/* Fmemopen implementation. Copyright (C) 2000-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of the GNU C Library. Contributed by Hanno Mueller, kontakt@hanno.de, 2000. The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. The GNU C Library 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 Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see . */ /* * fmemopen() - "my" version of a string stream * Hanno Mueller, kontakt@hanno.de * * * I needed fmemopen() for an application that I currently work on, * but couldn't find it in libio. The following snippet of code is an * attempt to implement what glibc's documentation describes. * * * * I already see some potential problems: * * - I never used the "original" fmemopen(). I am sure that "my" * fmemopen() behaves differently than the original version. * * - The documentation doesn't say wether a string stream allows * seeks. I checked the old fmemopen implementation in glibc's stdio * directory, wasn't quite able to see what is going on in that * source, but as far as I understand there was no seek there. For * my application, I needed fseek() and ftell(), so it's here. * * - "append" mode and fseek(p, SEEK_END) have two different ideas * about the "end" of the stream. * * As described in the documentation, when opening the file in * "append" mode, the position pointer will be set to the first null * character of the string buffer (yet the buffer may already * contain more data). For fseek(), the last byte of the buffer is * used as the end of the stream. * * - It is unclear to me what the documentation tries to say when it * explains what happens when you use fmemopen with a NULL * buffer. * * Quote: "fmemopen [then] allocates an array SIZE bytes long. This * is really only useful if you are going to write things to the * buffer and then read them back in again." * * What does that mean if the original fmemopen() did not allow * seeking? How do you read what you just wrote without seeking back * to the beginning of the stream? * * - I think there should be a second version of fmemopen() that does * not add null characters for each write. (At least in my * application, I am not actually using strings but binary data and * so I don't need the stream to add null characters on its own.) */ #include "libioP.h" #if SHLIB_COMPAT (libc, GLIBC_2_2, GLIBC_2_22) #include #include #include #include #include #include #include typedef struct fmemopen_cookie_struct fmemopen_cookie_t; struct fmemopen_cookie_struct { char *buffer; int mybuffer; int binmode; size_t size; _IO_off64_t pos; size_t maxpos; }; static ssize_t fmemopen_read (void *cookie, char *b, size_t s) { fmemopen_cookie_t *c; c = (fmemopen_cookie_t *) cookie; if (c->pos + s > c->size) { if ((size_t) c->pos == c->size) return 0; s = c->size - c->pos; } memcpy (b, &(c->buffer[c->pos]), s); c->pos += s; if ((size_t) c->pos > c->maxpos) c->maxpos = c->pos; return s; } static ssize_t fmemopen_write (void *cookie, const char *b, size_t s) { fmemopen_cookie_t *c; int addnullc; c = (fmemopen_cookie_t *) cookie; addnullc = c->binmode == 0 && (s == 0 || b[s - 1] != '\0'); if (c->pos + s + addnullc > c->size) { if ((size_t) (c->pos + addnullc) >= c->size) { __set_errno (ENOSPC); return 0; } s = c->size - c->pos - addnullc; } memcpy (&(c->buffer[c->pos]), b, s); c->pos += s; if ((size_t) c->pos > c->maxpos) { c->maxpos = c->pos; if (addnullc) c->buffer[c->maxpos] = '\0'; } return s; } static int fmemopen_seek (void *cookie, _IO_off64_t *p, int w) { _IO_off64_t np; fmemopen_cookie_t *c; c = (fmemopen_cookie_t *) cookie; switch (w) { case SEEK_SET: np = *p; break; case SEEK_CUR: np = c->pos + *p; break; case SEEK_END: np = (c->binmode ? c->size : c->maxpos) - *p; break; default: return -1; } if (np < 0 || (size_t) np > c->size) return -1; *p = c->pos = np; return 0; } static int fmemopen_close (void *cookie) { fmemopen_cookie_t *c; c = (fmemopen_cookie_t *) cookie; if (c->mybuffer) free (c->buffer); free (c); return 0; } FILE * __old_fmemopen (void *buf, size_t len, const char *mode) { cookie_io_functions_t iof; fmemopen_cookie_t *c; FILE *result; if (__glibc_unlikely (len == 0)) { einval: __set_errno (EINVAL); return NULL; } c = (fmemopen_cookie_t *) malloc (sizeof (fmemopen_cookie_t)); if (c == NULL) return NULL; c->mybuffer = (buf == NULL); if (c->mybuffer) { c->buffer = (char *) malloc (len); if (c->buffer == NULL) { free (c); return NULL; } c->buffer[0] = '\0'; c->maxpos = 0; } else { if (__glibc_unlikely ((uintptr_t) len > -(uintptr_t) buf)) { free (c); goto einval; } c->buffer = buf; if (mode[0] == 'w') c->buffer[0] = '\0'; c->maxpos = strnlen (c->buffer, len); } c->size = len; if (mode[0] == 'a') c->pos = c->maxpos; else c->pos = 0; c->binmode = mode[0] != '\0' && mode[1] == 'b'; iof.read = fmemopen_read; iof.write = fmemopen_write; iof.seek = fmemopen_seek; iof.close = fmemopen_close; result = _IO_fopencookie (c, mode, iof); if (__glibc_unlikely (result == NULL)) { if (c->mybuffer) free (c->buffer); free (c); } return result; } compat_symbol (libc, __old_fmemopen, fmemopen, GLIBC_2_2); #endif