mc/lib/strutil/xstrtol.c
Andrew Borodin 6cb97d18f1 src/strutil/xstrtol.c: sync with gnulib.
Sync with gnulib 64ddc975e72cb55d2b2d755c25603bd70312aa5e:
  This patch alters xstrtoumax behavior slightly, in areas are not
  likely to affect any real callers, by making xstrtoumax behave more
  like the system strtol. In particular, it lets xstrtoumax support
  bases other than those required by POSIX, if the underlying
  implementation does; this removes the need for an g_assert().

  * lib/strutil/strtol.c: Do not include stdio.h.
  (xstrtoumax): Use same parameter names as POSIX, to make it
  easier for outsiders to follow. Do not require the base to be 0-36,
  as the underlying implementation is allowed to support other bases.

Sync with gnulib 16b33e6649425fcdce095f262da98b539d2f7448.

  * (xstrtoumax): Don't update *endptr if strtol doesn't.
  Also, if the underlying strtol gives an unusual error number and
  sets *endpnr = nptr, assume that's an error not a missing number.

Sync with gnulib bd1e981434c98751b1106a1744e77a27317b52b3
  * (xstrtoumax): Stop worrying about hypothetical implementations that
  are causing more confusion than the code is worth. Instead, go back
  more to old way of doing things.  None of this matters for practical
  applications.

Add commemt.

Signed-off-by: Andrew Borodin <aborodin@vmail.ru>
2024-10-05 15:05:58 +03:00

282 lines
8.8 KiB
C

/* A more useful interface to strtol.
Copyright (C) 1995-2024
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
/* Written by Jim Meyering. */
#include <config.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "lib/strutil.h"
/*** global variables ****************************************************************************/
/*** file scope macro definitions ****************************************************************/
/*** file scope type declarations ****************************************************************/
/*** forward declarations (file scope functions) *************************************************/
/*** file scope variables ************************************************************************/
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/*** file scope functions ************************************************************************/
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static strtol_error_t
bkm_scale (uintmax_t *x, int scale_factor)
{
if (UINTMAX_MAX / scale_factor < *x)
{
*x = UINTMAX_MAX;
return LONGINT_OVERFLOW;
}
*x *= scale_factor;
return LONGINT_OK;
}
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
static strtol_error_t
bkm_scale_by_power (uintmax_t *x, int base, int power)
{
strtol_error_t err = LONGINT_OK;
while (power-- != 0)
err |= bkm_scale (x, base);
return err;
}
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/*** public functions ****************************************************************************/
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* Act like the system's strtol (NPTR, ENDPTR, BASE) except:
- The TYPE of the result might be something other than long int.
- Return strtol_error, and store any result through an additional
TYPE *VAL pointer instead of returning the result.
- If TYPE is unsigned, reject leading '-'.
- Behavior is undefined if BASE is negative, 1, or greater than 36.
(In this respect xstrtol acts like the C standard, not like POSIX.)
- Accept an additional char const *VALID_SUFFIXES pointer to a
possibly-empty string containing allowed numeric suffixes,
which multiply the value. These include SI suffixes like 'k' and 'M';
these normally stand for powers of 1024, but if VALID_SUFFIXES also
includes '0' they can be followed by "B" to stand for the usual
SI powers of 1000 (or by "iB" to stand for powers of 1024 as before).
Other supported suffixes include 'K' for 1024 or 1000, 'b' for 512,
'c' for 1, and 'w' for 2.
- Suppose that after the initial whitespace, the number is missing
but there is a valid suffix. Then the number is treated as 1.
*/
strtol_error_t
xstrtoumax (const char *nptr, char **endptr, int base, uintmax_t *val, const char *valid_suffixes)
{
char *t_ptr;
char **p;
uintmax_t tmp;
strtol_error_t err = LONGINT_OK;
p = endptr != NULL ? endptr : &t_ptr;
{
const char *q = nptr;
unsigned char ch = *q;
while (isspace (ch))
ch = *++q;
if (ch == '-')
{
*p = (char *) nptr;
return LONGINT_INVALID;
}
}
errno = 0;
tmp = strtol (nptr, p, base);
if (*p == nptr)
{
/* If there is no number but there is a valid suffix, assume the
number is 1. The string is invalid otherwise. */
if (!(valid_suffixes != NULL && *nptr != '\0' && strchr (valid_suffixes, *nptr) != NULL))
return LONGINT_INVALID;
tmp = 1;
}
else if (errno != 0)
{
if (errno != ERANGE)
return LONGINT_INVALID;
err = LONGINT_OVERFLOW;
}
/* Let valid_suffixes == NULL mean "allow any suffix". */
/* FIXME: update all callers except the ones that allow suffixes
after the number, changing last parameter NULL to "". */
if (valid_suffixes == NULL)
{
*val = tmp;
return err;
}
if (**p != '\0')
{
int xbase = 1024;
int suffixes = 1;
strtol_error_t overflow;
if (strchr (valid_suffixes, **p) == NULL)
{
*val = tmp;
return err | LONGINT_INVALID_SUFFIX_CHAR;
}
switch (**p)
{
case 'E':
case 'G':
case 'g':
case 'k':
case 'K':
case 'M':
case 'm':
case 'P':
case 'Q':
case 'R':
case 'T':
case 't':
case 'Y':
case 'Z':
if (strchr (valid_suffixes, '0') != NULL)
{
/* The "valid suffix" '0' is a special flag meaning that
an optional second suffix is allowed, which can change
the base. A suffix "B" (e.g. "100MB") stands for a power
of 1000, whereas a suffix "iB" (e.g. "100MiB") stands for
a power of 1024. If no suffix (e.g. "100M"), assume
power-of-1024. */
switch (p[0][1])
{
case 'i':
if (p[0][2] == 'B')
suffixes += 2;
break;
case 'B':
case 'D': /* 'D' is obsolescent */
xbase = 1000;
suffixes++;
break;
default:
break;
}
}
break;
default:
break;
}
switch (**p)
{
case 'b':
overflow = bkm_scale (&tmp, 512);
break;
case 'B':
/* This obsolescent first suffix is distinct from the 'B'
second suffix above. E.g., 'tar -L 1000B' means change
the tape after writing 1000 KiB of data. */
overflow = bkm_scale (&tmp, 1024);
break;
case 'c':
overflow = LONGINT_OK;
break;
case 'E': /* exa or exbi */
overflow = bkm_scale_by_power (&tmp, xbase, 6);
break;
case 'G': /* giga or gibi */
case 'g': /* 'g' is undocumented; for compatibility only */
overflow = bkm_scale_by_power (&tmp, xbase, 3);
break;
case 'k': /* kilo */
case 'K': /* kibi */
overflow = bkm_scale_by_power (&tmp, xbase, 1);
break;
case 'M': /* mega or mebi */
case 'm': /* 'm' is undocumented; for compatibility only */
overflow = bkm_scale_by_power (&tmp, xbase, 2);
break;
case 'P': /* peta or pebi */
overflow = bkm_scale_by_power (&tmp, xbase, 5);
break;
case 'Q': /* quetta or 2**100 */
overflow = bkm_scale_by_power (&tmp, xbase, 10);
break;
case 'R': /* ronna or 2**90 */
overflow = bkm_scale_by_power (&tmp, xbase, 9);
break;
case 'T': /* tera or tebi */
case 't': /* 't' is undocumented; for compatibility only */
overflow = bkm_scale_by_power (&tmp, xbase, 4);
break;
case 'w':
overflow = bkm_scale (&tmp, 2);
break;
case 'Y': /* yotta or 2**80 */
overflow = bkm_scale_by_power (&tmp, xbase, 8);
break;
case 'Z': /* zetta or 2**70 */
overflow = bkm_scale_by_power (&tmp, xbase, 7);
break;
default:
*val = tmp;
return err | LONGINT_INVALID_SUFFIX_CHAR;
}
err |= overflow;
*p += suffixes;
if (**p != '\0')
err |= LONGINT_INVALID_SUFFIX_CHAR;
}
*val = tmp;
return err;
}
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */