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Code Editor : rstring.h
#ifndef RBIMPL_RSTRING_H /*-*-C++-*-vi:se ft=cpp:*/ #define RBIMPL_RSTRING_H /** * @file * @author Ruby developers <ruby-core@ruby-lang.org> * @copyright This file is a part of the programming language Ruby. * Permission is hereby granted, to either redistribute and/or * modify this file, provided that the conditions mentioned in the * file COPYING are met. Consult the file for details. * @warning Symbols prefixed with either `RBIMPL` or `rbimpl` are * implementation details. Don't take them as canon. They could * rapidly appear then vanish. The name (path) of this header file * is also an implementation detail. Do not expect it to persist * at the place it is now. Developers are free to move it anywhere * anytime at will. * @note To ruby-core: remember that this header can be possibly * recursively included from extension libraries written in C++. * Do not expect for instance `__VA_ARGS__` is always available. * We assume C99 for ruby itself but we don't assume languages of * extension libraries. They could be written in C++98. * @brief Defines struct ::RString. */ #include "ruby/internal/config.h" #include "ruby/internal/arithmetic/long.h" #include "ruby/internal/attr/artificial.h" #include "ruby/internal/attr/pure.h" #include "ruby/internal/cast.h" #include "ruby/internal/core/rbasic.h" #include "ruby/internal/dllexport.h" #include "ruby/internal/fl_type.h" #include "ruby/internal/value_type.h" #include "ruby/internal/warning_push.h" #include "ruby/assert.h" /** * Convenient casting macro. * * @param obj An object, which is in fact an ::RString. * @return The passed object casted to ::RString. */ #define RSTRING(obj) RBIMPL_CAST((struct RString *)(obj)) /** @cond INTERNAL_MACRO */ #define RSTRING_NOEMBED RSTRING_NOEMBED #if !USE_RVARGC #define RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_MASK RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_MASK #define RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_SHIFT RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_SHIFT #define RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_MAX RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_MAX #endif #define RSTRING_FSTR RSTRING_FSTR #define RSTRING_EMBED_LEN RSTRING_EMBED_LEN #define RSTRING_LEN RSTRING_LEN #define RSTRING_LENINT RSTRING_LENINT #define RSTRING_PTR RSTRING_PTR #define RSTRING_END RSTRING_END /** @endcond */ /** * @name Conversion of Ruby strings into C's * * @{ */ /** * Ensures that the parameter object is a String. This is done by calling its * `to_str` method. * * @param[in,out] v Arbitrary Ruby object. * @exception rb_eTypeError No implicit conversion defined. * @post `v` is a String. */ #define StringValue(v) rb_string_value(&(v)) /** * Identical to #StringValue, except it returns a `char*`. * * @param[in,out] v Arbitrary Ruby object. * @exception rb_eTypeError No implicit conversion defined. * @return Converted Ruby string's backend C string. * @post `v` is a String. */ #define StringValuePtr(v) rb_string_value_ptr(&(v)) /** * Identical to #StringValuePtr, except it additionally checks for the contents * for viability as a C string. Ruby can accept wider range of contents as * strings, compared to C. This function is to check that. * * @param[in,out] v Arbitrary Ruby object. * @exception rb_eTypeError No implicit conversion defined. * @exception rb_eArgError String is not C-compatible. * @return Converted Ruby string's backend C string. * @post `v` is a String. */ #define StringValueCStr(v) rb_string_value_cstr(&(v)) /** * @private * * @deprecated This macro once was a thing in the old days, but makes no sense * any longer today. Exists here for backwards compatibility * only. You can safely forget about it. */ #define SafeStringValue(v) StringValue(v) /** * Identical to #StringValue, except it additionally converts the string's * encoding to default external encoding. Ruby has a concept called encodings. * A string can have different encoding than the environment expects. Someone * has to make sure its contents be converted to something suitable. This is * that routine. Call it when necessary. * * @param[in,out] v Arbitrary Ruby object. * @exception rb_eTypeError No implicit conversion defined. * @return Converted Ruby string's backend C string. * @post `v` is a String. * * @internal * * Not sure but it seems this macro does not raise on encoding * incompatibilities? Doesn't sound right to @shyouhei. */ #define ExportStringValue(v) do { \ StringValue(v); \ (v) = rb_str_export(v); \ } while (0) /** @} */ /** * @private * * Bits that you can set to ::RBasic::flags. * * @warning These enums are not the only bits we use for strings. * * @internal * * Actually all bits through FL_USER1 to FL_USER19 are used for strings. Why * only this tiny part of them are made public here? @shyouhei can find no * reason. */ enum ruby_rstring_flags { /** * This flag has something to do with memory footprint. If the string is * short enough, ruby tries to be creative to abuse padding bits of struct * ::RString for storing contents. If this flag is set that string does * _not_ do that, to resort to good old fashioned external allocation * strategy instead. * * @warning This bit has to be considered read-only. Setting/clearing * this bit without corresponding fix up must cause immediate * SEGV. Also, internal structures of a string change * dynamically and transparently throughout of its lifetime. * Don't assume it being persistent. * * @internal * * 3rd parties must not be aware that there even is more than one way to * store a string. Might better be hidden. */ RSTRING_NOEMBED = RUBY_FL_USER1, #if !USE_RVARGC /** * When a string employs embedded strategy (see ::RSTRING_NOEMBED), these * bits are used to store the number of bytes actually filled into * ::RString::ary. * * @internal * * 3rd parties must not be aware that there even is more than one way to * store a string. Might better be hidden. */ RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_MASK = RUBY_FL_USER2 | RUBY_FL_USER3 | RUBY_FL_USER4 | RUBY_FL_USER5 | RUBY_FL_USER6, #endif /* Actually, string encodings are also encoded into the flags, using * remaining bits.*/ /** * This flag has something to do with infamous "f"string. What is a * fstring? Well it is a special subkind of strings that is immutable, * deduped globally, and managed by our GC. It is much like a Symbol (in * fact Symbols are dynamic these days and are backended using fstrings). * This concept has been silently introduced at some point in 2.x era. * Since then it gained wider acceptance in the core. But extension * libraries could not know that until very recently. Strings of this flag * live in a special Limbo deep inside of the interpreter. Never try to * manipulate it by hand. * * @internal * * Fstrings are not the only variant strings that we implement today. * Other things are behind-the-scene. This is the only one that is visible * from extension library. There is no clear reason why it has to be. * Given there are more "polite" ways to create fstrings, it seems this bit * need not be exposed to extension libraries. Might better be hidden. */ RSTRING_FSTR = RUBY_FL_USER17 }; #if !USE_RVARGC /** * This is an enum because GDB wants it (rather than a macro). People need not * bother. */ enum ruby_rstring_consts { /** Where ::RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_MASK resides. */ RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_SHIFT = RUBY_FL_USHIFT + 2, /** Max possible number of characters that can be embedded. */ RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_MAX = RBIMPL_EMBED_LEN_MAX_OF(char) - 1 }; #endif /** * Ruby's String. A string in ruby conceptually has these information: * * - Encoding of the string. * - Length of the string. * - Contents of the string. * * It is worth noting that a string is _not_ an array of characters in ruby. * It has never been. In 1.x a string was an array of integers. Since 2.x a * string is no longer an array of anything. A string is a string -- just like * a Time is not an integer. */ struct RString { /** Basic part, including flags and class. */ struct RBasic basic; /** String's specific fields. */ union { /** * Strings that use separated memory region for contents use this * pattern. */ struct { /** * Length of the string, not including terminating NUL character. * * @note This is in bytes. */ long len; /** * Pointer to the contents of the string. In the old days each * string had dedicated memory regions. That is no longer true * today, but there still are strings of such properties. This * field could be used to point such things. */ char *ptr; /** Auxiliary info. */ union { /** * Capacity of `*ptr`. A continuous memory region of at least * `capa` bytes is expected to exist at `*ptr`. This can be * bigger than `len`. */ long capa; /** * Parent of the string. Nowadays strings can share their * contents each other, constructing gigantic nest of objects. * This situation is called "shared", and this is the field to * control such properties. */ VALUE shared; } aux; } heap; /** Embedded contents. */ struct { #if USE_RVARGC long len; /* This is a length 1 array because: * 1. GCC has a bug that does not optimize C flexible array members * (https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=102452) * 2. Zero length arrays are not supported by all compilers */ char ary[1]; #else /** * When a string is short enough, it uses this area to store the * contents themselves. This was impractical in the 20th century, * but these days 64 bit machines can typically hold 24 bytes here. * Could be sufficiently large. In this case the length is encoded * into the flags. */ char ary[RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_MAX + 1]; #endif } embed; } as; }; RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_BEGIN() /** * Identical to rb_check_string_type(), except it raises exceptions in case of * conversion failures. * * @param[in] obj Target object. * @exception rb_eTypeError No implicit conversion to String. * @return Return value of `obj.to_str`. * @see rb_io_get_io * @see rb_ary_to_ary */ VALUE rb_str_to_str(VALUE obj); /** * Identical to rb_str_to_str(), except it fills the passed pointer with the * converted object. * * @param[in,out] ptr Pointer to a variable of target object. * @exception rb_eTypeError No implicit conversion to String. * @return Return value of `obj.to_str`. * @post `*ptr` is the return value. */ VALUE rb_string_value(volatile VALUE *ptr); /** * Identical to rb_str_to_str(), except it returns the converted string's * backend memory region. * * @param[in,out] ptr Pointer to a variable of target object. * @exception rb_eTypeError No implicit conversion to String. * @post `*ptr` is the return value of `obj.to_str`. * @return Pointer to the contents of the return value. */ char *rb_string_value_ptr(volatile VALUE *ptr); /** * Identical to rb_string_value_ptr(), except it additionally checks for the * contents for viability as a C string. Ruby can accept wider range of * contents as strings, compared to C. This function is to check that. * * @param[in,out] ptr Pointer to a variable of target object. * @exception rb_eTypeError No implicit conversion to String. * @exception rb_eArgError String is not C-compatible. * @post `*ptr` is the return value of `obj.to_str`. * @return Pointer to the contents of the return value. */ char *rb_string_value_cstr(volatile VALUE *ptr); /** * Identical to rb_str_to_str(), except it additionally converts the string * into default external encoding. Ruby has a concept called encodings. A * string can have different encoding than the environment expects. Someone * has to make sure its contents be converted to something suitable. This is * that routine. Call it when necessary. * * @param[in] obj Target object. * @exception rb_eTypeError No implicit conversion to String. * @return Converted ruby string of default external encoding. */ VALUE rb_str_export(VALUE obj); /** * Identical to rb_str_export(), except it converts into the locale encoding * instead. * * @param[in] obj Target object. * @exception rb_eTypeError No implicit conversion to String. * @return Converted ruby string of locale encoding. */ VALUE rb_str_export_locale(VALUE obj); RBIMPL_ATTR_ERROR(("rb_check_safe_str() and Check_SafeStr() are obsolete; use StringValue() instead")) /** * @private * * @deprecated This function once was a thing in the old days, but makes no * sense any longer today. Exists here for backwards * compatibility only. You can safely forget about it. */ void rb_check_safe_str(VALUE); /** * @private * * @deprecated This macro once was a thing in the old days, but makes no sense * any longer today. Exists here for backwards compatibility * only. You can safely forget about it. */ #define Check_SafeStr(v) rb_check_safe_str(RBIMPL_CAST((VALUE)(v))) /** * @private * * Prints diagnostic message to stderr when RSTRING_PTR or RSTRING_END * is NULL. * * @param[in] func The function name where encountered NULL pointer. */ void rb_debug_rstring_null_ptr(const char *func); RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_END() RBIMPL_ATTR_PURE_UNLESS_DEBUG() RBIMPL_ATTR_ARTIFICIAL() /** * Queries the length of the string. * * @param[in] str String in question. * @return Its length, in bytes. * @pre `str` must be an instance of ::RString, and must has its * ::RSTRING_NOEMBED flag off. * * @internal * * This was a macro before. It was inevitable to be public, since macros are * global constructs. But should it be forever? Now that it is a function, * @shyouhei thinks it could just be eliminated, hidden into implementation * details. */ static inline long RSTRING_EMBED_LEN(VALUE str) { RBIMPL_ASSERT_TYPE(str, RUBY_T_STRING); RBIMPL_ASSERT_OR_ASSUME(! RB_FL_ANY_RAW(str, RSTRING_NOEMBED)); #if USE_RVARGC long f = RSTRING(str)->as.embed.len; return f; #else VALUE f = RBASIC(str)->flags; f &= RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_MASK; f >>= RSTRING_EMBED_LEN_SHIFT; return RBIMPL_CAST((long)f); #endif } RBIMPL_WARNING_PUSH() #if RBIMPL_COMPILER_IS(Intel) RBIMPL_WARNING_IGNORED(413) #endif RBIMPL_ATTR_PURE_UNLESS_DEBUG() RBIMPL_ATTR_ARTIFICIAL() /** * @private * * "Expands" an embedded string into an ordinal one. This is a function that * returns aggregated type. The returned struct always has its `as.heap.len` * an `as.heap.ptr` fields set appropriately. * * This is an implementation detail that 3rd parties should never bother. */ static inline struct RString rbimpl_rstring_getmem(VALUE str) { RBIMPL_ASSERT_TYPE(str, RUBY_T_STRING); if (RB_FL_ANY_RAW(str, RSTRING_NOEMBED)) { return *RSTRING(str); } else { /* Expecting compilers to optimize this on-stack struct away. */ struct RString retval; retval.as.heap.len = RSTRING_EMBED_LEN(str); retval.as.heap.ptr = RSTRING(str)->as.embed.ary; return retval; } } RBIMPL_WARNING_POP() RBIMPL_ATTR_PURE_UNLESS_DEBUG() RBIMPL_ATTR_ARTIFICIAL() /** * Queries the length of the string. * * @param[in] str String in question. * @return Its length, in bytes. * @pre `str` must be an instance of ::RString. */ static inline long RSTRING_LEN(VALUE str) { return rbimpl_rstring_getmem(str).as.heap.len; } RBIMPL_ATTR_ARTIFICIAL() /** * Queries the contents pointer of the string. * * @param[in] str String in question. * @return Pointer to its contents. * @pre `str` must be an instance of ::RString. */ static inline char * RSTRING_PTR(VALUE str) { char *ptr = rbimpl_rstring_getmem(str).as.heap.ptr; if (RB_UNLIKELY(! ptr)) { /* :BEWARE: @shyouhei thinks that currently, there are rooms for this * function to return NULL. In the 20th century that was a pointless * concern. However struct RString can hold fake strings nowadays. It * seems no check against NULL are exercised around handling of them * (one of such usages is located in marshal.c, which scares * @shyouhei). Better check here for maximum safety. * * Also, this is not rb_warn() because RSTRING_PTR() can be called * during GC (see what obj_info() does). rb_warn() needs to allocate * Ruby objects. That is not possible at this moment. */ rb_debug_rstring_null_ptr("RSTRING_PTR"); } return ptr; } RBIMPL_ATTR_ARTIFICIAL() /** * Queries the end of the contents pointer of the string. * * @param[in] str String in question. * @return Pointer to its end of contents. * @pre `str` must be an instance of ::RString. */ static inline char * RSTRING_END(VALUE str) { struct RString buf = rbimpl_rstring_getmem(str); if (RB_UNLIKELY(! buf.as.heap.ptr)) { /* Ditto. */ rb_debug_rstring_null_ptr("RSTRING_END"); } return &buf.as.heap.ptr[buf.as.heap.len]; } RBIMPL_ATTR_ARTIFICIAL() /** * Identical to RSTRING_LEN(), except it differs for the return type. * * @param[in] str String in question. * @exception rb_eRangeError Too long. * @return Its length, in bytes. * @pre `str` must be an instance of ::RString. * * @internal * * This API seems redundant but has actual usages. */ static inline int RSTRING_LENINT(VALUE str) { return rb_long2int(RSTRING_LEN(str)); } /** * Convenient macro to obtain the contents and length at once. * * @param str String in question. * @param ptrvar Variable where its contents is stored. * @param lenvar Variable where its length is stored. */ #ifdef HAVE_STMT_AND_DECL_IN_EXPR # define RSTRING_GETMEM(str, ptrvar, lenvar) \ __extension__ ({ \ struct RString rbimpl_str = rbimpl_rstring_getmem(str); \ (ptrvar) = rbimpl_str.as.heap.ptr; \ (lenvar) = rbimpl_str.as.heap.len; \ }) #else # define RSTRING_GETMEM(str, ptrvar, lenvar) \ ((ptrvar) = RSTRING_PTR(str), \ (lenvar) = RSTRING_LEN(str)) #endif /* HAVE_STMT_AND_DECL_IN_EXPR */ #endif /* RBIMPL_RSTRING_H */
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