/* Output like sprintf to a buffer of specified size. Also takes args differently: pass one pointer to the end of the format string in addition to the format string itself. Copyright (C) 1985, 2001-2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Emacs. If not, see . */ /* If you think about replacing this with some similar standard C function of the printf family (such as vsnprintf), please note that this function supports the following Emacs-specific features: . For %c conversions, it produces a string with the multibyte representation of the (`int') argument, suitable for display in an Emacs buffer. . For %s and %c, when field width is specified (e.g., %25s), it accounts for the diplay width of each character, according to char-width-table. That is, it does not assume that each character takes one column on display. . If the size of the buffer is not enough to produce the formatted string in its entirety, it makes sure that truncation does not chop the last character in the middle of its multibyte sequence, producing an invalid sequence. . It accepts a pointer to the end of the format string, so the format string could include embedded null characters. . It signals an error if the length of the formatted string is about to overflow MOST_POSITIVE_FIXNUM, to avoid producing strings longer than what Emacs can handle. OTOH, this function supports only a small subset of the standard C formatted output facilities. E.g., %u and %ll are not supported, and precision is ignored %s and %c conversions. (See below for the detailed documentation of what is supported.) However, this is okay, as this function is supposed to be called from `error' and similar functions, and thus does not need to support features beyond those in `Fformat', which is used by `error' on the Lisp level. */ /* This function supports the following %-sequences in the `format' argument: %s means print a string argument. %S is silently treated as %s, for loose compatibility with `Fformat'. %d means print a `signed int' argument in decimal. %o means print an `unsigned int' argument in octal. %x means print an `unsigned int' argument in hex. %e means print a `double' argument in exponential notation. %f means print a `double' argument in decimal-point notation. %g means print a `double' argument in exponential notation or in decimal-point notation, whichever uses fewer characters. %c means print a `signed int' argument as a single character. %% means produce a literal % character. A %-sequence may contain optional flag, width, and precision specifiers, and a length modifier, as follows: %character where flags is [+ -0], width is [0-9]+, precision is .[0-9]+, and length is empty or l or the value of the pI macro. Also, %% in a format stands for a single % in the output. A % that does not introduce a valid %-sequence causes undefined behavior. The + flag character inserts a + before any positive number, while a space inserts a space before any positive number; these flags only affect %d, %o, %x, %e, %f, and %g sequences. The - and 0 flags affect the width specifier, as described below. For signed numerical arguments only, the ` ' (space) flag causes the result to be prefixed with a space character if it does not start with a sign (+ or -). The l (lower-case letter ell) length modifier is a `long' data type modifier: it is supported for %d, %o, and %x conversions of integral arguments, must immediately precede the conversion specifier, and means that the respective argument is to be treated as `long int' or `unsigned long int'. Similarly, the value of the pI macro means to use EMACS_INT or EMACS_UINT and the empty length modifier means `int' or `unsigned int'. The width specifier supplies a lower limit for the length of the printed representation. The padding, if any, normally goes on the left, but it goes on the right if the - flag is present. The padding character is normally a space, but (for numerical arguments only) it is 0 if the 0 flag is present. The - flag takes precedence over the 0 flag. For %e, %f, and %g sequences, the number after the "." in the precision specifier says how many decimal places to show; if zero, the decimal point itself is omitted. For %s and %S, the precision specifier is ignored. */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "lisp.h" /* Since we use the macro CHAR_HEAD_P, we have to include this, but don't have to include others because CHAR_HEAD_P does not contains another macro. */ #include "character.h" #ifndef DBL_MAX_10_EXP #define DBL_MAX_10_EXP 308 /* IEEE double */ #endif /* Generate output from a format-spec FORMAT, terminated at position FORMAT_END. (*FORMAT_END is not part of the format, but must exist and be readable.) Output goes in BUFFER, which has room for BUFSIZE chars. BUFSIZE must be positive. If the output does not fit, truncate it to fit and return BUFSIZE - 1; if this truncates a multibyte sequence, store '\0' into the sequence's first byte. Returns the number of bytes stored into BUFFER, excluding the terminating null byte. Output is always null-terminated. String arguments are passed as C strings. Integers are passed as C integers. */ ptrdiff_t doprnt (char *buffer, ptrdiff_t bufsize, const char *format, const char *format_end, va_list ap) { const char *fmt = format; /* Pointer into format string */ register char *bufptr = buffer; /* Pointer into output buffer.. */ /* Use this for sprintf unless we need something really big. */ char tembuf[DBL_MAX_10_EXP + 100]; /* Size of sprintf_buffer. */ ptrdiff_t size_allocated = sizeof (tembuf); /* Buffer to use for sprintf. Either tembuf or same as BIG_BUFFER. */ char *sprintf_buffer = tembuf; /* Buffer we have got with malloc. */ char *big_buffer = NULL; register size_t tem; char *string; char fixed_buffer[20]; /* Default buffer for small formatting. */ char *fmtcpy; int minlen; char charbuf[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH + 1]; /* Used for %c. */ USE_SAFE_ALLOCA; if (format_end == 0) format_end = format + strlen (format); if (format_end - format < sizeof (fixed_buffer) - 1) fmtcpy = fixed_buffer; else SAFE_ALLOCA (fmtcpy, char *, format_end - format + 1); bufsize--; /* Loop until end of format string or buffer full. */ while (fmt < format_end && bufsize > 0) { if (*fmt == '%') /* Check for a '%' character */ { ptrdiff_t size_bound = 0; EMACS_INT width; /* Columns occupied by STRING on display. */ int long_flag = 0; int pIlen = sizeof pI - 1; fmt++; /* Copy this one %-spec into fmtcpy. */ string = fmtcpy; *string++ = '%'; while (fmt < format_end) { *string++ = *fmt; if ('0' <= *fmt && *fmt <= '9') { /* Get an idea of how much space we might need. This might be a field width or a precision; e.g. %1.1000f and %1000.1f both might need 1000+ bytes. Parse the width or precision, checking for overflow. */ ptrdiff_t n = *fmt - '0'; while (fmt + 1 < format_end && '0' <= fmt[1] && fmt[1] <= '9') { /* Avoid ptrdiff_t, size_t, and int overflow, as many sprintfs mishandle widths greater than INT_MAX. This test is simple but slightly conservative: e.g., (INT_MAX - INT_MAX % 10) is reported as an overflow even when it's not. */ if (n >= min (INT_MAX, min (PTRDIFF_MAX, SIZE_MAX)) / 10) error ("Format width or precision too large"); n = n * 10 + fmt[1] - '0'; *string++ = *++fmt; } if (size_bound < n) size_bound = n; } else if (! (*fmt == '-' || *fmt == ' ' || *fmt == '.' || *fmt == '+')) break; fmt++; } if (0 < pIlen && pIlen <= format_end - fmt && memcmp (fmt, pI, pIlen) == 0) { long_flag = 2; memcpy (string, fmt + 1, pIlen); string += pIlen; fmt += pIlen; } else if (fmt < format_end && *fmt == 'l') { long_flag = 1; *string++ = *++fmt; } *string = 0; /* Make the size bound large enough to handle floating point formats with large numbers. */ if (size_bound > min (PTRDIFF_MAX, SIZE_MAX) - DBL_MAX_10_EXP - 50) error ("Format width or precision too large"); size_bound += DBL_MAX_10_EXP + 50; /* Make sure we have that much. */ if (size_bound > size_allocated) { if (big_buffer) xfree (big_buffer); big_buffer = (char *) xmalloc (size_bound); sprintf_buffer = big_buffer; size_allocated = size_bound; } minlen = 0; switch (*fmt++) { default: error ("Invalid format operation %s", fmtcpy); /* case 'b': */ case 'l': case 'd': { int i; long l; if (1 < long_flag) { EMACS_INT ll = va_arg (ap, EMACS_INT); sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, ll); } else if (long_flag) { l = va_arg(ap, long); sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, l); } else { i = va_arg(ap, int); sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, i); } /* Now copy into final output, truncating as necessary. */ string = sprintf_buffer; goto doit; } case 'o': case 'x': { unsigned u; unsigned long ul; if (1 < long_flag) { EMACS_UINT ull = va_arg (ap, EMACS_UINT); sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, ull); } else if (long_flag) { ul = va_arg(ap, unsigned long); sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, ul); } else { u = va_arg(ap, unsigned); sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, u); } /* Now copy into final output, truncating as necessary. */ string = sprintf_buffer; goto doit; } case 'f': case 'e': case 'g': { double d = va_arg(ap, double); sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, d); /* Now copy into final output, truncating as necessary. */ string = sprintf_buffer; goto doit; } case 'S': string[-1] = 's'; case 's': if (fmtcpy[1] != 's') minlen = atoi (&fmtcpy[1]); string = va_arg (ap, char *); tem = strlen (string); if (STRING_BYTES_BOUND < tem) error ("String for %%s or %%S format is too long"); width = strwidth (string, tem); goto doit1; /* Copy string into final output, truncating if no room. */ doit: /* Coming here means STRING contains ASCII only. */ tem = strlen (string); if (STRING_BYTES_BOUND < tem) error ("Format width or precision too large"); width = tem; doit1: /* We have already calculated: TEM -- length of STRING, WIDTH -- columns occupied by STRING when displayed, and MINLEN -- minimum columns of the output. */ if (minlen > 0) { while (minlen > width && bufsize > 0) { *bufptr++ = ' '; bufsize--; minlen--; } minlen = 0; } if (tem > bufsize) { /* Truncate the string at character boundary. */ tem = bufsize; while (!CHAR_HEAD_P (string[tem - 1])) tem--; /* If the multibyte sequence of this character is too long for the space we have left in the buffer, truncate before it. */ if (tem > 0 && BYTES_BY_CHAR_HEAD (string[tem - 1]) > bufsize) tem--; if (tem > 0) memcpy (bufptr, string, tem); bufptr[tem] = 0; /* Trigger exit from the loop, but make sure we return to the caller a value which will indicate that the buffer was too small. */ bufptr += bufsize; bufsize = 0; continue; } else memcpy (bufptr, string, tem); bufptr += tem; bufsize -= tem; if (minlen < 0) { while (minlen < - width && bufsize > 0) { *bufptr++ = ' '; bufsize--; minlen++; } minlen = 0; } continue; case 'c': { int chr = va_arg(ap, int); tem = CHAR_STRING (chr, (unsigned char *) charbuf); string = charbuf; string[tem] = 0; width = strwidth (string, tem); if (fmtcpy[1] != 'c') minlen = atoi (&fmtcpy[1]); goto doit1; } case '%': fmt--; /* Drop thru and this % will be treated as normal */ } } { /* Just some character; Copy it if the whole multi-byte form fit in the buffer. */ char *save_bufptr = bufptr; do { *bufptr++ = *fmt++; } while (fmt < format_end && --bufsize > 0 && !CHAR_HEAD_P (*fmt)); if (!CHAR_HEAD_P (*fmt)) { /* Truncate, but return value that will signal to caller that the buffer was too small. */ *save_bufptr = 0; break; } } }; /* If we had to malloc something, free it. */ xfree (big_buffer); *bufptr = 0; /* Make sure our string ends with a '\0' */ SAFE_FREE (); return bufptr - buffer; }