/* stringvec.c - functions for managing arrays of strings. */
/* Copyright (C) 2000-2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GNU Bash, the Bourne Again SHell.
Bash is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
Bash 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 General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Bash. If not, see .
*/
#include
#include
#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H)
# include
#endif
#include
#include
#include
#include "shell.h"
/* Allocate an array of strings with room for N members. */
char **
strvec_create (n)
int n;
{
return ((char **)xmalloc ((n) * sizeof (char *)));
}
char **
strvec_resize (array, nsize)
char **array;
int nsize;
{
return ((char **)xrealloc (array, nsize * sizeof (char *)));
}
/* Return the length of ARRAY, a NULL terminated array of char *. */
int
strvec_len (array)
char **array;
{
register int i;
for (i = 0; array[i]; i++);
return (i);
}
/* Free the contents of ARRAY, a NULL terminated array of char *. */
void
strvec_flush (array)
char **array;
{
register int i;
if (array == 0)
return;
for (i = 0; array[i]; i++)
free (array[i]);
}
void
strvec_dispose (array)
char **array;
{
if (array == 0)
return;
strvec_flush (array);
free (array);
}
int
strvec_remove (array, name)
char **array, *name;
{
register int i, j;
char *x;
if (array == 0)
return 0;
for (i = 0; array[i]; i++)
if (STREQ (name, array[i]))
{
x = array[i];
for (j = i; array[j]; j++)
array[j] = array[j + 1];
free (x);
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
#ifdef INCLUDE_UNUSED
/* Find NAME in ARRAY. Return the index of NAME, or -1 if not present.
ARRAY should be NULL terminated. */
int
strvec_search (array, name)
char **array, *name;
{
int i;
for (i = 0; array[i]; i++)
if (STREQ (name, array[i]))
return (i);
return (-1);
}
#endif
/* Allocate and return a new copy of ARRAY and its contents. */
char **
strvec_copy (array)
char **array;
{
register int i;
int len;
char **ret;
len = strvec_len (array);
ret = (char **)xmalloc ((len + 1) * sizeof (char *));
for (i = 0; array[i]; i++)
ret[i] = savestring (array[i]);
ret[i] = (char *)NULL;
return (ret);
}
/* Comparison routine for use with qsort() on arrays of strings. Uses
strcoll(3) if available, otherwise it uses strcmp(3). */
int
strvec_strcmp (s1, s2)
register char **s1, **s2;
{
#if defined (HAVE_STRCOLL)
return (strcoll (*s1, *s2));
#else /* !HAVE_STRCOLL */
int result;
if ((result = **s1 - **s2) == 0)
result = strcmp (*s1, *s2);
return (result);
#endif /* !HAVE_STRCOLL */
}
/* Sort ARRAY, a null terminated array of pointers to strings. */
void
strvec_sort (array)
char **array;
{
qsort (array, strvec_len (array), sizeof (char *), (QSFUNC *)strvec_strcmp);
}
/* Cons up a new array of words. The words are taken from LIST,
which is a WORD_LIST *. If ALLOC is true, everything is malloc'ed,
so you should free everything in this array when you are done.
The array is NULL terminated. If IP is non-null, it gets the
number of words in the returned array. STARTING_INDEX says where
to start filling in the returned array; it can be used to reserve
space at the beginning of the array. */
char **
strvec_from_word_list (list, alloc, starting_index, ip)
WORD_LIST *list;
int alloc, starting_index, *ip;
{
int count;
char **array;
count = list_length (list);
array = (char **)xmalloc ((1 + count + starting_index) * sizeof (char *));
for (count = 0; count < starting_index; count++)
array[count] = (char *)NULL;
for (count = starting_index; list; count++, list = list->next)
array[count] = alloc ? savestring (list->word->word) : list->word->word;
array[count] = (char *)NULL;
if (ip)
*ip = count;
return (array);
}
/* Convert an array of strings into the form used internally by the shell.
ALLOC means to allocate new storage for each WORD_DESC in the returned
list rather than copy the values in ARRAY. STARTING_INDEX says where
in ARRAY to begin. */
WORD_LIST *
strvec_to_word_list (array, alloc, starting_index)
char **array;
int alloc, starting_index;
{
WORD_LIST *list;
WORD_DESC *w;
int i, count;
if (array == 0 || array[0] == 0)
return (WORD_LIST *)NULL;
for (count = 0; array[count]; count++)
;
for (i = starting_index, list = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; i < count; i++)
{
w = make_bare_word (alloc ? array[i] : "");
if (alloc == 0)
{
free (w->word);
w->word = array[i];
}
list = make_word_list (w, list);
}
return (REVERSE_LIST (list, WORD_LIST *));
}