From 03a0958d68a25d93328f12c027f8b243a26d187b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Carl Worth Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 15:32:30 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] lib: Import getdate source from gnulib. Each of these files was copied directly from the gnulib source repository at git commit ID e961f4c04b6bbd1bf6f98c91fa0e6ae1d7a8eea9 The git repository was cloned from: git://git.sv.gnu.org/gnulib.git Each file here is made available either under the GNU GPLv2+ or the GNU GPLv3+ so all are compatible with the license of notmuch (GNU GPLv3+). The import was made with the help of the import script in this directory, which can be run again in the future to import new changes to the gnulib source. --- lib/getdate/c-ctype.c | 396 ++++++++++ lib/getdate/c-ctype.h | 295 +++++++ lib/getdate/getdate.h | 22 + lib/getdate/getdate.y | 1572 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ lib/getdate/gettime.c | 48 ++ lib/getdate/intprops.h | 83 ++ lib/getdate/timespec.h | 39 + lib/getdate/verify.h | 140 ++++ lib/getdate/xalloc-die.c | 41 + lib/getdate/xalloc.h | 281 +++++++ lib/getdate/xmalloc.c | 118 +++ 11 files changed, 3035 insertions(+) create mode 100644 lib/getdate/c-ctype.c create mode 100644 lib/getdate/c-ctype.h create mode 100644 lib/getdate/getdate.h create mode 100644 lib/getdate/getdate.y create mode 100644 lib/getdate/gettime.c create mode 100644 lib/getdate/intprops.h create mode 100644 lib/getdate/timespec.h create mode 100644 lib/getdate/verify.h create mode 100644 lib/getdate/xalloc-die.c create mode 100644 lib/getdate/xalloc.h create mode 100644 lib/getdate/xmalloc.c diff --git a/lib/getdate/c-ctype.c b/lib/getdate/c-ctype.c new file mode 100644 index 00000000..43dba866 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/c-ctype.c @@ -0,0 +1,396 @@ +/* Character handling in C locale. + + Copyright 2000-2003, 2006, 2009-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + +This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify +it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by +the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or +(at your option) any later version. + +This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the +GNU General Public License for more details. + +You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, +Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */ + +#include + +/* Specification. */ +#define NO_C_CTYPE_MACROS +#include "c-ctype.h" + +/* The function isascii is not locale dependent. Its use in EBCDIC is + questionable. */ +bool +c_isascii (int c) +{ + return (c >= 0x00 && c <= 0x7f); +} + +bool +c_isalnum (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_DIGITS \ + && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII + return ((c >= '0' && c <= '9') + || ((c & ~0x20) >= 'A' && (c & ~0x20) <= 'Z')); +#else + return ((c >= '0' && c <= '9') + || (c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z') + || (c >= 'a' && c <= 'z')); +#endif +#else + switch (c) + { + case '0': case '1': case '2': case '3': case '4': case '5': + case '6': case '7': case '8': case '9': + case 'A': case 'B': case 'C': case 'D': case 'E': case 'F': + case 'G': case 'H': case 'I': case 'J': case 'K': case 'L': + case 'M': case 'N': case 'O': case 'P': case 'Q': case 'R': + case 'S': case 'T': case 'U': case 'V': case 'W': case 'X': + case 'Y': case 'Z': + case 'a': case 'b': case 'c': case 'd': case 'e': case 'f': + case 'g': case 'h': case 'i': case 'j': case 'k': case 'l': + case 'm': case 'n': case 'o': case 'p': case 'q': case 'r': + case 's': case 't': case 'u': case 'v': case 'w': case 'x': + case 'y': case 'z': + return 1; + default: + return 0; + } +#endif +} + +bool +c_isalpha (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII + return ((c & ~0x20) >= 'A' && (c & ~0x20) <= 'Z'); +#else + return ((c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z') || (c >= 'a' && c <= 'z')); +#endif +#else + switch (c) + { + case 'A': case 'B': case 'C': case 'D': case 'E': case 'F': + case 'G': case 'H': case 'I': case 'J': case 'K': case 'L': + case 'M': case 'N': case 'O': case 'P': case 'Q': case 'R': + case 'S': case 'T': case 'U': case 'V': case 'W': case 'X': + case 'Y': case 'Z': + case 'a': case 'b': case 'c': case 'd': case 'e': case 'f': + case 'g': case 'h': case 'i': case 'j': case 'k': case 'l': + case 'm': case 'n': case 'o': case 'p': case 'q': case 'r': + case 's': case 't': case 'u': case 'v': case 'w': case 'x': + case 'y': case 'z': + return 1; + default: + return 0; + } +#endif +} + +bool +c_isblank (int c) +{ + return (c == ' ' || c == '\t'); +} + +bool +c_iscntrl (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII + return ((c & ~0x1f) == 0 || c == 0x7f); +#else + switch (c) + { + case ' ': case '!': case '"': case '#': case '$': case '%': + case '&': case '\'': case '(': case ')': case '*': case '+': + case ',': case '-': case '.': case '/': + case '0': case '1': case '2': case '3': case '4': case '5': + case '6': case '7': case '8': case '9': + case ':': case ';': case '<': case '=': case '>': case '?': + case '@': + case 'A': case 'B': case 'C': case 'D': case 'E': case 'F': + case 'G': case 'H': case 'I': case 'J': case 'K': case 'L': + case 'M': case 'N': case 'O': case 'P': case 'Q': case 'R': + case 'S': case 'T': case 'U': case 'V': case 'W': case 'X': + case 'Y': case 'Z': + case '[': case '\\': case ']': case '^': case '_': case '`': + case 'a': case 'b': case 'c': case 'd': case 'e': case 'f': + case 'g': case 'h': case 'i': case 'j': case 'k': case 'l': + case 'm': case 'n': case 'o': case 'p': case 'q': case 'r': + case 's': case 't': case 'u': case 'v': case 'w': case 'x': + case 'y': case 'z': + case '{': case '|': case '}': case '~': + return 0; + default: + return 1; + } +#endif +} + +bool +c_isdigit (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_DIGITS + return (c >= '0' && c <= '9'); +#else + switch (c) + { + case '0': case '1': case '2': case '3': case '4': case '5': + case '6': case '7': case '8': case '9': + return 1; + default: + return 0; + } +#endif +} + +bool +c_islower (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE + return (c >= 'a' && c <= 'z'); +#else + switch (c) + { + case 'a': case 'b': case 'c': case 'd': case 'e': case 'f': + case 'g': case 'h': case 'i': case 'j': case 'k': case 'l': + case 'm': case 'n': case 'o': case 'p': case 'q': case 'r': + case 's': case 't': case 'u': case 'v': case 'w': case 'x': + case 'y': case 'z': + return 1; + default: + return 0; + } +#endif +} + +bool +c_isgraph (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII + return (c >= '!' && c <= '~'); +#else + switch (c) + { + case '!': case '"': case '#': case '$': case '%': case '&': + case '\'': case '(': case ')': case '*': case '+': case ',': + case '-': case '.': case '/': + case '0': case '1': case '2': case '3': case '4': case '5': + case '6': case '7': case '8': case '9': + case ':': case ';': case '<': case '=': case '>': case '?': + case '@': + case 'A': case 'B': case 'C': case 'D': case 'E': case 'F': + case 'G': case 'H': case 'I': case 'J': case 'K': case 'L': + case 'M': case 'N': case 'O': case 'P': case 'Q': case 'R': + case 'S': case 'T': case 'U': case 'V': case 'W': case 'X': + case 'Y': case 'Z': + case '[': case '\\': case ']': case '^': case '_': case '`': + case 'a': case 'b': case 'c': case 'd': case 'e': case 'f': + case 'g': case 'h': case 'i': case 'j': case 'k': case 'l': + case 'm': case 'n': case 'o': case 'p': case 'q': case 'r': + case 's': case 't': case 'u': case 'v': case 'w': case 'x': + case 'y': case 'z': + case '{': case '|': case '}': case '~': + return 1; + default: + return 0; + } +#endif +} + +bool +c_isprint (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII + return (c >= ' ' && c <= '~'); +#else + switch (c) + { + case ' ': case '!': case '"': case '#': case '$': case '%': + case '&': case '\'': case '(': case ')': case '*': case '+': + case ',': case '-': case '.': case '/': + case '0': case '1': case '2': case '3': case '4': case '5': + case '6': case '7': case '8': case '9': + case ':': case ';': case '<': case '=': case '>': case '?': + case '@': + case 'A': case 'B': case 'C': case 'D': case 'E': case 'F': + case 'G': case 'H': case 'I': case 'J': case 'K': case 'L': + case 'M': case 'N': case 'O': case 'P': case 'Q': case 'R': + case 'S': case 'T': case 'U': case 'V': case 'W': case 'X': + case 'Y': case 'Z': + case '[': case '\\': case ']': case '^': case '_': case '`': + case 'a': case 'b': case 'c': case 'd': case 'e': case 'f': + case 'g': case 'h': case 'i': case 'j': case 'k': case 'l': + case 'm': case 'n': case 'o': case 'p': case 'q': case 'r': + case 's': case 't': case 'u': case 'v': case 'w': case 'x': + case 'y': case 'z': + case '{': case '|': case '}': case '~': + return 1; + default: + return 0; + } +#endif +} + +bool +c_ispunct (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII + return ((c >= '!' && c <= '~') + && !((c >= '0' && c <= '9') + || ((c & ~0x20) >= 'A' && (c & ~0x20) <= 'Z'))); +#else + switch (c) + { + case '!': case '"': case '#': case '$': case '%': case '&': + case '\'': case '(': case ')': case '*': case '+': case ',': + case '-': case '.': case '/': + case ':': case ';': case '<': case '=': case '>': case '?': + case '@': + case '[': case '\\': case ']': case '^': case '_': case '`': + case '{': case '|': case '}': case '~': + return 1; + default: + return 0; + } +#endif +} + +bool +c_isspace (int c) +{ + return (c == ' ' || c == '\t' + || c == '\n' || c == '\v' || c == '\f' || c == '\r'); +} + +bool +c_isupper (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE + return (c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z'); +#else + switch (c) + { + case 'A': case 'B': case 'C': case 'D': case 'E': case 'F': + case 'G': case 'H': case 'I': case 'J': case 'K': case 'L': + case 'M': case 'N': case 'O': case 'P': case 'Q': case 'R': + case 'S': case 'T': case 'U': case 'V': case 'W': case 'X': + case 'Y': case 'Z': + return 1; + default: + return 0; + } +#endif +} + +bool +c_isxdigit (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_DIGITS \ + && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII + return ((c >= '0' && c <= '9') + || ((c & ~0x20) >= 'A' && (c & ~0x20) <= 'F')); +#else + return ((c >= '0' && c <= '9') + || (c >= 'A' && c <= 'F') + || (c >= 'a' && c <= 'f')); +#endif +#else + switch (c) + { + case '0': case '1': case '2': case '3': case '4': case '5': + case '6': case '7': case '8': case '9': + case 'A': case 'B': case 'C': case 'D': case 'E': case 'F': + case 'a': case 'b': case 'c': case 'd': case 'e': case 'f': + return 1; + default: + return 0; + } +#endif +} + +int +c_tolower (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE + return (c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z' ? c - 'A' + 'a' : c); +#else + switch (c) + { + case 'A': return 'a'; + case 'B': return 'b'; + case 'C': return 'c'; + case 'D': return 'd'; + case 'E': return 'e'; + case 'F': return 'f'; + case 'G': return 'g'; + case 'H': return 'h'; + case 'I': return 'i'; + case 'J': return 'j'; + case 'K': return 'k'; + case 'L': return 'l'; + case 'M': return 'm'; + case 'N': return 'n'; + case 'O': return 'o'; + case 'P': return 'p'; + case 'Q': return 'q'; + case 'R': return 'r'; + case 'S': return 's'; + case 'T': return 't'; + case 'U': return 'u'; + case 'V': return 'v'; + case 'W': return 'w'; + case 'X': return 'x'; + case 'Y': return 'y'; + case 'Z': return 'z'; + default: return c; + } +#endif +} + +int +c_toupper (int c) +{ +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE + return (c >= 'a' && c <= 'z' ? c - 'a' + 'A' : c); +#else + switch (c) + { + case 'a': return 'A'; + case 'b': return 'B'; + case 'c': return 'C'; + case 'd': return 'D'; + case 'e': return 'E'; + case 'f': return 'F'; + case 'g': return 'G'; + case 'h': return 'H'; + case 'i': return 'I'; + case 'j': return 'J'; + case 'k': return 'K'; + case 'l': return 'L'; + case 'm': return 'M'; + case 'n': return 'N'; + case 'o': return 'O'; + case 'p': return 'P'; + case 'q': return 'Q'; + case 'r': return 'R'; + case 's': return 'S'; + case 't': return 'T'; + case 'u': return 'U'; + case 'v': return 'V'; + case 'w': return 'W'; + case 'x': return 'X'; + case 'y': return 'Y'; + case 'z': return 'Z'; + default: return c; + } +#endif +} diff --git a/lib/getdate/c-ctype.h b/lib/getdate/c-ctype.h new file mode 100644 index 00000000..6404fd40 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/c-ctype.h @@ -0,0 +1,295 @@ +/* Character handling in C locale. + + These functions work like the corresponding functions in , + except that they have the C (POSIX) locale hardwired, whereas the + functions' behaviour depends on the current locale set via + setlocale. + + Copyright (C) 2000-2003, 2006, 2008-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + +This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify +it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by +the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or +(at your option) any later version. + +This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the +GNU General Public License for more details. + +You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, +Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */ + +#ifndef C_CTYPE_H +#define C_CTYPE_H + +#include + + +#ifdef __cplusplus +extern "C" { +#endif + + +/* The functions defined in this file assume the "C" locale and a character + set without diacritics (ASCII-US or EBCDIC-US or something like that). + Even if the "C" locale on a particular system is an extension of the ASCII + character set (like on BeOS, where it is UTF-8, or on AmigaOS, where it + is ISO-8859-1), the functions in this file recognize only the ASCII + characters. */ + + +/* Check whether the ASCII optimizations apply. */ + +/* ANSI C89 (and ISO C99 5.2.1.3 too) already guarantees that + '0', '1', ..., '9' have consecutive integer values. */ +#define C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_DIGITS 1 + +#if ('A' <= 'Z') \ + && ('A' + 1 == 'B') && ('B' + 1 == 'C') && ('C' + 1 == 'D') \ + && ('D' + 1 == 'E') && ('E' + 1 == 'F') && ('F' + 1 == 'G') \ + && ('G' + 1 == 'H') && ('H' + 1 == 'I') && ('I' + 1 == 'J') \ + && ('J' + 1 == 'K') && ('K' + 1 == 'L') && ('L' + 1 == 'M') \ + && ('M' + 1 == 'N') && ('N' + 1 == 'O') && ('O' + 1 == 'P') \ + && ('P' + 1 == 'Q') && ('Q' + 1 == 'R') && ('R' + 1 == 'S') \ + && ('S' + 1 == 'T') && ('T' + 1 == 'U') && ('U' + 1 == 'V') \ + && ('V' + 1 == 'W') && ('W' + 1 == 'X') && ('X' + 1 == 'Y') \ + && ('Y' + 1 == 'Z') +#define C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE 1 +#endif + +#if ('a' <= 'z') \ + && ('a' + 1 == 'b') && ('b' + 1 == 'c') && ('c' + 1 == 'd') \ + && ('d' + 1 == 'e') && ('e' + 1 == 'f') && ('f' + 1 == 'g') \ + && ('g' + 1 == 'h') && ('h' + 1 == 'i') && ('i' + 1 == 'j') \ + && ('j' + 1 == 'k') && ('k' + 1 == 'l') && ('l' + 1 == 'm') \ + && ('m' + 1 == 'n') && ('n' + 1 == 'o') && ('o' + 1 == 'p') \ + && ('p' + 1 == 'q') && ('q' + 1 == 'r') && ('r' + 1 == 's') \ + && ('s' + 1 == 't') && ('t' + 1 == 'u') && ('u' + 1 == 'v') \ + && ('v' + 1 == 'w') && ('w' + 1 == 'x') && ('x' + 1 == 'y') \ + && ('y' + 1 == 'z') +#define C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE 1 +#endif + +#if (' ' == 32) && ('!' == 33) && ('"' == 34) && ('#' == 35) \ + && ('%' == 37) && ('&' == 38) && ('\'' == 39) && ('(' == 40) \ + && (')' == 41) && ('*' == 42) && ('+' == 43) && (',' == 44) \ + && ('-' == 45) && ('.' == 46) && ('/' == 47) && ('0' == 48) \ + && ('1' == 49) && ('2' == 50) && ('3' == 51) && ('4' == 52) \ + && ('5' == 53) && ('6' == 54) && ('7' == 55) && ('8' == 56) \ + && ('9' == 57) && (':' == 58) && (';' == 59) && ('<' == 60) \ + && ('=' == 61) && ('>' == 62) && ('?' == 63) && ('A' == 65) \ + && ('B' == 66) && ('C' == 67) && ('D' == 68) && ('E' == 69) \ + && ('F' == 70) && ('G' == 71) && ('H' == 72) && ('I' == 73) \ + && ('J' == 74) && ('K' == 75) && ('L' == 76) && ('M' == 77) \ + && ('N' == 78) && ('O' == 79) && ('P' == 80) && ('Q' == 81) \ + && ('R' == 82) && ('S' == 83) && ('T' == 84) && ('U' == 85) \ + && ('V' == 86) && ('W' == 87) && ('X' == 88) && ('Y' == 89) \ + && ('Z' == 90) && ('[' == 91) && ('\\' == 92) && (']' == 93) \ + && ('^' == 94) && ('_' == 95) && ('a' == 97) && ('b' == 98) \ + && ('c' == 99) && ('d' == 100) && ('e' == 101) && ('f' == 102) \ + && ('g' == 103) && ('h' == 104) && ('i' == 105) && ('j' == 106) \ + && ('k' == 107) && ('l' == 108) && ('m' == 109) && ('n' == 110) \ + && ('o' == 111) && ('p' == 112) && ('q' == 113) && ('r' == 114) \ + && ('s' == 115) && ('t' == 116) && ('u' == 117) && ('v' == 118) \ + && ('w' == 119) && ('x' == 120) && ('y' == 121) && ('z' == 122) \ + && ('{' == 123) && ('|' == 124) && ('}' == 125) && ('~' == 126) +/* The character set is ASCII or one of its variants or extensions, not EBCDIC. + Testing the value of '\n' and '\r' is not relevant. */ +#define C_CTYPE_ASCII 1 +#endif + + +/* Function declarations. */ + +/* Unlike the functions in , which require an argument in the range + of the 'unsigned char' type, the functions here operate on values that are + in the 'unsigned char' range or in the 'char' range. In other words, + when you have a 'char' value, you need to cast it before using it as + argument to a function: + + const char *s = ...; + if (isalpha ((unsigned char) *s)) ... + + but you don't need to cast it for the functions defined in this file: + + const char *s = ...; + if (c_isalpha (*s)) ... + */ + +extern bool c_isascii (int c); /* not locale dependent */ + +extern bool c_isalnum (int c); +extern bool c_isalpha (int c); +extern bool c_isblank (int c); +extern bool c_iscntrl (int c); +extern bool c_isdigit (int c); +extern bool c_islower (int c); +extern bool c_isgraph (int c); +extern bool c_isprint (int c); +extern bool c_ispunct (int c); +extern bool c_isspace (int c); +extern bool c_isupper (int c); +extern bool c_isxdigit (int c); + +extern int c_tolower (int c); +extern int c_toupper (int c); + + +#if defined __GNUC__ && defined __OPTIMIZE__ && !defined __OPTIMIZE_SIZE__ && !defined NO_C_CTYPE_MACROS + +/* ASCII optimizations. */ + +#undef c_isascii +#define c_isascii(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + (__c >= 0x00 && __c <= 0x7f); \ + }) + +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_DIGITS \ + && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII +#undef c_isalnum +#define c_isalnum(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + ((__c >= '0' && __c <= '9') \ + || ((__c & ~0x20) >= 'A' && (__c & ~0x20) <= 'Z')); \ + }) +#else +#undef c_isalnum +#define c_isalnum(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + ((__c >= '0' && __c <= '9') \ + || (__c >= 'A' && __c <= 'Z') \ + || (__c >= 'a' && __c <= 'z')); \ + }) +#endif +#endif + +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII +#undef c_isalpha +#define c_isalpha(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + ((__c & ~0x20) >= 'A' && (__c & ~0x20) <= 'Z'); \ + }) +#else +#undef c_isalpha +#define c_isalpha(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + ((__c >= 'A' && __c <= 'Z') || (__c >= 'a' && __c <= 'z')); \ + }) +#endif +#endif + +#undef c_isblank +#define c_isblank(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + (__c == ' ' || __c == '\t'); \ + }) + +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII +#undef c_iscntrl +#define c_iscntrl(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + ((__c & ~0x1f) == 0 || __c == 0x7f); \ + }) +#endif + +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_DIGITS +#undef c_isdigit +#define c_isdigit(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + (__c >= '0' && __c <= '9'); \ + }) +#endif + +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE +#undef c_islower +#define c_islower(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + (__c >= 'a' && __c <= 'z'); \ + }) +#endif + +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII +#undef c_isgraph +#define c_isgraph(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + (__c >= '!' && __c <= '~'); \ + }) +#endif + +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII +#undef c_isprint +#define c_isprint(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + (__c >= ' ' && __c <= '~'); \ + }) +#endif + +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII +#undef c_ispunct +#define c_ispunct(c) \ + ({ int _c = (c); \ + (c_isgraph (_c) && ! c_isalnum (_c)); \ + }) +#endif + +#undef c_isspace +#define c_isspace(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + (__c == ' ' || __c == '\t' \ + || __c == '\n' || __c == '\v' || __c == '\f' || __c == '\r'); \ + }) + +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE +#undef c_isupper +#define c_isupper(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + (__c >= 'A' && __c <= 'Z'); \ + }) +#endif + +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_DIGITS \ + && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE +#if C_CTYPE_ASCII +#undef c_isxdigit +#define c_isxdigit(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + ((__c >= '0' && __c <= '9') \ + || ((__c & ~0x20) >= 'A' && (__c & ~0x20) <= 'F')); \ + }) +#else +#undef c_isxdigit +#define c_isxdigit(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + ((__c >= '0' && __c <= '9') \ + || (__c >= 'A' && __c <= 'F') \ + || (__c >= 'a' && __c <= 'f')); \ + }) +#endif +#endif + +#if C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_UPPERCASE && C_CTYPE_CONSECUTIVE_LOWERCASE +#undef c_tolower +#define c_tolower(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + (__c >= 'A' && __c <= 'Z' ? __c - 'A' + 'a' : __c); \ + }) +#undef c_toupper +#define c_toupper(c) \ + ({ int __c = (c); \ + (__c >= 'a' && __c <= 'z' ? __c - 'a' + 'A' : __c); \ + }) +#endif + +#endif /* optimizing for speed */ + + +#ifdef __cplusplus +} +#endif + +#endif /* C_CTYPE_H */ diff --git a/lib/getdate/getdate.h b/lib/getdate/getdate.h new file mode 100644 index 00000000..22cc2c02 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/getdate.h @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +/* Parse a string into an internal time stamp. + + Copyright (C) 1995, 1997, 1998, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010 Free Software + Foundation, Inc. + + This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program. If not, see . */ + +#include +#include + +bool get_date (struct timespec *, char const *, struct timespec const *); diff --git a/lib/getdate/getdate.y b/lib/getdate/getdate.y new file mode 100644 index 00000000..445865bd --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/getdate.y @@ -0,0 +1,1572 @@ +%{ +/* Parse a string into an internal time stamp. + + Copyright (C) 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, + 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + + This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program. If not, see . */ + +/* Originally written by Steven M. Bellovin while + at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Later tweaked by + a couple of people on Usenet. Completely overhauled by Rich $alz + and Jim Berets in August, 1990. + + Modified by Paul Eggert in August 1999 to do + the right thing about local DST. Also modified by Paul Eggert + in February 2004 to support + nanosecond-resolution time stamps, and in October 2004 to support + TZ strings in dates. */ + +/* FIXME: Check for arithmetic overflow in all cases, not just + some of them. */ + +#include + +#include "getdate.h" + +#include "intprops.h" +#include "timespec.h" +#include "verify.h" + +/* There's no need to extend the stack, so there's no need to involve + alloca. */ +#define YYSTACK_USE_ALLOCA 0 + +/* Tell Bison how much stack space is needed. 20 should be plenty for + this grammar, which is not right recursive. Beware setting it too + high, since that might cause problems on machines whose + implementations have lame stack-overflow checking. */ +#define YYMAXDEPTH 20 +#define YYINITDEPTH YYMAXDEPTH + +/* Since the code of getdate.y is not included in the Emacs executable + itself, there is no need to #define static in this file. Even if + the code were included in the Emacs executable, it probably + wouldn't do any harm to #undef it here; this will only cause + problems if we try to write to a static variable, which I don't + think this code needs to do. */ +#ifdef emacs +# undef static +#endif + +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include + +#include "xalloc.h" + + +/* ISDIGIT differs from isdigit, as follows: + - Its arg may be any int or unsigned int; it need not be an unsigned char + or EOF. + - It's typically faster. + POSIX says that only '0' through '9' are digits. Prefer ISDIGIT to + isdigit unless it's important to use the locale's definition + of `digit' even when the host does not conform to POSIX. */ +#define ISDIGIT(c) ((unsigned int) (c) - '0' <= 9) + +/* Shift A right by B bits portably, by dividing A by 2**B and + truncating towards minus infinity. A and B should be free of side + effects, and B should be in the range 0 <= B <= INT_BITS - 2, where + INT_BITS is the number of useful bits in an int. GNU code can + assume that INT_BITS is at least 32. + + ISO C99 says that A >> B is implementation-defined if A < 0. Some + implementations (e.g., UNICOS 9.0 on a Cray Y-MP EL) don't shift + right in the usual way when A < 0, so SHR falls back on division if + ordinary A >> B doesn't seem to be the usual signed shift. */ +#define SHR(a, b) \ + (-1 >> 1 == -1 \ + ? (a) >> (b) \ + : (a) / (1 << (b)) - ((a) % (1 << (b)) < 0)) + +#define EPOCH_YEAR 1970 +#define TM_YEAR_BASE 1900 + +#define HOUR(x) ((x) * 60) + +/* long_time_t is a signed integer type that contains all time_t values. */ +verify (TYPE_IS_INTEGER (time_t)); +#if TIME_T_FITS_IN_LONG_INT +typedef long int long_time_t; +#else +typedef time_t long_time_t; +#endif + +/* Lots of this code assumes time_t and time_t-like values fit into + long_time_t. */ +verify (TYPE_MINIMUM (long_time_t) <= TYPE_MINIMUM (time_t) + && TYPE_MAXIMUM (time_t) <= TYPE_MAXIMUM (long_time_t)); + +/* FIXME: It also assumes that signed integer overflow silently wraps around, + but this is not true any more with recent versions of GCC 4. */ + +/* An integer value, and the number of digits in its textual + representation. */ +typedef struct +{ + bool negative; + long int value; + size_t digits; +} textint; + +/* An entry in the lexical lookup table. */ +typedef struct +{ + char const *name; + int type; + int value; +} table; + +/* Meridian: am, pm, or 24-hour style. */ +enum { MERam, MERpm, MER24 }; + +enum { BILLION = 1000000000, LOG10_BILLION = 9 }; + +/* Relative times. */ +typedef struct +{ + /* Relative year, month, day, hour, minutes, seconds, and nanoseconds. */ + long int year; + long int month; + long int day; + long int hour; + long int minutes; + long_time_t seconds; + long int ns; +} relative_time; + +#if HAVE_COMPOUND_LITERALS +# define RELATIVE_TIME_0 ((relative_time) { 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 }) +#else +static relative_time const RELATIVE_TIME_0; +#endif + +/* Information passed to and from the parser. */ +typedef struct +{ + /* The input string remaining to be parsed. */ + const char *input; + + /* N, if this is the Nth Tuesday. */ + long int day_ordinal; + + /* Day of week; Sunday is 0. */ + int day_number; + + /* tm_isdst flag for the local zone. */ + int local_isdst; + + /* Time zone, in minutes east of UTC. */ + long int time_zone; + + /* Style used for time. */ + int meridian; + + /* Gregorian year, month, day, hour, minutes, seconds, and nanoseconds. */ + textint year; + long int month; + long int day; + long int hour; + long int minutes; + struct timespec seconds; /* includes nanoseconds */ + + /* Relative year, month, day, hour, minutes, seconds, and nanoseconds. */ + relative_time rel; + + /* Presence or counts of nonterminals of various flavors parsed so far. */ + bool timespec_seen; + bool rels_seen; + size_t dates_seen; + size_t days_seen; + size_t local_zones_seen; + size_t dsts_seen; + size_t times_seen; + size_t zones_seen; + + /* Table of local time zone abbrevations, terminated by a null entry. */ + table local_time_zone_table[3]; +} parser_control; + +union YYSTYPE; +static int yylex (union YYSTYPE *, parser_control *); +static int yyerror (parser_control const *, char const *); +static long int time_zone_hhmm (parser_control *, textint, long int); + +/* Extract into *PC any date and time info from a string of digits + of the form e.g., YYYYMMDD, YYMMDD, HHMM, HH (and sometimes YYY, + YYYY, ...). */ +static void +digits_to_date_time (parser_control *pc, textint text_int) +{ + if (pc->dates_seen && ! pc->year.digits + && ! pc->rels_seen && (pc->times_seen || 2 < text_int.digits)) + pc->year = text_int; + else + { + if (4 < text_int.digits) + { + pc->dates_seen++; + pc->day = text_int.value % 100; + pc->month = (text_int.value / 100) % 100; + pc->year.value = text_int.value / 10000; + pc->year.digits = text_int.digits - 4; + } + else + { + pc->times_seen++; + if (text_int.digits <= 2) + { + pc->hour = text_int.value; + pc->minutes = 0; + } + else + { + pc->hour = text_int.value / 100; + pc->minutes = text_int.value % 100; + } + pc->seconds.tv_sec = 0; + pc->seconds.tv_nsec = 0; + pc->meridian = MER24; + } + } +} + +/* Increment PC->rel by FACTOR * REL (FACTOR is 1 or -1). */ +static void +apply_relative_time (parser_control *pc, relative_time rel, int factor) +{ + pc->rel.ns += factor * rel.ns; + pc->rel.seconds += factor * rel.seconds; + pc->rel.minutes += factor * rel.minutes; + pc->rel.hour += factor * rel.hour; + pc->rel.day += factor * rel.day; + pc->rel.month += factor * rel.month; + pc->rel.year += factor * rel.year; + pc->rels_seen = true; +} + +/* Set PC-> hour, minutes, seconds and nanoseconds members from arguments. */ +static void +set_hhmmss (parser_control *pc, long int hour, long int minutes, + time_t sec, long int nsec) +{ + pc->hour = hour; + pc->minutes = minutes; + pc->seconds.tv_sec = sec; + pc->seconds.tv_nsec = nsec; +} + +%} + +/* We want a reentrant parser, even if the TZ manipulation and the calls to + localtime and gmtime are not reentrant. */ +%pure-parser +%parse-param { parser_control *pc } +%lex-param { parser_control *pc } + +/* This grammar has 20 shift/reduce conflicts. */ +%expect 20 + +%union +{ + long int intval; + textint textintval; + struct timespec timespec; + relative_time rel; +} + +%token tAGO tDST + +%token tYEAR_UNIT tMONTH_UNIT tHOUR_UNIT tMINUTE_UNIT tSEC_UNIT +%token tDAY_UNIT tDAY_SHIFT + +%token tDAY tDAYZONE tLOCAL_ZONE tMERIDIAN +%token tMONTH tORDINAL tZONE + +%token tSNUMBER tUNUMBER +%token tSDECIMAL_NUMBER tUDECIMAL_NUMBER + +%type o_colon_minutes o_merid +%type seconds signed_seconds unsigned_seconds + +%type relunit relunit_snumber dayshift + +%% + +spec: + timespec + | items + ; + +timespec: + '@' seconds + { + pc->seconds = $2; + pc->timespec_seen = true; + } + ; + +items: + /* empty */ + | items item + ; + +item: + time + { pc->times_seen++; } + | local_zone + { pc->local_zones_seen++; } + | zone + { pc->zones_seen++; } + | date + { pc->dates_seen++; } + | day + { pc->days_seen++; } + | rel + | number + | hybrid + ; + +time: + tUNUMBER tMERIDIAN + { + set_hhmmss (pc, $1.value, 0, 0, 0); + pc->meridian = $2; + } + | tUNUMBER ':' tUNUMBER o_merid + { + set_hhmmss (pc, $1.value, $3.value, 0, 0); + pc->meridian = $4; + } + | tUNUMBER ':' tUNUMBER tSNUMBER o_colon_minutes + { + set_hhmmss (pc, $1.value, $3.value, 0, 0); + pc->meridian = MER24; + pc->zones_seen++; + pc->time_zone = time_zone_hhmm (pc, $4, $5); + } + | tUNUMBER ':' tUNUMBER ':' unsigned_seconds o_merid + { + set_hhmmss (pc, $1.value, $3.value, $5.tv_sec, $5.tv_nsec); + pc->meridian = $6; + } + | tUNUMBER ':' tUNUMBER ':' unsigned_seconds tSNUMBER o_colon_minutes + { + set_hhmmss (pc, $1.value, $3.value, $5.tv_sec, $5.tv_nsec); + pc->meridian = MER24; + pc->zones_seen++; + pc->time_zone = time_zone_hhmm (pc, $6, $7); + } + ; + +local_zone: + tLOCAL_ZONE + { + pc->local_isdst = $1; + pc->dsts_seen += (0 < $1); + } + | tLOCAL_ZONE tDST + { + pc->local_isdst = 1; + pc->dsts_seen += (0 < $1) + 1; + } + ; + +zone: + tZONE + { pc->time_zone = $1; } + | tZONE relunit_snumber + { pc->time_zone = $1; + apply_relative_time (pc, $2, 1); } + | tZONE tSNUMBER o_colon_minutes + { pc->time_zone = $1 + time_zone_hhmm (pc, $2, $3); } + | tDAYZONE + { pc->time_zone = $1 + 60; } + | tZONE tDST + { pc->time_zone = $1 + 60; } + ; + +day: + tDAY + { + pc->day_ordinal = 0; + pc->day_number = $1; + } + | tDAY ',' + { + pc->day_ordinal = 0; + pc->day_number = $1; + } + | tORDINAL tDAY + { + pc->day_ordinal = $1; + pc->day_number = $2; + } + | tUNUMBER tDAY + { + pc->day_ordinal = $1.value; + pc->day_number = $2; + } + ; + +date: + tUNUMBER '/' tUNUMBER + { + pc->month = $1.value; + pc->day = $3.value; + } + | tUNUMBER '/' tUNUMBER '/' tUNUMBER + { + /* Interpret as YYYY/MM/DD if the first value has 4 or more digits, + otherwise as MM/DD/YY. + The goal in recognizing YYYY/MM/DD is solely to support legacy + machine-generated dates like those in an RCS log listing. If + you want portability, use the ISO 8601 format. */ + if (4 <= $1.digits) + { + pc->year = $1; + pc->month = $3.value; + pc->day = $5.value; + } + else + { + pc->month = $1.value; + pc->day = $3.value; + pc->year = $5; + } + } + | tUNUMBER tSNUMBER tSNUMBER + { + /* ISO 8601 format. YYYY-MM-DD. */ + pc->year = $1; + pc->month = -$2.value; + pc->day = -$3.value; + } + | tUNUMBER tMONTH tSNUMBER + { + /* e.g. 17-JUN-1992. */ + pc->day = $1.value; + pc->month = $2; + pc->year.value = -$3.value; + pc->year.digits = $3.digits; + } + | tMONTH tSNUMBER tSNUMBER + { + /* e.g. JUN-17-1992. */ + pc->month = $1; + pc->day = -$2.value; + pc->year.value = -$3.value; + pc->year.digits = $3.digits; + } + | tMONTH tUNUMBER + { + pc->month = $1; + pc->day = $2.value; + } + | tMONTH tUNUMBER ',' tUNUMBER + { + pc->month = $1; + pc->day = $2.value; + pc->year = $4; + } + | tUNUMBER tMONTH + { + pc->day = $1.value; + pc->month = $2; + } + | tUNUMBER tMONTH tUNUMBER + { + pc->day = $1.value; + pc->month = $2; + pc->year = $3; + } + ; + +rel: + relunit tAGO + { apply_relative_time (pc, $1, -1); } + | relunit + { apply_relative_time (pc, $1, 1); } + | dayshift + { apply_relative_time (pc, $1, 1); } + ; + +relunit: + tORDINAL tYEAR_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.year = $1; } + | tUNUMBER tYEAR_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.year = $1.value; } + | tYEAR_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.year = 1; } + | tORDINAL tMONTH_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.month = $1; } + | tUNUMBER tMONTH_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.month = $1.value; } + | tMONTH_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.month = 1; } + | tORDINAL tDAY_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.day = $1 * $2; } + | tUNUMBER tDAY_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.day = $1.value * $2; } + | tDAY_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.day = $1; } + | tORDINAL tHOUR_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.hour = $1; } + | tUNUMBER tHOUR_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.hour = $1.value; } + | tHOUR_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.hour = 1; } + | tORDINAL tMINUTE_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.minutes = $1; } + | tUNUMBER tMINUTE_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.minutes = $1.value; } + | tMINUTE_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.minutes = 1; } + | tORDINAL tSEC_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.seconds = $1; } + | tUNUMBER tSEC_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.seconds = $1.value; } + | tSDECIMAL_NUMBER tSEC_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.seconds = $1.tv_sec; $$.ns = $1.tv_nsec; } + | tUDECIMAL_NUMBER tSEC_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.seconds = $1.tv_sec; $$.ns = $1.tv_nsec; } + | tSEC_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.seconds = 1; } + | relunit_snumber + ; + +relunit_snumber: + tSNUMBER tYEAR_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.year = $1.value; } + | tSNUMBER tMONTH_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.month = $1.value; } + | tSNUMBER tDAY_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.day = $1.value * $2; } + | tSNUMBER tHOUR_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.hour = $1.value; } + | tSNUMBER tMINUTE_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.minutes = $1.value; } + | tSNUMBER tSEC_UNIT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.seconds = $1.value; } + ; + +dayshift: + tDAY_SHIFT + { $$ = RELATIVE_TIME_0; $$.day = $1; } + ; + +seconds: signed_seconds | unsigned_seconds; + +signed_seconds: + tSDECIMAL_NUMBER + | tSNUMBER + { $$.tv_sec = $1.value; $$.tv_nsec = 0; } + ; + +unsigned_seconds: + tUDECIMAL_NUMBER + | tUNUMBER + { $$.tv_sec = $1.value; $$.tv_nsec = 0; } + ; + +number: + tUNUMBER + { digits_to_date_time (pc, $1); } + ; + +hybrid: + tUNUMBER relunit_snumber + { + /* Hybrid all-digit and relative offset, so that we accept e.g., + "YYYYMMDD +N days" as well as "YYYYMMDD N days". */ + digits_to_date_time (pc, $1); + apply_relative_time (pc, $2, 1); + } + ; + +o_colon_minutes: + /* empty */ + { $$ = -1; } + | ':' tUNUMBER + { $$ = $2.value; } + ; + +o_merid: + /* empty */ + { $$ = MER24; } + | tMERIDIAN + { $$ = $1; } + ; + +%% + +static table const meridian_table[] = +{ + { "AM", tMERIDIAN, MERam }, + { "A.M.", tMERIDIAN, MERam }, + { "PM", tMERIDIAN, MERpm }, + { "P.M.", tMERIDIAN, MERpm }, + { NULL, 0, 0 } +}; + +static table const dst_table[] = +{ + { "DST", tDST, 0 } +}; + +static table const month_and_day_table[] = +{ + { "JANUARY", tMONTH, 1 }, + { "FEBRUARY", tMONTH, 2 }, + { "MARCH", tMONTH, 3 }, + { "APRIL", tMONTH, 4 }, + { "MAY", tMONTH, 5 }, + { "JUNE", tMONTH, 6 }, + { "JULY", tMONTH, 7 }, + { "AUGUST", tMONTH, 8 }, + { "SEPTEMBER",tMONTH, 9 }, + { "SEPT", tMONTH, 9 }, + { "OCTOBER", tMONTH, 10 }, + { "NOVEMBER", tMONTH, 11 }, + { "DECEMBER", tMONTH, 12 }, + { "SUNDAY", tDAY, 0 }, + { "MONDAY", tDAY, 1 }, + { "TUESDAY", tDAY, 2 }, + { "TUES", tDAY, 2 }, + { "WEDNESDAY",tDAY, 3 }, + { "WEDNES", tDAY, 3 }, + { "THURSDAY", tDAY, 4 }, + { "THUR", tDAY, 4 }, + { "THURS", tDAY, 4 }, + { "FRIDAY", tDAY, 5 }, + { "SATURDAY", tDAY, 6 }, + { NULL, 0, 0 } +}; + +static table const time_units_table[] = +{ + { "YEAR", tYEAR_UNIT, 1 }, + { "MONTH", tMONTH_UNIT, 1 }, + { "FORTNIGHT",tDAY_UNIT, 14 }, + { "WEEK", tDAY_UNIT, 7 }, + { "DAY", tDAY_UNIT, 1 }, + { "HOUR", tHOUR_UNIT, 1 }, + { "MINUTE", tMINUTE_UNIT, 1 }, + { "MIN", tMINUTE_UNIT, 1 }, + { "SECOND", tSEC_UNIT, 1 }, + { "SEC", tSEC_UNIT, 1 }, + { NULL, 0, 0 } +}; + +/* Assorted relative-time words. */ +static table const relative_time_table[] = +{ + { "TOMORROW", tDAY_SHIFT, 1 }, + { "YESTERDAY",tDAY_SHIFT, -1 }, + { "TODAY", tDAY_SHIFT, 0 }, + { "NOW", tDAY_SHIFT, 0 }, + { "LAST", tORDINAL, -1 }, + { "THIS", tORDINAL, 0 }, + { "NEXT", tORDINAL, 1 }, + { "FIRST", tORDINAL, 1 }, +/*{ "SECOND", tORDINAL, 2 }, */ + { "THIRD", tORDINAL, 3 }, + { "FOURTH", tORDINAL, 4 }, + { "FIFTH", tORDINAL, 5 }, + { "SIXTH", tORDINAL, 6 }, + { "SEVENTH", tORDINAL, 7 }, + { "EIGHTH", tORDINAL, 8 }, + { "NINTH", tORDINAL, 9 }, + { "TENTH", tORDINAL, 10 }, + { "ELEVENTH", tORDINAL, 11 }, + { "TWELFTH", tORDINAL, 12 }, + { "AGO", tAGO, 1 }, + { NULL, 0, 0 } +}; + +/* The universal time zone table. These labels can be used even for + time stamps that would not otherwise be valid, e.g., GMT time + stamps in London during summer. */ +static table const universal_time_zone_table[] = +{ + { "GMT", tZONE, HOUR ( 0) }, /* Greenwich Mean */ + { "UT", tZONE, HOUR ( 0) }, /* Universal (Coordinated) */ + { "UTC", tZONE, HOUR ( 0) }, + { NULL, 0, 0 } +}; + +/* The time zone table. This table is necessarily incomplete, as time + zone abbreviations are ambiguous; e.g. Australians interpret "EST" + as Eastern time in Australia, not as US Eastern Standard Time. + You cannot rely on getdate to handle arbitrary time zone + abbreviations; use numeric abbreviations like `-0500' instead. */ +static table const time_zone_table[] = +{ + { "WET", tZONE, HOUR ( 0) }, /* Western European */ + { "WEST", tDAYZONE, HOUR ( 0) }, /* Western European Summer */ + { "BST", tDAYZONE, HOUR ( 0) }, /* British Summer */ + { "ART", tZONE, -HOUR ( 3) }, /* Argentina */ + { "BRT", tZONE, -HOUR ( 3) }, /* Brazil */ + { "BRST", tDAYZONE, -HOUR ( 3) }, /* Brazil Summer */ + { "NST", tZONE, -(HOUR ( 3) + 30) }, /* Newfoundland Standard */ + { "NDT", tDAYZONE,-(HOUR ( 3) + 30) }, /* Newfoundland Daylight */ + { "AST", tZONE, -HOUR ( 4) }, /* Atlantic Standard */ + { "ADT", tDAYZONE, -HOUR ( 4) }, /* Atlantic Daylight */ + { "CLT", tZONE, -HOUR ( 4) }, /* Chile */ + { "CLST", tDAYZONE, -HOUR ( 4) }, /* Chile Summer */ + { "EST", tZONE, -HOUR ( 5) }, /* Eastern Standard */ + { "EDT", tDAYZONE, -HOUR ( 5) }, /* Eastern Daylight */ + { "CST", tZONE, -HOUR ( 6) }, /* Central Standard */ + { "CDT", tDAYZONE, -HOUR ( 6) }, /* Central Daylight */ + { "MST", tZONE, -HOUR ( 7) }, /* Mountain Standard */ + { "MDT", tDAYZONE, -HOUR ( 7) }, /* Mountain Daylight */ + { "PST", tZONE, -HOUR ( 8) }, /* Pacific Standard */ + { "PDT", tDAYZONE, -HOUR ( 8) }, /* Pacific Daylight */ + { "AKST", tZONE, -HOUR ( 9) }, /* Alaska Standard */ + { "AKDT", tDAYZONE, -HOUR ( 9) }, /* Alaska Daylight */ + { "HST", tZONE, -HOUR (10) }, /* Hawaii Standard */ + { "HAST", tZONE, -HOUR (10) }, /* Hawaii-Aleutian Standard */ + { "HADT", tDAYZONE, -HOUR (10) }, /* Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight */ + { "SST", tZONE, -HOUR (12) }, /* Samoa Standard */ + { "WAT", tZONE, HOUR ( 1) }, /* West Africa */ + { "CET", tZONE, HOUR ( 1) }, /* Central European */ + { "CEST", tDAYZONE, HOUR ( 1) }, /* Central European Summer */ + { "MET", tZONE, HOUR ( 1) }, /* Middle European */ + { "MEZ", tZONE, HOUR ( 1) }, /* Middle European */ + { "MEST", tDAYZONE, HOUR ( 1) }, /* Middle European Summer */ + { "MESZ", tDAYZONE, HOUR ( 1) }, /* Middle European Summer */ + { "EET", tZONE, HOUR ( 2) }, /* Eastern European */ + { "EEST", tDAYZONE, HOUR ( 2) }, /* Eastern European Summer */ + { "CAT", tZONE, HOUR ( 2) }, /* Central Africa */ + { "SAST", tZONE, HOUR ( 2) }, /* South Africa Standard */ + { "EAT", tZONE, HOUR ( 3) }, /* East Africa */ + { "MSK", tZONE, HOUR ( 3) }, /* Moscow */ + { "MSD", tDAYZONE, HOUR ( 3) }, /* Moscow Daylight */ + { "IST", tZONE, (HOUR ( 5) + 30) }, /* India Standard */ + { "SGT", tZONE, HOUR ( 8) }, /* Singapore */ + { "KST", tZONE, HOUR ( 9) }, /* Korea Standard */ + { "JST", tZONE, HOUR ( 9) }, /* Japan Standard */ + { "GST", tZONE, HOUR (10) }, /* Guam Standard */ + { "NZST", tZONE, HOUR (12) }, /* New Zealand Standard */ + { "NZDT", tDAYZONE, HOUR (12) }, /* New Zealand Daylight */ + { NULL, 0, 0 } +}; + +/* Military time zone table. */ +static table const military_table[] = +{ + { "A", tZONE, -HOUR ( 1) }, + { "B", tZONE, -HOUR ( 2) }, + { "C", tZONE, -HOUR ( 3) }, + { "D", tZONE, -HOUR ( 4) }, + { "E", tZONE, -HOUR ( 5) }, + { "F", tZONE, -HOUR ( 6) }, + { "G", tZONE, -HOUR ( 7) }, + { "H", tZONE, -HOUR ( 8) }, + { "I", tZONE, -HOUR ( 9) }, + { "K", tZONE, -HOUR (10) }, + { "L", tZONE, -HOUR (11) }, + { "M", tZONE, -HOUR (12) }, + { "N", tZONE, HOUR ( 1) }, + { "O", tZONE, HOUR ( 2) }, + { "P", tZONE, HOUR ( 3) }, + { "Q", tZONE, HOUR ( 4) }, + { "R", tZONE, HOUR ( 5) }, + { "S", tZONE, HOUR ( 6) }, + { "T", tZONE, HOUR ( 7) }, + { "U", tZONE, HOUR ( 8) }, + { "V", tZONE, HOUR ( 9) }, + { "W", tZONE, HOUR (10) }, + { "X", tZONE, HOUR (11) }, + { "Y", tZONE, HOUR (12) }, + { "Z", tZONE, HOUR ( 0) }, + { NULL, 0, 0 } +}; + + + +/* Convert a time zone expressed as HH:MM into an integer count of + minutes. If MM is negative, then S is of the form HHMM and needs + to be picked apart; otherwise, S is of the form HH. As specified in + http://www.opengroup.org/susv3xbd/xbd_chap08.html#tag_08_03, allow + only valid TZ range, and consider first two digits as hours, if no + minutes specified. */ + +static long int +time_zone_hhmm (parser_control *pc, textint s, long int mm) +{ + long int n_minutes; + + /* If the length of S is 1 or 2 and no minutes are specified, + interpret it as a number of hours. */ + if (s.digits <= 2 && mm < 0) + s.value *= 100; + + if (mm < 0) + n_minutes = (s.value / 100) * 60 + s.value % 100; + else + n_minutes = s.value * 60 + (s.negative ? -mm : mm); + + /* If the absolute number of minutes is larger than 24 hours, + arrange to reject it by incrementing pc->zones_seen. Thus, + we allow only values in the range UTC-24:00 to UTC+24:00. */ + if (24 * 60 < abs (n_minutes)) + pc->zones_seen++; + + return n_minutes; +} + +static int +to_hour (long int hours, int meridian) +{ + switch (meridian) + { + default: /* Pacify GCC. */ + case MER24: + return 0 <= hours && hours < 24 ? hours : -1; + case MERam: + return 0 < hours && hours < 12 ? hours : hours == 12 ? 0 : -1; + case MERpm: + return 0 < hours && hours < 12 ? hours + 12 : hours == 12 ? 12 : -1; + } +} + +static long int +to_year (textint textyear) +{ + long int year = textyear.value; + + if (year < 0) + year = -year; + + /* XPG4 suggests that years 00-68 map to 2000-2068, and + years 69-99 map to 1969-1999. */ + else if (textyear.digits == 2) + year += year < 69 ? 2000 : 1900; + + return year; +} + +static table const * +lookup_zone (parser_control const *pc, char const *name) +{ + table const *tp; + + for (tp = universal_time_zone_table; tp->name; tp++) + if (strcmp (name, tp->name) == 0) + return tp; + + /* Try local zone abbreviations before those in time_zone_table, as + the local ones are more likely to be right. */ + for (tp = pc->local_time_zone_table; tp->name; tp++) + if (strcmp (name, tp->name) == 0) + return tp; + + for (tp = time_zone_table; tp->name; tp++) + if (strcmp (name, tp->name) == 0) + return tp; + + return NULL; +} + +#if ! HAVE_TM_GMTOFF +/* Yield the difference between *A and *B, + measured in seconds, ignoring leap seconds. + The body of this function is taken directly from the GNU C Library; + see src/strftime.c. */ +static long int +tm_diff (struct tm const *a, struct tm const *b) +{ + /* Compute intervening leap days correctly even if year is negative. + Take care to avoid int overflow in leap day calculations. */ + int a4 = SHR (a->tm_year, 2) + SHR (TM_YEAR_BASE, 2) - ! (a->tm_year & 3); + int b4 = SHR (b->tm_year, 2) + SHR (TM_YEAR_BASE, 2) - ! (b->tm_year & 3); + int a100 = a4 / 25 - (a4 % 25 < 0); + int b100 = b4 / 25 - (b4 % 25 < 0); + int a400 = SHR (a100, 2); + int b400 = SHR (b100, 2); + int intervening_leap_days = (a4 - b4) - (a100 - b100) + (a400 - b400); + long int ayear = a->tm_year; + long int years = ayear - b->tm_year; + long int days = (365 * years + intervening_leap_days + + (a->tm_yday - b->tm_yday)); + return (60 * (60 * (24 * days + (a->tm_hour - b->tm_hour)) + + (a->tm_min - b->tm_min)) + + (a->tm_sec - b->tm_sec)); +} +#endif /* ! HAVE_TM_GMTOFF */ + +static table const * +lookup_word (parser_control const *pc, char *word) +{ + char *p; + char *q; + size_t wordlen; + table const *tp; + bool period_found; + bool abbrev; + + /* Make it uppercase. */ + for (p = word; *p; p++) + { + unsigned char ch = *p; + *p = c_toupper (ch); + } + + for (tp = meridian_table; tp->name; tp++) + if (strcmp (word, tp->name) == 0) + return tp; + + /* See if we have an abbreviation for a month. */ + wordlen = strlen (word); + abbrev = wordlen == 3 || (wordlen == 4 && word[3] == '.'); + + for (tp = month_and_day_table; tp->name; tp++) + if ((abbrev ? strncmp (word, tp->name, 3) : strcmp (word, tp->name)) == 0) + return tp; + + if ((tp = lookup_zone (pc, word))) + return tp; + + if (strcmp (word, dst_table[0].name) == 0) + return dst_table; + + for (tp = time_units_table; tp->name; tp++) + if (strcmp (word, tp->name) == 0) + return tp; + + /* Strip off any plural and try the units table again. */ + if (word[wordlen - 1] == 'S') + { + word[wordlen - 1] = '\0'; + for (tp = time_units_table; tp->name; tp++) + if (strcmp (word, tp->name) == 0) + return tp; + word[wordlen - 1] = 'S'; /* For "this" in relative_time_table. */ + } + + for (tp = relative_time_table; tp->name; tp++) + if (strcmp (word, tp->name) == 0) + return tp; + + /* Military time zones. */ + if (wordlen == 1) + for (tp = military_table; tp->name; tp++) + if (word[0] == tp->name[0]) + return tp; + + /* Drop out any periods and try the time zone table again. */ + for (period_found = false, p = q = word; (*p = *q); q++) + if (*q == '.') + period_found = true; + else + p++; + if (period_found && (tp = lookup_zone (pc, word))) + return tp; + + return NULL; +} + +static int +yylex (YYSTYPE *lvalp, parser_control *pc) +{ + unsigned char c; + size_t count; + + for (;;) + { + while (c = *pc->input, c_isspace (c)) + pc->input++; + + if (ISDIGIT (c) || c == '-' || c == '+') + { + char const *p; + int sign; + unsigned long int value; + if (c == '-' || c == '+') + { + sign = c == '-' ? -1 : 1; + while (c = *++pc->input, c_isspace (c)) + continue; + if (! ISDIGIT (c)) + /* skip the '-' sign */ + continue; + } + else + sign = 0; + p = pc->input; + for (value = 0; ; value *= 10) + { + unsigned long int value1 = value + (c - '0'); + if (value1 < value) + return '?'; + value = value1; + c = *++p; + if (! ISDIGIT (c)) + break; + if (ULONG_MAX / 10 < value) + return '?'; + } + if ((c == '.' || c == ',') && ISDIGIT (p[1])) + { + time_t s; + int ns; + int digits; + unsigned long int value1; + + /* Check for overflow when converting value to time_t. */ + if (sign < 0) + { + s = - value; + if (0 < s) + return '?'; + value1 = -s; + } + else + { + s = value; + if (s < 0) + return '?'; + value1 = s; + } + if (value != value1) + return '?'; + + /* Accumulate fraction, to ns precision. */ + p++; + ns = *p++ - '0'; + for (digits = 2; digits <= LOG10_BILLION; digits++) + { + ns *= 10; + if (ISDIGIT (*p)) + ns += *p++ - '0'; + } + + /* Skip excess digits, truncating toward -Infinity. */ + if (sign < 0) + for (; ISDIGIT (*p); p++) + if (*p != '0') + { + ns++; + break; + } + while (ISDIGIT (*p)) + p++; + + /* Adjust to the timespec convention, which is that + tv_nsec is always a positive offset even if tv_sec is + negative. */ + if (sign < 0 && ns) + { + s--; + if (! (s < 0)) + return '?'; + ns = BILLION - ns; + } + + lvalp->timespec.tv_sec = s; + lvalp->timespec.tv_nsec = ns; + pc->input = p; + return sign ? tSDECIMAL_NUMBER : tUDECIMAL_NUMBER; + } + else + { + lvalp->textintval.negative = sign < 0; + if (sign < 0) + { + lvalp->textintval.value = - value; + if (0 < lvalp->textintval.value) + return '?'; + } + else + { + lvalp->textintval.value = value; + if (lvalp->textintval.value < 0) + return '?'; + } + lvalp->textintval.digits = p - pc->input; + pc->input = p; + return sign ? tSNUMBER : tUNUMBER; + } + } + + if (c_isalpha (c)) + { + char buff[20]; + char *p = buff; + table const *tp; + + do + { + if (p < buff + sizeof buff - 1) + *p++ = c; + c = *++pc->input; + } + while (c_isalpha (c) || c == '.'); + + *p = '\0'; + tp = lookup_word (pc, buff); + if (! tp) + return '?'; + lvalp->intval = tp->value; + return tp->type; + } + + if (c != '(') + return *pc->input++; + count = 0; + do + { + c = *pc->input++; + if (c == '\0') + return c; + if (c == '(') + count++; + else if (c == ')') + count--; + } + while (count != 0); + } +} + +/* Do nothing if the parser reports an error. */ +static int +yyerror (parser_control const *pc _GL_UNUSED, + char const *s _GL_UNUSED) +{ + return 0; +} + +/* If *TM0 is the old and *TM1 is the new value of a struct tm after + passing it to mktime, return true if it's OK that mktime returned T. + It's not OK if *TM0 has out-of-range members. */ + +static bool +mktime_ok (struct tm const *tm0, struct tm const *tm1, time_t t) +{ + if (t == (time_t) -1) + { + /* Guard against falsely reporting an error when parsing a time + stamp that happens to equal (time_t) -1, on a host that + supports such a time stamp. */ + tm1 = localtime (&t); + if (!tm1) + return false; + } + + return ! ((tm0->tm_sec ^ tm1->tm_sec) + | (tm0->tm_min ^ tm1->tm_min) + | (tm0->tm_hour ^ tm1->tm_hour) + | (tm0->tm_mday ^ tm1->tm_mday) + | (tm0->tm_mon ^ tm1->tm_mon) + | (tm0->tm_year ^ tm1->tm_year)); +} + +/* A reasonable upper bound for the size of ordinary TZ strings. + Use heap allocation if TZ's length exceeds this. */ +enum { TZBUFSIZE = 100 }; + +/* Return a copy of TZ, stored in TZBUF if it fits, and heap-allocated + otherwise. */ +static char * +get_tz (char tzbuf[TZBUFSIZE]) +{ + char *tz = getenv ("TZ"); + if (tz) + { + size_t tzsize = strlen (tz) + 1; + tz = (tzsize <= TZBUFSIZE + ? memcpy (tzbuf, tz, tzsize) + : xmemdup (tz, tzsize)); + } + return tz; +} + +/* Parse a date/time string, storing the resulting time value into *RESULT. + The string itself is pointed to by P. Return true if successful. + P can be an incomplete or relative time specification; if so, use + *NOW as the basis for the returned time. */ +bool +get_date (struct timespec *result, char const *p, struct timespec const *now) +{ + time_t Start; + long int Start_ns; + struct tm const *tmp; + struct tm tm; + struct tm tm0; + parser_control pc; + struct timespec gettime_buffer; + unsigned char c; + bool tz_was_altered = false; + char *tz0 = NULL; + char tz0buf[TZBUFSIZE]; + bool ok = true; + + if (! now) + { + gettime (&gettime_buffer); + now = &gettime_buffer; + } + + Start = now->tv_sec; + Start_ns = now->tv_nsec; + + tmp = localtime (&now->tv_sec); + if (! tmp) + return false; + + while (c = *p, c_isspace (c)) + p++; + + if (strncmp (p, "TZ=\"", 4) == 0) + { + char const *tzbase = p + 4; + size_t tzsize = 1; + char const *s; + + for (s = tzbase; *s; s++, tzsize++) + if (*s == '\\') + { + s++; + if (! (*s == '\\' || *s == '"')) + break; + } + else if (*s == '"') + { + char *z; + char *tz1; + char tz1buf[TZBUFSIZE]; + bool large_tz = TZBUFSIZE < tzsize; + bool setenv_ok; + /* Free tz0, in case this is the 2nd or subsequent time through. */ + free (tz0); + tz0 = get_tz (tz0buf); + z = tz1 = large_tz ? xmalloc (tzsize) : tz1buf; + for (s = tzbase; *s != '"'; s++) + *z++ = *(s += *s == '\\'); + *z = '\0'; + setenv_ok = setenv ("TZ", tz1, 1) == 0; + if (large_tz) + free (tz1); + if (!setenv_ok) + goto fail; + tz_was_altered = true; + p = s + 1; + } + } + + /* As documented, be careful to treat the empty string just like + a date string of "0". Without this, an empty string would be + declared invalid when parsed during a DST transition. */ + if (*p == '\0') + p = "0"; + + pc.input = p; + pc.year.value = tmp->tm_year; + pc.year.value += TM_YEAR_BASE; + pc.year.digits = 0; + pc.month = tmp->tm_mon + 1; + pc.day = tmp->tm_mday; + pc.hour = tmp->tm_hour; + pc.minutes = tmp->tm_min; + pc.seconds.tv_sec = tmp->tm_sec; + pc.seconds.tv_nsec = Start_ns; + tm.tm_isdst = tmp->tm_isdst; + + pc.meridian = MER24; + pc.rel = RELATIVE_TIME_0; + pc.timespec_seen = false; + pc.rels_seen = false; + pc.dates_seen = 0; + pc.days_seen = 0; + pc.times_seen = 0; + pc.local_zones_seen = 0; + pc.dsts_seen = 0; + pc.zones_seen = 0; + +#if HAVE_STRUCT_TM_TM_ZONE + pc.local_time_zone_table[0].name = tmp->tm_zone; + pc.local_time_zone_table[0].type = tLOCAL_ZONE; + pc.local_time_zone_table[0].value = tmp->tm_isdst; + pc.local_time_zone_table[1].name = NULL; + + /* Probe the names used in the next three calendar quarters, looking + for a tm_isdst different from the one we already have. */ + { + int quarter; + for (quarter = 1; quarter <= 3; quarter++) + { + time_t probe = Start + quarter * (90 * 24 * 60 * 60); + struct tm const *probe_tm = localtime (&probe); + if (probe_tm && probe_tm->tm_zone + && probe_tm->tm_isdst != pc.local_time_zone_table[0].value) + { + { + pc.local_time_zone_table[1].name = probe_tm->tm_zone; + pc.local_time_zone_table[1].type = tLOCAL_ZONE; + pc.local_time_zone_table[1].value = probe_tm->tm_isdst; + pc.local_time_zone_table[2].name = NULL; + } + break; + } + } + } +#else +#if HAVE_TZNAME + { +# if !HAVE_DECL_TZNAME + extern char *tzname[]; +# endif + int i; + for (i = 0; i < 2; i++) + { + pc.local_time_zone_table[i].name = tzname[i]; + pc.local_time_zone_table[i].type = tLOCAL_ZONE; + pc.local_time_zone_table[i].value = i; + } + pc.local_time_zone_table[i].name = NULL; + } +#else + pc.local_time_zone_table[0].name = NULL; +#endif +#endif + + if (pc.local_time_zone_table[0].name && pc.local_time_zone_table[1].name + && ! strcmp (pc.local_time_zone_table[0].name, + pc.local_time_zone_table[1].name)) + { + /* This locale uses the same abbrevation for standard and + daylight times. So if we see that abbreviation, we don't + know whether it's daylight time. */ + pc.local_time_zone_table[0].value = -1; + pc.local_time_zone_table[1].name = NULL; + } + + if (yyparse (&pc) != 0) + goto fail; + + if (pc.timespec_seen) + *result = pc.seconds; + else + { + if (1 < (pc.times_seen | pc.dates_seen | pc.days_seen | pc.dsts_seen + | (pc.local_zones_seen + pc.zones_seen))) + goto fail; + + tm.tm_year = to_year (pc.year) - TM_YEAR_BASE; + tm.tm_mon = pc.month - 1; + tm.tm_mday = pc.day; + if (pc.times_seen || (pc.rels_seen && ! pc.dates_seen && ! pc.days_seen)) + { + tm.tm_hour = to_hour (pc.hour, pc.meridian); + if (tm.tm_hour < 0) + goto fail; + tm.tm_min = pc.minutes; + tm.tm_sec = pc.seconds.tv_sec; + } + else + { + tm.tm_hour = tm.tm_min = tm.tm_sec = 0; + pc.seconds.tv_nsec = 0; + } + + /* Let mktime deduce tm_isdst if we have an absolute time stamp. */ + if (pc.dates_seen | pc.days_seen | pc.times_seen) + tm.tm_isdst = -1; + + /* But if the input explicitly specifies local time with or without + DST, give mktime that information. */ + if (pc.local_zones_seen) + tm.tm_isdst = pc.local_isdst; + + tm0 = tm; + + Start = mktime (&tm); + + if (! mktime_ok (&tm0, &tm, Start)) + { + if (! pc.zones_seen) + goto fail; + else + { + /* Guard against falsely reporting errors near the time_t + boundaries when parsing times in other time zones. For + example, suppose the input string "1969-12-31 23:00:00 -0100", + the current time zone is 8 hours ahead of UTC, and the min + time_t value is 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC. Then the min + localtime value is 1970-01-01 08:00:00, and mktime will + therefore fail on 1969-12-31 23:00:00. To work around the + problem, set the time zone to 1 hour behind UTC temporarily + by setting TZ="XXX1:00" and try mktime again. */ + + long int time_zone = pc.time_zone; + long int abs_time_zone = time_zone < 0 ? - time_zone : time_zone; + long int abs_time_zone_hour = abs_time_zone / 60; + int abs_time_zone_min = abs_time_zone % 60; + char tz1buf[sizeof "XXX+0:00" + + sizeof pc.time_zone * CHAR_BIT / 3]; + if (!tz_was_altered) + tz0 = get_tz (tz0buf); + sprintf (tz1buf, "XXX%s%ld:%02d", "-" + (time_zone < 0), + abs_time_zone_hour, abs_time_zone_min); + if (setenv ("TZ", tz1buf, 1) != 0) + goto fail; + tz_was_altered = true; + tm = tm0; + Start = mktime (&tm); + if (! mktime_ok (&tm0, &tm, Start)) + goto fail; + } + } + + if (pc.days_seen && ! pc.dates_seen) + { + tm.tm_mday += ((pc.day_number - tm.tm_wday + 7) % 7 + + 7 * (pc.day_ordinal + - (0 < pc.day_ordinal + && tm.tm_wday != pc.day_number))); + tm.tm_isdst = -1; + Start = mktime (&tm); + if (Start == (time_t) -1) + goto fail; + } + + /* Add relative date. */ + if (pc.rel.year | pc.rel.month | pc.rel.day) + { + int year = tm.tm_year + pc.rel.year; + int month = tm.tm_mon + pc.rel.month; + int day = tm.tm_mday + pc.rel.day; + if (((year < tm.tm_year) ^ (pc.rel.year < 0)) + | ((month < tm.tm_mon) ^ (pc.rel.month < 0)) + | ((day < tm.tm_mday) ^ (pc.rel.day < 0))) + goto fail; + tm.tm_year = year; + tm.tm_mon = month; + tm.tm_mday = day; + tm.tm_hour = tm0.tm_hour; + tm.tm_min = tm0.tm_min; + tm.tm_sec = tm0.tm_sec; + tm.tm_isdst = tm0.tm_isdst; + Start = mktime (&tm); + if (Start == (time_t) -1) + goto fail; + } + + /* The only "output" of this if-block is an updated Start value, + so this block must follow others that clobber Start. */ + if (pc.zones_seen) + { + long int delta = pc.time_zone * 60; + time_t t1; +#ifdef HAVE_TM_GMTOFF + delta -= tm.tm_gmtoff; +#else + time_t t = Start; + struct tm const *gmt = gmtime (&t); + if (! gmt) + goto fail; + delta -= tm_diff (&tm, gmt); +#endif + t1 = Start - delta; + if ((Start < t1) != (delta < 0)) + goto fail; /* time_t overflow */ + Start = t1; + } + + /* Add relative hours, minutes, and seconds. On hosts that support + leap seconds, ignore the possibility of leap seconds; e.g., + "+ 10 minutes" adds 600 seconds, even if one of them is a + leap second. Typically this is not what the user wants, but it's + too hard to do it the other way, because the time zone indicator + must be applied before relative times, and if mktime is applied + again the time zone will be lost. */ + { + long int sum_ns = pc.seconds.tv_nsec + pc.rel.ns; + long int normalized_ns = (sum_ns % BILLION + BILLION) % BILLION; + time_t t0 = Start; + long int d1 = 60 * 60 * pc.rel.hour; + time_t t1 = t0 + d1; + long int d2 = 60 * pc.rel.minutes; + time_t t2 = t1 + d2; + long_time_t d3 = pc.rel.seconds; + long_time_t t3 = t2 + d3; + long int d4 = (sum_ns - normalized_ns) / BILLION; + long_time_t t4 = t3 + d4; + time_t t5 = t4; + + if ((d1 / (60 * 60) ^ pc.rel.hour) + | (d2 / 60 ^ pc.rel.minutes) + | ((t1 < t0) ^ (d1 < 0)) + | ((t2 < t1) ^ (d2 < 0)) + | ((t3 < t2) ^ (d3 < 0)) + | ((t4 < t3) ^ (d4 < 0)) + | (t5 != t4)) + goto fail; + + result->tv_sec = t5; + result->tv_nsec = normalized_ns; + } + } + + goto done; + + fail: + ok = false; + done: + if (tz_was_altered) + ok &= (tz0 ? setenv ("TZ", tz0, 1) : unsetenv ("TZ")) == 0; + if (tz0 != tz0buf) + free (tz0); + return ok; +} + +#if TEST + +int +main (int ac, char **av) +{ + char buff[BUFSIZ]; + + printf ("Enter date, or blank line to exit.\n\t> "); + fflush (stdout); + + buff[BUFSIZ - 1] = '\0'; + while (fgets (buff, BUFSIZ - 1, stdin) && buff[0]) + { + struct timespec d; + struct tm const *tm; + if (! get_date (&d, buff, NULL)) + printf ("Bad format - couldn't convert.\n"); + else if (! (tm = localtime (&d.tv_sec))) + { + long int sec = d.tv_sec; + printf ("localtime (%ld) failed\n", sec); + } + else + { + int ns = d.tv_nsec; + printf ("%04ld-%02d-%02d %02d:%02d:%02d.%09d\n", + tm->tm_year + 1900L, tm->tm_mon + 1, tm->tm_mday, + tm->tm_hour, tm->tm_min, tm->tm_sec, ns); + } + printf ("\t> "); + fflush (stdout); + } + return 0; +} +#endif /* TEST */ diff --git a/lib/getdate/gettime.c b/lib/getdate/gettime.c new file mode 100644 index 00000000..044b26f0 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/gettime.c @@ -0,0 +1,48 @@ +/* gettime -- get the system clock + + Copyright (C) 2002, 2004-2007, 2009-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + + This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program. If not, see . */ + +/* Written by Paul Eggert. */ + +#include + +#include "timespec.h" + +#include + +/* Get the system time into *TS. */ + +void +gettime (struct timespec *ts) +{ +#if HAVE_NANOTIME + nanotime (ts); +#else + +# if defined CLOCK_REALTIME && HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME + if (clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME, ts) == 0) + return; +# endif + + { + struct timeval tv; + gettimeofday (&tv, NULL); + ts->tv_sec = tv.tv_sec; + ts->tv_nsec = tv.tv_usec * 1000; + } + +#endif +} diff --git a/lib/getdate/intprops.h b/lib/getdate/intprops.h new file mode 100644 index 00000000..46f4d47d --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/intprops.h @@ -0,0 +1,83 @@ +/* intprops.h -- properties of integer types + + Copyright (C) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2009, 2010 Free Software + Foundation, Inc. + + This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program. If not, see . */ + +/* Written by Paul Eggert. */ + +#ifndef GL_INTPROPS_H +# define GL_INTPROPS_H + +# include + +/* The extra casts in the following macros work around compiler bugs, + e.g., in Cray C 5.0.3.0. */ + +/* True if the arithmetic type T is an integer type. bool counts as + an integer. */ +# define TYPE_IS_INTEGER(t) ((t) 1.5 == 1) + +/* True if negative values of the signed integer type T use two's + complement, ones' complement, or signed magnitude representation, + respectively. Much GNU code assumes two's complement, but some + people like to be portable to all possible C hosts. */ +# define TYPE_TWOS_COMPLEMENT(t) ((t) ~ (t) 0 == (t) -1) +# define TYPE_ONES_COMPLEMENT(t) ((t) ~ (t) 0 == 0) +# define TYPE_SIGNED_MAGNITUDE(t) ((t) ~ (t) 0 < (t) -1) + +/* True if the arithmetic type T is signed. */ +# define TYPE_SIGNED(t) (! ((t) 0 < (t) -1)) + +/* The maximum and minimum values for the integer type T. These + macros have undefined behavior if T is signed and has padding bits. + If this is a problem for you, please let us know how to fix it for + your host. */ +# define TYPE_MINIMUM(t) \ + ((t) (! TYPE_SIGNED (t) \ + ? (t) 0 \ + : TYPE_SIGNED_MAGNITUDE (t) \ + ? ~ (t) 0 \ + : ~ (t) 0 << (sizeof (t) * CHAR_BIT - 1))) +# define TYPE_MAXIMUM(t) \ + ((t) (! TYPE_SIGNED (t) \ + ? (t) -1 \ + : ~ (~ (t) 0 << (sizeof (t) * CHAR_BIT - 1)))) + +/* Return zero if T can be determined to be an unsigned type. + Otherwise, return 1. + When compiling with GCC, INT_STRLEN_BOUND uses this macro to obtain a + tighter bound. Otherwise, it overestimates the true bound by one byte + when applied to unsigned types of size 2, 4, 16, ... bytes. + The symbol signed_type_or_expr__ is private to this header file. */ +# if __GNUC__ >= 2 +# define signed_type_or_expr__(t) TYPE_SIGNED (__typeof__ (t)) +# else +# define signed_type_or_expr__(t) 1 +# endif + +/* Bound on length of the string representing an integer type or expression T. + Subtract 1 for the sign bit if T is signed; log10 (2.0) < 146/485; + add 1 for integer division truncation; add 1 more for a minus sign + if needed. */ +# define INT_STRLEN_BOUND(t) \ + ((sizeof (t) * CHAR_BIT - signed_type_or_expr__ (t)) * 146 / 485 \ + + signed_type_or_expr__ (t) + 1) + +/* Bound on buffer size needed to represent an integer type or expression T, + including the terminating null. */ +# define INT_BUFSIZE_BOUND(t) (INT_STRLEN_BOUND (t) + 1) + +#endif /* GL_INTPROPS_H */ diff --git a/lib/getdate/timespec.h b/lib/getdate/timespec.h new file mode 100644 index 00000000..81b34230 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/timespec.h @@ -0,0 +1,39 @@ +/* timespec -- System time interface + + Copyright (C) 2000, 2002, 2004-2005, 2007, 2009-2010 Free Software + Foundation, Inc. + + This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program. If not, see . */ + +#if ! defined TIMESPEC_H +# define TIMESPEC_H + +# include + +/* Return negative, zero, positive if A < B, A == B, A > B, respectively. + Assume the nanosecond components are in range, or close to it. */ +static inline int +timespec_cmp (struct timespec a, struct timespec b) +{ + return (a.tv_sec < b.tv_sec ? -1 + : a.tv_sec > b.tv_sec ? 1 + : a.tv_nsec < b.tv_nsec ? -1 + : a.tv_nsec > b.tv_nsec ? 1 + : 0); +} + +void gettime (struct timespec *); +int settime (struct timespec const *); + +#endif diff --git a/lib/getdate/verify.h b/lib/getdate/verify.h new file mode 100644 index 00000000..bcd3f5a0 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/verify.h @@ -0,0 +1,140 @@ +/* Compile-time assert-like macros. + + Copyright (C) 2005-2006, 2009-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + + This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program. If not, see . */ + +/* Written by Paul Eggert, Bruno Haible, and Jim Meyering. */ + +#ifndef VERIFY_H +# define VERIFY_H 1 + +/* Each of these macros verifies that its argument R is nonzero. To + be portable, R should be an integer constant expression. Unlike + assert (R), there is no run-time overhead. + + There are two macros, since no single macro can be used in all + contexts in C. verify_true (R) is for scalar contexts, including + integer constant expression contexts. verify (R) is for declaration + contexts, e.g., the top level. + + Symbols ending in "__" are private to this header. + + The code below uses several ideas. + + * The first step is ((R) ? 1 : -1). Given an expression R, of + integral or boolean or floating-point type, this yields an + expression of integral type, whose value is later verified to be + constant and nonnegative. + + * Next this expression W is wrapped in a type + struct verify_type__ { unsigned int verify_error_if_negative_size__: W; }. + If W is negative, this yields a compile-time error. No compiler can + deal with a bit-field of negative size. + + One might think that an array size check would have the same + effect, that is, that the type struct { unsigned int dummy[W]; } + would work as well. However, inside a function, some compilers + (such as C++ compilers and GNU C) allow local parameters and + variables inside array size expressions. With these compilers, + an array size check would not properly diagnose this misuse of + the verify macro: + + void function (int n) { verify (n < 0); } + + * For the verify macro, the struct verify_type__ will need to + somehow be embedded into a declaration. To be portable, this + declaration must declare an object, a constant, a function, or a + typedef name. If the declared entity uses the type directly, + such as in + + struct dummy {...}; + typedef struct {...} dummy; + extern struct {...} *dummy; + extern void dummy (struct {...} *); + extern struct {...} *dummy (void); + + two uses of the verify macro would yield colliding declarations + if the entity names are not disambiguated. A workaround is to + attach the current line number to the entity name: + + #define GL_CONCAT0(x, y) x##y + #define GL_CONCAT(x, y) GL_CONCAT0 (x, y) + extern struct {...} * GL_CONCAT(dummy,__LINE__); + + But this has the problem that two invocations of verify from + within the same macro would collide, since the __LINE__ value + would be the same for both invocations. + + A solution is to use the sizeof operator. It yields a number, + getting rid of the identity of the type. Declarations like + + extern int dummy [sizeof (struct {...})]; + extern void dummy (int [sizeof (struct {...})]); + extern int (*dummy (void)) [sizeof (struct {...})]; + + can be repeated. + + * Should the implementation use a named struct or an unnamed struct? + Which of the following alternatives can be used? + + extern int dummy [sizeof (struct {...})]; + extern int dummy [sizeof (struct verify_type__ {...})]; + extern void dummy (int [sizeof (struct {...})]); + extern void dummy (int [sizeof (struct verify_type__ {...})]); + extern int (*dummy (void)) [sizeof (struct {...})]; + extern int (*dummy (void)) [sizeof (struct verify_type__ {...})]; + + In the second and sixth case, the struct type is exported to the + outer scope; two such declarations therefore collide. GCC warns + about the first, third, and fourth cases. So the only remaining + possibility is the fifth case: + + extern int (*dummy (void)) [sizeof (struct {...})]; + + * This implementation exploits the fact that GCC does not warn about + the last declaration mentioned above. If a future version of GCC + introduces a warning for this, the problem could be worked around + by using code specialized to GCC, e.g.,: + + #if 4 <= __GNUC__ + # define verify(R) \ + extern int (* verify_function__ (void)) \ + [__builtin_constant_p (R) && (R) ? 1 : -1] + #endif + + * In C++, any struct definition inside sizeof is invalid. + Use a template type to work around the problem. */ + + +/* Verify requirement R at compile-time, as an integer constant expression. + Return 1. */ + +# ifdef __cplusplus +template + struct verify_type__ { unsigned int verify_error_if_negative_size__: w; }; +# define verify_true(R) \ + (!!sizeof (verify_type__<(R) ? 1 : -1>)) +# else +# define verify_true(R) \ + (!!sizeof \ + (struct { unsigned int verify_error_if_negative_size__: (R) ? 1 : -1; })) +# endif + +/* Verify requirement R at compile-time, as a declaration without a + trailing ';'. */ + +# define verify(R) extern int (* verify_function__ (void)) [verify_true (R)] + +#endif diff --git a/lib/getdate/xalloc-die.c b/lib/getdate/xalloc-die.c new file mode 100644 index 00000000..4b220403 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/xalloc-die.c @@ -0,0 +1,41 @@ +/* Report a memory allocation failure and exit. + + Copyright (C) 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2009, 2010 + Free Software Foundation, Inc. + + This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program. If not, see . */ + +#include + +#include "xalloc.h" + +#include + +#include "error.h" +#include "exitfail.h" + +#include "gettext.h" +#define _(msgid) gettext (msgid) + +void +xalloc_die (void) +{ + error (exit_failure, 0, "%s", _("memory exhausted")); + + /* The `noreturn' cannot be given to error, since it may return if + its first argument is 0. To help compilers understand the + xalloc_die does not return, call abort. Also, the abort is a + safety feature if exit_failure is 0 (which shouldn't happen). */ + abort (); +} diff --git a/lib/getdate/xalloc.h b/lib/getdate/xalloc.h new file mode 100644 index 00000000..6122cc58 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/xalloc.h @@ -0,0 +1,281 @@ +/* xalloc.h -- malloc with out-of-memory checking + + Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, + 2000, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, + Inc. + + This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program. If not, see . */ + +#ifndef XALLOC_H_ +# define XALLOC_H_ + +# include + + +# ifdef __cplusplus +extern "C" { +# endif + + +# ifndef __attribute__ +# if __GNUC__ < 2 || (__GNUC__ == 2 && __GNUC_MINOR__ < 8) +# define __attribute__(x) +# endif +# endif + +# ifndef ATTRIBUTE_NORETURN +# define ATTRIBUTE_NORETURN __attribute__ ((__noreturn__)) +# endif + +# ifndef ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC +# if __GNUC__ >= 3 +# define ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC __attribute__ ((__malloc__)) +# else +# define ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC +# endif +# endif + +/* This function is always triggered when memory is exhausted. + It must be defined by the application, either explicitly + or by using gnulib's xalloc-die module. This is the + function to call when one wants the program to die because of a + memory allocation failure. */ +extern void xalloc_die (void) ATTRIBUTE_NORETURN; + +void *xmalloc (size_t s) ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC; +void *xzalloc (size_t s) ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC; +void *xcalloc (size_t n, size_t s) ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC; +void *xrealloc (void *p, size_t s); +void *x2realloc (void *p, size_t *pn); +void *xmemdup (void const *p, size_t s) ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC; +char *xstrdup (char const *str) ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC; + +/* Return 1 if an array of N objects, each of size S, cannot exist due + to size arithmetic overflow. S must be positive and N must be + nonnegative. This is a macro, not an inline function, so that it + works correctly even when SIZE_MAX < N. + + By gnulib convention, SIZE_MAX represents overflow in size + calculations, so the conservative dividend to use here is + SIZE_MAX - 1, since SIZE_MAX might represent an overflowed value. + However, malloc (SIZE_MAX) fails on all known hosts where + sizeof (ptrdiff_t) <= sizeof (size_t), so do not bother to test for + exactly-SIZE_MAX allocations on such hosts; this avoids a test and + branch when S is known to be 1. */ +# define xalloc_oversized(n, s) \ + ((size_t) (sizeof (ptrdiff_t) <= sizeof (size_t) ? -1 : -2) / (s) < (n)) + + +/* In the following macros, T must be an elementary or structure/union or + typedef'ed type, or a pointer to such a type. To apply one of the + following macros to a function pointer or array type, you need to typedef + it first and use the typedef name. */ + +/* Allocate an object of type T dynamically, with error checking. */ +/* extern t *XMALLOC (typename t); */ +# define XMALLOC(t) ((t *) xmalloc (sizeof (t))) + +/* Allocate memory for N elements of type T, with error checking. */ +/* extern t *XNMALLOC (size_t n, typename t); */ +# define XNMALLOC(n, t) \ + ((t *) (sizeof (t) == 1 ? xmalloc (n) : xnmalloc (n, sizeof (t)))) + +/* Allocate an object of type T dynamically, with error checking, + and zero it. */ +/* extern t *XZALLOC (typename t); */ +# define XZALLOC(t) ((t *) xzalloc (sizeof (t))) + +/* Allocate memory for N elements of type T, with error checking, + and zero it. */ +/* extern t *XCALLOC (size_t n, typename t); */ +# define XCALLOC(n, t) \ + ((t *) (sizeof (t) == 1 ? xzalloc (n) : xcalloc (n, sizeof (t)))) + + +# if HAVE_INLINE +# define static_inline static inline +# else +void *xnmalloc (size_t n, size_t s) ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC; +void *xnrealloc (void *p, size_t n, size_t s); +void *x2nrealloc (void *p, size_t *pn, size_t s); +char *xcharalloc (size_t n) ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC; +# endif + +# ifdef static_inline + +/* Allocate an array of N objects, each with S bytes of memory, + dynamically, with error checking. S must be nonzero. */ + +static_inline void *xnmalloc (size_t n, size_t s) ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC; +static_inline void * +xnmalloc (size_t n, size_t s) +{ + if (xalloc_oversized (n, s)) + xalloc_die (); + return xmalloc (n * s); +} + +/* Change the size of an allocated block of memory P to an array of N + objects each of S bytes, with error checking. S must be nonzero. */ + +static_inline void * +xnrealloc (void *p, size_t n, size_t s) +{ + if (xalloc_oversized (n, s)) + xalloc_die (); + return xrealloc (p, n * s); +} + +/* If P is null, allocate a block of at least *PN such objects; + otherwise, reallocate P so that it contains more than *PN objects + each of S bytes. *PN must be nonzero unless P is null, and S must + be nonzero. Set *PN to the new number of objects, and return the + pointer to the new block. *PN is never set to zero, and the + returned pointer is never null. + + Repeated reallocations are guaranteed to make progress, either by + allocating an initial block with a nonzero size, or by allocating a + larger block. + + In the following implementation, nonzero sizes are increased by a + factor of approximately 1.5 so that repeated reallocations have + O(N) overall cost rather than O(N**2) cost, but the + specification for this function does not guarantee that rate. + + Here is an example of use: + + int *p = NULL; + size_t used = 0; + size_t allocated = 0; + + void + append_int (int value) + { + if (used == allocated) + p = x2nrealloc (p, &allocated, sizeof *p); + p[used++] = value; + } + + This causes x2nrealloc to allocate a block of some nonzero size the + first time it is called. + + To have finer-grained control over the initial size, set *PN to a + nonzero value before calling this function with P == NULL. For + example: + + int *p = NULL; + size_t used = 0; + size_t allocated = 0; + size_t allocated1 = 1000; + + void + append_int (int value) + { + if (used == allocated) + { + p = x2nrealloc (p, &allocated1, sizeof *p); + allocated = allocated1; + } + p[used++] = value; + } + + */ + +static_inline void * +x2nrealloc (void *p, size_t *pn, size_t s) +{ + size_t n = *pn; + + if (! p) + { + if (! n) + { + /* The approximate size to use for initial small allocation + requests, when the invoking code specifies an old size of + zero. 64 bytes is the largest "small" request for the + GNU C library malloc. */ + enum { DEFAULT_MXFAST = 64 }; + + n = DEFAULT_MXFAST / s; + n += !n; + } + } + else + { + /* Set N = ceil (1.5 * N) so that progress is made if N == 1. + Check for overflow, so that N * S stays in size_t range. + The check is slightly conservative, but an exact check isn't + worth the trouble. */ + if ((size_t) -1 / 3 * 2 / s <= n) + xalloc_die (); + n += (n + 1) / 2; + } + + *pn = n; + return xrealloc (p, n * s); +} + +/* Return a pointer to a new buffer of N bytes. This is like xmalloc, + except it returns char *. */ + +static_inline char *xcharalloc (size_t n) ATTRIBUTE_MALLOC; +static_inline char * +xcharalloc (size_t n) +{ + return XNMALLOC (n, char); +} + +# endif + +# ifdef __cplusplus +} + +/* C++ does not allow conversions from void * to other pointer types + without a cast. Use templates to work around the problem when + possible. */ + +template inline T * +xrealloc (T *p, size_t s) +{ + return (T *) xrealloc ((void *) p, s); +} + +template inline T * +xnrealloc (T *p, size_t n, size_t s) +{ + return (T *) xnrealloc ((void *) p, n, s); +} + +template inline T * +x2realloc (T *p, size_t *pn) +{ + return (T *) x2realloc ((void *) p, pn); +} + +template inline T * +x2nrealloc (T *p, size_t *pn, size_t s) +{ + return (T *) x2nrealloc ((void *) p, pn, s); +} + +template inline T * +xmemdup (T const *p, size_t s) +{ + return (T *) xmemdup ((void const *) p, s); +} + +# endif + + +#endif /* !XALLOC_H_ */ diff --git a/lib/getdate/xmalloc.c b/lib/getdate/xmalloc.c new file mode 100644 index 00000000..ecce5296 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/getdate/xmalloc.c @@ -0,0 +1,118 @@ +/* xmalloc.c -- malloc with out of memory checking + + Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, + 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software + Foundation, Inc. + + This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or + (at your option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this program. If not, see . */ + +#include + +#if ! HAVE_INLINE +# define static_inline +#endif +#include "xalloc.h" +#undef static_inline + +#include +#include + +/* 1 if calloc is known to be compatible with GNU calloc. This + matters if we are not also using the calloc module, which defines + HAVE_CALLOC and supports the GNU API even on non-GNU platforms. */ +#if defined HAVE_CALLOC || defined __GLIBC__ +enum { HAVE_GNU_CALLOC = 1 }; +#else +enum { HAVE_GNU_CALLOC = 0 }; +#endif + +/* Allocate N bytes of memory dynamically, with error checking. */ + +void * +xmalloc (size_t n) +{ + void *p = malloc (n); + if (!p && n != 0) + xalloc_die (); + return p; +} + +/* Change the size of an allocated block of memory P to N bytes, + with error checking. */ + +void * +xrealloc (void *p, size_t n) +{ + p = realloc (p, n); + if (!p && n != 0) + xalloc_die (); + return p; +} + +/* If P is null, allocate a block of at least *PN bytes; otherwise, + reallocate P so that it contains more than *PN bytes. *PN must be + nonzero unless P is null. Set *PN to the new block's size, and + return the pointer to the new block. *PN is never set to zero, and + the returned pointer is never null. */ + +void * +x2realloc (void *p, size_t *pn) +{ + return x2nrealloc (p, pn, 1); +} + +/* Allocate S bytes of zeroed memory dynamically, with error checking. + There's no need for xnzalloc (N, S), since it would be equivalent + to xcalloc (N, S). */ + +void * +xzalloc (size_t s) +{ + return memset (xmalloc (s), 0, s); +} + +/* Allocate zeroed memory for N elements of S bytes, with error + checking. S must be nonzero. */ + +void * +xcalloc (size_t n, size_t s) +{ + void *p; + /* Test for overflow, since some calloc implementations don't have + proper overflow checks. But omit overflow and size-zero tests if + HAVE_GNU_CALLOC, since GNU calloc catches overflow and never + returns NULL if successful. */ + if ((! HAVE_GNU_CALLOC && xalloc_oversized (n, s)) + || (! (p = calloc (n, s)) && (HAVE_GNU_CALLOC || n != 0))) + xalloc_die (); + return p; +} + +/* Clone an object P of size S, with error checking. There's no need + for xnmemdup (P, N, S), since xmemdup (P, N * S) works without any + need for an arithmetic overflow check. */ + +void * +xmemdup (void const *p, size_t s) +{ + return memcpy (xmalloc (s), p, s); +} + +/* Clone STRING. */ + +char * +xstrdup (char const *string) +{ + return xmemdup (string, strlen (string) + 1); +} -- 2.43.0