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author | Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> | 2008-09-16 14:36:41 +0200 |
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committer | Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> | 2008-09-16 14:36:41 +0200 |
commit | 80a5da73e9a9ed148314be3fa071181c82fc7c64 (patch) | |
tree | c561200c7b7ff8e9bf6e44be0ad9f093789a3b72 /source3/lib/talloc | |
parent | ec1c854f2175823bd1ad39c2e272d1b3fab80bf1 (diff) | |
download | samba-80a5da73e9a9ed148314be3fa071181c82fc7c64.tar.gz samba-80a5da73e9a9ed148314be3fa071181c82fc7c64.tar.bz2 samba-80a5da73e9a9ed148314be3fa071181c82fc7c64.zip |
Share talloc source code between Samba 3 and Samba 4.
Diffstat (limited to 'source3/lib/talloc')
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/Makefile.in | 43 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/NEWS | 13 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/aclocal.m4 | 1 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | source3/lib/talloc/autogen.sh | 14 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | source3/lib/talloc/config.guess | 1464 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/config.mk | 7 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | source3/lib/talloc/config.sub | 1577 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/configure.ac | 24 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | source3/lib/talloc/install-sh | 238 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/libtalloc.m4 | 33 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/rules.mk | 18 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/talloc.3.xml | 738 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/talloc.c | 1732 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/talloc.h | 183 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/talloc.i | 31 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/talloc.mk | 37 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/talloc.pc.in | 11 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/talloc_guide.txt | 685 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/testsuite.c | 1152 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | source3/lib/talloc/web/index.html | 46 |
20 files changed, 0 insertions, 8047 deletions
diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/Makefile.in b/source3/lib/talloc/Makefile.in deleted file mode 100644 index 07b8fd4ff0..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/Makefile.in +++ /dev/null @@ -1,43 +0,0 @@ -#!gmake -# -prefix = @prefix@ -datarootdir = @datarootdir@ -exec_prefix = @exec_prefix@ -includedir = @includedir@ -libdir = @libdir@ -mandir = @mandir@ -VPATH = @srcdir@:@libreplacedir@ -srcdir = @srcdir@ -builddir = @builddir@ -XSLTPROC = @XSLTPROC@ -INSTALLCMD = @INSTALL@ -CC = @CC@ -CFLAGS = @CFLAGS@ -DHAVE_CONFIG_H= -I. -I@srcdir@ -EXTRA_TARGETS = @DOC_TARGET@ -PICFLAG = @PICFLAG@ -PACKAGE_VERSION = @PACKAGE_VERSION@ -SHLIBEXT = @SHLIBEXT@ -SHLD = @SHLD@ -SHLD_FLAGS = @SHLD_FLAGS@ -tallocdir = @tallocdir@ - -LIBOBJ = $(TALLOC_OBJ) @LIBREPLACEOBJ@ - -all:: showflags $(EXTRA_TARGETS) - -include $(tallocdir)/rules.mk -include $(tallocdir)/talloc.mk - -$(TALLOC_SOLIB): $(LIBOBJ) - $(SHLD) $(SHLD_FLAGS) -o $@ $(LIBOBJ) @SONAMEFLAG@$(TALLOC_SONAME) - -check: test - -installcheck:: test install - -distclean:: clean - rm -f Makefile - rm -f config.log config.status config.h config.cache - -realdistclean:: distclean - rm -f configure config.h.in diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/NEWS b/source3/lib/talloc/NEWS deleted file mode 100644 index e5b3aa0731..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/NEWS +++ /dev/null @@ -1,13 +0,0 @@ -1.0.1 26 May 2007 - - BUGS - - * Set name of correctly when using talloc_append_string() (metze) - - LICENSE - - * Change license of files in lib/replace to LGPL (was GPL). (jelmer) - -1.0.0 30 April 2007 - - Initial release. diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/aclocal.m4 b/source3/lib/talloc/aclocal.m4 deleted file mode 100644 index 5605e476ba..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/aclocal.m4 +++ /dev/null @@ -1 +0,0 @@ -m4_include(libreplace.m4) diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/autogen.sh b/source3/lib/talloc/autogen.sh deleted file mode 100755 index bf84eeee19..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/autogen.sh +++ /dev/null @@ -1,14 +0,0 @@ -#!/bin/sh - -rm -rf autom4te.cache -rm -f configure config.h.in - -IPATHS="-I libreplace -I lib/replace -I ../libreplace -I ../replace" -autoconf $IPATHS || exit 1 -autoheader $IPATHS || exit 1 - -rm -rf autom4te.cache - -echo "Now run ./configure and then make." -exit 0 - diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/config.guess b/source3/lib/talloc/config.guess deleted file mode 100755 index 354dbe175a..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/config.guess +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1464 +0,0 @@ -#! /bin/sh -# Attempt to guess a canonical system name. -# Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, -# 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc. - -timestamp='2005-08-03' - -# This file 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 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. -# -# As a special exception to the GNU General Public License, if you -# distribute this file as part of a program that contains a -# configuration script generated by Autoconf, you may include it under -# the same distribution terms that you use for the rest of that program. - - -# Originally written by Per Bothner <per@bothner.com>. -# Please send patches to <config-patches@gnu.org>. Submit a context -# diff and a properly formatted ChangeLog entry. -# -# This script attempts to guess a canonical system name similar to -# config.sub. If it succeeds, it prints the system name on stdout, and -# exits with 0. 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then - echo rs6000-ibm-aix3.2.4 - else - echo rs6000-ibm-aix3.2 - fi - exit ;; - *:AIX:*:[45]) - IBM_CPU_ID=`/usr/sbin/lsdev -C -c processor -S available | sed 1q | awk '{ print $1 }'` - if /usr/sbin/lsattr -El ${IBM_CPU_ID} | grep ' POWER' >/dev/null 2>&1; then - IBM_ARCH=rs6000 - else - IBM_ARCH=powerpc - fi - if [ -x /usr/bin/oslevel ] ; then - IBM_REV=`/usr/bin/oslevel` - else - IBM_REV=${UNAME_VERSION}.${UNAME_RELEASE} - fi - echo ${IBM_ARCH}-ibm-aix${IBM_REV} - exit ;; - *:AIX:*:*) - echo rs6000-ibm-aix - exit ;; - ibmrt:4.4BSD:*|romp-ibm:BSD:*) - echo romp-ibm-bsd4.4 - exit ;; - ibmrt:*BSD:*|romp-ibm:BSD:*) # covers RT/PC BSD and - echo romp-ibm-bsd${UNAME_RELEASE} # 4.3 with uname added to - exit ;; # report: romp-ibm BSD 4.3 - *:BOSX:*:*) - echo rs6000-bull-bosx - exit ;; - DPX/2?00:B.O.S.:*:*) - echo m68k-bull-sysv3 - exit ;; - 9000/[34]??:4.3bsd:1.*:*) - echo m68k-hp-bsd - exit ;; - hp300:4.4BSD:*:* | 9000/[34]??:4.3bsd:2.*:*) - echo m68k-hp-bsd4.4 - exit ;; - 9000/[34678]??:HP-UX:*:*) - HPUX_REV=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[^.]*.[0B]*//'` - case "${UNAME_MACHINE}" in - 9000/31? ) HP_ARCH=m68000 ;; - 9000/[34]?? ) HP_ARCH=m68k ;; - 9000/[678][0-9][0-9]) - if [ -x /usr/bin/getconf ]; then - sc_cpu_version=`/usr/bin/getconf SC_CPU_VERSION 2>/dev/null` - sc_kernel_bits=`/usr/bin/getconf SC_KERNEL_BITS 2>/dev/null` - case "${sc_cpu_version}" in - 523) HP_ARCH="hppa1.0" ;; # CPU_PA_RISC1_0 - 528) HP_ARCH="hppa1.1" ;; # CPU_PA_RISC1_1 - 532) # CPU_PA_RISC2_0 - case "${sc_kernel_bits}" in - 32) HP_ARCH="hppa2.0n" ;; - 64) HP_ARCH="hppa2.0w" ;; - '') HP_ARCH="hppa2.0" ;; # HP-UX 10.20 - esac ;; - esac - fi - if [ "${HP_ARCH}" = "" ]; then - eval $set_cc_for_build - sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c - - #define _HPUX_SOURCE - #include <stdlib.h> - #include <unistd.h> - - int main () - { - #if defined(_SC_KERNEL_BITS) - long bits = sysconf(_SC_KERNEL_BITS); - #endif - long cpu = sysconf (_SC_CPU_VERSION); - - switch (cpu) - { - case CPU_PA_RISC1_0: puts ("hppa1.0"); break; - case CPU_PA_RISC1_1: puts ("hppa1.1"); break; - case CPU_PA_RISC2_0: - #if defined(_SC_KERNEL_BITS) - switch (bits) - { - case 64: puts ("hppa2.0w"); break; - case 32: puts ("hppa2.0n"); break; - default: puts ("hppa2.0"); break; - } break; - #else /* !defined(_SC_KERNEL_BITS) */ - puts ("hppa2.0"); break; - #endif - default: puts ("hppa1.0"); break; - } - exit (0); - } -EOF - (CCOPTS= $CC_FOR_BUILD -o $dummy $dummy.c 2>/dev/null) && HP_ARCH=`$dummy` - test -z "$HP_ARCH" && HP_ARCH=hppa - fi ;; - esac - if [ ${HP_ARCH} = "hppa2.0w" ] - then - eval $set_cc_for_build - - # hppa2.0w-hp-hpux* has a 64-bit kernel and a compiler generating - # 32-bit code. hppa64-hp-hpux* has the same kernel and a compiler - # generating 64-bit code. GNU and HP use different nomenclature: - # - # $ CC_FOR_BUILD=cc ./config.guess - # => hppa2.0w-hp-hpux11.23 - # $ CC_FOR_BUILD="cc +DA2.0w" ./config.guess - # => hppa64-hp-hpux11.23 - - if echo __LP64__ | (CCOPTS= $CC_FOR_BUILD -E - 2>/dev/null) | - grep __LP64__ >/dev/null - then - HP_ARCH="hppa2.0w" - else - HP_ARCH="hppa64" - fi - fi - echo ${HP_ARCH}-hp-hpux${HPUX_REV} - exit ;; - ia64:HP-UX:*:*) - HPUX_REV=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[^.]*.[0B]*//'` - echo ia64-hp-hpux${HPUX_REV} - exit ;; - 3050*:HI-UX:*:*) - eval $set_cc_for_build - sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c - #include <unistd.h> - int - main () - { - long cpu = sysconf (_SC_CPU_VERSION); - /* The order matters, because CPU_IS_HP_MC68K erroneously returns - true for CPU_PA_RISC1_0. CPU_IS_PA_RISC returns correct - results, however. */ - if (CPU_IS_PA_RISC (cpu)) - { - switch (cpu) - { - case CPU_PA_RISC1_0: puts ("hppa1.0-hitachi-hiuxwe2"); break; - case CPU_PA_RISC1_1: puts ("hppa1.1-hitachi-hiuxwe2"); break; - case CPU_PA_RISC2_0: puts ("hppa2.0-hitachi-hiuxwe2"); break; - default: puts ("hppa-hitachi-hiuxwe2"); break; - } - } - else if (CPU_IS_HP_MC68K (cpu)) - puts ("m68k-hitachi-hiuxwe2"); - else puts ("unknown-hitachi-hiuxwe2"); - exit (0); - } -EOF - $CC_FOR_BUILD -o $dummy $dummy.c && SYSTEM_NAME=`$dummy` && - { echo "$SYSTEM_NAME"; exit; } - echo unknown-hitachi-hiuxwe2 - exit ;; - 9000/7??:4.3bsd:*:* | 9000/8?[79]:4.3bsd:*:* ) - echo hppa1.1-hp-bsd - exit ;; - 9000/8??:4.3bsd:*:*) - echo hppa1.0-hp-bsd - exit ;; - *9??*:MPE/iX:*:* | *3000*:MPE/iX:*:*) - echo hppa1.0-hp-mpeix - exit ;; - hp7??:OSF1:*:* | hp8?[79]:OSF1:*:* ) - echo hppa1.1-hp-osf - exit ;; - hp8??:OSF1:*:*) - echo hppa1.0-hp-osf - exit ;; - i*86:OSF1:*:*) - if [ -x /usr/sbin/sysversion ] ; then - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-osf1mk - else - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-osf1 - fi - exit ;; - parisc*:Lites*:*:*) - echo hppa1.1-hp-lites - exit ;; - C1*:ConvexOS:*:* | convex:ConvexOS:C1*:*) - echo c1-convex-bsd - exit ;; - C2*:ConvexOS:*:* | convex:ConvexOS:C2*:*) - if getsysinfo -f scalar_acc - then echo c32-convex-bsd - else echo c2-convex-bsd - fi - exit ;; - C34*:ConvexOS:*:* | convex:ConvexOS:C34*:*) - echo c34-convex-bsd - exit ;; - C38*:ConvexOS:*:* | convex:ConvexOS:C38*:*) - echo c38-convex-bsd - exit ;; - C4*:ConvexOS:*:* | convex:ConvexOS:C4*:*) - echo c4-convex-bsd - exit ;; - CRAY*Y-MP:*:*:*) - echo ymp-cray-unicos${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/' - exit ;; - CRAY*[A-Z]90:*:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-cray-unicos${UNAME_RELEASE} \ - | sed -e 's/CRAY.*\([A-Z]90\)/\1/' \ - -e y/ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz/ \ - -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/' - exit ;; - CRAY*TS:*:*:*) - echo t90-cray-unicos${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/' - exit ;; - CRAY*T3E:*:*:*) - echo alphaev5-cray-unicosmk${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/' - exit ;; - CRAY*SV1:*:*:*) - echo sv1-cray-unicos${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/' - exit ;; - *:UNICOS/mp:*:*) - echo craynv-cray-unicosmp${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$/.X/' - exit ;; - F30[01]:UNIX_System_V:*:* | F700:UNIX_System_V:*:*) - FUJITSU_PROC=`uname -m | tr 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ' 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'` - FUJITSU_SYS=`uname -p | tr 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ' 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz' | sed -e 's/\///'` - FUJITSU_REL=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed -e 's/ /_/'` - echo "${FUJITSU_PROC}-fujitsu-${FUJITSU_SYS}${FUJITSU_REL}" - exit ;; - 5000:UNIX_System_V:4.*:*) - FUJITSU_SYS=`uname -p | tr 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ' 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz' | sed -e 's/\///'` - FUJITSU_REL=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE} | tr 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ' 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz' | sed -e 's/ /_/'` - echo "sparc-fujitsu-${FUJITSU_SYS}${FUJITSU_REL}" - exit ;; - i*86:BSD/386:*:* | i*86:BSD/OS:*:* | *:Ascend\ Embedded/OS:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-bsdi${UNAME_RELEASE} - exit ;; - sparc*:BSD/OS:*:*) - echo sparc-unknown-bsdi${UNAME_RELEASE} - exit ;; - *:BSD/OS:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-bsdi${UNAME_RELEASE} - exit ;; - *:FreeBSD:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-freebsd`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[-(].*//'` - exit ;; - i*:CYGWIN*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-cygwin - exit ;; - i*:MINGW*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-mingw32 - exit ;; - i*:windows32*:*) - # uname -m includes "-pc" on this system. - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-mingw32 - exit ;; - i*:PW*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-pw32 - exit ;; - x86:Interix*:[34]*) - echo i586-pc-interix${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/\..*//' - exit ;; - [345]86:Windows_95:* | [345]86:Windows_98:* | [345]86:Windows_NT:*) - echo i${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-mks - exit ;; - i*:Windows_NT*:* | Pentium*:Windows_NT*:*) - # How do we know it's Interix rather than the generic POSIX subsystem? - # It also conflicts with pre-2.0 versions of AT&T UWIN. Should we - # UNAME_MACHINE based on the output of uname instead of i386? - echo i586-pc-interix - exit ;; - i*:UWIN*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-uwin - exit ;; - amd64:CYGWIN*:*:* | x86_64:CYGWIN*:*:*) - echo x86_64-unknown-cygwin - exit ;; - p*:CYGWIN*:*) - echo powerpcle-unknown-cygwin - exit ;; - prep*:SunOS:5.*:*) - echo powerpcle-unknown-solaris2`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[^.]*//'` - exit ;; - *:GNU:*:*) - # the GNU system - echo `echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}|sed -e 's,[-/].*$,,'`-unknown-gnu`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's,/.*$,,'` - exit ;; - *:GNU/*:*:*) - # other systems with GNU libc and userland - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-`echo ${UNAME_SYSTEM} | sed 's,^[^/]*/,,' | tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'``echo ${UNAME_RELEASE}|sed -e 's/[-(].*//'`-gnu - exit ;; - i*86:Minix:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-minix - exit ;; - arm*:Linux:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - cris:Linux:*:*) - echo cris-axis-linux-gnu - exit ;; - crisv32:Linux:*:*) - echo crisv32-axis-linux-gnu - exit ;; - frv:Linux:*:*) - echo frv-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - ia64:Linux:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - m32r*:Linux:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - m68*:Linux:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - mips:Linux:*:*) - eval $set_cc_for_build - sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c - #undef CPU - #undef mips - #undef mipsel - #if defined(__MIPSEL__) || defined(__MIPSEL) || defined(_MIPSEL) || defined(MIPSEL) - CPU=mipsel - #else - #if defined(__MIPSEB__) || defined(__MIPSEB) || defined(_MIPSEB) || defined(MIPSEB) - CPU=mips - #else - CPU= - #endif - #endif -EOF - eval `$CC_FOR_BUILD -E $dummy.c 2>/dev/null | grep ^CPU=` - test x"${CPU}" != x && { echo "${CPU}-unknown-linux-gnu"; exit; } - ;; - mips64:Linux:*:*) - eval $set_cc_for_build - sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c - #undef CPU - #undef mips64 - #undef mips64el - #if defined(__MIPSEL__) || defined(__MIPSEL) || defined(_MIPSEL) || defined(MIPSEL) - CPU=mips64el - #else - #if defined(__MIPSEB__) || defined(__MIPSEB) || defined(_MIPSEB) || defined(MIPSEB) - CPU=mips64 - #else - CPU= - #endif - #endif -EOF - eval `$CC_FOR_BUILD -E $dummy.c 2>/dev/null | grep ^CPU=` - test x"${CPU}" != x && { echo "${CPU}-unknown-linux-gnu"; exit; } - ;; - or32:Linux:*:*) - echo or32-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - ppc:Linux:*:*) - echo powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - ppc64:Linux:*:*) - echo powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - alpha:Linux:*:*) - case `sed -n '/^cpu model/s/^.*: \(.*\)/\1/p' < /proc/cpuinfo` in - EV5) UNAME_MACHINE=alphaev5 ;; - EV56) UNAME_MACHINE=alphaev56 ;; - PCA56) UNAME_MACHINE=alphapca56 ;; - PCA57) UNAME_MACHINE=alphapca56 ;; - EV6) UNAME_MACHINE=alphaev6 ;; - EV67) UNAME_MACHINE=alphaev67 ;; - EV68*) UNAME_MACHINE=alphaev68 ;; - esac - objdump --private-headers /bin/sh | grep ld.so.1 >/dev/null - if test "$?" = 0 ; then LIBC="libc1" ; else LIBC="" ; fi - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu${LIBC} - exit ;; - parisc:Linux:*:* | hppa:Linux:*:*) - # Look for CPU level - case `grep '^cpu[^a-z]*:' /proc/cpuinfo 2>/dev/null | cut -d' ' -f2` in - PA7*) echo hppa1.1-unknown-linux-gnu ;; - PA8*) echo hppa2.0-unknown-linux-gnu ;; - *) echo hppa-unknown-linux-gnu ;; - esac - exit ;; - parisc64:Linux:*:* | hppa64:Linux:*:*) - echo hppa64-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - s390:Linux:*:* | s390x:Linux:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-ibm-linux - exit ;; - sh64*:Linux:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - sh*:Linux:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - sparc:Linux:*:* | sparc64:Linux:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - x86_64:Linux:*:*) - echo x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu - exit ;; - i*86:Linux:*:*) - # The BFD linker knows what the default object file format is, so - # first see if it will tell us. cd to the root directory to prevent - # problems with other programs or directories called `ld' in the path. - # Set LC_ALL=C to ensure ld outputs messages in English. - ld_supported_targets=`cd /; LC_ALL=C ld --help 2>&1 \ - | sed -ne '/supported targets:/!d - s/[ ][ ]*/ /g - s/.*supported targets: *// - s/ .*// - p'` - case "$ld_supported_targets" in - elf32-i386) - TENTATIVE="${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-linux-gnu" - ;; - a.out-i386-linux) - echo "${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-linux-gnuaout" - exit ;; - coff-i386) - echo "${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-linux-gnucoff" - exit ;; - "") - # Either a pre-BFD a.out linker (linux-gnuoldld) or - # one that does not give us useful --help. - echo "${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-linux-gnuoldld" - exit ;; - esac - # Determine whether the default compiler is a.out or elf - eval $set_cc_for_build - sed 's/^ //' << EOF >$dummy.c - #include <features.h> - #ifdef __ELF__ - # ifdef __GLIBC__ - # if __GLIBC__ >= 2 - LIBC=gnu - # else - LIBC=gnulibc1 - # endif - # else - LIBC=gnulibc1 - # endif - #else - #ifdef __INTEL_COMPILER - LIBC=gnu - #else - LIBC=gnuaout - #endif - #endif - #ifdef __dietlibc__ - LIBC=dietlibc - #endif -EOF - eval `$CC_FOR_BUILD -E $dummy.c 2>/dev/null | grep ^LIBC=` - test x"${LIBC}" != x && { - echo "${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-linux-${LIBC}" - exit - } - test x"${TENTATIVE}" != x && { echo "${TENTATIVE}"; exit; } - ;; - i*86:DYNIX/ptx:4*:*) - # ptx 4.0 does uname -s correctly, with DYNIX/ptx in there. - # earlier versions are messed up and put the nodename in both - # sysname and nodename. - echo i386-sequent-sysv4 - exit ;; - i*86:UNIX_SV:4.2MP:2.*) - # Unixware is an offshoot of SVR4, but it has its own version - # number series starting with 2... - # I am not positive that other SVR4 systems won't match this, - # I just have to hope. -- rms. - # Use sysv4.2uw... so that sysv4* matches it. - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-sysv4.2uw${UNAME_VERSION} - exit ;; - i*86:OS/2:*:*) - # If we were able to find `uname', then EMX Unix compatibility - # is probably installed. - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-os2-emx - exit ;; - i*86:XTS-300:*:STOP) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-stop - exit ;; - i*86:atheos:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-atheos - exit ;; - i*86:syllable:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-syllable - exit ;; - i*86:LynxOS:2.*:* | i*86:LynxOS:3.[01]*:* | i*86:LynxOS:4.0*:*) - echo i386-unknown-lynxos${UNAME_RELEASE} - exit ;; - i*86:*DOS:*:*) - echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-msdosdjgpp - exit ;; - i*86:*:4.*:* | i*86:SYSTEM_V:4.*:*) - UNAME_REL=`echo ${UNAME_RELEASE} | sed 's/\/MP$//'` - if grep Novell /usr/include/link.h >/dev/null 2>/dev/null; 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Perhaps BFD should be changed, - I don't know.... */ - printf ("mips-sony-bsd\n"); exit (0); -#else -#include <sys/param.h> - printf ("m68k-sony-newsos%s\n", -#ifdef NEWSOS4 - "4" -#else - "" -#endif - ); exit (0); -#endif -#endif - -#if defined (__arm) && defined (__acorn) && defined (__unix) - printf ("arm-acorn-riscix\n"); exit (0); -#endif - -#if defined (hp300) && !defined (hpux) - printf ("m68k-hp-bsd\n"); exit (0); -#endif - -#if defined (NeXT) -#if !defined (__ARCHITECTURE__) -#define __ARCHITECTURE__ "m68k" -#endif - int version; - version=`(hostinfo | sed -n 's/.*NeXT Mach \([0-9]*\).*/\1/p') 2>/dev/null`; - if (version < 4) - printf ("%s-next-nextstep%d\n", __ARCHITECTURE__, version); - else - printf ("%s-next-openstep%d\n", __ARCHITECTURE__, version); - exit (0); -#endif - -#if defined (MULTIMAX) || defined (n16) -#if defined (UMAXV) - printf ("ns32k-encore-sysv\n"); exit (0); -#else -#if defined (CMU) - printf ("ns32k-encore-mach\n"); exit (0); -#else - printf ("ns32k-encore-bsd\n"); exit (0); -#endif -#endif -#endif - -#if defined (__386BSD__) - printf ("i386-pc-bsd\n"); exit (0); -#endif - -#if defined (sequent) -#if defined (i386) - printf ("i386-sequent-dynix\n"); exit (0); -#endif -#if defined (ns32000) - printf ("ns32k-sequent-dynix\n"); exit (0); -#endif -#endif - -#if defined (_SEQUENT_) - struct utsname un; - - uname(&un); - - if (strncmp(un.version, "V2", 2) == 0) { - printf ("i386-sequent-ptx2\n"); exit (0); - } - if (strncmp(un.version, "V1", 2) == 0) { /* XXX is V1 correct? */ - printf ("i386-sequent-ptx1\n"); exit (0); - } - printf ("i386-sequent-ptx\n"); exit (0); - -#endif - -#if defined (vax) -# if !defined (ultrix) -# include <sys/param.h> -# if defined (BSD) -# if BSD == 43 - printf ("vax-dec-bsd4.3\n"); exit (0); -# else -# if BSD == 199006 - printf ("vax-dec-bsd4.3reno\n"); exit (0); -# else - printf ("vax-dec-bsd\n"); exit (0); -# endif -# endif -# else - printf ("vax-dec-bsd\n"); exit (0); -# endif -# else - printf ("vax-dec-ultrix\n"); exit (0); -# endif -#endif - -#if defined (alliant) && defined (i860) - printf ("i860-alliant-bsd\n"); exit (0); -#endif - - exit (1); -} -EOF - -$CC_FOR_BUILD -o $dummy $dummy.c 2>/dev/null && SYSTEM_NAME=`$dummy` && - { echo "$SYSTEM_NAME"; exit; } - -# Apollos put the system type in the environment. - -test -d /usr/apollo && { echo ${ISP}-apollo-${SYSTYPE}; exit; } - -# Convex versions that predate uname can use getsysinfo(1) - -if [ -x /usr/convex/getsysinfo ] -then - case `getsysinfo -f cpu_type` in - c1*) - echo c1-convex-bsd - exit ;; - c2*) - if getsysinfo -f scalar_acc - then echo c32-convex-bsd - else echo c2-convex-bsd - fi - exit ;; - c34*) - echo c34-convex-bsd - exit ;; - c38*) - echo c38-convex-bsd - exit ;; - c4*) - echo c4-convex-bsd - exit ;; - esac -fi - -cat >&2 <<EOF -$0: unable to guess system type - -This script, last modified $timestamp, has failed to recognize -the operating system you are using. It is advised that you -download the most up to date version of the config scripts from - - http://savannah.gnu.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs/*checkout*/config/config/config.guess -and - http://savannah.gnu.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs/*checkout*/config/config/config.sub - -If the version you run ($0) is already up to date, please -send the following data and any information you think might be -pertinent to <config-patches@gnu.org> in order to provide the needed -information to handle your system. - -config.guess timestamp = $timestamp - -uname -m = `(uname -m) 2>/dev/null || echo unknown` -uname -r = `(uname -r) 2>/dev/null || echo unknown` -uname -s = `(uname -s) 2>/dev/null || echo unknown` -uname -v = `(uname -v) 2>/dev/null || echo unknown` - -/usr/bin/uname -p = `(/usr/bin/uname -p) 2>/dev/null` -/bin/uname -X = `(/bin/uname -X) 2>/dev/null` - -hostinfo = `(hostinfo) 2>/dev/null` -/bin/universe = `(/bin/universe) 2>/dev/null` -/usr/bin/arch -k = `(/usr/bin/arch -k) 2>/dev/null` -/bin/arch = `(/bin/arch) 2>/dev/null` -/usr/bin/oslevel = `(/usr/bin/oslevel) 2>/dev/null` -/usr/convex/getsysinfo = `(/usr/convex/getsysinfo) 2>/dev/null` - -UNAME_MACHINE = ${UNAME_MACHINE} -UNAME_RELEASE = ${UNAME_RELEASE} -UNAME_SYSTEM = ${UNAME_SYSTEM} -UNAME_VERSION = ${UNAME_VERSION} -EOF - -exit 1 - -# Local variables: -# eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp) -# time-stamp-start: "timestamp='" -# time-stamp-format: "%:y-%02m-%02d" -# time-stamp-end: "'" -# End: diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/config.mk b/source3/lib/talloc/config.mk deleted file mode 100644 index c13e1b79ab..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/config.mk +++ /dev/null @@ -1,7 +0,0 @@ -[LIBRARY::LIBTALLOC] -OUTPUT_TYPE = MERGED_OBJ -CFLAGS = -Ilib/talloc - -LIBTALLOC_OBJ_FILES = lib/talloc/talloc.o - -MANPAGES += $(tallocdir)/talloc.3 diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/config.sub b/source3/lib/talloc/config.sub deleted file mode 100755 index 23cd6fd75c..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/config.sub +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1577 +0,0 @@ -#! /bin/sh -# Configuration validation subroutine script. -# Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, -# 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc. - -timestamp='2005-07-08' - -# This file is (in principle) common to ALL GNU software. -# The presence of a machine in this file suggests that SOME GNU software -# can handle that machine. 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We also -### recognize some manufacturers as not being operating systems, so we -### can provide default operating systems below. -case $os in - -sun*os*) - # Prevent following clause from handling this invalid input. - ;; - -dec* | -mips* | -sequent* | -encore* | -pc532* | -sgi* | -sony* | \ - -att* | -7300* | -3300* | -delta* | -motorola* | -sun[234]* | \ - -unicom* | -ibm* | -next | -hp | -isi* | -apollo | -altos* | \ - -convergent* | -ncr* | -news | -32* | -3600* | -3100* | -hitachi* |\ - -c[123]* | -convex* | -sun | -crds | -omron* | -dg | -ultra | -tti* | \ - -harris | -dolphin | -highlevel | -gould | -cbm | -ns | -masscomp | \ - -apple | -axis | -knuth | -cray) - os= - basic_machine=$1 - ;; - -sim | -cisco | -oki | -wec | -winbond) - os= - basic_machine=$1 - ;; - -scout) - ;; - -wrs) - os=-vxworks - basic_machine=$1 - ;; - -chorusos*) - os=-chorusos - basic_machine=$1 - ;; - -chorusrdb) - os=-chorusrdb - basic_machine=$1 - ;; - -hiux*) - os=-hiuxwe2 - ;; - -sco5) - os=-sco3.2v5 - basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86-.*/86-pc/'` - ;; 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- m32c) - basic_machine=$basic_machine-unknown - ;; - m6811 | m68hc11 | m6812 | m68hc12) - # Motorola 68HC11/12. - basic_machine=$basic_machine-unknown - os=-none - ;; - m88110 | m680[12346]0 | m683?2 | m68360 | m5200 | v70 | w65 | z8k) - ;; - - # We use `pc' rather than `unknown' - # because (1) that's what they normally are, and - # (2) the word "unknown" tends to confuse beginning users. - i*86 | x86_64) - basic_machine=$basic_machine-pc - ;; - # Object if more than one company name word. - *-*-*) - echo Invalid configuration \`$1\': machine \`$basic_machine\' not recognized 1>&2 - exit 1 - ;; - # Recognize the basic CPU types with company name. - 580-* \ - | a29k-* \ - | alpha-* | alphaev[4-8]-* | alphaev56-* | alphaev6[78]-* \ - | alpha64-* | alpha64ev[4-8]-* | alpha64ev56-* | alpha64ev6[78]-* \ - | alphapca5[67]-* | alpha64pca5[67]-* | arc-* \ - | arm-* | armbe-* | armle-* | armeb-* | armv*-* \ - | avr-* \ - | bfin-* | bs2000-* \ - | c[123]* | c30-* | [cjt]90-* | c4x-* | c54x-* | c55x-* | c6x-* \ - | clipper-* | craynv-* | cydra-* \ - | d10v-* | d30v-* | dlx-* \ - | elxsi-* \ - | f30[01]-* | f700-* | fr30-* | frv-* | fx80-* \ - | h8300-* | h8500-* \ - | hppa-* | hppa1.[01]-* | hppa2.0-* | hppa2.0[nw]-* | hppa64-* \ - | i*86-* | i860-* | i960-* | ia64-* \ - | ip2k-* | iq2000-* \ - | m32r-* | m32rle-* \ - | m68000-* | m680[012346]0-* | m68360-* | m683?2-* | m68k-* \ - | m88110-* | m88k-* | maxq-* | mcore-* \ - | mips-* | mipsbe-* | mipseb-* | mipsel-* | mipsle-* \ - | mips16-* \ - | mips64-* | mips64el-* \ - | mips64vr-* | mips64vrel-* \ - | mips64orion-* | mips64orionel-* \ - | mips64vr4100-* | mips64vr4100el-* \ - | mips64vr4300-* | mips64vr4300el-* \ - | mips64vr5000-* | mips64vr5000el-* \ - | mips64vr5900-* | mips64vr5900el-* \ - | mipsisa32-* | mipsisa32el-* \ - | mipsisa32r2-* | mipsisa32r2el-* \ - | mipsisa64-* | mipsisa64el-* \ - | mipsisa64r2-* | mipsisa64r2el-* \ - | mipsisa64sb1-* | mipsisa64sb1el-* \ - | mipsisa64sr71k-* | mipsisa64sr71kel-* \ - | mipstx39-* | mipstx39el-* \ - | mmix-* \ - | ms1-* \ - | msp430-* \ - | none-* | np1-* | ns16k-* | ns32k-* \ - | orion-* \ - | pdp10-* | pdp11-* | pj-* | pjl-* | pn-* | power-* \ - | powerpc-* | powerpc64-* | powerpc64le-* | powerpcle-* | ppcbe-* \ - | pyramid-* \ - | romp-* | rs6000-* \ - | sh-* | sh[1234]-* | sh[24]a-* | sh[23]e-* | sh[34]eb-* | shbe-* \ - | shle-* | sh[1234]le-* | sh3ele-* | sh64-* | sh64le-* \ - | sparc-* | sparc64-* | sparc64b-* | sparc86x-* | sparclet-* \ - | sparclite-* \ - | sparcv8-* | sparcv9-* | sparcv9b-* | strongarm-* | sv1-* | sx?-* \ - | tahoe-* | thumb-* \ - | tic30-* | tic4x-* | tic54x-* | tic55x-* | tic6x-* | tic80-* \ - | tron-* \ - | v850-* | v850e-* | vax-* \ - | we32k-* \ - | x86-* | x86_64-* | xps100-* | xscale-* | xscalee[bl]-* \ - | xstormy16-* | xtensa-* \ - | ymp-* \ - | z8k-*) - ;; - m32c-*) - ;; - # Recognize the various machine names and aliases which stand - # for a CPU type and a company and sometimes even an OS. - 386bsd) - basic_machine=i386-unknown - os=-bsd - ;; - 3b1 | 7300 | 7300-att | att-7300 | pc7300 | safari | unixpc) - basic_machine=m68000-att - ;; - 3b*) - basic_machine=we32k-att - ;; - a29khif) - basic_machine=a29k-amd - os=-udi - ;; - abacus) - basic_machine=abacus-unknown - ;; - adobe68k) - basic_machine=m68010-adobe - os=-scout - ;; - alliant | fx80) - basic_machine=fx80-alliant - ;; - altos | altos3068) - basic_machine=m68k-altos - ;; - am29k) - basic_machine=a29k-none - os=-bsd - ;; - amd64) - basic_machine=x86_64-pc - ;; - amd64-*) - basic_machine=x86_64-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'` - ;; - amdahl) - basic_machine=580-amdahl - os=-sysv - ;; - amiga | amiga-*) - basic_machine=m68k-unknown - ;; - amigaos | amigados) - basic_machine=m68k-unknown - os=-amigaos - ;; - amigaunix | amix) - basic_machine=m68k-unknown - os=-sysv4 - ;; - apollo68) - basic_machine=m68k-apollo - os=-sysv - ;; - apollo68bsd) - basic_machine=m68k-apollo - os=-bsd - ;; - aux) - basic_machine=m68k-apple - os=-aux - ;; - balance) - basic_machine=ns32k-sequent - os=-dynix - ;; - c90) - basic_machine=c90-cray - os=-unicos - ;; - convex-c1) - basic_machine=c1-convex - os=-bsd - ;; - convex-c2) - basic_machine=c2-convex - os=-bsd - ;; - convex-c32) - basic_machine=c32-convex - os=-bsd - ;; - convex-c34) - basic_machine=c34-convex - os=-bsd - ;; - convex-c38) - basic_machine=c38-convex - os=-bsd - ;; - cray | j90) - basic_machine=j90-cray - os=-unicos - ;; - craynv) - basic_machine=craynv-cray - os=-unicosmp - ;; - cr16c) - basic_machine=cr16c-unknown - os=-elf - ;; - crds | unos) - basic_machine=m68k-crds - ;; - crisv32 | crisv32-* | etraxfs*) - basic_machine=crisv32-axis - ;; - cris | cris-* | etrax*) - basic_machine=cris-axis - ;; - crx) - basic_machine=crx-unknown - os=-elf - ;; - da30 | da30-*) - basic_machine=m68k-da30 - ;; - decstation | decstation-3100 | pmax | pmax-* | pmin | dec3100 | decstatn) - basic_machine=mips-dec - ;; - decsystem10* | dec10*) - basic_machine=pdp10-dec - os=-tops10 - ;; - decsystem20* | dec20*) - basic_machine=pdp10-dec - os=-tops20 - ;; - delta | 3300 | motorola-3300 | motorola-delta \ - | 3300-motorola | delta-motorola) - basic_machine=m68k-motorola - ;; - delta88) - basic_machine=m88k-motorola - os=-sysv3 - ;; - djgpp) - basic_machine=i586-pc - os=-msdosdjgpp - ;; - dpx20 | dpx20-*) - basic_machine=rs6000-bull - os=-bosx - ;; - dpx2* | dpx2*-bull) - basic_machine=m68k-bull - os=-sysv3 - ;; - ebmon29k) - basic_machine=a29k-amd - os=-ebmon - ;; - elxsi) - basic_machine=elxsi-elxsi - os=-bsd - ;; - encore | umax | mmax) - basic_machine=ns32k-encore - ;; - es1800 | OSE68k | ose68k | ose | OSE) - basic_machine=m68k-ericsson - os=-ose - ;; - fx2800) - basic_machine=i860-alliant - ;; - genix) - basic_machine=ns32k-ns - ;; - gmicro) - basic_machine=tron-gmicro - os=-sysv - ;; - go32) - basic_machine=i386-pc - os=-go32 - ;; - h3050r* | hiux*) - basic_machine=hppa1.1-hitachi - os=-hiuxwe2 - ;; - h8300hms) - basic_machine=h8300-hitachi - os=-hms - ;; - h8300xray) - basic_machine=h8300-hitachi - os=-xray - ;; - h8500hms) - basic_machine=h8500-hitachi - os=-hms - ;; - harris) - basic_machine=m88k-harris - os=-sysv3 - ;; - hp300-*) - basic_machine=m68k-hp - ;; - hp300bsd) - basic_machine=m68k-hp - os=-bsd - ;; - hp300hpux) - basic_machine=m68k-hp - os=-hpux - ;; - hp3k9[0-9][0-9] | hp9[0-9][0-9]) - basic_machine=hppa1.0-hp - ;; - hp9k2[0-9][0-9] | hp9k31[0-9]) - basic_machine=m68000-hp - ;; - hp9k3[2-9][0-9]) - basic_machine=m68k-hp - ;; - hp9k6[0-9][0-9] | hp6[0-9][0-9]) - basic_machine=hppa1.0-hp - ;; - hp9k7[0-79][0-9] | hp7[0-79][0-9]) - basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp - ;; - hp9k78[0-9] | hp78[0-9]) - # FIXME: really hppa2.0-hp - basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp - ;; - hp9k8[67]1 | hp8[67]1 | hp9k80[24] | hp80[24] | hp9k8[78]9 | hp8[78]9 | hp9k893 | hp893) - # FIXME: really hppa2.0-hp - basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp - ;; - hp9k8[0-9][13679] | hp8[0-9][13679]) - basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp - ;; - hp9k8[0-9][0-9] | hp8[0-9][0-9]) - basic_machine=hppa1.0-hp - ;; - hppa-next) - os=-nextstep3 - ;; - hppaosf) - basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp - os=-osf - ;; - hppro) - basic_machine=hppa1.1-hp - os=-proelf - ;; - i370-ibm* | ibm*) - basic_machine=i370-ibm - ;; -# I'm not sure what "Sysv32" means. Should this be sysv3.2? - i*86v32) - basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86.*/86-pc/'` - os=-sysv32 - ;; - i*86v4*) - basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86.*/86-pc/'` - os=-sysv4 - ;; - i*86v) - basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86.*/86-pc/'` - os=-sysv - ;; - i*86sol2) - basic_machine=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/86.*/86-pc/'` - os=-solaris2 - ;; - i386mach) - basic_machine=i386-mach - os=-mach - ;; - i386-vsta | vsta) - basic_machine=i386-unknown - os=-vsta - ;; - iris | iris4d) - basic_machine=mips-sgi - case $os in - -irix*) - ;; - *) - os=-irix4 - ;; - esac - ;; - isi68 | isi) - basic_machine=m68k-isi - os=-sysv - ;; - m88k-omron*) - basic_machine=m88k-omron - ;; - magnum | m3230) - basic_machine=mips-mips - os=-sysv - ;; - merlin) - basic_machine=ns32k-utek - os=-sysv - ;; - mingw32) - basic_machine=i386-pc - os=-mingw32 - ;; - miniframe) - basic_machine=m68000-convergent - ;; - *mint | -mint[0-9]* | *MiNT | *MiNT[0-9]*) - basic_machine=m68k-atari - os=-mint - ;; - mips3*-*) - basic_machine=`echo $basic_machine | sed -e 's/mips3/mips64/'` - ;; - mips3*) - basic_machine=`echo $basic_machine | sed -e 's/mips3/mips64/'`-unknown - ;; - monitor) - basic_machine=m68k-rom68k - os=-coff - ;; - morphos) - basic_machine=powerpc-unknown - os=-morphos - ;; - msdos) - basic_machine=i386-pc - os=-msdos - ;; - mvs) - basic_machine=i370-ibm - os=-mvs - ;; - ncr3000) - basic_machine=i486-ncr - os=-sysv4 - ;; - netbsd386) - basic_machine=i386-unknown - os=-netbsd - ;; - netwinder) - basic_machine=armv4l-rebel - os=-linux - ;; - news | news700 | news800 | news900) - basic_machine=m68k-sony - os=-newsos - ;; - news1000) - basic_machine=m68030-sony - os=-newsos - ;; - news-3600 | risc-news) - basic_machine=mips-sony - os=-newsos - ;; - necv70) - basic_machine=v70-nec - os=-sysv - ;; - next | m*-next ) - basic_machine=m68k-next - case $os in - -nextstep* ) - ;; - -ns2*) - os=-nextstep2 - ;; - *) - os=-nextstep3 - ;; - esac - ;; - nh3000) - basic_machine=m68k-harris - os=-cxux - ;; - nh[45]000) - basic_machine=m88k-harris - os=-cxux - ;; - nindy960) - basic_machine=i960-intel - os=-nindy - ;; - mon960) - basic_machine=i960-intel - os=-mon960 - ;; - nonstopux) - basic_machine=mips-compaq - os=-nonstopux - ;; - np1) - basic_machine=np1-gould - ;; - nsr-tandem) - basic_machine=nsr-tandem - ;; - op50n-* | op60c-*) - basic_machine=hppa1.1-oki - os=-proelf - ;; - openrisc | openrisc-*) - basic_machine=or32-unknown - ;; - os400) - basic_machine=powerpc-ibm - os=-os400 - ;; - OSE68000 | ose68000) - basic_machine=m68000-ericsson - os=-ose - ;; - os68k) - basic_machine=m68k-none - os=-os68k - ;; - pa-hitachi) - basic_machine=hppa1.1-hitachi - os=-hiuxwe2 - ;; - paragon) - basic_machine=i860-intel - os=-osf - ;; - pbd) - basic_machine=sparc-tti - ;; - pbb) - basic_machine=m68k-tti - ;; - pc532 | pc532-*) - basic_machine=ns32k-pc532 - ;; - pentium | p5 | k5 | k6 | nexgen | viac3) - basic_machine=i586-pc - ;; - pentiumpro | p6 | 6x86 | athlon | athlon_*) - basic_machine=i686-pc - ;; - pentiumii | pentium2 | pentiumiii | pentium3) - basic_machine=i686-pc - ;; - pentium4) - basic_machine=i786-pc - ;; - pentium-* | p5-* | k5-* | k6-* | nexgen-* | viac3-*) - basic_machine=i586-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'` - ;; - pentiumpro-* | p6-* | 6x86-* | athlon-*) - basic_machine=i686-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'` - ;; - pentiumii-* | pentium2-* | pentiumiii-* | pentium3-*) - basic_machine=i686-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'` - ;; - pentium4-*) - basic_machine=i786-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'` - ;; - pn) - basic_machine=pn-gould - ;; - power) basic_machine=power-ibm - ;; - ppc) basic_machine=powerpc-unknown - ;; - ppc-*) basic_machine=powerpc-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'` - ;; - ppcle | powerpclittle | ppc-le | powerpc-little) - basic_machine=powerpcle-unknown - ;; - ppcle-* | powerpclittle-*) - basic_machine=powerpcle-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'` - ;; - ppc64) basic_machine=powerpc64-unknown - ;; - ppc64-*) basic_machine=powerpc64-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'` - ;; - ppc64le | powerpc64little | ppc64-le | powerpc64-little) - basic_machine=powerpc64le-unknown - ;; - ppc64le-* | powerpc64little-*) - basic_machine=powerpc64le-`echo $basic_machine | sed 's/^[^-]*-//'` - ;; - ps2) - basic_machine=i386-ibm - ;; - pw32) - basic_machine=i586-unknown - os=-pw32 - ;; - rom68k) - basic_machine=m68k-rom68k - os=-coff - ;; - rm[46]00) - basic_machine=mips-siemens - ;; - rtpc | rtpc-*) - basic_machine=romp-ibm - ;; - s390 | s390-*) - basic_machine=s390-ibm - ;; - s390x | s390x-*) - basic_machine=s390x-ibm - ;; - sa29200) - basic_machine=a29k-amd - os=-udi - ;; - sb1) - basic_machine=mipsisa64sb1-unknown - ;; - sb1el) - basic_machine=mipsisa64sb1el-unknown - ;; - sei) - basic_machine=mips-sei - os=-seiux - ;; - sequent) - basic_machine=i386-sequent - ;; - sh) - basic_machine=sh-hitachi - os=-hms - ;; - sh64) - basic_machine=sh64-unknown - ;; - sparclite-wrs | simso-wrs) - basic_machine=sparclite-wrs - os=-vxworks - ;; - sps7) - basic_machine=m68k-bull - os=-sysv2 - ;; - spur) - basic_machine=spur-unknown - ;; - st2000) - basic_machine=m68k-tandem - ;; - stratus) - basic_machine=i860-stratus - os=-sysv4 - ;; - sun2) - basic_machine=m68000-sun - ;; - sun2os3) - basic_machine=m68000-sun - os=-sunos3 - ;; - sun2os4) - basic_machine=m68000-sun - os=-sunos4 - ;; - sun3os3) - basic_machine=m68k-sun - os=-sunos3 - ;; - sun3os4) - basic_machine=m68k-sun - os=-sunos4 - ;; - sun4os3) - basic_machine=sparc-sun - os=-sunos3 - ;; - sun4os4) - basic_machine=sparc-sun - os=-sunos4 - ;; - sun4sol2) - basic_machine=sparc-sun - os=-solaris2 - ;; - sun3 | sun3-*) - basic_machine=m68k-sun - ;; - sun4) - basic_machine=sparc-sun - ;; - sun386 | sun386i | roadrunner) - basic_machine=i386-sun - ;; - sv1) - basic_machine=sv1-cray - os=-unicos - ;; - symmetry) - basic_machine=i386-sequent - os=-dynix - ;; - t3e) - basic_machine=alphaev5-cray - os=-unicos - ;; - t90) - basic_machine=t90-cray - os=-unicos - ;; - tic54x | c54x*) - basic_machine=tic54x-unknown - os=-coff - ;; - tic55x | c55x*) - basic_machine=tic55x-unknown - os=-coff - ;; - tic6x | c6x*) - basic_machine=tic6x-unknown - os=-coff - ;; - tx39) - basic_machine=mipstx39-unknown - ;; 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- -# Here we handle the default manufacturer of certain CPU types. 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/bin/sh -# -# install - install a program, script, or datafile -# This comes from X11R5. -# -# Calling this script install-sh is preferred over install.sh, to prevent -# `make' implicit rules from creating a file called install from it -# when there is no Makefile. -# -# This script is compatible with the BSD install script, but was written -# from scratch. -# - - -# set DOITPROG to echo to test this script - -# Don't use :- since 4.3BSD and earlier shells don't like it. -doit="${DOITPROG-}" - - -# put in absolute paths if you don't have them in your path; or use env. vars. - -mvprog="${MVPROG-mv}" -cpprog="${CPPROG-cp}" -chmodprog="${CHMODPROG-chmod}" -chownprog="${CHOWNPROG-chown}" -chgrpprog="${CHGRPPROG-chgrp}" -stripprog="${STRIPPROG-strip}" -rmprog="${RMPROG-rm}" -mkdirprog="${MKDIRPROG-mkdir}" - -transformbasename="" -transform_arg="" -instcmd="$mvprog" -chmodcmd="$chmodprog 0755" -chowncmd="" -chgrpcmd="" -stripcmd="" -rmcmd="$rmprog -f" -mvcmd="$mvprog" -src="" -dst="" -dir_arg="" - -while [ x"$1" != x ]; do - case $1 in - -c) instcmd="$cpprog" - shift - continue;; - - -d) dir_arg=true - shift - continue;; - - -m) chmodcmd="$chmodprog $2" - shift - shift - continue;; - - -o) chowncmd="$chownprog $2" - shift - shift - continue;; - - -g) chgrpcmd="$chgrpprog $2" - shift - shift - continue;; - - -s) stripcmd="$stripprog" - shift - continue;; - - -t=*) transformarg=`echo $1 | sed 's/-t=//'` - shift - continue;; - - -b=*) transformbasename=`echo $1 | sed 's/-b=//'` - shift - continue;; - - *) if [ x"$src" = x ] - then - src=$1 - else - # this colon is to work around a 386BSD /bin/sh bug - : - dst=$1 - fi - shift - continue;; - esac -done - -if [ x"$src" = x ] -then - echo "install: no input file specified" - exit 1 -else - true -fi - -if [ x"$dir_arg" != x ]; then - dst=$src - src="" - - if [ -d $dst ]; then - instcmd=: - else - instcmd=mkdir - fi -else - -# Waiting for this to be detected by the "$instcmd $src $dsttmp" command -# might cause directories to be created, which would be especially bad -# if $src (and thus $dsttmp) contains '*'. - - if [ -f $src -o -d $src ] - then - true - else - echo "install: $src does not exist" - exit 1 - fi - - if [ x"$dst" = x ] - then - echo "install: no destination specified" - exit 1 - else - true - fi - -# If destination is a directory, append the input filename; if your system -# does not like double slashes in filenames, you may need to add some logic - - if [ -d $dst ] - then - dst="$dst"/`basename $src` - else - true - fi -fi - -## this sed command emulates the dirname command -dstdir=`echo $dst | sed -e 's,[^/]*$,,;s,/$,,;s,^$,.,'` - -# Make sure that the destination directory exists. -# this part is taken from Noah Friedman's mkinstalldirs script - -# Skip lots of stat calls in the usual case. -if [ ! -d "$dstdir" ]; then -defaultIFS=' -' -IFS="${IFS-${defaultIFS}}" - -oIFS="${IFS}" -# Some sh's can't handle IFS=/ for some reason. -IFS='%' -set - `echo ${dstdir} | sed -e 's@/@%@g' -e 's@^%@/@'` -IFS="${oIFS}" - -pathcomp='' - -while [ $# -ne 0 ] ; do - pathcomp="${pathcomp}${1}" - shift - - if [ ! -d "${pathcomp}" ] ; - then - $mkdirprog "${pathcomp}" - else - true - fi - - pathcomp="${pathcomp}/" -done -fi - -if [ x"$dir_arg" != x ] -then - $doit $instcmd $dst && - - if [ x"$chowncmd" != x ]; then $doit $chowncmd $dst; else true ; fi && - if [ x"$chgrpcmd" != x ]; then $doit $chgrpcmd $dst; else true ; fi && - if [ x"$stripcmd" != x ]; then $doit $stripcmd $dst; else true ; fi && - if [ x"$chmodcmd" != x ]; then $doit $chmodcmd $dst; else true ; fi -else - -# If we're going to rename the final executable, determine the name now. - - if [ x"$transformarg" = x ] - then - dstfile=`basename $dst` - else - dstfile=`basename $dst $transformbasename | - sed $transformarg`$transformbasename - fi - -# don't allow the sed command to completely eliminate the filename - - if [ x"$dstfile" = x ] - then - dstfile=`basename $dst` - else - true - fi - -# Make a temp file name in the proper directory. - - dsttmp=$dstdir/#inst.$$# - -# Move or copy the file name to the temp name - - $doit $instcmd $src $dsttmp && - - trap "rm -f ${dsttmp}" 0 && - -# and set any options; do chmod last to preserve setuid bits - -# If any of these fail, we abort the whole thing. If we want to -# ignore errors from any of these, just make sure not to ignore -# errors from the above "$doit $instcmd $src $dsttmp" command. - - if [ x"$chowncmd" != x ]; then $doit $chowncmd $dsttmp; else true;fi && - if [ x"$chgrpcmd" != x ]; then $doit $chgrpcmd $dsttmp; else true;fi && - if [ x"$stripcmd" != x ]; then $doit $stripcmd $dsttmp; else true;fi && - if [ x"$chmodcmd" != x ]; then $doit $chmodcmd $dsttmp; else true;fi && - -# Now rename the file to the real destination. - - $doit $rmcmd -f $dstdir/$dstfile && - $doit $mvcmd $dsttmp $dstdir/$dstfile - -fi && - - -exit 0 diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/libtalloc.m4 b/source3/lib/talloc/libtalloc.m4 deleted file mode 100644 index fd2b4b22cd..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/libtalloc.m4 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,33 +0,0 @@ -dnl find the talloc sources. This is meant to work both for -dnl talloc standalone builds, and builds of packages using talloc -tallocdir="" -tallocpaths=". lib/talloc talloc ../talloc" -for d in $tallocpaths; do - if test -f "$srcdir/$d/talloc.c"; then - tallocdir="$d" - AC_SUBST(tallocdir) - break; - fi -done -if test x"$tallocdir" = "x"; then - AC_MSG_ERROR([cannot find talloc source in $tallocpaths]) -fi -TALLOC_OBJ="talloc.o" -AC_SUBST(TALLOC_OBJ) - -TALLOC_CFLAGS="-I$srcdir/$tallocdir" -AC_SUBST(TALLOC_CFLAGS) - -TALLOC_LIBS="" -AC_SUBST(TALLOC_LIBS) - -AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(size_t,cross) -AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(void *,cross) - -if test $ac_cv_sizeof_size_t -lt $ac_cv_sizeof_void_p; then - AC_WARN([size_t cannot represent the amount of used memory of a process]) - AC_WARN([please report this to <samba-technical@samba.org>]) - AC_WARN([sizeof(size_t) = $ac_cv_sizeof_size_t]) - AC_WARN([sizeof(void *) = $ac_cv_sizeof_void_p]) - AC_ERROR([sizeof(size_t) < sizeof(void *)]) -fi diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/rules.mk b/source3/lib/talloc/rules.mk deleted file mode 100644 index 6cee126529..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/rules.mk +++ /dev/null @@ -1,18 +0,0 @@ -.SUFFIXES: .c .o .3 .3.xml .xml .html - -showflags:: - @echo 'talloc will be compiled with flags:' - @echo ' CFLAGS = $(CFLAGS)' - @echo ' LIBS = $(LIBS)' - -.c.o: - $(CC) $(PICFLAG) -o $@ -c $< $(CFLAGS) - -.3.xml.3: - -test -z "$(XSLTPROC)" || $(XSLTPROC) --nonet -o $@ http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/manpages/docbook.xsl $< - -.xml.html: - -test -z "$(XSLTPROC)" || $(XSLTPROC) --nonet -o $@ http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/html/docbook.xsl $< - -distclean:: - rm -f *~ */*~ diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.3.xml b/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.3.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 67de15bfc8..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.3.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,738 +0,0 @@ -<?xml version="1.0"?> -<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> -<refentry> - <refmeta> - <refentrytitle>talloc</refentrytitle> - <manvolnum>3</manvolnum> - </refmeta> - <refnamediv> - <refname>talloc</refname> -<refpurpose>hierarchical reference counted memory pool system with destructors</refpurpose> - </refnamediv> - <refsynopsisdiv> -<synopsis>#include <talloc/talloc.h></synopsis> - </refsynopsisdiv> - <refsect1><title>DESCRIPTION</title> - <para> - If you are used to talloc from Samba3 then please read this - carefully, as talloc has changed a lot. - </para> - <para> - The new talloc is a hierarchical, reference counted memory pool - system with destructors. Quite a mouthful really, but not too bad - once you get used to it. - </para> - <para> - Perhaps the biggest change from Samba3 is that there is no - distinction between a "talloc context" and a "talloc pointer". Any - pointer returned from talloc() is itself a valid talloc context. - This means you can do this: - </para> - <programlisting> - struct foo *X = talloc(mem_ctx, struct foo); - X->name = talloc_strdup(X, "foo"); - </programlisting> - <para> - and the pointer <literal role="code">X->name</literal> - would be a "child" of the talloc context <literal - role="code">X</literal> which is itself a child of - <literal role="code">mem_ctx</literal>. So if you do - <literal role="code">talloc_free(mem_ctx)</literal> then - it is all destroyed, whereas if you do <literal - role="code">talloc_free(X)</literal> then just <literal - role="code">X</literal> and <literal - role="code">X->name</literal> are destroyed, and if - you do <literal - role="code">talloc_free(X->name)</literal> then just - the name element of <literal role="code">X</literal> is - destroyed. - </para> - <para> - If you think about this, then what this effectively gives you is an - n-ary tree, where you can free any part of the tree with - talloc_free(). - </para> - <para> - If you find this confusing, then I suggest you run the <literal - role="code">testsuite</literal> program to watch talloc - in action. You may also like to add your own tests to <literal - role="code">testsuite.c</literal> to clarify how some - particular situation is handled. - </para> - </refsect1> - <refsect1><title>TALLOC API</title> - <para> - The following is a complete guide to the talloc API. Read it all at - least twice. - </para> - <refsect2><title>(type *)talloc(const void *ctx, type);</title> - <para> - The talloc() macro is the core of the talloc library. It takes a - memory <emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis> and a <emphasis - role="italic">type</emphasis>, and returns a pointer to a new - area of memory of the given <emphasis - role="italic">type</emphasis>. - </para> - <para> - The returned pointer is itself a talloc context, so you can use - it as the <emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis> argument to more - calls to talloc() if you wish. - </para> - <para> - The returned pointer is a "child" of the supplied context. This - means that if you talloc_free() the <emphasis - role="italic">ctx</emphasis> then the new child disappears as - well. Alternatively you can free just the child. - </para> - <para> - The <emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis> argument to talloc() - can be NULL, in which case a new top level context is created. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_size(const void *ctx, size_t size);</title> - <para> - The function talloc_size() should be used when you don't have a - convenient type to pass to talloc(). Unlike talloc(), it is not - type safe (as it returns a void *), so you are on your own for - type checking. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>(typeof(ptr)) talloc_ptrtype(const void *ctx, ptr);</title> - <para> - The talloc_ptrtype() macro should be used when you have a pointer and - want to allocate memory to point at with this pointer. When compiling - with gcc >= 3 it is typesafe. Note this is a wrapper of talloc_size() - and talloc_get_name() will return the current location in the source file. - and not the type. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>int talloc_free(void *ptr);</title> - <para> - The talloc_free() function frees a piece of talloc memory, and - all its children. You can call talloc_free() on any pointer - returned by talloc(). - </para> - <para> - The return value of talloc_free() indicates success or failure, - with 0 returned for success and -1 for failure. The only - possible failure condition is if <emphasis - role="italic">ptr</emphasis> had a destructor attached to it and - the destructor returned -1. See <link - linkend="talloc_set_destructor"><quote>talloc_set_destructor()</quote></link> - for details on destructors. - </para> - <para> - If this pointer has an additional parent when talloc_free() is - called then the memory is not actually released, but instead the - most recently established parent is destroyed. See <link - linkend="talloc_reference"><quote>talloc_reference()</quote></link> - for details on establishing additional parents. - </para> - <para> - For more control on which parent is removed, see <link - linkend="talloc_unlink"><quote>talloc_unlink()</quote></link>. - </para> - <para> - talloc_free() operates recursively on its children. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2 id="talloc_reference"><title>void *talloc_reference(const void *ctx, const void *ptr);</title> - <para> - The talloc_reference() function makes <emphasis - role="italic">ctx</emphasis> an additional parent of <emphasis - role="italic">ptr</emphasis>. - </para> - <para> - The return value of talloc_reference() is always the original - pointer <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>, unless talloc ran - out of memory in creating the reference in which case it will - return NULL (each additional reference consumes around 48 bytes - of memory on intel x86 platforms). - </para> - <para> - If <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis> is NULL, then the - function is a no-op, and simply returns NULL. - </para> - <para> - After creating a reference you can free it in one of the - following ways: - </para> - <para> - <itemizedlist> - <listitem> - <para> - you can talloc_free() any parent of the original pointer. - That will reduce the number of parents of this pointer by 1, - and will cause this pointer to be freed if it runs out of - parents. - </para> - </listitem> - <listitem> - <para> - you can talloc_free() the pointer itself. That will destroy - the most recently established parent to the pointer and leave - the pointer as a child of its current parent. - </para> - </listitem> - </itemizedlist> - </para> - <para> - For more control on which parent to remove, see <link - linkend="talloc_unlink"><quote>talloc_unlink()</quote></link>. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2 id="talloc_unlink"><title>int talloc_unlink(const void *ctx, const void *ptr);</title> - <para> - The talloc_unlink() function removes a specific parent from - <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>. The <emphasis - role="italic">ctx</emphasis> passed must either be a context used - in talloc_reference() with this pointer, or must be a direct - parent of ptr. - </para> - <para> - Note that if the parent has already been removed using - talloc_free() then this function will fail and will return -1. - Likewise, if <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis> is NULL, then - the function will make no modifications and return -1. - </para> - <para> - Usually you can just use talloc_free() instead of - talloc_unlink(), but sometimes it is useful to have the - additional control on which parent is removed. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2 id="talloc_set_destructor"><title>void talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*destructor)(void *));</title> - <para> - The function talloc_set_destructor() sets the <emphasis - role="italic">destructor</emphasis> for the pointer <emphasis - role="italic">ptr</emphasis>. A <emphasis - role="italic">destructor</emphasis> is a function that is called - when the memory used by a pointer is about to be released. The - destructor receives <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis> as an - argument, and should return 0 for success and -1 for failure. - </para> - <para> - The <emphasis role="italic">destructor</emphasis> can do anything - it wants to, including freeing other pieces of memory. A common - use for destructors is to clean up operating system resources - (such as open file descriptors) contained in the structure the - destructor is placed on. - </para> - <para> - You can only place one destructor on a pointer. If you need more - than one destructor then you can create a zero-length child of - the pointer and place an additional destructor on that. - </para> - <para> - To remove a destructor call talloc_set_destructor() with NULL for - the destructor. - </para> - <para> - If your destructor attempts to talloc_free() the pointer that it - is the destructor for then talloc_free() will return -1 and the - free will be ignored. This would be a pointless operation - anyway, as the destructor is only called when the memory is just - about to go away. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_increase_ref_count(<emphasis - role="italic">ptr</emphasis>) function is exactly equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_reference(NULL, ptr);</programlisting> - <para> - You can use either syntax, depending on which you think is - clearer in your code. - </para> - <para> - It returns 0 on success and -1 on failure. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - Return the number of references to the pointer. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2 id="talloc_set_name"><title>void talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...);</title> - <para> - Each talloc pointer has a "name". The name is used principally - for debugging purposes, although it is also possible to set and - get the name on a pointer in as a way of "marking" pointers in - your code. - </para> - <para> - The main use for names on pointer is for "talloc reports". See - <link - linkend="talloc_report"><quote>talloc_report_depth_cb()</quote></link>, - <link - linkend="talloc_report"><quote>talloc_report_depth_file()</quote></link>, - <link - linkend="talloc_report"><quote>talloc_report()</quote></link> - <link - linkend="talloc_report"><quote>talloc_report()</quote></link> - and <link - linkend="talloc_report_full"><quote>talloc_report_full()</quote></link> - for details. Also see <link - linkend="talloc_enable_leak_report"><quote>talloc_enable_leak_report()</quote></link> - and <link - linkend="talloc_enable_leak_report_full"><quote>talloc_enable_leak_report_full()</quote></link>. - </para> - <para> - The talloc_set_name() function allocates memory as a child of the - pointer. It is logically equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, talloc_asprintf(ptr, fmt, ...));</programlisting> - <para> - Note that multiple calls to talloc_set_name() will allocate more - memory without releasing the name. All of the memory is released - when the ptr is freed using talloc_free(). - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void talloc_set_name_const(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">name</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The function talloc_set_name_const() is just like - talloc_set_name(), but it takes a string constant, and is much - faster. It is extensively used by the "auto naming" macros, such - as talloc_p(). - </para> - <para> - This function does not allocate any memory. It just copies the - supplied pointer into the internal representation of the talloc - ptr. This means you must not pass a <emphasis - role="italic">name</emphasis> pointer to memory that will - disappear before <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis> is freed - with talloc_free(). - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_named(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, size_t <emphasis role="italic">size</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">fmt</emphasis>, ...);</title> - <para> - The talloc_named() function creates a named talloc pointer. It - is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>ptr = talloc_size(ctx, size); -talloc_set_name(ptr, fmt, ....);</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_named_const(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, size_t <emphasis role="italic">size</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">name</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - This is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>ptr = talloc_size(ctx, size); -talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name);</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>const char *talloc_get_name(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - This returns the current name for the given talloc pointer, - <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>. See <link - linkend="talloc_set_name"><quote>talloc_set_name()</quote></link> - for details. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_init(const char *<emphasis role="italic">fmt</emphasis>, ...);</title> - <para> - This function creates a zero length named talloc context as a top - level context. It is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_named(NULL, 0, fmt, ...);</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_new(void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - This is a utility macro that creates a new memory context hanging - off an exiting context, automatically naming it "talloc_new: - __location__" where __location__ is the source line it is called - from. It is particularly useful for creating a new temporary - working context. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>(<emphasis role="italic">type</emphasis> *)talloc_realloc(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>, <emphasis role="italic">type</emphasis>, <emphasis role="italic">count</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_realloc() macro changes the size of a talloc pointer. - It has the following equivalences: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_realloc(ctx, NULL, type, 1) ==> talloc(ctx, type); -talloc_realloc(ctx, ptr, type, 0) ==> talloc_free(ptr);</programlisting> - <para> - The <emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis> argument is only used - if <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis> is not NULL, otherwise - it is ignored. - </para> - <para> - talloc_realloc() returns the new pointer, or NULL on failure. - The call will fail either due to a lack of memory, or because the - pointer has more than one parent (see <link - linkend="talloc_reference"><quote>talloc_reference()</quote></link>). - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_realloc_size(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t size);</title> - <para> - the talloc_realloc_size() function is useful when the type is not - known so the type-safe talloc_realloc() cannot be used. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>TYPE *talloc_steal(const void *<emphasis role="italic">new_ctx</emphasis>, const TYPE *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_steal() function changes the parent context of a - talloc pointer. It is typically used when the context that the - pointer is currently a child of is going to be freed and you wish - to keep the memory for a longer time. - </para> - <para> - The talloc_steal() function returns the pointer that you pass it. - It does not have any failure modes. - </para> - <para> - NOTE: It is possible to produce loops in the parent/child - relationship if you are not careful with talloc_steal(). No - guarantees are provided as to your sanity or the safety of your - data if you do this. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>TYPE *talloc_move(const void *<emphasis role="italic">new_ctx</emphasis>, TYPE **<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_move() function is a wrapper around - talloc_steal() which zeros the source pointer after the - move. This avoids a potential source of bugs where a - programmer leaves a pointer in two structures, and uses the - pointer from the old structure after it has been moved to a - new one. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>size_t talloc_total_size(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_total_size() function returns the total size in bytes - used by this pointer and all child pointers. Mostly useful for - debugging. - </para> - <para> - Passing NULL is allowed, but it will only give a meaningful - result if talloc_enable_leak_report() or - talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has been called. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_total_blocks() function returns the total memory block - count used by this pointer and all child pointers. Mostly useful - for debugging. - </para> - <para> - Passing NULL is allowed, but it will only give a meaningful - result if talloc_enable_leak_report() or - talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has been called. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2 id="talloc_report"><title>void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f);</title> - <para> - The talloc_report() function prints a summary report of all - memory used by <emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>. One line - of report is printed for each immediate child of ptr, showing the - total memory and number of blocks used by that child. - </para> - <para> - You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is - printed for the top level memory context, but only if - talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() - has been called. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2 id="talloc_report_full"><title>void talloc_report_full(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ptr</emphasis>, FILE *<emphasis role="italic">f</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - This provides a more detailed report than talloc_report(). It - will recursively print the entire tree of memory referenced by - the pointer. References in the tree are shown by giving the name - of the pointer that is referenced. - </para> - <para> - You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is - printed for the top level memory context, but only if - talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() - has been called. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2 id="talloc_report_depth_cb"> - <funcsynopsis><funcprototype> - <funcdef>void <function>talloc_report_depth_cb</function></funcdef> - <paramdef><parameter>const void *ptr</parameter></paramdef> - <paramdef><parameter>int depth</parameter></paramdef> - <paramdef><parameter>int max_depth</parameter></paramdef> - <paramdef><parameter>void (*callback)(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, int is_ref, void *priv)</parameter></paramdef> - <paramdef><parameter>void *priv</parameter></paramdef> - </funcprototype></funcsynopsis> - <para> - This provides a more flexible reports than talloc_report(). It - will recursively call the callback for the entire tree of memory - referenced by the pointer. References in the tree are passed with - <emphasis role="italic">is_ref = 1</emphasis> and the pointer that is referenced. - </para> - <para> - You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is - printed for the top level memory context, but only if - talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() - has been called. - </para> - <para> - The recursion is stopped when depth >= max_depth. - max_depth = -1 means only stop at leaf nodes. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2 id="talloc_report_depth_file"> - <funcsynopsis><funcprototype> - <funcdef>void <function>talloc_report_depth_file</function></funcdef> - <paramdef><parameter>const void *ptr</parameter></paramdef> - <paramdef><parameter>int depth</parameter></paramdef> - <paramdef><parameter>int max_depth</parameter></paramdef> - <paramdef><parameter>FILE *f</parameter></paramdef> - </funcprototype></funcsynopsis> - <para> - This provides a more flexible reports than talloc_report(). It - will let you specify the depth and max_depth. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2 id="talloc_enable_leak_report"><title>void talloc_enable_leak_report(void);</title> - <para> - This enables calling of talloc_report(NULL, stderr) when the - program exits. In Samba4 this is enabled by using the - --leak-report command line option. - </para> - <para> - For it to be useful, this function must be called before any - other talloc function as it establishes a "null context" that - acts as the top of the tree. If you don't call this function - first then passing NULL to talloc_report() or - talloc_report_full() won't give you the full tree printout. - </para> - <para> - Here is a typical talloc report: - </para> - <screen format="linespecific">talloc report on 'null_context' (total 267 bytes in 15 blocks) -libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks -libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks -iconv(UTF8,CP850) contains 42 bytes in 2 blocks -libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks -iconv(CP850,UTF8) contains 42 bytes in 2 blocks -iconv(UTF8,UTF-16LE) contains 45 bytes in 2 blocks -iconv(UTF-16LE,UTF8) contains 45 bytes in 2 blocks - </screen> - </refsect2> - <refsect2 id="talloc_enable_leak_report_full"><title>void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void);</title> - <para> - This enables calling of talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr) when the - program exits. In Samba4 this is enabled by using the - --leak-report-full command line option. - </para> - <para> - For it to be useful, this function must be called before any - other talloc function as it establishes a "null context" that - acts as the top of the tree. If you don't call this function - first then passing NULL to talloc_report() or - talloc_report_full() won't give you the full tree printout. - </para> - <para> - Here is a typical full report: - </para> - <screen format="linespecific">full talloc report on 'root' (total 18 bytes in 8 blocks) -p1 contains 18 bytes in 7 blocks (ref 0) - r1 contains 13 bytes in 2 blocks (ref 0) - reference to: p2 - p2 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 1) - x3 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0) - x2 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0) - x1 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0) - </screen> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>(<emphasis role="italic">type</emphasis> *)talloc_zero(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, <emphasis role="italic">type</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_zero() macro is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>ptr = talloc(ctx, type); -if (ptr) memset(ptr, 0, sizeof(type));</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_zero_size(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, size_t <emphasis role="italic">size</emphasis>)</title> - <para> - The talloc_zero_size() function is useful when you don't have a - known type. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_memdup(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, const void *<emphasis role="italic">p</emphasis>, size_t size);</title> - <para> - The talloc_memdup() function is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>ptr = talloc_size(ctx, size); -if (ptr) memcpy(ptr, p, size);</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>char *talloc_strdup(const void *<emphasis role="italic">ctx</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">p</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_strdup() function is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>ptr = talloc_size(ctx, strlen(p)+1); -if (ptr) memcpy(ptr, p, strlen(p)+1);</programlisting> - <para> - This function sets the name of the new pointer to the passed - string. This is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>char *talloc_strndup(const void *<emphasis role="italic">t</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">p</emphasis>, size_t <emphasis role="italic">n</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_strndup() function is the talloc equivalent of the C - library function strndup(3). - </para> - <para> - This function sets the name of the new pointer to the passed - string. This is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>char *talloc_append_string(const void *<emphasis role="italic">t</emphasis>, char *<emphasis role="italic">orig</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">append</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_append_string() function appends the given formatted - string to the given string. - </para> - <para> - This function sets the name of the new pointer to the new - string. This is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *<emphasis role="italic">t</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">fmt</emphasis>, va_list <emphasis role="italic">ap</emphasis>);</title> - <para> - The talloc_vasprintf() function is the talloc equivalent of the C - library function vasprintf(3). - </para> - <para> - This function sets the name of the new pointer to the new - string. This is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>char *talloc_asprintf(const void *<emphasis role="italic">t</emphasis>, const char *<emphasis role="italic">fmt</emphasis>, ...);</title> - <para> - The talloc_asprintf() function is the talloc equivalent of the C - library function asprintf(3). - </para> - <para> - This function sets the name of the new pointer to the passed - string. This is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...);</title> - <para> - The talloc_asprintf_append() function appends the given formatted - string to the given string. - </para> - <para> - This function sets the name of the new pointer to the new - string. This is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr)</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>(type *)talloc_array(const void *ctx, type, uint_t count);</title> - <para> - The talloc_array() macro is equivalent to: - </para> - <programlisting>(type *)talloc_size(ctx, sizeof(type) * count);</programlisting> - <para> - except that it provides integer overflow protection for the - multiply, returning NULL if the multiply overflows. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_array_size(const void *ctx, size_t size, uint_t count);</title> - <para> - The talloc_array_size() function is useful when the type is not - known. It operates in the same way as talloc_array(), but takes a - size instead of a type. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>(typeof(ptr)) talloc_array_ptrtype(const void *ctx, ptr, uint_t count);</title> - <para> - The talloc_ptrtype() macro should be used when you have a pointer to an array - and want to allocate memory of an array to point at with this pointer. When compiling - with gcc >= 3 it is typesafe. Note this is a wrapper of talloc_array_size() - and talloc_get_name() will return the current location in the source file. - and not the type. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t size)</title> - <para> - This is a non-macro version of talloc_realloc(), which is useful - as libraries sometimes want a realloc function pointer. A - realloc(3) implementation encapsulates the functionality of - malloc(3), free(3) and realloc(3) in one call, which is why it is - useful to be able to pass around a single function pointer. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_autofree_context(void);</title> - <para> - This is a handy utility function that returns a talloc context - which will be automatically freed on program exit. This can be - used to reduce the noise in memory leak reports. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name);</title> - <para> - This function checks if a pointer has the specified <emphasis - role="italic">name</emphasis>. If it does then the pointer is - returned. It it doesn't then NULL is returned. - </para> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>(type *)talloc_get_type(const void *ptr, type);</title> - <para> - This macro allows you to do type checking on talloc pointers. It - is particularly useful for void* private pointers. It is - equivalent to this: - </para> - <programlisting>(type *)talloc_check_name(ptr, #type)</programlisting> - </refsect2> - <refsect2><title>talloc_set_type(const void *ptr, type);</title> - <para> - This macro allows you to force the name of a pointer to be a - particular <emphasis>type</emphasis>. This can be - used in conjunction with talloc_get_type() to do type checking on - void* pointers. - </para> - <para> - It is equivalent to this: - </para> - <programlisting>talloc_set_name_const(ptr, #type)</programlisting> - </refsect2> - </refsect1> - <refsect1><title>PERFORMANCE</title> - <para> - All the additional features of talloc(3) over malloc(3) do come at a - price. We have a simple performance test in Samba4 that measures - talloc() versus malloc() performance, and it seems that talloc() is - about 10% slower than malloc() on my x86 Debian Linux box. For - Samba, the great reduction in code complexity that we get by using - talloc makes this worthwhile, especially as the total overhead of - talloc/malloc in Samba is already quite small. - </para> - </refsect1> - <refsect1><title>SEE ALSO</title> - <para> - malloc(3), strndup(3), vasprintf(3), asprintf(3), - <ulink url="http://talloc.samba.org/"/> - </para> - </refsect1> - <refsect1><title>COPYRIGHT/LICENSE</title> - <para> - Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004 - </para> - <para> - 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. - </para> - <para> - 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. - </para> - <para> - You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License - along with this program; if not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/. - </para> - </refsect1> -</refentry> diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.c b/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.c deleted file mode 100644 index 1f7e52439f..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.c +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1732 +0,0 @@ -/* - Samba Unix SMB/CIFS implementation. - - Samba trivial allocation library - new interface - - NOTE: Please read talloc_guide.txt for full documentation - - Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004 - Copyright (C) Stefan Metzmacher 2006 - - ** NOTE! The following LGPL license applies to the talloc - ** library. This does NOT imply that all of Samba is released - ** under the LGPL - - This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or - modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public - License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either - version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. - - This library 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 - Lesser General Public License for more details. - - You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public - License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. -*/ - -/* - inspired by http://swapped.cc/halloc/ -*/ - -#ifdef _SAMBA_BUILD_ -#include "version.h" -#if (SAMBA_VERSION_MAJOR<4) -#include "includes.h" -/* This is to circumvent SAMBA3's paranoid malloc checker. Here in this file - * we trust ourselves... */ -#ifdef malloc -#undef malloc -#endif -#ifdef realloc -#undef realloc -#endif -#define _TALLOC_SAMBA3 -#endif /* (SAMBA_VERSION_MAJOR<4) */ -#endif /* _SAMBA_BUILD_ */ - -#ifndef _TALLOC_SAMBA3 -#include "replace.h" -#include "talloc.h" -#endif /* not _TALLOC_SAMBA3 */ - -/* use this to force every realloc to change the pointer, to stress test - code that might not cope */ -#define ALWAYS_REALLOC 0 - - -#define MAX_TALLOC_SIZE 0x10000000 -#define TALLOC_MAGIC 0xe814ec70 -#define TALLOC_FLAG_FREE 0x01 -#define TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP 0x02 -#define TALLOC_FLAG_POOL 0x04 /* This is a talloc pool */ -#define TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM 0x08 /* This is allocated in a pool */ -#define TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE ((const char *)1) - -/* by default we abort when given a bad pointer (such as when talloc_free() is called - on a pointer that came from malloc() */ -#ifndef TALLOC_ABORT -#define TALLOC_ABORT(reason) abort() -#endif - -#ifndef discard_const_p -#if defined(__intptr_t_defined) || defined(HAVE_INTPTR_T) -# define discard_const_p(type, ptr) ((type *)((intptr_t)(ptr))) -#else -# define discard_const_p(type, ptr) ((type *)(ptr)) -#endif -#endif - -/* these macros gain us a few percent of speed on gcc */ -#if (__GNUC__ >= 3) -/* the strange !! is to ensure that __builtin_expect() takes either 0 or 1 - as its first argument */ -#ifndef likely -#define likely(x) __builtin_expect(!!(x), 1) -#endif -#ifndef unlikely -#define unlikely(x) __builtin_expect(!!(x), 0) -#endif -#else -#ifndef likely -#define likely(x) (x) -#endif -#ifndef unlikely -#define unlikely(x) (x) -#endif -#endif - -/* this null_context is only used if talloc_enable_leak_report() or - talloc_enable_leak_report_full() is called, otherwise it remains - NULL -*/ -static void *null_context; -static void *autofree_context; - -struct talloc_reference_handle { - struct talloc_reference_handle *next, *prev; - void *ptr; -}; - -typedef int (*talloc_destructor_t)(void *); - -struct talloc_chunk { - struct talloc_chunk *next, *prev; - struct talloc_chunk *parent, *child; - struct talloc_reference_handle *refs; - talloc_destructor_t destructor; - const char *name; - size_t size; - unsigned flags; - - /* - * "pool" has dual use: - * - * For the talloc pool itself (i.e. TALLOC_FLAG_POOL is set), "pool" - * marks the end of the currently allocated area. - * - * For members of the pool (i.e. TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM is set), "pool" - * is a pointer to the struct talloc_chunk of the pool that it was - * allocated from. This way children can quickly find the pool to chew - * from. - */ - void *pool; -}; - -/* 16 byte alignment seems to keep everyone happy */ -#define TC_HDR_SIZE ((sizeof(struct talloc_chunk)+15)&~15) -#define TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc) ((void *)(TC_HDR_SIZE + (char*)tc)) - -static void talloc_abort_double_free(void) -{ - TALLOC_ABORT("Bad talloc magic value - double free"); -} - -static void talloc_abort_unknown_value(void) -{ - TALLOC_ABORT("Bad talloc magic value - unknown value"); -} - -/* panic if we get a bad magic value */ -static inline struct talloc_chunk *talloc_chunk_from_ptr(const void *ptr) -{ - const char *pp = (const char *)ptr; - struct talloc_chunk *tc = discard_const_p(struct talloc_chunk, pp - TC_HDR_SIZE); - if (unlikely((tc->flags & (TALLOC_FLAG_FREE | ~0xF)) != TALLOC_MAGIC)) { - if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_FREE) { - talloc_abort_double_free(); - } else { - talloc_abort_unknown_value(); - } - } - return tc; -} - -/* hook into the front of the list */ -#define _TLIST_ADD(list, p) \ -do { \ - if (!(list)) { \ - (list) = (p); \ - (p)->next = (p)->prev = NULL; \ - } else { \ - (list)->prev = (p); \ - (p)->next = (list); \ - (p)->prev = NULL; \ - (list) = (p); \ - }\ -} while (0) - -/* remove an element from a list - element doesn't have to be in list. */ -#define _TLIST_REMOVE(list, p) \ -do { \ - if ((p) == (list)) { \ - (list) = (p)->next; \ - if (list) (list)->prev = NULL; \ - } else { \ - if ((p)->prev) (p)->prev->next = (p)->next; \ - if ((p)->next) (p)->next->prev = (p)->prev; \ - } \ - if ((p) && ((p) != (list))) (p)->next = (p)->prev = NULL; \ -} while (0) - - -/* - return the parent chunk of a pointer -*/ -static inline struct talloc_chunk *talloc_parent_chunk(const void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc; - - if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) { - return NULL; - } - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - while (tc->prev) tc=tc->prev; - - return tc->parent; -} - -void *talloc_parent(const void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr); - return tc? TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc) : NULL; -} - -/* - find parents name -*/ -const char *talloc_parent_name(const void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr); - return tc? tc->name : NULL; -} - -/* - A pool carries an in-pool object count count in the first 16 bytes. - bytes. This is done to support talloc_steal() to a parent outside of the - pool. The count includes the pool itself, so a talloc_free() on a pool will - only destroy the pool if the count has dropped to zero. A talloc_free() of a - pool member will reduce the count, and eventually also call free(3) on the - pool memory. - - The object count is not put into "struct talloc_chunk" because it is only - relevant for talloc pools and the alignment to 16 bytes would increase the - memory footprint of each talloc chunk by those 16 bytes. -*/ - -#define TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE 16 - -static unsigned int *talloc_pool_objectcount(struct talloc_chunk *tc) -{ - return (unsigned int *)((char *)tc + sizeof(struct talloc_chunk)); -} - -/* - Allocate from a pool -*/ - -static struct talloc_chunk *talloc_alloc_pool(struct talloc_chunk *parent, - size_t size) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *pool_ctx = NULL; - size_t space_left; - struct talloc_chunk *result; - size_t chunk_size; - - if (parent == NULL) { - return NULL; - } - - if (parent->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOL) { - pool_ctx = parent; - } - else if (parent->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM) { - pool_ctx = (struct talloc_chunk *)parent->pool; - } - - if (pool_ctx == NULL) { - return NULL; - } - - space_left = ((char *)pool_ctx + TC_HDR_SIZE + pool_ctx->size) - - ((char *)pool_ctx->pool); - - /* - * Align size to 16 bytes - */ - chunk_size = ((size + 15) & ~15); - - if (space_left < chunk_size) { - return NULL; - } - - result = (struct talloc_chunk *)pool_ctx->pool; - -#if defined(DEVELOPER) && defined(VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED) - VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED(result, size); -#endif - - pool_ctx->pool = (void *)((char *)result + chunk_size); - - result->flags = TALLOC_MAGIC | TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM; - result->pool = pool_ctx; - - *talloc_pool_objectcount(pool_ctx) += 1; - - return result; -} - -/* - Allocate a bit of memory as a child of an existing pointer -*/ -static inline void *__talloc(const void *context, size_t size) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc = NULL; - - if (unlikely(context == NULL)) { - context = null_context; - } - - if (unlikely(size >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE)) { - return NULL; - } - - if (context != NULL) { - tc = talloc_alloc_pool(talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context), - TC_HDR_SIZE+size); - } - - if (tc == NULL) { - tc = (struct talloc_chunk *)malloc(TC_HDR_SIZE+size); - if (unlikely(tc == NULL)) return NULL; - tc->flags = TALLOC_MAGIC; - tc->pool = NULL; - } - - tc->size = size; - tc->destructor = NULL; - tc->child = NULL; - tc->name = NULL; - tc->refs = NULL; - - if (likely(context)) { - struct talloc_chunk *parent = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context); - - if (parent->child) { - parent->child->parent = NULL; - tc->next = parent->child; - tc->next->prev = tc; - } else { - tc->next = NULL; - } - tc->parent = parent; - tc->prev = NULL; - parent->child = tc; - } else { - tc->next = tc->prev = tc->parent = NULL; - } - - return TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc); -} - -/* - * Create a talloc pool - */ - -void *talloc_pool(const void *context, size_t size) -{ - void *result = __talloc(context, size + TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE); - struct talloc_chunk *tc; - - if (unlikely(result == NULL)) { - return NULL; - } - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(result); - - tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_POOL; - tc->pool = (char *)result + TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE; - - *talloc_pool_objectcount(tc) = 1; - -#if defined(DEVELOPER) && defined(VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS) - VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS(tc->pool, size); -#endif - - return result; -} - -/* - setup a destructor to be called on free of a pointer - the destructor should return 0 on success, or -1 on failure. - if the destructor fails then the free is failed, and the memory can - be continued to be used -*/ -void _talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*destructor)(void *)) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - tc->destructor = destructor; -} - -/* - increase the reference count on a piece of memory. -*/ -int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *ptr) -{ - if (unlikely(!talloc_reference(null_context, ptr))) { - return -1; - } - return 0; -} - -/* - helper for talloc_reference() - - this is referenced by a function pointer and should not be inline -*/ -static int talloc_reference_destructor(struct talloc_reference_handle *handle) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *ptr_tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(handle->ptr); - _TLIST_REMOVE(ptr_tc->refs, handle); - return 0; -} - -/* - more efficient way to add a name to a pointer - the name must point to a - true string constant -*/ -static inline void _talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - tc->name = name; -} - -/* - internal talloc_named_const() -*/ -static inline void *_talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name) -{ - void *ptr; - - ptr = __talloc(context, size); - if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) { - return NULL; - } - - _talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name); - - return ptr; -} - -/* - make a secondary reference to a pointer, hanging off the given context. - the pointer remains valid until both the original caller and this given - context are freed. - - the major use for this is when two different structures need to reference the - same underlying data, and you want to be able to free the two instances separately, - and in either order -*/ -void *_talloc_reference(const void *context, const void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc; - struct talloc_reference_handle *handle; - if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL; - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - handle = (struct talloc_reference_handle *)_talloc_named_const(context, - sizeof(struct talloc_reference_handle), - TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE); - if (unlikely(handle == NULL)) return NULL; - - /* note that we hang the destructor off the handle, not the - main context as that allows the caller to still setup their - own destructor on the context if they want to */ - talloc_set_destructor(handle, talloc_reference_destructor); - handle->ptr = discard_const_p(void, ptr); - _TLIST_ADD(tc->refs, handle); - return handle->ptr; -} - - -/* - internal talloc_free call -*/ -static inline int _talloc_free(void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc; - - if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) { - return -1; - } - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - - if (unlikely(tc->refs)) { - int is_child; - /* check this is a reference from a child or grantchild - * back to it's parent or grantparent - * - * in that case we need to remove the reference and - * call another instance of talloc_free() on the current - * pointer. - */ - is_child = talloc_is_parent(tc->refs, ptr); - _talloc_free(tc->refs); - if (is_child) { - return _talloc_free(ptr); - } - return -1; - } - - if (unlikely(tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP)) { - /* we have a free loop - stop looping */ - return 0; - } - - if (unlikely(tc->destructor)) { - talloc_destructor_t d = tc->destructor; - if (d == (talloc_destructor_t)-1) { - return -1; - } - tc->destructor = (talloc_destructor_t)-1; - if (d(ptr) == -1) { - tc->destructor = d; - return -1; - } - tc->destructor = NULL; - } - - if (tc->parent) { - _TLIST_REMOVE(tc->parent->child, tc); - if (tc->parent->child) { - tc->parent->child->parent = tc->parent; - } - } else { - if (tc->prev) tc->prev->next = tc->next; - if (tc->next) tc->next->prev = tc->prev; - } - - tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP; - - while (tc->child) { - /* we need to work out who will own an abandoned child - if it cannot be freed. In priority order, the first - choice is owner of any remaining reference to this - pointer, the second choice is our parent, and the - final choice is the null context. */ - void *child = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc->child); - const void *new_parent = null_context; - if (unlikely(tc->child->refs)) { - struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(tc->child->refs); - if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p); - } - if (unlikely(_talloc_free(child) == -1)) { - if (new_parent == null_context) { - struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr); - if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p); - } - talloc_steal(new_parent, child); - } - } - - tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_FREE; - - if (tc->flags & (TALLOC_FLAG_POOL|TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM)) { - struct talloc_chunk *pool; - unsigned int *pool_object_count; - - pool = (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOL) - ? tc : (struct talloc_chunk *)tc->pool; - - pool_object_count = talloc_pool_objectcount(pool); - - if (*pool_object_count == 0) { - TALLOC_ABORT("Pool object count zero!"); - } - - *pool_object_count -= 1; - - if (*pool_object_count == 0) { - free(pool); - } - } - else { - free(tc); - } - return 0; -} - -/* - move a lump of memory from one talloc context to another return the - ptr on success, or NULL if it could not be transferred. - passing NULL as ptr will always return NULL with no side effects. -*/ -void *_talloc_steal(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc, *new_tc; - - if (unlikely(!ptr)) { - return NULL; - } - - if (unlikely(new_ctx == NULL)) { - new_ctx = null_context; - } - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - - if (unlikely(new_ctx == NULL)) { - if (tc->parent) { - _TLIST_REMOVE(tc->parent->child, tc); - if (tc->parent->child) { - tc->parent->child->parent = tc->parent; - } - } else { - if (tc->prev) tc->prev->next = tc->next; - if (tc->next) tc->next->prev = tc->prev; - } - - tc->parent = tc->next = tc->prev = NULL; - return discard_const_p(void, ptr); - } - - new_tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(new_ctx); - - if (unlikely(tc == new_tc || tc->parent == new_tc)) { - return discard_const_p(void, ptr); - } - - if (tc->parent) { - _TLIST_REMOVE(tc->parent->child, tc); - if (tc->parent->child) { - tc->parent->child->parent = tc->parent; - } - } else { - if (tc->prev) tc->prev->next = tc->next; - if (tc->next) tc->next->prev = tc->prev; - } - - tc->parent = new_tc; - if (new_tc->child) new_tc->child->parent = NULL; - _TLIST_ADD(new_tc->child, tc); - - return discard_const_p(void, ptr); -} - - - -/* - remove a secondary reference to a pointer. This undo's what - talloc_reference() has done. The context and pointer arguments - must match those given to a talloc_reference() -*/ -static inline int talloc_unreference(const void *context, const void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - struct talloc_reference_handle *h; - - if (unlikely(context == NULL)) { - context = null_context; - } - - for (h=tc->refs;h;h=h->next) { - struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(h); - if (p == NULL) { - if (context == NULL) break; - } else if (TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p) == context) { - break; - } - } - if (h == NULL) { - return -1; - } - - return _talloc_free(h); -} - -/* - remove a specific parent context from a pointer. This is a more - controlled varient of talloc_free() -*/ -int talloc_unlink(const void *context, void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc_p, *new_p; - void *new_parent; - - if (ptr == NULL) { - return -1; - } - - if (context == NULL) { - context = null_context; - } - - if (talloc_unreference(context, ptr) == 0) { - return 0; - } - - if (context == NULL) { - if (talloc_parent_chunk(ptr) != NULL) { - return -1; - } - } else { - if (talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context) != talloc_parent_chunk(ptr)) { - return -1; - } - } - - tc_p = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - - if (tc_p->refs == NULL) { - return _talloc_free(ptr); - } - - new_p = talloc_parent_chunk(tc_p->refs); - if (new_p) { - new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(new_p); - } else { - new_parent = NULL; - } - - if (talloc_unreference(new_parent, ptr) != 0) { - return -1; - } - - talloc_steal(new_parent, ptr); - - return 0; -} - -/* - add a name to an existing pointer - va_list version -*/ -static inline const char *talloc_set_name_v(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0); - -static inline const char *talloc_set_name_v(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, va_list ap) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - tc->name = talloc_vasprintf(ptr, fmt, ap); - if (likely(tc->name)) { - _talloc_set_name_const(tc->name, ".name"); - } - return tc->name; -} - -/* - add a name to an existing pointer -*/ -const char *talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...) -{ - const char *name; - va_list ap; - va_start(ap, fmt); - name = talloc_set_name_v(ptr, fmt, ap); - va_end(ap); - return name; -} - - -/* - create a named talloc pointer. Any talloc pointer can be named, and - talloc_named() operates just like talloc() except that it allows you - to name the pointer. -*/ -void *talloc_named(const void *context, size_t size, const char *fmt, ...) -{ - va_list ap; - void *ptr; - const char *name; - - ptr = __talloc(context, size); - if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL; - - va_start(ap, fmt); - name = talloc_set_name_v(ptr, fmt, ap); - va_end(ap); - - if (unlikely(name == NULL)) { - _talloc_free(ptr); - return NULL; - } - - return ptr; -} - -/* - return the name of a talloc ptr, or "UNNAMED" -*/ -const char *talloc_get_name(const void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - if (unlikely(tc->name == TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE)) { - return ".reference"; - } - if (likely(tc->name)) { - return tc->name; - } - return "UNNAMED"; -} - - -/* - check if a pointer has the given name. If it does, return the pointer, - otherwise return NULL -*/ -void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name) -{ - const char *pname; - if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL; - pname = talloc_get_name(ptr); - if (likely(pname == name || strcmp(pname, name) == 0)) { - return discard_const_p(void, ptr); - } - return NULL; -} - - -/* - this is for compatibility with older versions of talloc -*/ -void *talloc_init(const char *fmt, ...) -{ - va_list ap; - void *ptr; - const char *name; - - /* - * samba3 expects talloc_report_depth_cb(NULL, ...) - * reports all talloc'ed memory, so we need to enable - * null_tracking - */ - talloc_enable_null_tracking(); - - ptr = __talloc(NULL, 0); - if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) return NULL; - - va_start(ap, fmt); - name = talloc_set_name_v(ptr, fmt, ap); - va_end(ap); - - if (unlikely(name == NULL)) { - _talloc_free(ptr); - return NULL; - } - - return ptr; -} - -/* - this is a replacement for the Samba3 talloc_destroy_pool functionality. It - should probably not be used in new code. It's in here to keep the talloc - code consistent across Samba 3 and 4. -*/ -void talloc_free_children(void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc; - - if (unlikely(ptr == NULL)) { - return; - } - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - - while (tc->child) { - /* we need to work out who will own an abandoned child - if it cannot be freed. In priority order, the first - choice is owner of any remaining reference to this - pointer, the second choice is our parent, and the - final choice is the null context. */ - void *child = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc->child); - const void *new_parent = null_context; - if (unlikely(tc->child->refs)) { - struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(tc->child->refs); - if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p); - } - if (unlikely(_talloc_free(child) == -1)) { - if (new_parent == null_context) { - struct talloc_chunk *p = talloc_parent_chunk(ptr); - if (p) new_parent = TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(p); - } - talloc_steal(new_parent, child); - } - } - - if ((tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOL) - && (*talloc_pool_objectcount(tc) == 1)) { - tc->pool = ((char *)tc + TC_HDR_SIZE + TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE); -#if defined(DEVELOPER) && defined(VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS) - VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_NOACCESS( - tc->pool, tc->size - TALLOC_POOL_HDR_SIZE); -#endif - } -} - -/* - Allocate a bit of memory as a child of an existing pointer -*/ -void *_talloc(const void *context, size_t size) -{ - return __talloc(context, size); -} - -/* - externally callable talloc_set_name_const() -*/ -void talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name) -{ - _talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name); -} - -/* - create a named talloc pointer. Any talloc pointer can be named, and - talloc_named() operates just like talloc() except that it allows you - to name the pointer. -*/ -void *talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name) -{ - return _talloc_named_const(context, size, name); -} - -/* - free a talloc pointer. This also frees all child pointers of this - pointer recursively - - return 0 if the memory is actually freed, otherwise -1. The memory - will not be freed if the ref_count is > 1 or the destructor (if - any) returns non-zero -*/ -int talloc_free(void *ptr) -{ - return _talloc_free(ptr); -} - - - -/* - A talloc version of realloc. The context argument is only used if - ptr is NULL -*/ -void *_talloc_realloc(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size, const char *name) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc; - void *new_ptr; - bool malloced = false; - - /* size zero is equivalent to free() */ - if (unlikely(size == 0)) { - _talloc_free(ptr); - return NULL; - } - - if (unlikely(size >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE)) { - return NULL; - } - - /* realloc(NULL) is equivalent to malloc() */ - if (ptr == NULL) { - return _talloc_named_const(context, size, name); - } - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - - /* don't allow realloc on referenced pointers */ - if (unlikely(tc->refs)) { - return NULL; - } - - /* don't shrink if we have less than 1k to gain */ - if ((size < tc->size) && ((tc->size - size) < 1024)) { - tc->size = size; - return ptr; - } - - /* by resetting magic we catch users of the old memory */ - tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_FREE; - -#if ALWAYS_REALLOC - new_ptr = malloc(size + TC_HDR_SIZE); - if (new_ptr) { - memcpy(new_ptr, tc, tc->size + TC_HDR_SIZE); - free(tc); - } -#else - if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM) { - - new_ptr = talloc_alloc_pool(tc, size + TC_HDR_SIZE); - *talloc_pool_objectcount((struct talloc_chunk *) - (tc->pool)) -= 1; - - if (new_ptr == NULL) { - new_ptr = malloc(TC_HDR_SIZE+size); - malloced = true; - } - - if (new_ptr) { - memcpy(new_ptr, tc, MIN(tc->size,size) + TC_HDR_SIZE); - } - } - else { - new_ptr = realloc(tc, size + TC_HDR_SIZE); - } -#endif - if (unlikely(!new_ptr)) { - tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_FREE; - return NULL; - } - - tc = (struct talloc_chunk *)new_ptr; - tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_FREE; - if (malloced) { - tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_POOLMEM; - } - if (tc->parent) { - tc->parent->child = tc; - } - if (tc->child) { - tc->child->parent = tc; - } - - if (tc->prev) { - tc->prev->next = tc; - } - if (tc->next) { - tc->next->prev = tc; - } - - tc->size = size; - _talloc_set_name_const(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc), name); - - return TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc); -} - -/* - a wrapper around talloc_steal() for situations where you are moving a pointer - between two structures, and want the old pointer to be set to NULL -*/ -void *_talloc_move(const void *new_ctx, const void *_pptr) -{ - const void **pptr = discard_const_p(const void *,_pptr); - void *ret = _talloc_steal(new_ctx, *pptr); - (*pptr) = NULL; - return ret; -} - -/* - return the total size of a talloc pool (subtree) -*/ -size_t talloc_total_size(const void *ptr) -{ - size_t total = 0; - struct talloc_chunk *c, *tc; - - if (ptr == NULL) { - ptr = null_context; - } - if (ptr == NULL) { - return 0; - } - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - - if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP) { - return 0; - } - - tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP; - - total = tc->size; - for (c=tc->child;c;c=c->next) { - total += talloc_total_size(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c)); - } - - tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP; - - return total; -} - -/* - return the total number of blocks in a talloc pool (subtree) -*/ -size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *ptr) -{ - size_t total = 0; - struct talloc_chunk *c, *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - - if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP) { - return 0; - } - - tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP; - - total++; - for (c=tc->child;c;c=c->next) { - total += talloc_total_blocks(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c)); - } - - tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP; - - return total; -} - -/* - return the number of external references to a pointer -*/ -size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - struct talloc_reference_handle *h; - size_t ret = 0; - - for (h=tc->refs;h;h=h->next) { - ret++; - } - return ret; -} - -/* - report on memory usage by all children of a pointer, giving a full tree view -*/ -void talloc_report_depth_cb(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, - void (*callback)(const void *ptr, - int depth, int max_depth, - int is_ref, - void *private_data), - void *private_data) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *c, *tc; - - if (ptr == NULL) { - ptr = null_context; - } - if (ptr == NULL) return; - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(ptr); - - if (tc->flags & TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP) { - return; - } - - callback(ptr, depth, max_depth, 0, private_data); - - if (max_depth >= 0 && depth >= max_depth) { - return; - } - - tc->flags |= TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP; - for (c=tc->child;c;c=c->next) { - if (c->name == TALLOC_MAGIC_REFERENCE) { - struct talloc_reference_handle *h = (struct talloc_reference_handle *)TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c); - callback(h->ptr, depth + 1, max_depth, 1, private_data); - } else { - talloc_report_depth_cb(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(c), depth + 1, max_depth, callback, private_data); - } - } - tc->flags &= ~TALLOC_FLAG_LOOP; -} - -static void talloc_report_depth_FILE_helper(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, int is_ref, void *_f) -{ - const char *name = talloc_get_name(ptr); - FILE *f = (FILE *)_f; - - if (is_ref) { - fprintf(f, "%*sreference to: %s\n", depth*4, "", name); - return; - } - - if (depth == 0) { - fprintf(f,"%stalloc report on '%s' (total %6lu bytes in %3lu blocks)\n", - (max_depth < 0 ? "full " :""), name, - (unsigned long)talloc_total_size(ptr), - (unsigned long)talloc_total_blocks(ptr)); - return; - } - - fprintf(f, "%*s%-30s contains %6lu bytes in %3lu blocks (ref %d) %p\n", - depth*4, "", - name, - (unsigned long)talloc_total_size(ptr), - (unsigned long)talloc_total_blocks(ptr), - (int)talloc_reference_count(ptr), ptr); - -#if 0 - fprintf(f, "content: "); - if (talloc_total_size(ptr)) { - int tot = talloc_total_size(ptr); - int i; - - for (i = 0; i < tot; i++) { - if ((((char *)ptr)[i] > 31) && (((char *)ptr)[i] < 126)) { - fprintf(f, "%c", ((char *)ptr)[i]); - } else { - fprintf(f, "~%02x", ((char *)ptr)[i]); - } - } - } - fprintf(f, "\n"); -#endif -} - -/* - report on memory usage by all children of a pointer, giving a full tree view -*/ -void talloc_report_depth_file(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, FILE *f) -{ - talloc_report_depth_cb(ptr, depth, max_depth, talloc_report_depth_FILE_helper, f); - fflush(f); -} - -/* - report on memory usage by all children of a pointer, giving a full tree view -*/ -void talloc_report_full(const void *ptr, FILE *f) -{ - talloc_report_depth_file(ptr, 0, -1, f); -} - -/* - report on memory usage by all children of a pointer -*/ -void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f) -{ - talloc_report_depth_file(ptr, 0, 1, f); -} - -/* - report on any memory hanging off the null context -*/ -static void talloc_report_null(void) -{ - if (talloc_total_size(null_context) != 0) { - talloc_report(null_context, stderr); - } -} - -/* - report on any memory hanging off the null context -*/ -static void talloc_report_null_full(void) -{ - if (talloc_total_size(null_context) != 0) { - talloc_report_full(null_context, stderr); - } -} - -/* - enable tracking of the NULL context -*/ -void talloc_enable_null_tracking(void) -{ - if (null_context == NULL) { - null_context = _talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "null_context"); - } -} - -/* - disable tracking of the NULL context -*/ -void talloc_disable_null_tracking(void) -{ - _talloc_free(null_context); - null_context = NULL; -} - -/* - enable leak reporting on exit -*/ -void talloc_enable_leak_report(void) -{ - talloc_enable_null_tracking(); - atexit(talloc_report_null); -} - -/* - enable full leak reporting on exit -*/ -void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void) -{ - talloc_enable_null_tracking(); - atexit(talloc_report_null_full); -} - -/* - talloc and zero memory. -*/ -void *_talloc_zero(const void *ctx, size_t size, const char *name) -{ - void *p = _talloc_named_const(ctx, size, name); - - if (p) { - memset(p, '\0', size); - } - - return p; -} - -/* - memdup with a talloc. -*/ -void *_talloc_memdup(const void *t, const void *p, size_t size, const char *name) -{ - void *newp = _talloc_named_const(t, size, name); - - if (likely(newp)) { - memcpy(newp, p, size); - } - - return newp; -} - -static inline char *__talloc_strlendup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t len) -{ - char *ret; - - ret = (char *)__talloc(t, len + 1); - if (unlikely(!ret)) return NULL; - - memcpy(ret, p, len); - ret[len] = 0; - - _talloc_set_name_const(ret, ret); - return ret; -} - -/* - strdup with a talloc -*/ -char *talloc_strdup(const void *t, const char *p) -{ - if (unlikely(!p)) return NULL; - return __talloc_strlendup(t, p, strlen(p)); -} - -/* - strndup with a talloc -*/ -char *talloc_strndup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t n) -{ - if (unlikely(!p)) return NULL; - return __talloc_strlendup(t, p, strnlen(p, n)); -} - -static inline char *__talloc_strlendup_append(char *s, size_t slen, - const char *a, size_t alen) -{ - char *ret; - - ret = talloc_realloc(NULL, s, char, slen + alen + 1); - if (unlikely(!ret)) return NULL; - - /* append the string and the trailing \0 */ - memcpy(&ret[slen], a, alen); - ret[slen+alen] = 0; - - _talloc_set_name_const(ret, ret); - return ret; -} - -/* - * Appends at the end of the string. - */ -char *talloc_strdup_append(char *s, const char *a) -{ - if (unlikely(!s)) { - return talloc_strdup(NULL, a); - } - - if (unlikely(!a)) { - return s; - } - - return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, strlen(s), a, strlen(a)); -} - -/* - * Appends at the end of the talloc'ed buffer, - * not the end of the string. - */ -char *talloc_strdup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a) -{ - size_t slen; - - if (unlikely(!s)) { - return talloc_strdup(NULL, a); - } - - if (unlikely(!a)) { - return s; - } - - slen = talloc_get_size(s); - if (likely(slen > 0)) { - slen--; - } - - return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, slen, a, strlen(a)); -} - -/* - * Appends at the end of the string. - */ -char *talloc_strndup_append(char *s, const char *a, size_t n) -{ - if (unlikely(!s)) { - return talloc_strdup(NULL, a); - } - - if (unlikely(!a)) { - return s; - } - - return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, strlen(s), a, strnlen(a, n)); -} - -/* - * Appends at the end of the talloc'ed buffer, - * not the end of the string. - */ -char *talloc_strndup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a, size_t n) -{ - size_t slen; - - if (unlikely(!s)) { - return talloc_strdup(NULL, a); - } - - if (unlikely(!a)) { - return s; - } - - slen = talloc_get_size(s); - if (likely(slen > 0)) { - slen--; - } - - return __talloc_strlendup_append(s, slen, a, strnlen(a, n)); -} - -#ifndef HAVE_VA_COPY -#ifdef HAVE___VA_COPY -#define va_copy(dest, src) __va_copy(dest, src) -#else -#define va_copy(dest, src) (dest) = (src) -#endif -#endif - -char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, va_list ap) -{ - int len; - char *ret; - va_list ap2; - char c; - - /* this call looks strange, but it makes it work on older solaris boxes */ - va_copy(ap2, ap); - len = vsnprintf(&c, 1, fmt, ap2); - va_end(ap2); - if (unlikely(len < 0)) { - return NULL; - } - - ret = (char *)__talloc(t, len+1); - if (unlikely(!ret)) return NULL; - - va_copy(ap2, ap); - vsnprintf(ret, len+1, fmt, ap2); - va_end(ap2); - - _talloc_set_name_const(ret, ret); - return ret; -} - - -/* - Perform string formatting, and return a pointer to newly allocated - memory holding the result, inside a memory pool. - */ -char *talloc_asprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, ...) -{ - va_list ap; - char *ret; - - va_start(ap, fmt); - ret = talloc_vasprintf(t, fmt, ap); - va_end(ap); - return ret; -} - -static inline char *__talloc_vaslenprintf_append(char *s, size_t slen, - const char *fmt, va_list ap) - PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(3,0); - -static inline char *__talloc_vaslenprintf_append(char *s, size_t slen, - const char *fmt, va_list ap) -{ - ssize_t alen; - va_list ap2; - char c; - - va_copy(ap2, ap); - alen = vsnprintf(&c, 1, fmt, ap2); - va_end(ap2); - - if (alen <= 0) { - /* Either the vsnprintf failed or the format resulted in - * no characters being formatted. In the former case, we - * ought to return NULL, in the latter we ought to return - * the original string. Most current callers of this - * function expect it to never return NULL. - */ - return s; - } - - s = talloc_realloc(NULL, s, char, slen + alen + 1); - if (!s) return NULL; - - va_copy(ap2, ap); - vsnprintf(s + slen, alen + 1, fmt, ap2); - va_end(ap2); - - _talloc_set_name_const(s, s); - return s; -} - -/** - * Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and @p ap, - * and return @p s, which may have moved. Good for gradually - * accumulating output into a string buffer. Appends at the end - * of the string. - **/ -char *talloc_vasprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap) -{ - if (unlikely(!s)) { - return talloc_vasprintf(NULL, fmt, ap); - } - - return __talloc_vaslenprintf_append(s, strlen(s), fmt, ap); -} - -/** - * Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and @p ap, - * and return @p s, which may have moved. Always appends at the - * end of the talloc'ed buffer, not the end of the string. - **/ -char *talloc_vasprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap) -{ - size_t slen; - - if (unlikely(!s)) { - return talloc_vasprintf(NULL, fmt, ap); - } - - slen = talloc_get_size(s); - if (likely(slen > 0)) { - slen--; - } - - return __talloc_vaslenprintf_append(s, slen, fmt, ap); -} - -/* - Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and return @p - s, which may have moved. Good for gradually accumulating output - into a string buffer. - */ -char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...) -{ - va_list ap; - - va_start(ap, fmt); - s = talloc_vasprintf_append(s, fmt, ap); - va_end(ap); - return s; -} - -/* - Realloc @p s to append the formatted result of @p fmt and return @p - s, which may have moved. Good for gradually accumulating output - into a buffer. - */ -char *talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, ...) -{ - va_list ap; - - va_start(ap, fmt); - s = talloc_vasprintf_append_buffer(s, fmt, ap); - va_end(ap); - return s; -} - -/* - alloc an array, checking for integer overflow in the array size -*/ -void *_talloc_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name) -{ - if (count >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE/el_size) { - return NULL; - } - return _talloc_named_const(ctx, el_size * count, name); -} - -/* - alloc an zero array, checking for integer overflow in the array size -*/ -void *_talloc_zero_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name) -{ - if (count >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE/el_size) { - return NULL; - } - return _talloc_zero(ctx, el_size * count, name); -} - -/* - realloc an array, checking for integer overflow in the array size -*/ -void *_talloc_realloc_array(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name) -{ - if (count >= MAX_TALLOC_SIZE/el_size) { - return NULL; - } - return _talloc_realloc(ctx, ptr, el_size * count, name); -} - -/* - a function version of talloc_realloc(), so it can be passed as a function pointer - to libraries that want a realloc function (a realloc function encapsulates - all the basic capabilities of an allocation library, which is why this is useful) -*/ -void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size) -{ - return _talloc_realloc(context, ptr, size, NULL); -} - - -static int talloc_autofree_destructor(void *ptr) -{ - autofree_context = NULL; - return 0; -} - -static void talloc_autofree(void) -{ - _talloc_free(autofree_context); -} - -/* - return a context which will be auto-freed on exit - this is useful for reducing the noise in leak reports -*/ -void *talloc_autofree_context(void) -{ - if (autofree_context == NULL) { - autofree_context = _talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "autofree_context"); - talloc_set_destructor(autofree_context, talloc_autofree_destructor); - atexit(talloc_autofree); - } - return autofree_context; -} - -size_t talloc_get_size(const void *context) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc; - - if (context == NULL) - return 0; - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context); - - return tc->size; -} - -/* - find a parent of this context that has the given name, if any -*/ -void *talloc_find_parent_byname(const void *context, const char *name) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc; - - if (context == NULL) { - return NULL; - } - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context); - while (tc) { - if (tc->name && strcmp(tc->name, name) == 0) { - return TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc); - } - while (tc && tc->prev) tc = tc->prev; - if (tc) { - tc = tc->parent; - } - } - return NULL; -} - -/* - show the parentage of a context -*/ -void talloc_show_parents(const void *context, FILE *file) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc; - - if (context == NULL) { - fprintf(file, "talloc no parents for NULL\n"); - return; - } - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context); - fprintf(file, "talloc parents of '%s'\n", talloc_get_name(context)); - while (tc) { - fprintf(file, "\t'%s'\n", talloc_get_name(TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc))); - while (tc && tc->prev) tc = tc->prev; - if (tc) { - tc = tc->parent; - } - } - fflush(file); -} - -/* - return 1 if ptr is a parent of context -*/ -int talloc_is_parent(const void *context, const void *ptr) -{ - struct talloc_chunk *tc; - - if (context == NULL) { - return 0; - } - - tc = talloc_chunk_from_ptr(context); - while (tc) { - if (TC_PTR_FROM_CHUNK(tc) == ptr) return 1; - while (tc && tc->prev) tc = tc->prev; - if (tc) { - tc = tc->parent; - } - } - return 0; -} diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.h b/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.h deleted file mode 100644 index 5431971655..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.h +++ /dev/null @@ -1,183 +0,0 @@ -#ifndef _TALLOC_H_ -#define _TALLOC_H_ -/* - Unix SMB/CIFS implementation. - Samba temporary memory allocation functions - - Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004-2005 - Copyright (C) Stefan Metzmacher 2006 - - ** NOTE! The following LGPL license applies to the talloc - ** library. This does NOT imply that all of Samba is released - ** under the LGPL - - This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or - modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public - License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either - version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. - - This library 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 - Lesser General Public License for more details. - - You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public - License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. -*/ - -#include <stdlib.h> -#include <stdio.h> -#include <stdarg.h> - -/* this is only needed for compatibility with the old talloc */ -typedef void TALLOC_CTX; - -/* - this uses a little trick to allow __LINE__ to be stringified -*/ -#ifndef __location__ -#define __TALLOC_STRING_LINE1__(s) #s -#define __TALLOC_STRING_LINE2__(s) __TALLOC_STRING_LINE1__(s) -#define __TALLOC_STRING_LINE3__ __TALLOC_STRING_LINE2__(__LINE__) -#define __location__ __FILE__ ":" __TALLOC_STRING_LINE3__ -#endif - -#ifndef TALLOC_DEPRECATED -#define TALLOC_DEPRECATED 0 -#endif - -#ifndef PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE -#if (__GNUC__ >= 3) -/** Use gcc attribute to check printf fns. a1 is the 1-based index of - * the parameter containing the format, and a2 the index of the first - * argument. Note that some gcc 2.x versions don't handle this - * properly **/ -#define PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(a1, a2) __attribute__ ((format (__printf__, a1, a2))) -#else -#define PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(a1, a2) -#endif -#endif - -/* try to make talloc_set_destructor() and talloc_steal() type safe, - if we have a recent gcc */ -#if (__GNUC__ >= 3) -#define _TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr) __typeof__(ptr) -#define talloc_set_destructor(ptr, function) \ - do { \ - int (*_talloc_destructor_fn)(_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr)) = (function); \ - _talloc_set_destructor((ptr), (int (*)(void *))_talloc_destructor_fn); \ - } while(0) -/* this extremely strange macro is to avoid some braindamaged warning - stupidity in gcc 4.1.x */ -#define talloc_steal(ctx, ptr) ({ _TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr) __talloc_steal_ret = (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))_talloc_steal((ctx),(ptr)); __talloc_steal_ret; }) -#else -#define talloc_set_destructor(ptr, function) \ - _talloc_set_destructor((ptr), (int (*)(void *))(function)) -#define _TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr) void * -#define talloc_steal(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))_talloc_steal((ctx),(ptr)) -#endif - -#define talloc_reference(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))_talloc_reference((ctx),(ptr)) -#define talloc_move(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(*(ptr)))_talloc_move((ctx),(void *)(ptr)) - -/* useful macros for creating type checked pointers */ -#define talloc(ctx, type) (type *)talloc_named_const(ctx, sizeof(type), #type) -#define talloc_size(ctx, size) talloc_named_const(ctx, size, __location__) -#define talloc_ptrtype(ctx, ptr) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))talloc_size(ctx, sizeof(*(ptr))) - -#define talloc_new(ctx) talloc_named_const(ctx, 0, "talloc_new: " __location__) - -#define talloc_zero(ctx, type) (type *)_talloc_zero(ctx, sizeof(type), #type) -#define talloc_zero_size(ctx, size) _talloc_zero(ctx, size, __location__) - -#define talloc_zero_array(ctx, type, count) (type *)_talloc_zero_array(ctx, sizeof(type), count, #type) -#define talloc_array(ctx, type, count) (type *)_talloc_array(ctx, sizeof(type), count, #type) -#define talloc_array_size(ctx, size, count) _talloc_array(ctx, size, count, __location__) -#define talloc_array_ptrtype(ctx, ptr, count) (_TALLOC_TYPEOF(ptr))talloc_array_size(ctx, sizeof(*(ptr)), count) - -#define talloc_realloc(ctx, p, type, count) (type *)_talloc_realloc_array(ctx, p, sizeof(type), count, #type) -#define talloc_realloc_size(ctx, ptr, size) _talloc_realloc(ctx, ptr, size, __location__) - -#define talloc_memdup(t, p, size) _talloc_memdup(t, p, size, __location__) - -#define talloc_set_type(ptr, type) talloc_set_name_const(ptr, #type) -#define talloc_get_type(ptr, type) (type *)talloc_check_name(ptr, #type) - -#define talloc_find_parent_bytype(ptr, type) (type *)talloc_find_parent_byname(ptr, #type) - -#if TALLOC_DEPRECATED -#define talloc_zero_p(ctx, type) talloc_zero(ctx, type) -#define talloc_p(ctx, type) talloc(ctx, type) -#define talloc_array_p(ctx, type, count) talloc_array(ctx, type, count) -#define talloc_realloc_p(ctx, p, type, count) talloc_realloc(ctx, p, type, count) -#define talloc_destroy(ctx) talloc_free(ctx) -#define talloc_append_string(c, s, a) (s?talloc_strdup_append(s,a):talloc_strdup(c, a)) -#endif - -/* The following definitions come from talloc.c */ -void *_talloc(const void *context, size_t size); -void *talloc_pool(const void *context, size_t size); -void _talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*destructor)(void *)); -int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *ptr); -size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *ptr); -void *_talloc_reference(const void *context, const void *ptr); -int talloc_unlink(const void *context, void *ptr); -const char *talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3); -void talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name); -void *talloc_named(const void *context, size_t size, - const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(3,4); -void *talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name); -const char *talloc_get_name(const void *ptr); -void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name); -void *talloc_parent(const void *ptr); -const char *talloc_parent_name(const void *ptr); -void *talloc_init(const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(1,2); -int talloc_free(void *ptr); -void talloc_free_children(void *ptr); -void *_talloc_realloc(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size, const char *name); -void *_talloc_steal(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr); -void *_talloc_move(const void *new_ctx, const void *pptr); -size_t talloc_total_size(const void *ptr); -size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *ptr); -void talloc_report_depth_cb(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, - void (*callback)(const void *ptr, - int depth, int max_depth, - int is_ref, - void *private_data), - void *private_data); -void talloc_report_depth_file(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, FILE *f); -void talloc_report_full(const void *ptr, FILE *f); -void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f); -void talloc_enable_null_tracking(void); -void talloc_disable_null_tracking(void); -void talloc_enable_leak_report(void); -void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void); -void *_talloc_zero(const void *ctx, size_t size, const char *name); -void *_talloc_memdup(const void *t, const void *p, size_t size, const char *name); -void *_talloc_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name); -void *_talloc_zero_array(const void *ctx, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name); -void *_talloc_realloc_array(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t el_size, unsigned count, const char *name); -void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size); -void *talloc_autofree_context(void); -size_t talloc_get_size(const void *ctx); -void *talloc_find_parent_byname(const void *ctx, const char *name); -void talloc_show_parents(const void *context, FILE *file); -int talloc_is_parent(const void *context, const void *ptr); - -char *talloc_strdup(const void *t, const char *p); -char *talloc_strdup_append(char *s, const char *a); -char *talloc_strdup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a); - -char *talloc_strndup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t n); -char *talloc_strndup_append(char *s, const char *a, size_t n); -char *talloc_strndup_append_buffer(char *s, const char *a, size_t n); - -char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0); -char *talloc_vasprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0); -char *talloc_vasprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, va_list ap) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,0); - -char *talloc_asprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3); -char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3); -char *talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(2,3); - -#endif diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.i b/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.i deleted file mode 100644 index a9afb97ed7..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.i +++ /dev/null @@ -1,31 +0,0 @@ -/* - Unix SMB/CIFS implementation. - Copyright (C) Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> 2007 - - 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 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. -*/ - -/* Don't expose talloc contexts in Python code. Python does reference - counting for us, so just create a new top-level talloc context. - */ -%typemap(in, numinputs=0, noblock=1) TALLOC_CTX * { - $1 = NULL; -} - -%define %talloctype(TYPE) -%nodefaultctor TYPE; -%extend TYPE { - ~TYPE() { talloc_free($self); } -} -%enddef diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.mk b/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.mk deleted file mode 100644 index e1fe88c84b..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.mk +++ /dev/null @@ -1,37 +0,0 @@ -TALLOC_OBJ = $(tallocdir)/talloc.o - -TALLOC_SOLIB = libtalloc.$(SHLIBEXT).$(PACKAGE_VERSION) -TALLOC_SONAME = libtalloc.$(SHLIBEXT).1 - -all:: libtalloc.a $(TALLOC_SOLIB) testsuite - -testsuite:: $(LIBOBJ) testsuite.o - $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o testsuite testsuite.o $(LIBOBJ) $(LIBS) - -libtalloc.a: $(LIBOBJ) - ar -rv $@ $(LIBOBJ) - @-ranlib $@ - -install:: all - ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(DESTDIR)$(libdir) - ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(DESTDIR)$(libdir)/pkgconfig - ${INSTALLCMD} -m 755 libtalloc.a $(DESTDIR)$(libdir) - ${INSTALLCMD} -m 755 $(TALLOC_SOLIB) $(DESTDIR)$(libdir) - ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(DESTDIR)${includedir} - ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 $(srcdir)/talloc.h $(DESTDIR)$(includedir) - ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 talloc.pc $(DESTDIR)$(libdir)/pkgconfig - if [ -f talloc.3 ];then ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man3; fi - if [ -f talloc.3 ];then ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 talloc.3 $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man3; fi - which swig >/dev/null 2>&1 && ${INSTALLCMD} -d $(DESTDIR)`swig -swiglib` || true - which swig >/dev/null 2>&1 && ${INSTALLCMD} -m 644 talloc.i $(DESTDIR)`swig -swiglib` || true - -doc:: talloc.3 talloc.3.html - -clean:: - rm -f *~ $(LIBOBJ) $(TALLOC_SOLIB) libtalloc.a testsuite testsuite.o *.gc?? talloc.3 talloc.3.html - -test:: testsuite - ./testsuite - -gcov:: - gcov talloc.c diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.pc.in b/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.pc.in deleted file mode 100644 index 459cce70b1..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc.pc.in +++ /dev/null @@ -1,11 +0,0 @@ -prefix=@prefix@ -exec_prefix=@exec_prefix@ -libdir=@libdir@ -includedir=@includedir@ - -Name: talloc -Description: A hierarchical pool based memory system with destructors -Version: @PACKAGE_VERSION@ -Libs: -L${libdir} -ltalloc -Cflags: -I${includedir} -URL: http://talloc.samba.org/ diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc_guide.txt b/source3/lib/talloc/talloc_guide.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 18663b370d..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/talloc_guide.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,685 +0,0 @@ -Using talloc in Samba4 ----------------------- - -Andrew Tridgell -September 2004 - -The most current version of this document is available at - http://samba.org/ftp/unpacked/samba4/source/lib/talloc/talloc_guide.txt - -If you are used to the "old" talloc from Samba3 before 3.0.20 then please read -this carefully, as talloc has changed a lot. With 3.0.20 (or 3.0.14?) the -Samba4 talloc has been ported back to Samba3, so this guide applies to both. - -The new talloc is a hierarchical, reference counted memory pool system -with destructors. Quite a mouthful really, but not too bad once you -get used to it. - -Perhaps the biggest change from Samba3 is that there is no distinction -between a "talloc context" and a "talloc pointer". Any pointer -returned from talloc() is itself a valid talloc context. This means -you can do this: - - struct foo *X = talloc(mem_ctx, struct foo); - X->name = talloc_strdup(X, "foo"); - -and the pointer X->name would be a "child" of the talloc context "X" -which is itself a child of mem_ctx. So if you do talloc_free(mem_ctx) -then it is all destroyed, whereas if you do talloc_free(X) then just X -and X->name are destroyed, and if you do talloc_free(X->name) then -just the name element of X is destroyed. - -If you think about this, then what this effectively gives you is an -n-ary tree, where you can free any part of the tree with -talloc_free(). - -If you find this confusing, then I suggest you run the testsuite to -watch talloc in action. You may also like to add your own tests to -testsuite.c to clarify how some particular situation is handled. - - -Performance ------------ - -All the additional features of talloc() over malloc() do come at a -price. We have a simple performance test in Samba4 that measures -talloc() versus malloc() performance, and it seems that talloc() is -about 4% slower than malloc() on my x86 Debian Linux box. For Samba, -the great reduction in code complexity that we get by using talloc -makes this worthwhile, especially as the total overhead of -talloc/malloc in Samba is already quite small. - - -talloc API ----------- - -The following is a complete guide to the talloc API. Read it all at -least twice. - -Multi-threading ---------------- - -talloc itself does not deal with threads. It is thread-safe (assuming -the underlying "malloc" is), as long as each thread uses different -memory contexts. -If two threads uses the same context then they need to synchronize in -order to be safe. In particular: -- when using talloc_enable_leak_report(), giving directly NULL as a -parent context implicitly refers to a hidden "null context" global -variable, so this should not be used in a multi-threaded environment -without proper synchronization ; -- the context returned by talloc_autofree_context() is also global so -shouldn't be used by several threads simultaneously without -synchronization. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -(type *)talloc(const void *context, type); - -The talloc() macro is the core of the talloc library. It takes a -memory context and a type, and returns a pointer to a new area of -memory of the given type. - -The returned pointer is itself a talloc context, so you can use it as -the context argument to more calls to talloc if you wish. - -The returned pointer is a "child" of the supplied context. This means -that if you talloc_free() the context then the new child disappears as -well. Alternatively you can free just the child. - -The context argument to talloc() can be NULL, in which case a new top -level context is created. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_size(const void *context, size_t size); - -The function talloc_size() should be used when you don't have a -convenient type to pass to talloc(). Unlike talloc(), it is not type -safe (as it returns a void *), so you are on your own for type checking. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -(typeof(ptr)) talloc_ptrtype(const void *ctx, ptr); - -The talloc_ptrtype() macro should be used when you have a pointer and -want to allocate memory to point at with this pointer. When compiling -with gcc >= 3 it is typesafe. Note this is a wrapper of talloc_size() -and talloc_get_name() will return the current location in the source file. -and not the type. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -int talloc_free(void *ptr); - -The talloc_free() function frees a piece of talloc memory, and all its -children. You can call talloc_free() on any pointer returned by -talloc(). - -The return value of talloc_free() indicates success or failure, with 0 -returned for success and -1 for failure. The only possible failure -condition is if the pointer had a destructor attached to it and the -destructor returned -1. See talloc_set_destructor() for details on -destructors. - -If this pointer has an additional parent when talloc_free() is called -then the memory is not actually released, but instead the most -recently established parent is destroyed. See talloc_reference() for -details on establishing additional parents. - -For more control on which parent is removed, see talloc_unlink() - -talloc_free() operates recursively on its children. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -int talloc_free_children(void *ptr); - -The talloc_free_children() walks along the list of all children of a -talloc context and talloc_free()s only the children, not the context -itself. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_reference(const void *context, const void *ptr); - -The talloc_reference() function makes "context" an additional parent -of "ptr". - -The return value of talloc_reference() is always the original pointer -"ptr", unless talloc ran out of memory in creating the reference in -which case it will return NULL (each additional reference consumes -around 48 bytes of memory on intel x86 platforms). - -If "ptr" is NULL, then the function is a no-op, and simply returns NULL. - -After creating a reference you can free it in one of the following -ways: - - - you can talloc_free() any parent of the original pointer. That - will reduce the number of parents of this pointer by 1, and will - cause this pointer to be freed if it runs out of parents. - - - you can talloc_free() the pointer itself. That will destroy the - most recently established parent to the pointer and leave the - pointer as a child of its current parent. - -For more control on which parent to remove, see talloc_unlink() - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -int talloc_unlink(const void *context, const void *ptr); - -The talloc_unlink() function removes a specific parent from ptr. The -context passed must either be a context used in talloc_reference() -with this pointer, or must be a direct parent of ptr. - -Note that if the parent has already been removed using talloc_free() -then this function will fail and will return -1. Likewise, if "ptr" -is NULL, then the function will make no modifications and return -1. - -Usually you can just use talloc_free() instead of talloc_unlink(), but -sometimes it is useful to have the additional control on which parent -is removed. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_set_destructor(const void *ptr, int (*destructor)(void *)); - -The function talloc_set_destructor() sets the "destructor" for the -pointer "ptr". A destructor is a function that is called when the -memory used by a pointer is about to be released. The destructor -receives the pointer as an argument, and should return 0 for success -and -1 for failure. - -The destructor can do anything it wants to, including freeing other -pieces of memory. A common use for destructors is to clean up -operating system resources (such as open file descriptors) contained -in the structure the destructor is placed on. - -You can only place one destructor on a pointer. If you need more than -one destructor then you can create a zero-length child of the pointer -and place an additional destructor on that. - -To remove a destructor call talloc_set_destructor() with NULL for the -destructor. - -If your destructor attempts to talloc_free() the pointer that it is -the destructor for then talloc_free() will return -1 and the free will -be ignored. This would be a pointless operation anyway, as the -destructor is only called when the memory is just about to go away. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -int talloc_increase_ref_count(const void *ptr); - -The talloc_increase_ref_count(ptr) function is exactly equivalent to: - - talloc_reference(NULL, ptr); - -You can use either syntax, depending on which you think is clearer in -your code. - -It returns 0 on success and -1 on failure. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -size_t talloc_reference_count(const void *ptr); - -Return the number of references to the pointer. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_set_name(const void *ptr, const char *fmt, ...); - -Each talloc pointer has a "name". The name is used principally for -debugging purposes, although it is also possible to set and get the -name on a pointer in as a way of "marking" pointers in your code. - -The main use for names on pointer is for "talloc reports". See -talloc_report() and talloc_report_full() for details. Also see -talloc_enable_leak_report() and talloc_enable_leak_report_full(). - -The talloc_set_name() function allocates memory as a child of the -pointer. It is logically equivalent to: - talloc_set_name_const(ptr, talloc_asprintf(ptr, fmt, ...)); - -Note that multiple calls to talloc_set_name() will allocate more -memory without releasing the name. All of the memory is released when -the ptr is freed using talloc_free(). - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_set_name_const(const void *ptr, const char *name); - -The function talloc_set_name_const() is just like talloc_set_name(), -but it takes a string constant, and is much faster. It is extensively -used by the "auto naming" macros, such as talloc_p(). - -This function does not allocate any memory. It just copies the -supplied pointer into the internal representation of the talloc -ptr. This means you must not pass a name pointer to memory that will -disappear before the ptr is freed with talloc_free(). - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_named(const void *context, size_t size, const char *fmt, ...); - -The talloc_named() function creates a named talloc pointer. It is -equivalent to: - - ptr = talloc_size(context, size); - talloc_set_name(ptr, fmt, ....); - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_named_const(const void *context, size_t size, const char *name); - -This is equivalent to: - - ptr = talloc_size(context, size); - talloc_set_name_const(ptr, name); - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -const char *talloc_get_name(const void *ptr); - -This returns the current name for the given talloc pointer. See -talloc_set_name() for details. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_init(const char *fmt, ...); - -This function creates a zero length named talloc context as a top -level context. It is equivalent to: - - talloc_named(NULL, 0, fmt, ...); - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_new(void *ctx); - -This is a utility macro that creates a new memory context hanging -off an exiting context, automatically naming it "talloc_new: __location__" -where __location__ is the source line it is called from. It is -particularly useful for creating a new temporary working context. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -(type *)talloc_realloc(const void *context, void *ptr, type, count); - -The talloc_realloc() macro changes the size of a talloc -pointer. The "count" argument is the number of elements of type "type" -that you want the resulting pointer to hold. - -talloc_realloc() has the following equivalences: - - talloc_realloc(context, NULL, type, 1) ==> talloc(context, type); - talloc_realloc(context, NULL, type, N) ==> talloc_array(context, type, N); - talloc_realloc(context, ptr, type, 0) ==> talloc_free(ptr); - -The "context" argument is only used if "ptr" is NULL, otherwise it is -ignored. - -talloc_realloc() returns the new pointer, or NULL on failure. The call -will fail either due to a lack of memory, or because the pointer has -more than one parent (see talloc_reference()). - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_realloc_size(const void *context, void *ptr, size_t size); - -the talloc_realloc_size() function is useful when the type is not -known so the typesafe talloc_realloc() cannot be used. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_steal(const void *new_ctx, const void *ptr); - -The talloc_steal() function changes the parent context of a talloc -pointer. It is typically used when the context that the pointer is -currently a child of is going to be freed and you wish to keep the -memory for a longer time. - -The talloc_steal() function returns the pointer that you pass it. It -does not have any failure modes. - -NOTE: It is possible to produce loops in the parent/child relationship -if you are not careful with talloc_steal(). No guarantees are provided -as to your sanity or the safety of your data if you do this. - -talloc_steal (new_ctx, NULL) will return NULL with no sideeffects. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -size_t talloc_total_size(const void *ptr); - -The talloc_total_size() function returns the total size in bytes used -by this pointer and all child pointers. Mostly useful for debugging. - -Passing NULL is allowed, but it will only give a meaningful result if -talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has -been called. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -size_t talloc_total_blocks(const void *ptr); - -The talloc_total_blocks() function returns the total memory block -count used by this pointer and all child pointers. Mostly useful for -debugging. - -Passing NULL is allowed, but it will only give a meaningful result if -talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has -been called. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_report_depth_cb(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, - void (*callback)(const void *ptr, - int depth, int max_depth, - int is_ref, - void *priv), - void *priv); - -This provides a more flexible reports than talloc_report(). It -will recursively call the callback for the entire tree of memory -referenced by the pointer. References in the tree are passed with -is_ref = 1 and the pointer that is referenced. - -You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is -printed for the top level memory context, but only if -talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() -has been called. - -The recursion is stopped when depth >= max_depth. -max_depth = -1 means only stop at leaf nodes. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_report_depth_file(const void *ptr, int depth, int max_depth, FILE *f); - -This provides a more flexible reports than talloc_report(). It -will let you specify the depth and max_depth. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_report(const void *ptr, FILE *f); - -The talloc_report() function prints a summary report of all memory -used by ptr. One line of report is printed for each immediate child of -ptr, showing the total memory and number of blocks used by that child. - -You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is printed -for the top level memory context, but only if -talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has -been called. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_report_full(const void *ptr, FILE *f); - -This provides a more detailed report than talloc_report(). It will -recursively print the ensire tree of memory referenced by the -pointer. References in the tree are shown by giving the name of the -pointer that is referenced. - -You can pass NULL for the pointer, in which case a report is printed -for the top level memory context, but only if -talloc_enable_leak_report() or talloc_enable_leak_report_full() has -been called. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_enable_leak_report(void); - -This enables calling of talloc_report(NULL, stderr) when the program -exits. In Samba4 this is enabled by using the --leak-report command -line option. - -For it to be useful, this function must be called before any other -talloc function as it establishes a "null context" that acts as the -top of the tree. If you don't call this function first then passing -NULL to talloc_report() or talloc_report_full() won't give you the -full tree printout. - -Here is a typical talloc report: - -talloc report on 'null_context' (total 267 bytes in 15 blocks) - libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks - libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks - iconv(UTF8,CP850) contains 42 bytes in 2 blocks - libcli/auth/spnego_parse.c:55 contains 31 bytes in 2 blocks - iconv(CP850,UTF8) contains 42 bytes in 2 blocks - iconv(UTF8,UTF-16LE) contains 45 bytes in 2 blocks - iconv(UTF-16LE,UTF8) contains 45 bytes in 2 blocks - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_enable_leak_report_full(void); - -This enables calling of talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr) when the -program exits. In Samba4 this is enabled by using the ---leak-report-full command line option. - -For it to be useful, this function must be called before any other -talloc function as it establishes a "null context" that acts as the -top of the tree. If you don't call this function first then passing -NULL to talloc_report() or talloc_report_full() won't give you the -full tree printout. - -Here is a typical full report: - -full talloc report on 'root' (total 18 bytes in 8 blocks) - p1 contains 18 bytes in 7 blocks (ref 0) - r1 contains 13 bytes in 2 blocks (ref 0) - reference to: p2 - p2 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 1) - x3 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0) - x2 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0) - x1 contains 1 bytes in 1 blocks (ref 0) - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_enable_null_tracking(void); - -This enables tracking of the NULL memory context without enabling leak -reporting on exit. Useful for when you want to do your own leak -reporting call via talloc_report_null_full(); - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void talloc_disable_null_tracking(void); - -This disables tracking of the NULL memory context. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -(type *)talloc_zero(const void *ctx, type); - -The talloc_zero() macro is equivalent to: - - ptr = talloc(ctx, type); - if (ptr) memset(ptr, 0, sizeof(type)); - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_zero_size(const void *ctx, size_t size) - -The talloc_zero_size() function is useful when you don't have a known type - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_memdup(const void *ctx, const void *p, size_t size); - -The talloc_memdup() function is equivalent to: - - ptr = talloc_size(ctx, size); - if (ptr) memcpy(ptr, p, size); - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -char *talloc_strdup(const void *ctx, const char *p); - -The talloc_strdup() function is equivalent to: - - ptr = talloc_size(ctx, strlen(p)+1); - if (ptr) memcpy(ptr, p, strlen(p)+1); - -This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the passed -string. This is equivalent to: - talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr) - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -char *talloc_strndup(const void *t, const char *p, size_t n); - -The talloc_strndup() function is the talloc equivalent of the C -library function strndup() - -This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the passed -string. This is equivalent to: - talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr) - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -char *talloc_append_string(const void *t, char *orig, const char *append); - -The talloc_append_string() function appends the given formatted -string to the given string. - -This function sets the name of the new pointer to the new -string. This is equivalent to: - talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr) - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -char *talloc_vasprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, va_list ap); - -The talloc_vasprintf() function is the talloc equivalent of the C -library function vasprintf() - -This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new -string. This is equivalent to: - talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr) - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -char *talloc_asprintf(const void *t, const char *fmt, ...); - -The talloc_asprintf() function is the talloc equivalent of the C -library function asprintf() - -This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new -string. This is equivalent to: - talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr) - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -char *talloc_asprintf_append(char *s, const char *fmt, ...); - -The talloc_asprintf_append() function appends the given formatted -string to the given string. -Use this varient when the string in the current talloc buffer may -have been truncated in length. - -This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new -string. This is equivalent to: - talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr) - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -char *talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(char *s, const char *fmt, ...); - -The talloc_asprintf_append() function appends the given formatted -string to the end of the currently allocated talloc buffer. -Use this varient when the string in the current talloc buffer has -not been changed. - -This functions sets the name of the new pointer to the new -string. This is equivalent to: - talloc_set_name_const(ptr, ptr) - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -((type *)talloc_array(const void *ctx, type, uint_t count); - -The talloc_array() macro is equivalent to: - - (type *)talloc_size(ctx, sizeof(type) * count); - -except that it provides integer overflow protection for the multiply, -returning NULL if the multiply overflows. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_array_size(const void *ctx, size_t size, uint_t count); - -The talloc_array_size() function is useful when the type is not -known. It operates in the same way as talloc_array(), but takes a size -instead of a type. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -(typeof(ptr)) talloc_array_ptrtype(const void *ctx, ptr, uint_t count); - -The talloc_ptrtype() macro should be used when you have a pointer to an array -and want to allocate memory of an array to point at with this pointer. When compiling -with gcc >= 3 it is typesafe. Note this is a wrapper of talloc_array_size() -and talloc_get_name() will return the current location in the source file. -and not the type. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_realloc_fn(const void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t size); - -This is a non-macro version of talloc_realloc(), which is useful -as libraries sometimes want a ralloc function pointer. A realloc() -implementation encapsulates the functionality of malloc(), free() and -realloc() in one call, which is why it is useful to be able to pass -around a single function pointer. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_autofree_context(void); - -This is a handy utility function that returns a talloc context -which will be automatically freed on program exit. This can be used -to reduce the noise in memory leak reports. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_check_name(const void *ptr, const char *name); - -This function checks if a pointer has the specified name. If it does -then the pointer is returned. It it doesn't then NULL is returned. - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -(type *)talloc_get_type(const void *ptr, type); - -This macro allows you to do type checking on talloc pointers. It is -particularly useful for void* private pointers. It is equivalent to -this: - - (type *)talloc_check_name(ptr, #type) - - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -talloc_set_type(const void *ptr, type); - -This macro allows you to force the name of a pointer to be a -particular type. This can be used in conjunction with -talloc_get_type() to do type checking on void* pointers. - -It is equivalent to this: - talloc_set_name_const(ptr, #type) - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -talloc_get_size(const void *ctx); - -This function lets you know the amount of memory alloced so far by -this context. It does NOT account for subcontext memory. -This can be used to calculate the size of an array. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -void *talloc_find_parent_byname(const void *ctx, const char *name); - -Find a parent memory context of the current context that has the given -name. This can be very useful in complex programs where it may be -difficult to pass all information down to the level you need, but you -know the structure you want is a parent of another context. - -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- -(type *)talloc_find_parent_bytype(ctx, type); - -Like talloc_find_parent_byname() but takes a type, making it typesafe. - diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/testsuite.c b/source3/lib/talloc/testsuite.c deleted file mode 100644 index 3f06eee566..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/testsuite.c +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1152 +0,0 @@ -/* - Unix SMB/CIFS implementation. - - local testing of talloc routines. - - Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004 - - ** NOTE! The following LGPL license applies to the talloc - ** library. This does NOT imply that all of Samba is released - ** under the LGPL - - This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or - modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public - License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either - version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. - - This library 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 - Lesser General Public License for more details. - - You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public - License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. -*/ - -#include "replace.h" -#include "system/time.h" -#include "talloc.h" - -static struct timeval timeval_current(void) -{ - struct timeval tv; - gettimeofday(&tv, NULL); - return tv; -} - -static double timeval_elapsed(struct timeval *tv) -{ - struct timeval tv2 = timeval_current(); - return (tv2.tv_sec - tv->tv_sec) + - (tv2.tv_usec - tv->tv_usec)*1.0e-6; -} - -#define torture_assert(test, expr, str) if (!(expr)) { \ - printf("failure: %s [\n%s: Expression %s failed: %s\n]\n", \ - test, __location__, #expr, str); \ - return false; \ -} - -#define torture_assert_str_equal(test, arg1, arg2, desc) \ - if (arg1 == NULL && arg2 == NULL) { \ - } else if (strcmp(arg1, arg2)) { \ - printf("failure: %s [\n%s: Expected %s, got %s: %s\n]\n", \ - test, __location__, arg1, arg2, desc); \ - return false; \ - } - -#if _SAMBA_BUILD_==3 -#ifdef malloc -#undef malloc -#endif -#ifdef strdup -#undef strdup -#endif -#endif - -#define CHECK_SIZE(test, ptr, tsize) do { \ - if (talloc_total_size(ptr) != (tsize)) { \ - printf("failed: %s [\nwrong '%s' tree size: got %u expected %u\n]\n", \ - test, #ptr, \ - (unsigned)talloc_total_size(ptr), \ - (unsigned)tsize); \ - talloc_report_full(ptr, stdout); \ - return false; \ - } \ -} while (0) - -#define CHECK_BLOCKS(test, ptr, tblocks) do { \ - if (talloc_total_blocks(ptr) != (tblocks)) { \ - printf("failed: %s [\nwrong '%s' tree blocks: got %u expected %u\n]\n", \ - test, #ptr, \ - (unsigned)talloc_total_blocks(ptr), \ - (unsigned)tblocks); \ - talloc_report_full(ptr, stdout); \ - return false; \ - } \ -} while (0) - -#define CHECK_PARENT(test, ptr, parent) do { \ - if (talloc_parent(ptr) != (parent)) { \ - printf("failed: %s [\n'%s' has wrong parent: got %p expected %p\n]\n", \ - test, #ptr, \ - talloc_parent(ptr), \ - (parent)); \ - talloc_report_full(ptr, stdout); \ - talloc_report_full(parent, stdout); \ - talloc_report_full(NULL, stdout); \ - return false; \ - } \ -} while (0) - - -/* - test references -*/ -static bool test_ref1(void) -{ - void *root, *p1, *p2, *ref, *r1; - - printf("test: ref1\n# SINGLE REFERENCE FREE\n"); - - root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root"); - p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p1"); - p2 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "p2"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x1"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 2, "x2"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 3, "x3"); - - r1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "r1"); - ref = talloc_reference(r1, p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", p1, 5); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", r1, 2); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p2\n"); - talloc_free(p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", p1, 5); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", r1, 1); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p1\n"); - talloc_free(p1); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", r1, 1); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing r1\n"); - talloc_free(r1); - talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr); - - fprintf(stderr, "Testing NULL\n"); - if (talloc_reference(root, NULL)) { - return false; - } - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref1", root, 1); - - CHECK_SIZE("ref1", root, 0); - - talloc_free(root); - printf("success: ref1\n"); - return true; -} - -/* - test references -*/ -static bool test_ref2(void) -{ - void *root, *p1, *p2, *ref, *r1; - - printf("test: ref2\n# DOUBLE REFERENCE FREE\n"); - root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root"); - p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p1"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x1"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x2"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x3"); - p2 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "p2"); - - r1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "r1"); - ref = talloc_reference(r1, p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", p1, 5); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", r1, 2); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing ref\n"); - talloc_free(ref); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", p1, 5); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", r1, 1); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p2\n"); - talloc_free(p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", p1, 4); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", r1, 1); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p1\n"); - talloc_free(p1); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref2", r1, 1); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing r1\n"); - talloc_free(r1); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_SIZE("ref2", root, 0); - - talloc_free(root); - printf("success: ref2\n"); - return true; -} - -/* - test references -*/ -static bool test_ref3(void) -{ - void *root, *p1, *p2, *ref, *r1; - - printf("test: ref3\n# PARENT REFERENCE FREE\n"); - - root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root"); - p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p1"); - p2 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p2"); - r1 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "r1"); - ref = talloc_reference(p2, r1); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref3", p1, 2); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref3", p2, 2); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref3", r1, 1); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p1\n"); - talloc_free(p1); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref3", p2, 2); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref3", r1, 1); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p2\n"); - talloc_free(p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_SIZE("ref3", root, 0); - - talloc_free(root); - - printf("success: ref3\n"); - return true; -} - -/* - test references -*/ -static bool test_ref4(void) -{ - void *root, *p1, *p2, *ref, *r1; - - printf("test: ref4\n# REFERRER REFERENCE FREE\n"); - - root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root"); - p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p1"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x1"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x2"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x3"); - p2 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "p2"); - - r1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "r1"); - ref = talloc_reference(r1, p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", p1, 5); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", r1, 2); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing r1\n"); - talloc_free(r1); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", p1, 5); - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", p2, 1); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p2\n"); - talloc_free(p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("ref4", p1, 4); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p1\n"); - talloc_free(p1); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_SIZE("ref4", root, 0); - - talloc_free(root); - - printf("success: ref4\n"); - return true; -} - - -/* - test references -*/ -static bool test_unlink1(void) -{ - void *root, *p1, *p2, *ref, *r1; - - printf("test: unlink\n# UNLINK\n"); - - root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root"); - p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "p1"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x1"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x2"); - talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "x3"); - p2 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "p2"); - - r1 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "r1"); - ref = talloc_reference(r1, p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", p1, 7); - CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", r1, 2); - - fprintf(stderr, "Unreferencing r1\n"); - talloc_unlink(r1, p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", p1, 6); - CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("unlink", r1, 1); - - fprintf(stderr, "Freeing p1\n"); - talloc_free(p1); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - - CHECK_SIZE("unlink", root, 0); - - talloc_free(root); - - printf("success: unlink\n"); - return true; -} - -static int fail_destructor(void *ptr) -{ - return -1; -} - -/* - miscellaneous tests to try to get a higher test coverage percentage -*/ -static bool test_misc(void) -{ - void *root, *p1; - char *p2; - double *d; - const char *name; - - printf("test: misc\n# MISCELLANEOUS\n"); - - root = talloc_new(NULL); - - p1 = talloc_size(root, 0x7fffffff); - torture_assert("misc", !p1, "failed: large talloc allowed\n"); - - p1 = talloc_strdup(root, "foo"); - talloc_increase_ref_count(p1); - talloc_increase_ref_count(p1); - talloc_increase_ref_count(p1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 2); - talloc_free(p1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 2); - talloc_unlink(NULL, p1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 2); - p2 = talloc_strdup(p1, "foo"); - torture_assert("misc", talloc_unlink(root, p2) == -1, - "failed: talloc_unlink() of non-reference context should return -1\n"); - torture_assert("misc", talloc_unlink(p1, p2) == 0, - "failed: talloc_unlink() of parent should succeed\n"); - talloc_free(p1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 2); - - name = talloc_set_name(p1, "my name is %s", "foo"); - torture_assert_str_equal("misc", talloc_get_name(p1), "my name is foo", - "failed: wrong name after talloc_set_name(my name is foo)"); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 2); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 3); - - talloc_set_name_const(p1, NULL); - torture_assert_str_equal ("misc", talloc_get_name(p1), "UNNAMED", - "failed: wrong name after talloc_set_name(NULL)"); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 2); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 3); - - torture_assert("misc", talloc_free(NULL) == -1, - "talloc_free(NULL) should give -1\n"); - - talloc_set_destructor(p1, fail_destructor); - torture_assert("misc", talloc_free(p1) == -1, - "Failed destructor should cause talloc_free to fail\n"); - talloc_set_destructor(p1, NULL); - - talloc_report(root, stderr); - - - p2 = (char *)talloc_zero_size(p1, 20); - torture_assert("misc", p2[19] == 0, "Failed to give zero memory\n"); - talloc_free(p2); - - torture_assert("misc", talloc_strdup(root, NULL) == NULL, - "failed: strdup on NULL should give NULL\n"); - - p2 = talloc_strndup(p1, "foo", 2); - torture_assert("misc", strcmp("fo", p2) == 0, - "strndup doesn't work\n"); - p2 = talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(p2, "o%c", 'd'); - torture_assert("misc", strcmp("food", p2) == 0, - "talloc_asprintf_append_buffer doesn't work\n"); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 3); - - p2 = talloc_asprintf_append_buffer(NULL, "hello %s", "world"); - torture_assert("misc", strcmp("hello world", p2) == 0, - "talloc_asprintf_append_buffer doesn't work\n"); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 3); - talloc_free(p2); - - d = talloc_array(p1, double, 0x20000000); - torture_assert("misc", !d, "failed: integer overflow not detected\n"); - - d = talloc_realloc(p1, d, double, 0x20000000); - torture_assert("misc", !d, "failed: integer overflow not detected\n"); - - talloc_free(p1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 1); - - p1 = talloc_named(root, 100, "%d bytes", 100); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 2); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 3); - talloc_unlink(root, p1); - - p1 = talloc_init("%d bytes", 200); - p2 = talloc_asprintf(p1, "my test '%s'", "string"); - torture_assert_str_equal("misc", p2, "my test 'string'", - "failed: talloc_asprintf(\"my test '%%s'\", \"string\") gave: \"%s\""); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 3); - CHECK_SIZE("misc", p2, 17); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 1); - talloc_unlink(NULL, p1); - - p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 10, "p1"); - p2 = (char *)talloc_named_const(root, 20, "p2"); - (void)talloc_reference(p1, p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - talloc_unlink(root, p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 2); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 3); - talloc_unlink(p1, p2); - talloc_unlink(root, p1); - - p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 10, "p1"); - p2 = (char *)talloc_named_const(root, 20, "p2"); - (void)talloc_reference(NULL, p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - talloc_unlink(root, p2); - talloc_report_full(root, stderr); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p2, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", p1, 1); - CHECK_BLOCKS("misc", root, 2); - talloc_unlink(NULL, p2); - talloc_unlink(root, p1); - - /* Test that talloc_unlink is a no-op */ - - torture_assert("misc", talloc_unlink(root, NULL) == -1, - "failed: talloc_unlink(root, NULL) == -1\n"); - - talloc_report(root, stderr); - talloc_report(NULL, stderr); - - CHECK_SIZE("misc", root, 0); - - talloc_free(root); - - CHECK_SIZE("misc", NULL, 0); - - talloc_enable_leak_report(); - talloc_enable_leak_report_full(); - - printf("success: misc\n"); - - return true; -} - - -/* - test realloc -*/ -static bool test_realloc(void) -{ - void *root, *p1, *p2; - - printf("test: realloc\n# REALLOC\n"); - - root = talloc_new(NULL); - - p1 = talloc_size(root, 10); - CHECK_SIZE("realloc", p1, 10); - - p1 = talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p1, 20); - CHECK_SIZE("realloc", p1, 20); - - talloc_new(p1); - - p2 = talloc_realloc_size(p1, NULL, 30); - - talloc_new(p1); - - p2 = talloc_realloc_size(p1, p2, 40); - - CHECK_SIZE("realloc", p2, 40); - CHECK_SIZE("realloc", root, 60); - CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc", p1, 4); - - p1 = talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p1, 20); - CHECK_SIZE("realloc", p1, 60); - - talloc_increase_ref_count(p2); - torture_assert("realloc", talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p2, 5) == NULL, - "failed: talloc_realloc() on a referenced pointer should fail\n"); - CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc", p1, 4); - - talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p2, 0); - talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p2, 0); - CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc", p1, 3); - - torture_assert("realloc", talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p1, 0x7fffffff) == NULL, - "failed: oversize talloc should fail\n"); - - talloc_realloc_size(NULL, p1, 0); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc", root, 1); - CHECK_SIZE("realloc", root, 0); - - talloc_free(root); - - printf("success: realloc\n"); - - return true; -} - -/* - test realloc with a child -*/ -static bool test_realloc_child(void) -{ - void *root; - struct el2 { - const char *name; - } *el2; - struct el1 { - int count; - struct el2 **list, **list2, **list3; - } *el1; - - printf("test: REALLOC WITH CHILD\n"); - - root = talloc_new(NULL); - - el1 = talloc(root, struct el1); - el1->list = talloc(el1, struct el2 *); - el1->list[0] = talloc(el1->list, struct el2); - el1->list[0]->name = talloc_strdup(el1->list[0], "testing"); - - el1->list2 = talloc(el1, struct el2 *); - el1->list2[0] = talloc(el1->list2, struct el2); - el1->list2[0]->name = talloc_strdup(el1->list2[0], "testing2"); - - el1->list3 = talloc(el1, struct el2 *); - el1->list3[0] = talloc(el1->list3, struct el2); - el1->list3[0]->name = talloc_strdup(el1->list3[0], "testing2"); - - el2 = talloc(el1->list, struct el2); - el2 = talloc(el1->list2, struct el2); - el2 = talloc(el1->list3, struct el2); - - el1->list = talloc_realloc(el1, el1->list, struct el2 *, 100); - el1->list2 = talloc_realloc(el1, el1->list2, struct el2 *, 200); - el1->list3 = talloc_realloc(el1, el1->list3, struct el2 *, 300); - - talloc_free(root); - - printf("success: REALLOC WITH CHILD\n"); - return true; -} - -/* - test type checking -*/ -static bool test_type(void) -{ - void *root; - struct el1 { - int count; - }; - struct el2 { - int count; - }; - struct el1 *el1; - - printf("test: type\n# talloc type checking\n"); - - root = talloc_new(NULL); - - el1 = talloc(root, struct el1); - - el1->count = 1; - - torture_assert("type", talloc_get_type(el1, struct el1) == el1, - "type check failed on el1\n"); - torture_assert("type", talloc_get_type(el1, struct el2) == NULL, - "type check failed on el1 with el2\n"); - talloc_set_type(el1, struct el2); - torture_assert("type", talloc_get_type(el1, struct el2) == (struct el2 *)el1, - "type set failed on el1 with el2\n"); - - talloc_free(root); - - printf("success: type\n"); - return true; -} - -/* - test steal -*/ -static bool test_steal(void) -{ - void *root, *p1, *p2; - - printf("test: steal\n# STEAL\n"); - - root = talloc_new(NULL); - - p1 = talloc_array(root, char, 10); - CHECK_SIZE("steal", p1, 10); - - p2 = talloc_realloc(root, NULL, char, 20); - CHECK_SIZE("steal", p1, 10); - CHECK_SIZE("steal", root, 30); - - torture_assert("steal", talloc_steal(p1, NULL) == NULL, - "failed: stealing NULL should give NULL\n"); - - torture_assert("steal", talloc_steal(p1, p1) == p1, - "failed: stealing to ourselves is a nop\n"); - CHECK_BLOCKS("steal", root, 3); - CHECK_SIZE("steal", root, 30); - - talloc_steal(NULL, p1); - talloc_steal(NULL, p2); - CHECK_BLOCKS("steal", root, 1); - CHECK_SIZE("steal", root, 0); - - talloc_free(p1); - talloc_steal(root, p2); - CHECK_BLOCKS("steal", root, 2); - CHECK_SIZE("steal", root, 20); - - talloc_free(p2); - - CHECK_BLOCKS("steal", root, 1); - CHECK_SIZE("steal", root, 0); - - talloc_free(root); - - p1 = talloc_size(NULL, 3); - talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr); - CHECK_SIZE("steal", NULL, 3); - talloc_free(p1); - - printf("success: steal\n"); - return true; -} - -/* - test move -*/ -static bool test_move(void) -{ - void *root; - struct t_move { - char *p; - int *x; - } *t1, *t2; - - printf("test: move\n# MOVE\n"); - - root = talloc_new(NULL); - - t1 = talloc(root, struct t_move); - t2 = talloc(root, struct t_move); - t1->p = talloc_strdup(t1, "foo"); - t1->x = talloc(t1, int); - *t1->x = 42; - - t2->p = talloc_move(t2, &t1->p); - t2->x = talloc_move(t2, &t1->x); - torture_assert("move", t1->p == NULL && t1->x == NULL && - strcmp(t2->p, "foo") == 0 && *t2->x == 42, - "talloc move failed"); - - talloc_free(root); - - printf("success: move\n"); - - return true; -} - -/* - test talloc_realloc_fn -*/ -static bool test_realloc_fn(void) -{ - void *root, *p1; - - printf("test: realloc_fn\n# talloc_realloc_fn\n"); - - root = talloc_new(NULL); - - p1 = talloc_realloc_fn(root, NULL, 10); - CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc_fn", root, 2); - CHECK_SIZE("realloc_fn", root, 10); - p1 = talloc_realloc_fn(root, p1, 20); - CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc_fn", root, 2); - CHECK_SIZE("realloc_fn", root, 20); - p1 = talloc_realloc_fn(root, p1, 0); - CHECK_BLOCKS("realloc_fn", root, 1); - CHECK_SIZE("realloc_fn", root, 0); - - talloc_free(root); - - printf("success: realloc_fn\n"); - return true; -} - - -static bool test_unref_reparent(void) -{ - void *root, *p1, *p2, *c1; - - printf("test: unref_reparent\n# UNREFERENCE AFTER PARENT FREED\n"); - - root = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "root"); - p1 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "orig parent"); - p2 = talloc_named_const(root, 1, "parent by reference"); - - c1 = talloc_named_const(p1, 1, "child"); - talloc_reference(p2, c1); - - CHECK_PARENT("unref_reparent", c1, p1); - - talloc_free(p1); - - CHECK_PARENT("unref_reparent", c1, p2); - - talloc_unlink(p2, c1); - - CHECK_SIZE("unref_reparent", root, 1); - - talloc_free(p2); - talloc_free(root); - - printf("success: unref_reparent\n"); - return true; -} - -/* - measure the speed of talloc versus malloc -*/ -static bool test_speed(void) -{ - void *ctx = talloc_new(NULL); - unsigned count; - const int loop = 1000; - int i; - struct timeval tv; - - printf("test: speed\n# TALLOC VS MALLOC SPEED\n"); - - tv = timeval_current(); - count = 0; - do { - void *p1, *p2, *p3; - for (i=0;i<loop;i++) { - p1 = talloc_size(ctx, loop % 100); - p2 = talloc_strdup(p1, "foo bar"); - p3 = talloc_size(p1, 300); - talloc_free(p1); - } - count += 3 * loop; - } while (timeval_elapsed(&tv) < 5.0); - - fprintf(stderr, "talloc: %.0f ops/sec\n", count/timeval_elapsed(&tv)); - - talloc_free(ctx); - - ctx = talloc_pool(NULL, 1024); - - tv = timeval_current(); - count = 0; - do { - void *p1, *p2, *p3; - for (i=0;i<loop;i++) { - p1 = talloc_size(ctx, loop % 100); - p2 = talloc_strdup(p1, "foo bar"); - p3 = talloc_size(p1, 300); - talloc_free_children(ctx); - } - count += 3 * loop; - } while (timeval_elapsed(&tv) < 5.0); - - talloc_free(ctx); - - fprintf(stderr, "talloc_pool: %.0f ops/sec\n", count/timeval_elapsed(&tv)); - - tv = timeval_current(); - count = 0; - do { - void *p1, *p2, *p3; - for (i=0;i<loop;i++) { - p1 = malloc(loop % 100); - p2 = strdup("foo bar"); - p3 = malloc(300); - free(p1); - free(p2); - free(p3); - } - count += 3 * loop; - } while (timeval_elapsed(&tv) < 5.0); - fprintf(stderr, "malloc: %.0f ops/sec\n", count/timeval_elapsed(&tv)); - - printf("success: speed\n"); - - return true; -} - -static bool test_lifeless(void) -{ - void *top = talloc_new(NULL); - char *parent, *child; - void *child_owner = talloc_new(NULL); - - printf("test: lifeless\n# TALLOC_UNLINK LOOP\n"); - - parent = talloc_strdup(top, "parent"); - child = talloc_strdup(parent, "child"); - (void)talloc_reference(child, parent); - (void)talloc_reference(child_owner, child); - talloc_report_full(top, stderr); - talloc_unlink(top, parent); - talloc_free(child); - talloc_report_full(top, stderr); - talloc_free(top); - talloc_free(child_owner); - talloc_free(child); - - printf("success: lifeless\n"); - return true; -} - -static int loop_destructor_count; - -static int test_loop_destructor(char *ptr) -{ - loop_destructor_count++; - return 0; -} - -static bool test_loop(void) -{ - void *top = talloc_new(NULL); - char *parent; - struct req1 { - char *req2, *req3; - } *req1; - - printf("test: loop\n# TALLOC LOOP DESTRUCTION\n"); - - parent = talloc_strdup(top, "parent"); - req1 = talloc(parent, struct req1); - req1->req2 = talloc_strdup(req1, "req2"); - talloc_set_destructor(req1->req2, test_loop_destructor); - req1->req3 = talloc_strdup(req1, "req3"); - (void)talloc_reference(req1->req3, req1); - talloc_report_full(top, stderr); - talloc_free(parent); - talloc_report_full(top, stderr); - talloc_report_full(NULL, stderr); - talloc_free(top); - - torture_assert("loop", loop_destructor_count == 1, - "FAILED TO FIRE LOOP DESTRUCTOR\n"); - loop_destructor_count = 0; - - printf("success: loop\n"); - return true; -} - -static int fail_destructor_str(char *ptr) -{ - return -1; -} - -static bool test_free_parent_deny_child(void) -{ - void *top = talloc_new(NULL); - char *level1; - char *level2; - char *level3; - - printf("test: free_parent_deny_child\n# TALLOC FREE PARENT DENY CHILD\n"); - - level1 = talloc_strdup(top, "level1"); - level2 = talloc_strdup(level1, "level2"); - level3 = talloc_strdup(level2, "level3"); - - talloc_set_destructor(level3, fail_destructor_str); - talloc_free(level1); - talloc_set_destructor(level3, NULL); - - CHECK_PARENT("free_parent_deny_child", level3, top); - - talloc_free(top); - - printf("success: free_parent_deny_child\n"); - return true; -} - -static bool test_talloc_ptrtype(void) -{ - void *top = talloc_new(NULL); - struct struct1 { - int foo; - int bar; - } *s1, *s2, **s3, ***s4; - const char *location1; - const char *location2; - const char *location3; - const char *location4; - - printf("test: ptrtype\n# TALLOC PTRTYPE\n"); - - s1 = talloc_ptrtype(top, s1);location1 = __location__; - - if (talloc_get_size(s1) != sizeof(struct struct1)) { - printf("failure: ptrtype [\n" - "talloc_ptrtype() allocated the wrong size %lu (should be %lu)\n" - "]\n", (unsigned long)talloc_get_size(s1), - (unsigned long)sizeof(struct struct1)); - return false; - } - - if (strcmp(location1, talloc_get_name(s1)) != 0) { - printf("failure: ptrtype [\n" - "talloc_ptrtype() sets the wrong name '%s' (should be '%s')\n]\n", - talloc_get_name(s1), location1); - return false; - } - - s2 = talloc_array_ptrtype(top, s2, 10);location2 = __location__; - - if (talloc_get_size(s2) != (sizeof(struct struct1) * 10)) { - printf("failure: ptrtype [\n" - "talloc_array_ptrtype() allocated the wrong size " - "%lu (should be %lu)\n]\n", - (unsigned long)talloc_get_size(s2), - (unsigned long)(sizeof(struct struct1)*10)); - return false; - } - - if (strcmp(location2, talloc_get_name(s2)) != 0) { - printf("failure: ptrtype [\n" - "talloc_array_ptrtype() sets the wrong name '%s' (should be '%s')\n]\n", - talloc_get_name(s2), location2); - return false; - } - - s3 = talloc_array_ptrtype(top, s3, 10);location3 = __location__; - - if (talloc_get_size(s3) != (sizeof(struct struct1 *) * 10)) { - printf("failure: ptrtype [\n" - "talloc_array_ptrtype() allocated the wrong size " - "%lu (should be %lu)\n]\n", - (unsigned long)talloc_get_size(s3), - (unsigned long)(sizeof(struct struct1 *)*10)); - return false; - } - - torture_assert_str_equal("ptrtype", location3, talloc_get_name(s3), - "talloc_array_ptrtype() sets the wrong name"); - - s4 = talloc_array_ptrtype(top, s4, 10);location4 = __location__; - - if (talloc_get_size(s4) != (sizeof(struct struct1 **) * 10)) { - printf("failure: ptrtype [\n" - "talloc_array_ptrtype() allocated the wrong size " - "%lu (should be %lu)\n]\n", - (unsigned long)talloc_get_size(s4), - (unsigned long)(sizeof(struct struct1 **)*10)); - return false; - } - - torture_assert_str_equal("ptrtype", location4, talloc_get_name(s4), - "talloc_array_ptrtype() sets the wrong name"); - - talloc_free(top); - - printf("success: ptrtype\n"); - return true; -} - -static int _test_talloc_free_in_destructor(void **ptr) -{ - talloc_free(*ptr); - return 0; -} - -static bool test_talloc_free_in_destructor(void) -{ - void *level0; - void *level1; - void *level2; - void *level3; - void *level4; - void **level5; - - printf("test: free_in_destructor\n# TALLOC FREE IN DESTRUCTOR\n"); - - level0 = talloc_new(NULL); - level1 = talloc_new(level0); - level2 = talloc_new(level1); - level3 = talloc_new(level2); - level4 = talloc_new(level3); - level5 = talloc(level4, void *); - - *level5 = level3; - (void)talloc_reference(level0, level3); - (void)talloc_reference(level3, level3); - (void)talloc_reference(level5, level3); - - talloc_set_destructor(level5, _test_talloc_free_in_destructor); - - talloc_free(level1); - - talloc_free(level0); - - printf("success: free_in_destructor\n"); - return true; -} - -static bool test_autofree(void) -{ -#if _SAMBA_BUILD_ < 4 - /* autofree test would kill smbtorture */ - void *p; - printf("test: autofree\n# TALLOC AUTOFREE CONTEXT\n"); - - p = talloc_autofree_context(); - talloc_free(p); - - p = talloc_autofree_context(); - talloc_free(p); - - printf("success: autofree\n"); -#endif - return true; -} - -static bool test_pool(void) -{ - void *pool; - void *p1, *p2, *p3, *p4; - - pool = talloc_pool(NULL, 1024); - - p1 = talloc_size(pool, 80); - p2 = talloc_size(pool, 20); - p3 = talloc_size(p1, 50); - p4 = talloc_size(p3, 1000); - - talloc_free(pool); - - return true; -} - -struct torture_context; -bool torture_local_talloc(struct torture_context *tctx) -{ - bool ret = true; - - setlinebuf(stdout); - - talloc_disable_null_tracking(); - talloc_enable_null_tracking(); - - ret &= test_ref1(); - ret &= test_ref2(); - ret &= test_ref3(); - ret &= test_ref4(); - ret &= test_unlink1(); - ret &= test_misc(); - ret &= test_realloc(); - ret &= test_realloc_child(); - ret &= test_steal(); - ret &= test_move(); - ret &= test_unref_reparent(); - ret &= test_realloc_fn(); - ret &= test_type(); - ret &= test_lifeless(); - ret &= test_loop(); - ret &= test_free_parent_deny_child(); - ret &= test_talloc_ptrtype(); - ret &= test_talloc_free_in_destructor(); - ret &= test_pool(); - - if (ret) { - ret &= test_speed(); - } - ret &= test_autofree(); - - return ret; -} - -#if _SAMBA_BUILD_ < 4 -int main(void) -{ - bool ret = torture_local_talloc(NULL); - if (!ret) - return -1; - return 0; -} -#endif diff --git a/source3/lib/talloc/web/index.html b/source3/lib/talloc/web/index.html deleted file mode 100644 index 5deab93665..0000000000 --- a/source3/lib/talloc/web/index.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,46 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN"> -<HTML> -<HEAD> -<TITLE>talloc</TITLE> -</HEAD> -<BODY BGCOLOR="#ffffff" TEXT="#000000" VLINK="#292555" LINK="#292555" ALINK="#cc0033"> - -<h1>talloc</h1> - -talloc is a hierarchical pool based memory allocator with -destructors. It is the core memory allocator used in Samba4, and has -made a huge difference in many aspects of Samba4 development.<p> - -To get started with talloc, I would recommend you read the <a -href="http://samba.org/ftp/unpacked/talloc/talloc_guide.txt">talloc guide</a>. - -<h2>Discussion and bug reports</h2> - -talloc does not currently have its own mailing list or bug tracking -system. For now, please use the <a -href="https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba-technical">samba-technical</a> -mailing list, and the <a href="http://bugzilla.samba.org/">Samba -bugzilla</a> bug tracking system. - -<h2>Download</h2> - -You can download the latest release either via rsync or git.<br> -<br> -To fetch via git see the following guide:<br> -<a href="http://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Using_Git_for_Samba_Development">Using Git for Samba Development</a><br> -Once you have cloned the tree switch to the v4-0-test branch and cd into the source/lib/talloc directory.<br> -<br> -To fetch via rsync use this command: - -<pre> - rsync -Pavz samba.org::ftp/unpacked/talloc . -</pre> - -<hr> -<tiny> -<a href="http://samba.org/~tridge/">Andrew Tridgell</a><br> -talloc AT tridgell.net -</tiny> - -</BODY> -</HTML> |