symbian-qemu-0.9.1-12/python-2.6.1/Lib/plat-os2emx/_emx_link.py
author Gareth Stockwell <gareth.stockwell@accenture.com>
Wed, 22 Sep 2010 15:40:40 +0100
branchgraphics-phase-3
changeset 111 345f1c88c950
parent 1 2fb8b9db1c86
permissions -rw-r--r--
Fixes to syborg-graphicswrapper.vcproj These changes allow syborg-graphicswrapper to link against the hostthreadadapter and khronosapiwrapper libraries built by the graphics.simulator component. The .vcproj file uses relative paths, which requires that the following three packages are laid out as follows: os/ graphics adapt/ graphics.simulator qemu

# _emx_link.py

# Written by Andrew I MacIntyre, December 2002.

"""_emx_link.py is a simplistic emulation of the Unix link(2) library routine
for creating so-called hard links.  It is intended to be imported into
the os module in place of the unimplemented (on OS/2) Posix link()
function (os.link()).

We do this on OS/2 by implementing a file copy, with link(2) semantics:-
  - the target cannot already exist;
  - we hope that the actual file open (if successful) is actually
    atomic...

Limitations of this approach/implementation include:-
  - no support for correct link counts (EMX stat(target).st_nlink
    is always 1);
  - thread safety undefined;
  - default file permissions (r+w) used, can't be over-ridden;
  - implemented in Python so comparatively slow, especially for large
    source files;
  - need sufficient free disk space to store the copy.

Behaviour:-
  - any exception should propagate to the caller;
  - want target to be an exact copy of the source, so use binary mode;
  - returns None, same as os.link() which is implemented in posixmodule.c;
  - target removed in the event of a failure where possible;
  - given the motivation to write this emulation came from trying to
    support a Unix resource lock implementation, where minimal overhead
    during creation of the target is desirable and the files are small,
    we read a source block before attempting to create the target so that
    we're ready to immediately write some data into it.
"""

import os
import errno

__all__ = ['link']

def link(source, target):
    """link(source, target) -> None

    Attempt to hard link the source file to the target file name.
    On OS/2, this creates a complete copy of the source file.
    """

    s = os.open(source, os.O_RDONLY | os.O_BINARY)
    if os.isatty(s):
        raise OSError, (errno.EXDEV, 'Cross-device link')
    data = os.read(s, 1024)

    try:
        t = os.open(target, os.O_WRONLY | os.O_BINARY | os.O_CREAT | os.O_EXCL)
    except OSError:
        os.close(s)
        raise

    try:
        while data:
            os.write(t, data)
            data = os.read(s, 1024)
    except OSError:
        os.close(s)
        os.close(t)
        os.unlink(target)
        raise

    os.close(s)
    os.close(t)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    import sys
    try:
        link(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2])
    except IndexError:
        print 'Usage: emx_link <source> <target>'
    except OSError:
        print 'emx_link: %s' % str(sys.exc_info()[1])