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  1. /*
  2.  * Copyright © 2010 Intel Corporation
  3.  *
  4.  * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
  5.  * copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
  6.  * to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
  7.  * the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
  8.  * and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
  9.  * Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
  10.  *
  11.  * The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
  12.  * paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
  13.  * Software.
  14.  *
  15.  * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
  16.  * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
  17.  * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.  IN NO EVENT SHALL
  18.  * THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
  19.  * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
  20.  * FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
  21.  * DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
  22.  */
  23.  
  24. /**
  25.  * \file ralloc.h
  26.  *
  27.  * ralloc: a recursive memory allocator
  28.  *
  29.  * The ralloc memory allocator creates a hierarchy of allocated
  30.  * objects. Every allocation is in reference to some parent, and
  31.  * every allocated object can in turn be used as the parent of a
  32.  * subsequent allocation. This allows for extremely convenient
  33.  * discarding of an entire tree/sub-tree of allocations by calling
  34.  * ralloc_free on any particular object to free it and all of its
  35.  * children.
  36.  *
  37.  * The conceptual working of ralloc was directly inspired by Andrew
  38.  * Tridgell's talloc, but ralloc is an independent implementation
  39.  * released under the MIT license and tuned for Mesa.
  40.  *
  41.  * The talloc implementation is available under the GNU Lesser
  42.  * General Public License (GNU LGPL), version 3 or later. It is
  43.  * more sophisticated than ralloc in that it includes reference
  44.  * counting and debugging features. See: http://talloc.samba.org/
  45.  */
  46.  
  47. #ifndef RALLOC_H
  48. #define RALLOC_H
  49.  
  50. #ifdef __cplusplus
  51. extern "C" {
  52. #endif
  53.  
  54. #include <stddef.h>
  55. #include <stdarg.h>
  56. #include <stdbool.h>
  57. #include "main/compiler.h"
  58.  
  59. /**
  60.  * \def ralloc(ctx, type)
  61.  * Allocate a new object chained off of the given context.
  62.  *
  63.  * This is equivalent to:
  64.  * \code
  65.  * ((type *) ralloc_size(ctx, sizeof(type))
  66.  * \endcode
  67.  */
  68. #define ralloc(ctx, type)  ((type *) ralloc_size(ctx, sizeof(type)))
  69.  
  70. /**
  71.  * \def rzalloc(ctx, type)
  72.  * Allocate a new object out of the given context and initialize it to zero.
  73.  *
  74.  * This is equivalent to:
  75.  * \code
  76.  * ((type *) rzalloc_size(ctx, sizeof(type))
  77.  * \endcode
  78.  */
  79. #define rzalloc(ctx, type) ((type *) rzalloc_size(ctx, sizeof(type)))
  80.  
  81. /**
  82.  * Allocate a new ralloc context.
  83.  *
  84.  * While any ralloc'd pointer can be used as a context, sometimes it is useful
  85.  * to simply allocate a context with no associated memory.
  86.  *
  87.  * It is equivalent to:
  88.  * \code
  89.  * ((type *) ralloc_size(ctx, 0)
  90.  * \endcode
  91.  */
  92. void *ralloc_context(const void *ctx);
  93.  
  94. /**
  95.  * Allocate memory chained off of the given context.
  96.  *
  97.  * This is the core allocation routine which is used by all others.  It
  98.  * simply allocates storage for \p size bytes and returns the pointer,
  99.  * similar to \c malloc.
  100.  */
  101. void *ralloc_size(const void *ctx, size_t size);
  102.  
  103. /**
  104.  * Allocate zero-initialized memory chained off of the given context.
  105.  *
  106.  * This is similar to \c calloc with a size of 1.
  107.  */
  108. void *rzalloc_size(const void *ctx, size_t size);
  109.  
  110. /**
  111.  * Resize a piece of ralloc-managed memory, preserving data.
  112.  *
  113.  * Similar to \c realloc.  Unlike C89, passing 0 for \p size does not free the
  114.  * memory.  Instead, it resizes it to a 0-byte ralloc context, just like
  115.  * calling ralloc_size(ctx, 0).  This is different from talloc.
  116.  *
  117.  * \param ctx  The context to use for new allocation.  If \p ptr != NULL,
  118.  *             it must be the same as ralloc_parent(\p ptr).
  119.  * \param ptr  Pointer to the memory to be resized.  May be NULL.
  120.  * \param size The amount of memory to allocate, in bytes.
  121.  */
  122. void *reralloc_size(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t size);
  123.  
  124. /// \defgroup array Array Allocators @{
  125.  
  126. /**
  127.  * \def ralloc_array(ctx, type, count)
  128.  * Allocate an array of objects chained off the given context.
  129.  *
  130.  * Similar to \c calloc, but does not initialize the memory to zero.
  131.  *
  132.  * More than a convenience function, this also checks for integer overflow when
  133.  * multiplying \c sizeof(type) and \p count.  This is necessary for security.
  134.  *
  135.  * This is equivalent to:
  136.  * \code
  137.  * ((type *) ralloc_array_size(ctx, sizeof(type), count)
  138.  * \endcode
  139.  */
  140. #define ralloc_array(ctx, type, count) \
  141.    ((type *) ralloc_array_size(ctx, sizeof(type), count))
  142.  
  143. /**
  144.  * \def rzalloc_array(ctx, type, count)
  145.  * Allocate a zero-initialized array chained off the given context.
  146.  *
  147.  * Similar to \c calloc.
  148.  *
  149.  * More than a convenience function, this also checks for integer overflow when
  150.  * multiplying \c sizeof(type) and \p count.  This is necessary for security.
  151.  *
  152.  * This is equivalent to:
  153.  * \code
  154.  * ((type *) rzalloc_array_size(ctx, sizeof(type), count)
  155.  * \endcode
  156.  */
  157. #define rzalloc_array(ctx, type, count) \
  158.    ((type *) rzalloc_array_size(ctx, sizeof(type), count))
  159.  
  160. /**
  161.  * \def reralloc(ctx, ptr, type, count)
  162.  * Resize a ralloc-managed array, preserving data.
  163.  *
  164.  * Similar to \c realloc.  Unlike C89, passing 0 for \p size does not free the
  165.  * memory.  Instead, it resizes it to a 0-byte ralloc context, just like
  166.  * calling ralloc_size(ctx, 0).  This is different from talloc.
  167.  *
  168.  * More than a convenience function, this also checks for integer overflow when
  169.  * multiplying \c sizeof(type) and \p count.  This is necessary for security.
  170.  *
  171.  * \param ctx   The context to use for new allocation.  If \p ptr != NULL,
  172.  *              it must be the same as ralloc_parent(\p ptr).
  173.  * \param ptr   Pointer to the array to be resized.  May be NULL.
  174.  * \param type  The element type.
  175.  * \param count The number of elements to allocate.
  176.  */
  177. #define reralloc(ctx, ptr, type, count) \
  178.    ((type *) reralloc_array_size(ctx, ptr, sizeof(type), count))
  179.  
  180. /**
  181.  * Allocate memory for an array chained off the given context.
  182.  *
  183.  * Similar to \c calloc, but does not initialize the memory to zero.
  184.  *
  185.  * More than a convenience function, this also checks for integer overflow when
  186.  * multiplying \p size and \p count.  This is necessary for security.
  187.  */
  188. void *ralloc_array_size(const void *ctx, size_t size, unsigned count);
  189.  
  190. /**
  191.  * Allocate a zero-initialized array chained off the given context.
  192.  *
  193.  * Similar to \c calloc.
  194.  *
  195.  * More than a convenience function, this also checks for integer overflow when
  196.  * multiplying \p size and \p count.  This is necessary for security.
  197.  */
  198. void *rzalloc_array_size(const void *ctx, size_t size, unsigned count);
  199.  
  200. /**
  201.  * Resize a ralloc-managed array, preserving data.
  202.  *
  203.  * Similar to \c realloc.  Unlike C89, passing 0 for \p size does not free the
  204.  * memory.  Instead, it resizes it to a 0-byte ralloc context, just like
  205.  * calling ralloc_size(ctx, 0).  This is different from talloc.
  206.  *
  207.  * More than a convenience function, this also checks for integer overflow when
  208.  * multiplying \c sizeof(type) and \p count.  This is necessary for security.
  209.  *
  210.  * \param ctx   The context to use for new allocation.  If \p ptr != NULL,
  211.  *              it must be the same as ralloc_parent(\p ptr).
  212.  * \param ptr   Pointer to the array to be resized.  May be NULL.
  213.  * \param size  The size of an individual element.
  214.  * \param count The number of elements to allocate.
  215.  *
  216.  * \return True unless allocation failed.
  217.  */
  218. void *reralloc_array_size(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t size,
  219.                           unsigned count);
  220. /// @}
  221.  
  222. /**
  223.  * Free a piece of ralloc-managed memory.
  224.  *
  225.  * This will also free the memory of any children allocated this context.
  226.  */
  227. void ralloc_free(void *ptr);
  228.  
  229. /**
  230.  * "Steal" memory from one context, changing it to another.
  231.  *
  232.  * This changes \p ptr's context to \p new_ctx.  This is quite useful if
  233.  * memory is allocated out of a temporary context.
  234.  */
  235. void ralloc_steal(const void *new_ctx, void *ptr);
  236.  
  237. /**
  238.  * Return the given pointer's ralloc context.
  239.  */
  240. void *ralloc_parent(const void *ptr);
  241.  
  242. /**
  243.  * Return a context whose memory will be automatically freed at program exit.
  244.  *
  245.  * The first call to this function creates a context and registers a handler
  246.  * to free it using \c atexit.  This may cause trouble if used in a library
  247.  * loaded with \c dlopen.
  248.  */
  249. void *ralloc_autofree_context(void);
  250.  
  251. /**
  252.  * Set a callback to occur just before an object is freed.
  253.  */
  254. void ralloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, void(*destructor)(void *));
  255.  
  256. /// \defgroup array String Functions @{
  257. /**
  258.  * Duplicate a string, allocating the memory from the given context.
  259.  */
  260. char *ralloc_strdup(const void *ctx, const char *str);
  261.  
  262. /**
  263.  * Duplicate a string, allocating the memory from the given context.
  264.  *
  265.  * Like \c strndup, at most \p n characters are copied.  If \p str is longer
  266.  * than \p n characters, \p n are copied, and a termining \c '\0' byte is added.
  267.  */
  268. char *ralloc_strndup(const void *ctx, const char *str, size_t n);
  269.  
  270. /**
  271.  * Concatenate two strings, allocating the necessary space.
  272.  *
  273.  * This appends \p str to \p *dest, similar to \c strcat, using ralloc_resize
  274.  * to expand \p *dest to the appropriate size.  \p dest will be updated to the
  275.  * new pointer unless allocation fails.
  276.  *
  277.  * The result will always be null-terminated.
  278.  *
  279.  * \return True unless allocation failed.
  280.  */
  281. bool ralloc_strcat(char **dest, const char *str);
  282.  
  283. /**
  284.  * Concatenate two strings, allocating the necessary space.
  285.  *
  286.  * This appends at most \p n bytes of \p str to \p *dest, using ralloc_resize
  287.  * to expand \p *dest to the appropriate size.  \p dest will be updated to the
  288.  * new pointer unless allocation fails.
  289.  *
  290.  * The result will always be null-terminated; \p str does not need to be null
  291.  * terminated if it is longer than \p n.
  292.  *
  293.  * \return True unless allocation failed.
  294.  */
  295. bool ralloc_strncat(char **dest, const char *str, size_t n);
  296.  
  297. /**
  298.  * Print to a string.
  299.  *
  300.  * This is analogous to \c sprintf, but allocates enough space (using \p ctx
  301.  * as the context) for the resulting string.
  302.  *
  303.  * \return The newly allocated string.
  304.  */
  305. char *ralloc_asprintf (const void *ctx, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTFLIKE(2, 3);
  306.  
  307. /**
  308.  * Print to a string, given a va_list.
  309.  *
  310.  * This is analogous to \c vsprintf, but allocates enough space (using \p ctx
  311.  * as the context) for the resulting string.
  312.  *
  313.  * \return The newly allocated string.
  314.  */
  315. char *ralloc_vasprintf(const void *ctx, const char *fmt, va_list args);
  316.  
  317. /**
  318.  * Rewrite the tail of an existing string, starting at a given index.
  319.  *
  320.  * Overwrites the contents of *str starting at \p start with newly formatted
  321.  * text, including a new null-terminator.  Allocates more memory as necessary.
  322.  *
  323.  * This can be used to append formatted text when the length of the existing
  324.  * string is already known, saving a strlen() call.
  325.  *
  326.  * \sa ralloc_asprintf_append
  327.  *
  328.  * \param str   The string to be updated.
  329.  * \param start The index to start appending new data at.
  330.  * \param fmt   A printf-style formatting string
  331.  *
  332.  * \p str will be updated to the new pointer unless allocation fails.
  333.  * \p start will be increased by the length of the newly formatted text.
  334.  *
  335.  * \return True unless allocation failed.
  336.  */
  337. bool ralloc_asprintf_rewrite_tail(char **str, size_t *start,
  338.                                   const char *fmt, ...)
  339.                                   PRINTFLIKE(3, 4);
  340.  
  341. /**
  342.  * Rewrite the tail of an existing string, starting at a given index.
  343.  *
  344.  * Overwrites the contents of *str starting at \p start with newly formatted
  345.  * text, including a new null-terminator.  Allocates more memory as necessary.
  346.  *
  347.  * This can be used to append formatted text when the length of the existing
  348.  * string is already known, saving a strlen() call.
  349.  *
  350.  * \sa ralloc_vasprintf_append
  351.  *
  352.  * \param str   The string to be updated.
  353.  * \param start The index to start appending new data at.
  354.  * \param fmt   A printf-style formatting string
  355.  * \param args  A va_list containing the data to be formatted
  356.  *
  357.  * \p str will be updated to the new pointer unless allocation fails.
  358.  * \p start will be increased by the length of the newly formatted text.
  359.  *
  360.  * \return True unless allocation failed.
  361.  */
  362. bool ralloc_vasprintf_rewrite_tail(char **str, size_t *start, const char *fmt,
  363.                                    va_list args);
  364.  
  365. /**
  366.  * Append formatted text to the supplied string.
  367.  *
  368.  * This is equivalent to
  369.  * \code
  370.  * ralloc_asprintf_rewrite_tail(str, strlen(*str), fmt, ...)
  371.  * \endcode
  372.  *
  373.  * \sa ralloc_asprintf
  374.  * \sa ralloc_asprintf_rewrite_tail
  375.  * \sa ralloc_strcat
  376.  *
  377.  * \p str will be updated to the new pointer unless allocation fails.
  378.  *
  379.  * \return True unless allocation failed.
  380.  */
  381. bool ralloc_asprintf_append (char **str, const char *fmt, ...)
  382.                              PRINTFLIKE(2, 3);
  383.  
  384. /**
  385.  * Append formatted text to the supplied string, given a va_list.
  386.  *
  387.  * This is equivalent to
  388.  * \code
  389.  * ralloc_vasprintf_rewrite_tail(str, strlen(*str), fmt, args)
  390.  * \endcode
  391.  *
  392.  * \sa ralloc_vasprintf
  393.  * \sa ralloc_vasprintf_rewrite_tail
  394.  * \sa ralloc_strcat
  395.  *
  396.  * \p str will be updated to the new pointer unless allocation fails.
  397.  *
  398.  * \return True unless allocation failed.
  399.  */
  400. bool ralloc_vasprintf_append(char **str, const char *fmt, va_list args);
  401. /// @}
  402.  
  403. #ifdef __cplusplus
  404. } /* end of extern "C" */
  405. #endif
  406.  
  407. #endif
  408.