// Copyright 2011 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. package os const ( PathSeparator = '\\' // OS-specific path separator PathListSeparator = ';' // OS-specific path list separator ) // IsPathSeparator reports whether c is a directory separator character. func IsPathSeparator(c uint8) bool { // NOTE: Windows accepts / as path separator. return c == '\\' || c == '/' } // basename removes trailing slashes and the leading // directory name and drive letter from path name. func basename(name string) string { // Remove drive letter if len(name) == 2 && name[1] == ':' { name = "." } else if len(name) > 2 && name[1] == ':' { name = name[2:] } i := len(name) - 1 // Remove trailing slashes for ; i > 0 && (name[i] == '/' || name[i] == '\\'); i-- { name = name[:i] } // Remove leading directory name for i--; i >= 0; i-- { if name[i] == '/' || name[i] == '\\' { name = name[i+1:] break } } return name } func isAbs(path string) (b bool) { v := volumeName(path) if v == "" { return false } path = path[len(v):] if path == "" { return false } return IsPathSeparator(path[0]) } func volumeName(path string) (v string) { if len(path) < 2 { return "" } // with drive letter c := path[0] if path[1] == ':' && ('0' <= c && c <= '9' || 'a' <= c && c <= 'z' || 'A' <= c && c <= 'Z') { return path[:2] } // is it UNC if l := len(path); l >= 5 && IsPathSeparator(path[0]) && IsPathSeparator(path[1]) && !IsPathSeparator(path[2]) && path[2] != '.' { // first, leading `\\` and next shouldn't be `\`. its server name. for n := 3; n < l-1; n++ { // second, next '\' shouldn't be repeated. if IsPathSeparator(path[n]) { n++ // third, following something characters. its share name. if !IsPathSeparator(path[n]) { if path[n] == '.' { break } for ; n < l; n++ { if IsPathSeparator(path[n]) { break } } return path[:n] } break } } } return "" } func fromSlash(path string) string { // Replace each '/' with '\\' if present var pathbuf []byte var lastSlash int for i, b := range path { if b == '/' { if pathbuf == nil { pathbuf = make([]byte, len(path)) } copy(pathbuf[lastSlash:], path[lastSlash:i]) pathbuf[i] = '\\' lastSlash = i + 1 } } if pathbuf == nil { return path } copy(pathbuf[lastSlash:], path[lastSlash:]) return string(pathbuf) } func dirname(path string) string { vol := volumeName(path) i := len(path) - 1 for i >= len(vol) && !IsPathSeparator(path[i]) { i-- } dir := path[len(vol) : i+1] last := len(dir) - 1 if last > 0 && IsPathSeparator(dir[last]) { dir = dir[:last] } if dir == "" { dir = "." } return vol + dir } // This is set via go:linkname on runtime.canUseLongPaths, and is true when the OS // supports opting into proper long path handling without the need for fixups. var canUseLongPaths bool // fixLongPath returns the extended-length (\\?\-prefixed) form of // path when needed, in order to avoid the default 260 character file // path limit imposed by Windows. If path is not easily converted to // the extended-length form (for example, if path is a relative path // or contains .. elements), or is short enough, fixLongPath returns // path unmodified. // // See https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/fileio/naming-a-file#maximum-path-length-limitation func fixLongPath(path string) string { if canUseLongPaths { return path } // Do nothing (and don't allocate) if the path is "short". // Empirically (at least on the Windows Server 2013 builder), // the kernel is arbitrarily okay with < 248 bytes. That // matches what the docs above say: // "When using an API to create a directory, the specified // path cannot be so long that you cannot append an 8.3 file // name (that is, the directory name cannot exceed MAX_PATH // minus 12)." Since MAX_PATH is 260, 260 - 12 = 248. // // The MSDN docs appear to say that a normal path that is 248 bytes long // will work; empirically the path must be less then 248 bytes long. if len(path) < 248 { // Don't fix. (This is how Go 1.7 and earlier worked, // not automatically generating the \\?\ form) return path } // The extended form begins with \\?\, as in // \\?\c:\windows\foo.txt or \\?\UNC\server\share\foo.txt. // The extended form disables evaluation of . and .. path // elements and disables the interpretation of / as equivalent // to \. The conversion here rewrites / to \ and elides // . elements as well as trailing or duplicate separators. For // simplicity it avoids the conversion entirely for relative // paths or paths containing .. elements. For now, // \\server\share paths are not converted to // \\?\UNC\server\share paths because the rules for doing so // are less well-specified. if len(path) >= 2 && path[:2] == `\\` { // Don't canonicalize UNC paths. return path } if !isAbs(path) { // Relative path return path } const prefix = `\\?` pathbuf := make([]byte, len(prefix)+len(path)+len(`\`)) copy(pathbuf, prefix) n := len(path) r, w := 0, len(prefix) for r < n { switch { case IsPathSeparator(path[r]): // empty block r++ case path[r] == '.' && (r+1 == n || IsPathSeparator(path[r+1])): // /./ r++ case r+1 < n && path[r] == '.' && path[r+1] == '.' && (r+2 == n || IsPathSeparator(path[r+2])): // /../ is currently unhandled return path default: pathbuf[w] = '\\' w++ for ; r < n && !IsPathSeparator(path[r]); r++ { pathbuf[w] = path[r] w++ } } } // A drive's root directory needs a trailing \ if w == len(`\\?\c:`) { pathbuf[w] = '\\' w++ } return string(pathbuf[:w]) }