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- #!/usr/bin/perl
- #
- # Please read all the comments down to the line that says "TOP".
- # These comments are divided into three sections:
- #
- # 1. usage instructions
- # 2. installation instructions
- # 3. standard copyright
- #
- # Feel free to share this script with other instructors of programming
- # classes, but please do not place the script in a publicly accessible
- # place. Comments, questions, and bug reports should be sent to
- # moss-request@moss.stanford.edu.
- #
- # IMPORTANT: This script is known to work on Unix and on Windows using Cygwin.
- # It is not known to work on other ways of using Perl under Windows. If the
- # script does not work for you under Windows, you can try the email-based
- # version for Windows (available on the Moss home page).
- #
- #
- # Section 1. Usage instructions
- #
- # moss [-l language] [-d] [-b basefile1] ... [-b basefilen] [-m #] [-c "string"] file1 file2 file3 ...
- #
- # The -l option specifies the source language of the tested programs.
- # Moss supports many different languages; see the variable "languages" below for the
- # full list.
- #
- # Example: Compare the lisp programs foo.lisp and bar.lisp:
- #
- # moss -l lisp foo.lisp bar.lisp
- #
- #
- # The -d option specifies that submissions are by directory, not by file.
- # That is, files in a directory are taken to be part of the same program,
- # and reported matches are organized accordingly by directory.
- #
- # Example: Compare the programs foo and bar, which consist of .c and .h
- # files in the directories foo and bar respectively.
- #
- # moss -d foo/*.c foo/*.h bar/*.c bar/*.h
- #
- # Example: Each program consists of the *.c and *.h files in a directory under
- # the directory "assignment1."
- #
- # moss -d assignment1/*/*.h assignment1/*/*.c
- #
- #
- # The -b option names a "base file". Moss normally reports all code
- # that matches in pairs of files. When a base file is supplied,
- # program code that also appears in the base file is not counted in matches.
- # A typical base file will include, for example, the instructor-supplied
- # code for an assignment. Multiple -b options are allowed. You should
- # use a base file if it is convenient; base files improve results, but
- # are not usually necessary for obtaining useful information.
- #
- # IMPORTANT: Unlike previous versions of moss, the -b option *always*
- # takes a single filename, even if the -d option is also used.
- #
- # Examples:
- #
- # Submit all of the C++ files in the current directory, using skeleton.cc
- # as the base file:
- #
- # moss -l cc -b skeleton.cc *.cc
- #
- # Submit all of the ML programs in directories asn1.96/* and asn1.97/*, where
- # asn1.97/instructor/example.ml and asn1.96/instructor/example.ml contain the base files.
- #
- # moss -l ml -b asn1.97/instructor/example.ml -b asn1.96/instructor/example.ml -d asn1.97/*/*.ml asn1.96/*/*.ml
- #
- # The -m option sets the maximum number of times a given passage may appear
- # before it is ignored. A passage of code that appears in many programs
- # is probably legitimate sharing and not the result of plagiarism. With -m N,
- # any passage appearing in more than N programs is treated as if it appeared in
- # a base file (i.e., it is never reported). Option -m can be used to control
- # moss' sensitivity. With -m 2, moss reports only passages that appear
- # in exactly two programs. If one expects many very similar solutions
- # (e.g., the short first assignments typical of introductory programming
- # courses) then using -m 3 or -m 4 is a good way to eliminate all but
- # truly unusual matches between programs while still being able to detect
- # 3-way or 4-way plagiarism. With -m 1000000 (or any very
- # large number), moss reports all matches, no matter how often they appear.
- # The -m setting is most useful for large assignments where one also a base file
- # expected to hold all legitimately shared code. The default for -m is 10.
- #
- # Examples:
- #
- # moss -l pascal -m 2 *.pascal
- # moss -l cc -m 1000000 -b mycode.cc asn1/*.cc
- #
- #
- # The -c option supplies a comment string that is attached to the generated
- # report. This option facilitates matching queries submitted with replies
- # received, especially when several queries are submitted at once.
- #
- # Example:
- #
- # moss -l scheme -c "Scheme programs" *.sch
- #
- # The -n option determines the number of matching files to show in the results.
- # The default is 250.
- #
- # Example:
- # moss -c java -n 200 *.java
- # The -x option sends queries to the current experimental version of the server.
- # The experimental server has the most recent Moss features and is also usually
- # less stable (read: may have more bugs).
- #
- # Example:
- #
- # moss -x -l ml *.ml
- #
- #
- # Section 2. Installation instructions.
- #
- # You may need to change the very first line of this script
- # if perl is not in /usr/bin on your system. Just replace /usr/bin
- # with the pathname of the directory where perl resides.
- #
- #
- # 3. Standard Copyright
- #
- #Copyright (c) 1997 The Regents of the University of California.
- #All rights reserved.
- #
- #Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
- #purpose, without fee, and without written agreement is hereby granted,
- #provided that the above copyright notice and the following two
- #paragraphs appear in all copies of this software.
- #
- #IN NO EVENT SHALL THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BE LIABLE TO ANY PARTY FOR
- #DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT
- #OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE AND ITS DOCUMENTATION, EVEN IF THE UNIVERSITY OF
- #CALIFORNIA HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
- #
- #THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY WARRANTIES,
- #INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY
- #AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE SOFTWARE PROVIDED HEREUNDER IS
- #ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, AND THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA HAS NO OBLIGATION TO
- #PROVIDE MAINTENANCE, SUPPORT, UPDATES, ENHANCEMENTS, OR MODIFICATIONS.
- #
- #
- # STOP. It should not be necessary to change anything below this line
- # to use the script.
- #
- use IO::Socket;
- #
- # As of the date this script was written, the following languages were supported. This script will work with
- # languages added later however. Check the moss website for the full list of supported languages.
- #
- @languages = ("c", "cc", "java", "ml", "pascal", "ada", "lisp", "scheme", "haskell", "fortran", "ascii", "vhdl", "perl", "matlab", "python", "mips", "prolog", "spice", "vb", "csharp", "modula2", "a8086", "javascript", "plsql", "verilog");
- $server = 'moss.stanford.edu';
- $port = '7690';
- $noreq = "Request not sent.";
- $usage = "usage: moss [-x] [-l language] [-d] [-b basefile1] ... [-b basefilen] [-m #] [-c \"string\"] file1 file2 file3 ...";
- #
- # The userid is used to authenticate your queries to the server; don't change it!
- #
- $userid=720082582;
- #
- # Process the command line options. This is done in a non-standard
- # way to allow multiple -b's.
- #
- $opt_l = "c"; # default language is c
- $opt_m = 10;
- $opt_d = 0;
- $opt_x = 0;
- $opt_c = "";
- $opt_n = 250;
- $bindex = 0; # this becomes non-zero if we have any base files
- while (@ARGV && ($_ = $ARGV[0]) =~ /^-(.)(.*)/) {
- ($first,$rest) = ($1,$2);
-
- shift(@ARGV);
- if ($first eq "d") {
- $opt_d = 1;
- next;
- }
- if ($first eq "b") {
- if($rest eq '') {
- die "No argument for option -b.\n" unless @ARGV;
- $rest = shift(@ARGV);
- }
- $opt_b[$bindex++] = $rest;
- next;
- }
- if ($first eq "l") {
- if ($rest eq '') {
- die "No argument for option -l.\n" unless @ARGV;
- $rest = shift(@ARGV);
- }
- $opt_l = $rest;
- next;
- }
- if ($first eq "m") {
- if($rest eq '') {
- die "No argument for option -m.\n" unless @ARGV;
- $rest = shift(@ARGV);
- }
- $opt_m = $rest;
- next;
- }
- if ($first eq "c") {
- if($rest eq '') {
- die "No argument for option -c.\n" unless @ARGV;
- $rest = shift(@ARGV);
- }
- $opt_c = $rest;
- next;
- }
- if ($first eq "n") {
- if($rest eq '') {
- die "No argument for option -n.\n" unless @ARGV;
- $rest = shift(@ARGV);
- }
- $opt_n = $rest;
- next;
- }
- if ($first eq "x") {
- $opt_x = 1;
- next;
- }
- #
- # Override the name of the server. This is used for testing this script.
- #
- if ($first eq "s") {
- $server = shift(@ARGV);
- next;
- }
- #
- # Override the port. This is used for testing this script.
- #
- if ($first eq "p") {
- $port = shift(@ARGV);
- next;
- }
- die "Unrecognized option -$first. $usage\n";
- }
- #
- # Check a bunch of things first to ensure that the
- # script will be able to run to completion.
- #
- #
- # Make sure all the argument files exist and are readable.
- #
- print "Checking files . . . \n";
- $i = 0;
- while($i < $bindex)
- {
- die "Base file $opt_b[$i] does not exist. $noreq\n" unless -e "$opt_b[$i]";
- die "Base file $opt_b[$i] is not readable. $noreq\n" unless -r "$opt_b[$i]";
- die "Base file $opt_b is not a text file. $noreq\n" unless -T "$opt_b[$i]";
- $i++;
- }
- foreach $file (@ARGV)
- {
- die "File $file does not exist. $noreq\n" unless -e "$file";
- die "File $file is not readable. $noreq\n" unless -r "$file";
- die "File $file is not a text file. $noreq\n" unless -T "$file";
- }
- if ("@ARGV" eq '') {
- die "No files submitted.\n $usage";
- }
- print "OK\n";
- #
- # Now the real processing begins.
- #
- $sock = new IO::Socket::INET (
- PeerAddr => $server,
- PeerPort => $port,
- Proto => 'tcp',
- );
- die "Could not connect to server $server: $!\n" unless $sock;
- $sock->autoflush(1);
- sub read_from_server {
- $msg = <$sock>;
- print $msg;
- }
- sub upload_file {
- local ($file, $id, $lang) = @_;
- #
- # The stat function does not seem to give correct filesizes on windows, so
- # we compute the size here via brute force.
- #
- open(F,$file);
- $size = 0;
- while (<F>) {
- $size += length($_);
- }
- close(F);
- print "Uploading $file ...";
- open(F,$file);
- $file =~s/\s/\_/g; # replace blanks in filename with underscores
- print $sock "file $id $lang $size $file\n";
- while (<F>) {
- print $sock $_;
- }
- close(F);
- print "done.\n";
- }
- print $sock "moss $userid\n"; # authenticate user
- print $sock "directory $opt_d\n";
- print $sock "X $opt_x\n";
- print $sock "maxmatches $opt_m\n";
- print $sock "show $opt_n\n";
- #
- # confirm that we have a supported languages
- #
- print $sock "language $opt_l\n";
- $msg = <$sock>;
- chop($msg);
- if ($msg eq "no") {
- print $sock "end\n";
- die "Unrecognized language $opt_l.";
- }
- # upload any base files
- $i = 0;
- while($i < $bindex) {
- &upload_file($opt_b[$i++],0,$opt_l);
- }
- $setid = 1;
- foreach $file (@ARGV) {
- &upload_file($file,$setid++,$opt_l);
- }
- print $sock "query 0 $opt_c\n";
- print "Query submitted. Waiting for the server's response.\n";
- &read_from_server();
- print $sock "end\n";
- close($sock);
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