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postgres/src/include/lib/stringinfo.h
Daniel Gustafsson b783186515 Add destroyStringInfo function for cleaning up StringInfos
destroyStringInfo() is a counterpart to makeStringInfo(), freeing a
palloc'd StringInfo and its data. This is a convenience function to
align the StringInfo API with the PQExpBuffer API. Originally added
in the OAuth patchset, it was extracted and committed separately in
order to aid upcoming JSON work.

Author: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Author: Jacob Champion <jacob.champion@enterprisedb.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz>
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAOYmi+mWdTd6ujtyF7MsvXvk7ToLRVG_tYAcaGbQLvf=N4KrQw@mail.gmail.com
2024-03-16 23:18:28 +01:00

244 lines
9.0 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* stringinfo.h
* Declarations/definitions for "StringInfo" functions.
*
* StringInfo provides an extensible string data type (currently limited to a
* length of 1GB). It can be used to buffer either ordinary C strings
* (null-terminated text) or arbitrary binary data. All storage is allocated
* with palloc() (falling back to malloc in frontend code).
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2024, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
* src/include/lib/stringinfo.h
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifndef STRINGINFO_H
#define STRINGINFO_H
/*-------------------------
* StringInfoData holds information about an extensible string.
* data is the current buffer for the string.
* len is the current string length. Except in the case of read-only
* strings described below, there is guaranteed to be a
* terminating '\0' at data[len].
* maxlen is the allocated size in bytes of 'data', i.e. the maximum
* string size (including the terminating '\0' char) that we can
* currently store in 'data' without having to reallocate
* more space. We must always have maxlen > len, except
* in the read-only case described below.
* cursor is initialized to zero by makeStringInfo, initStringInfo,
* initReadOnlyStringInfo and initStringInfoFromString but is not
* otherwise touched by the stringinfo.c routines. Some routines
* use it to scan through a StringInfo.
*
* As a special case, a StringInfoData can be initialized with a read-only
* string buffer. In this case "data" does not necessarily point at a
* palloc'd chunk, and management of the buffer storage is the caller's
* responsibility. maxlen is set to zero to indicate that this is the case.
* Read-only StringInfoDatas cannot be appended to or reset.
* Also, it is caller's option whether a read-only string buffer has a
* terminating '\0' or not. This depends on the intended usage.
*-------------------------
*/
typedef struct StringInfoData
{
char *data;
int len;
int maxlen;
int cursor;
} StringInfoData;
typedef StringInfoData *StringInfo;
/*------------------------
* There are four ways to create a StringInfo object initially:
*
* StringInfo stringptr = makeStringInfo();
* Both the StringInfoData and the data buffer are palloc'd.
*
* StringInfoData string;
* initStringInfo(&string);
* The data buffer is palloc'd but the StringInfoData is just local.
* This is the easiest approach for a StringInfo object that will
* only live as long as the current routine.
*
* StringInfoData string;
* initReadOnlyStringInfo(&string, existingbuf, len);
* The StringInfoData's data field is set to point directly to the
* existing buffer and the StringInfoData's len is set to the given len.
* The given buffer can point to memory that's not managed by palloc or
* is pointing partway through a palloc'd chunk. The maxlen field is set
* to 0. A read-only StringInfo cannot be appended to using any of the
* appendStringInfo functions or reset with resetStringInfo(). The given
* buffer can optionally omit the trailing NUL.
*
* StringInfoData string;
* initStringInfoFromString(&string, palloced_buf, len);
* The StringInfoData's data field is set to point directly to the given
* buffer and the StringInfoData's len is set to the given len. This
* method of initialization is useful when the buffer already exists.
* StringInfos initialized this way can be appended to using the
* appendStringInfo functions and reset with resetStringInfo(). The
* given buffer must be NUL-terminated. The palloc'd buffer is assumed
* to be len + 1 in size.
*
* To destroy a StringInfo, pfree() the data buffer, and then pfree() the
* StringInfoData if it was palloc'd. For StringInfos created with
* makeStringInfo(), destroyStringInfo() is provided for this purpose.
* However, if the StringInfo was initialized using initReadOnlyStringInfo()
* then the caller will need to consider if it is safe to pfree the data
* buffer.
*
* NOTE: some routines build up a string using StringInfo, and then
* release the StringInfoData but return the data string itself to their
* caller. At that point the data string looks like a plain palloc'd
* string.
*-------------------------
*/
/*------------------------
* makeStringInfo
* Create an empty 'StringInfoData' & return a pointer to it.
*/
extern StringInfo makeStringInfo(void);
/*------------------------
* initStringInfo
* Initialize a StringInfoData struct (with previously undefined contents)
* to describe an empty string.
*/
extern void initStringInfo(StringInfo str);
/*------------------------
* initReadOnlyStringInfo
* Initialize a StringInfoData struct from an existing string without copying
* the string. The caller is responsible for ensuring the given string
* remains valid as long as the StringInfoData does. Calls to this are used
* in performance critical locations where allocating a new buffer and copying
* would be too costly. Read-only StringInfoData's may not be appended to
* using any of the appendStringInfo functions or reset with
* resetStringInfo().
*
* 'data' does not need to point directly to a palloc'd chunk of memory and may
* omit the NUL termination character at data[len].
*/
static inline void
initReadOnlyStringInfo(StringInfo str, char *data, int len)
{
str->data = data;
str->len = len;
str->maxlen = 0; /* read-only */
str->cursor = 0;
}
/*------------------------
* initStringInfoFromString
* Initialize a StringInfoData struct from an existing string without copying
* the string. 'data' must be a valid palloc'd chunk of memory that can have
* repalloc() called should more space be required during a call to any of the
* appendStringInfo functions.
*
* 'data' must be NUL terminated at 'len' bytes.
*/
static inline void
initStringInfoFromString(StringInfo str, char *data, int len)
{
Assert(data[len] == '\0');
str->data = data;
str->len = len;
str->maxlen = len + 1;
str->cursor = 0;
}
/*------------------------
* resetStringInfo
* Clears the current content of the StringInfo, if any. The
* StringInfo remains valid.
*/
extern void resetStringInfo(StringInfo str);
/*------------------------
* appendStringInfo
* Format text data under the control of fmt (an sprintf-style format string)
* and append it to whatever is already in str. More space is allocated
* to str if necessary. This is sort of like a combination of sprintf and
* strcat.
*/
extern void appendStringInfo(StringInfo str, const char *fmt,...) pg_attribute_printf(2, 3);
/*------------------------
* appendStringInfoVA
* Attempt to format text data under the control of fmt (an sprintf-style
* format string) and append it to whatever is already in str. If successful
* return zero; if not (because there's not enough space), return an estimate
* of the space needed, without modifying str. Typically the caller should
* pass the return value to enlargeStringInfo() before trying again; see
* appendStringInfo for standard usage pattern.
*/
extern int appendStringInfoVA(StringInfo str, const char *fmt, va_list args) pg_attribute_printf(2, 0);
/*------------------------
* appendStringInfoString
* Append a null-terminated string to str.
* Like appendStringInfo(str, "%s", s) but faster.
*/
extern void appendStringInfoString(StringInfo str, const char *s);
/*------------------------
* appendStringInfoChar
* Append a single byte to str.
* Like appendStringInfo(str, "%c", ch) but much faster.
*/
extern void appendStringInfoChar(StringInfo str, char ch);
/*------------------------
* appendStringInfoCharMacro
* As above, but a macro for even more speed where it matters.
* Caution: str argument will be evaluated multiple times.
*/
#define appendStringInfoCharMacro(str,ch) \
(((str)->len + 1 >= (str)->maxlen) ? \
appendStringInfoChar(str, ch) : \
(void)((str)->data[(str)->len] = (ch), (str)->data[++(str)->len] = '\0'))
/*------------------------
* appendStringInfoSpaces
* Append a given number of spaces to str.
*/
extern void appendStringInfoSpaces(StringInfo str, int count);
/*------------------------
* appendBinaryStringInfo
* Append arbitrary binary data to a StringInfo, allocating more space
* if necessary.
*/
extern void appendBinaryStringInfo(StringInfo str,
const void *data, int datalen);
/*------------------------
* appendBinaryStringInfoNT
* Append arbitrary binary data to a StringInfo, allocating more space
* if necessary. Does not ensure a trailing null-byte exists.
*/
extern void appendBinaryStringInfoNT(StringInfo str,
const void *data, int datalen);
/*------------------------
* enlargeStringInfo
* Make sure a StringInfo's buffer can hold at least 'needed' more bytes.
*/
extern void enlargeStringInfo(StringInfo str, int needed);
/*------------------------
* destroyStringInfo
* Frees a StringInfo and its buffer (opposite of makeStringInfo()).
*/
extern void destroyStringInfo(StringInfo str);
#endif /* STRINGINFO_H */