Function, Variable, and Macro Listing.#
-
void *alloca(size_t size)#
This function allocates memory which will be automatically reclaimed after the procedure exits. The
libiberty
implementation does not free the memory immediately but will do so eventually during subsequent calls to this function. Memory is allocated usingxmalloc
under normal circumstances.The header file
alloca-conf.h
can be used in conjunction with the GNU Autoconf testAC_FUNC_ALLOCA
to test for and properly make available this function. TheAC_FUNC_ALLOCA
test requires that client code use a block of preprocessor code to be safe (see the Autoconf manual for more); this header incorporates that logic and more, including the possibility of a GCC built-in function.
-
int asprintf(char **resptr, const char *format, ...)#
Like
sprintf
, but instead of passing a pointer to a buffer, you pass a pointer to a pointer. This function will compute the size of the buffer needed, allocate memory withmalloc
, and store a pointer to the allocated memory in*resptr
. The value returned is the same assprintf
would return. If memory could not be allocated, minus one is returned andNULL
is stored in*resptr
.
-
int atexit(void (*f)())#
Causes function
f
to be called at exit. Returns 0.
-
char *basename(const char *name)#
Returns a pointer to the last component of pathname
name
. Behavior is undefined if the pathname ends in a directory separator.
-
int bcmp(char *x, char *y, int count)#
Compares the first
count
bytes of two areas of memory. Returns zero if they are the same, nonzero otherwise. Returns zero ifcount
is zero. A nonzero result only indicates a difference, it does not indicate any sorting order (say, by having a positive result meanx
sorts beforey
).
-
void bcopy(char *in, char *out, int length)#
Copies
length
bytes from memory regionin
to regionout
. The use ofbcopy
is deprecated in new programs.
-
void *bsearch(const void *key, const void *base, size_t nmemb, size_t size, int (*compar)(const void*, const void*))#
Performs a search over an array of
nmemb
elements pointed to bybase
for a member that matches the object pointed to bykey
. The size of each member is specified bysize
. The array contents should be sorted in ascending order according to thecompar
comparison function. This routine should take two arguments pointing to thekey
and to an array member, in that order, and should return an integer less than, equal to, or greater than zero if thekey
object is respectively less than, matching, or greater than the array member.
-
void *bsearch_r(const void *key, const void *base, size_t nmemb, size_t size, int (*compar)(const void*, const void*, void*), void *arg)#
Performs a search over an array of
nmemb
elements pointed to bybase
for a member that matches the object pointed to bykey
. The size of each member is specified bysize
. The array contents should be sorted in ascending order according to thecompar
comparison function. This routine should take three arguments: the first two point to thekey
and to an array member, and the last is passed down unchanged frombsearch_r
‘s last argument. It should return an integer less than, equal to, or greater than zero if thekey
object is respectively less than, matching, or greater than the array member.
-
char **buildargv(char *sp)#
Given a pointer to a string, parse the string extracting fields separated by whitespace and optionally enclosed within either single or double quotes (which are stripped off), and build a vector of pointers to copies of the string for each field. The input string remains unchanged. The last element of the vector is followed by a
NULL
element.All of the memory for the pointer array and copies of the string is obtained from
xmalloc
. All of the memory can be returned to the system with the single function callfreeargv
, which takes the returned result ofbuildargv
, as it’s argument.Returns a pointer to the argument vector if successful. Returns
NULL
ifsp
isNULL
or if there is insufficient memory to complete building the argument vector.If the input is a null string (as opposed to a
NULL
pointer), then buildarg returns an argument vector that has one arg, a null string.
-
void bzero(char *mem, int count)#
Zeros
count
bytes starting atmem
. Use of this function is deprecated in favor ofmemset
.
-
void *calloc(size_t nelem, size_t elsize)#
Uses
malloc
to allocate storage fornelem
objects ofelsize
bytes each, then zeros the memory.
-
int canonical_filename_eq(const char *a, const char *b)#
Return non-zero if file names
a
andb
are equivalent. This function compares the canonical versions of the filenames as returned bylrealpath()
, so that so that different file names pointing to the same underlying file are treated as being identical.
-
char *choose_temp_base(void)#
Return a prefix for temporary file names or
NULL
if unable to find one. The current directory is chosen if all else fails so the program is exited if a temporary directory can’t be found (mktemp
fails). The buffer for the result is obtained withxmalloc
.This function is provided for backwards compatibility only. Its use is not recommended.
-
const char *choose_tmpdir()#
Returns a pointer to a directory path suitable for creating temporary files in.
-
long clock(void)#
Returns an approximation of the CPU time used by the process as a
clock_t
; divide this number byCLOCKS_PER_SEC
to get the number of seconds used.
- char* concat (const char *s1, const char *s2, ..., NULL)
Concatenate zero or more of strings and return the result in freshly
xmalloc
ed memory. The argument list is terminated by the firstNULL
pointer encountered. Pointers to empty strings are ignored.
-
int countargv(char *const *argv)#
Return the number of elements in
argv
. Returns zero ifargv
is NULL.
-
unsigned int crc32(const unsigned char *buf, int len, unsigned int init)#
Compute the 32-bit CRC of
buf
which has lengthlen
. The starting value isinit
; this may be used to compute the CRC of data split across multiple buffers by passing the return value of each call as theinit
parameter of the next.This is used by the gdb remote protocol for the
qCRC
command. In order to get the same results as gdb for a block of data, you must pass the first CRC parameter as0xffffffff
.This CRC can be specified as:
- Width32
Poly : 0x04c11db7 Init : parameter, typically 0xffffffff RefIn : false RefOut : false XorOut : 0
This differs from the “standard” CRC-32 algorithm in that the values are not reflected, and there is no final XOR value. These differences make it easy to compose the values of multiple blocks.
-
char **dupargv(char *const *vector)#
Duplicate an argument vector. Simply scans through
vector
, duplicating each argument until the terminatingNULL
is found. Returns a pointer to the argument vector if successful. ReturnsNULL
if there is insufficient memory to complete building the argument vector.
-
int errno_max(void)#
Returns the maximum
errno
value for which a corresponding symbolic name or message is available. Note that in the case where we use thesys_errlist
supplied by the system, it is possible for there to be more symbolic names than messages, or vice versa. In fact, the manual page forperror(3C)
explicitly warns that one should check the size of the table (sys_nerr
) before indexing it, since new error codes may be added to the system before they are added to the table. Thussys_nerr
might be smaller than value implied by the largesterrno
value defined in<errno.h>
.We return the maximum value that can be used to obtain a meaningful symbolic name or message.
-
void expandargv(int *argcp, char ***argvp)#
The
argcp
andargvp
arguments are pointers to the usualargc
andargv
arguments tomain
. This function looks for arguments that begin with the character@
. Any such arguments are interpreted as ‘response files’. The contents of the response file are interpreted as additional command line options. In particular, the file is separated into whitespace-separated strings; each such string is taken as a command-line option. The new options are inserted in place of the option naming the response file, and*argcp
and*argvp
will be updated. If the value of*argvp
is modified by this function, then the new value has been dynamically allocated and can be deallocated by the caller withfreeargv
. However, most callers will simply callexpandargv
near the beginning ofmain
and allow the operating system to free the memory when the program exits.
-
int fdmatch(int fd1, int fd2)#
Check to see if two open file descriptors refer to the same file. This is useful, for example, when we have an open file descriptor for an unnamed file, and the name of a file that we believe to correspond to that fd. This can happen when we are exec’d with an already open file (
stdout
for example) or from the SVR4/proc
calls that return open file descriptors for mapped address spaces. All we have to do is open the file by name and check the two file descriptors for a match, which is done by comparing major and minor device numbers and inode numbers.
-
FILE *fdopen_unlocked(int fildes, const char *mode)#
Opens and returns a
FILE
pointer viafdopen
. If the operating system supports it, ensure that the stream is setup to avoid any multi-threaded locking. Otherwise return theFILE
pointer unchanged.
-
int ffs(int valu)#
Find the first (least significant) bit set in
valu
. Bits are numbered from right to left, starting with bit 1 (corresponding to the value 1). Ifvalu
is zero, zero is returned.
-
int filename_cmp(const char *s1, const char *s2)#
Return zero if the two file names
s1
ands2
are equivalent. If not equivalent, the returned value is similar to whatstrcmp
would return. In other words, it returns a negative value ifs1
is less thans2
, or a positive value ifs2
is greater thans2
.This function does not normalize file names. As a result, this function will treat filenames that are spelled differently as different even in the case when the two filenames point to the same underlying file. However, it does handle the fact that on DOS-like file systems, forward and backward slashes are equal.
-
int filename_eq(const void *s1, const void *s2)#
Return non-zero if file names
s1
ands2
are equivalent. This function is for use with hashtab.c hash tables.
-
hashval_t filename_hash(const void *s)#
Return the hash value for file name
s
that will be compared using filename_cmp. This function is for use with hashtab.c hash tables.
-
int filename_ncmp(const char *s1, const char *s2, size_t n)#
Return zero if the two file names
s1
ands2
are equivalent in rangen
. If not equivalent, the returned value is similar to whatstrncmp
would return. In other words, it returns a negative value ifs1
is less thans2
, or a positive value ifs2
is greater thans2
.This function does not normalize file names. As a result, this function will treat filenames that are spelled differently as different even in the case when the two filenames point to the same underlying file. However, it does handle the fact that on DOS-like file systems, forward and backward slashes are equal.
-
int fnmatch(const char *pattern, const char *string, int flags)#
Matches
string
againstpattern
, returning zero if it matches,FNM_NOMATCH
if not.pattern
may contain the wildcards?
to match any one character,*
to match any zero or more characters, or a set of alternate characters in square brackets, like[a-gt8]
, which match one character (a
throughg
, ort
, or8
, in this example) if that one character is in the set. A set may be inverted (i.e., match anything except what’s in the set) by giving^
or!
as the first character in the set. To include those characters in the set, list them as anything other than the first character of the set. To include a dash in the set, list it last in the set. A backslash character makes the following character not special, so for example you could match against a literal asterisk with\*
. To match a literal backslash, use\
.flags
controls various aspects of the matching process, and is a boolean OR of zero or more of the following values (defined in<fnmatch.h>
):- FNM_PATHNAME#
string
is assumed to be a path name. No wildcard will ever match/
.
- FNM_NOESCAPE#
Do not interpret backslashes as quoting the following special character.
- FNM_PERIOD#
A leading period (at the beginning of
string
, or ifFNM_PATHNAME
after a slash) is not matched by*
or?
but must be matched explicitly.
- FNM_LEADING_DIR#
Means that
string
also matchespattern
if some initial part ofstring
matches, and is followed by/
and zero or more characters. For example,foo*
would match eitherfoobar
orfoobar/grill
.
- FNM_CASEFOLD#
Ignores case when performing the comparison.
-
FILE *fopen_unlocked(const char *path, const char *mode)#
Opens and returns a
FILE
pointer viafopen
. If the operating system supports it, ensure that the stream is setup to avoid any multi-threaded locking. Otherwise return theFILE
pointer unchanged.
-
void freeargv(char **vector)#
Free an argument vector that was built using
buildargv
. Simply scans throughvector
, freeing the memory for each argument until the terminatingNULL
is found, and then freesvector
itself.
-
FILE *freopen_unlocked(const char *path, const char *mode, FILE *stream)#
Opens and returns a
FILE
pointer viafreopen
. If the operating system supports it, ensure that the stream is setup to avoid any multi-threaded locking. Otherwise return theFILE
pointer unchanged.
-
long get_run_time(void)#
Returns the time used so far, in microseconds. If possible, this is the time used by this process, else it is the elapsed time since the process started.
-
char *getcwd(char *pathname, int len)#
Copy the absolute pathname for the current working directory into
pathname
, which is assumed to point to a buffer of at leastlen
bytes, and return a pointer to the buffer. If the current directory’s path doesn’t fit inlen
characters, the result isNULL
anderrno
is set. Ifpathname
is a null pointer,getcwd
will obtainlen
bytes of space usingmalloc
.
-
int getpagesize(void)#
Returns the number of bytes in a page of memory. This is the granularity of many of the system memory management routines. No guarantee is made as to whether or not it is the same as the basic memory management hardware page size.
-
char *getpwd(void)#
Returns the current working directory. This implementation caches the result on the assumption that the process will not call
chdir
between calls togetpwd
.
-
int gettimeofday(struct timeval *tp, void *tz)#
Writes the current time to
tp
. This implementation requires thattz
be NULL. Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure.
-
void hex_init(void)#
Initializes the array mapping the current character set to corresponding hex values. This function must be called before any call to
hex_p
orhex_value
. If you fail to call it, a default ASCII-based table will normally be used on ASCII systems.
-
int hex_p(int c)#
Evaluates to non-zero if the given character is a valid hex character, or zero if it is not. Note that the value you pass will be cast to
unsigned char
within the macro.
-
unsigned int hex_value(int c)#
Returns the numeric equivalent of the given character when interpreted as a hexadecimal digit. The result is undefined if you pass an invalid hex digit. Note that the value you pass will be cast to
unsigned char
within the macro.The
hex_value
macro returnsunsigned int
, rather than signedint
, to make it easier to use in parsing addresses from hex dump files: a signedint
would be sign-extended when converted to a wider unsigned type — likebfd_vma
, on some systems.
-
HOST_CHARSET#
This macro indicates the basic character set and encoding used by the host: more precisely, the encoding used for character constants in preprocessor
#if
statements (the C “execution character set”). It is defined bysafe-ctype.h
, and will be an integer constant with one of the following values:
- HOST_CHARSET_UNKNOWN#
The host character set is unknown - that is, not one of the next two possibilities.
- HOST_CHARSET_ASCII#
The host character set is ASCII.
- HOST_CHARSET_EBCDIC#
The host character set is some variant of EBCDIC. (Only one of the nineteen EBCDIC varying characters is tested; exercise caution.)
-
htab_t htab_create_typed_alloc(size_t size, htab_hash hash_f, htab_eq eq_f, htab_del del_f, htab_alloc alloc_tab_f, htab_alloc alloc_f, htab_free free_f)#
This function creates a hash table that uses two different allocators
alloc_tab_f
andalloc_f
to use for allocating the table itself and its entries respectively. This is useful when variables of different types need to be allocated with different allocators.The created hash table is slightly larger than
size
and it is initially empty (all the hash table entries areHTAB_EMPTY_ENTRY
). The function returns the created hash table, orNULL
if memory allocation fails.
-
char *index(char *s, int c)#
Returns a pointer to the first occurrence of the character
c
in the strings
, orNULL
if not found. The use ofindex
is deprecated in new programs in favor ofstrchr
.
-
void insque(struct qelem *elem, struct qelem *pred)#
-
void remque(struct qelem *elem)#
Routines to manipulate queues built from doubly linked lists. The
insque
routine insertselem
in the queue immediately afterpred
. Theremque
routine removeselem
from its containing queue. These routines expect to be passed pointers to structures which have as their first members a forward pointer and a back pointer, like this prototype (although no prototype is provided):struct qelem { struct qelem *q_forw; struct qelem *q_back; char q_data[]; };
-
ISALPHA(c)#
-
ISALNUM(c)#
-
ISBLANK(c)#
-
ISCNTRL(c)#
-
ISDIGIT(c)#
-
ISGRAPH(c)#
-
ISLOWER(c)#
-
ISPRINT(c)#
-
ISPUNCT(c)#
-
ISSPACE(c)#
-
ISUPPER(c)#
-
ISXDIGIT(c)#
These twelve macros are defined by safe-ctype.h
. Each has the
same meaning as the corresponding macro (with name in lowercase)
defined by the standard header ctype.h
. For example,
ISALPHA
returns true for alphabetic characters and false for
others. However, there are two differences between these macros and
those provided by ctype.h
:
These macros are guaranteed to have well-defined behavior for all values representable by
signed char
andunsigned char
, and forEOF
.These macros ignore the current locale; they are true for these fixed sets of characters:
ALPHA
A-Za-z
ALNUM
A-Za-z0-9
BLANK
space tab
CNTRL
!PRINT
DIGIT
0-9
GRAPH
ALNUM || PUNCT
LOWER
a-z
PRINT
GRAPH ||
spacePUNCT
`~!@#$%^&*()_-=+[{]}|;:’”,<.>/?
SPACE
space tab n r f v
UPPER
A-Z
XDIGIT
0-9A-Fa-f
Note that, if the host character set is ASCII or a superset thereof, all these macros will return false for all values of
char
outside the range of 7-bit ASCII. In particular, both ISPRINT and ISCNTRL return false for characters with numeric values from 128 to 255.
These six macros are defined by safe-ctype.h and provide additional character classes which are useful when doing lexical analysis of C or similar languages. They are true for the following sets of characters:
|
A-Za-z0-9_ |
|
A-Za-z_ |
|
r n |
|
space tab f v 0 |
|
|
|
|
-
const char *lbasename(const char *name)#
Given a pointer to a string containing a typical pathname (
/usr/src/cmd/ls/ls.c
for example), returns a pointer to the last component of the pathname (ls.c
in this case). The returned pointer is guaranteed to lie within the original string. This latter fact is not true of many vendor C libraries, which return special strings or modify the passed strings for particular input.In particular, the empty string returns the same empty string, and a path ending in
/
returns the empty string after it.
-
const char *lrealpath(const char *name)#
Given a pointer to a string containing a pathname, returns a canonical version of the filename. Symlinks will be resolved, and ‘.’ and ‘..’ components will be simplified. The returned value will be allocated using
malloc
, orNULL
will be returned on a memory allocation error.
-
const char *make_relative_prefix(const char *progname, const char *bin_prefix, const char *prefix)#
Given three paths
progname
,bin_prefix
,prefix
, return the path that is in the same position relative toprogname
‘s directory asprefix
is relative tobin_prefix
. That is, a string starting with the directory portion ofprogname
, followed by a relative pathname of the difference betweenbin_prefix
andprefix
.If
progname
does not contain any directory separators,make_relative_prefix
will searchPATH
to find a program namedprogname
. Also, ifprogname
is a symbolic link, the symbolic link will be resolved.For example, if
bin_prefix
is/alpha/beta/gamma/gcc/delta
,prefix
is/alpha/beta/gamma/omega/
, andprogname
is/red/green/blue/gcc
, then this function will return/red/green/blue/../../omega/
.The return value is normally allocated via
malloc
. If no relative prefix can be found, returnNULL
.
-
char *make_temp_file(const char *suffix)#
Return a temporary file name (as a string) or
NULL
if unable to create one.suffix
is a suffix to append to the file name. The string ismalloc
ed, and the temporary file has been created.
-
void *memchr(const void *s, int c, size_t n)#
This function searches memory starting at
*s
for the characterc
. The search only ends with the first occurrence ofc
, or afterlength
characters; in particular, a null character does not terminate the search. If the characterc
is found withinlength
characters of*s
, a pointer to the character is returned. Ifc
is not found, thenNULL
is returned.
-
int memcmp(const void *x, const void *y, size_t count)#
Compares the first
count
bytes of two areas of memory. Returns zero if they are the same, a value less than zero ifx
is lexically less thany
, or a value greater than zero ifx
is lexically greater thany
. Note that lexical order is determined as if comparing unsigned char arrays.
-
void *memcpy(void *out, const void *in, size_t length)#
Copies
length
bytes from memory regionin
to regionout
. Returns a pointer toout
.
-
void *memmem(const void *haystack, size_t haystack_len, const void *needle, size_t needle_len)#
Returns a pointer to the first occurrence of
needle
(lengthneedle_len
) inhaystack
(lengthhaystack_len
). ReturnsNULL
if not found.
-
void *memmove(void *from, const void *to, size_t count)#
Copies
count
bytes from memory areafrom
to memory areato
, returning a pointer toto
.
-
void *mempcpy(void *out, const void *in, size_t length)#
Copies
length
bytes from memory regionin
to regionout
. Returns a pointer toout
+length
.
-
void *memset(void *s, int c, size_t count)#
Sets the first
count
bytes ofs
to the constant bytec
, returning a pointer tos
.
-
int mkstemps(char *pattern, int suffix_len)#
Generate a unique temporary file name from
pattern
.pattern
has the form:path/ccXXXXXXsuffix
suffix_len
tells us how longsuffix
is (it can be zero length). The last six characters ofpattern
beforesuffix
must beXXXXXX
; they are replaced with a string that makes the filename unique. Returns a file descriptor open on the file for reading and writing.
-
void pex_free(struct pex_obj obj)#
Clean up and free all data associated with
obj
. If you have not yet calledpex_get_times
orpex_get_status
, this will try to kill the subprocesses.
-
int pex_get_status(struct pex_obj *obj, int count, int *vector)#
Returns the exit status of all programs run using
obj
.count
is the number of results expected. The results will be placed intovector
. The results are in the order of the calls topex_run
. Returns 0 on error, 1 on success.
-
int pex_get_times(struct pex_obj *obj, int count, struct pex_time *vector)#
Returns the process execution times of all programs run using
obj
.count
is the number of results expected. The results will be placed intovector
. The results are in the order of the calls topex_run
. Returns 0 on error, 1 on success.struct pex_time
has the following fields of the typeunsigned long
:user_seconds
,user_microseconds
,system_seconds
,system_microseconds
. On systems which do not support reporting process times, all the fields will be set to0
.
-
struct pex_obj *pex_init(int flags, const char *pname, const char *tempbase)#
Prepare to execute one or more programs, with standard output of each program fed to standard input of the next. This is a system independent interface to execute a pipeline.
flags
is a bitwise combination of the following:- PEX_RECORD_TIMES#
Record subprocess times if possible.
- PEX_USE_PIPES#
Use pipes for communication between processes, if possible.
- PEX_SAVE_TEMPS#
Don’t delete temporary files used for communication between processes.
pname
is the name of program to be executed, used in error messages.tempbase
is a base name to use for any required temporary files; it may beNULL
to use a randomly chosen name.
-
FILE *pex_input_file(struct pex_obj *obj, int flags, const char *in_name)#
Return a stream for a temporary file to pass to the first program in the pipeline as input.
The name of the input file is chosen according to the same rules
pex_run
uses to choose output file names, based onin_name
,obj
and thePEX_SUFFIX
bit inflags
.Don’t call
fclose
on the returned stream; the first call topex_run
closes it automatically.If
flags
includesPEX_BINARY_OUTPUT
, open the stream in binary mode; otherwise, open it in the default mode. IncludingPEX_BINARY_OUTPUT
inflags
has no effect on Unix.
-
FILE *pex_input_pipe(struct pex_obj *obj, int binary)#
Return a stream
fp
for a pipe connected to the standard input of the first program in the pipeline;fp
is opened for writing. You must have passedPEX_USE_PIPES
to thepex_init
call that returnedobj
.You must close
fp
usingfclose
yourself when you have finished writing data to the pipeline.The file descriptor underlying
fp
is marked not to be inherited by child processes.On systems that do not support pipes, this function returns
NULL
, and setserrno
toEINVAL
. If you would like to write code that is portable to all systems thepex
functions support, consider usingpex_input_file
instead.There are two opportunities for deadlock using
pex_input_pipe
:Most systems’ pipes can buffer only a fixed amount of data; a process that writes to a full pipe blocks. Thus, if you write to
fp
before starting the first process, you run the risk of blocking when there is no child process yet to read the data and allow you to continue.pex_input_pipe
makes no promises about the size of the pipe’s buffer, so if you need to write any data at all before starting the first process in the pipeline, consider usingpex_input_file
instead.Using
pex_input_pipe
andpex_read_output
together may also cause deadlock. If the output pipe fills up, so that each program in the pipeline is waiting for the next to read more data, and you fill the input pipe by writing more data tofp
, then there is no way to make progress: the only process that could read data from the output pipe is you, but you are blocked on the input pipe.
-
const char *pex_one(int flags, const char *executable, char *const *argv, const char *pname, const char *outname, const char *errname, int *status, int *err)#
An interface to permit the easy execution of a single program. The return value and most of the parameters are as for a call to
pex_run
.flags
is restricted to a combination ofPEX_SEARCH
,PEX_STDERR_TO_STDOUT
, andPEX_BINARY_OUTPUT
.outname
is interpreted as ifPEX_LAST
were set. On a successful return,*status
will be set to the exit status of the program.
-
FILE *pex_read_err(struct pex_obj *obj, int binary)#
Returns a
FILE
pointer which may be used to read the standard error of the last program in the pipeline. When this is used,PEX_LAST
should not be used in a call topex_run
. After this is called,pex_run
may no longer be called with the sameobj
.binary
should be non-zero if the file should be opened in binary mode. Don’t callfclose
on the returned file; it will be closed bypex_free
.
-
FILE *pex_read_output(struct pex_obj *obj, int binary)#
Returns a
FILE
pointer which may be used to read the standard output of the last program in the pipeline. When this is used,PEX_LAST
should not be used in a call topex_run
. After this is called,pex_run
may no longer be called with the sameobj
.binary
should be non-zero if the file should be opened in binary mode. Don’t callfclose
on the returned file; it will be closed bypex_free
.
-
const char *pex_run(struct pex_obj *obj, int flags, const char *executable, char *const *argv, const char *outname, const char *errname, int *err)#
Execute one program in a pipeline. On success this returns
NULL
. On failure it returns an error message, a statically allocated string.obj
is returned by a previous call topex_init
.flags
is a bitwise combination of the following:- PEX_LAST#
This must be set on the last program in the pipeline. In particular, it should be set when executing a single program. The standard output of the program will be sent to
outname
, or, ifoutname
isNULL
, to the standard output of the calling program. Do not set this bit if you want to callpex_read_output
(described below). After a call topex_run
with this bit set,pex_run
may no longer be called with the sameobj
.
- PEX_SEARCH#
Search for the program using the user’s executable search path.
- PEX_SUFFIX#
outname
is a suffix. See the description ofoutname
, below.
- PEX_STDERR_TO_STDOUT#
Send the program’s standard error to standard output, if possible.
- PEX_BINARY_INPUT#
The standard input (output or error) of the program should be read (written) in binary mode rather than text mode. These flags are ignored on systems which do not distinguish binary mode and text mode, such as Unix. For proper behavior these flags should match appropriately—a call to
pex_run
usingPEX_BINARY_OUTPUT
should be followed by a call usingPEX_BINARY_INPUT
.
- PEX_STDERR_TO_PIPE#
Send the program’s standard error to a pipe, if possible. This flag cannot be specified together with
PEX_STDERR_TO_STDOUT
. This flag can be specified only on the last program in pipeline.
executable
is the program to execute.argv
is the set of arguments to pass to the program; normallyargv[0]
will be a copy ofexecutable
.outname
is used to set the name of the file to use for standard output. There are two cases in which no output file will be used:if
PEX_LAST
is not set inflags
, andPEX_USE_PIPES
was set in the call topex_init
, and the system supports pipesif
PEX_LAST
is set inflags
, andoutname
isNULL
Otherwise the code will use a file to hold standard output. If
PEX_LAST
is not set, this file is considered to be a temporary file, and it will be removed when no longer needed, unlessPEX_SAVE_TEMPS
was set in the call topex_init
.There are two cases to consider when setting the name of the file to hold standard output.
PEX_SUFFIX
is set inflags
. In this caseoutname
may not beNULL
. If thetempbase
parameter topex_init
was notNULL
, then the output file name is the concatenation oftempbase
andoutname
. Iftempbase
wasNULL
, then the output file name is a random file name ending inoutname
.PEX_SUFFIX
was not set inflags
. In this case, ifoutname
is notNULL
, it is used as the output file name. Ifoutname
isNULL
, andtempbase
was not NULL, the output file name is randomly chosen usingtempbase
. Otherwise the output file name is chosen completely at random.
errname
is the file name to use for standard error output. If it isNULL
, standard error is the same as the caller’s. Otherwise, standard error is written to the named file.On an error return, the code sets
*err
to anerrno
value, or to 0 if there is no relevanterrno
.
-
const char *pex_run_in_environment(struct pex_obj *obj, int flags, const char *executable, char *const *argv, char *const *env, int env_size, const char *outname, const char *errname, int *err)#
Execute one program in a pipeline, permitting the environment for the program to be specified. Behaviour and parameters not listed below are as for
pex_run
.env
is the environment for the child process, specified as an array of character pointers. Each element of the array should point to a string of the formVAR=VALUE
, with the exception of the last element that must beNULL
.
-
int pexecute(const char *program, char *const *argv, const char *this_pname, const char *temp_base, char **errmsg_fmt, char **errmsg_arg, int flags)#
This is the old interface to execute one or more programs. It is still supported for compatibility purposes, but is no longer documented.
-
void psignal(int signo, char *message)#
Print
message
to the standard error, followed by a colon, followed by the description of the signal specified bysigno
, followed by a newline.
-
int putenv(const char *string)#
Uses
setenv
orunsetenv
to putstring
into the environment or remove it. Ifstring
is of the formname=value
the string is added; if no=
is present the name is unset/removed.
-
int pwait(int pid, int *status, int flags)#
Another part of the old execution interface.
-
long int random(void)#
-
void srandom(unsigned int seed)#
-
void *initstate(unsigned int seed, void *arg_state, unsigned long n)#
-
void *setstate(void *arg_state)#
Random number functions.
random
returns a random number in the range 0 toLONG_MAX
.srandom
initializes the random number generator to some starting point determined byseed
(else, the values returned byrandom
are always the same for each run of the program).initstate
andsetstate
allow fine-grained control over the state of the random number generator.
- char* reconcat (char *optr, const char *s1, ..., NULL)
Same as
concat
, except that ifoptr
is notNULL
it is freed after the string is created. This is intended to be useful when you’re extending an existing string or building up a string in a loop:str = reconcat (str, "pre-", str, NULL);
-
int rename(const char *old, const char *new)#
Renames a file from
old
tonew
. Ifnew
already exists, it is removed.
-
char *rindex(const char *s, int c)#
Returns a pointer to the last occurrence of the character
c
in the strings
, orNULL
if not found. The use ofrindex
is deprecated in new programs in favor ofstrrchr
.
-
int setenv(const char *name, const char *value, int overwrite)#
-
void unsetenv(const char *name)#
setenv
addsname
to the environment with valuevalue
. If the name was already present in the environment, the new value will be stored only ifoverwrite
is nonzero. The companionunsetenv
function removesname
from the environment. This implementation is not safe for multithreaded code.
-
void setproctitle(const char *fmt, ...)#
Set the title of a process to
fmt
. va args not supported for now, but defined for compatibility with BSD.
-
int signo_max(void)#
Returns the maximum signal value for which a corresponding symbolic name or message is available. Note that in the case where we use the
sys_siglist
supplied by the system, it is possible for there to be more symbolic names than messages, or vice versa. In fact, the manual page forpsignal(3b)
explicitly warns that one should check the size of the table (NSIG
) before indexing it, since new signal codes may be added to the system before they are added to the table. ThusNSIG
might be smaller than value implied by the largest signo value defined in<signal.h>
.We return the maximum value that can be used to obtain a meaningful symbolic name or message.
-
int sigsetmask(int set)#
Sets the signal mask to the one provided in
set
and returns the old mask (which, for libiberty’s implementation, will always be the value1
).
-
const char *simple_object_attributes_compare(simple_object_attributes *attrs1, simple_object_attributes *attrs2, int *err)#
Compare
attrs1
andattrs2
. If they could be linked together without error, returnNULL
. Otherwise, return an error message and set*err
to an errno value or0
if there is no relevant errno.
-
simple_object_attributes *simple_object_fetch_attributes(simple_object_read *simple_object, const char **errmsg, int *err)#
Fetch the attributes of
simple_object
. The attributes are internal information such as the format of the object file, or the architecture it was compiled for. This information will persist untilsimple_object_attributes_release
is called, even ifsimple_object
itself is released.On error this returns
NULL
, sets*errmsg
to an error message, and sets*err
to an errno value or0
if there is no relevant errno.
-
int simple_object_find_section(simple_object_read *simple_object, off_t *offset, off_t *length, const char **errmsg, int *err)#
Look for the section
name
insimple_object
. This returns information for the first section with that name.If found, return 1 and set
*offset
to the offset in the file of the section contents and set*length
to the length of the section contents. The value in*offset
will be relative to the offset passed tosimple_object_open_read
.If the section is not found, and no error occurs,
simple_object_find_section
returns0
and set*errmsg
toNULL
.If an error occurs,
simple_object_find_section
returns0
, sets*errmsg
to an error message, and sets*err
to an errno value or0
if there is no relevant errno.
-
const char *simple_object_find_sections(simple_object_read *simple_object, int (*pfn)(void *data, const char *name, off_t offset, off_t length), void *data, int *err)#
This function calls
pfn
for each section insimple_object
. It callspfn
with the section name, the offset within the file of the section contents, and the length of the section contents. The offset within the file is relative to the offset passed tosimple_object_open_read
. Thedata
argument to this function is passed along topfn
.If
pfn
returns0
, the loop over the sections stops andsimple_object_find_sections
returns. Ifpfn
returns some other value, the loop continues.On success
simple_object_find_sections
returns. On error it returns an error string, and sets*err
to an errno value or0
if there is no relevant errno.
-
simple_object_read *simple_object_open_read(int descriptor, off_t offset, const char *segment_name, const char **errmsg, int *err)#
Opens an object file for reading. Creates and returns an
simple_object_read
pointer which may be passed to other functions to extract data from the object file.descriptor
holds a file descriptor which permits reading.offset
is the offset into the file; this will be0
in the normal case, but may be a different value when reading an object file in an archive file.segment_name
is only used with the Mach-O file format used on Darwin aka Mac OS X. It is required on that platform, and means to only look at sections within the segment with that name. The parameter is ignored on other systems.If an error occurs, this functions returns
NULL
and sets*errmsg
to an error string and sets*err
to an errno value or0
if there is no relevant errno.
-
void simple_object_release_attributes(simple_object_attributes *attrs)#
Release all resources associated with
attrs
.
-
void simple_object_release_read(simple_object_read *simple_object)#
Release all resources associated with
simple_object
. This does not close the file descriptor.
-
void simple_object_release_write(simple_object_write *simple_object)#
Release all resources associated with
simple_object
.
-
simple_object_write *simple_object_start_write(simple_object_attributes attrs, const char *segment_name, const char **errmsg, int *err)#
Start creating a new object file using the object file format described in
attrs
. You must fetch attribute information from an existing object file before you can create a new one. There is currently no support for creating an object file de novo.segment_name
is only used with Mach-O as found on Darwin aka Mac OS X. The parameter is required on that target. It means that all sections are created within the named segment. It is ignored for other object file formats.On error
simple_object_start_write
returnsNULL
, sets*ERRMSG
to an error message, and sets*err
to an errno value or0
if there is no relevant errno.
-
const char *simple_object_write_add_data(simple_object_write *simple_object, simple_object_write_section *section, const void *buffer, size_t size, int copy, int *err)#
Add data
buffer
/size
tosection
insimple_object
. Ifcopy
is non-zero, the data will be copied into memory if necessary. Ifcopy
is zero,buffer
must persist untilsimple_object_write_to_file
is called. is released.On success this returns
NULL
. On error this returns an error message, and sets*err
to an errno value or 0 if there is no relevant erro.
-
simple_object_write_section *simple_object_write_create_section(simple_object_write *simple_object, const char *name, unsigned int align, const char **errmsg, int *err)#
Add a section to
simple_object
.name
is the name of the new section.align
is the required alignment expressed as the number of required low-order 0 bits (e.g., 2 for alignment to a 32-bit boundary).The section is created as containing data, readable, not writable, not executable, not loaded at runtime. The section is not written to the file until
simple_object_write_to_file
is called.On error this returns
NULL
, sets*errmsg
to an error message, and sets*err
to an errno value or0
if there is no relevant errno.
-
const char *simple_object_write_to_file(simple_object_write *simple_object, int descriptor, int *err)#
Write the complete object file to
descriptor
, an open file descriptor. This writes out all the data accumulated by calls tosimple_object_write_create_section
andsimple_object_write_add_data
.This returns
NULL
on success. On error this returns an error message and sets*err
to an errno value or0
if there is no relevant errno.
-
int snprintf(char *buf, size_t n, const char *format, ...)#
This function is similar to
sprintf
, but it will write tobuf
at mostn-1
bytes of text, followed by a terminating null byte, for a total ofn
bytes. On error the return value is -1, otherwise it returns the number of bytes, not including the terminating null byte, that would have been written hadn
been sufficiently large, regardless of the actual value ofn
. Note some pre-C99 system libraries do not implement this correctly so users cannot generally rely on the return value if the system version of this function is used.
-
char *spaces(int count)#
Returns a pointer to a memory region filled with the specified number of spaces and null terminated. The returned pointer is valid until at least the next call.
-
splay_tree splay_tree_new_with_typed_alloc(splay_tree_compare_fn compare_fn, splay_tree_delete_key_fn delete_key_fn, splay_tree_delete_value_fn delete_value_fn, splay_tree_allocate_fn tree_allocate_fn, splay_tree_allocate_fn node_allocate_fn, splay_tree_deallocate_fn deallocate_fn, void *allocate_data)#
This function creates a splay tree that uses two different allocators
tree_allocate_fn
andnode_allocate_fn
to use for allocating the tree itself and its nodes respectively. This is useful when variables of different types need to be allocated with different allocators.The splay tree will use
compare_fn
to compare nodes,delete_key_fn
to deallocate keys, anddelete_value_fn
to deallocate values. Keys and values will be deallocated when the tree is deleted using splay_tree_delete or when a node is removed using splay_tree_remove. splay_tree_insert will release the previously inserted key and value usingdelete_key_fn
anddelete_value_fn
if the inserted key is already found in the tree.
-
void stack_limit_increase(unsigned long pref)#
Attempt to increase stack size limit to
pref
bytes if possible.
-
char *stpcpy(char *dst, const char *src)#
Copies the string
src
intodst
. Returns a pointer todst
+ strlen(src
).
-
char *stpncpy(char *dst, const char *src, size_t len)#
Copies the string
src
intodst
, copying exactlylen
and padding with zeros if necessary. Iflen
< strlen(src
) then returndst
+len
, otherwise returnsdst
+ strlen(src
).
-
int strcasecmp(const char *s1, const char *s2)#
A case-insensitive
strcmp
.
-
char *strchr(const char *s, int c)#
Returns a pointer to the first occurrence of the character
c
in the strings
, orNULL
if not found. Ifc
is itself the null character, the results are undefined.
-
char *strdup(const char *s)#
Returns a pointer to a copy of
s
in memory obtained frommalloc
, orNULL
if insufficient memory was available.
-
const char *strerrno(int errnum)#
Given an error number returned from a system call (typically returned in
errno
), returns a pointer to a string containing the symbolic name of that error number, as found in<errno.h>
.If the supplied error number is within the valid range of indices for symbolic names, but no name is available for the particular error number, then returns the string
Error num
, wherenum
is the error number.If the supplied error number is not within the range of valid indices, then returns
NULL
.The contents of the location pointed to are only guaranteed to be valid until the next call to
strerrno
.
-
char *strerror(int errnoval)#
Maps an
errno
number to an error message string, the contents of which are implementation defined. On systems which have the external variablessys_nerr
andsys_errlist
, these strings will be the same as the ones used byperror
.If the supplied error number is within the valid range of indices for the
sys_errlist
, but no message is available for the particular error number, then returns the stringError num
, wherenum
is the error number.If the supplied error number is not a valid index into
sys_errlist
, returnsNULL
.The returned string is only guaranteed to be valid only until the next call to
strerror
.
-
int strncasecmp(const char *s1, const char *s2)#
A case-insensitive
strncmp
.
-
int strncmp(const char *s1, const char *s2, size_t n)#
Compares the first
n
bytes of two strings, returning a value asstrcmp
.
-
char *strndup(const char *s, size_t n)#
Returns a pointer to a copy of
s
with at mostn
characters in memory obtained frommalloc
, orNULL
if insufficient memory was available. The result is always NUL terminated.
-
size_t strnlen(const char *s, size_t maxlen)#
Returns the length of
s
, as withstrlen
, but never looks past the firstmaxlen
characters in the string. If there is no ‘0’ character in the firstmaxlen
characters, returnsmaxlen
.
-
char *strrchr(const char *s, int c)#
Returns a pointer to the last occurrence of the character
c
in the strings
, orNULL
if not found. Ifc
is itself the null character, the results are undefined.
-
const char *strsignal(int signo)#
Maps an signal number to an signal message string, the contents of which are implementation defined. On systems which have the external variable
sys_siglist
, these strings will be the same as the ones used bypsignal()
.If the supplied signal number is within the valid range of indices for the
sys_siglist
, but no message is available for the particular signal number, then returns the stringSignal num
, wherenum
is the signal number.If the supplied signal number is not a valid index into
sys_siglist
, returnsNULL
.The returned string is only guaranteed to be valid only until the next call to
strsignal
.
-
const char *strsigno(int signo)#
Given an signal number, returns a pointer to a string containing the symbolic name of that signal number, as found in
<signal.h>
.If the supplied signal number is within the valid range of indices for symbolic names, but no name is available for the particular signal number, then returns the string
Signal num
, wherenum
is the signal number.If the supplied signal number is not within the range of valid indices, then returns
NULL
.The contents of the location pointed to are only guaranteed to be valid until the next call to
strsigno
.
-
char *strstr(const char *string, const char *sub)#
This function searches for the substring
sub
in the stringstring
, not including the terminating null characters. A pointer to the first occurrence ofsub
is returned, orNULL
if the substring is absent. Ifsub
points to a string with zero length, the function returnsstring
.
-
double strtod(const char *string, char **endptr)#
This ISO C function converts the initial portion of
string
to adouble
. Ifendptr
is notNULL
, a pointer to the character after the last character used in the conversion is stored in the location referenced byendptr
. If no conversion is performed, zero is returned and the value ofstring
is stored in the location referenced byendptr
.
-
int strtoerrno(const char *name)#
Given the symbolic name of a error number (e.g.,
EACCES
), map it to an errno value. If no translation is found, returns 0.
-
long int strtol(const char *string, char **endptr, int base)#
-
unsigned long int strtoul(const char *string, char **endptr, int base)#
The
strtol
function converts the string instring
to a long integer value according to the givenbase
, which must be between 2 and 36 inclusive, or be the special value 0. Ifbase
is 0,strtol
will look for the prefixes0
and0x
to indicate bases 8 and 16, respectively, else default to base 10. When the base is 16 (either explicitly or implicitly), a prefix of0x
is allowed. The handling ofendptr
is as that ofstrtod
above. Thestrtoul
function is the same, except that the converted value is unsigned.
-
long long int strtoll(const char *string, char **endptr, int base)#
-
unsigned long long int strtoull(const char *string, char **endptr, int base)#
The
strtoll
function converts the string instring
to a long long integer value according to the givenbase
, which must be between 2 and 36 inclusive, or be the special value 0. Ifbase
is 0,strtoll
will look for the prefixes0
and0x
to indicate bases 8 and 16, respectively, else default to base 10. When the base is 16 (either explicitly or implicitly), a prefix of0x
is allowed. The handling ofendptr
is as that ofstrtod
above. Thestrtoull
function is the same, except that the converted value is unsigned.
-
int strtosigno(const char *name)#
Given the symbolic name of a signal, map it to a signal number. If no translation is found, returns 0.
-
int strverscmp(const char *s1, const char *s2)#
The
strverscmp
function compares the strings1
againsts2
, considering them as holding indices/version numbers. Return value follows the same conventions as found in thestrverscmp
function. In fact, ifs1
ands2
contain no digits,strverscmp
behaves likestrcmp
.Basically, we compare strings normally (character by character), until we find a digit in each string - then we enter a special comparison mode, where each sequence of digits is taken as a whole. If we reach the end of these two parts without noticing a difference, we return to the standard comparison mode. There are two types of numeric parts: “integral” and “fractional” (those begin with a ‘0’). The types of the numeric parts affect the way we sort them:
integral/integral: we compare values as you would expect.
fractional/integral: the fractional part is less than the integral one. Again, no surprise.
fractional/fractional: the things become a bit more complex. If the common prefix contains only leading zeroes, the longest part is less than the other one; else the comparison behaves normally.
strverscmp ("no digit", "no digit") ⇒ 0 // same behavior as strcmp. strverscmp ("item#99", "item#100") ⇒ <0 // same prefix, but 99 < 100. strverscmp ("alpha1", "alpha001") ⇒ >0 // fractional part inferior to integral one. strverscmp ("part1_f012", "part1_f01") ⇒ >0 // two fractional parts. strverscmp ("foo.009", "foo.0") ⇒ <0 // idem, but with leading zeroes only.
This function is especially useful when dealing with filename sorting, because filenames frequently hold indices/version numbers.
-
void timeval_add(struct timeval *a, struct timeval *b, struct timeval *result)#
Adds
a
tob
and stores the result inresult
.
-
void timeval_sub(struct timeval *a, struct timeval *b, struct timeval *result)#
Subtracts
b
froma
and stores the result inresult
.
-
char *tmpnam(char *s)#
This function attempts to create a name for a temporary file, which will be a valid file name yet not exist when
tmpnam
checks for it.s
must point to a buffer of at leastL_tmpnam
bytes, or beNULL
. Use of this function creates a security risk, and it must not be used in new projects. Usemkstemp
instead.
-
int unlink_if_ordinary(const char*)#
Unlinks the named file, unless it is special (e.g. a device file). Returns 0 when the file was unlinked, a negative value (and errno set) when there was an error deleting the file, and a positive value if no attempt was made to unlink the file because it is special.
-
void unlock_std_streams(void)#
If the OS supports it, ensure that the standard I/O streams,
stdin
,stdout
andstderr
are setup to avoid any multi-threaded locking. Otherwise do nothing.
-
void unlock_stream(FILE *stream)#
If the OS supports it, ensure that the supplied stream is setup to avoid any multi-threaded locking. Otherwise leave the
FILE
pointer unchanged. If thestream
isNULL
do nothing.
-
int vasprintf(char **resptr, const char *format, va_list args)#
Like
vsprintf
, but instead of passing a pointer to a buffer, you pass a pointer to a pointer. This function will compute the size of the buffer needed, allocate memory withmalloc
, and store a pointer to the allocated memory in*resptr
. The value returned is the same asvsprintf
would return. If memory could not be allocated, minus one is returned andNULL
is stored in*resptr
.
-
int vfork(void)#
Emulates
vfork
by callingfork
and returning its value.
-
int vprintf(const char *format, va_list ap)#
-
int vfprintf(FILE *stream, const char *format, va_list ap)#
-
int vsprintf(char *str, const char *format, va_list ap)#
These functions are the same as
printf
,fprintf
, andsprintf
, respectively, except that they are called with ava_list
instead of a variable number of arguments. Note that they do not callva_end
; this is the application’s responsibility. Inlibiberty
they are implemented in terms of the nonstandard but common function_doprnt
.
-
int vsnprintf(char *buf, size_t n, const char *format, va_list ap)#
This function is similar to
vsprintf
, but it will write tobuf
at mostn-1
bytes of text, followed by a terminating null byte, for a total ofn
bytes. On error the return value is -1, otherwise it returns the number of characters that would have been printed hadn
been sufficiently large, regardless of the actual value ofn
. Note some pre-C99 system libraries do not implement this correctly so users cannot generally rely on the return value if the system version of this function is used.
-
int waitpid(int pid, int *status, int)#
This is a wrapper around the
wait
function. Any ‘special’ values ofpid
depend on your implementation ofwait
, as does the return value. The third argument is unused inlibiberty
.
-
int writeargv(char *const *argv, FILE *file)#
Write each member of ARGV, handling all necessary quoting, to the file named by FILE, separated by whitespace. Return 0 on success, non-zero if an error occurred while writing to FILE.
-
char *xasprintf(const char *format, ...)#
Print to allocated string without fail. If
xasprintf
fails, this will print a message tostderr
(using the name set byxmalloc_set_program_name
, if any) and then callxexit
.
-
int xatexit(void (*fn)(void))#
Behaves as the standard
atexit
function, but with no limit on the number of registered functions. Returns 0 on success, or -1 on failure. If you usexatexit
to register functions, you must usexexit
to terminate your program.
-
void *xcalloc(size_t nelem, size_t elsize)#
Allocate memory without fail, and set it to zero. This routine functions like
calloc
, but will behave the same asxmalloc
if memory cannot be found.
-
void xexit(int code)#
Terminates the program. If any functions have been registered with the
xatexit
replacement function, they will be called first. Termination is handled via the system’s normalexit
call.
-
void *xmalloc(size_t)#
Allocate memory without fail. If
malloc
fails, this will print a message tostderr
(using the name set byxmalloc_set_program_name
, if any) and then callxexit
. Note that it is therefore safe for a program to contain#define malloc xmalloc
in its source.
-
void xmalloc_failed(size_t)#
This function is not meant to be called by client code, and is listed here for completeness only. If any of the allocation routines fail, this function will be called to print an error message and terminate execution.
-
void xmalloc_set_program_name(const char *name)#
You can use this to set the name of the program used by
xmalloc_failed
when printing a failure message.
-
void *xmemdup(void *input, size_t copy_size, size_t alloc_size)#
Duplicates a region of memory without fail. First,
alloc_size
bytes are allocated, thencopy_size
bytes frominput
are copied into it, and the new memory is returned. If fewer bytes are copied than were allocated, the remaining memory is zeroed.
-
void *xrealloc(void *ptr, size_t size)#
Reallocate memory without fail. This routine functions like
realloc
, but will behave the same asxmalloc
if memory cannot be found.
-
char *xstrdup(const char *s)#
Duplicates a character string without fail, using
xmalloc
to obtain memory.
-
char *xstrerror(int errnum)#
Behaves exactly like the standard
strerror
function, but will never return aNULL
pointer.
-
char *xstrndup(const char *s, size_t n)#
Returns a pointer to a copy of
s
with at mostn
characters without fail, usingxmalloc
to obtain memory. The result is always NUL terminated.
-
char *xvasprintf(const char *format, va_list args)#
Print to allocated string without fail. If
xvasprintf
fails, this will print a message tostderr
(using the name set byxmalloc_set_program_name
, if any) and then callxexit
.