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microtar
A lightweight tar library written in ANSI C
Modifications from upstream
Upstream has numerous bugs and gotchas, which I fixed in order to improve the overall robustness of the library.
A summary of my changes, in no particular order:
- Fix possible sscanf beyond the bounds of the input buffer
- Fix possible buffer overruns due to strcpy on untrusted input
- Fix incorrect octal formatting by sprintf and possible output overrruns
- Catch read/writes which are too big and handle them gracefully
- Handle over-long names in
mtar_write_file_header
/mtar_write_dir_header
- Ensure strings in
mtar_header_t
are always null-terminated - Save and load group information so we don't lose information
- Move
mtar_open()
tomicrotar-stdio.c
somicrotar.c
can be used in a freestanding environment - Allow control of stack usage by moving temporary variables into
mtar_t
, so the caller can decide whether to use the stack or heap
An up-to-date copy of this modified version can be found here.
Modifications for Rockbox
Added file microtar-rockbox.c
implementing mtar_open()
with native
Rockbox filesystem API.
Basic Usage
The library consists of microtar.c
and microtar.h
. These two files can be
dropped into an existing project and compiled along with it.
Reading
mtar_t tar;
mtar_header_t h;
char *p;
/* Open archive for reading */
mtar_open(&tar, "test.tar", "r");
/* Print all file names and sizes */
while ( (mtar_read_header(&tar, &h)) != MTAR_ENULLRECORD ) {
printf("%s (%d bytes)\n", h.name, h.size);
mtar_next(&tar);
}
/* Load and print contents of file "test.txt" */
mtar_find(&tar, "test.txt", &h);
p = calloc(1, h.size + 1);
mtar_read_data(&tar, p, h.size);
printf("%s", p);
free(p);
/* Close archive */
mtar_close(&tar);
Writing
mtar_t tar;
const char *str1 = "Hello world";
const char *str2 = "Goodbye world";
/* Open archive for writing */
mtar_open(&tar, "test.tar", "w");
/* Write strings to files `test1.txt` and `test2.txt` */
mtar_write_file_header(&tar, "test1.txt", strlen(str1));
mtar_write_data(&tar, str1, strlen(str1));
mtar_write_file_header(&tar, "test2.txt", strlen(str2));
mtar_write_data(&tar, str2, strlen(str2));
/* Finalize -- this needs to be the last thing done before closing */
mtar_finalize(&tar);
/* Close archive */
mtar_close(&tar);
Error handling
All functions which return an int
will return MTAR_ESUCCESS
if the operation
is successful. If an error occurs an error value less-than-zero will be
returned; this value can be passed to the function mtar_strerror()
to get its
corresponding error string.
Wrapping a stream
If you want to read or write from something other than a file, the mtar_t
struct can be manually initialized with your own callback functions and a
stream
pointer.
All callback functions are passed a pointer to the mtar_t
struct as their
first argument. They should return MTAR_ESUCCESS
if the operation succeeds
without an error, or an integer below zero if an error occurs.
After the stream
field has been set, all required callbacks have been set and
all unused fields have been zeroset the mtar_t
struct can be safely used with
the microtar functions. mtar_open
should not be called if the mtar_t
struct was initialized manually.
Reading
The following callbacks should be set for reading an archive from a stream:
Name | Arguments | Description |
---|---|---|
read |
mtar_t *tar, void *data, unsigned size |
Read data from the stream |
seek |
mtar_t *tar, unsigned pos |
Set the position indicator |
close |
mtar_t *tar |
Close the stream |
Writing
The following callbacks should be set for writing an archive to a stream:
Name | Arguments | Description |
---|---|---|
write |
mtar_t *tar, const void *data, unsigned size |
Write data to the stream |
License
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.