next_bucket;
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struct node *first_node;
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};
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struct node {
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const char *string;
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int len, prefixlen;
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struct node *next;
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};
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struct node *new_node(struct node *prev_head, const char *string, int len)
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{
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struct node *ret = (struct node *)malloc(sizeof(struct node));
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if (!ret) {
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fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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ret->next = prev_head;
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ret->string = string;
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ret->len = len;
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return ret;
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}
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char *get_unused_env_prefix(void)
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{
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struct bucket *qhead, *qtail;
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extern char **environ;
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char **e;
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qhead = (struct bucket *)malloc(sizeof(struct bucket));
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if (!qhead) {
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fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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qhead->prefixlen = 0;
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qhead->first_node = NULL;
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qhead->next_bucket = NULL;
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for (e = environ; *e; e++)
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qhead->first_node = new_node(qhead->first_node, *e, strcspn(*e, "="));
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qtail = qhead;
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while (1) {
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struct bucket *buckets[FANOUT];
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struct node *bucketnode;
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int i, index;
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for (i = 0; i < FANOUT; i++) {
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buckets[i] = (struct bucket *)malloc(sizeof(struct bucket));
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if (!buckets[i]) {
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fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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buckets[i]->prefixlen = qhead->prefixlen + 1;
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buckets[i]->first_node = NULL;
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qtail->next_bucket = buckets[i];
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qtail = buckets[i];
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}
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qtail->next_bucket = NULL;
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bucketnode = qhead->first_node;
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while (bucketnode) {
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struct node *node = bucketnode;
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bucketnode = bucketnode->next;
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if (node->len <= qhead->prefixlen)
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continue;
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index = char_index(node->string[qhead->prefixlen]);
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if (!(index >= 0 && index < FANOUT))
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continue;
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node->prefixlen++;
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node->next = buckets[index]->first_node;
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buckets[index]->first_node = node;
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}
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for (i = 0; i < FANOUT; i++) {
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if (!buckets[i]->first_node) {
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char *ret = malloc(qhead->prefixlen + 2);
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if (!ret) {
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fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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memcpy(ret, qhead->first_node->string, qhead->prefixlen);
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ret[qhead->prefixlen] = i + 'A';
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ret[qhead->prefixlen + 1] = '\0';
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/* This would be where we freed everything, if we
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* didn't know it didn't matter because we were
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* imminently going to exec another program */
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return ret;
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}
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}
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qhead = qhead->next_bucket;
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}
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}
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* Get the pathname of this executable, so we can locate the rest of
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* the app bundle relative to it.
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*/
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/*
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* There are several ways to try to retrieve the pathname to the
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* running executable:
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*
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* (a) Declare main() as taking four arguments int main(int argc, char
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* **argv, char **envp, char **apple); and look at apple[0].
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*
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* (b) Use sysctl(KERN_PROCARGS) to get the process arguments for the
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* current pid. This involves two steps:
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* - sysctl(mib, 2, &argmax, &argmax_size, NULL, 0)
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* + mib is an array[2] of int containing
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* { CTL_KERN, KERN_ARGMAX }
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* + argmax is an int
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* + argmax_size is a size_t initialised to sizeof(argmax)
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* + returns in argmax the amount of memory you need for the next
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* call.
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* - sysctl(mib, 3, procargs, &procargs_size, NULL, 0)
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* + mib is an array[3] of int containing
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* { CTL_KERN, KERN_PROCARGS, current pid }
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* + procargs is a buffer of size 'argmax'
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* + procargs_size is a size_t initialised to argmax
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* + returns in the procargs buffer a collection of
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* zero-terminated strings of which the first is the program
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* name.
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*
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* (c) Call _NSGetExecutablePath, once to find out the needed buffer
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* size and again to fetch the actual path.
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*
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* (d) Use Objective-C and Cocoa and call
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* [[[NSProcessInfo processInfo] arguments] objectAtIndex: 0].
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*
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* So, how do those work in various cases? Experiments show:
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*
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* - if you run the program as 'binary' (or whatever you called it)
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* and rely on the shell to search your PATH, all four methods
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* return a sensible-looking absolute pathname.
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*
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* - if you run the program as './binary', (a) and (b) return just
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* "./binary", which has a particularly bad race condition if you
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* try to convert it into an absolute pathname using realpath(3).
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* (c) returns "/full/path/to/./binary", which still needs
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* realpath(3)ing to get rid of that ".", but at least it's
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* _trying_ to be fully qualified. (d) returns
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* "/full/path/to/binary" - full marks!
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* + Similar applies if you run it via a more interesting relative
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* path such as one with a ".." in: (c) gives you an absolute
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* path containing a ".." element, whereas (d) has sorted that
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* out.
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*
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* - if you run the program via a path with a symlink on, _none_ of
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* these options successfully returns a path without the symlink.
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*
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* That last point suggests that even (d) is not a perfect solution on
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* its own, and you'll have to realpath() whatever you get back from
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* it regardless.
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*
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* And (d) is extra inconvenient because it returns an NSString, which
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* is implicitly Unicode, so it's not clear how you turn that back
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* into a char * representing a correct Unix pathname (what charset
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* should you interpret it in?). Also because you have to bring in all
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* of ObjC and Cocoa, which for a low-level Unix API client like this
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* seems like overkill.
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*
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* So my conclusion is that (c) is most practical for these purposes.
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*/
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char *get_program_path(void)
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{
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char *our_path;
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uint32_t pathlen = 0;
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_NSGetExecutablePath(NULL, &pathlen);
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our_path = malloc(pathlen);
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if (!our_path) {
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fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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if (_NSGetExecutablePath(our_path, &pathlen)) {
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fprintf(stderr, "unable to get launcher executable path\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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/* OS X guarantees to malloc the return value if we pass NULL */
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char *our_real_path = realpath(our_path, NULL);
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if (!our_real_path) {
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fprintf(stderr, "realpath failed\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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free(our_path);
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return our_real_path;
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}
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* Wrapper on dirname(3) which mallocs its return value to whatever
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* size is needed.
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*/
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char *dirname_wrapper(const char *path)
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{
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char *path_copy = malloc(strlen(path) + 1);
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if (!path_copy) {
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fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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strcpy(path_copy, path);
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char *ret_orig = dirname(path_copy);
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char *ret = malloc(strlen(ret_orig) + 1);
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if (!ret) {
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fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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strcpy(ret, ret_orig);
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free(path_copy);
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return ret;
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}
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* mallocing string concatenation function.
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*/
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char *alloc_cat(const char *str1, const char *str2)
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{
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int len1 = strlen(str1), len2 = strlen(str2);
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char *ret = malloc(len1 + len2 + 1);
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if (!ret) {
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fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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strcpy(ret, str1);
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strcpy(ret + len1, str2);
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return ret;
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}
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* Overwrite an environment variable, preserving the old one for the
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* real app to restore.
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*/
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void setenv_wrap(const char *name, const char *value)
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{
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#ifdef DEBUG_OSXLAUNCH
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printf("setenv(\"%s\",\"%s\")\n", name, value);
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#endif
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setenv(name, value, 1);
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}
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void unsetenv_wrap(const char *name)
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{
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#ifdef DEBUG_OSXLAUNCH
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printf("unsetenv(\"%s\")\n", name);
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#endif
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unsetenv(name);
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}
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char *prefix, *prefixset, *prefixunset;
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void overwrite_env(const char *name, const char *value)
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{
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const char *oldvalue = getenv(name);
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if (oldvalue) {
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setenv_wrap(alloc_cat(prefixset, name), oldvalue);
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} else {
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setenv_wrap(alloc_cat(prefixunset, name), "");
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}
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if (value)
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setenv_wrap(name, value);
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else
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unsetenv_wrap(name);
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}
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* Main program.
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*/
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int main(int argc, char **argv)
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{
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prefix = get_unused_env_prefix();
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prefixset = alloc_cat(prefix, "s");
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prefixunset = alloc_cat(prefix, "u");
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#ifdef DEBUG_OSXLAUNCH
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printf("Environment prefixes: main=\"%s\", set=\"%s\", unset=\"%s\"\n",
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prefix, prefixset, prefixunset);
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#endif
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char *prog_path = get_program_path(); // <bundle>/Contents/MacOS/<filename>
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char *macos = dirname_wrapper(prog_path); // <bundle>/Contents/MacOS
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char *contents = dirname_wrapper(macos); // <bundle>/Contents
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// char *bundle = dirname_wrapper(contents); // <bundle>
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char *resources = alloc_cat(contents, "/Resources");
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// char *bin = alloc_cat(resources, "/bin");
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char *etc = alloc_cat(resources, "/etc");
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char *lib = alloc_cat(resources, "/lib");
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char *share = alloc_cat(resources, "/share");
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char *xdg = alloc_cat(etc, "/xdg");
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// char *gtkrc = alloc_cat(etc, "/gtk-2.0/gtkrc");
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char *locale = alloc_cat(share, "/locale");
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char *realbin = alloc_cat(prog_path, "-bin");
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// overwrite_env("DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH", lib);
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overwrite_env("XDG_CONFIG_DIRS", xdg);
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overwrite_env("XDG_DATA_DIRS", share);
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overwrite_env("GTK_DATA_PREFIX", resources);
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overwrite_env("GTK_EXE_PREFIX", resources);
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overwrite_env("GTK_PATH", resources);
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overwrite_env("PANGO_LIBDIR", lib);
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overwrite_env("PANGO_SYSCONFDIR", etc);
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overwrite_env("I18NDIR", locale);
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overwrite_env("LANG", NULL);
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overwrite_env("LC_MESSAGES", NULL);
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overwrite_env("LC_MONETARY", NULL);
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overwrite_env("LC_COLLATE", NULL);
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char **new_argv = malloc((argc + 16) * sizeof(const char *));
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if (!new_argv) {
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fprintf(stderr, "out of memory\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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int j = 0;
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new_argv[j++] = realbin;
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#ifdef DEBUG_OSXLAUNCH
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printf("argv[%d] = \"%s\"\n", j-1, new_argv[j-1]);
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#endif
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{
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int i = 1;
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if (i < argc && !strncmp(argv[i], "-psn_", 5))
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i++;
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for (; i < argc; i++) {
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new_argv[j++] = argv[i];
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#ifdef DEBUG_OSXLAUNCH
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printf("argv[%d] = \"%s\"\n", j-1, new_argv[j-1]);
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#endif
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}
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}
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new_argv[j++] = prefix;
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#ifdef DEBUG_OSXLAUNCH
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printf("argv[%d] = \"%s\"\n", j-1, new_argv[j-1]);
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#endif
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new_argv[j++] = NULL;
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#ifdef DEBUG_OSXLAUNCH
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printf("executing \"%s\"\n", realbin);
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#endif
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execv(realbin, new_argv);
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perror("execv");
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free(new_argv);
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free(contents);
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free(macos);
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return 127;
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}
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#endif /* __APPLE__ */
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