| /* Type-safe arrays which grow dynamically. | |
| Copyright 2021-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | |
| This file 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. | |
| This file 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 this program. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ | |
| /* Written by Paul Eggert and Bruno Haible, 2021. */ | |
| /* Before including this file, you need to define: | |
| DYNARRAY_STRUCT | |
| The struct tag of dynamic array to be defined. | |
| DYNARRAY_ELEMENT | |
| The type name of the element type. Elements are copied | |
| as if by memcpy, and can change address as the dynamic | |
| array grows. | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX | |
| The prefix of the functions which are defined. | |
| The following parameters are optional: | |
| DYNARRAY_ELEMENT_FREE | |
| DYNARRAY_ELEMENT_FREE (E) is evaluated to deallocate the | |
| contents of elements. E is of type DYNARRAY_ELEMENT *. | |
| DYNARRAY_ELEMENT_INIT | |
| DYNARRAY_ELEMENT_INIT (E) is evaluated to initialize a new | |
| element. E is of type DYNARRAY_ELEMENT *. | |
| If DYNARRAY_ELEMENT_FREE but not DYNARRAY_ELEMENT_INIT is | |
| defined, new elements are automatically zero-initialized. | |
| Otherwise, new elements have undefined contents. | |
| DYNARRAY_INITIAL_SIZE | |
| The size of the statically allocated array (default: | |
| at least 2, more elements if they fit into 128 bytes). | |
| Must be a preprocessor constant. If DYNARRAY_INITIAL_SIZE is 0, | |
| there is no statically allocated array at, and all non-empty | |
| arrays are heap-allocated. | |
| DYNARRAY_FINAL_TYPE | |
| The name of the type which holds the final array. If not | |
| defined, is PREFIX##finalize not provided. DYNARRAY_FINAL_TYPE | |
| must be a struct type, with members of type DYNARRAY_ELEMENT and | |
| size_t at the start (in this order). | |
| These macros are undefined after this header file has been | |
| included. | |
| The following types are provided (their members are private to the | |
| dynarray implementation): | |
| struct DYNARRAY_STRUCT | |
| The following functions are provided: | |
| */ | |
| /* Initialize a dynamic array object. This must be called before any | |
| use of the object. */ | |
| static void | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| /* Deallocate the dynamic array and its elements. */ | |
| static void | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| /* Return true if the dynamic array is in an error state. */ | |
| static bool | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX##has_failed (const struct DYNARRAY_STRUCT *list); | |
| /* Mark the dynamic array as failed. All elements are deallocated as | |
| a side effect. */ | |
| static void | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX##mark_failed (struct DYNARRAY_STRUCT *list); | |
| /* Return the number of elements which have been added to the dynamic | |
| array. */ | |
| static size_t | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| /* Return a pointer to the first array element, if any. For a | |
| zero-length array, the pointer can be NULL even though the dynamic | |
| array has not entered the failure state. */ | |
| static DYNARRAY_ELEMENT * | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| /* Return a pointer one element past the last array element. For a | |
| zero-length array, the pointer can be NULL even though the dynamic | |
| array has not entered the failure state. */ | |
| static DYNARRAY_ELEMENT * | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| /* Return a pointer to the array element at INDEX. Terminate the | |
| process if INDEX is out of bounds. */ | |
| static DYNARRAY_ELEMENT * | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| /* Add ITEM at the end of the array, enlarging it by one element. | |
| Mark *LIST as failed if the dynamic array allocation size cannot be | |
| increased. */ | |
| static void | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| DYNARRAY_ELEMENT item); | |
| /* Allocate a place for a new element in *LIST and return a pointer to | |
| it. The pointer can be NULL if the dynamic array cannot be | |
| enlarged due to a memory allocation failure. */ | |
| static DYNARRAY_ELEMENT * | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| /* Change the size of *LIST to SIZE. If SIZE is larger than the | |
| existing size, new elements are added (which can be initialized). | |
| Otherwise, the list is truncated, and elements are freed. Return | |
| false on memory allocation failure (and mark *LIST as failed). */ | |
| static bool | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| /* Remove the last element of LIST if it is present. */ | |
| static void | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX##remove_last (struct DYNARRAY_STRUCT *list); | |
| /* Remove all elements from the list. The elements are freed, but the | |
| list itself is not. */ | |
| static void | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| /* Transfer the dynamic array to a permanent location at *RESULT. | |
| Returns true on success on false on allocation failure. In either | |
| case, *LIST is re-initialized and can be reused. A NULL pointer is | |
| stored in *RESULT if LIST refers to an empty list. On success, the | |
| pointer in *RESULT is heap-allocated and must be deallocated using | |
| free. */ | |
| static bool | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| DYNARRAY_FINAL_TYPE *result); | |
| /* Transfer the dynamic array to a heap-allocated array and return a | |
| pointer to it. The pointer is NULL if memory allocation fails, or | |
| if the array is empty, so this function should be used only for | |
| arrays which are known not be empty (usually because they always | |
| have a sentinel at the end). If LENGTHP is not NULL, the array | |
| length is written to *LENGTHP. *LIST is re-initialized and can be | |
| reused. */ | |
| static DYNARRAY_ELEMENT * | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX# | |
| size_t *lengthp); | |
| /* A minimal example which provides a growing list of integers can be | |
| defined like this: | |
| struct int_array | |
| { | |
| // Pointer to result array followed by its length, | |
| // as required by DYNARRAY_FINAL_TYPE. | |
| int *array; | |
| size_t length; | |
| }; | |
| #define DYNARRAY_STRUCT dynarray_int | |
| #define DYNARRAY_ELEMENT int | |
| #define DYNARRAY_PREFIX dynarray_int_ | |
| #define DYNARRAY_FINAL_TYPE struct int_array | |
| #include <malloc/dynarray-skeleton.c> | |
| To create a three-element array with elements 1, 2, 3, use this | |
| code: | |
| struct dynarray_int dyn; | |
| dynarray_int_init (&dyn); | |
| for (int i = 1; i <= 3; ++i) | |
| { | |
| int *place = dynarray_int_emplace (&dyn); | |
| assert (place != NULL); | |
| *place = i; | |
| } | |
| struct int_array result; | |
| bool ok = dynarray_int_finalize (&dyn, &result); | |
| assert (ok); | |
| assert (result.length == 3); | |
| assert (result.array[0] == 1); | |
| assert (result.array[1] == 2); | |
| assert (result.array[2] == 3); | |
| free (result.array); | |
| If the elements contain resources which must be freed, define | |
| DYNARRAY_ELEMENT_FREE appropriately, like this: | |
| struct str_array | |
| { | |
| char **array; | |
| size_t length; | |
| }; | |
| #define DYNARRAY_STRUCT dynarray_str | |
| #define DYNARRAY_ELEMENT char * | |
| #define DYNARRAY_ELEMENT_FREE(ptr) free (*ptr) | |
| #define DYNARRAY_PREFIX dynarray_str_ | |
| #define DYNARRAY_FINAL_TYPE struct str_array | |
| #include <malloc/dynarray-skeleton.c> | |
| */ | |
| /* The implementation is imported from glibc. */ | |
| /* Avoid possible conflicts with symbols exported by the GNU libc. */ | |
| /* Rely on __builtin_expect, as provided by the module 'builtin-expect'. */ | |
| /* Define auxiliary structs and declare auxiliary functions, common to all | |
| instantiations of dynarray. */ | |
| /* Define the instantiation, specified through | |
| DYNARRAY_STRUCT | |
| DYNARRAY_ELEMENT | |
| DYNARRAY_PREFIX | |
| etc. */ | |
| /* This file is being included from one of the malloc/dynarray_*.c files. */ | |