mirror of https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv
260 lines
8.7 KiB
C
260 lines
8.7 KiB
C
/*
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* This file is part of mpv.
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*
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* mpv is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
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* (at your option) any later version.
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*
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* mpv is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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* GNU General Public License for more details.
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*
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* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
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* with mpv. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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*/
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#include <stdarg.h>
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#include <assert.h>
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#include <libavutil/common.h>
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#include <libavutil/error.h>
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#include "talloc.h"
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#include "misc/bstr.h"
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#include "common/common.h"
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#define appendf(ptr, ...) \
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do {(*(ptr)) = talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(*(ptr), __VA_ARGS__);} while(0)
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// Return a talloc'ed string formatted according to the format string in fmt.
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// On error, return NULL.
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// Valid formats:
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// %H, %h: hour (%H is padded with 0 to two digits)
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// %M: minutes from 00-59 (hours are subtracted)
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// %m: total minutes (includes hours, unlike %M)
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// %S: seconds from 00-59 (minutes and hours are subtracted)
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// %s: total seconds (includes hours and minutes)
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// %f: like %s, but as float
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// %T: milliseconds (000-999)
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char *mp_format_time_fmt(const char *fmt, double time)
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{
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if (time == MP_NOPTS_VALUE)
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return talloc_strdup(NULL, "unknown");
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char *sign = time < 0 ? "-" : "";
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time = time < 0 ? -time : time;
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long long int itime = time;
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long long int h, m, tm, s;
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int ms;
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s = itime;
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tm = s / 60;
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h = s / 3600;
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s -= h * 3600;
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m = s / 60;
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s -= m * 60;
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ms = (time - itime) * 1000;
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char *res = talloc_strdup(NULL, "");
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while (*fmt) {
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if (fmt[0] == '%') {
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fmt++;
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switch (fmt[0]) {
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case 'h': appendf(&res, "%s%lld", sign, h); break;
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case 'H': appendf(&res, "%s%02lld", sign, h); break;
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case 'm': appendf(&res, "%s%lld", sign, tm); break;
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case 'M': appendf(&res, "%02lld", m); break;
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case 's': appendf(&res, "%s%lld", sign, itime); break;
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case 'S': appendf(&res, "%02lld", s); break;
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case 'T': appendf(&res, "%03d", ms); break;
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case '%': appendf(&res, "%s", "%"); break;
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default: goto error;
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}
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fmt++;
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} else {
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appendf(&res, "%c", *fmt);
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fmt++;
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}
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}
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return res;
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error:
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talloc_free(res);
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return NULL;
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}
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char *mp_format_time(double time, bool fractions)
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{
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return mp_format_time_fmt(fractions ? "%H:%M:%S.%T" : "%H:%M:%S", time);
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}
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// Set rc to the union of rc and rc2
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void mp_rect_union(struct mp_rect *rc, const struct mp_rect *rc2)
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{
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rc->x0 = FFMIN(rc->x0, rc2->x0);
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rc->y0 = FFMIN(rc->y0, rc2->y0);
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rc->x1 = FFMAX(rc->x1, rc2->x1);
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rc->y1 = FFMAX(rc->y1, rc2->y1);
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}
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// Returns whether or not a point is contained by rc
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bool mp_rect_contains(struct mp_rect *rc, int x, int y)
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{
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return rc->x0 <= x && x < rc->x1 && rc->y0 <= y && y < rc->y1;
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}
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// Set rc to the intersection of rc and src.
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// Return false if the result is empty.
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bool mp_rect_intersection(struct mp_rect *rc, const struct mp_rect *rc2)
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{
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rc->x0 = FFMAX(rc->x0, rc2->x0);
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rc->y0 = FFMAX(rc->y0, rc2->y0);
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rc->x1 = FFMIN(rc->x1, rc2->x1);
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rc->y1 = FFMIN(rc->y1, rc2->y1);
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return rc->x1 > rc->x0 && rc->y1 > rc->y0;
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}
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// This works like snprintf(), except that it starts writing the first output
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// character to str[strlen(str)]. This returns the number of characters the
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// string would have *appended* assuming a large enough buffer, will make sure
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// str is null-terminated, and will never write to str[size] or past.
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// Example:
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// int example(char *buf, size_t buf_size, double num, char *str) {
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// int n = 0;
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// n += mp_snprintf_cat(buf, size, "%f", num);
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// n += mp_snprintf_cat(buf, size, "%s", str);
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// return n; }
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// Note how this can be chained with functions similar in style.
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int mp_snprintf_cat(char *str, size_t size, const char *format, ...)
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{
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size_t len = strnlen(str, size);
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assert(!size || len < size); // str with no 0-termination is not allowed
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int r;
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va_list ap;
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va_start(ap, format);
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r = vsnprintf(str + len, size - len, format, ap);
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va_end(ap);
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return r;
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}
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// Encode the unicode codepoint as UTF-8, and append to the end of the
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// talloc'ed buffer. All guarantees bstr_xappend() give applies, such as
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// implicit \0-termination for convenience.
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void mp_append_utf8_bstr(void *talloc_ctx, struct bstr *buf, uint32_t codepoint)
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{
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char data[8];
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uint8_t tmp;
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char *output = data;
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PUT_UTF8(codepoint, tmp, *output++ = tmp;);
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bstr_xappend(talloc_ctx, buf, (bstr){data, output - data});
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}
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// Parse a C-style escape beginning at code, and append the result to *str
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// using talloc. The input string (*code) must point to the first character
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// after the initial '\', and after parsing *code is set to the first character
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// after the current escape.
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// On error, false is returned, and all input remains unchanged.
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static bool mp_parse_escape(void *talloc_ctx, bstr *dst, bstr *code)
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{
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if (code->len < 1)
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return false;
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char replace = 0;
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switch (code->start[0]) {
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case '"': replace = '"'; break;
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case '\\': replace = '\\'; break;
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case 'b': replace = '\b'; break;
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case 'f': replace = '\f'; break;
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case 'n': replace = '\n'; break;
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case 'r': replace = '\r'; break;
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case 't': replace = '\t'; break;
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case 'e': replace = '\x1b'; break;
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case '\'': replace = '\''; break;
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}
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if (replace) {
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bstr_xappend(talloc_ctx, dst, (bstr){&replace, 1});
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*code = bstr_cut(*code, 1);
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return true;
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}
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if (code->start[0] == 'x' && code->len >= 3) {
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bstr num = bstr_splice(*code, 1, 3);
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char c = bstrtoll(num, &num, 16);
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if (num.len)
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return false;
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bstr_xappend(talloc_ctx, dst, (bstr){&c, 1});
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*code = bstr_cut(*code, 3);
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return true;
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}
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if (code->start[0] == 'u' && code->len >= 5) {
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bstr num = bstr_splice(*code, 1, 5);
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int c = bstrtoll(num, &num, 16);
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if (num.len)
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return false;
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mp_append_utf8_bstr(talloc_ctx, dst, c);
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*code = bstr_cut(*code, 5);
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return true;
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}
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return false;
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}
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// Like mp_append_escaped_string, but set *dst to sliced *src if no escape
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// sequences have to be parsed (i.e. no memory allocation is required), and
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// if dst->start was NULL on function entry.
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bool mp_append_escaped_string_noalloc(void *talloc_ctx, bstr *dst, bstr *src)
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{
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bstr t = *src;
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int cur = 0;
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while (1) {
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if (cur >= t.len || t.start[cur] == '"') {
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*src = bstr_cut(t, cur);
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t = bstr_splice(t, 0, cur);
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if (dst->start == NULL) {
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*dst = t;
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} else {
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bstr_xappend(talloc_ctx, dst, t);
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}
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return true;
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} else if (t.start[cur] == '\\') {
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bstr_xappend(talloc_ctx, dst, bstr_splice(t, 0, cur));
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t = bstr_cut(t, cur + 1);
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cur = 0;
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if (!mp_parse_escape(talloc_ctx, dst, &t))
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goto error;
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} else {
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cur++;
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}
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}
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error:
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return false;
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}
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// src is expected to point to a C-style string literal, *src pointing to the
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// first char after the starting '"'. It will append the contents of the literal
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// to *dst (using talloc_ctx) until the first '"' or the end of *str is found.
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// See bstr_xappend() how data is appended to *dst.
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// On success, *src will either start with '"', or be empty.
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// On error, return false, and *dst will contain the string until the first
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// error, *src is not changed.
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// Note that dst->start will be implicitly \0-terminated on successful return,
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// and if it was NULL or \0-terminated before calling the function.
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// As mentioned above, the caller is responsible for skipping the '"' chars.
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bool mp_append_escaped_string(void *talloc_ctx, bstr *dst, bstr *src)
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{
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if (mp_append_escaped_string_noalloc(talloc_ctx, dst, src)) {
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// Guarantee copy (or allocation).
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if (!dst->start || dst->start == src->start) {
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bstr res = *dst;
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*dst = (bstr){0};
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bstr_xappend(talloc_ctx, dst, res);
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}
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return true;
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}
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return false;
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}
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// Behaves like strerror()/strerror_r(), but is thread- and GNU-safe.
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char *mp_strerror_buf(char *buf, size_t buf_size, int errnum)
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{
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// This handles the nasty details of calling the right function for us.
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av_strerror(AVERROR(errnum), buf, buf_size);
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return buf;
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}
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