#ifndef INCLUDE_buffer_h__ #define INCLUDE_buffer_h__ #include #include #include #include typedef struct { unsigned char *ptr; int asize, size; } gh_buf; extern unsigned char gh_buf__initbuf[]; extern unsigned char gh_buf__oom[]; #define GH_BUF_INIT { gh_buf__initbuf, 0, 0 } /** * Initialize a gh_buf structure. * * For the cases where GH_BUF_INIT cannot be used to do static * initialization. */ extern void gh_buf_init(gh_buf *buf, int initial_size); /** * Attempt to grow the buffer to hold at least `target_size` bytes. * * If the allocation fails, this will return an error. If mark_oom is true, * this will mark the buffer as invalid for future operations; if false, * existing buffer content will be preserved, but calling code must handle * that buffer was not expanded. */ extern int gh_buf_try_grow(gh_buf *buf, int target_size, bool mark_oom); /** * Grow the buffer to hold at least `target_size` bytes. * * If the allocation fails, this will return an error and the buffer will be * marked as invalid for future operations, invaliding contents. * * @return 0 on success or -1 on failure */ static inline int gh_buf_grow(gh_buf *buf, int target_size) { return gh_buf_try_grow(buf, target_size, true); } extern void gh_buf_free(gh_buf *buf); extern void gh_buf_swap(gh_buf *buf_a, gh_buf *buf_b); /** * Test if there have been any reallocation failures with this gh_buf. * * Any function that writes to a gh_buf can fail due to memory allocation * issues. If one fails, the gh_buf will be marked with an OOM error and * further calls to modify the buffer will fail. Check gh_buf_oom() at the * end of your sequence and it will be true if you ran out of memory at any * point with that buffer. * * @return false if no error, true if allocation error */ static inline bool gh_buf_oom(const gh_buf *buf) { return (buf->ptr == gh_buf__oom); } static inline size_t gh_buf_len(const gh_buf *buf) { return buf->size; } extern int gh_buf_cmp(const gh_buf *a, const gh_buf *b); extern void gh_buf_attach(gh_buf *buf, unsigned char *ptr, int asize); extern unsigned char *gh_buf_detach(gh_buf *buf); extern void gh_buf_copy_cstr(char *data, int datasize, const gh_buf *buf); static inline const char *gh_buf_cstr(const gh_buf *buf) { return (char *)buf->ptr; } #define gh_buf_at(buf, n) ((buf)->ptr[n]) /* * Functions below that return int value error codes will return 0 on * success or -1 on failure (which generally means an allocation failed). * Using a gh_buf where the allocation has failed with result in -1 from * all further calls using that buffer. As a result, you can ignore the * return code of these functions and call them in a series then just call * gh_buf_oom at the end. */ extern int gh_buf_set(gh_buf *buf, const unsigned char *data, int len); extern int gh_buf_sets(gh_buf *buf, const char *string); extern int gh_buf_putc(gh_buf *buf, int c); extern int gh_buf_put(gh_buf *buf, const unsigned char *data, int len); extern int gh_buf_puts(gh_buf *buf, const char *string); extern int gh_buf_printf(gh_buf *buf, const char *format, ...) __attribute__((format (printf, 2, 3))); extern int gh_buf_vprintf(gh_buf *buf, const char *format, va_list ap); extern void gh_buf_clear(gh_buf *buf); int gh_buf_strchr(const gh_buf *buf, int c, int pos); int gh_buf_strrchr(const gh_buf *buf, int c, int pos); void gh_buf_truncate(gh_buf *buf, int len); void gh_buf_ltruncate(gh_buf *buf, int len); void gh_buf_trim(gh_buf *buf); #endif