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// Copyright 2010 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 exec
import (
"errors"
"io/fs"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"strings"
"syscall"
)
// ErrNotFound is the error resulting if a path search failed to find an executable file.
var ErrNotFound = errors.New("executable file not found in %PATH%")
func chkStat(file string) error {
d, err := os.Stat(file)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if d.IsDir() {
return fs.ErrPermission
}
return nil
}
func hasExt(file string) bool {
i := strings.LastIndex(file, ".")
if i < 0 {
return false
}
return strings.LastIndexAny(file, `:\/`) < i
}
func findExecutable(file string, exts []string) (string, error) {
if len(exts) == 0 {
return file, chkStat(file)
}
if hasExt(file) {
if chkStat(file) == nil {
return file, nil
}
}
for _, e := range exts {
if f := file + e; chkStat(f) == nil {
return f, nil
}
}
return "", fs.ErrNotExist
}
// LookPath searches for an executable named file in the
// directories named by the PATH environment variable.
// LookPath also uses PATHEXT environment variable to match
// a suitable candidate.
// If file contains a slash, it is tried directly and the PATH is not consulted.
// Otherwise, on success, the result is an absolute path.
//
// In older versions of Go, LookPath could return a path relative to the current directory.
// As of Go 1.19, LookPath will instead return that path along with an error satisfying
// errors.Is(err, ErrDot). See the package documentation for more details.
func LookPath(file string) (string, error) {
var exts []string
x := os.Getenv(`PATHEXT`)
if x != "" {
for _, e := range strings.Split(strings.ToLower(x), `;`) {
if e == "" {
continue
}
if e[0] != '.' {
e = "." + e
}
exts = append(exts, e)
}
} else {
exts = []string{".com", ".exe", ".bat", ".cmd"}
}
if strings.ContainsAny(file, `:\/`) {
f, err := findExecutable(file, exts)
if err == nil {
return f, nil
}
return "", &Error{file, err}
}
// On Windows, creating the NoDefaultCurrentDirectoryInExePath
// environment variable (with any value or no value!) signals that
// path lookups should skip the current directory.
// In theory we are supposed to call NeedCurrentDirectoryForExePathW
// "as the registry location of this environment variable can change"
// but that seems exceedingly unlikely: it would break all users who
// have configured their environment this way!
// https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/processenv/nf-processenv-needcurrentdirectoryforexepathw
// See also go.dev/issue/43947.
var (
dotf string
dotErr error
)
if _, found := syscall.Getenv("NoDefaultCurrentDirectoryInExePath"); !found {
if f, err := findExecutable(filepath.Join(".", file), exts); err == nil {
if execerrdot.Value() == "0" {
return f, nil
}
dotf, dotErr = f, &Error{file, ErrDot}
}
}
path := os.Getenv("path")
for _, dir := range filepath.SplitList(path) {
if f, err := findExecutable(filepath.Join(dir, file), exts); err == nil {
if dotErr != nil {
// https://go.dev/issue/53536: if we resolved a relative path implicitly,
// and it is the same executable that would be resolved from the explicit %PATH%,
// prefer the explicit name for the executable (and, likely, no error) instead
// of the equivalent implicit name with ErrDot.
//
// Otherwise, return the ErrDot for the implicit path as soon as we find
// out that the explicit one doesn't match.
dotfi, dotfiErr := os.Lstat(dotf)
fi, fiErr := os.Lstat(f)
if dotfiErr != nil || fiErr != nil || !os.SameFile(dotfi, fi) {
return dotf, dotErr
}
}
if !filepath.IsAbs(f) && execerrdot.Value() != "0" {
return f, &Error{file, ErrDot}
}
return f, nil
}
}
if dotErr != nil {
return dotf, dotErr
}
return "", &Error{file, ErrNotFound}
}