/* Copyright (c) 2003-2004, Roger Dingledine * Copyright (c) 2004-2006, Roger Dingledine, Nick Mathewson. * Copyright (c) 2007-2018, The Tor Project, Inc. */ /* See LICENSE for licensing information */ /** * \file printf.c * \brief Compatibility wrappers around snprintf and its friends **/ #include "lib/string/printf.h" #include "lib/err/torerr.h" #include "lib/cc/torint.h" #include "lib/malloc/malloc.h" #include #include /** Replacement for snprintf. Differs from platform snprintf in two * ways: First, always NUL-terminates its output. Second, always * returns -1 if the result is truncated. (Note that this return * behavior does not conform to C99; it just happens to be * easier to emulate "return -1" with conformant implementations than * it is to emulate "return number that would be written" with * non-conformant implementations.) */ int tor_snprintf(char *str, size_t size, const char *format, ...) { va_list ap; int r; va_start(ap,format); r = tor_vsnprintf(str,size,format,ap); va_end(ap); return r; } /** Replacement for vsnprintf; behavior differs as tor_snprintf differs from * snprintf. */ int tor_vsnprintf(char *str, size_t size, const char *format, va_list args) { int r; if (size == 0) return -1; /* no place for the NUL */ if (size > SIZE_T_CEILING) return -1; #ifdef _WIN32 r = _vsnprintf(str, size, format, args); #else r = vsnprintf(str, size, format, args); #endif str[size-1] = '\0'; if (r < 0 || r >= (ssize_t)size) return -1; return r; } /** * Portable asprintf implementation. Does a printf() into a newly malloc'd * string. Sets *strp to this string, and returns its length (not * including the terminating NUL character). * * You can treat this function as if its implementation were something like
     char buf[_INFINITY_];
     tor_snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), fmt, args);
     *strp = tor_strdup(buf);
     return strlen(*strp):
   
* Where _INFINITY_ is an imaginary constant so big that any string can fit * into it. */ int tor_asprintf(char **strp, const char *fmt, ...) { int r; va_list args; va_start(args, fmt); r = tor_vasprintf(strp, fmt, args); va_end(args); if (!*strp || r < 0) { /* LCOV_EXCL_START */ raw_assert_unreached_msg("Internal error in asprintf"); /* LCOV_EXCL_STOP */ } return r; } /** * Portable vasprintf implementation. Does a printf() into a newly malloc'd * string. Differs from regular vasprintf in the same ways that * tor_asprintf() differs from regular asprintf. */ int tor_vasprintf(char **strp, const char *fmt, va_list args) { /* use a temporary variable in case *strp is in args. */ char *strp_tmp=NULL; #ifdef HAVE_VASPRINTF /* If the platform gives us one, use it. */ int r = vasprintf(&strp_tmp, fmt, args); if (r < 0) *strp = NULL; // LCOV_EXCL_LINE -- no cross-platform way to force this else *strp = strp_tmp; return r; #elif defined(HAVE__VSCPRINTF) /* On Windows, _vsnprintf won't tell us the length of the string if it * overflows, so we need to use _vcsprintf to tell how much to allocate */ int len, r; va_list tmp_args; va_copy(tmp_args, args); len = _vscprintf(fmt, tmp_args); va_end(tmp_args); if (len < 0) { *strp = NULL; return -1; } strp_tmp = tor_malloc(len + 1); r = _vsnprintf(strp_tmp, len+1, fmt, args); if (r != len) { tor_free(strp_tmp); *strp = NULL; return -1; } *strp = strp_tmp; return len; #else /* Everywhere else, we have a decent vsnprintf that tells us how many * characters we need. We give it a try on a short buffer first, since * it might be nice to avoid the second vsnprintf call. */ char buf[128]; int len, r; va_list tmp_args; va_copy(tmp_args, args); /* vsnprintf() was properly checked but tor_vsnprintf() available so * why not use it? */ len = tor_vsnprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), fmt, tmp_args); va_end(tmp_args); if (len < (int)sizeof(buf)) { *strp = tor_strdup(buf); return len; } strp_tmp = tor_malloc(len+1); /* use of tor_vsnprintf() will ensure string is null terminated */ r = tor_vsnprintf(strp_tmp, len+1, fmt, args); if (r != len) { tor_free(strp_tmp); *strp = NULL; return -1; } *strp = strp_tmp; return len; #endif /* defined(HAVE_VASPRINTF) || ... */ }