.\"- .\" Copyright (c) 2000 Poul Henning Kamp and Dag-Erling Coïdan Smørgrav .\" All rights reserved. .\" .\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without .\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions .\" are met: .\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. .\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the .\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. .\" .\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND .\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE .\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE .\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE .\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL .\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS .\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) .\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT .\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY .\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF .\" SUCH DAMAGE. .\" .\" $FreeBSD$ .\" .Dd January 28, 2001 .Dt SBUF 9 .Os .Sh NAME .Nm sbuf_new , .Nm sbuf_clear , .Nm sbuf_setpos , .Nm sbuf_bcat , .Nm sbuf_bcopyin , .Nm sbuf_bcpy , .Nm sbuf_cat , .Nm sbuf_copyin , .Nm sbuf_cpy , .Nm sbuf_printf , .Nm sbuf_putc , .Nm sbuf_overflowed , .Nm sbuf_finish , .Nm sbuf_data , .Nm sbuf_len , .Nm sbuf_delete .Nd safe string formatting .Sh SYNOPSIS .Fd #include .Fd #include .Ft struct sbuf *s .Fn sbuf_new "struct sbuf *s" "char *buf" "int length" "int flags" .Ft void .Fn sbuf_clear "struct sbuf *s" .Ft int .Fn sbuf_setpos "struct sbuf *s" "int pos" .Ft int .Fn sbuf_bcat "struct sbuf *s" "const char *str" "size_t len" .Ft int .Fn sbuf_bcopyin "struct sbuf *s" "const void *uaddr" "size_t len" .Ft int .Fn sbuf_bcpy "struct sbuf *s" "const char *str" "size_t len" .Ft int .Fn sbuf_cat "struct sbuf *s" "const char *str" .Ft int .Fn sbuf_copyin "struct sbuf *s" "const void *uaddr" "size_t len" .Ft int .Fn sbuf_cpy "struct sbuf *s" "const char *str" .Ft int .Fn sbuf_printf "struct sbuf *s" "const char *fmt" "..." .Ft int .Fn sbuf_putc "struct sbuf *s" "int c" .Ft int .Fn sbuf_overflowed "struct sbuf *s" .Ft void .Fn sbuf_finish "struct sbuf *s" .Ft char * .Fn sbuf_data "struct sbuf *s" .Ft int .Fn sbuf_len "struct sbuf *s" .Ft void .Fn sbuf_delete "struct sbuf *s" .Sh DESCRIPTION The .Nm sbuf family of functions allows one to safely allocate, construct and release bounded null-terminated strings in kernel space. Instead of arrays of characters, these functions operate on structures called .Fa sbufs , defined in .Aq Pa sys/sbuf.h . .Pp The .Fn sbuf_new function initializes the .Fa sbuf pointed to by its first argument. If that pointer is .Dv NULL , .Fn sbuf_new allocates a .Vt struct sbuf using .Xr malloc 9 . The .Fa buf argument is a pointer to a buffer in which to store the actual string; if it is .Dv NULL , .Fn sbuf_new will allocate one using .Xr malloc 9 . The .Fa length is the intended size of the storage buffer. The fourth argument, .Fa flags , is currently unused and should always be set to zero. .Pp Note that if .Fa buf is not .Dv NULL , it must point to an array of at least .Fa length characters. .Pp The .Fn sbuf_clear function invalidates the contents of the .Fa sbuf and resets its position to zero. .Pp The .Fn sbuf_setpos function sets the .Fa sbuf Ns 's current position to .Fa pos , which is a value between zero and one less than the size of the storage buffer. .Pp The .Fn sbuf_bcat function appends the first .Fa len bytes from the byte string .Fa str to the .Fa sbuf . .Pp The .Fn sbuf_bcopyin function copies .Fa len bytes from the specified userland address into the .Fa sbuf . .Pp The .Fn sbuf_bcpy function replaces the contents of the .Fa sbuf with the first .Fa len bytes from the byte string .Fa str . .Pp The .Fn sbuf_cat function appends the NUL-terminated string .Fa str to the .Fa sbuf at the current position. .Pp The .Fn sbuf_copyin function copies a NUL-terminated string from the specified userland address into the .Fa sbuf . If the .Fa len argument is non-zero, no more than .Fa len characters (not counting the terminating NUL) are copied; otherwise the entire string, or as much of it as can fit in the .Fa sbuf , is copied. .Pp The .Fn sbuf_cpy function replaces the contents of the .Fa sbuf with those of the NUL-terminated string .Fa str . This is equivalent to calling .Fn sbuf_cat with a fresh .Fa sbuf or one which position has been reset to zero with .Fn sbuf_clear or .Fn sbuf_setpos . .Pp The .Fn sbuf_printf function formats its arguments according to the format string pointed to by .Fa fmt and appends the resulting string to the .Fa sbuf at the current position. .Pp The .Fn sbuf_putc function appends the character .Fa c to the .Fa sbuf at the current position. .Pp The .Fn sbuf_overflowed function returns a non-zero value if the .Fa sbuf overflowed. .Pp The .Fn sbuf_finish function null-terminates the .Fa sbuf and marks it as finished, which means that it may no longer be modified using .Fn sbuf_setpos , .Fn sbuf_cat , .Fn sbuf_cpy , .Fn sbuf_printf or .Fn sbuf_putc . .Pp The .Fn sbuf_data and .Fn sbuf_len functions return the actual string and its length, respectively; .Fn sbuf_data only works on a finished .Fa sbuf . .Pp Finally, the .Fn sbuf_delete function clears the .Fa sbuf and frees its storage buffer if it was allocated by .Fn sbuf_new . .Sh NOTES If an operation caused an .Fa sbuf to overflow, most subsequent operations on it will fail until the .Fa sbuf is finished using .Fn sbuf_finish or reset using .Fn sbuf_clear , or its position is reset to a value between 0 and one less than the size of its storage buffer using .Fn sbuf_setpos , or it is reinitialized to a sufficiently short string using .Fn sbuf_cpy . .Sh RETURN VALUES .Fn sbuf_new returns .Dv NULL if it failed to allocate a storage buffer, and a pointer to the new .Fa sbuf otherwise. .Pp .Fn sbuf_setpos returns \-1 if .Fa pos was invalid, and zero otherwise. .Pp .Fn sbuf_cat , .Fn sbuf_cpy , .Fn sbuf_printf , and .Fn sbuf_putc all return \-1 if the buffer overflowed, and zero otherwise. .Pp .Fn sbuf_overflowed returns a non-zero value if the buffer overflowed, and zero otherwise. .Pp .Fn sbuf_data and .Fn sbuf_len return .Dv NULL and \-1, respectively, if the buffer overflowed. .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr printf 3 , .Xr strcat 3 , .Xr strcpy 3 , .Xr copyin 9 , .Xr copyinstr 9 .Sh HISTORY The .Nm sbuf family of functions first appeared in .Fx 5.0 . .Sh AUTHORS .An -nosplit The .Nm sbuf family of functions was designed by .An Poul-Henning Kamp Aq phk@FreeBSD.org and implemented by .An Dag-Erling Co\(:idan Sm\(/orgrav Aq des@FreeBSD.org . Additional improvements were suggested by .An Justin T. Gibbs Aq gibbs@FreeBSD.org . .Pp This manual page was written by .An Dag-Erling Co\(:idan Sm\(/orgrav .