/*
* Copyright 1995, 2000 Perforce Software. All rights reserved.
*
* This file is part of Perforce - the FAST SCM System.
*/
/*
* ClientUserMarshal - Classes for doing ClientUser I/O as
* marshalled data for scripting languages.
*/
# define NEED_FILE
# ifdef OS_NT
# define NEED_FCNTL
# endif
# include <stdhdrs.h>
# include <strbuf.h>
# include <strops.h>
# include <strdict.h>
# include <strtable.h>
# include <enviro.h>
# include <error.h>
# include <signaler.h>
# include <filesys.h>
# include <diff.h>
# include <spec.h>
# include <msgclient.h>
# include <p4tags.h>
# include "clientuser.h"
# include "clientusermsh.h"
# ifdef OS_SCO
# define INLINE /**/
# else
# define INLINE inline
# endif
/*******************************************************************************
* Local class definitions
******************************************************************************/
/*
* MarshalDict : a StrBuf that holds a marshalled Dictionary Object
*
* Virtual base class for language specific marshalling.
*/
class MarshalDict : public StrBuf
{
public:
virtual ~MarshalDict();
// Read/Write
virtual void StartWrite( const char *code ) = 0;
virtual void EndWrite() = 0;
virtual void StartRead( Error *e ) = 0;
virtual void EndRead( Error *e ) = 0;
// Writing dictionary pairs
void Add( const char *code, const StrPtr &value )
{ AddString( StrRef( code ) ); AddString( value ); }
void Add( const StrPtr &code, const StrPtr &value )
{ AddString( code ); AddString( value ); }
void Add( const char *code, int value )
{ AddString( StrRef( code ) ); AddInt( value ); }
// Reading dictionary pairs
virtual int Get( StrBuf &var, StrBuf &val ) = 0;
protected:
// Low level string/int/etc
virtual void AddInt( int value ) = 0;
virtual void AddString( const StrPtr &value ) = 0;
void AddCode( char c )
{ Extend( c ); }
INLINE int GetChar( char c );
StrRef s; // StrRef access to the buffer
} ;
/*
* PythonDict : a MarshalDict that holds a marshalled Python Dictionary Object
*
* This class either reads or writes (from stdin/stdout) a Python
* dictionary object in Python's "marshalling" format.
*
* PythonDict will write the object if the constructor is given a
* "code" value, which will appear in the dictionary as "code" : code.
*/
class PythonDict : public MarshalDict
{
public:
// Read/Write
void StartWrite( const char *code );
void EndWrite();
void StartRead( Error *e );
void EndRead( Error *e );
// Reading dictionary pairs
INLINE int Get( StrBuf &var, StrBuf &val );
protected:
// Low level string/int/etc
void AddInt( int value )
{ AddCode( 'i' ); StrOps::PackInt( *this, value ); }
void AddString( const StrPtr &value )
{ AddCode( 's' ); StrOps::PackString( *this, value ); }
} ;
/*
* RubyDict : a MarshalDict that holds a marshalled Ruby Hash Object
*
* This class either reads or writes (from stdin/stdout) a Ruby
* hash object in Ruby's "marshalled" format. This differs from the
* Python version in that Ruby marshalled objects have their length at
* the beginning so we have to save the actual write till the end when
* we know what the length should be.
*
*/
/*
* Minimum Ruby marshalling format supported. If the major number of any
* input matches, we'll try and read it even if the minor number differs.
* For output, we'll always use this version.
*/
#define RUBY_SUPPORTED_MAJOR 4
#define RUBY_SUPPORTED_MINOR 6
/*
* Some macros to help with version handling
*/
#define RUBY_VERSION( maj, min ) ( (maj << 8) | min )
#define RUBY_MAJOR( ver ) ( (ver >> 8) & 0x0f )
#define RUBY_MINOR( ver ) ( ver & 0x0f )
class RubyDict : public MarshalDict
{
public:
// Read/Write
void StartWrite( const char *code );
void EndWrite();
void StartRead( Error *e );
void EndRead( Error *e );
// Reading dictionary pairs
INLINE int Get( StrBuf &var, StrBuf &val );
private:
// Low level string/int/etc to implement MarshalDict interface
void AddInt( int value );
void AddString( const StrPtr &value );
// Class Methods supporting Ruby Marshalled format
static void PackInt( StrBuf &dict, int value );
static int UnpackInt( StrRef &str );
static void UnpackString( StrRef &str, StrBuf &buf );
static int UnpackVersion( StrRef &str );
private:
int elemCount; // Number of elements in the hash
} ;
/*
* PhpDict : a MarshalDict that holds a serialized PHP array.
*
* This class either reads or writes (from stdin/stdout) an array
* in Serialized PHP format.
*/
class PhpDict : public MarshalDict
{
public:
// Read/Write
void StartWrite( const char *code );
void EndWrite();
void StartRead( Error *e );
void EndRead( Error *e );
// Reading dictionary pairs
INLINE int Get( StrBuf &var, StrBuf &val );
protected:
// Low level string/int/etc to implement MarshalDict interface
void AddInt( int value );
void AddString( const StrPtr &value );
// Class method supporting string de-serialization
static int UnpackString( StrRef &str, StrBuf &buf );
private:
int elemCount; // Number of elements in the array
} ;
/*******************************************************************************
* MarshalDict methods
******************************************************************************/
// empty virtual destructor
MarshalDict::~MarshalDict()
{
}
/*
* Checks whether or not the next char in the input is what is expected.
* returns 1 if it is, and zero if it's not.
*/
INLINE int
MarshalDict::GetChar( char c )
{
if( !s.Length() || s[0] != c )
return 0;
s.Set( s.Text() + 1, s.Length() - 1 );
return 1;
}
/*******************************************************************************
* PythonDict methods
******************************************************************************/
/*
* Get a variable and value pair from a Marshalled Python dictionary
* Returns non-zero on success.
*/
INLINE int
PythonDict::Get( StrBuf &var, StrBuf &val )
{
if( !GetChar('s') && !GetChar('u') )
// Return if input is neither a string nor an Unicode
// string (Python 3.x uses Unicode strings by default).
return 0;
StrOps::UnpackString( s, var ); // bytes in 'u' strings are always
// UTF-8 encoded.
if( !GetChar('s') && !GetChar('u') )
return 0;
StrOps::UnpackString( s, val );
return 1;
}
/*
* Prepare a Python Marhsalled dictionary for writing. Just involves
* opening the dictionary with a "{" character and writing the "code"
* member.
*/
void
PythonDict::StartWrite( const char *code )
{
Clear();
AddCode( '{' );
Add( "code", StrRef( code ) );
s.Set( 0, 0 );
}
/*
* Close a marshalled dictionary and write it to stdout.
*/
void
PythonDict::EndWrite()
{
AddCode( '0' );
}
/*
* Start reading a Python marshalled dictionary.
*/
void
PythonDict::StartRead( Error *e )
{
s.Set( *this );
if( !GetChar( '{' ) )
e->Set( MsgClient::BadMarshalInput );
}
/*
* Finish off the read of a Python marshalled dictionary. Just involves
* reading the trailing '0'
*/
void
PythonDict::EndRead( Error *e )
{
if( !GetChar( '0' ) )
e->Set( MsgClient::BadMarshalInput );
}
/*******************************************************************************
* RubyDict methods
******************************************************************************/
/*
* Read the next key = value pair from the marshalled hash. When reading
* the elemcount is the number of pairs so we only decrease it by one.
*/
INLINE int
RubyDict::Get( StrBuf &var, StrBuf &val )
{
if( ! elemCount ) return 0;
if( !GetChar( '"' ) ) return 0;
UnpackString( s, var );
if( ! GetChar( '"' ) ) return 0;
UnpackString( s, val );
--elemCount;
return 1;
}
/*
* Append an integer to the marshalled data in Ruby marshalled format.
*/
void
RubyDict::AddInt( int value )
{
AddCode( 'i' );
PackInt( *this, value );
elemCount++;
}
/*
* Append a string to the marshalled data in Ruby marshalled format
*/
void
RubyDict::AddString( const StrPtr &value )
{
AddCode( '"' );
PackInt( *this, value.Length() );
Append( value.Text(), value.Length() );
elemCount++;
}
/*
* Initialise the Ruby marshalled hash. We don't write the preamble at
* this point because we don't know the length of the hash.
*/
void
RubyDict::StartWrite( const char *code )
{
Clear();
elemCount = 0; // No of elements (i.e 1 per key, 1 per value)
Add( "code", StrRef( code ) );
s.Set( 0, 0 );
}
/*
* Terminate the hash. Now that we know the number of elements, we can
* wite out the preamble and the hash data itself.
*/
void
RubyDict::EndWrite()
{
/*
* Because Ruby marshalled hashes contain their length, we can't
* write the preamble until we know the number of elements in the
* hash. So the string is built without any preamble and we
* now have to work out the number of hash pairs from elemCount
* and write the preamble accordingly
*/
StrBuf tmp;
char *t = tmp.Alloc( 4 );
t[0] = RUBY_SUPPORTED_MAJOR;
t[1] = RUBY_SUPPORTED_MINOR;
t[2] = '{'; // Marks the start of a hash
tmp.SetEnd( t + 3 );
PackInt( tmp, elemCount / 2 );
// Append our current contents to the header
tmp << *this;
// Copy the final result into our buffer
Set( tmp );
}
/*
* Start reading a Ruby marshalled hash. It should be prefixed by
* the major and minor marshalling numbers to make sure we're using the
* right version of the marshalling format.
*/
void
RubyDict::StartRead( Error *e )
{
s.Set( *this );
int valid = 1;
int version = UnpackVersion( s );
if( RUBY_MAJOR( version ) != RUBY_SUPPORTED_MAJOR )
valid = 0;
if( RUBY_MINOR( version ) < RUBY_SUPPORTED_MINOR )
valid = 0;
if( valid )
valid = GetChar( '{' );
if( !valid )
{
e->Set( MsgClient::BadMarshalInput );
return;
}
// On a read elemCount is the number of *pairs*
elemCount = UnpackInt( s );
}
/*
* Read any termination for a Ruby marshalled hash (there is none).
*/
void
RubyDict::EndRead( Error *e )
{
// Nothing to do for Ruby.
return;
}
/*
* Pack an integer in Ruby format. This is mostly taken from ruby's marshal.c
* and is pretty arcane stuff. The basic idea is this:
*
* The first byte of a ruby marshalled int tells you (a) whether or not
* the value is negative and (b) either the number itself or the number of
* following bytes in which the number is encoded.
*
* Since there will never (ha!) be more than 4 bytes of encoding (marshal.c
* does not support marshalling longs - at the moment) Matz has chosen to use
* this to pack numbers in the range -123 <= x <= 122 in a single byte. i.e.
* ( -128 + 5 ) <= x <= ( 127 - 5 ).
*
* If the first byte is in the range -4 <= x <= 4 then this indicates the
* number of following bytes in which the rest of the number is marshalled.
*
* Negative numbers always have the high bit set in the first byte.
*/
void
RubyDict::PackInt( StrBuf &dict, int value )
{
/*
* 64-bit ints are not supported by Ruby's marshalling code at this
* time (1.6.8) so we assume we're packing a 32-bit int. This also
* seems reasonable since Perforce are 32-bit so we should not
* need to pack 64-bit ints for some time.
*/
#define PACKSIZE 4
char buf[ PACKSIZE ];
int len = 0;
if( 0 < value && value < ( 127 - PACKSIZE ) )
buf[ len++ ] = value + PACKSIZE + 1;
else if( value > ( PACKSIZE - 128 ) && value < 0 )
buf[ len++ ] = (value - PACKSIZE - 1) & 0xff;
// If it's packed in a single byte, we're out easy.
if ( len )
{
dict.Append( buf, len );
return;
}
// More than one byte required.
for( len = 1; len < 5; len++ )
{
buf[ len ] = value & 0xff;
value = value >> 8;
if( value == 0 )
{
buf[ 0 ] = len;
break;
}
if( value == -1 )
{
buf[ 0 ] = -len;
break;
}
}
dict.Append( buf, len + 1 );
}
/*
* Unpack an integer packed in Ruby format. See comments on PackInt for
* a description of the packed format.
*/
int
RubyDict::UnpackInt( StrRef &str )
{
int i = 0;
int isneg = 0;
int len;
int value;
if( ! str.Length() ) return 0;
value = str[ i++ ];
str += 1;
if( value == 0 ) return 0;
if( 4 < value && value < 128 ) return value - 5;
if( -129 < value && value < -4 ) return value + 5;
// what we've got so far is just the number of bytes
len = value;
value = 0;
if( isneg = ( len < 0 ) )
{
len = -len;
value = -1;
}
// Make sure the buffer is long enough first
if( str.Length() < len ) return 0;
for( i = 0; i < len; i++ )
{
if( isneg )
value &= ~( (long)0xff << ( 8 * i ) );
value |= ( ((long)str[i] & 0xff) << ( 8 * i ) );
}
str += len;
return value;
}
/*
* Unpack a string into a buffer. Just a matter of unpacking the length
* of the string first, then you can just extract the string directly.
*/
void
RubyDict::UnpackString( StrRef &str, StrBuf &buf )
{
int len = UnpackInt( str );
if( ! len ) return;
buf.Set( str.Text(), len );
str += len;
}
/*
* Unpack the Ruby marshalling format into an int. This is coded as two
* bytes at the start of the input. They're not encoded using the normal
* PackInt()/UnpackInt() code above, just raw.
*/
int
RubyDict::UnpackVersion( StrRef &str )
{
int major;
int minor;
// Must be at least two bytes there.
if( str.Length() < 2 ) return 0;
major = str[ 0 ];
minor = str[ 1 ];
str += 2;
return RUBY_VERSION( major, minor );
}
/*******************************************************************************
* PhpDict methods
******************************************************************************/
/*
* Begin writing a block of output. Each output block is represented
* as a serialized PHP array. The first element is always the "code"
* (or output type).
*
* PHP serializes arrays as "a:<n>:{<element>,<element>,...}".
* Therefore, we defer writing the beginning of the array because
* we don't know the length. All we write at this point is the "code"
* element. We will both open and close the array in EndWrite.
*/
void
PhpDict::StartWrite( const char *code )
{
Clear();
elemCount = 0;
Add( "code", StrRef( code ) );
}
/*
* Append a integer to the current block of output.
*/
void
PhpDict::AddInt( int value )
{
Append( "i:" );
*this << value;
Append( ";" );
// Bump the element count.
elemCount++;
}
/*
* Append a string to the current block of output.
*/
void
PhpDict::AddString( const StrPtr &value )
{
Append( "s:" );
*this << value.Length();
Append( ":\"" );
Append( &value );
Append( "\";" );
// Bump the element count.
elemCount++;
}
/*
* Finish writing a block of output. Arrays are closed with "}".
* Now that we know the number of elements we can properly open
* the array (which was deferred in StartWrite).
*/
void
PhpDict::EndWrite()
{
// Open the array.
StrBuf tmp;
tmp.Append( "a:" );
tmp << elemCount / 2;
tmp.Append( ":{" );
tmp << *this;
Set( tmp );
// Close the array.
Append( "}" );
}
/*
* Start reading a serialized PHP array.
*/
void
PhpDict::StartRead( Error *e )
{
s.Set( *this );
// Input array begins with 'a:<n>:{'
// Read to opening bracket
while ( s.Length() )
{
if( GetChar( '{' ) ) return;
s.Set( s.Text() + 1, s.Length() - 1 );
}
e->Set( MsgClient::BadMarshalInput );
}
/*
* Get a variable and value pair from a serialized PHP array.
* Returns non-zero on success.
*/
INLINE int
PhpDict::Get( StrBuf &var, StrBuf &val )
{
if( !GetChar( 's' ) || !UnpackString( s, var ) )
return 0;
if( !GetChar( 's' ) || !UnpackString( s, val ) )
return 0;
return 1;
}
/*
* Unpack a PHP serialized string into a buffer. Just a matter of
* reading the length of the string first, then we can skip past the
* delimiters and extract the string directly. Returns non-zero on success.
*/
int
PhpDict::UnpackString( StrRef &str, StrBuf &buf )
{
// Determine length of string
StrBuf len;
str.Set( str.Text() + 1, str.Length() - 1 );
while ( str[0] != ':' && str.Length() > 0 )
{
len.Append( str.Text(), 1 );
str.Set( str.Text() + 1, str.Length() - 1 );
}
// Verify len won't exceed str length
// Note: strings are wrapped in two characters on either side
if( str.Length() < len.Atoi() + 4 ) return 0;
// Extract string to buf and advance str reference
buf.Set( str.Text() + 2, len.Atoi() );
str.Set( str.Text() + buf.Length() + 4, str.Length() - buf.Length() - 4 );
return 1;
}
/*
* Finish off the read of a serialized PHP array.
* Just involves reading the trailing '}'
*/
void
PhpDict::EndRead( Error *e )
{
if( !GetChar( '}' ) )
e->Set( MsgClient::BadMarshalInput );
}
/*******************************************************************************
* ClientUserMarshal methods
******************************************************************************/
/*
* Constructor.
*/
ClientUserMarshal::ClientUserMarshal()
{
# ifdef OS_NT
// both python and ruby marshalled formats are binary
setmode( fileno( stdin ), O_BINARY );
setmode( fileno( stdout ), O_BINARY );
# endif
result = NULL;
}
/*
* Destructor.
*/
ClientUserMarshal::~ClientUserMarshal()
{
if( result ) delete result;
}
/*
* Write any errors into the output dictionary/hash
*/
void
ClientUserMarshal::HandleError( Error *err )
{
StrBuf msg;
err->Fmt( msg, EF_NEWLINE );
result->StartWrite( "error" );
result->Add( "data", msg );
result->Add( "severity", err->GetSeverity() );
result->Add( "generic", err->GetGeneric() );
result->EndWrite();
WriteOutput( result );
}
/*
* Write text errors into the output
*/
void
ClientUserMarshal::OutputError( const char *errBuf )
{
result->StartWrite( "error" );
result->Add( "data", StrRef( errBuf ) );
result->EndWrite();
WriteOutput( result );
}
/*
* Write text output with level indicator into the output
*/
void
ClientUserMarshal::OutputInfo( char level, const char *data )
{
result->StartWrite( "info" );
result->Add( "level", level - '0' );
result->Add( "data", StrRef( data ) );
result->EndWrite();
WriteOutput( result );
}
/*
* Write plain text output.
*/
void
ClientUserMarshal::OutputText( const char *data, int length )
{
result->StartWrite( "text" );
result->Add( "data", StrRef( data, length ) );
result->EndWrite();
WriteOutput( result );
}
/*
* Write binary output into the hash. The binary data is just
* encoded as a string.
*/
void
ClientUserMarshal::OutputBinary( const char *data, int length )
{
result->StartWrite( "binary" );
result->Add( P4Tag::v_data, StrRef( data, length ) );
result->EndWrite();
WriteOutput( result );
}
/*
* Tagged output support. If we have both a data and specdef members of
* the StrDict, then we try to parse the form directly into a StrDict and
* add that to the output rather than the enclosing StrDict.
*/
void
ClientUserMarshal::OutputStat( StrDict *varList )
{
SpecDataTable specData;
StrPtr *data = varList->GetVar( P4Tag::v_data );
StrPtr *spec = varList->GetVar( P4Tag::v_specdef );
StrPtr *specFormatted = varList->GetVar( P4Tag::v_specFormatted );
StrDict *dict = varList;
/*
* Normally, we scan the ClientUser::varList and
* add variable into the python dictionary object.
* But if we're dealing with form output, let's go
* ahead and try to parse the form.
*/
if( spec && data )
{
/*
* Parse the form data using the spec,
* and load the result into the SpecDataTable.
* That stores its contents in a StrDict.
* Use that for our results.
*/
Error e;
Spec s( spec->Text(), "", &e );
if( !e.Test() )
s.ParseNoValid( data->Text(), &specData, &e );
if( e.Test() )
{
HandleError( &e );
return;
}
dict = specData.Dict();
}
result->StartWrite( P4Tag::v_stat );
// Don't put in the 'func' (that's for us).
// Don't put in 'specFormatted' (tagged forms are formatted
// by the server in 5.2).
// Don't put in 'specdef' unless this is not spec data formatted
// by the server. 'p4 jobs -G' needs specdef to be set.
int i;
StrRef var, val;
for( i = 0; dict->GetVar( i, var, val ); i++ )
if( var != P4Tag::v_func && var != P4Tag::v_specFormatted &&
( var != P4Tag::v_specdef || !specFormatted ) )
result->Add( var, val );
result->EndWrite();
WriteOutput( result );
}
/*
* Diff output support. Extends parent to collect output in a temp file
* so that it can be routed through OutputText() and serialized.
*/
void
ClientUserMarshal::Diff( FileSys *f1, FileSys *f2, int doPage, char *df, Error *e )
{
// Create temp file to collect output.
FileSys *t = File( FileSysType( ( f1->GetType() & FST_L_MASK )
| FST_UNICODE ) );
t->MakeGlobalTemp();
// Perform diff
ClientUser::Diff(f1, f2, t, doPage, df, e);
// Stream diffs to OutputText()
t->Open( FOM_READ, e );
if( !e->Test() )
{
char buf[4096];
int i;
while( (i = t->Read( buf, sizeof(buf), e )) > 0
&& !e->Test() )
OutputText( buf, i );
t->Close( e );
}
t->Unlink( e );
delete t;
}
/*
* Input -- parse a marshalled object!
*/
void
ClientUserMarshal::InputData( StrBuf *buf, Error *e )
{
/*
* If no spec, we'll just pass to ClientUser.
* A sorry default, but only forms related commands
* use InputData.
*/
StrPtr *spec = varList->GetVar( P4Tag::v_specdef );
if( !spec )
{
ClientUser::InputData( buf, e );
return;
}
/*
* We've got a spec form: read the dictionary
* entry from stdin and format it using the spec.
*/
StrBuf var, val;
SpecDataTable specData;
/*
* Load the input from the user
*/
ReadInput( result, e );
/* Read dictionary entries */
/* and put them into our table. */
result->StartRead( e );
while( result->Get( var, val ) )
specData.Dict()->SetVar( var, val );
result->EndRead( e );
/*
* Errors here are not fatal to the client, but they
* need to be reported.
*/
if( e->Test() )
{
HandleError( e );
e->Clear();
return;
}
/* Using our table and the spec, */
/* format and return the form. */
Spec s( spec->Text(), "", e );
if( e->Test() )
{
HandleError( e );
e->Clear();
return;
}
s.Format( &specData, buf );
}
//
// Read input from stdin and load it into a buffer
//
void
ClientUserMarshal::ReadInput( StrBuf *buf, Error *e )
{
int n;
int size = FileSys::BufferSize();
do {
char *b = buf->Alloc( size );
n = read( 0, b, size );
if( n < 0 )
{
e->Sys( "read", "stdin" );
break;
}
buf->SetEnd( b + n );
} while( n > 0 );
}
//
// Write the result buffer to stdout. Subclasses can override to
// redirect the output elsewhere
//
void
ClientUserMarshal::WriteOutput( StrPtr *buf )
{
fwrite( buf->Text(), 1, buf->Length(), stdout );
}
/*******************************************************************************
* ClientUserPython methods
******************************************************************************/
/*
* ClientUserPython - ClientUser I/O is marshalled Python data
*
* Just ClientUserMarshal but with a Python dictionary.
*/
ClientUserPython::ClientUserPython()
{
result = new PythonDict;
}
/*******************************************************************************
* ClientUserRuby methods
******************************************************************************/
/*
* ClientUserRuby - ClientUser I/O is marshalled Ruby data
*
* Just ClientUserMarshal but with a Ruby dictionary.
*/
ClientUserRuby::ClientUserRuby()
{
result = new RubyDict;
}
/*******************************************************************************
* ClientUserPhp methods
******************************************************************************/
/*
* ClientUserPhp - ClientUser I/O is serialized PHP data
*
* Differs from other ClientUserMarshal classes in that all
* output is buffered until the ClientUser object is destroyed.
*/
ClientUserPhp::ClientUserPhp()
{
result = new PhpDict;
outputBuffer = new StrBuf;
outputCount = 0;
}
ClientUserPhp::~ClientUserPhp()
{
// Now that all output has been collected, wrap it
// in an array and write it to stdout
StrBuf output;
output.Append( "a:" );
output << outputCount;
output.Append( ":{" );
output.Append( outputBuffer );
output.Append( "}" );
fwrite( output.Text(), 1, output.Length(), stdout );
}
/*
* Buffer all output. Output blocks are encapsulated in an array the
* size of which cannot be known until ClientUser is deconstructed.
*/
void
ClientUserPhp::WriteOutput( StrPtr *buf )
{
outputBuffer->Append( "i:" );
*outputBuffer << outputCount;
outputBuffer->Append( ";" );
outputBuffer->Append( buf );
outputCount++;
}
/*
* ClientUser::Prompt() - don't prompt the user, just collect the response.
*/
void
ClientUserPhp::Prompt( const StrPtr &msg, StrBuf &buf, int noEcho, Error *e )
{
ClientUser::Prompt( msg, buf, noEcho, 1, e );
}