diff -r 828f3afd5c76 -r 5a71d53d0228 snprintf_2.2/README --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/snprintf_2.2/README Sat Jan 19 19:14:36 2002 +0100 @@ -0,0 +1,283 @@ + + snprintf.c + - a portable implementation of snprintf, + including vsnprintf.c, asnprintf, vasnprintf, asprintf, vasprintf + + snprintf is a routine to convert numeric and string arguments to + formatted strings. It is similar to sprintf(3) provided in a system's + C library, yet it requires an additional argument - the buffer size - + and it guarantees never to store anything beyond the given buffer, + regardless of the format or arguments to be formatted. Some newer + operating systems do provide snprintf in their C library, but many do + not or do provide an inadequate (slow or idiosyncratic) version, which + calls for a portable implementation of this routine. + +Author + + Mark Martinec , April 1999, June 2000 + Copyright © 1999, Mark Martinec + +Terms and conditions ... + + This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the Frontier Artistic License which comes with + this Kit. + +Features + + * careful adherence to specs regarding flags, field width and + precision; + * good performance for large string handling (large format, large + argument or large paddings). Performance is similar to system's + sprintf and in several cases significantly better (make sure you + compile with optimizations turned on, tell the compiler the code + is strict ANSI if necessary to give it more freedom for + optimizations); + * return value semantics per ISO/IEC 9899:1999 ("ISO C99"); + * written in standard ISO/ANSI C - requires an ANSI C compiler. + +Supported conversion specifiers and data types + + This snprintf only supports the following conversion specifiers: s, c, + d, o, u, x, X, p (and synonyms: i, D, U, O - see below) with flags: + '-', '+', ' ', '0' and '#'. An asterisk is supported for field width + as well as precision. + + Length modifiers 'h' (short int), 'l' (long int), and 'll' (long long + int) are supported. + + NOTE: + + If macro SNPRINTF_LONGLONG_SUPPORT is not defined (default) the + length modifier 'll' is recognized but treated the same as 'l', + which may cause argument value truncation! Defining + SNPRINTF_LONGLONG_SUPPORT requires that your system's sprintf also + handles length modifier 'll'. long long int is a language extension + which may not be portable. + + Conversion of numeric data (conversion specifiers d, o, u, x, X, p) + with length modifiers (none or h, l, ll) is left to the system routine + sprintf, but all handling of flags, field width and precision as well + as c and s conversions is done very carefully by this portable + routine. If a string precision (truncation) is specified (e.g. %.8s) + it is guaranteed the string beyond the specified precision will not be + referenced. + + Length modifiers h, l and ll are ignored for c and s conversions (data + types wint_t and wchar_t are not supported). + + The following common synonyms for conversion characters are supported: + * i is a synonym for d + * D is a synonym for ld, explicit length modifiers are ignored + * U is a synonym for lu, explicit length modifiers are ignored + * O is a synonym for lo, explicit length modifiers are ignored + + The D, O and U conversion characters are nonstandard, they are + supported for backward compatibility only, and should not be used for + new code. + + The following is specifically not supported: + * flag ' (thousands' grouping character) is recognized but ignored + * numeric conversion specifiers: f, e, E, g, G and synonym F, as + well as the new a and A conversion specifiers + * length modifier 'L' (long double) and 'q' (quad - use 'll' + instead) + * wide character/string conversions: lc, ls, and nonstandard + synonyms C and S + * writeback of converted string length: conversion character n + * the n$ specification for direct reference to n-th argument + * locales + + It is permitted for str_m to be zero, and it is permitted to specify + NULL pointer for resulting string argument if str_m is zero (as per + ISO C99). + + The return value is the number of characters which would be generated + for the given input, excluding the trailing null. If this value is + greater or equal to str_m, not all characters from the result have + been stored in str, output bytes beyond the (str_m-1) -th character + are discarded. If str_m is greater than zero it is guaranteed the + resulting string will be null-terminated. + + NOTE that this matches the ISO C99, OpenBSD, and GNU C library 2.1, + but is different from some older and vendor implementations, and is + also different from XPG, XSH5, SUSv2 specifications. For historical + discussion on changes in the semantics and standards of snprintf see + printf(3) man page in the Linux programmers manual. + + Routines asprintf and vasprintf return a pointer (in the ptr argument) + to a buffer sufficiently large to hold the resulting string. This + pointer should be passed to free(3) to release the allocated storage + when it is no longer needed. If sufficient space cannot be allocated, + these functions will return -1 and set ptr to be a NULL pointer. These + two routines are a GNU C library extensions (glibc). + + Routines asnprintf and vasnprintf are similar to asprintf and + vasprintf, yet, like snprintf and vsnprintf counterparts, will write + at most str_m-1 characters into the allocated output string, the last + character in the allocated buffer then gets the terminating null. If + the formatted string length (the return value) is greater than or + equal to the str_m argument, the resulting string was truncated and + some of the formatted characters were discarded. These routines + present a handy way to limit the amount of allocated memory to some + sane value. + +Availability + + http://www.ijs.si/software/snprintf/ + * snprintf_1.3.tar.gz (1999-06-30), md5 sum: snprintf_1.3.tar.gz.md5 + * snprintf_2.1.tar.gz (2000-07-14), md5 sum: snprintf_2.1.tar.gz.md5 + * snprintf_2.2.tar.gz (2000-10-18), md5 sum: snprintf_2.2.tar.gz.md5 + +Mailing list + + There is a very low-traffic mailing list snprintf-announce@ijs.si + where announcements about new versions will be posted as well as + warnings about threatening bugs if discovered. The posting is + restricted to snprintf developer(s). + + To subscribe to (or unsubscribe from) the mailing list please visit + the list server's web page + http://mailman.ijs.si/listinfo/snprintf-announce + + You can also subscribe to the list by mailing the command SUBSCRIBE + either in the subject or in the message body to the address + snprintf-announce-request@ijs.si . You will be asked for confirmation + before subscription will be effective. + + The list of members is only accessible to the list administrator, so + there is no need for concern about automatic e-mail address gatherers. + + Questions about the mailing list and concerns for the attention of a + person should be sent to snprintf-announce-admin@ijs.si + + There is no general discussion list about portable snprintf at the + moment. Please send comments and suggestion to the author. + +Revision history + + Version 1.3 fixes a runaway loop problem from 1.2. Please upgrade. + + 1999-06-30 V1.3 Mark Martinec + + + fixed runaway loop (eventually crashing when str_l wraps + beyond 2^31) while copying format string without conversion + specifiers to a buffer that is too short (thanks to Edwin + Young for spotting the problem); + + added macros PORTABLE_SNPRINTF_VERSION_(MAJOR|MINOR) to + snprintf.h + + 2000-02-14 V2.0 (never released) Mark Martinec + + + relaxed license terms: The Artistic License now applies. You + may still apply the GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE as was + distributed with previous versions, if you prefer; + + changed REVISION HISTORY dates to use ISO 8601 date format; + + added vsnprintf (patch also independently proposed by Caolán + McNamara 2000-05-04, and Keith M Willenson 2000-06-01) + + 2000-06-27 V2.1 Mark Martinec + + + removed POSIX check for str_m < 1; value 0 for str_m is + allowed by ISO C99 (and GNU C library 2.1) (pointed out on + 2000-05-04 by Caolán McNamara, caolan@ csn dot ul dot ie). + Besides relaxed license this change in standards adherence is + the main reason to bump up the major version number; + + added nonstandard routines asnprintf, vasnprintf, asprintf, + vasprintf that dynamically allocate storage for the resulting + string; these routines are not compiled by default, see + comments where NEED_V?ASN?PRINTF macros are defined; + + autoconf contributed by Caolán McNamara + + 2000-10-06 V2.2 Mark Martinec + + + BUG FIX: the %c conversion used a temporary variable that was + no longer in scope when referenced, possibly causing + incorrect resulting character; + + BUG FIX: make precision and minimal field width unsigned to + handle huge values (2^31 <= n < 2^32) correctly; also be more + careful in the use of signed/unsigned/size_t internal + variables -- probably more careful than many vendor + implementations, but there may still be a case where huge + values of str_m, precision or minimal field could cause + incorrect behaviour; + + use separate variables for signed/unsigned arguments, and for + short/int, long, and long long argument lengths to avoid + possible incompatibilities on certain computer architectures. + Also use separate variable arg_sign to hold sign of a numeric + argument, to make code more transparent; + + some fiddling with zero padding and "0x" to make it Linux + compatible; + + systematically use macros fast_memcpy and fast_memset instead + of case-by-case hand optimization; determine some breakeven + string lengths for different architectures; + + terminology change: format -> conversion specifier, C9x -> + ISO/IEC 9899:1999 ("ISO C99"), alternative form -> alternate + form, data type modifier -> length modifier; + + several comments rephrased and new ones added; + + make compiler not complain about 'credits' defined but not + used; + +Other implementations of snprintf + + I am aware of some other (more or less) portable implementations of + snprintf. I do not claim they are free software - please refer to + their respective copyright and licensing terms. If you know of other + versions please let me know. + * a very thorough implementation (src/util_snprintf.c) by the Apache + Group distributed with the Apache web server - + http://www.apache.org/ . Does its own floating point conversions + using routines ecvt(3), fcvt(3) and gcvt(3) from the standard C + library or from the GNU libc. + This is from the code: + + This software [...] was originally based on public domain software + written at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications, + University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. + [...] This code is based on, and used with the permission of, the + SIO stdio-replacement strx_* functions by Panos Tsirigotis + for xinetd. + * QCI Utilities use a modified version of snprintf from the Apache + group. + * implementations as distributed with OpenBSD, FreeBSD, and NetBSD + are all wrappers to vfprintf.c, which is derived from software + contributed to Berkeley by Chris Torek. + * implementation from Prof. Patrick Powell , + Dept. Electrical and Computer Engineering, San Diego State + University, San Diego, CA 92182-1309, published in Bugtraq + archives for 3rd quarter (Jul-Aug) 1995. No floating point + conversions. + * Brandon Long's modified version of Prof. + Patrick Powell's snprintf with contributions from others. With + minimal floating point support. + * implementation (src/snprintf.c) as distributed with sendmail - + http://www.sendmail.org/ is a cleaned up Prof. Patrick Powell's + version to compile properly and to support .precision and %lx. + * implementation from Caolán McNamara available at + http://www.csn.ul.ie/~caolan/publink/snprintf-1.1.tar.gz, handles + floating point. + * implementation used by newlog (a replacement for syslog(3)) made + available by the SOS Corporation. Enabling floating point support + is a compile-time option. + * implementation by Michael Richardson is + available at http://sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/SSW/snp/snp.html. It is + based on BSD44-lite's vfprintf() call, modified to function on + SunOS. Needs internal routines from the 4.4 strtod (included), + requires GCC to compile the long long (aka quad_t) portions. + * implementation from Tomi Salo distributed with SSH + 2.0 Unix Server. Not in public domain. Floating point conversions + done by system's sprintf. + * and for completeness: my portable version described in this very + document available at http://www.ijs.si/software/snprintf/ . + + In retrospect, it appears that a lot of effort was wasted by many + people for not being aware of what others are doing. Sigh. + + Also of interest: The Approved Base Working Group Resolution for XSH5, + Ref: bwg98-006, Topic: snprintf. + _________________________________________________________________ + + mm + Last updated: 2000-10-18 + + Valid HTML 4.0!