| /*------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| * | |
| * stringinfo.h | |
| * Declarations/definitions for "StringInfo" functions. | |
| * | |
| * StringInfo provides an extensible string data type (currently limited to a | |
| * length of 1GB). It can be used to buffer either ordinary C strings | |
| * (null-terminated text) or arbitrary binary data. All storage is allocated | |
| * with palloc() (falling back to malloc in frontend code). | |
| * | |
| * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2023, PostgreSQL Global Development Group | |
| * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California | |
| * | |
| * src/include/lib/stringinfo.h | |
| * | |
| *------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| */ | |
| /*------------------------- | |
| * StringInfoData holds information about an extensible string. | |
| * data is the current buffer for the string (allocated with palloc). | |
| * len is the current string length. There is guaranteed to be | |
| * a terminating '\0' at data[len], although this is not very | |
| * useful when the string holds binary data rather than text. | |
| * maxlen is the allocated size in bytes of 'data', i.e. the maximum | |
| * string size (including the terminating '\0' char) that we can | |
| * currently store in 'data' without having to reallocate | |
| * more space. We must always have maxlen > len. | |
| * cursor is initialized to zero by makeStringInfo or initStringInfo, | |
| * but is not otherwise touched by the stringinfo.c routines. | |
| * Some routines use it to scan through a StringInfo. | |
| *------------------------- | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct StringInfoData | |
| { | |
| char *data; | |
| int len; | |
| int maxlen; | |
| int cursor; | |
| } StringInfoData; | |
| typedef StringInfoData *StringInfo; | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * There are two ways to create a StringInfo object initially: | |
| * | |
| * StringInfo stringptr = makeStringInfo(); | |
| * Both the StringInfoData and the data buffer are palloc'd. | |
| * | |
| * StringInfoData string; | |
| * initStringInfo(&string); | |
| * The data buffer is palloc'd but the StringInfoData is just local. | |
| * This is the easiest approach for a StringInfo object that will | |
| * only live as long as the current routine. | |
| * | |
| * To destroy a StringInfo, pfree() the data buffer, and then pfree() the | |
| * StringInfoData if it was palloc'd. There's no special support for this. | |
| * | |
| * NOTE: some routines build up a string using StringInfo, and then | |
| * release the StringInfoData but return the data string itself to their | |
| * caller. At that point the data string looks like a plain palloc'd | |
| * string. | |
| *------------------------- | |
| */ | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * makeStringInfo | |
| * Create an empty 'StringInfoData' & return a pointer to it. | |
| */ | |
| extern StringInfo makeStringInfo(void); | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * initStringInfo | |
| * Initialize a StringInfoData struct (with previously undefined contents) | |
| * to describe an empty string. | |
| */ | |
| extern void initStringInfo(StringInfo str); | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * resetStringInfo | |
| * Clears the current content of the StringInfo, if any. The | |
| * StringInfo remains valid. | |
| */ | |
| extern void resetStringInfo(StringInfo str); | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * appendStringInfo | |
| * Format text data under the control of fmt (an sprintf-style format string) | |
| * and append it to whatever is already in str. More space is allocated | |
| * to str if necessary. This is sort of like a combination of sprintf and | |
| * strcat. | |
| */ | |
| extern void appendStringInfo(StringInfo str, const char *fmt,...) pg_attribute_printf(2, 3); | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * appendStringInfoVA | |
| * Attempt to format text data under the control of fmt (an sprintf-style | |
| * format string) and append it to whatever is already in str. If successful | |
| * return zero; if not (because there's not enough space), return an estimate | |
| * of the space needed, without modifying str. Typically the caller should | |
| * pass the return value to enlargeStringInfo() before trying again; see | |
| * appendStringInfo for standard usage pattern. | |
| */ | |
| extern int appendStringInfoVA(StringInfo str, const char *fmt, va_list args) pg_attribute_printf(2, 0); | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * appendStringInfoString | |
| * Append a null-terminated string to str. | |
| * Like appendStringInfo(str, "%s", s) but faster. | |
| */ | |
| extern void appendStringInfoString(StringInfo str, const char *s); | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * appendStringInfoChar | |
| * Append a single byte to str. | |
| * Like appendStringInfo(str, "%c", ch) but much faster. | |
| */ | |
| extern void appendStringInfoChar(StringInfo str, char ch); | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * appendStringInfoCharMacro | |
| * As above, but a macro for even more speed where it matters. | |
| * Caution: str argument will be evaluated multiple times. | |
| */ | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * appendStringInfoSpaces | |
| * Append a given number of spaces to str. | |
| */ | |
| extern void appendStringInfoSpaces(StringInfo str, int count); | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * appendBinaryStringInfo | |
| * Append arbitrary binary data to a StringInfo, allocating more space | |
| * if necessary. | |
| */ | |
| extern void appendBinaryStringInfo(StringInfo str, | |
| const void *data, int datalen); | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * appendBinaryStringInfoNT | |
| * Append arbitrary binary data to a StringInfo, allocating more space | |
| * if necessary. Does not ensure a trailing null-byte exists. | |
| */ | |
| extern void appendBinaryStringInfoNT(StringInfo str, | |
| const void *data, int datalen); | |
| /*------------------------ | |
| * enlargeStringInfo | |
| * Make sure a StringInfo's buffer can hold at least 'needed' more bytes. | |
| */ | |
| extern void enlargeStringInfo(StringInfo str, int needed); | |