gecko-dev/webtools/doctor/Doctor.pm

106 lines
3.7 KiB
Perl

#!/usr/bin/perl -w
package Doctor;
require Exporter;
@ISA = qw(Exporter);
@EXPORT_OK = qw(%CONFIG); # symbols to export on request
use strict;
use File::Temp qw(tempfile tempdir);
use Template;
use AppConfig qw(:expand :argcount);
use CGI;
use Cwd qw(getcwd);
# Create an AppConfig object and populate it with parameters defined
# in the configuration file.
# Note: Look in the configuration file for descriptions of each parameter.
our $config = AppConfig->new({
CASE => 1,
CREATE => 1 ,
GLOBAL => { ARGCOUNT => ARGCOUNT_ONE }
});
$config->file("doctor.conf");
our %CONFIG = $config->varlist(".*");
# Create the global template object that processes templates and specify
# configuration parameters that apply to templates processed in this script.
my $_template;
sub template {
my $class = shift;
# INCLUDE_PATH is a colon-separated list of directories containing templates.
$_template ||= Template->new({INCLUDE_PATH => getcwd() . "/templates",
PRE_CHOMP => 1,
POST_CHOMP => 1});
return $_template;
}
my $_cgi;
sub cgi {
my $class = shift;
$_cgi ||= new CGI();
return $_cgi;
}
sub system_capture {
# Runs a command and captures its output and errors. This should be using
# in-memory files, but they require that we close STDOUT and STDERR
# before reopening them on the in-memory files, and closing and reopening
# STDERR causes CVS to choke with return value 256.
my ($command, @args) = @_;
my ($rv, $output, $errors);
# Back up the original STDOUT and STDERR so we can restore them later.
open(OLDOUT, ">&STDOUT") or die "Can't back up STDOUT to OLDOUT: $!";
open(OLDERR, ">&STDERR") or die "Can't back up STDERR to OLDERR: $!";
use vars qw( *OLDOUT *OLDERR ); # suppress "used only once" warnings
# Close and reopen STDOUT and STDERR to in-memory files, which are just
# scalars that take output and append it to their value.
# XXX Disabled in-memory files in favor of temp files until in-memory issues
# can be worked out.
#close(STDOUT);
#close(STDERR);
#open(STDOUT, ">", \$output) or die "Can't open STDOUT to output var: $!";
#open(STDERR, ">", \$errors) or die "Can't open STDERR to errors var: $!";
my $outfile = tempfile();
my $errfile = tempfile();
# Perl 5.6.1 filehandle duplication doesn't support the three-argument form
# of open, so we can't just open(STDOUT, ">&", $outfile); instead we have to
# create an alias OUTFILE and then do open(STDOUT, ">&OUTFILE").
local *OUTFILE = *$outfile;
local *ERRFILE = *$errfile;
use vars qw( *OUTFILE *ERRFILE ); # suppress "used only once" warnings
open(STDOUT, ">&OUTFILE") or open(STDOUT, ">&OLDOUT")
and die "Can't dupe STDOUT to output file: $!";
open(STDERR, ">&ERRFILE") or open(STDOUT, ">&OLDOUT")
and open(STDERR, ">&OLDERR")
and die "Can't dupe STDERR to errors file: $!";
# Run the command.
$rv = system($command, @args);
# Grab output and errors from the temp files. In a block to localize $/.
# XXX None of this would be necessary if in-memory files was working.
{
local $/ = undef;
seek($outfile, 0, 0);
seek($errfile, 0, 0);
$output = <$outfile>;
$errors = <$errfile>;
}
# Restore original STDOUT and STDERR.
close(STDOUT);
close(STDERR);
open(STDOUT, ">&OLDOUT") or die "Can't restore STDOUT from OLDOUT: $!";
open(STDERR, ">&OLDERR") or die "Can't restore STDERR from OLDERR: $!";
return ($rv, $output, $errors);
}
1; # so the require or use succeeds