package CPANPLUS::Internals::Fetch; use strict; use CPANPLUS::Error; use CPANPLUS::Internals::Constants; use File::Fetch; use File::Spec; use Cwd qw[cwd]; use IPC::Cmd qw[run]; use Params::Check qw[check]; use Module::Load::Conditional qw[can_load]; use Locale::Maketext::Simple Class => 'CPANPLUS', Style => 'gettext'; $Params::Check::VERBOSE = 1; =pod =head1 NAME CPANPLUS::Internals::Fetch =head1 SYNOPSIS my $output = $cb->_fetch( module => $modobj, fetchdir => '/path/to/save/to', verbose => BOOL, force => BOOL, ); $cb->_add_fail_host( host => 'foo.com' ); $cb->_host_ok( host => 'foo.com' ); =head1 DESCRIPTION CPANPLUS::Internals::Fetch fetches files from either ftp, http, file or rsync mirrors. This is the rough flow: $cb->_fetch Delegate to File::Fetch; =head1 METHODS =cut =head1 $path = _fetch( module => $modobj, [fetchdir => '/path/to/save/to', fetch_from => 'scheme://path/to/fetch/from', verbose => BOOL, force => BOOL, prefer_bin => BOOL] ) C<_fetch> will fetch files based on the information in a module object. You always need a module object. If you want a fake module object for a one-off fetch, look at C. C is the place to save the file to. Usually this information comes from your configuration, but you can override it expressly if needed. C lets you specify an URI to get this file from. If you do not specify one, your list of configured hosts will be probed to download the file from. C forces a new download, even if the file already exists. C simply indicates whether or not to print extra messages. C indicates whether you prefer the use of commandline programs over perl modules. Defaults to your corresponding config setting. C<_fetch> figures out, based on the host list, what scheme to use and from there, delegates to C do the actual fetching. Returns the path of the output file on success, false on failure. Note that you can set a C on certain methods in the config. Simply add the identifying name of the method (ie, C) to: $conf->_set_fetch( blacklist => ['lwp'] ); And the C function will be skipped by C. =cut sub _fetch { my $self = shift; my $conf = $self->configure_object; my %hash = @_; local $Params::Check::NO_DUPLICATES = 0; my ($modobj, $verbose, $force, $fetch_from); my $tmpl = { module => { required => 1, allow => IS_MODOBJ, store => \$modobj }, fetchdir => { default => $conf->get_conf('fetchdir') }, fetch_from => { default => '', store => \$fetch_from }, force => { default => $conf->get_conf('force'), store => \$force }, verbose => { default => $conf->get_conf('verbose'), store => \$verbose }, prefer_bin => { default => $conf->get_conf('prefer_bin') }, }; my $args = check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; ### check if we already downloaded the thing ### if( (my $where = $modobj->status->fetch()) && !$force ) { msg(loc("Already fetched '%1' to '%2', " . "won't fetch again without force", $modobj->module, $where ), $verbose ); return $where; } my ($remote_file, $local_file, $local_path); ### build the local path to downlaod to ### { $local_path = $args->{fetchdir} || File::Spec->catdir( $conf->get_conf('base'), $modobj->path, ); ### create the path if it doesn't exist ### unless( -d $local_path ) { unless( $self->_mkdir( dir => $local_path ) ) { msg( loc("Could not create path '%1'", $local_path), $verbose); return; } } $local_file = File::Spec->rel2abs( File::Spec->catfile( $local_path, $modobj->package, ) ); } ### do we already have the file? ### if( -e $local_file ) { if( $args->{force} ) { ### some fetches will fail if the files exist already, so let's ### delete them first unlink $local_file or msg( loc("Could not delete %1, some methods may " . "fail to force a download", $local_file), $verbose); } else { ### store where we fetched it ### $modobj->status->fetch( $local_file ); return $local_file; } } ### we got a custom URI if ( $fetch_from ) { my $abs = $self->__file_fetch( from => $fetch_from, to => $local_path, verbose => $verbose ); unless( $abs ) { error(loc("Unable to download '%1'", $fetch_from)); return; } ### store where we fetched it ### $modobj->status->fetch( $abs ); return $abs; ### we will get it from one of our mirrors } else { ### build the remote path to download from ### { $remote_file = File::Spec::Unix->catfile( $modobj->path, $modobj->package, ); unless( $remote_file ) { error( loc('No remote file given for download') ); return; } } ### see if we even have a host or a method to use to download with ### my $found_host; my @maybe_bad_host; HOST: { ### F*CKING PIECE OF F*CKING p4 SHIT makes ### '$File :: Fetch::SOME_VAR' ### into a meta variable and starts substituting the file name... ### GRAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH! ### use ' to combat it! ### set up some flags for File::Fetch ### local $File'Fetch::BLACKLIST = $conf->_get_fetch('blacklist'); local $File'Fetch::TIMEOUT = $conf->get_conf('timeout'); local $File'Fetch::DEBUG = $conf->get_conf('debug'); local $File'Fetch::FTP_PASSIVE = $conf->get_conf('passive'); local $File'Fetch::FROM_EMAIL = $conf->get_conf('email'); local $File'Fetch::PREFER_BIN = $conf->get_conf('prefer_bin'); local $File'Fetch::WARN = $verbose; ### loop over all hosts we have ### for my $host ( @{$conf->get_conf('hosts')} ) { $found_host++; my $where; ### file:// uris are special and need parsing if( $host->{'scheme'} eq 'file' ) { ### the full path in the native format of the OS my $host_spec = File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute( $host->{'path'} ) ? $host->{'path'} : File::Spec->rel2abs( $host->{'path'} ); ### there might be volumes involved on vms/win32 if( ON_WIN32 or ON_VMS ) { ### now extract the volume in order to be Win32 and ### VMS friendly. ### 'no_file' indicates that there's no file part ### of this path, so we only get 2 bits returned. my ($vol, $host_path) = File::Spec->splitpath( $host_spec, 'no_file' ); ### and split up the directories my @host_dirs = File::Spec->splitdir( $host_path ); ### if we got a volume we pretend its a directory for ### the sake of the file:// url if( defined $vol and $vol ) { ### D:\foo\bar needs to be encoded as D|\foo\bar ### For details, see the following link: ### http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:// ### The RFC doesnt seem to address Windows volume ### descriptors but it does address VMS volume ### descriptors, however wikipedia covers a bit of ### history regarding win32 $vol =~ s/:$/|/ if ON_WIN32; $vol =~ s/:// if ON_VMS; ### XXX i'm not sure what cases this is addressing. ### this comes straight from dmq's file:// patches ### for win32. --kane ### According to dmq, the best summary is: ### "if file:// urls dont look right on VMS reuse ### the win32 logic and see if that fixes things" ### first element not empty? Might happen on VMS. ### prepend the volume in that case. if( $host_dirs[0] ) { unshift @host_dirs, $vol; ### element empty? reuse it to store the volume ### encoded as a directory name. (Win32/VMS) } else { $host_dirs[0] = $vol; } } ### now it's in UNIX format, which is the same format ### as used for URIs $host_spec = File::Spec::Unix->catdir( @host_dirs ); } ### now create the file:// uri from the components $where = CREATE_FILE_URI->( File::Spec::Unix->catfile( $host->{'host'} || '', $host_spec, $remote_file, ) ); ### its components will be in unix format, for a http://, ### ftp:// or any other style of URI } else { my $mirror_path = File::Spec::Unix->catfile( $host->{'path'}, $remote_file ); my %args = ( scheme => $host->{scheme}, host => $host->{host}, path => $mirror_path, ); $where = $self->_host_to_uri( %args ); } my $abs = $self->__file_fetch( from => $where, to => $local_path, verbose => $verbose ); ### we got a path back? if( $abs ) { ### store where we fetched it ### $modobj->status->fetch( $abs ); ### this host is good, the previous ones are apparently ### not, so mark them as such. $self->_add_fail_host( host => $_ ) for @maybe_bad_host; return $abs; } ### so we tried to get the file but didn't actually fetch it -- ### there's a chance this host is bad. mark it as such and ### actually flag it back if we manage to get the file ### somewhere else push @maybe_bad_host, $host; } } $found_host ? error(loc("Fetch failed: host list exhausted " . "-- are you connected today?")) : error(loc("No hosts found to download from " . "-- check your config")); } return; } sub __file_fetch { my $self = shift; my $conf = $self->configure_object; my %hash = @_; my ($where, $local_path, $verbose); my $tmpl = { from => { required => 1, store => \$where }, to => { required => 1, store => \$local_path }, verbose => { default => $conf->get_conf('verbose'), store => \$verbose }, }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; msg(loc("Trying to get '%1'", $where ), $verbose ); ### build the object ### my $ff = File::Fetch->new( uri => $where ); ### sanity check ### error(loc("Bad uri '%1'",$where)), return unless $ff; if( my $file = $ff->fetch( to => $local_path ) ) { unless( -e $file && -s _ ) { msg(loc("'%1' said it fetched '%2', but it was not created", 'File::Fetch', $file), $verbose); } else { my $abs = File::Spec->rel2abs( $file ); return $abs; } } else { error(loc("Fetching of '%1' failed: %2", $where, $ff->error)); } return; } =pod =head2 _add_fail_host( host => $host_hashref ) Mark a particular host as bad. This makes C skip it in fetches until this cache is flushed. =head2 _host_ok( host => $host_hashref ) Query the cache to see if this host is ok, or if it has been flagged as bad. Returns true if the host is ok, false otherwise. =cut { ### caching functions ### sub _add_fail_host { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $host; my $tmpl = { host => { required => 1, default => {}, strict_type => 1, store => \$host }, }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; return $self->_hosts->{$host} = 1; } sub _host_ok { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $host; my $tmpl = { host => { required => 1, store => \$host }, }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; return $self->_hosts->{$host} ? 0 : 1; } } 1; # Local variables: # c-indentation-style: bsd # c-basic-offset: 4 # indent-tabs-mode: nil # End: # vim: expandtab shiftwidth=4: