String routines
[Apache Portability Runtime library]


Modules

 snprintf implementations

Functions

int apr_strnatcmp (char const *a, char const *b)
int apr_strnatcasecmp (char const *a, char const *b)
char * apr_pstrdup (apr_pool_t *p, const char *s)
char * apr_pstrmemdup (apr_pool_t *p, const char *s, apr_size_t n)
char * apr_pstrndup (apr_pool_t *p, const char *s, apr_size_t n)
void * apr_pmemdup (apr_pool_t *p, const void *m, apr_size_t n)
char * apr_pstrcat (apr_pool_t *p,...)
char * apr_pstrcatv (apr_pool_t *p, const struct iovec *vec, apr_size_t nvec, apr_size_t *nbytes)
char * apr_pvsprintf (apr_pool_t *p, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
char * apr_psprintf (apr_pool_t *p, const char *fmt,...)
char * apr_cpystrn (char *dst, const char *src, apr_size_t dst_size)
char * apr_collapse_spaces (char *dest, const char *src)
apr_status_t apr_tokenize_to_argv (const char *arg_str, char ***argv_out, apr_pool_t *token_context)
char * apr_strtok (char *str, const char *sep, char **last)
char * apr_itoa (apr_pool_t *p, int n)
char * apr_ltoa (apr_pool_t *p, long n)
char * apr_off_t_toa (apr_pool_t *p, apr_off_t n)
apr_status_t apr_strtoff (apr_off_t *offset, const char *buf, char **end, int base)
apr_int64_t apr_strtoi64 (const char *buf, char **end, int base)
apr_int64_t apr_atoi64 (const char *buf)
char * apr_strfsize (apr_off_t size, char *buf)

Function Documentation

apr_int64_t apr_atoi64 ( const char *  buf  ) 

parse a base-10 numeric string into a 64-bit numeric value. Equivalent to apr_strtoi64(buf, (char**)NULL, 10).

Parameters:
buf The string to parse
Returns:
The numeric value of the string

char* apr_collapse_spaces ( char *  dest,
const char *  src 
)

Strip spaces from a string

Parameters:
dest The destination string. It is okay to modify the string in place. Namely dest == src
src The string to rid the spaces from.
Returns:
The destination string, dest.

char* apr_cpystrn ( char *  dst,
const char *  src,
apr_size_t  dst_size 
)

Copy up to dst_size characters from src to dst; does not copy past a NUL terminator in src, but always terminates dst with a NUL regardless.

Parameters:
dst The destination string
src The source string
dst_size The space available in dst; dst always receives NUL termination, so if src is longer than dst_size, the actual number of characters copied is dst_size - 1.
Returns:
Pointer to the NUL terminator of the destination string, dst
Remarks:
 Note the differences between this function and strncpy():
  1) strncpy() doesn't always NUL terminate; apr_cpystrn() does.
  2) strncpy() pads the destination string with NULs, which is often 
     unnecessary; apr_cpystrn() does not.
  3) strncpy() returns a pointer to the beginning of the dst string;
     apr_cpystrn() returns a pointer to the NUL terminator of dst, 
     to allow a check for truncation.
 

char* apr_itoa ( apr_pool_t p,
int  n 
)

create a string representation of an int, allocated from a pool

Parameters:
p The pool from which to allocate
n The number to format
Returns:
The string representation of the number

char* apr_ltoa ( apr_pool_t p,
long  n 
)

create a string representation of a long, allocated from a pool

Parameters:
p The pool from which to allocate
n The number to format
Returns:
The string representation of the number

char* apr_off_t_toa ( apr_pool_t p,
apr_off_t  n 
)

create a string representation of an apr_off_t, allocated from a pool

Parameters:
p The pool from which to allocate
n The number to format
Returns:
The string representation of the number

void* apr_pmemdup ( apr_pool_t p,
const void *  m,
apr_size_t  n 
)

Duplicate a block of memory.

Parameters:
p The pool to allocate from
m The memory to duplicate
n The number of bytes to duplicate
Returns:
The new block of memory

char* apr_psprintf ( apr_pool_t p,
const char *  fmt,
  ... 
)

printf-style style printing routine. The data is output to a string allocated from a pool

Parameters:
p The pool to allocate out of
fmt The format of the string
... The arguments to use while printing the data
Returns:
The new string

char* apr_pstrcat ( apr_pool_t p,
  ... 
)

Concatenate multiple strings, allocating memory out a pool

Parameters:
p The pool to allocate out of
... The strings to concatenate. The final string must be NULL
Returns:
The new string

char* apr_pstrcatv ( apr_pool_t p,
const struct iovec *  vec,
apr_size_t  nvec,
apr_size_t *  nbytes 
)

Concatenate multiple strings specified in a writev-style vector

Parameters:
p The pool from which to allocate
vec The strings to concatenate
nvec The number of strings to concatenate
nbytes (output) strlen of new string (pass in NULL to omit)
Returns:
The new string

char* apr_pstrdup ( apr_pool_t p,
const char *  s 
)

duplicate a string into memory allocated out of a pool

Parameters:
p The pool to allocate out of
s The string to duplicate
Returns:
The new string

char* apr_pstrmemdup ( apr_pool_t p,
const char *  s,
apr_size_t  n 
)

Create a null-terminated string by making a copy of a sequence of characters and appending a null byte

Parameters:
p The pool to allocate out of
s The block of characters to duplicate
n The number of characters to duplicate
Returns:
The new string
Remarks:
This is a faster alternative to apr_pstrndup, for use when you know that the string being duplicated really has 'n' or more characters. If the string might contain fewer characters, use apr_pstrndup.

char* apr_pstrndup ( apr_pool_t p,
const char *  s,
apr_size_t  n 
)

Duplicate at most n characters of a string into memory allocated out of a pool; the new string will be NUL-terminated

Parameters:
p The pool to allocate out of
s The string to duplicate
n The maximum number of characters to duplicate
Returns:
The new string
Remarks:
The amount of memory allocated from the pool is the length of the returned string including the NUL terminator

char* apr_pvsprintf ( apr_pool_t p,
const char *  fmt,
va_list  ap 
)

printf-style style printing routine. The data is output to a string allocated from a pool

Parameters:
p The pool to allocate out of
fmt The format of the string
ap The arguments to use while printing the data
Returns:
The new string

char* apr_strfsize ( apr_off_t  size,
char *  buf 
)

Format a binary size (magnitiudes are 2^10 rather than 10^3) from an apr_off_t, as bytes, K, M, T, etc, to a four character compacted human readable string.

Parameters:
size The size to format
buf The 5 byte text buffer (counting the trailing null)
Returns:
The buf passed to apr_strfsize()
Remarks:
All negative sizes report ' - ', apr_strfsize only formats positive values.

int apr_strnatcasecmp ( char const *  a,
char const *  b 
)

Do a natural order comparison of two strings ignoring the case of the strings.

Parameters:
a The first string to compare
b The second string to compare
Returns:
Either <0, 0, or >0. If the first string is less than the second this returns <0, if they are equivalent it returns 0, and if the first string is greater than second string it retuns >0.

int apr_strnatcmp ( char const *  a,
char const *  b 
)

Do a natural order comparison of two strings.

Parameters:
a The first string to compare
b The second string to compare
Returns:
Either <0, 0, or >0. If the first string is less than the second this returns <0, if they are equivalent it returns 0, and if the first string is greater than second string it retuns >0.

apr_status_t apr_strtoff ( apr_off_t *  offset,
const char *  buf,
char **  end,
int  base 
)

Convert a numeric string into an apr_off_t numeric value.

Parameters:
offset The value of the parsed string.
buf The string to parse. It may contain optional whitespace, followed by an optional '+' (positive, default) or '-' (negative) character, followed by an optional '0x' prefix if base is 0 or 16, followed by numeric digits appropriate for base.
end A pointer to the end of the valid character in buf. If not NULL, it is set to the first invalid character in buf.
base A numeric base in the range between 2 and 36 inclusive, or 0. If base is zero, buf will be treated as base ten unless its digits are prefixed with '0x', in which case it will be treated as base 16.
Bug:
*end breaks type safety; where *buf is const, *end needs to be declared as const in APR 2.0

apr_int64_t apr_strtoi64 ( const char *  buf,
char **  end,
int  base 
)

parse a numeric string into a 64-bit numeric value

Parameters:
buf The string to parse. It may contain optional whitespace, followed by an optional '+' (positive, default) or '-' (negative) character, followed by an optional '0x' prefix if base is 0 or 16, followed by numeric digits appropriate for base.
end A pointer to the end of the valid character in buf. If not NULL, it is set to the first invalid character in buf.
base A numeric base in the range between 2 and 36 inclusive, or 0. If base is zero, buf will be treated as base ten unless its digits are prefixed with '0x', in which case it will be treated as base 16.
Returns:
The numeric value of the string. On overflow, errno is set to ERANGE.

char* apr_strtok ( char *  str,
const char *  sep,
char **  last 
)

Split a string into separate null-terminated tokens. The tokens are delimited in the string by one or more characters from the sep argument.

Parameters:
str The string to separate; this should be specified on the first call to apr_strtok() for a given string, and NULL on subsequent calls.
sep The set of delimiters
last Internal state saved by apr_strtok() between calls.
Returns:
The next token from the string

apr_status_t apr_tokenize_to_argv ( const char *  arg_str,
char ***  argv_out,
apr_pool_t token_context 
)

Convert the arguments to a program from one string to an array of strings terminated by a NULL pointer

Parameters:
arg_str The arguments to convert
argv_out Output location. This is a pointer to an array of strings.
token_context Pool to use.


Generated on Sat Aug 16 19:13:42 2008 for Apache Portable Runtime by  doxygen 1.5.6