curl/lib/bufq.h
2023-05-23 11:08:51 +02:00

272 lines
10 KiB
C

#ifndef HEADER_CURL_BUFQ_H
#define HEADER_CURL_BUFQ_H
/***************************************************************************
* _ _ ____ _
* Project ___| | | | _ \| |
* / __| | | | |_) | |
* | (__| |_| | _ <| |___
* \___|\___/|_| \_\_____|
*
* Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, <daniel@haxx.se>, et al.
*
* This software is licensed as described in the file COPYING, which
* you should have received as part of this distribution. The terms
* are also available at https://curl.se/docs/copyright.html.
*
* You may opt to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute and/or sell
* copies of the Software, and permit persons to whom the Software is
* furnished to do so, under the terms of the COPYING file.
*
* This software is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
* KIND, either express or implied.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: curl
*
***************************************************************************/
#include "curl_setup.h"
#include <curl/curl.h>
/**
* A chunk of bytes for reading and writing.
* The size is fixed a creation with read and write offset
* for where unread content is.
*/
struct buf_chunk {
struct buf_chunk *next; /* to keep it in a list */
size_t dlen; /* the amount of allocated x.data[] */
size_t r_offset; /* first unread bytes */
size_t w_offset; /* one after last written byte */
union {
unsigned char data[1]; /* the buffer for `dlen` bytes */
void *dummy; /* alignment */
} x;
};
/**
* A pool for providing/keeping a number of chunks of the same size
*
* The same pool can be shared by many `bufq` instances. However, a pool
* is not thread safe. All bufqs using it are supposed to operate in the
* same thread.
*/
struct bufc_pool {
struct buf_chunk *spare; /* list of available spare chunks */
size_t chunk_size; /* the size of chunks in this pool */
size_t spare_count; /* current number of spare chunks in list */
size_t spare_max; /* max number of spares to keep */
};
void Curl_bufcp_init(struct bufc_pool *pool,
size_t chunk_size, size_t spare_max);
void Curl_bufcp_free(struct bufc_pool *pool);
/**
* A queue of byte chunks for reading and writing.
* Reading is done from `head`, writing is done to `tail`.
*
* `bufq`s can be empty or full or neither. Its `len` is the number
* of bytes that can be read. For an empty bufq, `len` will be 0.
*
* By default, a bufq can hold up to `max_chunks * chunk_size` number
* of bytes. When `max_chunks` are used (in the `head` list) and the
* `tail` chunk is full, the bufq will report that it is full.
*
* On a full bufq, `len` may be less than the maximum number of bytes,
* e.g. when the head chunk is partially read. `len` may also become
* larger than the max when option `BUFQ_OPT_SOFT_LIMIT` is used.
*
* By default, writing to a full bufq will return (-1, CURLE_AGAIN). Same
* as reading from an empty bufq.
* With `BUFQ_OPT_SOFT_LIMIT` set, a bufq will allow writing becond this
* limit and use more than `max_chunks`. However it will report that it
* is full nevertheless. This is provided for situation where writes
* preferably never fail (except for memory exhaustion).
*
* By default and without a pool, a bufq will keep chunks that read
* read empty in its `spare` list. Option `BUFQ_OPT_NO_SPARES` will
* disable that and free chunks once they become empty.
*
* When providing a pool to a bufq, all chunk creation and spare handling
* will be delegated to that pool.
*/
struct bufq {
struct buf_chunk *head; /* chunk with bytes to read from */
struct buf_chunk *tail; /* chunk to write to */
struct buf_chunk *spare; /* list of free chunks, unless `pool` */
struct bufc_pool *pool; /* optional pool for free chunks */
size_t chunk_count; /* current number of chunks in `head+spare` */
size_t max_chunks; /* max `head` chunks to use */
size_t chunk_size; /* size of chunks to manage */
int opts; /* options for handling queue, see below */
};
/**
* Default behaviour: chunk limit is "hard", meaning attempts to write
* more bytes than can be hold in `max_chunks` is refused and will return
* -1, CURLE_AGAIN. */
#define BUFQ_OPT_NONE (0)
/**
* Make `max_chunks` a "soft" limit. A bufq will report that it is "full"
* when `max_chunks` are used, but allows writing beyond this limit.
*/
#define BUFQ_OPT_SOFT_LIMIT (1 << 0)
/**
* Do not keep spare chunks.
*/
#define BUFQ_OPT_NO_SPARES (1 << 1)
/**
* Initialize a buffer queue that can hold up to `max_chunks` buffers
* each of size `chunk_size`. The bufq will not allow writing of
* more bytes than can be held in `max_chunks`.
*/
void Curl_bufq_init(struct bufq *q, size_t chunk_size, size_t max_chunks);
/**
* Initialize a buffer queue that can hold up to `max_chunks` buffers
* each of size `chunk_size` with the given options. See `BUFQ_OPT_*`.
*/
void Curl_bufq_init2(struct bufq *q, size_t chunk_size,
size_t max_chunks, int opts);
void Curl_bufq_initp(struct bufq *q, struct bufc_pool *pool,
size_t max_chunks, int opts);
/**
* Reset the buffer queue to be empty. Will keep any allocated buffer
* chunks around.
*/
void Curl_bufq_reset(struct bufq *q);
/**
* Free all resources held by the buffer queue.
*/
void Curl_bufq_free(struct bufq *q);
/**
* Return the total amount of data in the queue.
*/
size_t Curl_bufq_len(const struct bufq *q);
/**
* Return the total amount of free space in the queue.
* The returned length is the number of bytes that can
* be expected to be written successfully to the bufq,
* providing no memory allocations fail.
*/
size_t Curl_bufq_space(const struct bufq *q);
/**
* Returns TRUE iff there is no data in the buffer queue.
*/
bool Curl_bufq_is_empty(const struct bufq *q);
/**
* Returns TRUE iff there is no space left in the buffer queue.
*/
bool Curl_bufq_is_full(const struct bufq *q);
/**
* Write buf to the end of the buffer queue. The buf is copied
* and the amount of copied bytes is returned.
* A return code of -1 indicates an error, setting `err` to the
* cause. An err of CURLE_AGAIN is returned if the buffer queue is full.
*/
ssize_t Curl_bufq_write(struct bufq *q,
const unsigned char *buf, size_t len,
CURLcode *err);
/**
* Read buf from the start of the buffer queue. The buf is copied
* and the amount of copied bytes is returned.
* A return code of -1 indicates an error, setting `err` to the
* cause. An err of CURLE_AGAIN is returned if the buffer queue is empty.
*/
ssize_t Curl_bufq_read(struct bufq *q, unsigned char *buf, size_t len,
CURLcode *err);
/**
* Peek at the head chunk in the buffer queue. Returns a pointer to
* the chunk buf (at the current offset) and its length. Does not
* modify the buffer queue.
* Returns TRUE iff bytes are available. Sets `pbuf` to NULL and `plen`
* to 0 when no bytes are available.
* Repeated calls return the same information until the buffer queue
* is modified, see `Curl_bufq_skip()``
*/
bool Curl_bufq_peek(struct bufq *q,
const unsigned char **pbuf, size_t *plen);
bool Curl_bufq_peek_at(struct bufq *q, size_t offset,
const unsigned char **pbuf, size_t *plen);
/**
* Tell the buffer queue to discard `amount` buf bytes at the head
* of the queue. Skipping more buf than is currently buffered will
* just empty the queue.
*/
void Curl_bufq_skip(struct bufq *q, size_t amount);
/**
* Same as `skip` but shift tail data to the start afterwards,
* so that further writes will find room in tail.
*/
void Curl_bufq_skip_and_shift(struct bufq *q, size_t amount);
typedef ssize_t Curl_bufq_writer(void *writer_ctx,
const unsigned char *buf, size_t len,
CURLcode *err);
/**
* Passes the chunks in the buffer queue to the writer and returns
* the amount of buf written. A writer may return -1 and CURLE_AGAIN
* to indicate blocking at which point the queue will stop and return
* the amount of buf passed so far.
* -1 is returned on any other errors reported by the writer.
* Note that in case of a -1 chunks may have been written and
* the buffer queue will have different length than before.
*/
ssize_t Curl_bufq_pass(struct bufq *q, Curl_bufq_writer *writer,
void *writer_ctx, CURLcode *err);
typedef ssize_t Curl_bufq_reader(void *reader_ctx,
unsigned char *buf, size_t len,
CURLcode *err);
/**
* Read date and append it to the end of the buffer queue until the
* reader returns blocking or the queue is full. A reader returns
* -1 and CURLE_AGAIN to indicate blocking.
* Returns the total amount of buf read (may be 0) or -1 on other
* reader errors.
* Note that in case of a -1 chunks may have been read and
* the buffer queue will have different length than before.
*/
ssize_t Curl_bufq_slurp(struct bufq *q, Curl_bufq_reader *reader,
void *reader_ctx, CURLcode *err);
/**
* Read *once* up to `max_len` bytes and append it to the buffer.
* if `max_len` is 0, no limit is imposed besides the chunk space.
* Returns the total amount of buf read (may be 0) or -1 on other
* reader errors.
*/
ssize_t Curl_bufq_sipn(struct bufq *q, size_t max_len,
Curl_bufq_reader *reader, void *reader_ctx,
CURLcode *err);
/**
* Write buf to the end of the buffer queue.
* Will write bufq content or passed `buf` directly using the `writer`
* callback when it sees fit. 'buf' might get passed directly
* on or is placed into the buffer, depending on `len` and current
* amount buffered, chunk size, etc.
*/
ssize_t Curl_bufq_write_pass(struct bufq *q,
const unsigned char *buf, size_t len,
Curl_bufq_writer *writer, void *writer_ctx,
CURLcode *err);
#endif /* HEADER_CURL_BUFQ_H */