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author | Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com> | 2019-04-11 09:43:16 +0200 |
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committer | Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com> | 2019-04-11 09:43:17 +0200 |
commit | 32d85c116dd07b25f58b24204e7b05489f06fed4 (patch) | |
tree | f4ab2240889915cc7d912f98e0b69df701cf40e0 /include | |
parent | 221710af7ead55942e24f225b18c81dbe07ab08f (diff) | |
download | glibc-32d85c116dd07b25f58b24204e7b05489f06fed4.tar.gz |
alloc_buffer: Return unqualified pointer type in alloc_buffer_next
alloc_buffer_next is useful for peeking to the remaining part of the
buffer and update it, with subsequent allocation (once the length
is known) using alloc_buffer_alloc_bytes. This is not as robust
as the other interfaces, but it allows using alloc_buffer with
string-writing interfaces such as snprintf and ns_name_ntop.
Diffstat (limited to 'include')
-rw-r--r-- | include/alloc_buffer.h | 31 |
1 files changed, 26 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/include/alloc_buffer.h b/include/alloc_buffer.h index f27cbb65ca..9c469b9e8b 100644 --- a/include/alloc_buffer.h +++ b/include/alloc_buffer.h @@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ alloc_buffer_add_byte (struct alloc_buffer *buf, unsigned char b) NULL is returned if there is not enough room, and the buffer is marked as failed, or if the buffer has already failed. (Zero-length allocations from an empty buffer which has not yet - failed succeed.) */ + failed succeed.) The buffer contents is not modified. */ static inline __attribute__ ((nonnull (1))) void * alloc_buffer_alloc_bytes (struct alloc_buffer *buf, size_t length) { @@ -300,11 +300,32 @@ __alloc_buffer_next (struct alloc_buffer *buf, size_t align) /* Like alloc_buffer_alloc, but do not advance the pointer beyond the object (so a subseqent call to alloc_buffer_next or alloc_buffer_alloc returns the same pointer). Note that the buffer - is still aligned according to the requirements of TYPE. The effect - of this function is similar to allocating a zero-length array from - the buffer. */ + is still aligned according to the requirements of TYPE, potentially + consuming buffer space. The effect of this function is similar to + allocating a zero-length array from the buffer. + + It is possible to use the return pointer to write to the buffer and + consume the written bytes using alloc_buffer_alloc_bytes (which + does not change the buffer contents), but the calling code needs to + perform manual length checks using alloc_buffer_size. For example, + to read as many int32_t values that are available in the input file + and can fit into the remaining buffer space, you can use this: + + int32_t array = alloc_buffer_next (buf, int32_t); + size_t ret = fread (array, sizeof (int32_t), + alloc_buffer_size (buf) / sizeof (int32_t), fp); + if (ferror (fp)) + handle_error (); + alloc_buffer_alloc_array (buf, int32_t, ret); + + The alloc_buffer_alloc_array call makes the actually-used part of + the buffer permanent. The remaining part of the buffer (not filled + with data from the file) can be used for something else. + + This manual length checking can easily introduce errors, so this + coding style is not recommended. */ #define alloc_buffer_next(buf, type) \ - ((const type *) __alloc_buffer_next \ + ((type *) __alloc_buffer_next \ (buf, __alloc_buffer_assert_align (__alignof__ (type)))) /* Internal function. Allocate an array. */ |