haproxy/include/haproxy/buf.h
Willy Tarreau 8dabda7497 REORG: include: split buf.h into haproxy/buf-t.h and haproxy/buf.h
File buf.h is one common cause of pain in the dependencies. Many files in
the code need it to get the struct buffer definition, and a few also need
the inlined functions to manipulate a buffer, but the file used to depend
on a long chain only for BUG_ON() (addressed by last commit).

Now buf.h is split into buf-t.h which only contains the type definitions,
and buf.h for all inlined functions. Callers who don't care can continue
to use buf.h but files in types/ must only use buf-t.h. sys/types.h had
to be added to buf.h to get ssize_t as used by b_move(). It's worth noting
that ssize_t is only supposed to be a size_t supporting -1, so b_move()
ought to be rethought regarding this.

The files were moved to haproxy/ and all their users were updated
accordingly. A dependency issue was addressed on fcgi whose C file didn't
include buf.h.
2020-06-11 10:18:56 +02:00

1023 lines
28 KiB
C

/*
* include/haproxy/buf.h
* Simple buffer handling - functions definitions.
*
* Copyright (C) 2000-2020 Willy Tarreau - w@1wt.eu
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
* a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
* "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
* without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
* distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
* permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
* the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
* included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
* EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES
* OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
* NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT
* HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY,
* WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
* FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
* OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
*/
#ifndef _HAPROXY_BUF_H
#define _HAPROXY_BUF_H
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <haproxy/api.h>
#include <haproxy/buf-t.h>
/***************************************************************************/
/* Functions used to compute offsets and pointers. Most of them exist in */
/* both wrapping-safe and unchecked ("__" prefix) variants. Some returning */
/* a pointer are also provided with an "_ofs" suffix when they return an */
/* offset relative to the storage area. */
/***************************************************************************/
/* b_is_null() : returns true if (and only if) the buffer is not yet allocated
* and thus has an empty size. Its pointer may then be anything, including NULL
* (unallocated) or an invalid pointer such as (char*)1 (allocation pending).
*/
static inline int b_is_null(const struct buffer *buf)
{
return buf->size == 0;
}
/* b_orig() : returns the pointer to the origin of the storage, which is the
* location of byte at offset zero. This is mostly used by functions which
* handle the wrapping by themselves.
*/
static inline char *b_orig(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b->area;
}
/* b_size() : returns the size of the buffer. */
static inline size_t b_size(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b->size;
}
/* b_wrap() : returns the pointer to the wrapping position of the buffer area,
* which is by definition the first byte not part of the buffer.
*/
static inline char *b_wrap(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b->area + b->size;
}
/* b_data() : returns the number of bytes present in the buffer. */
static inline size_t b_data(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b->data;
}
/* b_room() : returns the amount of room left in the buffer */
static inline size_t b_room(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b->size - b_data(b);
}
/* b_full() : returns true if the buffer is full. */
static inline size_t b_full(const struct buffer *b)
{
return !b_room(b);
}
/* b_stop() : returns the pointer to the byte following the end of the buffer,
* which may be out of the buffer if the buffer ends on the last byte of the
* area.
*/
static inline size_t __b_stop_ofs(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b->head + b->data;
}
static inline const char *__b_stop(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b_orig(b) + __b_stop_ofs(b);
}
static inline size_t b_stop_ofs(const struct buffer *b)
{
size_t stop = __b_stop_ofs(b);
if (stop > b->size)
stop -= b->size;
return stop;
}
static inline const char *b_stop(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b_orig(b) + b_stop_ofs(b);
}
/* b_peek() : returns a pointer to the data at position <ofs> relative to the
* head of the buffer. Will typically point to input data if called with the
* amount of output data. The wrapped versions will only support wrapping once
* before the beginning or after the end.
*/
static inline size_t __b_peek_ofs(const struct buffer *b, size_t ofs)
{
return b->head + ofs;
}
static inline char *__b_peek(const struct buffer *b, size_t ofs)
{
return b_orig(b) + __b_peek_ofs(b, ofs);
}
static inline size_t b_peek_ofs(const struct buffer *b, size_t ofs)
{
size_t ret = __b_peek_ofs(b, ofs);
if (ret >= b->size)
ret -= b->size;
return ret;
}
static inline char *b_peek(const struct buffer *b, size_t ofs)
{
return b_orig(b) + b_peek_ofs(b, ofs);
}
/* b_head() : returns the pointer to the buffer's head, which is the location
* of the next byte to be dequeued. Note that for buffers of size zero, the
* returned pointer may be outside of the buffer or even invalid.
*/
static inline size_t __b_head_ofs(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b->head;
}
static inline char *__b_head(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b_orig(b) + __b_head_ofs(b);
}
static inline size_t b_head_ofs(const struct buffer *b)
{
return __b_head_ofs(b);
}
static inline char *b_head(const struct buffer *b)
{
return __b_head(b);
}
/* b_tail() : returns the pointer to the tail of the buffer, which is the
* location of the first byte where it is possible to enqueue new data. Note
* that for buffers of size zero, the returned pointer may be outside of the
* buffer or even invalid.
*/
static inline size_t __b_tail_ofs(const struct buffer *b)
{
return __b_peek_ofs(b, b_data(b));
}
static inline char *__b_tail(const struct buffer *b)
{
return __b_peek(b, b_data(b));
}
static inline size_t b_tail_ofs(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b_peek_ofs(b, b_data(b));
}
static inline char *b_tail(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b_peek(b, b_data(b));
}
/* b_next() : for an absolute pointer <p> or a relative offset <o> pointing to
* a valid location within buffer <b>, returns either the absolute pointer or
* the relative offset pointing to the next byte, which usually is at (p + 1)
* unless p reaches the wrapping point and wrapping is needed.
*/
static inline size_t b_next_ofs(const struct buffer *b, size_t o)
{
o++;
if (o == b->size)
o = 0;
return o;
}
static inline char *b_next(const struct buffer *b, const char *p)
{
p++;
if (p == b_wrap(b))
p = b_orig(b);
return (char *)p;
}
/* b_dist() : returns the distance between two pointers, taking into account
* the ability to wrap around the buffer's end. The operation is not defined if
* either of the pointers does not belong to the buffer or if their distance is
* greater than the buffer's size.
*/
static inline size_t b_dist(const struct buffer *b, const char *from, const char *to)
{
ssize_t dist = to - from;
dist += dist < 0 ? b_size(b) : 0;
return dist;
}
/* b_almost_full() : returns 1 if the buffer uses at least 3/4 of its capacity,
* otherwise zero. Buffers of size zero are considered full.
*/
static inline int b_almost_full(const struct buffer *b)
{
return b_data(b) >= b_size(b) * 3 / 4;
}
/* b_space_wraps() : returns non-zero only if the buffer's free space wraps :
* [ |xxxx| ] => yes
* [xxxx| ] => no
* [ |xxxx] => no
* [xxxx| |xxxx] => no
* [xxxxxxxxxx|xxxxxxxxxxx] => no
*
* So the only case where the buffer does not wrap is when there's data either
* at the beginning or at the end of the buffer. Thus we have this :
* - if (head <= 0) ==> doesn't wrap
* - if (tail >= size) ==> doesn't wrap
* - otherwise wraps
*/
static inline int b_space_wraps(const struct buffer *b)
{
if ((ssize_t)__b_head_ofs(b) <= 0)
return 0;
if (__b_tail_ofs(b) >= b_size(b))
return 0;
return 1;
}
/* b_contig_data() : returns the amount of data that can contiguously be read
* at once starting from a relative offset <start> (which allows to easily
* pre-compute blocks for memcpy). The start point will typically contain the
* amount of past data already returned by a previous call to this function.
*/
static inline size_t b_contig_data(const struct buffer *b, size_t start)
{
size_t data = b_wrap(b) - b_peek(b, start);
size_t limit = b_data(b) - start;
if (data > limit)
data = limit;
return data;
}
/* b_contig_space() : returns the amount of bytes that can be appended to the
* buffer at once. We have 8 possible cases :
*
* [____________________] return size
* [______|_____________] return size - tail_ofs
* [XXXXXX|_____________] return size - tail_ofs
* [___|XXXXXX|_________] return size - tail_ofs
* [______________XXXXXX] return head_ofs
* [XXXX|___________|XXX] return head_ofs - tail_ofs
* [XXXXXXXXXX|XXXXXXXXX] return 0
* [XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX] return 0
*/
static inline size_t b_contig_space(const struct buffer *b)
{
size_t left, right;
right = b_head_ofs(b);
left = right + b_data(b);
left = b_size(b) - left;
if ((ssize_t)left <= 0)
left += right;
return left;
}
/* b_getblk() : gets one full block of data at once from a buffer, starting
* from offset <offset> after the buffer's head, and limited to no more than
* <len> bytes. The caller is responsible for ensuring that neither <offset>
* nor <offset>+<len> exceed the total number of bytes available in the buffer.
* Return values :
* >0 : number of bytes read, equal to requested size.
* =0 : not enough data available. <blk> is left undefined.
* The buffer is left unaffected.
*/
static inline size_t b_getblk(const struct buffer *buf, char *blk, size_t len, size_t offset)
{
size_t firstblock;
if (len + offset > b_data(buf))
return 0;
firstblock = b_wrap(buf) - b_head(buf);
if (firstblock > offset) {
if (firstblock >= len + offset) {
memcpy(blk, b_head(buf) + offset, len);
return len;
}
memcpy(blk, b_head(buf) + offset, firstblock - offset);
memcpy(blk + firstblock - offset, b_orig(buf), len - firstblock + offset);
return len;
}
memcpy(blk, b_orig(buf) + offset - firstblock, len);
return len;
}
/* b_getblk_nc() : gets one or two blocks of data at once from a buffer,
* starting from offset <ofs> after the beginning of its output, and limited to
* no more than <max> bytes. The caller is responsible for ensuring that
* neither <ofs> nor <ofs>+<max> exceed the total number of bytes available in
* the buffer. Return values :
* >0 : number of blocks filled (1 or 2). blk1 is always filled before blk2.
* =0 : not enough data available. <blk*> are left undefined.
* The buffer is left unaffected. Unused buffers are left in an undefined state.
*/
static inline size_t b_getblk_nc(const struct buffer *buf, const char **blk1, size_t *len1, const char **blk2, size_t *len2, size_t ofs, size_t max)
{
size_t l1;
if (!max)
return 0;
*blk1 = b_peek(buf, ofs);
l1 = b_wrap(buf) - *blk1;
if (l1 < max) {
*len1 = l1;
*len2 = max - l1;
*blk2 = b_orig(buf);
return 2;
}
*len1 = max;
return 1;
}
/*********************************************/
/* Functions used to modify the buffer state */
/*********************************************/
/* b_reset() : resets a buffer. The size is not touched. */
static inline void b_reset(struct buffer *b)
{
b->head = 0;
b->data = 0;
}
/* b_make() : make a buffer from all parameters */
static inline struct buffer b_make(char *area, size_t size, size_t head, size_t data)
{
struct buffer b;
b.area = area;
b.size = size;
b.head = head;
b.data = data;
return b;
}
/* b_sub() : decreases the buffer length by <count> */
static inline void b_sub(struct buffer *b, size_t count)
{
b->data -= count;
}
/* b_add() : increase the buffer length by <count> */
static inline void b_add(struct buffer *b, size_t count)
{
b->data += count;
}
/* b_set_data() : sets the buffer's length */
static inline void b_set_data(struct buffer *b, size_t len)
{
b->data = len;
}
/* b_del() : skips <del> bytes in a buffer <b>. Covers both the output and the
* input parts so it's up to the caller to know where it plays and that <del>
* is always smaller than the amount of data in the buffer.
*/
static inline void b_del(struct buffer *b, size_t del)
{
b->data -= del;
b->head += del;
if (b->head >= b->size)
b->head -= b->size;
}
/* b_realign_if_empty() : realigns a buffer if it's empty */
static inline void b_realign_if_empty(struct buffer *b)
{
if (!b_data(b))
b->head = 0;
}
/* b_slow_realign() : this function realigns a possibly wrapping buffer so that
* the part remaining to be parsed is contiguous and starts at the beginning of
* the buffer and the already parsed output part ends at the end of the buffer.
* This provides the best conditions since it allows the largest inputs to be
* processed at once and ensures that once the output data leaves, the whole
* buffer is available at once. The number of output bytes supposedly present
* at the beginning of the buffer and which need to be moved to the end must be
* passed in <output>. A temporary swap area at least as large as b->size must
* be provided in <swap>. It's up to the caller to ensure <output> is no larger
* than the difference between the whole buffer's length and its input.
*/
static inline void b_slow_realign(struct buffer *b, char *swap, size_t output)
{
size_t block1 = output;
size_t block2 = 0;
/* process output data in two steps to cover wrapping */
if (block1 > b_size(b) - b_head_ofs(b)) {
block2 = b_size(b) - b_head_ofs(b);
block1 -= block2;
}
memcpy(swap + b_size(b) - output, b_head(b), block1);
memcpy(swap + b_size(b) - block2, b_orig(b), block2);
/* process input data in two steps to cover wrapping */
block1 = b_data(b) - output;
block2 = 0;
if (block1 > b_tail_ofs(b)) {
block2 = b_tail_ofs(b);
block1 = block1 - block2;
}
memcpy(swap, b_peek(b, output), block1);
memcpy(swap + block1, b_orig(b), block2);
/* reinject changes into the buffer */
memcpy(b_orig(b), swap, b_data(b) - output);
memcpy(b_wrap(b) - output, swap + b_size(b) - output, output);
b->head = (output ? b_size(b) - output : 0);
}
/* b_putchar() : tries to append char <c> at the end of buffer <b>. Supports
* wrapping. Data are truncated if buffer is full.
*/
static inline void b_putchr(struct buffer *b, char c)
{
if (b_full(b))
return;
*b_tail(b) = c;
b->data++;
}
/* __b_putblk() : tries to append <len> bytes from block <blk> to the end of
* buffer <b> without checking for free space (it's up to the caller to do it).
* Supports wrapping. It must not be called with len == 0.
*/
static inline void __b_putblk(struct buffer *b, const char *blk, size_t len)
{
size_t half = b_contig_space(b);
if (half > len)
half = len;
memcpy(b_tail(b), blk, half);
if (len > half)
memcpy(b_peek(b, b_data(b) + half), blk + half, len - half);
b->data += len;
}
/* b_putblk() : tries to append block <blk> at the end of buffer <b>. Supports
* wrapping. Data are truncated if buffer is too short. It returns the number
* of bytes copied.
*/
static inline size_t b_putblk(struct buffer *b, const char *blk, size_t len)
{
if (len > b_room(b))
len = b_room(b);
if (len)
__b_putblk(b, blk, len);
return len;
}
/* b_xfer() : transfers at most <count> bytes from buffer <src> to buffer <dst>
* and returns the number of bytes copied. The bytes are removed from <src> and
* added to <dst>. The caller is responsible for ensuring that <count> is not
* larger than b_room(dst). Whenever possible (if the destination is empty and
* at least as much as the source was requested), the buffers are simply
* swapped instead of copied.
*/
static inline size_t b_xfer(struct buffer *dst, struct buffer *src, size_t count)
{
size_t ret, block1, block2;
ret = 0;
if (!count)
goto leave;
ret = b_data(src);
if (!ret)
goto leave;
if (ret > count)
ret = count;
else if (!b_data(dst)) {
/* zero copy is possible by just swapping buffers */
struct buffer tmp = *dst;
*dst = *src;
*src = tmp;
goto leave;
}
block1 = b_contig_data(src, 0);
if (block1 > ret)
block1 = ret;
block2 = ret - block1;
if (block1)
__b_putblk(dst, b_head(src), block1);
if (block2)
__b_putblk(dst, b_peek(src, block1), block2);
b_del(src, ret);
leave:
return ret;
}
/* Moves <len> bytes from absolute position <src> of buffer <b> by <shift>
* bytes, while supporting wrapping of both the source and the destination.
* The position is relative to the buffer's origin and may overlap with the
* target position. The <shift>'s absolute value must be strictly lower than
* the buffer's size. The main purpose is to aggregate data block during
* parsing while removing unused delimiters. The buffer's length is not
* modified, and the caller must take care of size adjustments and holes by
* itself.
*/
static inline void b_move(const struct buffer *b, size_t src, size_t len, ssize_t shift)
{
char *orig = b_orig(b);
size_t size = b_size(b);
size_t dst = src + size + shift;
size_t cnt;
if (dst >= size)
dst -= size;
if (shift < 0) {
/* copy from left to right */
for (; (cnt = len); len -= cnt) {
if (cnt > size - src)
cnt = size - src;
if (cnt > size - dst)
cnt = size - dst;
memmove(orig + dst, orig + src, cnt);
dst += cnt;
src += cnt;
if (dst >= size)
dst -= size;
if (src >= size)
src -= size;
}
}
else if (shift > 0) {
/* copy from right to left */
for (; (cnt = len); len -= cnt) {
size_t src_end = src + len;
size_t dst_end = dst + len;
if (dst_end > size)
dst_end -= size;
if (src_end > size)
src_end -= size;
if (cnt > dst_end)
cnt = dst_end;
if (cnt > src_end)
cnt = src_end;
memmove(orig + dst_end - cnt, orig + src_end - cnt, cnt);
}
}
}
/* b_rep_blk() : writes the block <blk> at position <pos> which must be in
* buffer <b>, and moves the part between <end> and the buffer's tail just
* after the end of the copy of <blk>. This effectively replaces the part
* located between <pos> and <end> with a copy of <blk> of length <len>. The
* buffer's length is automatically updated. This is used to replace a block
* with another one inside a buffer. The shift value (positive or negative) is
* returned. If there's no space left, the move is not done. If <len> is null,
* the <blk> pointer is allowed to be null, in order to erase a block.
*/
static inline int b_rep_blk(struct buffer *b, char *pos, char *end, const char *blk, size_t len)
{
int delta;
delta = len - (end - pos);
if (__b_tail(b) + delta > b_wrap(b))
return 0; /* no space left */
if (b_data(b) &&
b_tail(b) + delta > b_head(b) &&
b_head(b) >= b_tail(b))
return 0; /* no space left before wrapping data */
/* first, protect the end of the buffer */
memmove(end + delta, end, b_tail(b) - end);
/* now, copy blk over pos */
if (len)
memcpy(pos, blk, len);
b_add(b, delta);
b_realign_if_empty(b);
return delta;
}
/* b_insert_blk(): inserts the block <blk> at the absolute offset <off> moving
* data between this offset and the buffer's tail just after the end of the copy
* of <blk>. The buffer's length is automatically updated. It Supports
* wrapping. If there are not enough space to perform the copy, 0 is
* returned. Otherwise, the number of bytes copied is returned
*/
static inline int b_insert_blk(struct buffer *b, size_t off, const char *blk, size_t len)
{
size_t pos;
if (!len || len > b_room(b))
return 0; /* nothing to copy or not enough space left */
pos = b_peek_ofs(b, off);
if (pos == b_tail_ofs(b))
__b_putblk(b, blk, len);
else {
size_t delta = b_data(b) - off;
/* first, protect the end of the buffer */
b_move(b, pos, delta, len);
/* change the amount of data in the buffer during the copy */
b_sub(b, delta);
__b_putblk(b, blk, len);
b_add(b, delta);
}
return len;
}
/* __b_put_varint(): encode 64-bit value <v> as a varint into buffer <b>. The
* caller must have checked that the encoded value fits in the buffer so that
* there are no length checks. Wrapping is supported. You don't want to use
* this function but b_put_varint() instead.
*/
static inline void __b_put_varint(struct buffer *b, uint64_t v)
{
size_t data = b->data;
size_t size = b_size(b);
char *wrap = b_wrap(b);
char *tail = b_tail(b);
if (v >= 0xF0) {
/* more than one byte, first write the 4 least significant
* bits, then follow with 7 bits per byte.
*/
*tail = v | 0xF0;
v = (v - 0xF0) >> 4;
while (1) {
if (tail++ == wrap)
tail -= size;
data++;
if (v < 0x80)
break;
*tail = v | 0x80;
v = (v - 0x80) >> 7;
}
}
/* last byte */
*tail = v;
data++;
b->data = data;
}
/* b_put_varint(): try to encode value <v> as a varint into buffer <b>. Returns
* the number of bytes written in case of success, or 0 if there is not enough
* room. Wrapping is supported. No partial writes will be performed.
*/
static inline int b_put_varint(struct buffer *b, uint64_t v)
{
size_t data = b->data;
size_t size = b_size(b);
char *wrap = b_wrap(b);
char *tail = b_tail(b);
if (data != size && v >= 0xF0) {
/* more than one byte, first write the 4 least significant
* bits, then follow with 7 bits per byte.
*/
*tail = v | 0xF0;
v = (v - 0xF0) >> 4;
while (1) {
if (tail++ == wrap)
tail -= size;
data++;
if (data == size || v < 0x80)
break;
*tail = v | 0x80;
v = (v - 0x80) >> 7;
}
}
/* last byte */
if (data == size)
return 0;
*tail = v;
data++;
size = data - b->data;
b->data = data;
return size;
}
/* b_get_varint(): try to decode a varint from buffer <b> into value <vptr>.
* Returns the number of bytes read in case of success, or 0 if there were not
* enough bytes. Wrapping is supported. No partial reads will be performed.
*/
static inline int b_get_varint(struct buffer *b, uint64_t *vptr)
{
const uint8_t *head = (const uint8_t *)b_head(b);
const uint8_t *wrap = (const uint8_t *)b_wrap(b);
size_t data = b->data;
size_t size = b_size(b);
uint64_t v = 0;
int bits = 0;
if (data != 0 && (*head >= 0xF0)) {
v = *head;
bits += 4;
while (1) {
if (head++ == wrap)
head -= size;
data--;
if (!data || !(*head & 0x80))
break;
v += (uint64_t)*head << bits;
bits += 7;
}
}
/* last byte */
if (!data)
return 0;
v += (uint64_t)*head << bits;
*vptr = v;
data--;
size = b->data - data;
b_del(b, size);
return size;
}
/* b_peek_varint(): try to decode a varint from buffer <b> at offset <ofs>
* relative to head, into value <vptr>. Returns the number of bytes parsed in
* case of success, or 0 if there were not enough bytes, in which case the
* contents of <vptr> are not updated. Wrapping is supported. The buffer's head
* will NOT be updated. It is illegal to call this function with <ofs> greater
* than b->data.
*/
static inline int b_peek_varint(struct buffer *b, size_t ofs, uint64_t *vptr)
{
const uint8_t *head = (const uint8_t *)b_peek(b, ofs);
const uint8_t *wrap = (const uint8_t *)b_wrap(b);
size_t data = b_data(b) - ofs;
size_t size = b_size(b);
uint64_t v = 0;
int bits = 0;
if (data != 0 && (*head >= 0xF0)) {
v = *head;
bits += 4;
while (1) {
if (head++ == wrap)
head -= size;
data--;
if (!data || !(*head & 0x80))
break;
v += (uint64_t)*head << bits;
bits += 7;
}
}
/* last byte */
if (!data)
return 0;
v += (uint64_t)*head << bits;
*vptr = v;
data--;
size = b->data - ofs - data;
return size;
}
/*
* Buffer ring management.
*
* A buffer ring is a circular list of buffers, with a head buffer (the oldest,
* being read from) and a tail (the newest, being written to). Such a ring is
* declared as an array of buffers. The first element in the array is the root
* and is used differently. It stores the following elements :
* - size : number of allocated elements in the array, including the root
* - area : magic value BUF_RING (just to help debugging)
* - head : position of the head in the array (starts at one)
* - data : position of the tail in the array (starts at one).
*
* Note that contrary to a linear buffer, head and tail may be equal with room
* available, since the producer is expected to fill the tail. Also, the tail
* might pretty much be equal to BUF_WANTED if an allocation is pending, in
* which case it's illegal to try to allocate past this point (only one entry
* may be subscribed for allocation). It is illegal to allocate a buffer after
* an empty one, so that BUF_NULL is always the last buffer. It is also illegal
* to remove elements without freeing the buffers. Buffers between <tail> and
* <head> are in an undefined state, but <tail> and <head> are always valid.
* A ring may not contain less than 2 elements, since the root is mandatory,
* and at least one entry is required to always present a valid buffer.
*
* Given that buffers are 16- or 32- bytes long, it's convenient to set the
* size of the array to 2^N in order to keep (2^N)-1 elements, totalizing
* 2^N*16(or 32) bytes. For example on a 64-bit system, a ring of 31 usable
* buffers takes 1024 bytes.
*/
/* Initialization of a ring, the size argument contains the number of allocated
* elements, including the root. There must always be at least 2 elements, one
* for the root and one for storage.
*/
static inline void br_init(struct buffer *r, size_t size)
{
BUG_ON(size < 2);
r->size = size;
r->area = BUF_RING.area;
r->head = r->data = 1;
r[1] = BUF_NULL;
}
/* Returns number of elements in the ring, root included */
static inline unsigned int br_size(const struct buffer *r)
{
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
return r->size;
}
/* Returns true if no more buffers may be added */
static inline unsigned int br_full(const struct buffer *r)
{
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
return r->data + 1 == r->head || r->data + 1 == r->head - 1 + r->size;
}
/* Returns the index of the ring's head buffer */
static inline unsigned int br_head_idx(const struct buffer *r)
{
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
return r->head;
}
/* Returns the index of the ring's tail buffer */
static inline unsigned int br_tail_idx(const struct buffer *r)
{
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
return r->data;
}
/* Returns a pointer to the ring's head buffer */
static inline struct buffer *br_head(struct buffer *r)
{
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
return r + br_head_idx(r);
}
/* Returns a pointer to the ring's tail buffer */
static inline struct buffer *br_tail(struct buffer *r)
{
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
return r + br_tail_idx(r);
}
/* Returns the amount of data of the ring's HEAD buffer */
static inline unsigned int br_data(const struct buffer *r)
{
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
return b_data(r + br_head_idx(r));
}
/* Returns non-zero if the ring is non-full or its tail has some room */
static inline unsigned int br_has_room(const struct buffer *r)
{
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
if (!br_full(r))
return 1;
return b_room(r + br_tail_idx(r));
}
/* Advances the ring's tail if it points to a non-empty buffer, and returns the
* buffer, or NULL if the ring is full or the tail buffer is already empty. A
* new buffer is initialized to BUF_NULL before being returned. This is to be
* used after failing to append data, in order to decide to retry or not.
*/
static inline struct buffer *br_tail_add(struct buffer *r)
{
struct buffer *b;
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
b = br_tail(r);
if (!b_size(b))
return NULL;
if (br_full(r))
return NULL;
r->data++;
if (r->data >= r->size)
r->data = 1;
b = br_tail(r);
*b = BUF_NULL;
return b;
}
/* Extracts the ring's head buffer and returns it. The last buffer (tail) is
* never removed but it is returned. This guarantees that we stop on BUF_WANTED
* or BUF_EMPTY and that at the end a valid buffer remains present. This is
* used for pre-extraction during a free() loop for example. The caller is
* expected to detect the end (e.g. using bsize() since b_free() voids the
* buffer).
*/
static inline struct buffer *br_head_pick(struct buffer *r)
{
struct buffer *b;
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
b = br_head(r);
if (r->head != r->data) {
r->head++;
if (r->head >= r->size)
r->head = 1;
}
return b;
}
/* Advances the ring's head and returns the next buffer, unless it's already
* the tail, in which case the tail itself is returned. This is used for post-
* parsing deletion. The caller is expected to detect the end (e.g. a parser
* will typically purge the head before proceeding).
*/
static inline struct buffer *br_del_head(struct buffer *r)
{
BUG_ON(r->area != BUF_RING.area);
if (r->head != r->data) {
r->head++;
if (r->head >= r->size)
r->head = 1;
}
return br_head(r);
}
#endif /* _HAPROXY_BUF_H */
/*
* Local variables:
* c-indent-level: 8
* c-basic-offset: 8
* End:
*/