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author | Matt A. Tobin <mattatobin@localhost.localdomain> | 2018-02-02 04:16:08 -0500 |
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committer | Matt A. Tobin <mattatobin@localhost.localdomain> | 2018-02-02 04:16:08 -0500 |
commit | 5f8de423f190bbb79a62f804151bc24824fa32d8 (patch) | |
tree | 10027f336435511475e392454359edea8e25895d /security/sandbox/chromium/base/strings/string_util.h | |
parent | 49ee0794b5d912db1f95dce6eb52d781dc210db5 (diff) | |
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Add m-esr52 at 52.6.0
Diffstat (limited to 'security/sandbox/chromium/base/strings/string_util.h')
-rw-r--r-- | security/sandbox/chromium/base/strings/string_util.h | 461 |
1 files changed, 461 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/security/sandbox/chromium/base/strings/string_util.h b/security/sandbox/chromium/base/strings/string_util.h new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e369f294d --- /dev/null +++ b/security/sandbox/chromium/base/strings/string_util.h @@ -0,0 +1,461 @@ +// Copyright 2013 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. +// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be +// found in the LICENSE file. +// +// This file defines utility functions for working with strings. + +#ifndef BASE_STRINGS_STRING_UTIL_H_ +#define BASE_STRINGS_STRING_UTIL_H_ + +#include <ctype.h> +#include <stdarg.h> // va_list +#include <stddef.h> +#include <stdint.h> + +#include <string> +#include <vector> + +#include "base/base_export.h" +#include "base/compiler_specific.h" +#include "base/strings/string16.h" +#include "base/strings/string_piece.h" // For implicit conversions. +#include "build/build_config.h" + +namespace base { + +// C standard-library functions that aren't cross-platform are provided as +// "base::...", and their prototypes are listed below. These functions are +// then implemented as inline calls to the platform-specific equivalents in the +// platform-specific headers. + +// Wrapper for vsnprintf that always null-terminates and always returns the +// number of characters that would be in an untruncated formatted +// string, even when truncation occurs. +int vsnprintf(char* buffer, size_t size, const char* format, va_list arguments) + PRINTF_FORMAT(3, 0); + +// Some of these implementations need to be inlined. + +// We separate the declaration from the implementation of this inline +// function just so the PRINTF_FORMAT works. +inline int snprintf(char* buffer, + size_t size, + _Printf_format_string_ const char* format, + ...) PRINTF_FORMAT(3, 4); +inline int snprintf(char* buffer, + size_t size, + _Printf_format_string_ const char* format, + ...) { + va_list arguments; + va_start(arguments, format); + int result = vsnprintf(buffer, size, format, arguments); + va_end(arguments); + return result; +} + +// BSD-style safe and consistent string copy functions. +// Copies |src| to |dst|, where |dst_size| is the total allocated size of |dst|. +// Copies at most |dst_size|-1 characters, and always NULL terminates |dst|, as +// long as |dst_size| is not 0. Returns the length of |src| in characters. +// If the return value is >= dst_size, then the output was truncated. +// NOTE: All sizes are in number of characters, NOT in bytes. +BASE_EXPORT size_t strlcpy(char* dst, const char* src, size_t dst_size); +BASE_EXPORT size_t wcslcpy(wchar_t* dst, const wchar_t* src, size_t dst_size); + +// Scan a wprintf format string to determine whether it's portable across a +// variety of systems. This function only checks that the conversion +// specifiers used by the format string are supported and have the same meaning +// on a variety of systems. It doesn't check for other errors that might occur +// within a format string. +// +// Nonportable conversion specifiers for wprintf are: +// - 's' and 'c' without an 'l' length modifier. %s and %c operate on char +// data on all systems except Windows, which treat them as wchar_t data. +// Use %ls and %lc for wchar_t data instead. +// - 'S' and 'C', which operate on wchar_t data on all systems except Windows, +// which treat them as char data. Use %ls and %lc for wchar_t data +// instead. +// - 'F', which is not identified by Windows wprintf documentation. +// - 'D', 'O', and 'U', which are deprecated and not available on all systems. +// Use %ld, %lo, and %lu instead. +// +// Note that there is no portable conversion specifier for char data when +// working with wprintf. +// +// This function is intended to be called from base::vswprintf. +BASE_EXPORT bool IsWprintfFormatPortable(const wchar_t* format); + +// ASCII-specific tolower. The standard library's tolower is locale sensitive, +// so we don't want to use it here. +inline char ToLowerASCII(char c) { + return (c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z') ? (c + ('a' - 'A')) : c; +} +inline char16 ToLowerASCII(char16 c) { + return (c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z') ? (c + ('a' - 'A')) : c; +} + +// ASCII-specific toupper. The standard library's toupper is locale sensitive, +// so we don't want to use it here. +inline char ToUpperASCII(char c) { + return (c >= 'a' && c <= 'z') ? (c + ('A' - 'a')) : c; +} +inline char16 ToUpperASCII(char16 c) { + return (c >= 'a' && c <= 'z') ? (c + ('A' - 'a')) : c; +} + +// Converts the given string to it's ASCII-lowercase equivalent. +BASE_EXPORT std::string ToLowerASCII(StringPiece str); +BASE_EXPORT string16 ToLowerASCII(StringPiece16 str); + +// Converts the given string to it's ASCII-uppercase equivalent. +BASE_EXPORT std::string ToUpperASCII(StringPiece str); +BASE_EXPORT string16 ToUpperASCII(StringPiece16 str); + +// Functor for case-insensitive ASCII comparisons for STL algorithms like +// std::search. +// +// Note that a full Unicode version of this functor is not possible to write +// because case mappings might change the number of characters, depend on +// context (combining accents), and require handling UTF-16. If you need +// proper Unicode support, use base::i18n::ToLower/FoldCase and then just +// use a normal operator== on the result. +template<typename Char> struct CaseInsensitiveCompareASCII { + public: + bool operator()(Char x, Char y) const { + return ToLowerASCII(x) == ToLowerASCII(y); + } +}; + +// Like strcasecmp for case-insensitive ASCII characters only. Returns: +// -1 (a < b) +// 0 (a == b) +// 1 (a > b) +// (unlike strcasecmp which can return values greater or less than 1/-1). For +// full Unicode support, use base::i18n::ToLower or base::i18h::FoldCase +// and then just call the normal string operators on the result. +BASE_EXPORT int CompareCaseInsensitiveASCII(StringPiece a, StringPiece b); +BASE_EXPORT int CompareCaseInsensitiveASCII(StringPiece16 a, StringPiece16 b); + +// Equality for ASCII case-insensitive comparisons. For full Unicode support, +// use base::i18n::ToLower or base::i18h::FoldCase and then compare with either +// == or !=. +BASE_EXPORT bool EqualsCaseInsensitiveASCII(StringPiece a, StringPiece b); +BASE_EXPORT bool EqualsCaseInsensitiveASCII(StringPiece16 a, StringPiece16 b); + +// These threadsafe functions return references to globally unique empty +// strings. +// +// It is likely faster to construct a new empty string object (just a few +// instructions to set the length to 0) than to get the empty string singleton +// returned by these functions (which requires threadsafe singleton access). +// +// Therefore, DO NOT USE THESE AS A GENERAL-PURPOSE SUBSTITUTE FOR DEFAULT +// CONSTRUCTORS. There is only one case where you should use these: functions +// which need to return a string by reference (e.g. as a class member +// accessor), and don't have an empty string to use (e.g. in an error case). +// These should not be used as initializers, function arguments, or return +// values for functions which return by value or outparam. +BASE_EXPORT const std::string& EmptyString(); +BASE_EXPORT const string16& EmptyString16(); + +// Contains the set of characters representing whitespace in the corresponding +// encoding. Null-terminated. The ASCII versions are the whitespaces as defined +// by HTML5, and don't include control characters. +BASE_EXPORT extern const wchar_t kWhitespaceWide[]; // Includes Unicode. +BASE_EXPORT extern const char16 kWhitespaceUTF16[]; // Includes Unicode. +BASE_EXPORT extern const char kWhitespaceASCII[]; +BASE_EXPORT extern const char16 kWhitespaceASCIIAs16[]; // No unicode. + +// Null-terminated string representing the UTF-8 byte order mark. +BASE_EXPORT extern const char kUtf8ByteOrderMark[]; + +// Removes characters in |remove_chars| from anywhere in |input|. Returns true +// if any characters were removed. |remove_chars| must be null-terminated. +// NOTE: Safe to use the same variable for both |input| and |output|. +BASE_EXPORT bool RemoveChars(const string16& input, + const StringPiece16& remove_chars, + string16* output); +BASE_EXPORT bool RemoveChars(const std::string& input, + const StringPiece& remove_chars, + std::string* output); + +// Replaces characters in |replace_chars| from anywhere in |input| with +// |replace_with|. Each character in |replace_chars| will be replaced with +// the |replace_with| string. Returns true if any characters were replaced. +// |replace_chars| must be null-terminated. +// NOTE: Safe to use the same variable for both |input| and |output|. +BASE_EXPORT bool ReplaceChars(const string16& input, + const StringPiece16& replace_chars, + const string16& replace_with, + string16* output); +BASE_EXPORT bool ReplaceChars(const std::string& input, + const StringPiece& replace_chars, + const std::string& replace_with, + std::string* output); + +enum TrimPositions { + TRIM_NONE = 0, + TRIM_LEADING = 1 << 0, + TRIM_TRAILING = 1 << 1, + TRIM_ALL = TRIM_LEADING | TRIM_TRAILING, +}; + +// Removes characters in |trim_chars| from the beginning and end of |input|. +// The 8-bit version only works on 8-bit characters, not UTF-8. +// +// It is safe to use the same variable for both |input| and |output| (this is +// the normal usage to trim in-place). +BASE_EXPORT bool TrimString(const string16& input, + StringPiece16 trim_chars, + string16* output); +BASE_EXPORT bool TrimString(const std::string& input, + StringPiece trim_chars, + std::string* output); + +// StringPiece versions of the above. The returned pieces refer to the original +// buffer. +BASE_EXPORT StringPiece16 TrimString(StringPiece16 input, + const StringPiece16& trim_chars, + TrimPositions positions); +BASE_EXPORT StringPiece TrimString(StringPiece input, + const StringPiece& trim_chars, + TrimPositions positions); + +// Truncates a string to the nearest UTF-8 character that will leave +// the string less than or equal to the specified byte size. +BASE_EXPORT void TruncateUTF8ToByteSize(const std::string& input, + const size_t byte_size, + std::string* output); + +// Trims any whitespace from either end of the input string. +// +// The StringPiece versions return a substring referencing the input buffer. +// The ASCII versions look only for ASCII whitespace. +// +// The std::string versions return where whitespace was found. +// NOTE: Safe to use the same variable for both input and output. +BASE_EXPORT TrimPositions TrimWhitespace(const string16& input, + TrimPositions positions, + string16* output); +BASE_EXPORT StringPiece16 TrimWhitespace(StringPiece16 input, + TrimPositions positions); +BASE_EXPORT TrimPositions TrimWhitespaceASCII(const std::string& input, + TrimPositions positions, + std::string* output); +BASE_EXPORT StringPiece TrimWhitespaceASCII(StringPiece input, + TrimPositions positions); + +// Searches for CR or LF characters. Removes all contiguous whitespace +// strings that contain them. This is useful when trying to deal with text +// copied from terminals. +// Returns |text|, with the following three transformations: +// (1) Leading and trailing whitespace is trimmed. +// (2) If |trim_sequences_with_line_breaks| is true, any other whitespace +// sequences containing a CR or LF are trimmed. +// (3) All other whitespace sequences are converted to single spaces. +BASE_EXPORT string16 CollapseWhitespace( + const string16& text, + bool trim_sequences_with_line_breaks); +BASE_EXPORT std::string CollapseWhitespaceASCII( + const std::string& text, + bool trim_sequences_with_line_breaks); + +// Returns true if |input| is empty or contains only characters found in +// |characters|. +BASE_EXPORT bool ContainsOnlyChars(const StringPiece& input, + const StringPiece& characters); +BASE_EXPORT bool ContainsOnlyChars(const StringPiece16& input, + const StringPiece16& characters); + +// Returns true if the specified string matches the criteria. How can a wide +// string be 8-bit or UTF8? It contains only characters that are < 256 (in the +// first case) or characters that use only 8-bits and whose 8-bit +// representation looks like a UTF-8 string (the second case). +// +// Note that IsStringUTF8 checks not only if the input is structurally +// valid but also if it doesn't contain any non-character codepoint +// (e.g. U+FFFE). It's done on purpose because all the existing callers want +// to have the maximum 'discriminating' power from other encodings. If +// there's a use case for just checking the structural validity, we have to +// add a new function for that. +// +// IsStringASCII assumes the input is likely all ASCII, and does not leave early +// if it is not the case. +BASE_EXPORT bool IsStringUTF8(const StringPiece& str); +BASE_EXPORT bool IsStringASCII(const StringPiece& str); +BASE_EXPORT bool IsStringASCII(const StringPiece16& str); +// A convenience adaptor for WebStrings, as they don't convert into +// StringPieces directly. +BASE_EXPORT bool IsStringASCII(const string16& str); +#if defined(WCHAR_T_IS_UTF32) +BASE_EXPORT bool IsStringASCII(const std::wstring& str); +#endif + +// Compare the lower-case form of the given string against the given +// previously-lower-cased ASCII string (typically a constant). +BASE_EXPORT bool LowerCaseEqualsASCII(StringPiece str, + StringPiece lowecase_ascii); +BASE_EXPORT bool LowerCaseEqualsASCII(StringPiece16 str, + StringPiece lowecase_ascii); + +// Performs a case-sensitive string compare of the given 16-bit string against +// the given 8-bit ASCII string (typically a constant). The behavior is +// undefined if the |ascii| string is not ASCII. +BASE_EXPORT bool EqualsASCII(StringPiece16 str, StringPiece ascii); + +// Indicates case sensitivity of comparisons. Only ASCII case insensitivity +// is supported. Full Unicode case-insensitive conversions would need to go in +// base/i18n so it can use ICU. +// +// If you need to do Unicode-aware case-insensitive StartsWith/EndsWith, it's +// best to call base::i18n::ToLower() or base::i18n::FoldCase() (see +// base/i18n/case_conversion.h for usage advice) on the arguments, and then use +// the results to a case-sensitive comparison. +enum class CompareCase { + SENSITIVE, + INSENSITIVE_ASCII, +}; + +BASE_EXPORT bool StartsWith(StringPiece str, + StringPiece search_for, + CompareCase case_sensitivity); +BASE_EXPORT bool StartsWith(StringPiece16 str, + StringPiece16 search_for, + CompareCase case_sensitivity); +BASE_EXPORT bool EndsWith(StringPiece str, + StringPiece search_for, + CompareCase case_sensitivity); +BASE_EXPORT bool EndsWith(StringPiece16 str, + StringPiece16 search_for, + CompareCase case_sensitivity); + +// Determines the type of ASCII character, independent of locale (the C +// library versions will change based on locale). +template <typename Char> +inline bool IsAsciiWhitespace(Char c) { + return c == ' ' || c == '\r' || c == '\n' || c == '\t'; +} +template <typename Char> +inline bool IsAsciiAlpha(Char c) { + return ((c >= 'A') && (c <= 'Z')) || ((c >= 'a') && (c <= 'z')); +} +template <typename Char> +inline bool IsAsciiDigit(Char c) { + return c >= '0' && c <= '9'; +} + +template <typename Char> +inline bool IsHexDigit(Char c) { + return (c >= '0' && c <= '9') || + (c >= 'A' && c <= 'F') || + (c >= 'a' && c <= 'f'); +} + +// Returns the integer corresponding to the given hex character. For example: +// '4' -> 4 +// 'a' -> 10 +// 'B' -> 11 +// Assumes the input is a valid hex character. DCHECKs in debug builds if not. +BASE_EXPORT char HexDigitToInt(wchar_t c); + +// Returns true if it's a Unicode whitespace character. +BASE_EXPORT bool IsUnicodeWhitespace(wchar_t c); + +// Return a byte string in human-readable format with a unit suffix. Not +// appropriate for use in any UI; use of FormatBytes and friends in ui/base is +// highly recommended instead. TODO(avi): Figure out how to get callers to use +// FormatBytes instead; remove this. +BASE_EXPORT string16 FormatBytesUnlocalized(int64_t bytes); + +// Starting at |start_offset| (usually 0), replace the first instance of +// |find_this| with |replace_with|. +BASE_EXPORT void ReplaceFirstSubstringAfterOffset( + base::string16* str, + size_t start_offset, + StringPiece16 find_this, + StringPiece16 replace_with); +BASE_EXPORT void ReplaceFirstSubstringAfterOffset( + std::string* str, + size_t start_offset, + StringPiece find_this, + StringPiece replace_with); + +// Starting at |start_offset| (usually 0), look through |str| and replace all +// instances of |find_this| with |replace_with|. +// +// This does entire substrings; use std::replace in <algorithm> for single +// characters, for example: +// std::replace(str.begin(), str.end(), 'a', 'b'); +BASE_EXPORT void ReplaceSubstringsAfterOffset( + string16* str, + size_t start_offset, + StringPiece16 find_this, + StringPiece16 replace_with); +BASE_EXPORT void ReplaceSubstringsAfterOffset( + std::string* str, + size_t start_offset, + StringPiece find_this, + StringPiece replace_with); + +// Reserves enough memory in |str| to accommodate |length_with_null| characters, +// sets the size of |str| to |length_with_null - 1| characters, and returns a +// pointer to the underlying contiguous array of characters. This is typically +// used when calling a function that writes results into a character array, but +// the caller wants the data to be managed by a string-like object. It is +// convenient in that is can be used inline in the call, and fast in that it +// avoids copying the results of the call from a char* into a string. +// +// |length_with_null| must be at least 2, since otherwise the underlying string +// would have size 0, and trying to access &((*str)[0]) in that case can result +// in a number of problems. +// +// Internally, this takes linear time because the resize() call 0-fills the +// underlying array for potentially all +// (|length_with_null - 1| * sizeof(string_type::value_type)) bytes. Ideally we +// could avoid this aspect of the resize() call, as we expect the caller to +// immediately write over this memory, but there is no other way to set the size +// of the string, and not doing that will mean people who access |str| rather +// than str.c_str() will get back a string of whatever size |str| had on entry +// to this function (probably 0). +BASE_EXPORT char* WriteInto(std::string* str, size_t length_with_null); +BASE_EXPORT char16* WriteInto(string16* str, size_t length_with_null); +#ifndef OS_WIN +BASE_EXPORT wchar_t* WriteInto(std::wstring* str, size_t length_with_null); +#endif + +// Does the opposite of SplitString(). +BASE_EXPORT std::string JoinString(const std::vector<std::string>& parts, + StringPiece separator); +BASE_EXPORT string16 JoinString(const std::vector<string16>& parts, + StringPiece16 separator); + +// Replace $1-$2-$3..$9 in the format string with |a|-|b|-|c|..|i| respectively. +// Additionally, any number of consecutive '$' characters is replaced by that +// number less one. Eg $$->$, $$$->$$, etc. The offsets parameter here can be +// NULL. This only allows you to use up to nine replacements. +BASE_EXPORT string16 ReplaceStringPlaceholders( + const string16& format_string, + const std::vector<string16>& subst, + std::vector<size_t>* offsets); + +BASE_EXPORT std::string ReplaceStringPlaceholders( + const StringPiece& format_string, + const std::vector<std::string>& subst, + std::vector<size_t>* offsets); + +// Single-string shortcut for ReplaceStringHolders. |offset| may be NULL. +BASE_EXPORT string16 ReplaceStringPlaceholders(const string16& format_string, + const string16& a, + size_t* offset); + +} // namespace base + +#if defined(OS_WIN) +#include "base/strings/string_util_win.h" +#elif defined(OS_POSIX) +#include "base/strings/string_util_posix.h" +#else +#error Define string operations appropriately for your platform +#endif + +#endif // BASE_STRINGS_STRING_UTIL_H_ |