chiark / gitweb /
Minor typo fixes.
[mLib] / lbuf.h
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97f65b00 1/* -*-c-*-
2 *
e03be5f4 3 * $Id: lbuf.h,v 1.4 2000/06/17 10:38:14 mdw Exp $
97f65b00 4 *
5 * Block-to-line buffering
6 *
7 * (c) 1999 Straylight/Edgeware
8 */
9
10/*----- Licensing notice --------------------------------------------------*
11 *
12 * This file is part of the mLib utilities library.
13 *
14 * mLib is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
15 * it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
16 * published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
17 * License, or (at your option) any later version.
18 *
19 * mLib is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
20 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
21 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
22 * GNU Library General Public License for more details.
23 *
24 * You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
25 * License along with mLib; if not, write to the Free
26 * Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston,
27 * MA 02111-1307, USA.
28 */
29
30/*----- Revision history --------------------------------------------------*
31 *
32 * $Log: lbuf.h,v $
e03be5f4 33 * Revision 1.4 2000/06/17 10:38:14 mdw
34 * Add support for variable buffer sizes.
35 *
c6e0eaf0 36 * Revision 1.3 1999/12/10 23:42:04 mdw
37 * Change header file guard names.
38 *
1ef7279c 39 * Revision 1.2 1999/05/17 20:36:08 mdw
40 * Make the magical constants for the buffer flags uppercase.
41 *
97f65b00 42 * Revision 1.1 1999/05/14 21:01:14 mdw
43 * Integrated `select' handling bits from the background resolver project.
44 *
45 */
46
c6e0eaf0 47#ifndef MLIB_LBUF_H
48#define MLIB_LBUF_H
97f65b00 49
50#ifdef __cplusplus
51 extern "C" {
52#endif
53
54/*----- Line buffering ----------------------------------------------------*
55 *
56 * The line buffer accepts as input arbitrary-sized lumps of data and
57 * converts them, by passing them to a client-supplied function, into a
58 * sequence of lines. It's particularly useful when performing multiplexed
59 * network I/O. It's not normally acceptable to block while waiting for the
60 * rest of a text line to arrive, for example. The line buffer stores the
61 * start of the line until the rest of it arrives later.
62 *
63 * A line is a piece of text terminated by either a linefeed or a carriage-
64 * return/linefeed pair. (The former is there to cope with Unix; the latter
65 * copes with Internet-format line ends.)
66 *
67 * There's a limit to the size of lines that the buffer can cope with. It's
68 * not hard to remove this limit, but it's probably a bad idea in a lot of
69 * cases, because it'd allow a remote user to gobble arbitrary amounts of
70 * your memory. If a line exceeds the limit, it is truncated: the initial
71 * portion of the line is processed normally, and the remaining portion is
72 * simply discarded.
73 *
74 * Lines extracted from the input data are passed, one at a time, to a
75 * `handler function', along with a caller-supplied pointer argument to
76 * provide the handler with some context. The line read is null-terminated
77 * and does not include the trailing newline characters. It is legal for a
78 * handler function to modify the string it is passed. However, writing
79 * beyond the terminating null byte is not allowed. An end-of-file condition
80 * is signalled to the handler by passing it a null pointer rather than the
81 * address of a string.
82 *
83 * A complexity arises because of the concept of a `disabled' buffer.
84 * Disablement is really a higher-level concept, but it turns out to be
85 * important to implement it here. It's useful for a line handler function
86 * to `disable' itself, so that it doesn't get called any more. For example,
87 * this might happen if it encouters an error, or when it finishes reading
88 * everything it wanted to read. The line buffer needs to be `in the loop'
89 * so that it stops attempting to flush any further lines stored in its
90 * buffer towards a handler function which isn't ready to accept them.
91 * Buffers are initially enabled, although higher- level buffering systems
92 * might well disable them immediately for their own purposes.
93 */
94
95/*----- Header files ------------------------------------------------------*/
96
97#include <stddef.h>
98
e03be5f4 99#ifndef MLIB_ARENA_H
100# include "arena.h"
101#endif
102
97f65b00 103/*----- Data structures ---------------------------------------------------*/
104
105/* --- The buffer structure --- *
106 *
107 * The only thing that's safe to fiddle with in here is the @lbuf_enable@
108 * flag. Only higher-level buffering systems should be playing with even
109 * that.
110 */
111
112typedef struct lbuf {
113 void (*func)(char */*s*/, void */*p*/); /* Handler function */
114 void *p; /* Argument for handler */
115 size_t len; /* Length of data in buffer */
e03be5f4 116 size_t sz; /* Buffer size */
97f65b00 117 unsigned f; /* Various useful state flags */
e03be5f4 118 arena *a; /* Memory allocation arena */
119 char *buf; /* The actual buffer */
97f65b00 120} lbuf;
121
122enum {
1ef7279c 123 LBUF_CR = 1, /* Read a carriage return */
124 LBUF_ENABLE = 2 /* Buffer is currently enabled */
97f65b00 125};
126
127/*----- Functions provided ------------------------------------------------*/
128
129/* --- @lbuf_flush@ --- *
130 *
131 * Arguments: @lbuf *b@ = pointer to buffer block
132 * @char *p@ = pointer to where to start searching
133 * @size_t len@ = length of new material added
134 *
135 * Returns: ---
136 *
137 * Use: Flushes any complete lines in a line buffer. New material
138 * is assumed to have been added starting at @p@. If @p@ is
139 * null, then the scan starts at the beginning of the buffer,
140 * and the size of data already in the buffer is used in place
141 * of @len@.
142 *
143 * It is assumed that the buffer is initially enabled. You
144 * shouldn't be contributing data to a disabled buffer anyway.
145 * However, the buffer handler may at some point disable itself,
146 * and @lbuf_flush@ can cope with this eventuality. Any pending
147 * data is left at the start of the buffer and can be flushed
148 * out by calling @lbuf_flush(b, 0, 0)@ if the buffer is ever
149 * re-enabled.
150 */
151
152extern void lbuf_flush(lbuf */*b*/, char */*p*/, size_t /*len*/);
153
154/* --- @lbuf_close@ --- *
155 *
156 * Arguments: @lbuf *b@ = pointer to buffer block
157 *
158 * Returns: ---
159 *
160 * Use: Empties the buffer of any data currently lurking in it, and
161 * informs the client that this has happened. It's assumed that
162 * the buffer is enabled: you shouldn't be reading close events
163 * on disabled buffers.
164 */
165
166extern void lbuf_close(lbuf */*b*/);
167
168/* --- @lbuf_free@ --- *
169 *
170 * Arguments: @lbuf *b@ = pointer to buffer block
171 * @char **p@ = output pointer to free space
172 *
173 * Returns: Free buffer size.
174 *
175 * Use: Returns the free portion of a line buffer. Data can then be
176 * written to this portion, and split out into lines by calling
177 * @lbuf_flush@.
178 */
179
180extern size_t lbuf_free(lbuf */*b*/, char **/*p*/);
181
182/* --- @lbuf_snarf@ --- *
183 *
184 * Arguments: @lbuf *b@ = pointer to buffer block
185 * @const void *p@ = pointer to input data buffer
186 * @size_t sz@ = size of data in input buffer
187 *
188 * Returns: ---
189 *
190 * Use: Snarfs the data from the input buffer and spits it out as
191 * lines. This interface ignores the complexities of dealing
192 * with disablement: you should be using @lbuf_free@ to
193 * contribute data if you want to cope with that.
194 */
195
196extern void lbuf_snarf(lbuf */*b*/, const void */*p*/, size_t /*sz*/);
197
e03be5f4 198/* --- @lbuf_setsize@ --- *
199 *
200 * Arguments: @lbuf *b@ = pointer to buffer block
201 * @size_t sz@ = requested maximum line size
202 *
203 * Returns: ---
204 *
205 * Use: Allocates a buffer of the requested size reading lines.
206 */
207
208extern void lbuf_setsize(lbuf */*b*/, size_t /*sz*/);
209
97f65b00 210/* --- @lbuf_init@ --- *
211 *
212 * Arguments: @lbuf *b@ = pointer to buffer block
213 * @void (*func)(char *s, void *p)@ = handler function
214 * @void *p@ = argument pointer for @func@
215 *
216 * Returns: ---
217 *
218 * Use: Initializes a line buffer block. Any recognized lines are
219 * passed to @func@ for processing.
220 */
221
222extern void lbuf_init(lbuf */*b*/,
223 void (*/*func*/)(char */*s*/, void */*p*/),
224 void */*p*/);
225
e03be5f4 226/* --- @lbuf_destroy@ --- *
227 *
228 * Arguments: @lbuf *b@ = pointer to buffer block
229 *
230 * Returns: ---
231 *
232 * Use: Deallocates a line buffer and frees any resources it owned.
233 */
234
235extern void lbuf_destroy(lbuf */*b*/);
236
97f65b00 237/*----- That's all, folks -------------------------------------------------*/
238
239#ifdef __cplusplus
240 }
241#endif
242
243#endif