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libc: add nx_strdup() & nx_strndup() support

Signed-off-by: ligd <liguiding1@xiaomi.com>
This commit is contained in:
ligd 2023-11-09 21:28:38 +08:00 committed by Xiang Xiao
parent 10659a8bc2
commit 7d218f93fa
6 changed files with 199 additions and 0 deletions

View file

@ -266,8 +266,16 @@ int remove(FAR const char *path);
#ifndef __KERNEL__
int pclose(FILE *stream);
FILE *popen(FAR const char *command, FAR const char *mode) popen_like;
#else
#define asprintf(p, f, ...) nx_asprintf(p, f, ##__VA_ARGS__)
#define vasprintf(p, f, a) nx_vasprintf(p, f, a)
#endif
int nx_asprintf(FAR char **ptr, FAR const IPTR char *fmt, ...)
printf_like(2, 3);
int nx_vasprintf(FAR char **ptr, FAR const IPTR char *fmt, va_list ap)
printf_like(2, 0);
#if CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE > 0
fortify_function(fgets) FAR char *fgets(FAR char *s, int n, FAR FILE *stream)
{

View file

@ -110,6 +110,14 @@ FAR void *memmem(FAR const void *haystack, size_t haystacklen,
void explicit_bzero(FAR void *s, size_t n);
int timingsafe_bcmp(FAR const void *b1, FAR const void *b2, size_t n);
#ifdef __KERNEL__
# define strdup(s) nx_strdup(s)
# define strndup(s,sz) nx_strndup(s,sz)
#endif
FAR char *nx_strdup(FAR const char *s) malloc_like;
FAR char *nx_strndup(FAR const char *s, size_t size) malloc_like;
#if CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE > 0
fortify_function(strcat) FAR char *strcat(FAR char *dest,
FAR const char *src)

View file

@ -30,6 +30,38 @@
* Public Functions
****************************************************************************/
/****************************************************************************
* Name: nx_asprintf
*
* Description:
* This function is similar to sprintf, except that it dynamically
* allocates a string (as with kmm_malloc) to hold the output, instead of
* putting the output in a buffer you allocate in advance. The ptr
* argument should be the address of a char * object, and a successful
* call to asprintf stores a pointer to the newly allocated string at that
* location.
*
* Returned Value:
* The returned value is the number of characters allocated for the buffer,
* or less than zero if an error occurred. Usually this means that the
* buffer could not be allocated.
*
****************************************************************************/
int nx_asprintf(FAR char **ptr, FAR const IPTR char *fmt, ...)
{
va_list ap;
int ret;
/* Let vasprintf do all of the work */
va_start(ap, fmt);
ret = nx_vasprintf(ptr, fmt, ap);
va_end(ap);
return ret;
}
/****************************************************************************
* Name: asprintf
*
@ -48,6 +80,7 @@
*
****************************************************************************/
#undef asprintf
int asprintf(FAR char **ptr, FAR const IPTR char *fmt, ...)
{
va_list ap;

View file

@ -34,6 +34,101 @@
* Public Functions
****************************************************************************/
/****************************************************************************
* Name: nx_vasprintf
*
* Description:
* This function is similar to vsprintf, except that it dynamically
* allocates a string (as with kmm_malloc) to hold the output, instead of
* putting the output in a buffer you allocate in advance. The ptr
* argument should be the address of a char * object, and a successful
* call to vasprintf stores a pointer to the newly allocated string at that
* location.
*
* Returned Value:
* The returned value is the number of characters allocated for the buffer,
* or less than zero if an error occurred. Usually this means that the
* buffer could not be allocated.
*
****************************************************************************/
int nx_vasprintf(FAR char **ptr, FAR const IPTR char *fmt, va_list ap)
{
struct lib_outstream_s nulloutstream;
struct lib_memoutstream_s memoutstream;
/* On some architectures, va_list is really a pointer to a structure on
* the stack. And the va_arg builtin will modify that instance of va_list.
* Since vasprintf traverse the parameters in the va_list twice, the
* va_list will be altered in this first cases and the second usage will
* fail. This is a known issue with x86_64.
*/
#ifdef va_copy
va_list ap2;
#endif
FAR char *buf;
int nbytes;
DEBUGASSERT(ptr != NULL && fmt != NULL);
#ifdef va_copy
va_copy(ap2, ap);
#endif
/* First, use a nullstream to get the size of the buffer. The number
* of bytes returned may or may not include the null terminator.
*/
lib_nulloutstream(&nulloutstream);
lib_vsprintf(&nulloutstream, fmt, ap);
/* Then allocate a buffer to hold that number of characters, adding one
* for the null terminator.
*/
buf = kmm_malloc(nulloutstream.nput + 1);
if (buf == NULL)
{
#ifdef va_copy
va_end(ap2);
#endif
return ERROR;
}
/* Initialize a memory stream to write into the allocated buffer. The
* memory stream will reserve one byte at the end of the buffer for the
* null terminator and will not report this in the number of output bytes.
*/
lib_memoutstream(&memoutstream, buf, nulloutstream.nput + 1);
/* Then let lib_vsprintf do it's real thing */
#ifdef va_copy
nbytes = lib_vsprintf(&memoutstream.common, fmt, ap2);
va_end(ap2);
#else
nbytes = lib_vsprintf(&memoutstream.common, fmt, ap);
#endif
/* Return a pointer to the string to the caller. NOTE: the memstream put()
* method has already added the NUL terminator to the end of the string
* (not included in the nput count).
*/
DEBUGASSERT(nbytes < 0 || nbytes == nulloutstream.nput);
if (nbytes < 0)
{
kmm_free(buf);
return ERROR;
}
*ptr = buf;
return nbytes;
}
/****************************************************************************
* Name: vasprintf
*
@ -52,6 +147,7 @@
*
****************************************************************************/
#undef vasprintf
int vasprintf(FAR char **ptr, FAR const IPTR char *fmt, va_list ap)
{
struct lib_outstream_s nulloutstream;

View file

@ -47,3 +47,16 @@ FAR char *strdup(FAR const char *s)
return news;
}
FAR char *nx_strdup(FAR const char *s)
{
size_t size = strlen(s) + 1;
FAR char *news = (FAR char *)kmm_malloc(size);
if (news != NULL)
{
strlcpy(news, s, size);
}
return news;
}

View file

@ -34,6 +34,47 @@
* Public Functions
****************************************************************************/
/****************************************************************************
* Name: nx_strndup
*
* Description:
* The strndup() function is equivalent to the strdup() function,
* duplicating the provided 's' in a new block of memory allocated as
* if by using kmm_malloc(), with the exception being that strndup() copies
* at most 'size' plus one bytes into the newly allocated memory,
* terminating the new string with a NUL character. If the length of 's'
* is larger than 'size', only 'size' bytes will be duplicated. If
* 'size' is larger than the length of 's', all bytes in s will be
* copied into the new memory buffer, including the terminating NUL
* character. The newly created string will always be properly
* terminated.
*
****************************************************************************/
FAR char *nx_strndup(FAR const char *s, size_t size)
{
FAR char *news;
/* Get the size of the new string (limited to size) */
size_t allocsize = strnlen(s, size);
/* Allocate the new string, adding 1 for the NUL terminator */
news = (FAR char *)kmm_malloc(allocsize + 1);
if (news != NULL)
{
/* Copy the string into the allocated memory and add a NUL
* terminator in any case.
*/
memcpy(news, s, allocsize);
news[allocsize] = '\0';
}
return news;
}
/****************************************************************************
* Name: strndup
*