/* gmp_vasprintf -- formatted output to an allocated space. Copyright 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of the GNU MP Library. The GNU MP Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. The GNU MP Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with the GNU MP Library. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/. */ #include "config.h" #if HAVE_STDARG #include #else #include #endif #include #include #include #include "gmp.h" #include "gmp-impl.h" #if ! HAVE_VSNPRINTF #define vsnprintf __gmp_replacement_vsnprintf #endif /* vasprintf isn't used since we prefer all GMP allocs to go through __gmp_allocate_func, and in particular we don't want the -1 return from vasprintf for out-of-memory, instead __gmp_allocate_func should handle that. Using vsnprintf unfortunately means we might have to re-run it if our current space is insufficient. The initial guess for the needed space is an arbitrary 256 bytes. If that (and any extra GMP_ASPRINTF_T_NEED might give) isn't enough then an ISO C99 standard vsnprintf will tell us what we really need. GLIBC 2.0.x vsnprintf returns either -1 or space-1 to indicate overflow, without giving any indication how much is really needed. In this case keep trying with double the space each time. A return of space-1 is success on a C99 vsnprintf, but we're not bothering to identify which style vsnprintf we've got, so just take the pessimistic option and assume it's glibc 2.0.x. Notice the use of ret+2 for the new space in the C99 case. This ensures the next vsnprintf return value will be space-2, which is unambiguously successful. But actually GMP_ASPRINTF_T_NEED() will realloc to even bigger than that ret+2. vsnprintf might trash it's given ap, so copy it in case we need to use it more than once. See comments with gmp_snprintf_format. */ static int gmp_asprintf_format (struct gmp_asprintf_t *d, const char *fmt, va_list orig_ap) { int ret; va_list ap; size_t space = 256; for (;;) { GMP_ASPRINTF_T_NEED (d, space); space = d->alloc - d->size; va_copy (ap, orig_ap); ret = vsnprintf (d->buf + d->size, space, fmt, ap); if (ret == -1) { ASSERT (strlen (d->buf + d->size) == space-1); ret = space-1; } /* done if output fits in our space */ if (ret < space-1) break; if (ret == space-1) space *= 2; /* possible glibc 2.0.x, so double */ else space = ret+2; /* C99, so now know space required */ } d->size += ret; return ret; } const struct doprnt_funs_t __gmp_asprintf_funs = { (doprnt_format_t) gmp_asprintf_format, (doprnt_memory_t) __gmp_asprintf_memory, (doprnt_reps_t) __gmp_asprintf_reps, (doprnt_final_t) __gmp_asprintf_final }; int gmp_vasprintf (char **result, const char *fmt, va_list ap) { struct gmp_asprintf_t d; GMP_ASPRINTF_T_INIT (d, result); return __gmp_doprnt (&__gmp_asprintf_funs, &d, fmt, ap); }