/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */ /* vim: set ts=8 sts=2 et sw=2 tw=80: */ // Copyright (c) 2006-2008 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be // found in the LICENSE file. #ifndef BASE_SCOPED_BSTR_WIN_H_ #define BASE_SCOPED_BSTR_WIN_H_ #include "base/basictypes.h" // needed to pick up OS_WIN #include "base/logging.h" #include #include // Manages a BSTR string pointer. // The class interface is based on scoped_ptr. class ScopedBstr { public: ScopedBstr() : bstr_(NULL) {} // Constructor to create a new BSTR. // NOTE: Do not pass a BSTR to this constructor expecting ownership to // be transferred - even though it compiles! ;-) explicit ScopedBstr(const wchar_t* non_bstr); ~ScopedBstr(); // Give ScopedBstr ownership over an already allocated BSTR or NULL. // If you need to allocate a new BSTR instance, use |allocate| instead. void Reset(BSTR bstr = NULL); // Releases ownership of the BSTR to the caller. BSTR Release(); // Creates a new BSTR from a wide string. // If you already have a BSTR and want to transfer ownership to the // ScopedBstr instance, call |reset| instead. // Returns a pointer to the new BSTR, or NULL if allocation failed. BSTR Allocate(const wchar_t* wide_str); // Allocates a new BSTR with the specified number of bytes. // Returns a pointer to the new BSTR, or NULL if allocation failed. BSTR AllocateBytes(int bytes); // Sets the allocated length field of the already-allocated BSTR to be // |bytes|. This is useful when the BSTR was preallocated with e.g. // SysAllocStringLen or SysAllocStringByteLen (call |AllocateBytes|) and // then not all the bytes are being used. // Note that if you want to set the length to a specific number of characters, // you need to multiply by sizeof(wchar_t). Oddly, there's no public API to // set the length, so we do this ourselves by hand. // // NOTE: The actual allocated size of the BSTR MUST be >= bytes. // That responsibility is with the caller. void SetByteLen(uint32_t bytes); // Swap values of two ScopedBstr's. void Swap(ScopedBstr& bstr2); // Retrieves the pointer address. // Used to receive BSTRs as out arguments (and take ownership). // The function DCHECKs on the current value being NULL. // Usage: GetBstr(bstr.Receive()); BSTR* Receive(); // Returns number of chars in the BSTR. uint32_t Length() const; // Returns the number of bytes allocated for the BSTR. uint32_t ByteLength() const; operator BSTR() const { return bstr_; } protected: BSTR bstr_; private: // Forbid comparison of ScopedBstr types. You should never have the same // BSTR owned by two different scoped_ptrs. bool operator==(const ScopedBstr& bstr2) const; bool operator!=(const ScopedBstr& bstr2) const; DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(ScopedBstr); }; // Template class to generate a BSTR from a static wide string // without touching the heap. Use this class via the StackBstrVar and // StackBstr macros. template class StackBstrT { public: // Try to stay as const as we can in an attempt to avoid someone // using the class incorrectly (e.g. by supplying a variable instead // of a verbatim string. We also have an assert in the constructor // as an extra runtime check since the const-ness only catches one case. explicit StackBstrT(const wchar_t* const str) { // The BSTR API uses UINT, but we prefer uint32_t. // Make sure we'll know about it if these types don't match. COMPILE_ASSERT(sizeof(uint32_t) == sizeof(UINT), UintToUint32); COMPILE_ASSERT(sizeof(wchar_t) == sizeof(OLECHAR), WcharToOlechar); // You shouldn't pass string pointers to this constructor since // there's no way for the compiler to calculate the length of the // string (string_bytes will be equal to pointer size in those cases). DCHECK(lstrlenW(str) == (string_bytes / sizeof(bstr_.str_[0])) - 1) << "not expecting a string pointer"; memcpy(bstr_.str_, str, string_bytes); bstr_.len_ = string_bytes - sizeof(wchar_t); } operator BSTR() { return bstr_.str_; } protected: struct BstrInternal { uint32_t len_; wchar_t str_[string_bytes / sizeof(wchar_t)]; } bstr_; }; // Use this macro to generate an inline BSTR from a wide string. // This is about 6 times faster than using the SysAllocXxx functions to // allocate a BSTR and helps with keeping heap fragmentation down. // Example: // DoBstrStuff(StackBstr(L"This is my BSTR")); // Where DoBstrStuff is: // HRESULT DoBstrStuff(BSTR bstr) { ... } #define StackBstr(str) static_cast(StackBstrT(str)) // If you need a named BSTR variable that's based on a fixed string // (e.g. if the BSTR is used inside a loop or more than one place), // use StackBstrVar to declare a variable. // Example: // StackBstrVar(L"my_property", myprop); // for (int i = 0; i < objects.length(); ++i) // ProcessValue(objects[i].GetProp(myprop)); // GetProp accepts BSTR #define StackBstrVar(str, var) StackBstrT var(str) #endif // BASE_SCOPED_BSTR_WIN_H_