/* dquote_inline.h * * Copyright (C) 2015 by Larry Wall and others * * You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public * License or the Artistic License, as specified in the README file. */ #ifndef DQUOTE_INLINE_H /* Guard against nested #inclusion */ #define DQUOTE_INLINE_H /* - regcurly - a little FSA that accepts {\d+,?\d*} Pulled from reg.c. */ PERL_STATIC_INLINE I32 S_regcurly(const char *s) { PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_REGCURLY; if (*s++ != '{') return FALSE; if (!isDIGIT(*s)) return FALSE; while (isDIGIT(*s)) s++; if (*s == ',') { s++; while (isDIGIT(*s)) s++; } return *s == '}'; } PERL_STATIC_INLINE bool S_grok_bslash_x(pTHX_ char **s, UV *uv, const char** error_msg, const bool output_warning, const bool strict, const bool silence_non_portable, const bool UTF) { /* Documentation to be supplied when interface nailed down finally * This returns FALSE if there is an error which the caller need not recover * from; otherwise TRUE. * It guarantees that the returned codepoint, *uv, when expressed as * utf8 bytes, would fit within the skipped "\x{...}" bytes. * * On input: * s is the address of a pointer to a NULL terminated string that begins * with 'x', and the previous character was a backslash. At exit, *s * will be advanced to the byte just after those absorbed by this * function. Hence the caller can continue parsing from there. In * the case of an error, this routine has generally positioned *s to * point just to the right of the first bad spot, so that a message * that has a "<--" to mark the spot will be correctly positioned. * uv points to a UV that will hold the output value, valid only if the * return from the function is TRUE * error_msg is a pointer that will be set to an internal buffer giving an * error message upon failure (the return is FALSE). Untouched if * function succeeds * output_warning says whether to output any warning messages, or suppress * them * strict is true if anything out of the ordinary should cause this to * fail instead of warn or be silent. For example, it requires * exactly 2 digits following the \x (when there are no braces). * 3 digits could be a mistake, so is forbidden in this mode. * silence_non_portable is true if to suppress warnings about the code * point returned being too large to fit on all platforms. * UTF is true iff the string *s is encoded in UTF-8. */ char* e; STRLEN numbers_len; I32 flags = PERL_SCAN_DISALLOW_PREFIX; #ifdef DEBUGGING char *start = *s - 1; assert(*start == '\\'); #endif PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_GROK_BSLASH_X; assert(**s == 'x'); (*s)++; if (strict || ! output_warning) { flags |= PERL_SCAN_SILENT_ILLDIGIT; } if (**s != '{') { STRLEN len = (strict) ? 3 : 2; *uv = grok_hex(*s, &len, &flags, NULL); *s += len; if (strict && len != 2) { if (len < 2) { *s += (UTF) ? UTF8SKIP(*s) : 1; *error_msg = "Non-hex character"; } else { *error_msg = "Use \\x{...} for more than two hex characters"; } return FALSE; } return TRUE; } e = strchr(*s, '}'); if (!e) { (*s)++; /* Move past the '{' */ while (isXDIGIT(**s)) { /* Position beyond the legal digits */ (*s)++; } /* XXX The corresponding message above for \o is just '\\o{'; other * messages for other constructs include the '}', so are inconsistent. */ *error_msg = "Missing right brace on \\x{}"; return FALSE; } (*s)++; /* Point to expected first digit (could be first byte of utf8 sequence if not a digit) */ numbers_len = e - *s; if (numbers_len == 0) { if (strict) { (*s)++; /* Move past the } */ *error_msg = "Number with no digits"; return FALSE; } *s = e + 1; *uv = 0; return TRUE; } flags |= PERL_SCAN_ALLOW_UNDERSCORES; if (silence_non_portable) { flags |= PERL_SCAN_SILENT_NON_PORTABLE; } *uv = grok_hex(*s, &numbers_len, &flags, NULL); /* Note that if has non-hex, will ignore everything starting with that up * to the '}' */ if (strict && numbers_len != (STRLEN) (e - *s)) { *s += numbers_len; *s += (UTF) ? UTF8SKIP(*s) : 1; *error_msg = "Non-hex character"; return FALSE; } /* Return past the '}' */ *s = e + 1; return TRUE; } #endif /* DQUOTE_INLINE_H */