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230 lines
5.6 KiB
C
230 lines
5.6 KiB
C
/* $OpenLDAP$ */
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/*
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* Copyright 2002-2003 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
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* COPYING RESTRICTIONS APPLY, see COPYRIGHT file
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*/
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#include "portable.h"
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <ac/stdarg.h>
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#include <ac/string.h>
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#if !defined(HAVE_VSNPRINTF) && !defined(HAVE_EBCDIC)
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/* Write at most n characters to the buffer in str, return the
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* number of chars written or -1 if the buffer would have been
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* overflowed.
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*
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* This is portable to any POSIX-compliant system. We use pipe()
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* to create a valid file descriptor, and then fdopen() it to get
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* a valid FILE pointer. The user's buffer and size are assigned
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* to the FILE pointer using setvbuf. Then we close the read side
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* of the pipe to invalidate the descriptor.
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*
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* If the write arguments all fit into size n, the write will
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* return successfully. If the write is too large, the stdio
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* buffer will need to be flushed to the underlying file descriptor.
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* The flush will fail because it is attempting to write to a
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* broken pipe, and the write will be terminated.
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* -- hyc, 2002-07-19
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*/
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/* This emulation uses vfprintf; on OS/390 we're also emulating
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* that function so it's more efficient just to have a separate
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* version of vsnprintf there.
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*/
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#include <ac/signal.h>
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int ber_pvt_vsnprintf( char *str, size_t n, const char *fmt, va_list ap )
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{
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int fds[2], res;
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FILE *f;
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RETSIGTYPE (*sig)();
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if (pipe( fds )) return -1;
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f = fdopen( fds[1], "w" );
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if ( !f ) {
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close( fds[1] );
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close( fds[0] );
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return -1;
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}
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setvbuf( f, str, _IOFBF, n );
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sig = signal( SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN );
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close( fds[0] );
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res = vfprintf( f, fmt, ap );
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fclose( f );
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signal( SIGPIPE, sig );
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if ( res > 0 && res < n ) {
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res = vsprintf( str, fmt, ap );
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}
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return res;
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}
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#endif
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#ifndef HAVE_SNPRINTF
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int ber_pvt_snprintf( char *str, size_t n, const char *fmt, ... )
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{
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va_list ap;
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int res;
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va_start( ap, fmt );
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res = vsnprintf( str, n, fmt, ap );
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va_end( ap );
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return res;
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}
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#endif /* !HAVE_VSNPRINTF */
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#ifdef HAVE_EBCDIC
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/* stdio replacements with ASCII/EBCDIC translation for OS/390.
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* The OS/390 port depends on the CONVLIT compiler option being
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* used to force character and string literals to be compiled in
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* ISO8859-1, and the __LIBASCII cpp symbol to be defined to use the
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* OS/390 ASCII-compatibility library. This library only supplies
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* an ASCII version of sprintf, so other needed functions are
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* provided here.
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*
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* All of the internal character manipulation is done in ASCII,
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* but file I/O is EBCDIC, so we catch any stdio reading/writing
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* of files here and do the translations.
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*/
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#undef fputs
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#undef fgets
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char *ber_pvt_fgets( char *s, int n, FILE *fp )
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{
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s = (char *)fgets( s, n, fp );
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if ( s ) __etoa( s );
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return s;
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}
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int ber_pvt_fputs( const char *str, FILE *fp )
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{
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char buf[8192];
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strncpy( buf, str, sizeof(buf) );
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__atoe( buf );
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return fputs( buf, fp );
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}
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/* The __LIBASCII doesn't include a working vsprintf, so we make do
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* using just sprintf. This is a very simplistic parser that looks for
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* format strings and uses sprintf to process them one at a time.
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* Literal text is just copied straight to the destination.
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* The result is appended to the destination string. The parser
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* recognizes field-width specifiers and the 'l' qualifier; it
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* may need to be extended to recognize other qualifiers but so
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* far this seems to be enough.
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*/
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int ber_pvt_vsnprintf( char *str, size_t n, const char *fmt, va_list ap )
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{
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char *ptr, *pct, *s2, *f2, *end;
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char fm2[64];
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int len, rem;
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ptr = (char *)fmt;
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s2 = str;
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fm2[0] = '%';
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if (n)
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end = str + n;
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else
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end = NULL;
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for (pct = strchr(ptr, '%'); pct; pct = strchr(ptr, '%')) {
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len = pct-ptr;
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if (end) {
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rem = end-s2;
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if (rem < 1) return -1;
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if (rem < len) len = rem;
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}
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s2 = ber_pvt_strncopy( s2, ptr, len );
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/* Did we cheat the length above? If so, bail out */
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if (len < pct-ptr) return -1;
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for (pct++, f2 = fm2+1; isdigit(*pct);) *f2++ = *pct++;
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if (*pct == 'l') *f2++ = *pct++;
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if (*pct == '%') *s2++ = '%';
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else {
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*f2++ = *pct;
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*f2 = '\0';
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if (*pct == 's') {
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char *ss = va_arg(ap, char *);
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/* Attempt to limit sprintf output. This
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* may be thrown off if field widths were
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* specified for this string.
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*
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* If it looks like the string is too
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* long for the remaining buffer, bypass
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* sprintf and just copy what fits, then
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* quit.
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*/
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if (end && strlen(ss) > (rem=end-s2)) {
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strncpy(s2, ss, rem);
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return -1;
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} else {
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s2 += sprintf(s2, fm2, ss);
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}
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} else
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s2 += sprintf(s2, fm2, va_arg(ap, int));
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}
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ptr = pct + 1;
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}
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if (end) {
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rem = end-s2;
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if (rem > 0) {
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len = strlen(ptr);
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s2 = ber_pvt_strncopy( s2, ptr, rem );
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rem -= len;
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}
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if (rem < 0) return -1;
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} else {
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s2 = ber_pvt_strcopy( s2, ptr );
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}
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return s2 - str;
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}
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int ber_pvt_vsprintf( char *str, const char *fmt, va_list ap )
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{
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return vsnprintf( str, 0, fmt, ap );
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}
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/* The fixed buffer size here is a problem, we don't know how
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* to flush the buffer and keep printing if the msg is too big.
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* Hopefully we never try to write something bigger than this
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* in a log msg...
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*/
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int ber_pvt_vfprintf( FILE *fp, const char *fmt, va_list ap )
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{
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char buf[8192];
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int res;
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vsnprintf( buf, sizeof(buf), fmt, ap );
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__atoe( buf );
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res = fputs( buf, fp );
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if (res == EOF) res = -1;
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return res;
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}
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int ber_pvt_printf( const char *fmt, ... )
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{
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va_list ap;
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int res;
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va_start( ap, fmt );
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res = ber_pvt_vfprintf( stdout, fmt, ap );
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va_end( ap );
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return res;
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}
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int ber_pvt_fprintf( FILE *fp, const char *fmt, ... )
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{
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va_list ap;
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int res;
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va_start( ap, fmt );
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res = ber_pvt_vfprintf( fp, fmt, ap );
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va_end( ap );
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return res;
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}
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#endif
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