/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * pqexpbuffer.c * * PQExpBuffer provides an indefinitely-extensible string data type. * It can be used to buffer either ordinary C strings (null-terminated text) * or arbitrary binary data. All storage is allocated with malloc(). * * This module is essentially the same as the backend's StringInfo data type, * but it is intended for use in frontend libpq and client applications. * Thus, it does not rely on palloc() nor elog(), nor psprintf.c which * will exit() on error. * * It does rely on vsnprintf(); if configure finds that libc doesn't provide * a usable vsnprintf(), then a copy of our own implementation of it will * be linked into libpq. * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2021, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * src/interfaces/libpq/pqexpbuffer.c * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #include "postgres_fe.h" #include #include "pqexpbuffer.h" #ifdef WIN32 #include "win32.h" #endif /* All "broken" PQExpBuffers point to this string. */ static const char oom_buffer[1] = ""; /* Need a char * for unconstify() compatibility */ static const char *oom_buffer_ptr = oom_buffer; static bool appendPQExpBufferVA(PQExpBuffer str, const char *fmt, va_list args) pg_attribute_printf(2, 0); /* * markPQExpBufferBroken * * Put a PQExpBuffer in "broken" state if it isn't already. */ static void markPQExpBufferBroken(PQExpBuffer str) { if (str->data != oom_buffer) free(str->data); /* * Casting away const here is a bit ugly, but it seems preferable to not * marking oom_buffer const. We want to do that to encourage the compiler * to put oom_buffer in read-only storage, so that anyone who tries to * scribble on a broken PQExpBuffer will get a failure. */ str->data = unconstify(char *, oom_buffer_ptr); str->len = 0; str->maxlen = 0; } /* * createPQExpBuffer * * Create an empty 'PQExpBufferData' & return a pointer to it. */ PQExpBuffer createPQExpBuffer(void) { PQExpBuffer res; res = (PQExpBuffer) malloc(sizeof(PQExpBufferData)); if (res != NULL) initPQExpBuffer(res); return res; } /* * initPQExpBuffer * * Initialize a PQExpBufferData struct (with previously undefined contents) * to describe an empty string. */ void initPQExpBuffer(PQExpBuffer str) { str->data = (char *) malloc(INITIAL_EXPBUFFER_SIZE); if (str->data == NULL) { str->data = unconstify(char *, oom_buffer_ptr); /* see comment above */ str->maxlen = 0; str->len = 0; } else { str->maxlen = INITIAL_EXPBUFFER_SIZE; str->len = 0; str->data[0] = '\0'; } } /* * destroyPQExpBuffer(str); * * free()s both the data buffer and the PQExpBufferData. * This is the inverse of createPQExpBuffer(). */ void destroyPQExpBuffer(PQExpBuffer str) { if (str) { termPQExpBuffer(str); free(str); } } /* * termPQExpBuffer(str) * free()s the data buffer but not the PQExpBufferData itself. * This is the inverse of initPQExpBuffer(). */ void termPQExpBuffer(PQExpBuffer str) { if (str->data != oom_buffer) free(str->data); /* just for luck, make the buffer validly empty. */ str->data = unconstify(char *, oom_buffer_ptr); /* see comment above */ str->maxlen = 0; str->len = 0; } /* * resetPQExpBuffer * Reset a PQExpBuffer to empty * * Note: if possible, a "broken" PQExpBuffer is returned to normal. */ void resetPQExpBuffer(PQExpBuffer str) { if (str) { if (str->data != oom_buffer) { str->len = 0; str->data[0] = '\0'; } else { /* try to reinitialize to valid state */ initPQExpBuffer(str); } } } /* * enlargePQExpBuffer * Make sure there is enough space for 'needed' more bytes in the buffer * ('needed' does not include the terminating null). * * Returns 1 if OK, 0 if failed to enlarge buffer. (In the latter case * the buffer is left in "broken" state.) */ int enlargePQExpBuffer(PQExpBuffer str, size_t needed) { size_t newlen; char *newdata; if (PQExpBufferBroken(str)) return 0; /* already failed */ /* * Guard against ridiculous "needed" values, which can occur if we're fed * bogus data. Without this, we can get an overflow or infinite loop in * the following. */ if (needed >= ((size_t) INT_MAX - str->len)) { markPQExpBufferBroken(str); return 0; } needed += str->len + 1; /* total space required now */ /* Because of the above test, we now have needed <= INT_MAX */ if (needed <= str->maxlen) return 1; /* got enough space already */ /* * We don't want to allocate just a little more space with each append; * for efficiency, double the buffer size each time it overflows. * Actually, we might need to more than double it if 'needed' is big... */ newlen = (str->maxlen > 0) ? (2 * str->maxlen) : 64; while (needed > newlen) newlen = 2 * newlen; /* * Clamp to INT_MAX in case we went past it. Note we are assuming here * that INT_MAX <= UINT_MAX/2, else the above loop could overflow. We * will still have newlen >= needed. */ if (newlen > (size_t) INT_MAX) newlen = (size_t) INT_MAX; newdata = (char *) realloc(str->data, newlen); if (newdata != NULL) { str->data = newdata; str->maxlen = newlen; return 1; } markPQExpBufferBroken(str); return 0; } /* * printfPQExpBuffer * Format text data under the control of fmt (an sprintf-like format string) * and insert it into str. More space is allocated to str if necessary. * This is a convenience routine that does the same thing as * resetPQExpBuffer() followed by appendPQExpBuffer(). */ void printfPQExpBuffer(PQExpBuffer str, const char *fmt,...) { int save_errno = errno; va_list args; bool done; resetPQExpBuffer(str); if (PQExpBufferBroken(str)) return; /* already failed */ /* Loop in case we have to retry after enlarging the buffer. */ do { errno = save_errno; va_start(args, fmt); done = appendPQExpBufferVA(str, fmt, args); va_end(args); } while (!done); } /* * appendPQExpBuffer * * Format text data under the control of fmt (an sprintf-like 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. */ void appendPQExpBuffer(PQExpBuffer str, const char *fmt,...) { int save_errno = errno; va_list args; bool done; if (PQExpBufferBroken(str)) return; /* already failed */ /* Loop in case we have to retry after enlarging the buffer. */ do { errno = save_errno; va_start(args, fmt); done = appendPQExpBufferVA(str, fmt, args); va_end(args); } while (!done); } /* * appendPQExpBufferVA * Shared guts of printfPQExpBuffer/appendPQExpBuffer. * Attempt to format data and append it to str. Returns true if done * (either successful or hard failure), false if need to retry. * * Caution: callers must be sure to preserve their entry-time errno * when looping, in case the fmt contains "%m". */ static bool appendPQExpBufferVA(PQExpBuffer str, const char *fmt, va_list args) { size_t avail; size_t needed; int nprinted; /* * Try to format the given string into the available space; but if there's * hardly any space, don't bother trying, just enlarge the buffer first. */ if (str->maxlen > str->len + 16) { avail = str->maxlen - str->len; nprinted = vsnprintf(str->data + str->len, avail, fmt, args); /* * If vsnprintf reports an error, fail (we assume this means there's * something wrong with the format string). */ if (unlikely(nprinted < 0)) { markPQExpBufferBroken(str); return true; } if ((size_t) nprinted < avail) { /* Success. Note nprinted does not include trailing null. */ str->len += nprinted; return true; } /* * We assume a C99-compliant vsnprintf, so believe its estimate of the * required space, and add one for the trailing null. (If it's wrong, * the logic will still work, but we may loop multiple times.) * * Choke if the required space would exceed INT_MAX, since str->maxlen * can't represent more than that. */ if (unlikely(nprinted > INT_MAX - 1)) { markPQExpBufferBroken(str); return true; } needed = nprinted + 1; } else { /* * We have to guess at how much to enlarge, since we're skipping the * formatting work. Fortunately, because of enlargePQExpBuffer's * preference for power-of-2 sizes, this number isn't very sensitive; * the net effect is that we'll double the buffer size before trying * to run vsnprintf, which seems sensible. */ needed = 32; } /* Increase the buffer size and try again. */ if (!enlargePQExpBuffer(str, needed)) return true; /* oops, out of memory */ return false; } /* * appendPQExpBufferStr * Append the given string to a PQExpBuffer, allocating more space * if necessary. */ void appendPQExpBufferStr(PQExpBuffer str, const char *data) { appendBinaryPQExpBuffer(str, data, strlen(data)); } /* * appendPQExpBufferChar * Append a single byte to str. * Like appendPQExpBuffer(str, "%c", ch) but much faster. */ void appendPQExpBufferChar(PQExpBuffer str, char ch) { /* Make more room if needed */ if (!enlargePQExpBuffer(str, 1)) return; /* OK, append the character */ str->data[str->len] = ch; str->len++; str->data[str->len] = '\0'; } /* * appendBinaryPQExpBuffer * * Append arbitrary binary data to a PQExpBuffer, allocating more space * if necessary. */ void appendBinaryPQExpBuffer(PQExpBuffer str, const char *data, size_t datalen) { /* Make more room if needed */ if (!enlargePQExpBuffer(str, datalen)) return; /* OK, append the data */ memcpy(str->data + str->len, data, datalen); str->len += datalen; /* * Keep a trailing null in place, even though it's probably useless for * binary data... */ str->data[str->len] = '\0'; }