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- /* ====================================================================
- * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
- * or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
- * distributed with this work for additional information
- * regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
- * to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
- * "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
- * with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
- *
- * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- *
- * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
- * software distributed under the License is distributed on an
- * "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
- * KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
- * specific language governing permissions and limitations
- * under the License.
- * ====================================================================
- */
- /**
- * @file apr_cstr.h
- * @brief C string goodies.
- */
- #ifndef APR_CSTR_H
- #define APR_CSTR_H
- #include <apr.h> /* for apr_size_t */
- #include <apr_pools.h> /* for apr_pool_t */
- #include <apr_tables.h> /* for apr_array_header_t */
- #ifdef __cplusplus
- extern "C" {
- #endif /* __cplusplus */
- /**
- * @defgroup apr_cstr C (POSIX) locale string functions
- * @ingroup apr_strings
- *
- * The apr_cstr_* functions provide traditional C char * string text handling,
- * and notabilty they treat all text in the C (a.k.a. POSIX) locale using the
- * minimal POSIX character set, represented in either ASCII or a corresponding
- * EBCDIC subset.
- *
- * Character values outside of that set are treated as opaque bytes, and all
- * multi-byte character sequences are handled as individual distinct octets.
- *
- * Multi-byte characters sequences whose octets fall in the ASCII range cause
- * unexpected results, such as in the ISO-2022-JP code page where ASCII octets
- * occur within both shift-state and multibyte sequences.
- *
- * In the case of the UTF-8 encoding, all multibyte characters all fall outside
- * of the C/POSIX range of characters, so these functions are generally safe
- * to use on UTF-8 strings. The programmer must be aware that each octet may
- * not represent a distinct printable character in such encodings.
- *
- * The standard C99/POSIX string functions, rather than apr_cstr, should be
- * used in all cases where the current locale and encoding of the text is
- * significant.
- * @{
- */
- /** Divide @a input into substrings, interpreting any char from @a sep
- * as a token separator.
- *
- * Return an array of copies of those substrings (plain const char*),
- * allocating both the array and the copies in @a pool.
- *
- * None of the elements added to the array contain any of the
- * characters in @a sep_chars, and none of the new elements are empty
- * (thus, it is possible that the returned array will have length
- * zero).
- *
- * If @a chop_whitespace is TRUE, then remove leading and trailing
- * whitespace from the returned strings.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_array_header_t *) apr_cstr_split(const char *input,
- const char *sep_chars,
- int chop_whitespace,
- apr_pool_t *pool);
- /** Like apr_cstr_split(), but append to existing @a array instead of
- * creating a new one. Allocate the copied substrings in @a pool
- * (i.e., caller decides whether or not to pass @a array->pool as @a pool).
- *
- * @since New in 1.6
- */
- APR_DECLARE(void) apr_cstr_split_append(apr_array_header_t *array,
- const char *input,
- const char *sep_chars,
- int chop_whitespace,
- apr_pool_t *pool);
- /** Return @c TRUE iff @a str matches any of the elements of @a list, a list
- * of zero or more glob patterns.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6
- */
- APR_DECLARE(int) apr_cstr_match_glob_list(const char *str,
- const apr_array_header_t *list);
- /** Return @c TRUE iff @a str exactly matches any of the elements of @a list.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6
- */
- APR_DECLARE(int) apr_cstr_match_list(const char *str,
- const apr_array_header_t *list);
- /**
- * Get the next token from @a *str interpreting any char from @a sep as a
- * token separator. Separators at the beginning of @a str will be skipped.
- * Returns a pointer to the beginning of the first token in @a *str or NULL
- * if no token is left. Modifies @a str such that the next call will return
- * the next token.
- *
- * @note The content of @a *str may be modified by this function.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(char *) apr_cstr_tokenize(const char *sep, char **str);
- /**
- * Return the number of line breaks in @a msg, allowing any kind of newline
- * termination (CR, LF, CRLF, or LFCR), even inconsistent.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(int) apr_cstr_count_newlines(const char *msg);
- #if 0 /* XXX: stringbuf logic is not present in APR */
- /**
- * Return a cstring which is the concatenation of @a strings (an array
- * of char *) each followed by @a separator (that is, @a separator
- * will also end the resulting string). Allocate the result in @a pool.
- * If @a strings is empty, then return the empty string.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(char *) apr_cstr_join(const apr_array_header_t *strings,
- const char *separator,
- apr_pool_t *pool);
- #endif
- /**
- * Perform a case-insensitive comparison of two strings @a atr1 and @a atr2,
- * treating upper and lower case values of the 26 standard C/POSIX alphabetic
- * characters as equivalent. Extended latin characters outside of this set
- * are treated as unique octets, irrespective of the current locale.
- *
- * Returns in integer greater than, equal to, or less than 0,
- * according to whether @a str1 is considered greater than, equal to,
- * or less than @a str2.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(int) apr_cstr_casecmp(const char *str1, const char *str2);
- /**
- * Perform a case-insensitive comparison of two strings @a atr1 and @a atr2,
- * treating upper and lower case values of the 26 standard C/POSIX alphabetic
- * characters as equivalent. Extended latin characters outside of this set
- * are treated as unique octets, irrespective of the current locale.
- *
- * Returns in integer greater than, equal to, or less than 0,
- * according to whether @a str1 is considered greater than, equal to,
- * or less than @a str2.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(int) apr_cstr_casecmpn(const char *str1,
- const char *str2,
- apr_size_t n);
- /**
- * Parse the C string @a str into a 64 bit number, and return it in @a *n.
- * Assume that the number is represented in base @a base.
- * Raise an error if conversion fails (e.g. due to overflow), or if the
- * converted number is smaller than @a minval or larger than @a maxval.
- *
- * Leading whitespace in @a str is skipped in a locale-dependent way.
- * After that, the string may contain an optional '+' (positive, default)
- * or '-' (negative) character, followed by an optional '0x' prefix if
- * @a base is 0 or 16, followed by numeric digits appropriate for the base.
- * If there are any more characters after the numeric digits, an error is
- * returned.
- *
- * If @a base is zero, then a leading '0x' or '0X' prefix means hexadecimal,
- * else a leading '0' means octal (implemented, though not documented, in
- * apr_strtoi64() in APR 0.9.0 through 1.5.0), else use base ten.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_cstr_strtoi64(apr_int64_t *n, const char *str,
- apr_int64_t minval,
- apr_int64_t maxval,
- int base);
- /**
- * Parse the C string @a str into a 64 bit number, and return it in @a *n.
- * Assume that the number is represented in base 10.
- * Raise an error if conversion fails (e.g. due to overflow).
- *
- * The behaviour otherwise is as described for apr_cstr_strtoi64().
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_cstr_atoi64(apr_int64_t *n, const char *str);
- /**
- * Parse the C string @a str into a 32 bit number, and return it in @a *n.
- * Assume that the number is represented in base 10.
- * Raise an error if conversion fails (e.g. due to overflow).
- *
- * The behaviour otherwise is as described for apr_cstr_strtoi64().
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_cstr_atoi(int *n, const char *str);
- /**
- * Parse the C string @a str into an unsigned 64 bit number, and return
- * it in @a *n. Assume that the number is represented in base @a base.
- * Raise an error if conversion fails (e.g. due to overflow), or if the
- * converted number is smaller than @a minval or larger than @a maxval.
- *
- * Leading whitespace in @a str is skipped in a locale-dependent way.
- * After that, the string may contain an optional '+' (positive, default)
- * or '-' (negative) character, followed by an optional '0x' prefix if
- * @a base is 0 or 16, followed by numeric digits appropriate for the base.
- * If there are any more characters after the numeric digits, an error is
- * returned.
- *
- * If @a base is zero, then a leading '0x' or '0X' prefix means hexadecimal,
- * else a leading '0' means octal (as implemented, though not documented, in
- * apr_strtoi64(), else use base ten.
- *
- * @warning The implementation returns APR_ERANGE if the parsed number
- * is greater than APR_INT64_MAX, even if it is not greater than @a maxval.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_cstr_strtoui64(apr_uint64_t *n, const char *str,
- apr_uint64_t minval,
- apr_uint64_t maxval,
- int base);
- /**
- * Parse the C string @a str into an unsigned 64 bit number, and return
- * it in @a *n. Assume that the number is represented in base 10.
- * Raise an error if conversion fails (e.g. due to overflow).
- *
- * The behaviour otherwise is as described for apr_cstr_strtoui64(),
- * including the upper limit of APR_INT64_MAX.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_cstr_atoui64(apr_uint64_t *n, const char *str);
- /**
- * Parse the C string @a str into an unsigned 32 bit number, and return
- * it in @a *n. Assume that the number is represented in base 10.
- * Raise an error if conversion fails (e.g. due to overflow).
- *
- * The behaviour otherwise is as described for apr_cstr_strtoui64(),
- * including the upper limit of APR_INT64_MAX.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_cstr_atoui(unsigned int *n, const char *str);
- /**
- * Skip the common prefix @a prefix from the C string @a str, and return
- * a pointer to the next character after the prefix.
- * Return @c NULL if @a str does not start with @a prefix.
- *
- * @since New in 1.6.
- */
- APR_DECLARE(const char *) apr_cstr_skip_prefix(const char *str,
- const char *prefix);
- /** @} */
- #ifdef __cplusplus
- }
- #endif /* __cplusplus */
- #endif /* SVN_STRING_H */
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