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Diffstat (limited to 'include/asterisk/strings.h')
-rw-r--r-- | include/asterisk/strings.h | 304 |
1 files changed, 304 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/include/asterisk/strings.h b/include/asterisk/strings.h new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c800d532e --- /dev/null +++ b/include/asterisk/strings.h @@ -0,0 +1,304 @@ +/* + * Asterisk -- An open source telephony toolkit. + * + * Copyright (C) 1999 - 2006, Digium, Inc. + * + * Mark Spencer <markster@digium.com> + * + * See http://www.asterisk.org for more information about + * the Asterisk project. Please do not directly contact + * any of the maintainers of this project for assistance; + * the project provides a web site, mailing lists and IRC + * channels for your use. + * + * This program is free software, distributed under the terms of + * the GNU General Public License Version 2. See the LICENSE file + * at the top of the source tree. + */ + +/*! \file + * \brief String manipulation functions + */ + +#ifndef _ASTERISK_STRINGS_H +#define _ASTERISK_STRINGS_H + +#include <stdlib.h> +#include <string.h> +#include <stdarg.h> +#include <ctype.h> + +#include "asterisk/inline_api.h" +#include "asterisk/compiler.h" +#include "asterisk/compat.h" + +static force_inline int ast_strlen_zero(const char *s) +{ + return (!s || (*s == '\0')); +} + +/*! \brief returns the equivalent of logic or for strings: + * first one if not empty, otherwise second one. + */ +#define S_OR(a, b) (!ast_strlen_zero(a) ? (a) : (b)) + +/*! + \brief Gets a pointer to the first non-whitespace character in a string. + \param ast_skip_blanks function being used + \param str the input string + \return a pointer to the first non-whitespace character + */ +AST_INLINE_API( +char *ast_skip_blanks(const char *str), +{ + while (*str && ((unsigned char) *str) < 33) + str++; + return (char *)str; +} +) + +/*! + \brief Trims trailing whitespace characters from a string. + \param ast_trim_blanks function being used + \param str the input string + \return a pointer to the modified string + */ +AST_INLINE_API( +char *ast_trim_blanks(char *str), +{ + char *work = str; + + if (work) { + work += strlen(work) - 1; + /* It's tempting to only want to erase after we exit this loop, + but since ast_trim_blanks *could* receive a constant string + (which we presumably wouldn't have to touch), we shouldn't + actually set anything unless we must, and it's easier just + to set each position to \0 than to keep track of a variable + for it */ + while ((work >= str) && ((unsigned char) *work) < 33) + *(work--) = '\0'; + } + return str; +} +) + +/*! + \brief Gets a pointer to first whitespace character in a string. + \param ast_skip_noblanks function being used + \param str the input string + \return a pointer to the first whitespace character + */ +AST_INLINE_API( +char *ast_skip_nonblanks(char *str), +{ + while (*str && ((unsigned char) *str) > 32) + str++; + return str; +} +) + +/*! + \brief Strip leading/trailing whitespace from a string. + \param s The string to be stripped (will be modified). + \return The stripped string. + + This functions strips all leading and trailing whitespace + characters from the input string, and returns a pointer to + the resulting string. The string is modified in place. +*/ +AST_INLINE_API( +char *ast_strip(char *s), +{ + s = ast_skip_blanks(s); + if (s) + ast_trim_blanks(s); + return s; +} +) + +/*! + \brief Strip leading/trailing whitespace and quotes from a string. + \param s The string to be stripped (will be modified). + \param beg_quotes The list of possible beginning quote characters. + \param end_quotes The list of matching ending quote characters. + \return The stripped string. + + This functions strips all leading and trailing whitespace + characters from the input string, and returns a pointer to + the resulting string. The string is modified in place. + + It can also remove beginning and ending quote (or quote-like) + characters, in matching pairs. If the first character of the + string matches any character in beg_quotes, and the last + character of the string is the matching character in + end_quotes, then they are removed from the string. + + Examples: + \code + ast_strip_quoted(buf, "\"", "\""); + ast_strip_quoted(buf, "'", "'"); + ast_strip_quoted(buf, "[{(", "]})"); + \endcode + */ +char *ast_strip_quoted(char *s, const char *beg_quotes, const char *end_quotes); + +/*! + \brief Strip backslash for "escaped" semicolons. + \brief s The string to be stripped (will be modified). + \return The stripped string. + */ +char *ast_unescape_semicolon(char *s); + +/*! + \brief Size-limited null-terminating string copy. + \param ast_copy_string function being used + \param dst The destination buffer. + \param src The source string + \param size The size of the destination buffer + \return Nothing. + + This is similar to \a strncpy, with two important differences: + - the destination buffer will \b always be null-terminated + - the destination buffer is not filled with zeros past the copied string length + These differences make it slightly more efficient, and safer to use since it will + not leave the destination buffer unterminated. There is no need to pass an artificially + reduced buffer size to this function (unlike \a strncpy), and the buffer does not need + to be initialized to zeroes prior to calling this function. +*/ +AST_INLINE_API( +void ast_copy_string(char *dst, const char *src, size_t size), +{ + while (*src && size) { + *dst++ = *src++; + size--; + } + if (__builtin_expect(!size, 0)) + dst--; + *dst = '\0'; +} +) + + +/*! + \brief Build a string in a buffer, designed to be called repeatedly + + This is a wrapper for snprintf, that properly handles the buffer pointer + and buffer space available. + + \param buffer current position in buffer to place string into (will be updated on return) + \param space remaining space in buffer (will be updated on return) + \param fmt printf-style format string + \return 0 on success, non-zero on failure. +*/ +int ast_build_string(char **buffer, size_t *space, const char *fmt, ...) __attribute__((format(printf, 3, 4))); + +/*! + \brief Build a string in a buffer, designed to be called repeatedly + + This is a wrapper for snprintf, that properly handles the buffer pointer + and buffer space available. + + \return 0 on success, non-zero on failure. + \param buffer current position in buffer to place string into (will be updated on return) + \param space remaining space in buffer (will be updated on return) + \param fmt printf-style format string + \param ap varargs list of arguments for format +*/ +int ast_build_string_va(char **buffer, size_t *space, const char *fmt, va_list ap) __attribute__((format(printf, 3, 0))); + +/*! Make sure something is true */ +/*! + * Determine if a string containing a boolean value is "true". + * This function checks to see whether a string passed to it is an indication of an "true" value. It checks to see if the string is "yes", "true", "y", "t", "on" or "1". + * + * Returns 0 if val is a NULL pointer, -1 if "true", and 0 otherwise. + */ +int ast_true(const char *val); + +/*! Make sure something is false */ +/*! + * Determine if a string containing a boolean value is "false". + * This function checks to see whether a string passed to it is an indication of an "false" value. It checks to see if the string is "no", "false", "n", "f", "off" or "0". + * + * Returns 0 if val is a NULL pointer, -1 if "false", and 0 otherwise. + */ +int ast_false(const char *val); + +/* + \brief Join an array of strings into a single string. + \param s the resulting string buffer + \param len the length of the result buffer, s + \param w an array of strings to join + + This function will join all of the strings in the array 'w' into a single + string. It will also place a space in the result buffer in between each + string from 'w'. +*/ +void ast_join(char *s, size_t len, char * const w[]); + +/* + \brief Parse a time (integer) string. + \param src String to parse + \param dst Destination + \param _default Value to use if the string does not contain a valid time + \param consumed The number of characters 'consumed' in the string by the parse (see 'man sscanf' for details) + \return zero on success, non-zero on failure +*/ +int ast_get_time_t(const char *src, time_t *dst, time_t _default, int *consumed); + +/* The realloca lets us ast_restrdupa(), but you can't mix any other ast_strdup calls! */ + +struct ast_realloca { + char *ptr; + int alloclen; +}; + +#define ast_restrdupa(ra, s) \ + ({ \ + if ((ra)->ptr && strlen(s) + 1 < (ra)->alloclen) { \ + strcpy((ra)->ptr, s); \ + } else { \ + (ra)->ptr = alloca(strlen(s) + 1 - (ra)->alloclen); \ + if ((ra)->ptr) (ra)->alloclen = strlen(s) + 1; \ + } \ + (ra)->ptr; \ + }) + +/*! + * \brief Compute a hash value on a string + * + * This famous hash algorithm was written by Dan Bernstein and is + * commonly used. + * + * http://www.cse.yorku.ca/~oz/hash.html + */ +static force_inline int ast_str_hash(const char *str) +{ + int hash = 5381; + + while (*str) + hash = hash * 33 ^ *str++; + + return abs(hash); +} + +/*! + * \brief Compute a hash value on a case-insensitive string + * + * Uses the same hash algorithm as ast_str_hash, but converts + * all characters to lowercase prior to computing a hash. This + * allows for easy case-insensitive lookups in a hash table. + */ +static force_inline int ast_str_case_hash(const char *str) +{ + int hash = 5381; + + while (*str) { + hash = hash * 33 ^ tolower(*str++); + } + + return abs(hash); +} + +#endif /* _ASTERISK_STRINGS_H */ |