/* EINA - EFL data type library
* Copyright (C) 2002-2008 Carsten Haitzler, Jorge Luis Zapata Muga, Cedric Bail
*
* This 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 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This 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 this library;
* if not, see .
*
* This file incorporates work covered by the following copyright and
* permission notice:
*
* Copyright (C) 2008 Peter Wehrfritz
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
* of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to
* deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the
* rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
* sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
* furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
* all copies of the Software and its Copyright notices. In addition publicly
* documented acknowledgment must be given that this software has been used if no
* source code of this software is made available publicly. This includes
* acknowledgments in either Copyright notices, Manuals, Publicity and Marketing
* documents or any documentation provided with any product containing this
* software. This License does not apply to any software that links to the
* libraries provided by this software (statically or dynamically), but only to
* the software provided.
*
* Please see the OLD-COPYING.PLAIN for a plain-english explanation of this notice
* and it's intent.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
* THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER
* IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
* CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
*/
#ifndef EINA_STRINGSHARE_H_
#define EINA_STRINGSHARE_H_
#include
#include "eina_types.h"
/**
* @page eina_stringshare_example_01_page
* @dontinclude eina_stringshare_01.c
*
* Like all examples we start by including Eina:
* @skip #include
* @line #include
*
* Here we declare some variables and initialize eina:
* @until eina_init
*
* We start the substantive part of the example by showing how to make a part
* of a string shared and how to get the length of a shared string:
* @until stringshare_strlen
* As we add shared strings we also need to delete them when done using them:
* @line del
*
* There are many ways of creating shared strings including an equivalent to
* sprintf:
* @until del
*
* An equivalent to snprintf:
* @until printf
*
* But the simplest way of creating a shared string is through
* eina_stringshare_add():
* @until printf
*
* Sometimes you already have a pointer to a shared string and want to use it,
* so to make sure the provider of the pointer won't free it while you're using
* it you can increase the shared string's ref count:
* @until printf
*
* Whenever you have a pointer to a shared string and would like to change it's
* value you should use eina_stringshare_replace():
* @until printf
* @warning @b Don't use eina_stringshare_del() followed by
* eina_share_common_add(), under some circunstances you might end up deleting
* a shared string some other piece of code is using.
*
* We created str but haven't deleted it yet, and while we called
* eina_stringshare_del() on str2, we created it and then increased the ref
* count so it's still alive:
* @until str2
*
* You can see the full source code @ref eina_stringshare_example_01 "here".
*/
/**
* @page eina_stringshare_example_01
* @include eina_stringshare_01.c
* @example eina_stringshare_01.c
*/
/**
* @addtogroup Eina_Stringshare_Group Stringshare
*
* These functions allow you to store a single copy of a string, and use in
* multiple places throughout your program.
*
* This is a method to reduce the number of duplicated strings kept in
* memory. It's pretty common for the same strings to be dynamically
* allocated repeatedly between applications and libraries, especially in
* circumstances where you could have multiple copies of a structure that
* allocates the string. So rather than duplicating and freeing these
* strings, you request a read-only pointer to an existing string and
* only incur the overhead of a hash lookup.
*
* It sounds like micro-optimizing, but profiling has shown this can have
* a significant impact as you scale the number of copies up. It improves
* string creation/destruction speed, reduces memory use and decreases
* memory fragmentation, so a win all-around.
*
* The following diagram gives an idea of what happens as you create strings
* with eina_stringshare_add():
*
* @image html eina_stringshare.png
* @image latex eina_stringshare.eps height=\textheight
*
* For more information, see @ref eina_stringshare_example_01_page
* "this example".
*/
/**
* @addtogroup Eina_Data_Types_Group Data Types
*
* @{
*/
/**
* @defgroup Eina_Stringshare_Group Stringshare
*
* @{
*/
/**
* @brief Retrieve an instance of a string for use in a program.
*
* @param str The string to retrieve an instance of.
* @param slen The string size (<= strlen(str)).
* @return A pointer to an instance of the string on success.
* @c NULL on failure.
*
* This function retrieves an instance of @p str. If @p str is
* @c NULL, then @c NULL is returned. If @p str is already stored, it
* is just returned and its reference counter is increased. Otherwise
* a duplicated string of @p str is returned.
*
* This function does not check string size, but uses the
* exact given size. This can be used to share_common part of a larger
* buffer or substring.
*
* @see eina_share_common_add()
*/
EAPI const char *eina_stringshare_add_length(const char *str, unsigned int slen) EINA_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
/**
* @brief Retrieve an instance of a string for use in a program.
*
* @param str The NULL terminated string to retrieve an instance of.
* @return A pointer to an instance of the string on success.
* @c NULL on failure.
*
* This function retrieves an instance of @p str. If @p str is
* @c NULL, then @c NULL is returned. If @p str is already stored, it
* is just returned and its reference counter is increased. Otherwise
* a duplicated string of @p str is returned.
*
* The string @p str must be NULL terminated ('@\0') and its full
* length will be used. To use part of the string or non-null
* terminated, use eina_stringshare_add_length() instead.
*
* @see eina_stringshare_add_length()
*/
EAPI const char *eina_stringshare_add(const char *str) EINA_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
/**
* @brief Retrieve an instance of a string for use in a program
* from a format string.
*
* @param fmt The NULL terminated format string to retrieve an instance of.
* @return A pointer to an instance of the string on success.
* @c NULL on failure.
*
* This function retrieves an instance of @p fmt. If @p fmt is
* @c NULL, then @c NULL is returned. If @p fmt is already stored, it
* is just returned and its reference counter is increased. Otherwise
* a duplicated string is returned.
*
* The format string @p fmt must be NULL terminated ('@\0') and its full
* length will be used. To use part of the format string or non-null
* terminated, use eina_stringshare_nprintf() instead.
*
* @see eina_stringshare_nprintf()
*/
EAPI const char *eina_stringshare_printf(const char *fmt, ...) EINA_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT EINA_PRINTF(1, 2);
/**
* @brief Retrieve an instance of a string for use in a program
* from a format string.
*
* @param fmt The NULL terminated format string to retrieve an instance of.
* @param args The va_args for @p fmt
* @return A pointer to an instance of the string on success.
* @c NULL on failure.
*
* This function retrieves an instance of @p fmt with @p args. If @p fmt is
* @c NULL, then @c NULL is returned. If @p fmt with @p args is already stored, it
* is just returned and its reference counter is increased. Otherwise
* a duplicated string is returned.
*
* The format string @p fmt must be NULL terminated ('@\0') and its full
* length will be used. To use part of the format string or non-null
* terminated, use eina_stringshare_nprintf() instead.
*
* @see eina_stringshare_nprintf()
*/
EAPI const char *eina_stringshare_vprintf(const char *fmt, va_list args) EINA_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
/**
* @brief Retrieve an instance of a string for use in a program
* from a format string with size limitation.
* @param len The length of the format string to use
* @param fmt The format string to retrieve an instance of.
* @return A pointer to an instance of the string on success.
* @c NULL on failure.
*
* This function retrieves an instance of @p fmt limited by @p len. If @p fmt is
* @c NULL or @p len is < 1, then @c NULL is returned. If the resulting string
* is already stored, it is returned and its reference counter is increased.
* Otherwise a duplicated string is returned.
*
* @p len length of the format string will be used. To use the
* entire format string, use eina_stringshare_printf() instead.
*
* @see eina_stringshare_printf()
*/
EAPI const char *eina_stringshare_nprintf(unsigned int len, const char *fmt, ...) EINA_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT EINA_PRINTF(2, 3);
/**
* Increment references of the given shared string.
*
* @param str The shared string.
* @return A pointer to an instance of the string on success.
* @c NULL on failure.
*
* This is similar to eina_share_common_add(), but it's faster since it will
* avoid lookups if possible, but on the down side it requires the parameter
* to be shared string. In other words, it must be the return of a previous
* call to one of the stringshare functions.
*
* There is no unref since this is the work of eina_share_common_del().
*/
EAPI const char *eina_stringshare_ref(const char *str);
/**
* @brief Note that the given string has lost an instance.
*
* @param str string The given string.
*
* This function decreases the reference counter associated to @p str
* if it exists. If that counter reaches 0, the memory associated to
* @p str is freed. If @p str is NULL, the function returns
* immediately.
*
* Note that if the given pointer is not shared or NULL, bad things
* will happen, likely a segmentation fault.
*/
EAPI void eina_stringshare_del(const char *str);
/**
* @brief Note that the given string @b must be shared.
*
* @param str the shared string to know the length. It is safe to
* give NULL, in that case -1 is returned.
* @return The length of a shared string.
*
* This function is a cheap way to known the length of a shared
* string. Note that if the given pointer is not shared, bad
* things will happen, likely a segmentation fault. If in doubt, try
* strlen().
*/
EAPI int eina_stringshare_strlen(const char *str) EINA_PURE EINA_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
/**
* @brief Dump the contents of the share_common.
*
* This function dumps all strings in the share_common to stdout with a
* DDD: prefix per line and a memory usage summary.
*/
EAPI void eina_stringshare_dump(void);
static inline Eina_Bool eina_stringshare_replace(const char **p_str, const char *news) EINA_ARG_NONNULL(1);
static inline Eina_Bool eina_stringshare_replace_length(const char **p_str, const char *news, unsigned int slen) EINA_ARG_NONNULL(1);
#include "eina_inline_stringshare.x"
/**
* @}
*/
/**
* @}
*/
#endif /* EINA_STRINGSHARE_H_ */