| #! /usr/bin/env perl |
| |
| use strict; |
| use warnings; |
| |
| use File::Basename; |
| use File::Spec::Functions; |
| |
| my $there = canonpath(catdir(dirname($0), updir())); |
| my $std_engines = catdir($there, 'engines'); |
| my $std_providers = catdir($there, 'providers'); |
| my $unix_shlib_wrap = catfile($there, 'util/shlib_wrap.sh'); |
| |
| $ENV{OPENSSL_ENGINES} = $std_engines |
| if ($ENV{OPENSSL_ENGINES} // '') eq '' && -d $std_engines; |
| $ENV{OPENSSL_MODULES} = $std_providers |
| if ($ENV{OPENSSL_MODULES} // '') eq '' && -d $std_providers; |
| |
| my $use_system = 0; |
| my @cmd; |
| |
| if (-x $unix_shlib_wrap) { |
| @cmd = ( $unix_shlib_wrap, @ARGV ); |
| } else { |
| # Hope for the best |
| @cmd = ( @ARGV ); |
| } |
| |
| # The exec() statement on MSWin32 doesn't seem to give back the exit code |
| # from the call, so we resort to using system() instead. |
| my $waitcode = system @cmd; |
| |
| # According to documentation, -1 means that system() couldn't run the command, |
| # otherwise, the value is similar to the Unix wait() status value |
| # (exitcode << 8 | signalcode) |
| die "wrap.pl: Failed to execute '", join(' ', @cmd), "': $!\n" |
| if $waitcode == -1; |
| |
| # When the subprocess aborted on a signal, mimic what Unix shells do, by |
| # converting the signal code to an exit code by setting the high bit. |
| # This only happens on Unix flavored operating systems, the others don't |
| # have this sort of signaling to date, and simply leave the low byte zero. |
| exit(($? & 255) | 128) if ($? & 255) != 0; |
| |
| # When not a signal, just shift down the subprocess exit code and use that. |
| exit($? >> 8); |