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144 lines
7.2 KiB
C
144 lines
7.2 KiB
C
/*
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Serval numerical string primitives
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Copyright (C) 2012-2015 Serval Project Inc.
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This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
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modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
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as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
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of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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GNU General Public License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
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Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
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*/
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#ifndef __SERVAL_DNA__NUMERIC_STR_H__
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#define __SERVAL_DNA__NUMERIC_STR_H__
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#include "strbuf.h"
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#include <sys/types.h> // for size_t
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#include <stdint.h>
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#ifndef __SERVAL_DNA__NUMERIC_STR_INLINE
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# if __GNUC__ && !__GNUC_STDC_INLINE__
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# define __SERVAL_DNA__NUMERIC_STR_INLINE extern inline
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# else
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# define __SERVAL_DNA__NUMERIC_STR_INLINE inline
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# endif
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#endif
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/* Returns 1 if the given nul-terminated string parses successfully as an unsigned 64-bit integer.
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* Returns 0 if not. This is simply a shortcut for str_to_uint32(str, 10, NULL, NULL), which is
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* convenient for when a pointer to a predicate function is needed.
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*
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* @author Andrew Bettison <andrew@servalproject.com>
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*/
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int str_is_uint64_decimal(const char *str);
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/* Parse a NUL-terminated string as an integer in ASCII radix notation in the given 'base' (eg,
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* base=10 means decimal).
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*
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* Returns 1 if a valid integer is parsed, storing the value in *result (unless result is NULL) and
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* storing a pointer to the immediately succeeding character in *afterp. If afterp is NULL then
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* returns 0 unless the immediately succeeding character is a NUL '\0'. If no integer is parsed or
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* if the integer overflows (too many digits), then returns 0, leaving *result unchanged and setting
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* setting *afterp to point to the character where parsing failed.
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*
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* @author Andrew Bettison <andrew@servalproject.com>
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*/
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int str_to_uint16(const char *str, unsigned base, uint16_t *result, const char **afterp);
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int str_to_int32(const char *str, unsigned base, int32_t *result, const char **afterp);
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int str_to_uint32(const char *str, unsigned base, uint32_t *result, const char **afterp);
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int str_to_int64(const char *str, unsigned base, int64_t *result, const char **afterp);
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int str_to_uint64(const char *str, unsigned base, uint64_t *result, const char **afterp);
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/* Parse a length-bound string as an integer in ASCII radix notation in the given 'base' (eg,
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* base=10 means decimal).
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*
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* Returns 1 if a valid integer is parsed, storing the value in *result (unless result is NULL) and
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* storing a pointer to the immediately succeeding character in *afterp. If afterp is NULL then
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* returns 0 unless all 'strlen' characters of the string were consumed. If no integer is parsed or
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* if the integer overflows (too many digits), then returns 0, leaving *result unchanged and setting
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* setting *afterp to point to the character where parsing failed.
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*
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* @author Andrew Bettison <andrew@servalproject.com>
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*/
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int strn_to_uint16(const char *str, size_t strlen, unsigned base, uint16_t *result, const char **afterp);
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int strn_to_uint32(const char *str, size_t strlen, unsigned base, uint32_t *result, const char **afterp);
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int strn_to_uint64(const char *str, size_t strlen, unsigned base, uint64_t *result, const char **afterp);
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/* Parse a string as an integer in ASCII radix notation in the given 'base' (eg, base=10 means
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* decimal) and scale the result by a factor given by an optional suffix "scaling" character in the
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* set {kKmMgG}: 'k' = 1e3, 'K' = 1<<10, 'm' = 1e6, 'M' = 1<<20, 'g' = 1e9, 'G' = * 1<<30.
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*
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* Return 1 if a valid scaled integer was parsed, storing the value in *result (unless result is
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* NULL) and storing a pointer to the immediately succeeding character in *afterp (unless afterp is
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* NULL, in which case returns 1 only if the immediately succeeding character is a nul '\0').
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* Returns 0 otherwise, leaving *result and *afterp unchanged.
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*
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* NOTE: an argument base > 16 will cause any trailing 'g' or 'G' character to be parsed as part of
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* the integer, not as a scale suffix. Ditto for base > 20 and 'k' 'K', and base > 22 and 'm' 'M'.
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*
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* @author Andrew Bettison <andrew@servalproject.com>
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*/
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int str_to_int32_scaled(const char *str, unsigned base, int32_t *result, const char **afterp);
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int str_to_uint32_scaled(const char *str, unsigned base, uint32_t *result, const char **afterp);
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int str_to_int64_scaled(const char *str, unsigned base, int64_t *result, const char **afterp);
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int str_to_uint64_scaled(const char *str, unsigned base, uint64_t *result, const char **afterp);
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uint64_t scale_factor(const char *str, const char **afterp);
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/* Append an integer value to a strbuf in ASCII decimal format, optionally scaled with a scale
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* suffix character in the set {kKmMgGtTpP}: 'k' = 1e3, 'K' = 1<<10, 'm' = 1e6, 'M' = 1<<20, 'g' =
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* 1e9, 'G' = * 1<<30, etc. This format is lossless because the value is only scaled if it is an
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* exact multiple of the scaling factor.
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*
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* Eg, 1000 -> "1k"
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* 1001 -> "1001"
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* 1024 -> "1K"
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* 1025 -> "1025"
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*
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* @author Andrew Bettison <andrew@servalproject.com>
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*/
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strbuf strbuf_append_uint32_scaled(strbuf sb, uint32_t value);
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strbuf strbuf_append_uint64_scaled(strbuf sb, uint64_t value);
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/* Append a double value to a strbuf in ASCII decimal fixed-point format with three significant
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* digits, optionally scaled with either a binary scale suffix in the set {KMGTP}: 'K' = 1<<10, 'M'
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* = 1<<20, 'G' = * 1<<30, etc., or an S.I. scale suffix in the set {kmgtp}: 'k' = 1e3, 'm' = 1e6,
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* etc. This format is lossy because it always applies the scale, which may truncate insignificant
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* digits.
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*
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* Eg, binary S.I.
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* 1000 -> "1000" 1000 -> "1.00k"
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* 1001 -> "1001" 1001 -> "1.00k"
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* 1024 -> "1.00K" 1024 -> "1.02k"
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* 1025 -> "1.00K" 1025 -> "1.03k"
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*
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* @author Andrew Bettison <andrew@servalproject.com>
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*/
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strbuf strbuf_append_double_scaled_binary(strbuf sb, double value);
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strbuf strbuf_append_double_scaled_si(strbuf sb, double value);
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#define alloca_double_scaled_binary(v) strbuf_str(strbuf_append_double_scaled_binary(strbuf_alloca(10), (v)))
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#define alloca_double_scaled_si(v) strbuf_str(strbuf_append_double_scaled_si(strbuf_alloca(10), (v)))
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/* Parse a string as a time interval (seconds) in millisecond resolution. Return the number of
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* milliseconds. Valid strings are all unsigned ASCII decimal numbers with up to three digits after
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* the decimal point.
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*
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* Return 1 if a valid interval was parsed, storing the number of milliseconds in *result (unless
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* result is NULL) and storing a pointer to the immediately succeeding character in *afterp (unless
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* afterp is NULL, in which case returns 1 only if the immediately succeeding character is a nul
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* '\0'). Returns 0 otherwise, leaving *result and *afterp unchanged.
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*
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* @author Andrew Bettison <andrew@servalproject.com>
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*/
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int str_to_uint64_interval_ms(const char *str, int64_t *result, const char **afterp);
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#endif // __SERVAL_DNA__NUMERIC_STR_H__
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