Brian Silverman | 9c614bc | 2016-02-15 20:20:02 -0500 | [diff] [blame^] | 1 | // Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format |
| 2 | // Copyright 2008 Google Inc. All rights reserved. |
| 3 | // https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/ |
| 4 | // |
| 5 | // Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without |
| 6 | // modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are |
| 7 | // met: |
| 8 | // |
| 9 | // * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright |
| 10 | // notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. |
| 11 | // * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above |
| 12 | // copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer |
| 13 | // in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the |
| 14 | // distribution. |
| 15 | // * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its |
| 16 | // contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from |
| 17 | // this software without specific prior written permission. |
| 18 | // |
| 19 | // THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS |
| 20 | // "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
| 21 | // LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR |
| 22 | // A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT |
| 23 | // OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, |
| 24 | // SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
| 25 | // LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, |
| 26 | // DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY |
| 27 | // THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT |
| 28 | // (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE |
| 29 | // OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
| 30 | |
| 31 | // from google3/strings/strutil.h |
| 32 | |
| 33 | #ifndef GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_STUBS_STRUTIL_H__ |
| 34 | #define GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_STUBS_STRUTIL_H__ |
| 35 | |
| 36 | #include <stdlib.h> |
| 37 | #include <vector> |
| 38 | #include <google/protobuf/stubs/common.h> |
| 39 | #include <google/protobuf/stubs/stringpiece.h> |
| 40 | |
| 41 | namespace google { |
| 42 | namespace protobuf { |
| 43 | |
| 44 | #ifdef _MSC_VER |
| 45 | #define strtoll _strtoi64 |
| 46 | #define strtoull _strtoui64 |
| 47 | #elif defined(__DECCXX) && defined(__osf__) |
| 48 | // HP C++ on Tru64 does not have strtoll, but strtol is already 64-bit. |
| 49 | #define strtoll strtol |
| 50 | #define strtoull strtoul |
| 51 | #endif |
| 52 | |
| 53 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 54 | // ascii_isalnum() |
| 55 | // Check if an ASCII character is alphanumeric. We can't use ctype's |
| 56 | // isalnum() because it is affected by locale. This function is applied |
| 57 | // to identifiers in the protocol buffer language, not to natural-language |
| 58 | // strings, so locale should not be taken into account. |
| 59 | // ascii_isdigit() |
| 60 | // Like above, but only accepts digits. |
| 61 | // ascii_isspace() |
| 62 | // Check if the character is a space character. |
| 63 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 64 | |
| 65 | inline bool ascii_isalnum(char c) { |
| 66 | return ('a' <= c && c <= 'z') || |
| 67 | ('A' <= c && c <= 'Z') || |
| 68 | ('0' <= c && c <= '9'); |
| 69 | } |
| 70 | |
| 71 | inline bool ascii_isdigit(char c) { |
| 72 | return ('0' <= c && c <= '9'); |
| 73 | } |
| 74 | |
| 75 | inline bool ascii_isspace(char c) { |
| 76 | return c == ' ' || c == '\t' || c == '\n' || c == '\v' || c == '\f' || |
| 77 | c == '\r'; |
| 78 | } |
| 79 | |
| 80 | inline bool ascii_isupper(char c) { |
| 81 | return c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z'; |
| 82 | } |
| 83 | |
| 84 | inline bool ascii_islower(char c) { |
| 85 | return c >= 'a' && c <= 'z'; |
| 86 | } |
| 87 | |
| 88 | inline char ascii_toupper(char c) { |
| 89 | return ascii_islower(c) ? c - ('a' - 'A') : c; |
| 90 | } |
| 91 | |
| 92 | inline char ascii_tolower(char c) { |
| 93 | return ascii_isupper(c) ? c + ('a' - 'A') : c; |
| 94 | } |
| 95 | |
| 96 | inline int hex_digit_to_int(char c) { |
| 97 | /* Assume ASCII. */ |
| 98 | int x = static_cast<unsigned char>(c); |
| 99 | if (x > '9') { |
| 100 | x += 9; |
| 101 | } |
| 102 | return x & 0xf; |
| 103 | } |
| 104 | |
| 105 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 106 | // HasPrefixString() |
| 107 | // Check if a string begins with a given prefix. |
| 108 | // StripPrefixString() |
| 109 | // Given a string and a putative prefix, returns the string minus the |
| 110 | // prefix string if the prefix matches, otherwise the original |
| 111 | // string. |
| 112 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 113 | inline bool HasPrefixString(const string& str, |
| 114 | const string& prefix) { |
| 115 | return str.size() >= prefix.size() && |
| 116 | str.compare(0, prefix.size(), prefix) == 0; |
| 117 | } |
| 118 | |
| 119 | inline string StripPrefixString(const string& str, const string& prefix) { |
| 120 | if (HasPrefixString(str, prefix)) { |
| 121 | return str.substr(prefix.size()); |
| 122 | } else { |
| 123 | return str; |
| 124 | } |
| 125 | } |
| 126 | |
| 127 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 128 | // HasSuffixString() |
| 129 | // Return true if str ends in suffix. |
| 130 | // StripSuffixString() |
| 131 | // Given a string and a putative suffix, returns the string minus the |
| 132 | // suffix string if the suffix matches, otherwise the original |
| 133 | // string. |
| 134 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 135 | inline bool HasSuffixString(const string& str, |
| 136 | const string& suffix) { |
| 137 | return str.size() >= suffix.size() && |
| 138 | str.compare(str.size() - suffix.size(), suffix.size(), suffix) == 0; |
| 139 | } |
| 140 | |
| 141 | inline string StripSuffixString(const string& str, const string& suffix) { |
| 142 | if (HasSuffixString(str, suffix)) { |
| 143 | return str.substr(0, str.size() - suffix.size()); |
| 144 | } else { |
| 145 | return str; |
| 146 | } |
| 147 | } |
| 148 | |
| 149 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 150 | // StripString |
| 151 | // Replaces any occurrence of the character 'remove' (or the characters |
| 152 | // in 'remove') with the character 'replacewith'. |
| 153 | // Good for keeping html characters or protocol characters (\t) out |
| 154 | // of places where they might cause a problem. |
| 155 | // StripWhitespace |
| 156 | // Removes whitespaces from both ends of the given string. |
| 157 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 158 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void StripString(string* s, const char* remove, |
| 159 | char replacewith); |
| 160 | |
| 161 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void StripWhitespace(string* s); |
| 162 | |
| 163 | |
| 164 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 165 | // LowerString() |
| 166 | // UpperString() |
| 167 | // ToUpper() |
| 168 | // Convert the characters in "s" to lowercase or uppercase. ASCII-only: |
| 169 | // these functions intentionally ignore locale because they are applied to |
| 170 | // identifiers used in the Protocol Buffer language, not to natural-language |
| 171 | // strings. |
| 172 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 173 | |
| 174 | inline void LowerString(string * s) { |
| 175 | string::iterator end = s->end(); |
| 176 | for (string::iterator i = s->begin(); i != end; ++i) { |
| 177 | // tolower() changes based on locale. We don't want this! |
| 178 | if ('A' <= *i && *i <= 'Z') *i += 'a' - 'A'; |
| 179 | } |
| 180 | } |
| 181 | |
| 182 | inline void UpperString(string * s) { |
| 183 | string::iterator end = s->end(); |
| 184 | for (string::iterator i = s->begin(); i != end; ++i) { |
| 185 | // toupper() changes based on locale. We don't want this! |
| 186 | if ('a' <= *i && *i <= 'z') *i += 'A' - 'a'; |
| 187 | } |
| 188 | } |
| 189 | |
| 190 | inline string ToUpper(const string& s) { |
| 191 | string out = s; |
| 192 | UpperString(&out); |
| 193 | return out; |
| 194 | } |
| 195 | |
| 196 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 197 | // StringReplace() |
| 198 | // Give me a string and two patterns "old" and "new", and I replace |
| 199 | // the first instance of "old" in the string with "new", if it |
| 200 | // exists. RETURN a new string, regardless of whether the replacement |
| 201 | // happened or not. |
| 202 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 203 | |
| 204 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string StringReplace(const string& s, const string& oldsub, |
| 205 | const string& newsub, bool replace_all); |
| 206 | |
| 207 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 208 | // SplitStringUsing() |
| 209 | // Split a string using a character delimiter. Append the components |
| 210 | // to 'result'. If there are consecutive delimiters, this function skips |
| 211 | // over all of them. |
| 212 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 213 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void SplitStringUsing(const string& full, const char* delim, |
| 214 | vector<string>* res); |
| 215 | |
| 216 | // Split a string using one or more byte delimiters, presented |
| 217 | // as a nul-terminated c string. Append the components to 'result'. |
| 218 | // If there are consecutive delimiters, this function will return |
| 219 | // corresponding empty strings. If you want to drop the empty |
| 220 | // strings, try SplitStringUsing(). |
| 221 | // |
| 222 | // If "full" is the empty string, yields an empty string as the only value. |
| 223 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 224 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void SplitStringAllowEmpty(const string& full, |
| 225 | const char* delim, |
| 226 | vector<string>* result); |
| 227 | |
| 228 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 229 | // Split() |
| 230 | // Split a string using a character delimiter. |
| 231 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 232 | inline vector<string> Split( |
| 233 | const string& full, const char* delim, bool skip_empty = true) { |
| 234 | vector<string> result; |
| 235 | if (skip_empty) { |
| 236 | SplitStringUsing(full, delim, &result); |
| 237 | } else { |
| 238 | SplitStringAllowEmpty(full, delim, &result); |
| 239 | } |
| 240 | return result; |
| 241 | } |
| 242 | |
| 243 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 244 | // JoinStrings() |
| 245 | // These methods concatenate a vector of strings into a C++ string, using |
| 246 | // the C-string "delim" as a separator between components. There are two |
| 247 | // flavors of the function, one flavor returns the concatenated string, |
| 248 | // another takes a pointer to the target string. In the latter case the |
| 249 | // target string is cleared and overwritten. |
| 250 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 251 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void JoinStrings(const vector<string>& components, |
| 252 | const char* delim, string* result); |
| 253 | |
| 254 | inline string JoinStrings(const vector<string>& components, |
| 255 | const char* delim) { |
| 256 | string result; |
| 257 | JoinStrings(components, delim, &result); |
| 258 | return result; |
| 259 | } |
| 260 | |
| 261 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 262 | // UnescapeCEscapeSequences() |
| 263 | // Copies "source" to "dest", rewriting C-style escape sequences |
| 264 | // -- '\n', '\r', '\\', '\ooo', etc -- to their ASCII |
| 265 | // equivalents. "dest" must be sufficiently large to hold all |
| 266 | // the characters in the rewritten string (i.e. at least as large |
| 267 | // as strlen(source) + 1 should be safe, since the replacements |
| 268 | // are always shorter than the original escaped sequences). It's |
| 269 | // safe for source and dest to be the same. RETURNS the length |
| 270 | // of dest. |
| 271 | // |
| 272 | // It allows hex sequences \xhh, or generally \xhhhhh with an |
| 273 | // arbitrary number of hex digits, but all of them together must |
| 274 | // specify a value of a single byte (e.g. \x0045 is equivalent |
| 275 | // to \x45, and \x1234 is erroneous). |
| 276 | // |
| 277 | // It also allows escape sequences of the form \uhhhh (exactly four |
| 278 | // hex digits, upper or lower case) or \Uhhhhhhhh (exactly eight |
| 279 | // hex digits, upper or lower case) to specify a Unicode code |
| 280 | // point. The dest array will contain the UTF8-encoded version of |
| 281 | // that code-point (e.g., if source contains \u2019, then dest will |
| 282 | // contain the three bytes 0xE2, 0x80, and 0x99). |
| 283 | // |
| 284 | // Errors: In the first form of the call, errors are reported with |
| 285 | // LOG(ERROR). The same is true for the second form of the call if |
| 286 | // the pointer to the string vector is NULL; otherwise, error |
| 287 | // messages are stored in the vector. In either case, the effect on |
| 288 | // the dest array is not defined, but rest of the source will be |
| 289 | // processed. |
| 290 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 291 | |
| 292 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int UnescapeCEscapeSequences(const char* source, char* dest); |
| 293 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int UnescapeCEscapeSequences(const char* source, char* dest, |
| 294 | vector<string> *errors); |
| 295 | |
| 296 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 297 | // UnescapeCEscapeString() |
| 298 | // This does the same thing as UnescapeCEscapeSequences, but creates |
| 299 | // a new string. The caller does not need to worry about allocating |
| 300 | // a dest buffer. This should be used for non performance critical |
| 301 | // tasks such as printing debug messages. It is safe for src and dest |
| 302 | // to be the same. |
| 303 | // |
| 304 | // The second call stores its errors in a supplied string vector. |
| 305 | // If the string vector pointer is NULL, it reports the errors with LOG(). |
| 306 | // |
| 307 | // In the first and second calls, the length of dest is returned. In the |
| 308 | // the third call, the new string is returned. |
| 309 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 310 | |
| 311 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int UnescapeCEscapeString(const string& src, string* dest); |
| 312 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int UnescapeCEscapeString(const string& src, string* dest, |
| 313 | vector<string> *errors); |
| 314 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string UnescapeCEscapeString(const string& src); |
| 315 | |
| 316 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 317 | // CEscape() |
| 318 | // Escapes 'src' using C-style escape sequences and returns the resulting |
| 319 | // string. |
| 320 | // |
| 321 | // Escaped chars: \n, \r, \t, ", ', \, and !isprint(). |
| 322 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 323 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string CEscape(const string& src); |
| 324 | |
| 325 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 326 | // CEscapeAndAppend() |
| 327 | // Escapes 'src' using C-style escape sequences, and appends the escaped |
| 328 | // string to 'dest'. |
| 329 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 330 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void CEscapeAndAppend(StringPiece src, string* dest); |
| 331 | |
| 332 | namespace strings { |
| 333 | // Like CEscape() but does not escape bytes with the upper bit set. |
| 334 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string Utf8SafeCEscape(const string& src); |
| 335 | |
| 336 | // Like CEscape() but uses hex (\x) escapes instead of octals. |
| 337 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string CHexEscape(const string& src); |
| 338 | } // namespace strings |
| 339 | |
| 340 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 341 | // strto32() |
| 342 | // strtou32() |
| 343 | // strto64() |
| 344 | // strtou64() |
| 345 | // Architecture-neutral plug compatible replacements for strtol() and |
| 346 | // strtoul(). Long's have different lengths on ILP-32 and LP-64 |
| 347 | // platforms, so using these is safer, from the point of view of |
| 348 | // overflow behavior, than using the standard libc functions. |
| 349 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 350 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int32 strto32_adaptor(const char *nptr, char **endptr, |
| 351 | int base); |
| 352 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT uint32 strtou32_adaptor(const char *nptr, char **endptr, |
| 353 | int base); |
| 354 | |
| 355 | inline int32 strto32(const char *nptr, char **endptr, int base) { |
| 356 | if (sizeof(int32) == sizeof(long)) |
| 357 | return strtol(nptr, endptr, base); |
| 358 | else |
| 359 | return strto32_adaptor(nptr, endptr, base); |
| 360 | } |
| 361 | |
| 362 | inline uint32 strtou32(const char *nptr, char **endptr, int base) { |
| 363 | if (sizeof(uint32) == sizeof(unsigned long)) |
| 364 | return strtoul(nptr, endptr, base); |
| 365 | else |
| 366 | return strtou32_adaptor(nptr, endptr, base); |
| 367 | } |
| 368 | |
| 369 | // For now, long long is 64-bit on all the platforms we care about, so these |
| 370 | // functions can simply pass the call to strto[u]ll. |
| 371 | inline int64 strto64(const char *nptr, char **endptr, int base) { |
| 372 | GOOGLE_COMPILE_ASSERT(sizeof(int64) == sizeof(long long), |
| 373 | sizeof_int64_is_not_sizeof_long_long); |
| 374 | return strtoll(nptr, endptr, base); |
| 375 | } |
| 376 | |
| 377 | inline uint64 strtou64(const char *nptr, char **endptr, int base) { |
| 378 | GOOGLE_COMPILE_ASSERT(sizeof(uint64) == sizeof(unsigned long long), |
| 379 | sizeof_uint64_is_not_sizeof_long_long); |
| 380 | return strtoull(nptr, endptr, base); |
| 381 | } |
| 382 | |
| 383 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 384 | // safe_strtob() |
| 385 | // safe_strto32() |
| 386 | // safe_strtou32() |
| 387 | // safe_strto64() |
| 388 | // safe_strtou64() |
| 389 | // safe_strtof() |
| 390 | // safe_strtod() |
| 391 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 392 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT bool safe_strtob(StringPiece str, bool* value); |
| 393 | |
| 394 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT bool safe_strto32(const string& str, int32* value); |
| 395 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT bool safe_strtou32(const string& str, uint32* value); |
| 396 | inline bool safe_strto32(const char* str, int32* value) { |
| 397 | return safe_strto32(string(str), value); |
| 398 | } |
| 399 | inline bool safe_strto32(StringPiece str, int32* value) { |
| 400 | return safe_strto32(str.ToString(), value); |
| 401 | } |
| 402 | inline bool safe_strtou32(const char* str, uint32* value) { |
| 403 | return safe_strtou32(string(str), value); |
| 404 | } |
| 405 | inline bool safe_strtou32(StringPiece str, uint32* value) { |
| 406 | return safe_strtou32(str.ToString(), value); |
| 407 | } |
| 408 | |
| 409 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT bool safe_strto64(const string& str, int64* value); |
| 410 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT bool safe_strtou64(const string& str, uint64* value); |
| 411 | inline bool safe_strto64(const char* str, int64* value) { |
| 412 | return safe_strto64(string(str), value); |
| 413 | } |
| 414 | inline bool safe_strto64(StringPiece str, int64* value) { |
| 415 | return safe_strto64(str.ToString(), value); |
| 416 | } |
| 417 | inline bool safe_strtou64(const char* str, uint64* value) { |
| 418 | return safe_strtou64(string(str), value); |
| 419 | } |
| 420 | inline bool safe_strtou64(StringPiece str, uint64* value) { |
| 421 | return safe_strtou64(str.ToString(), value); |
| 422 | } |
| 423 | |
| 424 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT bool safe_strtof(const char* str, float* value); |
| 425 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT bool safe_strtod(const char* str, double* value); |
| 426 | inline bool safe_strtof(const string& str, float* value) { |
| 427 | return safe_strtof(str.c_str(), value); |
| 428 | } |
| 429 | inline bool safe_strtod(const string& str, double* value) { |
| 430 | return safe_strtod(str.c_str(), value); |
| 431 | } |
| 432 | inline bool safe_strtof(StringPiece str, float* value) { |
| 433 | return safe_strtof(str.ToString(), value); |
| 434 | } |
| 435 | inline bool safe_strtod(StringPiece str, double* value) { |
| 436 | return safe_strtod(str.ToString(), value); |
| 437 | } |
| 438 | |
| 439 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 440 | // FastIntToBuffer() |
| 441 | // FastHexToBuffer() |
| 442 | // FastHex64ToBuffer() |
| 443 | // FastHex32ToBuffer() |
| 444 | // FastTimeToBuffer() |
| 445 | // These are intended for speed. FastIntToBuffer() assumes the |
| 446 | // integer is non-negative. FastHexToBuffer() puts output in |
| 447 | // hex rather than decimal. FastTimeToBuffer() puts the output |
| 448 | // into RFC822 format. |
| 449 | // |
| 450 | // FastHex64ToBuffer() puts a 64-bit unsigned value in hex-format, |
| 451 | // padded to exactly 16 bytes (plus one byte for '\0') |
| 452 | // |
| 453 | // FastHex32ToBuffer() puts a 32-bit unsigned value in hex-format, |
| 454 | // padded to exactly 8 bytes (plus one byte for '\0') |
| 455 | // |
| 456 | // All functions take the output buffer as an arg. |
| 457 | // They all return a pointer to the beginning of the output, |
| 458 | // which may not be the beginning of the input buffer. |
| 459 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 460 | |
| 461 | // Suggested buffer size for FastToBuffer functions. Also works with |
| 462 | // DoubleToBuffer() and FloatToBuffer(). |
| 463 | static const int kFastToBufferSize = 32; |
| 464 | |
| 465 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* FastInt32ToBuffer(int32 i, char* buffer); |
| 466 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* FastInt64ToBuffer(int64 i, char* buffer); |
| 467 | char* FastUInt32ToBuffer(uint32 i, char* buffer); // inline below |
| 468 | char* FastUInt64ToBuffer(uint64 i, char* buffer); // inline below |
| 469 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* FastHexToBuffer(int i, char* buffer); |
| 470 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* FastHex64ToBuffer(uint64 i, char* buffer); |
| 471 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* FastHex32ToBuffer(uint32 i, char* buffer); |
| 472 | |
| 473 | // at least 22 bytes long |
| 474 | inline char* FastIntToBuffer(int i, char* buffer) { |
| 475 | return (sizeof(i) == 4 ? |
| 476 | FastInt32ToBuffer(i, buffer) : FastInt64ToBuffer(i, buffer)); |
| 477 | } |
| 478 | inline char* FastUIntToBuffer(unsigned int i, char* buffer) { |
| 479 | return (sizeof(i) == 4 ? |
| 480 | FastUInt32ToBuffer(i, buffer) : FastUInt64ToBuffer(i, buffer)); |
| 481 | } |
| 482 | inline char* FastLongToBuffer(long i, char* buffer) { |
| 483 | return (sizeof(i) == 4 ? |
| 484 | FastInt32ToBuffer(i, buffer) : FastInt64ToBuffer(i, buffer)); |
| 485 | } |
| 486 | inline char* FastULongToBuffer(unsigned long i, char* buffer) { |
| 487 | return (sizeof(i) == 4 ? |
| 488 | FastUInt32ToBuffer(i, buffer) : FastUInt64ToBuffer(i, buffer)); |
| 489 | } |
| 490 | |
| 491 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 492 | // FastInt32ToBufferLeft() |
| 493 | // FastUInt32ToBufferLeft() |
| 494 | // FastInt64ToBufferLeft() |
| 495 | // FastUInt64ToBufferLeft() |
| 496 | // |
| 497 | // Like the Fast*ToBuffer() functions above, these are intended for speed. |
| 498 | // Unlike the Fast*ToBuffer() functions, however, these functions write |
| 499 | // their output to the beginning of the buffer (hence the name, as the |
| 500 | // output is left-aligned). The caller is responsible for ensuring that |
| 501 | // the buffer has enough space to hold the output. |
| 502 | // |
| 503 | // Returns a pointer to the end of the string (i.e. the null character |
| 504 | // terminating the string). |
| 505 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 506 | |
| 507 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* FastInt32ToBufferLeft(int32 i, char* buffer); |
| 508 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* FastUInt32ToBufferLeft(uint32 i, char* buffer); |
| 509 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* FastInt64ToBufferLeft(int64 i, char* buffer); |
| 510 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* FastUInt64ToBufferLeft(uint64 i, char* buffer); |
| 511 | |
| 512 | // Just define these in terms of the above. |
| 513 | inline char* FastUInt32ToBuffer(uint32 i, char* buffer) { |
| 514 | FastUInt32ToBufferLeft(i, buffer); |
| 515 | return buffer; |
| 516 | } |
| 517 | inline char* FastUInt64ToBuffer(uint64 i, char* buffer) { |
| 518 | FastUInt64ToBufferLeft(i, buffer); |
| 519 | return buffer; |
| 520 | } |
| 521 | |
| 522 | inline string SimpleBtoa(bool value) { |
| 523 | return value ? "true" : "false"; |
| 524 | } |
| 525 | |
| 526 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 527 | // SimpleItoa() |
| 528 | // Description: converts an integer to a string. |
| 529 | // |
| 530 | // Return value: string |
| 531 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 532 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string SimpleItoa(int i); |
| 533 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string SimpleItoa(unsigned int i); |
| 534 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string SimpleItoa(long i); |
| 535 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string SimpleItoa(unsigned long i); |
| 536 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string SimpleItoa(long long i); |
| 537 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string SimpleItoa(unsigned long long i); |
| 538 | |
| 539 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 540 | // SimpleDtoa() |
| 541 | // SimpleFtoa() |
| 542 | // DoubleToBuffer() |
| 543 | // FloatToBuffer() |
| 544 | // Description: converts a double or float to a string which, if |
| 545 | // passed to NoLocaleStrtod(), will produce the exact same original double |
| 546 | // (except in case of NaN; all NaNs are considered the same value). |
| 547 | // We try to keep the string short but it's not guaranteed to be as |
| 548 | // short as possible. |
| 549 | // |
| 550 | // DoubleToBuffer() and FloatToBuffer() write the text to the given |
| 551 | // buffer and return it. The buffer must be at least |
| 552 | // kDoubleToBufferSize bytes for doubles and kFloatToBufferSize |
| 553 | // bytes for floats. kFastToBufferSize is also guaranteed to be large |
| 554 | // enough to hold either. |
| 555 | // |
| 556 | // Return value: string |
| 557 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 558 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string SimpleDtoa(double value); |
| 559 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string SimpleFtoa(float value); |
| 560 | |
| 561 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* DoubleToBuffer(double i, char* buffer); |
| 562 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT char* FloatToBuffer(float i, char* buffer); |
| 563 | |
| 564 | // In practice, doubles should never need more than 24 bytes and floats |
| 565 | // should never need more than 14 (including null terminators), but we |
| 566 | // overestimate to be safe. |
| 567 | static const int kDoubleToBufferSize = 32; |
| 568 | static const int kFloatToBufferSize = 24; |
| 569 | |
| 570 | namespace strings { |
| 571 | |
| 572 | enum PadSpec { |
| 573 | NO_PAD = 1, |
| 574 | ZERO_PAD_2, |
| 575 | ZERO_PAD_3, |
| 576 | ZERO_PAD_4, |
| 577 | ZERO_PAD_5, |
| 578 | ZERO_PAD_6, |
| 579 | ZERO_PAD_7, |
| 580 | ZERO_PAD_8, |
| 581 | ZERO_PAD_9, |
| 582 | ZERO_PAD_10, |
| 583 | ZERO_PAD_11, |
| 584 | ZERO_PAD_12, |
| 585 | ZERO_PAD_13, |
| 586 | ZERO_PAD_14, |
| 587 | ZERO_PAD_15, |
| 588 | ZERO_PAD_16, |
| 589 | }; |
| 590 | |
| 591 | struct Hex { |
| 592 | uint64 value; |
| 593 | enum PadSpec spec; |
| 594 | template <class Int> |
| 595 | explicit Hex(Int v, PadSpec s = NO_PAD) |
| 596 | : spec(s) { |
| 597 | // Prevent sign-extension by casting integers to |
| 598 | // their unsigned counterparts. |
| 599 | #ifdef LANG_CXX11 |
| 600 | static_assert( |
| 601 | sizeof(v) == 1 || sizeof(v) == 2 || sizeof(v) == 4 || sizeof(v) == 8, |
| 602 | "Unknown integer type"); |
| 603 | #endif |
| 604 | value = sizeof(v) == 1 ? static_cast<uint8>(v) |
| 605 | : sizeof(v) == 2 ? static_cast<uint16>(v) |
| 606 | : sizeof(v) == 4 ? static_cast<uint32>(v) |
| 607 | : static_cast<uint64>(v); |
| 608 | } |
| 609 | }; |
| 610 | |
| 611 | struct LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT AlphaNum { |
| 612 | const char *piece_data_; // move these to string_ref eventually |
| 613 | size_t piece_size_; // move these to string_ref eventually |
| 614 | |
| 615 | char digits[kFastToBufferSize]; |
| 616 | |
| 617 | // No bool ctor -- bools convert to an integral type. |
| 618 | // A bool ctor would also convert incoming pointers (bletch). |
| 619 | |
| 620 | AlphaNum(int32 i32) |
| 621 | : piece_data_(digits), |
| 622 | piece_size_(FastInt32ToBufferLeft(i32, digits) - &digits[0]) {} |
| 623 | AlphaNum(uint32 u32) |
| 624 | : piece_data_(digits), |
| 625 | piece_size_(FastUInt32ToBufferLeft(u32, digits) - &digits[0]) {} |
| 626 | AlphaNum(int64 i64) |
| 627 | : piece_data_(digits), |
| 628 | piece_size_(FastInt64ToBufferLeft(i64, digits) - &digits[0]) {} |
| 629 | AlphaNum(uint64 u64) |
| 630 | : piece_data_(digits), |
| 631 | piece_size_(FastUInt64ToBufferLeft(u64, digits) - &digits[0]) {} |
| 632 | |
| 633 | AlphaNum(float f) |
| 634 | : piece_data_(digits), piece_size_(strlen(FloatToBuffer(f, digits))) {} |
| 635 | AlphaNum(double f) |
| 636 | : piece_data_(digits), piece_size_(strlen(DoubleToBuffer(f, digits))) {} |
| 637 | |
| 638 | AlphaNum(Hex hex); |
| 639 | |
| 640 | AlphaNum(const char* c_str) |
| 641 | : piece_data_(c_str), piece_size_(strlen(c_str)) {} |
| 642 | // TODO: Add a string_ref constructor, eventually |
| 643 | // AlphaNum(const StringPiece &pc) : piece(pc) {} |
| 644 | |
| 645 | AlphaNum(const string& str) |
| 646 | : piece_data_(str.data()), piece_size_(str.size()) {} |
| 647 | |
| 648 | AlphaNum(StringPiece str) |
| 649 | : piece_data_(str.data()), piece_size_(str.size()) {} |
| 650 | |
| 651 | size_t size() const { return piece_size_; } |
| 652 | const char *data() const { return piece_data_; } |
| 653 | |
| 654 | private: |
| 655 | // Use ":" not ':' |
| 656 | AlphaNum(char c); // NOLINT(runtime/explicit) |
| 657 | |
| 658 | // Disallow copy and assign. |
| 659 | AlphaNum(const AlphaNum&); |
| 660 | void operator=(const AlphaNum&); |
| 661 | }; |
| 662 | |
| 663 | } // namespace strings |
| 664 | |
| 665 | using strings::AlphaNum; |
| 666 | |
| 667 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 668 | // StrCat() |
| 669 | // This merges the given strings or numbers, with no delimiter. This |
| 670 | // is designed to be the fastest possible way to construct a string out |
| 671 | // of a mix of raw C strings, strings, bool values, |
| 672 | // and numeric values. |
| 673 | // |
| 674 | // Don't use this for user-visible strings. The localization process |
| 675 | // works poorly on strings built up out of fragments. |
| 676 | // |
| 677 | // For clarity and performance, don't use StrCat when appending to a |
| 678 | // string. In particular, avoid using any of these (anti-)patterns: |
| 679 | // str.append(StrCat(...) |
| 680 | // str += StrCat(...) |
| 681 | // str = StrCat(str, ...) |
| 682 | // where the last is the worse, with the potential to change a loop |
| 683 | // from a linear time operation with O(1) dynamic allocations into a |
| 684 | // quadratic time operation with O(n) dynamic allocations. StrAppend |
| 685 | // is a better choice than any of the above, subject to the restriction |
| 686 | // of StrAppend(&str, a, b, c, ...) that none of the a, b, c, ... may |
| 687 | // be a reference into str. |
| 688 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 689 | |
| 690 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string StrCat(const AlphaNum& a, const AlphaNum& b); |
| 691 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string StrCat(const AlphaNum& a, const AlphaNum& b, |
| 692 | const AlphaNum& c); |
| 693 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string StrCat(const AlphaNum& a, const AlphaNum& b, |
| 694 | const AlphaNum& c, const AlphaNum& d); |
| 695 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string StrCat(const AlphaNum& a, const AlphaNum& b, |
| 696 | const AlphaNum& c, const AlphaNum& d, |
| 697 | const AlphaNum& e); |
| 698 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string StrCat(const AlphaNum& a, const AlphaNum& b, |
| 699 | const AlphaNum& c, const AlphaNum& d, |
| 700 | const AlphaNum& e, const AlphaNum& f); |
| 701 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string StrCat(const AlphaNum& a, const AlphaNum& b, |
| 702 | const AlphaNum& c, const AlphaNum& d, |
| 703 | const AlphaNum& e, const AlphaNum& f, |
| 704 | const AlphaNum& g); |
| 705 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string StrCat(const AlphaNum& a, const AlphaNum& b, |
| 706 | const AlphaNum& c, const AlphaNum& d, |
| 707 | const AlphaNum& e, const AlphaNum& f, |
| 708 | const AlphaNum& g, const AlphaNum& h); |
| 709 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string StrCat(const AlphaNum& a, const AlphaNum& b, |
| 710 | const AlphaNum& c, const AlphaNum& d, |
| 711 | const AlphaNum& e, const AlphaNum& f, |
| 712 | const AlphaNum& g, const AlphaNum& h, |
| 713 | const AlphaNum& i); |
| 714 | |
| 715 | inline string StrCat(const AlphaNum& a) { return string(a.data(), a.size()); } |
| 716 | |
| 717 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 718 | // StrAppend() |
| 719 | // Same as above, but adds the output to the given string. |
| 720 | // WARNING: For speed, StrAppend does not try to check each of its input |
| 721 | // arguments to be sure that they are not a subset of the string being |
| 722 | // appended to. That is, while this will work: |
| 723 | // |
| 724 | // string s = "foo"; |
| 725 | // s += s; |
| 726 | // |
| 727 | // This will not (necessarily) work: |
| 728 | // |
| 729 | // string s = "foo"; |
| 730 | // StrAppend(&s, s); |
| 731 | // |
| 732 | // Note: while StrCat supports appending up to 9 arguments, StrAppend |
| 733 | // is currently limited to 4. That's rarely an issue except when |
| 734 | // automatically transforming StrCat to StrAppend, and can easily be |
| 735 | // worked around as consecutive calls to StrAppend are quite efficient. |
| 736 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 737 | |
| 738 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void StrAppend(string* dest, const AlphaNum& a); |
| 739 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void StrAppend(string* dest, const AlphaNum& a, |
| 740 | const AlphaNum& b); |
| 741 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void StrAppend(string* dest, const AlphaNum& a, |
| 742 | const AlphaNum& b, const AlphaNum& c); |
| 743 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void StrAppend(string* dest, const AlphaNum& a, |
| 744 | const AlphaNum& b, const AlphaNum& c, |
| 745 | const AlphaNum& d); |
| 746 | |
| 747 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 748 | // Join() |
| 749 | // These methods concatenate a range of components into a C++ string, using |
| 750 | // the C-string "delim" as a separator between components. |
| 751 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 752 | template <typename Iterator> |
| 753 | void Join(Iterator start, Iterator end, |
| 754 | const char* delim, string* result) { |
| 755 | for (Iterator it = start; it != end; ++it) { |
| 756 | if (it != start) { |
| 757 | result->append(delim); |
| 758 | } |
| 759 | StrAppend(result, *it); |
| 760 | } |
| 761 | } |
| 762 | |
| 763 | template <typename Range> |
| 764 | string Join(const Range& components, |
| 765 | const char* delim) { |
| 766 | string result; |
| 767 | Join(components.begin(), components.end(), delim, &result); |
| 768 | return result; |
| 769 | } |
| 770 | |
| 771 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 772 | // ToHex() |
| 773 | // Return a lower-case hex string representation of the given integer. |
| 774 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 775 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT string ToHex(uint64 num); |
| 776 | |
| 777 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 778 | // GlobalReplaceSubstring() |
| 779 | // Replaces all instances of a substring in a string. Does nothing |
| 780 | // if 'substring' is empty. Returns the number of replacements. |
| 781 | // |
| 782 | // NOTE: The string pieces must not overlap s. |
| 783 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 784 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int GlobalReplaceSubstring(const string& substring, |
| 785 | const string& replacement, |
| 786 | string* s); |
| 787 | |
| 788 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 789 | // Base64Unescape() |
| 790 | // Converts "src" which is encoded in Base64 to its binary equivalent and |
| 791 | // writes it to "dest". If src contains invalid characters, dest is cleared |
| 792 | // and the function returns false. Returns true on success. |
| 793 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 794 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT bool Base64Unescape(StringPiece src, string* dest); |
| 795 | |
| 796 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 797 | // WebSafeBase64Unescape() |
| 798 | // This is a variation of Base64Unescape which uses '-' instead of '+', and |
| 799 | // '_' instead of '/'. src is not null terminated, instead specify len. I |
| 800 | // recommend that slen<szdest, but we honor szdest anyway. |
| 801 | // RETURNS the length of dest, or -1 if src contains invalid chars. |
| 802 | |
| 803 | // The variation that stores into a string clears the string first, and |
| 804 | // returns false (with dest empty) if src contains invalid chars; for |
| 805 | // this version src and dest must be different strings. |
| 806 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 807 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int WebSafeBase64Unescape(const char* src, int slen, |
| 808 | char* dest, int szdest); |
| 809 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT bool WebSafeBase64Unescape(StringPiece src, string* dest); |
| 810 | |
| 811 | // Return the length to use for the output buffer given to the base64 escape |
| 812 | // routines. Make sure to use the same value for do_padding in both. |
| 813 | // This function may return incorrect results if given input_len values that |
| 814 | // are extremely high, which should happen rarely. |
| 815 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int CalculateBase64EscapedLen(int input_len, |
| 816 | bool do_padding); |
| 817 | // Use this version when calling Base64Escape without a do_padding arg. |
| 818 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int CalculateBase64EscapedLen(int input_len); |
| 819 | |
| 820 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 821 | // Base64Escape() |
| 822 | // WebSafeBase64Escape() |
| 823 | // Encode "src" to "dest" using base64 encoding. |
| 824 | // src is not null terminated, instead specify len. |
| 825 | // 'dest' should have at least CalculateBase64EscapedLen() length. |
| 826 | // RETURNS the length of dest. |
| 827 | // The WebSafe variation use '-' instead of '+' and '_' instead of '/' |
| 828 | // so that we can place the out in the URL or cookies without having |
| 829 | // to escape them. It also has an extra parameter "do_padding", |
| 830 | // which when set to false will prevent padding with "=". |
| 831 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 832 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int Base64Escape(const unsigned char* src, int slen, |
| 833 | char* dest, int szdest); |
| 834 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int WebSafeBase64Escape( |
| 835 | const unsigned char* src, int slen, char* dest, |
| 836 | int szdest, bool do_padding); |
| 837 | // Encode src into dest with padding. |
| 838 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void Base64Escape(StringPiece src, string* dest); |
| 839 | // Encode src into dest web-safely without padding. |
| 840 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void WebSafeBase64Escape(StringPiece src, string* dest); |
| 841 | // Encode src into dest web-safely with padding. |
| 842 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void WebSafeBase64EscapeWithPadding(StringPiece src, |
| 843 | string* dest); |
| 844 | |
| 845 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void Base64Escape(const unsigned char* src, int szsrc, |
| 846 | string* dest, bool do_padding); |
| 847 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void WebSafeBase64Escape(const unsigned char* src, int szsrc, |
| 848 | string* dest, bool do_padding); |
| 849 | |
| 850 | static const int UTFmax = 4; |
| 851 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 852 | // EncodeAsUTF8Char() |
| 853 | // Helper to append a Unicode code point to a string as UTF8, without bringing |
| 854 | // in any external dependencies. The output buffer must be as least 4 bytes |
| 855 | // large. |
| 856 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 857 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int EncodeAsUTF8Char(uint32 code_point, char* output); |
| 858 | |
| 859 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 860 | // UTF8FirstLetterNumBytes() |
| 861 | // Length of the first UTF-8 character. |
| 862 | // ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 863 | LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT int UTF8FirstLetterNumBytes(const char* src, int len); |
| 864 | |
| 865 | } // namespace protobuf |
| 866 | } // namespace google |
| 867 | |
| 868 | #endif // GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_STUBS_STRUTIL_H__ |