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Diffstat (limited to 'libio/dbz/case.c')
-rw-r--r-- | libio/dbz/case.c | 129 |
1 files changed, 129 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/libio/dbz/case.c b/libio/dbz/case.c new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..87b741ff54a --- /dev/null +++ b/libio/dbz/case.c @@ -0,0 +1,129 @@ +/* + * case-mapping stuff + * + * We exploit the fact that we are dealing only with headers here, and + * headers are limited to the ASCII characters by RFC822. It is barely + * possible that we might be dealing with a translation into another + * character set, but in particular it's very unlikely for a header + * character to be outside -128..255. + * + * Life would be a whole lot simpler if tolower() could safely and portably + * be applied to any char. + */ +#include <stdio.h> +#include "string.h" +#include "case.h" + +/* note that case.h knows the value of OFFSET */ +#define OFFSET 128 /* avoid trouble with negative chars */ +#define MAPSIZE (256+OFFSET) +char casemap[MAPSIZE]; /* relies on init to '\0' */ +static int primed = 0; /* has casemap been set up? */ + +/* + - prime - set up case-mapping stuff + */ +static void +prime() +{ + register char *lp; + register char *up; + register int c; + register int i; + static char lower[] = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"; + static char upper[] = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"; + + for (lp = lower, up = upper; *lp != '\0'; lp++, up++) { + c = *lp; + casemap[c+OFFSET] = c; + casemap[*up+OFFSET] = c; + } + for (i = 0; i < MAPSIZE; i++) + if (casemap[i] == '\0') + casemap[i] = (char)(i-OFFSET); + primed = 1; +} + +/* + - cistrncmp - case-independent strncmp + */ +int /* < == > 0 */ +cistrncmp(s1, s2, len) +char *s1; +char *s2; +int len; +{ + register char *p1; + register char *p2; + register int n; + + if (!primed) + prime(); + + p1 = s1; + p2 = s2; + n = len; + while (--n >= 0 && *p1 != '\0' && TOLOW(*p1) == TOLOW(*p2)) { + p1++; + p2++; + } + if (n < 0) + return(0); + + /* + * The following case analysis is necessary so that characters + * which look negative collate low against normal characters but + * high against the end-of-string NUL. + */ + if (*p1 == '\0' && *p2 == '\0') + return(0); + else if (*p1 == '\0') + return(-1); + else if (*p2 == '\0') + return(1); + else + return(TOLOW(*p1) - TOLOW(*p2)); +} + +/* + - rfc822ize - do the bizarre case conversion needed for rfc822 message-ids + * + * Actually, this is not quite complete. Absolute, total, full RFC822 + * compliance requires a horrible parsing job, because of the arcane + * quoting conventions -- abc"def"ghi is not equivalent to abc"DEF"ghi, + * for example. There are three or four things that might occur in the + * domain part of a message-id that are case-sensitive. They don't seem + * to ever occur in real news, thank Cthulhu. (What? You were expecting + * a merciful and forgiving deity to be invoked in connection with RFC822? + * Forget it; none of them would come near it.) + */ +char * /* returns the argument */ +rfc822ize(s) +char *s; +{ + register char *p; + static char post[] = "postmaster"; + static int postlen = sizeof(post)-1; + + if (!primed) + prime(); + + p = strrchr(s, '@'); + if (p == NULL) /* no local/domain split */ + p = ""; /* assume all local */ + else if (p - (s+1) == postlen && CISTREQN(s+1, post, postlen)) { + /* crazy special case -- "postmaster" is case-insensitive */ + p = s; + } +#ifdef NONSTANDARD +#ifdef RFCVIOLATION +#ifdef B_2_11_MISTAKE + p = s; /* all case-insensitive */ +#endif +#endif +#endif + for (; *p != '\0'; p++) + *p = TOLOW(*p); + + return(s); +} |