Currently, there are some useless includes in the codebase. We can use a tool named include-what-you-use to optimize these includes. By using a strict include-what-you-use policy, we can get lots of benefits from it.
136 lines
4.3 KiB
C++
136 lines
4.3 KiB
C++
// Copyright 2002 and onwards Google Inc.
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#include "gutil/stringprintf.h"
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#include <stdarg.h> // For va_list and related operations
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#include <stdio.h> // MSVC requires this for _vsnprintf
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#include <vector>
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#include <ostream>
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using std::vector;
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#include "common/logging.h"
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// IWYU pragma: no_include <butil/macros.h>
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#include "gutil/macros.h" // IWYU pragma: keep
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#ifdef _MSC_VER
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enum { IS__MSC_VER = 1 };
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#else
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enum { IS__MSC_VER = 0 };
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#endif
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void StringAppendV(string* dst, const char* format, va_list ap) {
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// First try with a small fixed size buffer
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static const int kSpaceLength = 1024;
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char space[kSpaceLength];
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// It's possible for methods that use a va_list to invalidate
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// the data in it upon use. The fix is to make a copy
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// of the structure before using it and use that copy instead.
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va_list backup_ap;
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va_copy(backup_ap, ap);
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int result = vsnprintf(space, kSpaceLength, format, backup_ap);
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va_end(backup_ap);
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if (result < kSpaceLength) {
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if (result >= 0) {
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// Normal case -- everything fit.
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dst->append(space, result);
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return;
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}
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if (IS__MSC_VER) {
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// Error or MSVC running out of space. MSVC 8.0 and higher
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// can be asked about space needed with the special idiom below:
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va_copy(backup_ap, ap);
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result = vsnprintf(nullptr, 0, format, backup_ap);
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va_end(backup_ap);
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}
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if (result < 0) {
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// Just an error.
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return;
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}
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}
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// Increase the buffer size to the size requested by vsnprintf,
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// plus one for the closing \0.
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int length = result + 1;
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auto buf = new char[length];
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// Restore the va_list before we use it again
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va_copy(backup_ap, ap);
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result = vsnprintf(buf, length, format, backup_ap);
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va_end(backup_ap);
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if (result >= 0 && result < length) {
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// It fit
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dst->append(buf, result);
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}
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delete[] buf;
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}
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string StringPrintf(const char* format, ...) {
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va_list ap;
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va_start(ap, format);
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string result;
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StringAppendV(&result, format, ap);
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va_end(ap);
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return result;
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}
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const string& SStringPrintf(string* dst, const char* format, ...) {
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va_list ap;
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va_start(ap, format);
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dst->clear();
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StringAppendV(dst, format, ap);
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va_end(ap);
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return *dst;
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}
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void StringAppendF(string* dst, const char* format, ...) {
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va_list ap;
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va_start(ap, format);
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StringAppendV(dst, format, ap);
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va_end(ap);
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}
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// Max arguments supported by StringPrintVector
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const int kStringPrintfVectorMaxArgs = 32;
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// An empty block of zero for filler arguments. This is const so that if
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// printf tries to write to it (via %n) then the program gets a SIGSEGV
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// and we can fix the problem or protect against an attack.
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static const char string_printf_empty_block[256] = {'\0'};
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string StringPrintfVector(const char* format, const vector<string>& v) {
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CHECK_LE(v.size(), kStringPrintfVectorMaxArgs)
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<< "StringPrintfVector currently only supports up to " << kStringPrintfVectorMaxArgs
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<< " arguments. "
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<< "Feel free to add support for more if you need it.";
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// Add filler arguments so that bogus format+args have a harder time
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// crashing the program, corrupting the program (%n),
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// or displaying random chunks of memory to users.
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const char* cstr[kStringPrintfVectorMaxArgs];
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for (int i = 0; i < v.size(); ++i) {
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cstr[i] = v[i].c_str();
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}
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for (int i = v.size(); i < arraysize(cstr); ++i) {
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cstr[i] = &string_printf_empty_block[0];
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}
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// I do not know any way to pass kStringPrintfVectorMaxArgs arguments,
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// or any way to build a va_list by hand, or any API for printf
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// that accepts an array of arguments. The best I can do is stick
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// this COMPILE_ASSERT right next to the actual statement.
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COMPILE_ASSERT(kStringPrintfVectorMaxArgs == 32, arg_count_mismatch);
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return StringPrintf(format, cstr[0], cstr[1], cstr[2], cstr[3], cstr[4], cstr[5], cstr[6],
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cstr[7], cstr[8], cstr[9], cstr[10], cstr[11], cstr[12], cstr[13], cstr[14],
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cstr[15], cstr[16], cstr[17], cstr[18], cstr[19], cstr[20], cstr[21],
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cstr[22], cstr[23], cstr[24], cstr[25], cstr[26], cstr[27], cstr[28],
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cstr[29], cstr[30], cstr[31]);
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}
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