/* * CDDL HEADER START * * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the * Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). * You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * * You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE * or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions * and limitations under the License. * * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each * file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. * If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the * fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying * information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] * * CDDL HEADER END */ /* * Copyright 2006 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. * Use is subject to license terms. */ /* * Copyright (c) 1980 Regents of the University of California. * All rights reserved. The Berkeley software License Agreement * specifies the terms and conditions for redistribution. */ #pragma ident "%Z%%M% %I% %E% SMI" #ifndef KERNEL #define KERNEL #endif #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include /* * Convert time between DOS formats: * - years since 1980 * - months/days/hours/minutes/seconds, local TZ * and the UNIX format (seconds since 01/01/1970, 00:00:00 UT). * * Timezones are adjusted for via mount option arg (secondswest), * but daylight savings time corrections are not made. Calculated * time may therefore end up being wrong by an hour, but this: * a) will happen as well if media is interchanged between * two DOS/Windows-based systems that use different * timezone settings * b) is the best option we have unless we decide to put * a full ctime(3C) framework into the kernel, including * all conversion tables - AND keeping them current ... */ int pc_tvtopct(timestruc_t *, struct pctime *); void pc_pcttotv(struct pctime *, int64_t *); /* * Macros/Definitons required to convert between DOS-style and * UNIX-style time recording. * DOS year zero is 1980. */ static int daysinmonth[] = { 31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31 }; #define YEAR_ZERO 1980 #define YZ_SECS (((8 * 365) + (2 * 366)) * 86400) #define FAT_ENDOFTIME \ LE_16(23 << HOURSHIFT | 59 << MINSHIFT | (59/2) << SECSHIFT) #define FAT_ENDOFDATE \ LE_16(127 << YEARSHIFT | 12 << MONSHIFT | 31 << DAYSHIFT) #define leap_year(y) \ (((y) % 4) == 0 && (((y) % 100) != 0 || ((y) % 400) == 0)) static int days_in_year(int y) { return (leap_year((y)) ? 366 : 365); } static int days_in_month(int m, int y) { if (m == 2 && leap_year(y)) return (29); else return (daysinmonth[m-1]); } struct pcfs_args pc_tz; /* this is set by pcfs_mount */ /* * Convert time from UNIX to DOS format. * Return EOVERFLOW in case no valid DOS time representation * exists for the given UNIX time. */ int pc_tvtopct( timestruc_t *tvp, /* UNIX time input */ struct pctime *pctp) /* pctime output */ { uint_t year, month, day, hour, min, sec; int64_t unixtime; unixtime = (int64_t)tvp->tv_sec; unixtime -= YZ_SECS; unixtime -= pc_tz.secondswest; if (unixtime <= 0) { /* * "before beginning of all time" for DOS ... */ return (EOVERFLOW); } for (year = YEAR_ZERO; unixtime >= days_in_year(year) * 86400; year++) unixtime -= 86400 * days_in_year(year); if (year > 127 + YEAR_ZERO) { /* * "past end of all time" for DOS - can happen * on a 64bit kernel via utimes() syscall ... */ return (EOVERFLOW); } for (month = 1; unixtime >= 86400 * days_in_month(month, year); month++) unixtime -= 86400 * days_in_month(month, year); year -= YEAR_ZERO; day = (int)(unixtime / 86400); unixtime -= 86400 * day++; /* counting starts at 1 */ hour = (int)(unixtime / 3600); unixtime -= 3600 * hour; min = (int)(unixtime / 60); unixtime -= 60 * min; sec = (int)unixtime; PC_DPRINTF3(1, "ux2pc date: %d.%d.%d\n", day, month, YEAR_ZERO + year); PC_DPRINTF3(1, "ux2pc time: %dh%dm%ds\n", hour, min, sec); PC_DPRINTF1(1, "ux2pc unixtime: %lld\n", (long long)(unixtime)); ASSERT(year >= 0 && year < 128); ASSERT(month >= 1 && month <= 12); ASSERT(day >= 1 && day <= days_in_month(month, year)); ASSERT(hour < 24); ASSERT(min < 60); ASSERT(sec < 60); pctp->pct_time = LE_16(hour << HOURSHIFT | min << MINSHIFT | (sec / 2) << SECSHIFT); pctp->pct_date = LE_16(year << YEARSHIFT | month << MONSHIFT | day << DAYSHIFT); return (0); } /* * Convert time from DOS to UNIX time format. * Since FAT timestamps cannot be expressed in 32bit time_t, * the calculation is performed using 64bit values. It's up to * the caller to decide what to do for out-of-UNIX-range values. */ void pc_pcttotv( struct pctime *pctp, /* DOS time input */ int64_t *unixtime) /* caller converts to time_t */ { uint_t year, month, day, hour, min, sec; sec = 2 * ((LE_16(pctp->pct_time) >> SECSHIFT) & SECMASK); min = (LE_16(pctp->pct_time) >> MINSHIFT) & MINMASK; hour = (LE_16(pctp->pct_time) >> HOURSHIFT) & HOURMASK; day = (LE_16(pctp->pct_date) >> DAYSHIFT) & DAYMASK; month = (LE_16(pctp->pct_date) >> MONSHIFT) & MONMASK; year = (LE_16(pctp->pct_date) >> YEARSHIFT) & YEARMASK; year += YEAR_ZERO; /* * Basic sanity checks. The FAT timestamp bitfields allow for * impossible dates/times - return the "FAT epoch" for these. */ if (pctp->pct_date == 0) { year = YEAR_ZERO; month = 1; day = 1; } if (month > 12 || month < 1 || day < 1 || day > days_in_month(month, year) || hour > 23 || min > 59 || sec > 59) { cmn_err(CE_NOTE, "impossible FAT timestamp, " "d/m/y %d/%d/%d, h:m:s %d:%d:%d", day, month, year, hour, min, sec); *unixtime = YZ_SECS + pc_tz.secondswest; return; } PC_DPRINTF3(1, "pc2ux date: %d.%d.%d\n", day, month, year); PC_DPRINTF3(1, "pc2ux time: %dh%dm%ds\n", hour, min, sec); *unixtime = (int64_t)sec; *unixtime += 60 * (int64_t)min; *unixtime += 3600 * (int64_t)hour; *unixtime += 86400 * (int64_t)day; while (month > 1) { month--; *unixtime += 86400 * (int64_t)days_in_month(month, year); } while (year > YEAR_ZERO) { *unixtime += 86400 * (int64_t)days_in_year(year); year--; } /* * For FAT, the beginning of all time is 01/01/1980, * and years are counted relative to that. * We adjust this base value by the timezone offset * that is passed in to pcfs at mount time. */ *unixtime += YZ_SECS; *unixtime += pc_tz.secondswest; /* * FAT epoch is past UNIX epoch - negative UNIX times * cannot result from the conversion. */ ASSERT(*unixtime > 0); PC_DPRINTF1(1, "pc2ux unixtime: %lld\n", (long long)(*unixtime)); } /* * Determine whether a character is valid for a pc 8.3 file system file name. * The Windows 95 Resource Kit claims that these are valid: * uppercase letters and numbers * blank * ASCII characters greater than 127 * $%'-_@~`!()^#& * Long file names can also have * lowercase letters * +,;=[]. */ int pc_valid_lfn_char(char c) { char *cp; int n; static char valtab[] = { "+,;=[].$#&@!%()-{}<>`_^~|' " }; if (c >= 'a' && c <= 'z') return (1); if (c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z') return (1); if (c >= '0' && c <= '9') return (1); cp = valtab; n = sizeof (valtab); while (n--) { if (c == *cp++) return (1); } return (0); } int pc_valid_long_fn(char *namep) { char *tmp; for (tmp = namep; *tmp != '\0'; tmp++) if (!pc_valid_lfn_char(*tmp)) return (0); if ((tmp - namep) >= PCMAXNAMLEN) return (0); return (1); } int pc_fname_ext_to_name(char *namep, char *fname, char *ext, int foldcase) { int i; char *tp = namep; char c; i = PCFNAMESIZE; while (i-- && ((c = *fname) != ' ')) { if (!(c == '.' || pc_validchar(c))) { return (-1); } if (foldcase) *tp++ = tolower(c); else *tp++ = c; fname++; } if (*ext != ' ') { *tp++ = '.'; i = PCFEXTSIZE; while (i-- && ((c = *ext) != ' ')) { if (!pc_validchar(c)) { return (-1); } if (foldcase) *tp++ = tolower(c); else *tp++ = c; ext++; } } *tp = '\0'; return (0); }