From 462b26c1cc041a8fa26deb62cf12f1f351a5b2f6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Joshua Haberman Date: Wed, 8 Jul 2009 12:06:47 -0700 Subject: Directory restructuring. --- upb_string.h | 82 ------------------------------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 82 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 upb_string.h (limited to 'upb_string.h') diff --git a/upb_string.h b/upb_string.h deleted file mode 100644 index 7a05811..0000000 --- a/upb_string.h +++ /dev/null @@ -1,82 +0,0 @@ -/* - * upb - a minimalist implementation of protocol buffers. - * - * Copyright (c) 2009 Joshua Haberman. See LICENSE for details. - - * Defines a delimited (as opposed to null-terminated) string type and some - * library functions for manipulating them. - * - * There are two primary reasons upb uses delimited strings. One is that they - * can be more efficient for some operations because they do not have to scan - * the string to find its length. For example, streql can start by just - * comparing the lengths (very efficient) and scan the strings themselves only - * if the lengths are equal. - * - * More importantly, using delimited strings makes it possible for strings to - * reference substrings of other strings. For example, if I am parsing a - * protobuf I can create a string that references the original protobuf's - * string data. With NULL-termination I would be forced to write a NULL - * into the middle of the protobuf's data, which is less than ideal and in - * some cases not practical or possible. - */ - -#ifndef UPB_STRING_H_ -#define UPB_STRING_H_ - -#ifdef __cplusplus -extern "C" { -#endif - -#include -#include -#include "upb.h" - -struct upb_string { - /* We expect the data to be 8-bit clean (uint8_t), but char* is such an - * ingrained convention that we follow it. */ - char *ptr; - uint32_t byte_len; -}; - -INLINE bool upb_streql(struct upb_string *s1, struct upb_string *s2) { - return s1->byte_len == s2->byte_len && - memcmp(s1->ptr, s2->ptr, s1->byte_len) == 0; -} - -INLINE void upb_strcpy(struct upb_string *dest, struct upb_string *src) { - memcpy(dest->ptr, src->ptr, dest->byte_len); - dest->byte_len = src->byte_len; -} - -INLINE struct upb_string upb_strdup(struct upb_string s) { - struct upb_string copy; - copy.ptr = (char*)malloc(s.byte_len); - copy.byte_len = s.byte_len; - memcpy(copy.ptr, s.ptr, s.byte_len); - return copy; -} - -INLINE void upb_strfree(struct upb_string s) { - free(s.ptr); -} - -/* Reads an entire file into a newly-allocated string. */ -bool upb_strreadfile(const char *filename, struct upb_string *data); - -/* Allows defining upb_strings as literals, ie: - * struct upb_string str = UPB_STRLIT("Hello, World!\n"); - * Doesn't work with C++ due to lack of struct initializer syntax. - */ -#define UPB_STRLIT(strlit) {.ptr=strlit, .byte_len=sizeof(strlit)-1} - -/* Allows using upb_strings in printf, ie: - * struct upb_string str = UPB_STRLIT("Hello, World!\n"); - * printf("String is: " UPB_STRFMT, UPB_STRARG(str)); */ -#define UPB_STRARG(str) (str).byte_len, (str).ptr -#define UPB_STRFMT "%.*s" - -#ifdef __cplusplus -} /* extern "C" */ -#endif - -#endif /* UPB_H_ */ -- cgit v1.2.3