431 lines
12 KiB
C
431 lines
12 KiB
C
/*
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* include/common/ist.h
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* Very simple indirect string manipulation functions.
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*
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* Copyright (C) 2014-2017 Willy Tarreau - w@1wt.eu
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*
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* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
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* a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
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* "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
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* without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
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* distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
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* permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
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* the following conditions:
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*
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* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
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* included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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*
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* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
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* EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES
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* OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
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* NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT
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* HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY,
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* WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
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* FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
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* OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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*/
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#ifndef _COMMON_IST_H
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#define _COMMON_IST_H
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#include <string.h>
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#include <common/config.h>
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/* This string definition will most often be used to represent a read-only
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* string returned from a function, based on the starting point and its length
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* in bytes. No storage is provided, only a pointer and a length. The types
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* here are important as we only want to have 2 native machine words there so
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* that on modern architectures the compiler is capable of efficiently
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* returning a register pair without having to allocate stack room from the
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* caller. This is done with -freg-struct which is often enabled by default.
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*/
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struct ist {
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char *ptr;
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size_t len;
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};
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/* makes a constant ist from a constant string, for use in array declarations */
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#define IST(str) { .ptr = str "", .len = (sizeof str "") - 1 }
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/* makes an ist from a regular zero terminated string. Null has length 0.
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* Constants are detected and replaced with constant initializers. Other values
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* are measured by hand without strlen() as it's much cheaper and inlinable on
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* small strings. The construct is complex because we must never call
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* __builtin_strlen() with an expression otherwise it involves a real
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* measurement.
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*/
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#if __GNUC__ >= 4
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// gcc >= 4 detects constant propagation of str through __x and resolves the
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// length of constant strings easily.
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#define ist(str) ({ \
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char *__x = (void *)(str); \
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(struct ist){ \
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.ptr = __x, \
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.len = __builtin_constant_p(str) ? \
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((void *)str == (void *)0) ? 0 : \
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__builtin_strlen(__x) : \
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({ \
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size_t __l = 0; \
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if (__x) for (__l--; __x[++__l]; ) ; \
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__l; \
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}) \
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}; \
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})
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#else
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// gcc < 4 can't do this, and the side effect is a warning each time a NULL is
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// passed to ist() due to the check on __builtin_strlen(). It doesn't have the
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// ability to know that this code is never called.
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#define ist(str) ({ \
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char *__x = (void *)(str); \
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(struct ist){ \
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.ptr = __x, \
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.len = __builtin_constant_p(str) ? \
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((void *)str == (void *)0) ? 0 : \
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__builtin_strlen(str) : \
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({ \
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size_t __l = 0; \
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if (__x) for (__l--; __x[++__l]; ) ; \
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__l; \
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}) \
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}; \
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})
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#endif
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/* makes an ist struct from a string and a length */
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static inline struct ist ist2(const void *ptr, size_t len)
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{
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return (struct ist){ .ptr = (char *)ptr, .len = len };
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}
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/* This function MODIFIES the string to add a zero AFTER the end, and returns
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* the start pointer. The purpose is to use it on strings extracted by parsers
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* from larger strings cut with delimiters that are not important and can be
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* destroyed. It allows any such string to be used with regular string
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* functions. It's also convenient to use with printf() to show data extracted
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* from writable areas. The caller is obviously responsible for ensuring that
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* the string is valid and that the first byte past the end is writable. If
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* these conditions cannot be satisfied, use istpad() below instead.
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*/
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static inline char *ist0(struct ist ist)
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{
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ist.ptr[ist.len] = 0;
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return ist.ptr;
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}
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/* returns the length of the string */
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static inline size_t istlen(const struct ist ist)
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{
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return ist.len;
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}
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/* skips to next character in the string, always stops at the end */
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static inline struct ist istnext(const struct ist ist)
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{
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struct ist ret = ist;
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if (ret.len) {
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ret.len--;
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ret.ptr++;
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}
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return ret;
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}
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/* copies the contents from string <ist> to buffer <buf> and adds a trailing
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* zero. The caller must ensure <buf> is large enough.
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*/
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static inline struct ist istpad(void *buf, const struct ist ist)
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{
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struct ist ret = { .ptr = buf, .len = ist.len };
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for (ret.len = 0; ret.len < ist.len; ret.len++)
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ret.ptr[ret.len] = ist.ptr[ret.len];
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ret.ptr[ret.len] = 0;
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return ret;
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}
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/* trims string <ist> to no more than <size> characters. The string is
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* returned.
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*/
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static inline struct ist isttrim(const struct ist ist, size_t size)
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{
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struct ist ret = ist;
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if (ret.len > size)
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ret.len = size;
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return ret;
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}
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/* trims string <ist> to no more than <size>-1 characters and ensures that a
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* zero is placed after <ist.len> (possibly reduced by one) and before <size>,
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* unless <size> is already zero. The string is returned. This is mostly aimed
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* at building printable strings that need to be zero-terminated.
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*/
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static inline struct ist istzero(const struct ist ist, size_t size)
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{
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struct ist ret = ist;
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if (!size)
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ret.len = 0;
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else {
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if (ret.len > size - 1)
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ret.len = size - 1;
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ret.ptr[ret.len] = 0;
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}
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return ret;
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}
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/* returns the ordinal difference between two strings :
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* < 0 if ist1 < ist2
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* = 0 if ist1 == ist2
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* > 0 if ist1 > ist2
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*/
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static inline int istdiff(const struct ist ist1, const struct ist ist2)
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{
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struct ist l = ist1;
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struct ist r = ist2;
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do {
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if (!l.len--)
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return -r.len;
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if (!r.len--)
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return 1;
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} while (*l.ptr++ == *r.ptr++);
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return *(unsigned char *)(l.ptr - 1) - *(unsigned char *)(r.ptr - 1);
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}
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/* returns non-zero if <ist1> starts like <ist2> (empty strings do match) */
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static inline int istmatch(const struct ist ist1, const struct ist ist2)
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{
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struct ist l = ist1;
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struct ist r = ist2;
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if (l.len < r.len)
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return 0;
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while (r.len--) {
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if (*l.ptr++ != *r.ptr++)
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return 0;
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}
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return 1;
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}
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/* returns non-zero if <ist1> starts like <ist2> on the first <count>
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* characters (empty strings do match).
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*/
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static inline int istnmatch(const struct ist ist1, const struct ist ist2, size_t count)
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{
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struct ist l = ist1;
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struct ist r = ist2;
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if (l.len > count)
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l.len = count;
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if (r.len > count)
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r.len = count;
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return istmatch(l, r);
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}
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/* returns non-zero if <ist1> equals <ist2> (empty strings are equal) */
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static inline int isteq(const struct ist ist1, const struct ist ist2)
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{
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struct ist l = ist1;
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struct ist r = ist2;
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if (l.len != r.len)
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return 0;
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while (l.len--) {
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if (*l.ptr++ != *r.ptr++)
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return 0;
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}
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return 1;
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}
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/* returns non-zero if <ist1> equals <ist2> on the first <count> characters
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* (empty strings are equal).
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*/
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static inline int istneq(const struct ist ist1, const struct ist ist2, size_t count)
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{
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struct ist l = ist1;
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struct ist r = ist2;
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if (l.len > count)
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l.len = count;
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if (r.len > count)
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r.len = count;
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return isteq(l, r);
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}
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/* copies <src> over <dst> for a maximum of <count> bytes. Returns the number
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* of characters copied (src.len), or -1 if it does not fit. In all cases, the
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* contents are copied prior to reporting an error, so that the destination
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* at least contains a valid but truncated string.
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*/
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static inline ssize_t istcpy(struct ist *dst, const struct ist src, size_t count)
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{
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dst->len = 0;
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if (count > src.len)
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count = src.len;
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while (dst->len < count) {
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dst->ptr[dst->len] = src.ptr[dst->len];
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dst->len++;
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}
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if (dst->len == src.len)
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return src.len;
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return -1;
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}
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/* copies <src> over <dst> for a maximum of <count> bytes. Returns the number
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* of characters copied, or -1 if it does not fit. A (possibly truncated) valid
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* copy of <src> is always left into <dst>, and a trailing \0 is appended as
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* long as <count> is not null, even if that results in reducing the string by
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* one character.
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*/
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static inline ssize_t istscpy(struct ist *dst, const struct ist src, size_t count)
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{
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dst->len = 0;
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if (!count)
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goto fail;
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if (count > src.len)
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count = src.len + 1;
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while (dst->len < count - 1) {
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dst->ptr[dst->len] = src.ptr[dst->len];
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dst->len++;
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}
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dst->ptr[dst->len] = 0;
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if (dst->len == src.len)
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return src.len;
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fail:
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return -1;
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}
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/* appends <src> after <dst> for a maximum of <count> total bytes in <dst> after
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* the copy. <dst> is assumed to be <count> or less before the call. The new
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* string's length is returned, or -1 if a truncation happened. In all cases,
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* the contents are copied prior to reporting an error, so that the destination
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* at least contains a valid but truncated string.
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*/
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static inline ssize_t istcat(struct ist *dst, const struct ist src, size_t count)
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{
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const char *s = src.ptr;
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while (dst->len < count && s != src.ptr + src.len)
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dst->ptr[dst->len++] = *s++;
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if (s == src.ptr + src.len)
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return dst->len;
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return -1;
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}
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/* appends <src> after <dst> for a maximum of <count> total bytes in <dst> after
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* the copy. <dst> is assumed to be <count> or less before the call. The new
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* string's length is returned, or -1 if a truncation happened. In all cases,
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* the contents are copied prior to reporting an error, so that the destination
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* at least contains a valid but truncated string.
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*/
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static inline ssize_t istscat(struct ist *dst, const struct ist src, size_t count)
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{
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const char *s = src.ptr;
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if (!count)
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goto fail;
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while (dst->len < count - 1 && s != src.ptr + src.len) {
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dst->ptr[dst->len++] = *s++;
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}
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dst->ptr[dst->len] = 0;
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if (s == src.ptr + src.len)
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return dst->len;
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fail:
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return -1;
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}
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/* looks for first occurrence of character <chr> in string <ist>. Returns the
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* pointer if found, or NULL if not found.
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*/
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static inline char *istchr(const struct ist ist, char chr)
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{
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char *s = ist.ptr;
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do {
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if (s >= ist.ptr + ist.len)
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return NULL;
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} while (*s++ != chr);
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return s - 1;
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}
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/* looks for first occurrence of character <chr> in string <ist> and returns
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* the tail of the string starting with this character, or (ist.end,0) if not
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* found.
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*/
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static inline struct ist istfind(const struct ist ist, char chr)
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{
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struct ist ret = ist;
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while (ret.len--) {
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if (*ret.ptr++ == chr)
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return ist2(ret.ptr - 1, ret.len + 1);
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}
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return ist2(ret.ptr, 0);
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}
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/* looks for first occurrence of character different from <chr> in string <ist>
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* and returns the tail of the string starting at this character, or (ist_end,0)
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* if not found.
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*/
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static inline struct ist istskip(const struct ist ist, char chr)
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{
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struct ist ret = ist;
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while (ret.len--) {
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if (*ret.ptr++ != chr)
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return ist2(ret.ptr - 1, ret.len + 1);
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}
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return ist2(ret.ptr, 0);
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}
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/* looks for first occurrence of string <pat> in string <ist> and returns the
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* tail of the string starting at this position, or (NULL,0) if not found. The
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* empty pattern is found everywhere.
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*/
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static inline struct ist istist(const struct ist ist, const struct ist pat)
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{
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struct ist ret = ist;
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size_t pos;
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if (!pat.len)
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return ret;
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while (1) {
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loop:
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ret = istfind(ret, *pat.ptr);
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if (ret.len < pat.len)
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break;
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/* ret.len >= 1, pat.len >= 1 and *ret.ptr == *pat.ptr */
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ret = istnext(ret);
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for (pos = 0; pos < pat.len - 1; ) {
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++pos;
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if (ret.ptr[pos - 1] != pat.ptr[pos])
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goto loop;
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}
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return ist2(ret.ptr - 1, ret.len + 1);
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}
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return ist2(NULL, 0);
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}
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#endif
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