/* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ #ifndef APR_LIB_H #define APR_LIB_H /** * @file apr_lib.h * This is collection of oddballs that didn't fit anywhere else, * and might move to more appropriate headers with the release * of APR 1.0. * @brief APR general purpose library routines */ #include "apr.h" #include "apr_errno.h" #if APR_HAVE_CTYPE_H #include #endif #if APR_HAVE_STDARG_H #include #endif #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif /* __cplusplus */ /** * @defgroup apr_lib General Purpose Library Routines * @ingroup APR * This is collection of oddballs that didn't fit anywhere else, * and might move to more appropriate headers with the release * of APR 1.0. * @{ */ /** A constant representing a 'large' string. */ #define HUGE_STRING_LEN 8192 /* * Define the structures used by the APR general-purpose library. */ /** @see apr_vformatter_buff_t */ typedef struct apr_vformatter_buff_t apr_vformatter_buff_t; /** * Structure used by the variable-formatter routines. */ struct apr_vformatter_buff_t { /** The current position */ char *curpos; /** The end position of the format string */ char *endpos; }; /** * return the final element of the pathname * @param pathname The path to get the final element of * @return the final element of the path * @remark *
 * For example:
 *                 "/foo/bar/gum"    -> "gum"
 *                 "/foo/bar/gum/"   -> ""
 *                 "gum"             -> "gum"
 *                 "bs\\path\\stuff" -> "stuff"
 * 
*/ APR_DECLARE(const char *) apr_filepath_name_get(const char *pathname); /** * apr_killpg * Small utility macros to make things easier to read. Not usually a * goal, to be sure.. */ #ifdef WIN32 #define apr_killpg(x, y) #else /* WIN32 */ #ifdef NO_KILLPG #define apr_killpg(x, y) (kill (-(x), (y))) #else /* NO_KILLPG */ #define apr_killpg(x, y) (killpg ((x), (y))) #endif /* NO_KILLPG */ #endif /* WIN32 */ /** * apr_vformatter() is a generic printf-style formatting routine * with some extensions. * @param flush_func The function to call when the buffer is full * @param c The buffer to write to * @param fmt The format string * @param ap The arguments to use to fill out the format string. * * @remark *
 * The extensions are:
 *
 * - %%pA takes a struct in_addr *, and prints it as a.b.c.d
 * - %%pI takes an apr_sockaddr_t * and prints it as a.b.c.d:port or
 * \[ipv6-address\]:port
 * - %%pT takes an apr_os_thread_t * and prints it in decimal
 * ('0' is printed if !APR_HAS_THREADS)
 * - %%pt takes an apr_os_thread_t * and prints it in hexadecimal
 * ('0' is printed if !APR_HAS_THREADS)
 * - %%pm takes an apr_status_t * and prints the appropriate error
 * string (from apr_strerror) corresponding to that error code.
 * - %%pp takes a void * and outputs it in hex
 * - %%pB takes a apr_uint32_t * as bytes and outputs it's apr_strfsize
 * - %%pF same as above, but takes a apr_off_t *
 * - %%pS same as above, but takes a apr_size_t *
 *
 * %%pA, %%pI, %%pT, %%pp are available from APR 1.0.0 onwards (and in 0.9.x).
 * %%pt is only available from APR 1.2.0 onwards.
 * %%pm, %%pB, %%pF and %%pS are only available from APR 1.3.0 onwards.
 *
 * The %%p hacks are to force gcc's printf warning code to skip
 * over a pointer argument without complaining.  This does
 * mean that the ANSI-style %%p (output a void * in hex format) won't
 * work as expected at all, but that seems to be a fair trade-off
 * for the increased robustness of having printf-warnings work.
 *
 * Additionally, apr_vformatter allows for arbitrary output methods
 * using the apr_vformatter_buff and flush_func.
 *
 * The apr_vformatter_buff has two elements curpos and endpos.
 * curpos is where apr_vformatter will write the next byte of output.
 * It proceeds writing output to curpos, and updating curpos, until
 * either the end of output is reached, or curpos == endpos (i.e. the
 * buffer is full).
 *
 * If the end of output is reached, apr_vformatter returns the
 * number of bytes written.
 *
 * When the buffer is full, the flush_func is called.  The flush_func
 * can return -1 to indicate that no further output should be attempted,
 * and apr_vformatter will return immediately with -1.  Otherwise
 * the flush_func should flush the buffer in whatever manner is
 * appropriate, re apr_pool_t nitialize curpos and endpos, and return 0.
 *
 * Note that flush_func is only invoked as a result of attempting to
 * write another byte at curpos when curpos >= endpos.  So for
 * example, it's possible when the output exactly matches the buffer
 * space available that curpos == endpos will be true when
 * apr_vformatter returns.
 *
 * apr_vformatter does not call out to any other code, it is entirely
 * self-contained.  This allows the callers to do things which are
 * otherwise "unsafe".  For example, apr_psprintf uses the "scratch"
 * space at the unallocated end of a block, and doesn't actually
 * complete the allocation until apr_vformatter returns.  apr_psprintf
 * would be completely broken if apr_vformatter were to call anything
 * that used this same pool.  Similarly http_bprintf() uses the "scratch"
 * space at the end of its output buffer, and doesn't actually note
 * that the space is in use until it either has to flush the buffer
 * or until apr_vformatter returns.
 * 
*/ APR_DECLARE(int) apr_vformatter(int (*flush_func)(apr_vformatter_buff_t *b), apr_vformatter_buff_t *c, const char *fmt, va_list ap); /** * Display a prompt and read in the password from stdin. * @param prompt The prompt to display * @param pwbuf Buffer to store the password * @param bufsize The length of the password buffer. * @remark If the password entered must be truncated to fit in * the provided buffer, APR_ENAMETOOLONG will be returned. * Note that the bufsize paramater is passed by reference for no * reason; its value will never be modified by the apr_password_get() * function. */ APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_password_get(const char *prompt, char *pwbuf, apr_size_t *bufsize); /** @} */ /** * @defgroup apr_ctype ctype functions * These macros allow correct support of 8-bit characters on systems which * support 8-bit characters. Pretty dumb how the cast is required, but * that's legacy libc for ya. These new macros do not support EOF like * the standard macros do. Tough. * @{ */ /** @see isalnum */ #define apr_isalnum(c) (isalnum(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see isalpha */ #define apr_isalpha(c) (isalpha(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see iscntrl */ #define apr_iscntrl(c) (iscntrl(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see isdigit */ #define apr_isdigit(c) (isdigit(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see isgraph */ #define apr_isgraph(c) (isgraph(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see islower*/ #define apr_islower(c) (islower(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see isascii */ #ifdef isascii #define apr_isascii(c) (isascii(((unsigned char)(c)))) #else #define apr_isascii(c) (((c) & ~0x7f)==0) #endif /** @see isprint */ #define apr_isprint(c) (isprint(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see ispunct */ #define apr_ispunct(c) (ispunct(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see isspace */ #define apr_isspace(c) (isspace(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see isupper */ #define apr_isupper(c) (isupper(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see isxdigit */ #define apr_isxdigit(c) (isxdigit(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see tolower */ #define apr_tolower(c) (tolower(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @see toupper */ #define apr_toupper(c) (toupper(((unsigned char)(c)))) /** @} */ #ifdef __cplusplus } #endif #endif /* ! APR_LIB_H */