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1 @node String and Array Utilities, Character Set Handling, Character Handling, Top
2 @c %MENU% Utilities for copying and comparing strings and arrays
3 @chapter String and Array Utilities
4
5 Operations on strings (null-terminated byte sequences) are an important part of
6 many programs. @Theglibc{} provides an extensive set of string
7 utility functions, including functions for copying, concatenating,
8 comparing, and searching strings. Many of these functions can also
9 operate on arbitrary regions of storage; for example, the @code{memcpy}
10 function can be used to copy the contents of any kind of array.
11
12 It's fairly common for beginning C programmers to ``reinvent the wheel''
13 by duplicating this functionality in their own code, but it pays to
14 become familiar with the library functions and to make use of them,
15 since this offers benefits in maintenance, efficiency, and portability.
16
17 For instance, you could easily compare one string to another in two
18 lines of C code, but if you use the built-in @code{strcmp} function,
19 you're less likely to make a mistake. And, since these library
20 functions are typically highly optimized, your program may run faster
21 too.
22
23 @menu
24 * Representation of Strings:: Introduction to basic concepts.
25 * String/Array Conventions:: Whether to use a string function or an
26 arbitrary array function.
27 * String Length:: Determining the length of a string.
28 * Copying Strings and Arrays:: Functions to copy strings and arrays.
29 * Concatenating Strings:: Functions to concatenate strings while copying.
30 * Truncating Strings:: Functions to truncate strings while copying.
31 * String/Array Comparison:: Functions for byte-wise and character-wise
32 comparison.
33 * Collation Functions:: Functions for collating strings.
34 * Search Functions:: Searching for a specific element or substring.
35 * Finding Tokens in a String:: Splitting a string into tokens by looking
36 for delimiters.
37 * strfry:: Function for flash-cooking a string.
38 * Trivial Encryption:: Obscuring data.
39 * Encode Binary Data:: Encoding and Decoding of Binary Data.
40 * Argz and Envz Vectors:: Null-separated string vectors.
41 @end menu
42
43 @node Representation of Strings
44 @section Representation of Strings
45 @cindex string, representation of
46
47 This section is a quick summary of string concepts for beginning C
48 programmers. It describes how strings are represented in C
49 and some common pitfalls. If you are already familiar with this
50 material, you can skip this section.
51
52 @cindex string
53 A @dfn{string} is a null-terminated array of bytes of type @code{char},
54 including the terminating null byte. String-valued
55 variables are usually declared to be pointers of type @code{char *}.
56 Such variables do not include space for the text of a string; that has
57 to be stored somewhere else---in an array variable, a string constant,
58 or dynamically allocated memory (@pxref{Memory Allocation}). It's up to
59 you to store the address of the chosen memory space into the pointer
60 variable. Alternatively you can store a @dfn{null pointer} in the
61 pointer variable. The null pointer does not point anywhere, so
62 attempting to reference the string it points to gets an error.
63
64 @cindex multibyte character
65 @cindex multibyte string
66 @cindex wide string
67 A @dfn{multibyte character} is a sequence of one or more bytes that
68 represents a single character using the locale's encoding scheme; a
69 null byte always represents the null character. A @dfn{multibyte
70 string} is a string that consists entirely of multibyte
71 characters. In contrast, a @dfn{wide string} is a null-terminated
72 sequence of @code{wchar_t} objects. A wide-string variable is usually
73 declared to be a pointer of type @code{wchar_t *}, by analogy with
74 string variables and @code{char *}. @xref{Extended Char Intro}.
75
76 @cindex null byte
77 @cindex null wide character
78 By convention, the @dfn{null byte}, @code{'\0'},
79 marks the end of a string and the @dfn{null wide character},
80 @code{L'\0'}, marks the end of a wide string. For example, in
81 testing to see whether the @code{char *} variable @var{p} points to a
82 null byte marking the end of a string, you can write
83 @code{!*@var{p}} or @code{*@var{p} == '\0'}.
84
85 A null byte is quite different conceptually from a null pointer,
86 although both are represented by the integer constant @code{0}.
87
88 @cindex string literal
89 A @dfn{string literal} appears in C program source as a multibyte
90 string between double-quote characters (@samp{"}). If the
91 initial double-quote character is immediately preceded by a capital
92 @samp{L} (ell) character (as in @code{L"foo"}), it is a wide string
93 literal. String literals can also contribute to @dfn{string
94 concatenation}: @code{"a" "b"} is the same as @code{"ab"}.
95 For wide strings one can use either
96 @code{L"a" L"b"} or @code{L"a" "b"}. Modification of string literals is
97 not allowed by the GNU C compiler, because literals are placed in
98 read-only storage.
99
100 Arrays that are declared @code{const} cannot be modified
101 either. It's generally good style to declare non-modifiable string
102 pointers to be of type @code{const char *}, since this often allows the
103 C compiler to detect accidental modifications as well as providing some
104 amount of documentation about what your program intends to do with the
105 string.
106
107 The amount of memory allocated for a byte array may extend past the null byte
108 that marks the end of the string that the array contains. In this
109 document, the term @dfn{allocated size} is always used to refer to the
110 total amount of memory allocated for an array, while the term
111 @dfn{length} refers to the number of bytes up to (but not including)
112 the terminating null byte. Wide strings are similar, except their
113 sizes and lengths count wide characters, not bytes.
114 @cindex length of string
115 @cindex allocation size of string
116 @cindex size of string
117 @cindex string length
118 @cindex string allocation
119
120 A notorious source of program bugs is trying to put more bytes into a
121 string than fit in its allocated size. When writing code that extends
122 strings or moves bytes into a pre-allocated array, you should be
123 very careful to keep track of the length of the text and make explicit
124 checks for overflowing the array. Many of the library functions
125 @emph{do not} do this for you! Remember also that you need to allocate
126 an extra byte to hold the null byte that marks the end of the
127 string.
128
129 @cindex single-byte string
130 @cindex multibyte string
131 Originally strings were sequences of bytes where each byte represented a
132 single character. This is still true today if the strings are encoded
133 using a single-byte character encoding. Things are different if the
134 strings are encoded using a multibyte encoding (for more information on
135 encodings see @ref{Extended Char Intro}). There is no difference in
136 the programming interface for these two kind of strings; the programmer
137 has to be aware of this and interpret the byte sequences accordingly.
138
139 But since there is no separate interface taking care of these
140 differences the byte-based string functions are sometimes hard to use.
141 Since the count parameters of these functions specify bytes a call to
142 @code{memcpy} could cut a multibyte character in the middle and put an
143 incomplete (and therefore unusable) byte sequence in the target buffer.
144
145 @cindex wide string
146 To avoid these problems later versions of the @w{ISO C} standard
147 introduce a second set of functions which are operating on @dfn{wide
148 characters} (@pxref{Extended Char Intro}). These functions don't have
149 the problems the single-byte versions have since every wide character is
150 a legal, interpretable value. This does not mean that cutting wide
151 strings at arbitrary points is without problems. It normally
152 is for alphabet-based languages (except for non-normalized text) but
153 languages based on syllables still have the problem that more than one
154 wide character is necessary to complete a logical unit. This is a
155 higher level problem which the @w{C library} functions are not designed
156 to solve. But it is at least good that no invalid byte sequences can be
157 created. Also, the higher level functions can also much more easily operate
158 on wide characters than on multibyte characters so that a common strategy
159 is to use wide characters internally whenever text is more than simply
160 copied.
161
162 The remaining of this chapter will discuss the functions for handling
163 wide strings in parallel with the discussion of
164 strings since there is almost always an exact equivalent
165 available.
166
167 @node String/Array Conventions
168 @section String and Array Conventions
169
170 This chapter describes both functions that work on arbitrary arrays or
171 blocks of memory, and functions that are specific to strings and wide
172 strings.
173
174 Functions that operate on arbitrary blocks of memory have names
175 beginning with @samp{mem} and @samp{wmem} (such as @code{memcpy} and
176 @code{wmemcpy}) and invariably take an argument which specifies the size
177 (in bytes and wide characters respectively) of the block of memory to
178 operate on. The array arguments and return values for these functions
179 have type @code{void *} or @code{wchar_t}. As a matter of style, the
180 elements of the arrays used with the @samp{mem} functions are referred
181 to as ``bytes''. You can pass any kind of pointer to these functions,
182 and the @code{sizeof} operator is useful in computing the value for the
183 size argument. Parameters to the @samp{wmem} functions must be of type
184 @code{wchar_t *}. These functions are not really usable with anything
185 but arrays of this type.
186
187 In contrast, functions that operate specifically on strings and wide
188 strings have names beginning with @samp{str} and @samp{wcs}
189 respectively (such as @code{strcpy} and @code{wcscpy}) and look for a
190 terminating null byte or null wide character instead of requiring an explicit
191 size argument to be passed. (Some of these functions accept a specified
192 maximum length, but they also check for premature termination.)
193 The array arguments and return values for these
194 functions have type @code{char *} and @code{wchar_t *} respectively, and
195 the array elements are referred to as ``bytes'' and ``wide
196 characters''.
197
198 In many cases, there are both @samp{mem} and @samp{str}/@samp{wcs}
199 versions of a function. The one that is more appropriate to use depends
200 on the exact situation. When your program is manipulating arbitrary
201 arrays or blocks of storage, then you should always use the @samp{mem}
202 functions. On the other hand, when you are manipulating
203 strings it is usually more convenient to use the @samp{str}/@samp{wcs}
204 functions, unless you already know the length of the string in advance.
205 The @samp{wmem} functions should be used for wide character arrays with
206 known size.
207
208 @cindex wint_t
209 @cindex parameter promotion
210 Some of the memory and string functions take single characters as
211 arguments. Since a value of type @code{char} is automatically promoted
212 into a value of type @code{int} when used as a parameter, the functions
213 are declared with @code{int} as the type of the parameter in question.
214 In case of the wide character functions the situation is similar: the
215 parameter type for a single wide character is @code{wint_t} and not
216 @code{wchar_t}. This would for many implementations not be necessary
217 since @code{wchar_t} is large enough to not be automatically
218 promoted, but since the @w{ISO C} standard does not require such a
219 choice of types the @code{wint_t} type is used.
220
221 @node String Length
222 @section String Length
223
224 You can get the length of a string using the @code{strlen} function.
225 This function is declared in the header file @file{string.h}.
226 @pindex string.h
227
228 @comment string.h
229 @comment ISO
230 @deftypefun size_t strlen (const char *@var{s})
231 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
232 The @code{strlen} function returns the length of the
233 string @var{s} in bytes. (In other words, it returns the offset of the
234 terminating null byte within the array.)
235
236 For example,
237 @smallexample
238 strlen ("hello, world")
239 @result{} 12
240 @end smallexample
241
242 When applied to an array, the @code{strlen} function returns
243 the length of the string stored there, not its allocated size. You can
244 get the allocated size of the array that holds a string using
245 the @code{sizeof} operator:
246
247 @smallexample
248 char string[32] = "hello, world";
249 sizeof (string)
250 @result{} 32
251 strlen (string)
252 @result{} 12
253 @end smallexample
254
255 But beware, this will not work unless @var{string} is the
256 array itself, not a pointer to it. For example:
257
258 @smallexample
259 char string[32] = "hello, world";
260 char *ptr = string;
261 sizeof (string)
262 @result{} 32
263 sizeof (ptr)
264 @result{} 4 /* @r{(on a machine with 4 byte pointers)} */
265 @end smallexample
266
267 This is an easy mistake to make when you are working with functions that
268 take string arguments; those arguments are always pointers, not arrays.
269
270 It must also be noted that for multibyte encoded strings the return
271 value does not have to correspond to the number of characters in the
272 string. To get this value the string can be converted to wide
273 characters and @code{wcslen} can be used or something like the following
274 code can be used:
275
276 @smallexample
277 /* @r{The input is in @code{string}.}
278 @r{The length is expected in @code{n}.} */
279 @{
280 mbstate_t t;
281 char *scopy = string;
282 /* In initial state. */
283 memset (&t, '\0', sizeof (t));
284 /* Determine number of characters. */
285 n = mbsrtowcs (NULL, &scopy, strlen (scopy), &t);
286 @}
287 @end smallexample
288
289 This is cumbersome to do so if the number of characters (as opposed to
290 bytes) is needed often it is better to work with wide characters.
291 @end deftypefun
292
293 The wide character equivalent is declared in @file{wchar.h}.
294
295 @comment wchar.h
296 @comment ISO
297 @deftypefun size_t wcslen (const wchar_t *@var{ws})
298 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
299 The @code{wcslen} function is the wide character equivalent to
300 @code{strlen}. The return value is the number of wide characters in the
301 wide string pointed to by @var{ws} (this is also the offset of
302 the terminating null wide character of @var{ws}).
303
304 Since there are no multi wide character sequences making up one wide
305 character the return value is not only the offset in the array, it is
306 also the number of wide characters.
307
308 This function was introduced in @w{Amendment 1} to @w{ISO C90}.
309 @end deftypefun
310
311 @comment string.h
312 @comment GNU
313 @deftypefun size_t strnlen (const char *@var{s}, size_t @var{maxlen})
314 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
315 If the array @var{s} of size @var{maxlen} contains a null byte,
316 the @code{strnlen} function returns the length of the string @var{s} in
317 bytes. Otherwise it
318 returns @var{maxlen}. Therefore this function is equivalent to
319 @code{(strlen (@var{s}) < @var{maxlen} ? strlen (@var{s}) : @var{maxlen})}
320 but it
321 is more efficient and works even if @var{s} is not null-terminated so
322 long as @var{maxlen} does not exceed the size of @var{s}'s array.
323
324 @smallexample
325 char string[32] = "hello, world";
326 strnlen (string, 32)
327 @result{} 12
328 strnlen (string, 5)
329 @result{} 5
330 @end smallexample
331
332 This function is a GNU extension and is declared in @file{string.h}.
333 @end deftypefun
334
335 @comment wchar.h
336 @comment GNU
337 @deftypefun size_t wcsnlen (const wchar_t *@var{ws}, size_t @var{maxlen})
338 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
339 @code{wcsnlen} is the wide character equivalent to @code{strnlen}. The
340 @var{maxlen} parameter specifies the maximum number of wide characters.
341
342 This function is a GNU extension and is declared in @file{wchar.h}.
343 @end deftypefun
344
345 @node Copying Strings and Arrays
346 @section Copying Strings and Arrays
347
348 You can use the functions described in this section to copy the contents
349 of strings, wide strings, and arrays. The @samp{str} and @samp{mem}
350 functions are declared in @file{string.h} while the @samp{w} functions
351 are declared in @file{wchar.h}.
352 @pindex string.h
353 @pindex wchar.h
354 @cindex copying strings and arrays
355 @cindex string copy functions
356 @cindex array copy functions
357 @cindex concatenating strings
358 @cindex string concatenation functions
359
360 A helpful way to remember the ordering of the arguments to the functions
361 in this section is that it corresponds to an assignment expression, with
362 the destination array specified to the left of the source array. Most
363 of these functions return the address of the destination array; a few
364 return the address of the destination's terminating null, or of just
365 past the destination.
366
367 Most of these functions do not work properly if the source and
368 destination arrays overlap. For example, if the beginning of the
369 destination array overlaps the end of the source array, the original
370 contents of that part of the source array may get overwritten before it
371 is copied. Even worse, in the case of the string functions, the null
372 byte marking the end of the string may be lost, and the copy
373 function might get stuck in a loop trashing all the memory allocated to
374 your program.
375
376 All functions that have problems copying between overlapping arrays are
377 explicitly identified in this manual. In addition to functions in this
378 section, there are a few others like @code{sprintf} (@pxref{Formatted
379 Output Functions}) and @code{scanf} (@pxref{Formatted Input
380 Functions}).
381
382 @comment string.h
383 @comment ISO
384 @deftypefun {void *} memcpy (void *restrict @var{to}, const void *restrict @var{from}, size_t @var{size})
385 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
386 The @code{memcpy} function copies @var{size} bytes from the object
387 beginning at @var{from} into the object beginning at @var{to}. The
388 behavior of this function is undefined if the two arrays @var{to} and
389 @var{from} overlap; use @code{memmove} instead if overlapping is possible.
390
391 The value returned by @code{memcpy} is the value of @var{to}.
392
393 Here is an example of how you might use @code{memcpy} to copy the
394 contents of an array:
395
396 @smallexample
397 struct foo *oldarray, *newarray;
398 int arraysize;
399 @dots{}
400 memcpy (new, old, arraysize * sizeof (struct foo));
401 @end smallexample
402 @end deftypefun
403
404 @comment wchar.h
405 @comment ISO
406 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wmemcpy (wchar_t *restrict @var{wto}, const wchar_t *restrict @var{wfrom}, size_t @var{size})
407 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
408 The @code{wmemcpy} function copies @var{size} wide characters from the object
409 beginning at @var{wfrom} into the object beginning at @var{wto}. The
410 behavior of this function is undefined if the two arrays @var{wto} and
411 @var{wfrom} overlap; use @code{wmemmove} instead if overlapping is possible.
412
413 The following is a possible implementation of @code{wmemcpy} but there
414 are more optimizations possible.
415
416 @smallexample
417 wchar_t *
418 wmemcpy (wchar_t *restrict wto, const wchar_t *restrict wfrom,
419 size_t size)
420 @{
421 return (wchar_t *) memcpy (wto, wfrom, size * sizeof (wchar_t));
422 @}
423 @end smallexample
424
425 The value returned by @code{wmemcpy} is the value of @var{wto}.
426
427 This function was introduced in @w{Amendment 1} to @w{ISO C90}.
428 @end deftypefun
429
430 @comment string.h
431 @comment GNU
432 @deftypefun {void *} mempcpy (void *restrict @var{to}, const void *restrict @var{from}, size_t @var{size})
433 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
434 The @code{mempcpy} function is nearly identical to the @code{memcpy}
435 function. It copies @var{size} bytes from the object beginning at
436 @code{from} into the object pointed to by @var{to}. But instead of
437 returning the value of @var{to} it returns a pointer to the byte
438 following the last written byte in the object beginning at @var{to}.
439 I.e., the value is @code{((void *) ((char *) @var{to} + @var{size}))}.
440
441 This function is useful in situations where a number of objects shall be
442 copied to consecutive memory positions.
443
444 @smallexample
445 void *
446 combine (void *o1, size_t s1, void *o2, size_t s2)
447 @{
448 void *result = malloc (s1 + s2);
449 if (result != NULL)
450 mempcpy (mempcpy (result, o1, s1), o2, s2);
451 return result;
452 @}
453 @end smallexample
454
455 This function is a GNU extension.
456 @end deftypefun
457
458 @comment wchar.h
459 @comment GNU
460 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wmempcpy (wchar_t *restrict @var{wto}, const wchar_t *restrict @var{wfrom}, size_t @var{size})
461 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
462 The @code{wmempcpy} function is nearly identical to the @code{wmemcpy}
463 function. It copies @var{size} wide characters from the object
464 beginning at @code{wfrom} into the object pointed to by @var{wto}. But
465 instead of returning the value of @var{wto} it returns a pointer to the
466 wide character following the last written wide character in the object
467 beginning at @var{wto}. I.e., the value is @code{@var{wto} + @var{size}}.
468
469 This function is useful in situations where a number of objects shall be
470 copied to consecutive memory positions.
471
472 The following is a possible implementation of @code{wmemcpy} but there
473 are more optimizations possible.
474
475 @smallexample
476 wchar_t *
477 wmempcpy (wchar_t *restrict wto, const wchar_t *restrict wfrom,
478 size_t size)
479 @{
480 return (wchar_t *) mempcpy (wto, wfrom, size * sizeof (wchar_t));
481 @}
482 @end smallexample
483
484 This function is a GNU extension.
485 @end deftypefun
486
487 @comment string.h
488 @comment ISO
489 @deftypefun {void *} memmove (void *@var{to}, const void *@var{from}, size_t @var{size})
490 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
491 @code{memmove} copies the @var{size} bytes at @var{from} into the
492 @var{size} bytes at @var{to}, even if those two blocks of space
493 overlap. In the case of overlap, @code{memmove} is careful to copy the
494 original values of the bytes in the block at @var{from}, including those
495 bytes which also belong to the block at @var{to}.
496
497 The value returned by @code{memmove} is the value of @var{to}.
498 @end deftypefun
499
500 @comment wchar.h
501 @comment ISO
502 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wmemmove (wchar_t *@var{wto}, const wchar_t *@var{wfrom}, size_t @var{size})
503 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
504 @code{wmemmove} copies the @var{size} wide characters at @var{wfrom}
505 into the @var{size} wide characters at @var{wto}, even if those two
506 blocks of space overlap. In the case of overlap, @code{memmove} is
507 careful to copy the original values of the wide characters in the block
508 at @var{wfrom}, including those wide characters which also belong to the
509 block at @var{wto}.
510
511 The following is a possible implementation of @code{wmemcpy} but there
512 are more optimizations possible.
513
514 @smallexample
515 wchar_t *
516 wmempcpy (wchar_t *restrict wto, const wchar_t *restrict wfrom,
517 size_t size)
518 @{
519 return (wchar_t *) mempcpy (wto, wfrom, size * sizeof (wchar_t));
520 @}
521 @end smallexample
522
523 The value returned by @code{wmemmove} is the value of @var{wto}.
524
525 This function is a GNU extension.
526 @end deftypefun
527
528 @comment string.h
529 @comment SVID
530 @deftypefun {void *} memccpy (void *restrict @var{to}, const void *restrict @var{from}, int @var{c}, size_t @var{size})
531 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
532 This function copies no more than @var{size} bytes from @var{from} to
533 @var{to}, stopping if a byte matching @var{c} is found. The return
534 value is a pointer into @var{to} one byte past where @var{c} was copied,
535 or a null pointer if no byte matching @var{c} appeared in the first
536 @var{size} bytes of @var{from}.
537 @end deftypefun
538
539 @comment string.h
540 @comment ISO
541 @deftypefun {void *} memset (void *@var{block}, int @var{c}, size_t @var{size})
542 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
543 This function copies the value of @var{c} (converted to an
544 @code{unsigned char}) into each of the first @var{size} bytes of the
545 object beginning at @var{block}. It returns the value of @var{block}.
546 @end deftypefun
547
548 @comment wchar.h
549 @comment ISO
550 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wmemset (wchar_t *@var{block}, wchar_t @var{wc}, size_t @var{size})
551 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
552 This function copies the value of @var{wc} into each of the first
553 @var{size} wide characters of the object beginning at @var{block}. It
554 returns the value of @var{block}.
555 @end deftypefun
556
557 @comment string.h
558 @comment ISO
559 @deftypefun {char *} strcpy (char *restrict @var{to}, const char *restrict @var{from})
560 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
561 This copies bytes from the string @var{from} (up to and including
562 the terminating null byte) into the string @var{to}. Like
563 @code{memcpy}, this function has undefined results if the strings
564 overlap. The return value is the value of @var{to}.
565 @end deftypefun
566
567 @comment wchar.h
568 @comment ISO
569 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcscpy (wchar_t *restrict @var{wto}, const wchar_t *restrict @var{wfrom})
570 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
571 This copies wide characters from the wide string @var{wfrom} (up to and
572 including the terminating null wide character) into the string
573 @var{wto}. Like @code{wmemcpy}, this function has undefined results if
574 the strings overlap. The return value is the value of @var{wto}.
575 @end deftypefun
576
577 @comment SVID
578 @deftypefun {char *} strdup (const char *@var{s})
579 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
580 This function copies the string @var{s} into a newly
581 allocated string. The string is allocated using @code{malloc}; see
582 @ref{Unconstrained Allocation}. If @code{malloc} cannot allocate space
583 for the new string, @code{strdup} returns a null pointer. Otherwise it
584 returns a pointer to the new string.
585 @end deftypefun
586
587 @comment wchar.h
588 @comment GNU
589 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcsdup (const wchar_t *@var{ws})
590 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
591 This function copies the wide string @var{ws}
592 into a newly allocated string. The string is allocated using
593 @code{malloc}; see @ref{Unconstrained Allocation}. If @code{malloc}
594 cannot allocate space for the new string, @code{wcsdup} returns a null
595 pointer. Otherwise it returns a pointer to the new wide string.
596
597 This function is a GNU extension.
598 @end deftypefun
599
600 @comment string.h
601 @comment Unknown origin
602 @deftypefun {char *} stpcpy (char *restrict @var{to}, const char *restrict @var{from})
603 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
604 This function is like @code{strcpy}, except that it returns a pointer to
605 the end of the string @var{to} (that is, the address of the terminating
606 null byte @code{to + strlen (from)}) rather than the beginning.
607
608 For example, this program uses @code{stpcpy} to concatenate @samp{foo}
609 and @samp{bar} to produce @samp{foobar}, which it then prints.
610
611 @smallexample
612 @include stpcpy.c.texi
613 @end smallexample
614
615 This function is part of POSIX.1-2008 and later editions, but was
616 available in @theglibc{} and other systems as an extension long before
617 it was standardized.
618
619 Its behavior is undefined if the strings overlap. The function is
620 declared in @file{string.h}.
621 @end deftypefun
622
623 @comment wchar.h
624 @comment GNU
625 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcpcpy (wchar_t *restrict @var{wto}, const wchar_t *restrict @var{wfrom})
626 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
627 This function is like @code{wcscpy}, except that it returns a pointer to
628 the end of the string @var{wto} (that is, the address of the terminating
629 null wide character @code{wto + wcslen (wfrom)}) rather than the beginning.
630
631 This function is not part of ISO or POSIX but was found useful while
632 developing @theglibc{} itself.
633
634 The behavior of @code{wcpcpy} is undefined if the strings overlap.
635
636 @code{wcpcpy} is a GNU extension and is declared in @file{wchar.h}.
637 @end deftypefun
638
639 @comment string.h
640 @comment GNU
641 @deftypefn {Macro} {char *} strdupa (const char *@var{s})
642 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
643 This macro is similar to @code{strdup} but allocates the new string
644 using @code{alloca} instead of @code{malloc} (@pxref{Variable Size
645 Automatic}). This means of course the returned string has the same
646 limitations as any block of memory allocated using @code{alloca}.
647
648 For obvious reasons @code{strdupa} is implemented only as a macro;
649 you cannot get the address of this function. Despite this limitation
650 it is a useful function. The following code shows a situation where
651 using @code{malloc} would be a lot more expensive.
652
653 @smallexample
654 @include strdupa.c.texi
655 @end smallexample
656
657 Please note that calling @code{strtok} using @var{path} directly is
658 invalid. It is also not allowed to call @code{strdupa} in the argument
659 list of @code{strtok} since @code{strdupa} uses @code{alloca}
660 (@pxref{Variable Size Automatic}) can interfere with the parameter
661 passing.
662
663 This function is only available if GNU CC is used.
664 @end deftypefn
665
666 @comment string.h
667 @comment BSD
668 @deftypefun void bcopy (const void *@var{from}, void *@var{to}, size_t @var{size})
669 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
670 This is a partially obsolete alternative for @code{memmove}, derived from
671 BSD. Note that it is not quite equivalent to @code{memmove}, because the
672 arguments are not in the same order and there is no return value.
673 @end deftypefun
674
675 @comment string.h
676 @comment BSD
677 @deftypefun void bzero (void *@var{block}, size_t @var{size})
678 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
679 This is a partially obsolete alternative for @code{memset}, derived from
680 BSD. Note that it is not as general as @code{memset}, because the only
681 value it can store is zero.
682 @end deftypefun
683
684 @node Concatenating Strings
685 @section Concatenating Strings
686 @pindex string.h
687 @pindex wchar.h
688 @cindex concatenating strings
689 @cindex string concatenation functions
690
691 The functions described in this section concatenate the contents of a
692 string or wide string to another. They follow the string-copying
693 functions in their conventions. @xref{Copying Strings and Arrays}.
694 @samp{strcat} is declared in the header file @file{string.h} while
695 @samp{wcscat} is declared in @file{wchar.h}.
696
697 @comment string.h
698 @comment ISO
699 @deftypefun {char *} strcat (char *restrict @var{to}, const char *restrict @var{from})
700 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
701 The @code{strcat} function is similar to @code{strcpy}, except that the
702 bytes from @var{from} are concatenated or appended to the end of
703 @var{to}, instead of overwriting it. That is, the first byte from
704 @var{from} overwrites the null byte marking the end of @var{to}.
705
706 An equivalent definition for @code{strcat} would be:
707
708 @smallexample
709 char *
710 strcat (char *restrict to, const char *restrict from)
711 @{
712 strcpy (to + strlen (to), from);
713 return to;
714 @}
715 @end smallexample
716
717 This function has undefined results if the strings overlap.
718
719 As noted below, this function has significant performance issues.
720 @end deftypefun
721
722 @comment wchar.h
723 @comment ISO
724 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcscat (wchar_t *restrict @var{wto}, const wchar_t *restrict @var{wfrom})
725 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
726 The @code{wcscat} function is similar to @code{wcscpy}, except that the
727 wide characters from @var{wfrom} are concatenated or appended to the end of
728 @var{wto}, instead of overwriting it. That is, the first wide character from
729 @var{wfrom} overwrites the null wide character marking the end of @var{wto}.
730
731 An equivalent definition for @code{wcscat} would be:
732
733 @smallexample
734 wchar_t *
735 wcscat (wchar_t *wto, const wchar_t *wfrom)
736 @{
737 wcscpy (wto + wcslen (wto), wfrom);
738 return wto;
739 @}
740 @end smallexample
741
742 This function has undefined results if the strings overlap.
743
744 As noted below, this function has significant performance issues.
745 @end deftypefun
746
747 Programmers using the @code{strcat} or @code{wcscat} function (or the
748 @code{strncat} or @code{wcsncat} functions defined in
749 a later section, for that matter)
750 can easily be recognized as lazy and reckless. In almost all situations
751 the lengths of the participating strings are known (it better should be
752 since how can one otherwise ensure the allocated size of the buffer is
753 sufficient?) Or at least, one could know them if one keeps track of the
754 results of the various function calls. But then it is very inefficient
755 to use @code{strcat}/@code{wcscat}. A lot of time is wasted finding the
756 end of the destination string so that the actual copying can start.
757 This is a common example:
758
759 @cindex va_copy
760 @smallexample
761 /* @r{This function concatenates arbitrarily many strings. The last}
762 @r{parameter must be @code{NULL}.} */
763 char *
764 concat (const char *str, @dots{})
765 @{
766 va_list ap, ap2;
767 size_t total = 1;
768 const char *s;
769 char *result;
770
771 va_start (ap, str);
772 va_copy (ap2, ap);
773
774 /* @r{Determine how much space we need.} */
775 for (s = str; s != NULL; s = va_arg (ap, const char *))
776 total += strlen (s);
777
778 va_end (ap);
779
780 result = (char *) malloc (total);
781 if (result != NULL)
782 @{
783 result[0] = '\0';
784
785 /* @r{Copy the strings.} */
786 for (s = str; s != NULL; s = va_arg (ap2, const char *))
787 strcat (result, s);
788 @}
789
790 va_end (ap2);
791
792 return result;
793 @}
794 @end smallexample
795
796 This looks quite simple, especially the second loop where the strings
797 are actually copied. But these innocent lines hide a major performance
798 penalty. Just imagine that ten strings of 100 bytes each have to be
799 concatenated. For the second string we search the already stored 100
800 bytes for the end of the string so that we can append the next string.
801 For all strings in total the comparisons necessary to find the end of
802 the intermediate results sums up to 5500! If we combine the copying
803 with the search for the allocation we can write this function more
804 efficient:
805
806 @smallexample
807 char *
808 concat (const char *str, @dots{})
809 @{
810 va_list ap;
811 size_t allocated = 100;
812 char *result = (char *) malloc (allocated);
813
814 if (result != NULL)
815 @{
816 char *newp;
817 char *wp;
818 const char *s;
819
820 va_start (ap, str);
821
822 wp = result;
823 for (s = str; s != NULL; s = va_arg (ap, const char *))
824 @{
825 size_t len = strlen (s);
826
827 /* @r{Resize the allocated memory if necessary.} */
828 if (wp + len + 1 > result + allocated)
829 @{
830 allocated = (allocated + len) * 2;
831 newp = (char *) realloc (result, allocated);
832 if (newp == NULL)
833 @{
834 free (result);
835 return NULL;
836 @}
837 wp = newp + (wp - result);
838 result = newp;
839 @}
840
841 wp = mempcpy (wp, s, len);
842 @}
843
844 /* @r{Terminate the result string.} */
845 *wp++ = '\0';
846
847 /* @r{Resize memory to the optimal size.} */
848 newp = realloc (result, wp - result);
849 if (newp != NULL)
850 result = newp;
851
852 va_end (ap);
853 @}
854
855 return result;
856 @}
857 @end smallexample
858
859 With a bit more knowledge about the input strings one could fine-tune
860 the memory allocation. The difference we are pointing to here is that
861 we don't use @code{strcat} anymore. We always keep track of the length
862 of the current intermediate result so we can safe us the search for the
863 end of the string and use @code{mempcpy}. Please note that we also
864 don't use @code{stpcpy} which might seem more natural since we handle
865 with strings. But this is not necessary since we already know the
866 length of the string and therefore can use the faster memory copying
867 function. The example would work for wide characters the same way.
868
869 Whenever a programmer feels the need to use @code{strcat} she or he
870 should think twice and look through the program whether the code cannot
871 be rewritten to take advantage of already calculated results. Again: it
872 is almost always unnecessary to use @code{strcat}.
873
874 @node Truncating Strings
875 @section Truncating Strings while Copying
876 @cindex truncating strings
877 @cindex string truncation
878
879 The functions described in this section copy or concatenate the
880 possibly-truncated contents of a string or array to another, and
881 similarly for wide strings. They follow the string-copying functions
882 in their header conventions. @xref{Copying Strings and Arrays}. The
883 @samp{str} functions are declared in the header file @file{string.h}
884 and the @samp{wc} functions are declared in the file @file{wchar.h}.
885
886 @comment string.h
887 @deftypefun {char *} strncpy (char *restrict @var{to}, const char *restrict @var{from}, size_t @var{size})
888 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
889 This function is similar to @code{strcpy} but always copies exactly
890 @var{size} bytes into @var{to}.
891
892 If @var{from} does not contain a null byte in its first @var{size}
893 bytes, @code{strncpy} copies just the first @var{size} bytes. In this
894 case no null terminator is written into @var{to}.
895
896 Otherwise @var{from} must be a string with length less than
897 @var{size}. In this case @code{strncpy} copies all of @var{from},
898 followed by enough null bytes to add up to @var{size} bytes in all.
899
900 The behavior of @code{strncpy} is undefined if the strings overlap.
901
902 This function was designed for now-rarely-used arrays consisting of
903 non-null bytes followed by zero or more null bytes. It needs to set
904 all @var{size} bytes of the destination, even when @var{size} is much
905 greater than the length of @var{from}. As noted below, this function
906 is generally a poor choice for processing text.
907 @end deftypefun
908
909 @comment wchar.h
910 @comment ISO
911 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcsncpy (wchar_t *restrict @var{wto}, const wchar_t *restrict @var{wfrom}, size_t @var{size})
912 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
913 This function is similar to @code{wcscpy} but always copies exactly
914 @var{size} wide characters into @var{wto}.
915
916 If @var{wfrom} does not contain a null wide character in its first
917 @var{size} wide characters, then @code{wcsncpy} copies just the first
918 @var{size} wide characters. In this case no null terminator is
919 written into @var{wto}.
920
921 Otherwise @var{wfrom} must be a wide string with length less than
922 @var{size}. In this case @code{wcsncpy} copies all of @var{wfrom},
923 followed by enough null wide characters to add up to @var{size} wide
924 characters in all.
925
926 The behavior of @code{wcsncpy} is undefined if the strings overlap.
927
928 This function is the wide-character counterpart of @code{strncpy} and
929 suffers from most of the problems that @code{strncpy} does. For
930 example, as noted below, this function is generally a poor choice for
931 processing text.
932 @end deftypefun
933
934 @comment string.h
935 @comment GNU
936 @deftypefun {char *} strndup (const char *@var{s}, size_t @var{size})
937 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
938 This function is similar to @code{strdup} but always copies at most
939 @var{size} bytes into the newly allocated string.
940
941 If the length of @var{s} is more than @var{size}, then @code{strndup}
942 copies just the first @var{size} bytes and adds a closing null byte.
943 Otherwise all bytes are copied and the string is terminated.
944
945 This function differs from @code{strncpy} in that it always terminates
946 the destination string.
947
948 As noted below, this function is generally a poor choice for
949 processing text.
950
951 @code{strndup} is a GNU extension.
952 @end deftypefun
953
954 @comment string.h
955 @comment GNU
956 @deftypefn {Macro} {char *} strndupa (const char *@var{s}, size_t @var{size})
957 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
958 This function is similar to @code{strndup} but like @code{strdupa} it
959 allocates the new string using @code{alloca} @pxref{Variable Size
960 Automatic}. The same advantages and limitations of @code{strdupa} are
961 valid for @code{strndupa}, too.
962
963 This function is implemented only as a macro, just like @code{strdupa}.
964 Just as @code{strdupa} this macro also must not be used inside the
965 parameter list in a function call.
966
967 As noted below, this function is generally a poor choice for
968 processing text.
969
970 @code{strndupa} is only available if GNU CC is used.
971 @end deftypefn
972
973 @comment string.h
974 @comment GNU
975 @deftypefun {char *} stpncpy (char *restrict @var{to}, const char *restrict @var{from}, size_t @var{size})
976 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
977 This function is similar to @code{stpcpy} but copies always exactly
978 @var{size} bytes into @var{to}.
979
980 If the length of @var{from} is more than @var{size}, then @code{stpncpy}
981 copies just the first @var{size} bytes and returns a pointer to the
982 byte directly following the one which was copied last. Note that in
983 this case there is no null terminator written into @var{to}.
984
985 If the length of @var{from} is less than @var{size}, then @code{stpncpy}
986 copies all of @var{from}, followed by enough null bytes to add up
987 to @var{size} bytes in all. This behavior is rarely useful, but it
988 is implemented to be useful in contexts where this behavior of the
989 @code{strncpy} is used. @code{stpncpy} returns a pointer to the
990 @emph{first} written null byte.
991
992 This function is not part of ISO or POSIX but was found useful while
993 developing @theglibc{} itself.
994
995 Its behavior is undefined if the strings overlap. The function is
996 declared in @file{string.h}.
997
998 As noted below, this function is generally a poor choice for
999 processing text.
1000 @end deftypefun
1001
1002 @comment wchar.h
1003 @comment GNU
1004 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcpncpy (wchar_t *restrict @var{wto}, const wchar_t *restrict @var{wfrom}, size_t @var{size})
1005 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1006 This function is similar to @code{wcpcpy} but copies always exactly
1007 @var{wsize} wide characters into @var{wto}.
1008
1009 If the length of @var{wfrom} is more than @var{size}, then
1010 @code{wcpncpy} copies just the first @var{size} wide characters and
1011 returns a pointer to the wide character directly following the last
1012 non-null wide character which was copied last. Note that in this case
1013 there is no null terminator written into @var{wto}.
1014
1015 If the length of @var{wfrom} is less than @var{size}, then @code{wcpncpy}
1016 copies all of @var{wfrom}, followed by enough null wide characters to add up
1017 to @var{size} wide characters in all. This behavior is rarely useful, but it
1018 is implemented to be useful in contexts where this behavior of the
1019 @code{wcsncpy} is used. @code{wcpncpy} returns a pointer to the
1020 @emph{first} written null wide character.
1021
1022 This function is not part of ISO or POSIX but was found useful while
1023 developing @theglibc{} itself.
1024
1025 Its behavior is undefined if the strings overlap.
1026
1027 As noted below, this function is generally a poor choice for
1028 processing text.
1029
1030 @code{wcpncpy} is a GNU extension.
1031 @end deftypefun
1032
1033 @comment string.h
1034 @comment ISO
1035 @deftypefun {char *} strncat (char *restrict @var{to}, const char *restrict @var{from}, size_t @var{size})
1036 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1037 This function is like @code{strcat} except that not more than @var{size}
1038 bytes from @var{from} are appended to the end of @var{to}, and
1039 @var{from} need not be null-terminated. A single null byte is also
1040 always appended to @var{to}, so the total
1041 allocated size of @var{to} must be at least @code{@var{size} + 1} bytes
1042 longer than its initial length.
1043
1044 The @code{strncat} function could be implemented like this:
1045
1046 @smallexample
1047 @group
1048 char *
1049 strncat (char *to, const char *from, size_t size)
1050 @{
1051 size_t len = strlen (to);
1052 memcpy (to + len, from, strnlen (from, size));
1053 to[len + strnlen (from, size)] = '\0';
1054 return to;
1055 @}
1056 @end group
1057 @end smallexample
1058
1059 The behavior of @code{strncat} is undefined if the strings overlap.
1060
1061 As a companion to @code{strncpy}, @code{strncat} was designed for
1062 now-rarely-used arrays consisting of non-null bytes followed by zero
1063 or more null bytes. As noted below, this function is generally a poor
1064 choice for processing text. Also, this function has significant
1065 performance issues. @xref{Concatenating Strings}.
1066 @end deftypefun
1067
1068 @comment wchar.h
1069 @comment ISO
1070 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcsncat (wchar_t *restrict @var{wto}, const wchar_t *restrict @var{wfrom}, size_t @var{size})
1071 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1072 This function is like @code{wcscat} except that not more than @var{size}
1073 wide characters from @var{from} are appended to the end of @var{to},
1074 and @var{from} need not be null-terminated. A single null wide
1075 character is also always appended to @var{to}, so the total allocated
1076 size of @var{to} must be at least @code{wcsnlen (@var{wfrom},
1077 @var{size}) + 1} wide characters longer than its initial length.
1078
1079 The @code{wcsncat} function could be implemented like this:
1080
1081 @smallexample
1082 @group
1083 wchar_t *
1084 wcsncat (wchar_t *restrict wto, const wchar_t *restrict wfrom,
1085 size_t size)
1086 @{
1087 size_t len = wcslen (wto);
1088 memcpy (wto + len, wfrom, wcsnlen (wfrom, size) * sizeof (wchar_t));
1089 wto[len + wcsnlen (wfrom, size)] = L'\0';
1090 return wto;
1091 @}
1092 @end group
1093 @end smallexample
1094
1095 The behavior of @code{wcsncat} is undefined if the strings overlap.
1096
1097 As noted below, this function is generally a poor choice for
1098 processing text. Also, this function has significant performance
1099 issues. @xref{Concatenating Strings}.
1100 @end deftypefun
1101
1102 Because these functions can abruptly truncate strings or wide strings,
1103 they are generally poor choices for processing text. When coping or
1104 concatening multibyte strings, they can truncate within a multibyte
1105 character so that the result is not a valid multibyte string. When
1106 combining or concatenating multibyte or wide strings, they may
1107 truncate the output after a combining character, resulting in a
1108 corrupted grapheme. They can cause bugs even when processing
1109 single-byte strings: for example, when calculating an ASCII-only user
1110 name, a truncated name can identify the wrong user.
1111
1112 Although some buffer overruns can be prevented by manually replacing
1113 calls to copying functions with calls to truncation functions, there
1114 are often easier and safer automatic techniques that cause buffer
1115 overruns to reliably terminate a program, such as GCC's
1116 @option{-fcheck-pointer-bounds} and @option{-fsanitize=address}
1117 options. @xref{Debugging Options,, Options for Debugging Your Program
1118 or GCC, gcc.info, Using GCC}. Because truncation functions can mask
1119 application bugs that would otherwise be caught by the automatic
1120 techniques, these functions should be used only when the application's
1121 underlying logic requires truncation.
1122
1123 @strong{Note:} GNU programs should not truncate strings or wide
1124 strings to fit arbitrary size limits. @xref{Semantics, , Writing
1125 Robust Programs, standards, The GNU Coding Standards}. Instead of
1126 string-truncation functions, it is usually better to use dynamic
1127 memory allocation (@pxref{Unconstrained Allocation}) and functions
1128 such as @code{strdup} or @code{asprintf} to construct strings.
1129
1130 @node String/Array Comparison
1131 @section String/Array Comparison
1132 @cindex comparing strings and arrays
1133 @cindex string comparison functions
1134 @cindex array comparison functions
1135 @cindex predicates on strings
1136 @cindex predicates on arrays
1137
1138 You can use the functions in this section to perform comparisons on the
1139 contents of strings and arrays. As well as checking for equality, these
1140 functions can also be used as the ordering functions for sorting
1141 operations. @xref{Searching and Sorting}, for an example of this.
1142
1143 Unlike most comparison operations in C, the string comparison functions
1144 return a nonzero value if the strings are @emph{not} equivalent rather
1145 than if they are. The sign of the value indicates the relative ordering
1146 of the first part of the strings that are not equivalent: a
1147 negative value indicates that the first string is ``less'' than the
1148 second, while a positive value indicates that the first string is
1149 ``greater''.
1150
1151 The most common use of these functions is to check only for equality.
1152 This is canonically done with an expression like @w{@samp{! strcmp (s1, s2)}}.
1153
1154 All of these functions are declared in the header file @file{string.h}.
1155 @pindex string.h
1156
1157 @comment string.h
1158 @comment ISO
1159 @deftypefun int memcmp (const void *@var{a1}, const void *@var{a2}, size_t @var{size})
1160 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1161 The function @code{memcmp} compares the @var{size} bytes of memory
1162 beginning at @var{a1} against the @var{size} bytes of memory beginning
1163 at @var{a2}. The value returned has the same sign as the difference
1164 between the first differing pair of bytes (interpreted as @code{unsigned
1165 char} objects, then promoted to @code{int}).
1166
1167 If the contents of the two blocks are equal, @code{memcmp} returns
1168 @code{0}.
1169 @end deftypefun
1170
1171 @comment wchar.h
1172 @comment ISO
1173 @deftypefun int wmemcmp (const wchar_t *@var{a1}, const wchar_t *@var{a2}, size_t @var{size})
1174 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1175 The function @code{wmemcmp} compares the @var{size} wide characters
1176 beginning at @var{a1} against the @var{size} wide characters beginning
1177 at @var{a2}. The value returned is smaller than or larger than zero
1178 depending on whether the first differing wide character is @var{a1} is
1179 smaller or larger than the corresponding wide character in @var{a2}.
1180
1181 If the contents of the two blocks are equal, @code{wmemcmp} returns
1182 @code{0}.
1183 @end deftypefun
1184
1185 On arbitrary arrays, the @code{memcmp} function is mostly useful for
1186 testing equality. It usually isn't meaningful to do byte-wise ordering
1187 comparisons on arrays of things other than bytes. For example, a
1188 byte-wise comparison on the bytes that make up floating-point numbers
1189 isn't likely to tell you anything about the relationship between the
1190 values of the floating-point numbers.
1191
1192 @code{wmemcmp} is really only useful to compare arrays of type
1193 @code{wchar_t} since the function looks at @code{sizeof (wchar_t)} bytes
1194 at a time and this number of bytes is system dependent.
1195
1196 You should also be careful about using @code{memcmp} to compare objects
1197 that can contain ``holes'', such as the padding inserted into structure
1198 objects to enforce alignment requirements, extra space at the end of
1199 unions, and extra bytes at the ends of strings whose length is less
1200 than their allocated size. The contents of these ``holes'' are
1201 indeterminate and may cause strange behavior when performing byte-wise
1202 comparisons. For more predictable results, perform an explicit
1203 component-wise comparison.
1204
1205 For example, given a structure type definition like:
1206
1207 @smallexample
1208 struct foo
1209 @{
1210 unsigned char tag;
1211 union
1212 @{
1213 double f;
1214 long i;
1215 char *p;
1216 @} value;
1217 @};
1218 @end smallexample
1219
1220 @noindent
1221 you are better off writing a specialized comparison function to compare
1222 @code{struct foo} objects instead of comparing them with @code{memcmp}.
1223
1224 @comment string.h
1225 @comment ISO
1226 @deftypefun int strcmp (const char *@var{s1}, const char *@var{s2})
1227 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1228 The @code{strcmp} function compares the string @var{s1} against
1229 @var{s2}, returning a value that has the same sign as the difference
1230 between the first differing pair of bytes (interpreted as
1231 @code{unsigned char} objects, then promoted to @code{int}).
1232
1233 If the two strings are equal, @code{strcmp} returns @code{0}.
1234
1235 A consequence of the ordering used by @code{strcmp} is that if @var{s1}
1236 is an initial substring of @var{s2}, then @var{s1} is considered to be
1237 ``less than'' @var{s2}.
1238
1239 @code{strcmp} does not take sorting conventions of the language the
1240 strings are written in into account. To get that one has to use
1241 @code{strcoll}.
1242 @end deftypefun
1243
1244 @comment wchar.h
1245 @comment ISO
1246 @deftypefun int wcscmp (const wchar_t *@var{ws1}, const wchar_t *@var{ws2})
1247 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1248
1249 The @code{wcscmp} function compares the wide string @var{ws1}
1250 against @var{ws2}. The value returned is smaller than or larger than zero
1251 depending on whether the first differing wide character is @var{ws1} is
1252 smaller or larger than the corresponding wide character in @var{ws2}.
1253
1254 If the two strings are equal, @code{wcscmp} returns @code{0}.
1255
1256 A consequence of the ordering used by @code{wcscmp} is that if @var{ws1}
1257 is an initial substring of @var{ws2}, then @var{ws1} is considered to be
1258 ``less than'' @var{ws2}.
1259
1260 @code{wcscmp} does not take sorting conventions of the language the
1261 strings are written in into account. To get that one has to use
1262 @code{wcscoll}.
1263 @end deftypefun
1264
1265 @comment string.h
1266 @comment BSD
1267 @deftypefun int strcasecmp (const char *@var{s1}, const char *@var{s2})
1268 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1269 @c Although this calls tolower multiple times, it's a macro, and
1270 @c strcasecmp is optimized so that the locale pointer is read only once.
1271 @c There are some asm implementations too, for which the single-read
1272 @c from locale TLS pointers also applies.
1273 This function is like @code{strcmp}, except that differences in case are
1274 ignored, and its arguments must be multibyte strings.
1275 How uppercase and lowercase characters are related is
1276 determined by the currently selected locale. In the standard @code{"C"}
1277 locale the characters @"A and @"a do not match but in a locale which
1278 regards these characters as parts of the alphabet they do match.
1279
1280 @noindent
1281 @code{strcasecmp} is derived from BSD.
1282 @end deftypefun
1283
1284 @comment wchar.h
1285 @comment GNU
1286 @deftypefun int wcscasecmp (const wchar_t *@var{ws1}, const wchar_t *@var{ws2})
1287 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1288 @c Since towlower is not a macro, the locale object may be read multiple
1289 @c times.
1290 This function is like @code{wcscmp}, except that differences in case are
1291 ignored. How uppercase and lowercase characters are related is
1292 determined by the currently selected locale. In the standard @code{"C"}
1293 locale the characters @"A and @"a do not match but in a locale which
1294 regards these characters as parts of the alphabet they do match.
1295
1296 @noindent
1297 @code{wcscasecmp} is a GNU extension.
1298 @end deftypefun
1299
1300 @comment string.h
1301 @comment ISO
1302 @deftypefun int strncmp (const char *@var{s1}, const char *@var{s2}, size_t @var{size})
1303 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1304 This function is the similar to @code{strcmp}, except that no more than
1305 @var{size} bytes are compared. In other words, if the two
1306 strings are the same in their first @var{size} bytes, the
1307 return value is zero.
1308 @end deftypefun
1309
1310 @comment wchar.h
1311 @comment ISO
1312 @deftypefun int wcsncmp (const wchar_t *@var{ws1}, const wchar_t *@var{ws2}, size_t @var{size})
1313 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1314 This function is the similar to @code{wcscmp}, except that no more than
1315 @var{size} wide characters are compared. In other words, if the two
1316 strings are the same in their first @var{size} wide characters, the
1317 return value is zero.
1318 @end deftypefun
1319
1320 @comment string.h
1321 @comment BSD
1322 @deftypefun int strncasecmp (const char *@var{s1}, const char *@var{s2}, size_t @var{n})
1323 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1324 This function is like @code{strncmp}, except that differences in case
1325 are ignored, and the compared parts of the arguments should consist of
1326 valid multibyte characters.
1327 Like @code{strcasecmp}, it is locale dependent how
1328 uppercase and lowercase characters are related.
1329
1330 @noindent
1331 @code{strncasecmp} is a GNU extension.
1332 @end deftypefun
1333
1334 @comment wchar.h
1335 @comment GNU
1336 @deftypefun int wcsncasecmp (const wchar_t *@var{ws1}, const wchar_t *@var{s2}, size_t @var{n})
1337 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1338 This function is like @code{wcsncmp}, except that differences in case
1339 are ignored. Like @code{wcscasecmp}, it is locale dependent how
1340 uppercase and lowercase characters are related.
1341
1342 @noindent
1343 @code{wcsncasecmp} is a GNU extension.
1344 @end deftypefun
1345
1346 Here are some examples showing the use of @code{strcmp} and
1347 @code{strncmp} (equivalent examples can be constructed for the wide
1348 character functions). These examples assume the use of the ASCII
1349 character set. (If some other character set---say, EBCDIC---is used
1350 instead, then the glyphs are associated with different numeric codes,
1351 and the return values and ordering may differ.)
1352
1353 @smallexample
1354 strcmp ("hello", "hello")
1355 @result{} 0 /* @r{These two strings are the same.} */
1356 strcmp ("hello", "Hello")
1357 @result{} 32 /* @r{Comparisons are case-sensitive.} */
1358 strcmp ("hello", "world")
1359 @result{} -15 /* @r{The byte @code{'h'} comes before @code{'w'}.} */
1360 strcmp ("hello", "hello, world")
1361 @result{} -44 /* @r{Comparing a null byte against a comma.} */
1362 strncmp ("hello", "hello, world", 5)
1363 @result{} 0 /* @r{The initial 5 bytes are the same.} */
1364 strncmp ("hello, world", "hello, stupid world!!!", 5)
1365 @result{} 0 /* @r{The initial 5 bytes are the same.} */
1366 @end smallexample
1367
1368 @comment string.h
1369 @comment GNU
1370 @deftypefun int strverscmp (const char *@var{s1}, const char *@var{s2})
1371 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1372 @c Calls isdigit multiple times, locale may change in between.
1373 The @code{strverscmp} function compares the string @var{s1} against
1374 @var{s2}, considering them as holding indices/version numbers. The
1375 return value follows the same conventions as found in the
1376 @code{strcmp} function. In fact, if @var{s1} and @var{s2} contain no
1377 digits, @code{strverscmp} behaves like @code{strcmp}.
1378
1379 Basically, we compare strings normally (byte by byte), until
1380 we find a digit in each string - then we enter a special comparison
1381 mode, where each sequence of digits is taken as a whole. If we reach the
1382 end of these two parts without noticing a difference, we return to the
1383 standard comparison mode. There are two types of numeric parts:
1384 "integral" and "fractional" (those begin with a '0'). The types
1385 of the numeric parts affect the way we sort them:
1386
1387 @itemize @bullet
1388 @item
1389 integral/integral: we compare values as you would expect.
1390
1391 @item
1392 fractional/integral: the fractional part is less than the integral one.
1393 Again, no surprise.
1394
1395 @item
1396 fractional/fractional: the things become a bit more complex.
1397 If the common prefix contains only leading zeroes, the longest part is less
1398 than the other one; else the comparison behaves normally.
1399 @end itemize
1400
1401 @smallexample
1402 strverscmp ("no digit", "no digit")
1403 @result{} 0 /* @r{same behavior as strcmp.} */
1404 strverscmp ("item#99", "item#100")
1405 @result{} <0 /* @r{same prefix, but 99 < 100.} */
1406 strverscmp ("alpha1", "alpha001")
1407 @result{} >0 /* @r{fractional part inferior to integral one.} */
1408 strverscmp ("part1_f012", "part1_f01")
1409 @result{} >0 /* @r{two fractional parts.} */
1410 strverscmp ("foo.009", "foo.0")
1411 @result{} <0 /* @r{idem, but with leading zeroes only.} */
1412 @end smallexample
1413
1414 This function is especially useful when dealing with filename sorting,
1415 because filenames frequently hold indices/version numbers.
1416
1417 @code{strverscmp} is a GNU extension.
1418 @end deftypefun
1419
1420 @comment string.h
1421 @comment BSD
1422 @deftypefun int bcmp (const void *@var{a1}, const void *@var{a2}, size_t @var{size})
1423 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1424 This is an obsolete alias for @code{memcmp}, derived from BSD.
1425 @end deftypefun
1426
1427 @node Collation Functions
1428 @section Collation Functions
1429
1430 @cindex collating strings
1431 @cindex string collation functions
1432
1433 In some locales, the conventions for lexicographic ordering differ from
1434 the strict numeric ordering of character codes. For example, in Spanish
1435 most glyphs with diacritical marks such as accents are not considered
1436 distinct letters for the purposes of collation. On the other hand, the
1437 two-character sequence @samp{ll} is treated as a single letter that is
1438 collated immediately after @samp{l}.
1439
1440 You can use the functions @code{strcoll} and @code{strxfrm} (declared in
1441 the headers file @file{string.h}) and @code{wcscoll} and @code{wcsxfrm}
1442 (declared in the headers file @file{wchar}) to compare strings using a
1443 collation ordering appropriate for the current locale. The locale used
1444 by these functions in particular can be specified by setting the locale
1445 for the @code{LC_COLLATE} category; see @ref{Locales}.
1446 @pindex string.h
1447 @pindex wchar.h
1448
1449 In the standard C locale, the collation sequence for @code{strcoll} is
1450 the same as that for @code{strcmp}. Similarly, @code{wcscoll} and
1451 @code{wcscmp} are the same in this situation.
1452
1453 Effectively, the way these functions work is by applying a mapping to
1454 transform the characters in a multibyte string to a byte
1455 sequence that represents
1456 the string's position in the collating sequence of the current locale.
1457 Comparing two such byte sequences in a simple fashion is equivalent to
1458 comparing the strings with the locale's collating sequence.
1459
1460 The functions @code{strcoll} and @code{wcscoll} perform this translation
1461 implicitly, in order to do one comparison. By contrast, @code{strxfrm}
1462 and @code{wcsxfrm} perform the mapping explicitly. If you are making
1463 multiple comparisons using the same string or set of strings, it is
1464 likely to be more efficient to use @code{strxfrm} or @code{wcsxfrm} to
1465 transform all the strings just once, and subsequently compare the
1466 transformed strings with @code{strcmp} or @code{wcscmp}.
1467
1468 @comment string.h
1469 @comment ISO
1470 @deftypefun int strcoll (const char *@var{s1}, const char *@var{s2})
1471 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
1472 @c Calls strcoll_l with the current locale, which dereferences only the
1473 @c LC_COLLATE data pointer.
1474 The @code{strcoll} function is similar to @code{strcmp} but uses the
1475 collating sequence of the current locale for collation (the
1476 @code{LC_COLLATE} locale). The arguments are multibyte strings.
1477 @end deftypefun
1478
1479 @comment wchar.h
1480 @comment ISO
1481 @deftypefun int wcscoll (const wchar_t *@var{ws1}, const wchar_t *@var{ws2})
1482 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
1483 @c Same as strcoll, but calling wcscoll_l.
1484 The @code{wcscoll} function is similar to @code{wcscmp} but uses the
1485 collating sequence of the current locale for collation (the
1486 @code{LC_COLLATE} locale).
1487 @end deftypefun
1488
1489 Here is an example of sorting an array of strings, using @code{strcoll}
1490 to compare them. The actual sort algorithm is not written here; it
1491 comes from @code{qsort} (@pxref{Array Sort Function}). The job of the
1492 code shown here is to say how to compare the strings while sorting them.
1493 (Later on in this section, we will show a way to do this more
1494 efficiently using @code{strxfrm}.)
1495
1496 @smallexample
1497 /* @r{This is the comparison function used with @code{qsort}.} */
1498
1499 int
1500 compare_elements (const void *v1, const void *v2)
1501 @{
1502 char * const *p1 = v1;
1503 char * const *p2 = v2;
1504
1505 return strcoll (*p1, *p2);
1506 @}
1507
1508 /* @r{This is the entry point---the function to sort}
1509 @r{strings using the locale's collating sequence.} */
1510
1511 void
1512 sort_strings (char **array, int nstrings)
1513 @{
1514 /* @r{Sort @code{temp_array} by comparing the strings.} */
1515 qsort (array, nstrings,
1516 sizeof (char *), compare_elements);
1517 @}
1518 @end smallexample
1519
1520 @cindex converting string to collation order
1521 @comment string.h
1522 @comment ISO
1523 @deftypefun size_t strxfrm (char *restrict @var{to}, const char *restrict @var{from}, size_t @var{size})
1524 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
1525 The function @code{strxfrm} transforms the multibyte string
1526 @var{from} using the
1527 collation transformation determined by the locale currently selected for
1528 collation, and stores the transformed string in the array @var{to}. Up
1529 to @var{size} bytes (including a terminating null byte) are
1530 stored.
1531
1532 The behavior is undefined if the strings @var{to} and @var{from}
1533 overlap; see @ref{Copying Strings and Arrays}.
1534
1535 The return value is the length of the entire transformed string. This
1536 value is not affected by the value of @var{size}, but if it is greater
1537 or equal than @var{size}, it means that the transformed string did not
1538 entirely fit in the array @var{to}. In this case, only as much of the
1539 string as actually fits was stored. To get the whole transformed
1540 string, call @code{strxfrm} again with a bigger output array.
1541
1542 The transformed string may be longer than the original string, and it
1543 may also be shorter.
1544
1545 If @var{size} is zero, no bytes are stored in @var{to}. In this
1546 case, @code{strxfrm} simply returns the number of bytes that would
1547 be the length of the transformed string. This is useful for determining
1548 what size the allocated array should be. It does not matter what
1549 @var{to} is if @var{size} is zero; @var{to} may even be a null pointer.
1550 @end deftypefun
1551
1552 @comment wchar.h
1553 @comment ISO
1554 @deftypefun size_t wcsxfrm (wchar_t *restrict @var{wto}, const wchar_t *@var{wfrom}, size_t @var{size})
1555 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
1556 The function @code{wcsxfrm} transforms wide string @var{wfrom}
1557 using the collation transformation determined by the locale currently
1558 selected for collation, and stores the transformed string in the array
1559 @var{wto}. Up to @var{size} wide characters (including a terminating null
1560 wide character) are stored.
1561
1562 The behavior is undefined if the strings @var{wto} and @var{wfrom}
1563 overlap; see @ref{Copying Strings and Arrays}.
1564
1565 The return value is the length of the entire transformed wide
1566 string. This value is not affected by the value of @var{size}, but if
1567 it is greater or equal than @var{size}, it means that the transformed
1568 wide string did not entirely fit in the array @var{wto}. In
1569 this case, only as much of the wide string as actually fits
1570 was stored. To get the whole transformed wide string, call
1571 @code{wcsxfrm} again with a bigger output array.
1572
1573 The transformed wide string may be longer than the original
1574 wide string, and it may also be shorter.
1575
1576 If @var{size} is zero, no wide characters are stored in @var{to}. In this
1577 case, @code{wcsxfrm} simply returns the number of wide characters that
1578 would be the length of the transformed wide string. This is
1579 useful for determining what size the allocated array should be (remember
1580 to multiply with @code{sizeof (wchar_t)}). It does not matter what
1581 @var{wto} is if @var{size} is zero; @var{wto} may even be a null pointer.
1582 @end deftypefun
1583
1584 Here is an example of how you can use @code{strxfrm} when
1585 you plan to do many comparisons. It does the same thing as the previous
1586 example, but much faster, because it has to transform each string only
1587 once, no matter how many times it is compared with other strings. Even
1588 the time needed to allocate and free storage is much less than the time
1589 we save, when there are many strings.
1590
1591 @smallexample
1592 struct sorter @{ char *input; char *transformed; @};
1593
1594 /* @r{This is the comparison function used with @code{qsort}}
1595 @r{to sort an array of @code{struct sorter}.} */
1596
1597 int
1598 compare_elements (const void *v1, const void *v2)
1599 @{
1600 const struct sorter *p1 = v1;
1601 const struct sorter *p2 = v2;
1602
1603 return strcmp (p1->transformed, p2->transformed);
1604 @}
1605
1606 /* @r{This is the entry point---the function to sort}
1607 @r{strings using the locale's collating sequence.} */
1608
1609 void
1610 sort_strings_fast (char **array, int nstrings)
1611 @{
1612 struct sorter temp_array[nstrings];
1613 int i;
1614
1615 /* @r{Set up @code{temp_array}. Each element contains}
1616 @r{one input string and its transformed string.} */
1617 for (i = 0; i < nstrings; i++)
1618 @{
1619 size_t length = strlen (array[i]) * 2;
1620 char *transformed;
1621 size_t transformed_length;
1622
1623 temp_array[i].input = array[i];
1624
1625 /* @r{First try a buffer perhaps big enough.} */
1626 transformed = (char *) xmalloc (length);
1627
1628 /* @r{Transform @code{array[i]}.} */
1629 transformed_length = strxfrm (transformed, array[i], length);
1630
1631 /* @r{If the buffer was not large enough, resize it}
1632 @r{and try again.} */
1633 if (transformed_length >= length)
1634 @{
1635 /* @r{Allocate the needed space. +1 for terminating}
1636 @r{@code{'\0'} byte.} */
1637 transformed = (char *) xrealloc (transformed,
1638 transformed_length + 1);
1639
1640 /* @r{The return value is not interesting because we know}
1641 @r{how long the transformed string is.} */
1642 (void) strxfrm (transformed, array[i],
1643 transformed_length + 1);
1644 @}
1645
1646 temp_array[i].transformed = transformed;
1647 @}
1648
1649 /* @r{Sort @code{temp_array} by comparing transformed strings.} */
1650 qsort (temp_array, nstrings,
1651 sizeof (struct sorter), compare_elements);
1652
1653 /* @r{Put the elements back in the permanent array}
1654 @r{in their sorted order.} */
1655 for (i = 0; i < nstrings; i++)
1656 array[i] = temp_array[i].input;
1657
1658 /* @r{Free the strings we allocated.} */
1659 for (i = 0; i < nstrings; i++)
1660 free (temp_array[i].transformed);
1661 @}
1662 @end smallexample
1663
1664 The interesting part of this code for the wide character version would
1665 look like this:
1666
1667 @smallexample
1668 void
1669 sort_strings_fast (wchar_t **array, int nstrings)
1670 @{
1671 @dots{}
1672 /* @r{Transform @code{array[i]}.} */
1673 transformed_length = wcsxfrm (transformed, array[i], length);
1674
1675 /* @r{If the buffer was not large enough, resize it}
1676 @r{and try again.} */
1677 if (transformed_length >= length)
1678 @{
1679 /* @r{Allocate the needed space. +1 for terminating}
1680 @r{@code{L'\0'} wide character.} */
1681 transformed = (wchar_t *) xrealloc (transformed,
1682 (transformed_length + 1)
1683 * sizeof (wchar_t));
1684
1685 /* @r{The return value is not interesting because we know}
1686 @r{how long the transformed string is.} */
1687 (void) wcsxfrm (transformed, array[i],
1688 transformed_length + 1);
1689 @}
1690 @dots{}
1691 @end smallexample
1692
1693 @noindent
1694 Note the additional multiplication with @code{sizeof (wchar_t)} in the
1695 @code{realloc} call.
1696
1697 @strong{Compatibility Note:} The string collation functions are a new
1698 feature of @w{ISO C90}. Older C dialects have no equivalent feature.
1699 The wide character versions were introduced in @w{Amendment 1} to @w{ISO
1700 C90}.
1701
1702 @node Search Functions
1703 @section Search Functions
1704
1705 This section describes library functions which perform various kinds
1706 of searching operations on strings and arrays. These functions are
1707 declared in the header file @file{string.h}.
1708 @pindex string.h
1709 @cindex search functions (for strings)
1710 @cindex string search functions
1711
1712 @comment string.h
1713 @comment ISO
1714 @deftypefun {void *} memchr (const void *@var{block}, int @var{c}, size_t @var{size})
1715 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1716 This function finds the first occurrence of the byte @var{c} (converted
1717 to an @code{unsigned char}) in the initial @var{size} bytes of the
1718 object beginning at @var{block}. The return value is a pointer to the
1719 located byte, or a null pointer if no match was found.
1720 @end deftypefun
1721
1722 @comment wchar.h
1723 @comment ISO
1724 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wmemchr (const wchar_t *@var{block}, wchar_t @var{wc}, size_t @var{size})
1725 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1726 This function finds the first occurrence of the wide character @var{wc}
1727 in the initial @var{size} wide characters of the object beginning at
1728 @var{block}. The return value is a pointer to the located wide
1729 character, or a null pointer if no match was found.
1730 @end deftypefun
1731
1732 @comment string.h
1733 @comment GNU
1734 @deftypefun {void *} rawmemchr (const void *@var{block}, int @var{c})
1735 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1736 Often the @code{memchr} function is used with the knowledge that the
1737 byte @var{c} is available in the memory block specified by the
1738 parameters. But this means that the @var{size} parameter is not really
1739 needed and that the tests performed with it at runtime (to check whether
1740 the end of the block is reached) are not needed.
1741
1742 The @code{rawmemchr} function exists for just this situation which is
1743 surprisingly frequent. The interface is similar to @code{memchr} except
1744 that the @var{size} parameter is missing. The function will look beyond
1745 the end of the block pointed to by @var{block} in case the programmer
1746 made an error in assuming that the byte @var{c} is present in the block.
1747 In this case the result is unspecified. Otherwise the return value is a
1748 pointer to the located byte.
1749
1750 This function is of special interest when looking for the end of a
1751 string. Since all strings are terminated by a null byte a call like
1752
1753 @smallexample
1754 rawmemchr (str, '\0')
1755 @end smallexample
1756
1757 @noindent
1758 will never go beyond the end of the string.
1759
1760 This function is a GNU extension.
1761 @end deftypefun
1762
1763 @comment string.h
1764 @comment GNU
1765 @deftypefun {void *} memrchr (const void *@var{block}, int @var{c}, size_t @var{size})
1766 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1767 The function @code{memrchr} is like @code{memchr}, except that it searches
1768 backwards from the end of the block defined by @var{block} and @var{size}
1769 (instead of forwards from the front).
1770
1771 This function is a GNU extension.
1772 @end deftypefun
1773
1774 @comment string.h
1775 @comment ISO
1776 @deftypefun {char *} strchr (const char *@var{string}, int @var{c})
1777 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1778 The @code{strchr} function finds the first occurrence of the byte
1779 @var{c} (converted to a @code{char}) in the string
1780 beginning at @var{string}. The return value is a pointer to the located
1781 byte, or a null pointer if no match was found.
1782
1783 For example,
1784 @smallexample
1785 strchr ("hello, world", 'l')
1786 @result{} "llo, world"
1787 strchr ("hello, world", '?')
1788 @result{} NULL
1789 @end smallexample
1790
1791 The terminating null byte is considered to be part of the string,
1792 so you can use this function get a pointer to the end of a string by
1793 specifying zero as the value of the @var{c} argument.
1794
1795 When @code{strchr} returns a null pointer, it does not let you know
1796 the position of the terminating null byte it has found. If you
1797 need that information, it is better (but less portable) to use
1798 @code{strchrnul} than to search for it a second time.
1799 @end deftypefun
1800
1801 @comment wchar.h
1802 @comment ISO
1803 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcschr (const wchar_t *@var{wstring}, int @var{wc})
1804 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1805 The @code{wcschr} function finds the first occurrence of the wide
1806 character @var{wc} in the wide string
1807 beginning at @var{wstring}. The return value is a pointer to the
1808 located wide character, or a null pointer if no match was found.
1809
1810 The terminating null wide character is considered to be part of the wide
1811 string, so you can use this function get a pointer to the end
1812 of a wide string by specifying a null wide character as the
1813 value of the @var{wc} argument. It would be better (but less portable)
1814 to use @code{wcschrnul} in this case, though.
1815 @end deftypefun
1816
1817 @comment string.h
1818 @comment GNU
1819 @deftypefun {char *} strchrnul (const char *@var{string}, int @var{c})
1820 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1821 @code{strchrnul} is the same as @code{strchr} except that if it does
1822 not find the byte, it returns a pointer to string's terminating
1823 null byte rather than a null pointer.
1824
1825 This function is a GNU extension.
1826 @end deftypefun
1827
1828 @comment wchar.h
1829 @comment GNU
1830 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcschrnul (const wchar_t *@var{wstring}, wchar_t @var{wc})
1831 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1832 @code{wcschrnul} is the same as @code{wcschr} except that if it does not
1833 find the wide character, it returns a pointer to the wide string's
1834 terminating null wide character rather than a null pointer.
1835
1836 This function is a GNU extension.
1837 @end deftypefun
1838
1839 One useful, but unusual, use of the @code{strchr}
1840 function is when one wants to have a pointer pointing to the null byte
1841 terminating a string. This is often written in this way:
1842
1843 @smallexample
1844 s += strlen (s);
1845 @end smallexample
1846
1847 @noindent
1848 This is almost optimal but the addition operation duplicated a bit of
1849 the work already done in the @code{strlen} function. A better solution
1850 is this:
1851
1852 @smallexample
1853 s = strchr (s, '\0');
1854 @end smallexample
1855
1856 There is no restriction on the second parameter of @code{strchr} so it
1857 could very well also be zero. Those readers thinking very
1858 hard about this might now point out that the @code{strchr} function is
1859 more expensive than the @code{strlen} function since we have two abort
1860 criteria. This is right. But in @theglibc{} the implementation of
1861 @code{strchr} is optimized in a special way so that @code{strchr}
1862 actually is faster.
1863
1864 @comment string.h
1865 @comment ISO
1866 @deftypefun {char *} strrchr (const char *@var{string}, int @var{c})
1867 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1868 The function @code{strrchr} is like @code{strchr}, except that it searches
1869 backwards from the end of the string @var{string} (instead of forwards
1870 from the front).
1871
1872 For example,
1873 @smallexample
1874 strrchr ("hello, world", 'l')
1875 @result{} "ld"
1876 @end smallexample
1877 @end deftypefun
1878
1879 @comment wchar.h
1880 @comment ISO
1881 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcsrchr (const wchar_t *@var{wstring}, wchar_t @var{c})
1882 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1883 The function @code{wcsrchr} is like @code{wcschr}, except that it searches
1884 backwards from the end of the string @var{wstring} (instead of forwards
1885 from the front).
1886 @end deftypefun
1887
1888 @comment string.h
1889 @comment ISO
1890 @deftypefun {char *} strstr (const char *@var{haystack}, const char *@var{needle})
1891 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1892 This is like @code{strchr}, except that it searches @var{haystack} for a
1893 substring @var{needle} rather than just a single byte. It
1894 returns a pointer into the string @var{haystack} that is the first
1895 byte of the substring, or a null pointer if no match was found. If
1896 @var{needle} is an empty string, the function returns @var{haystack}.
1897
1898 For example,
1899 @smallexample
1900 strstr ("hello, world", "l")
1901 @result{} "llo, world"
1902 strstr ("hello, world", "wo")
1903 @result{} "world"
1904 @end smallexample
1905 @end deftypefun
1906
1907 @comment wchar.h
1908 @comment ISO
1909 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcsstr (const wchar_t *@var{haystack}, const wchar_t *@var{needle})
1910 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1911 This is like @code{wcschr}, except that it searches @var{haystack} for a
1912 substring @var{needle} rather than just a single wide character. It
1913 returns a pointer into the string @var{haystack} that is the first wide
1914 character of the substring, or a null pointer if no match was found. If
1915 @var{needle} is an empty string, the function returns @var{haystack}.
1916 @end deftypefun
1917
1918 @comment wchar.h
1919 @comment XPG
1920 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcswcs (const wchar_t *@var{haystack}, const wchar_t *@var{needle})
1921 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1922 @code{wcswcs} is a deprecated alias for @code{wcsstr}. This is the
1923 name originally used in the X/Open Portability Guide before the
1924 @w{Amendment 1} to @w{ISO C90} was published.
1925 @end deftypefun
1926
1927
1928 @comment string.h
1929 @comment GNU
1930 @deftypefun {char *} strcasestr (const char *@var{haystack}, const char *@var{needle})
1931 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1932 @c There may be multiple calls of strncasecmp, each accessing the locale
1933 @c object independently.
1934 This is like @code{strstr}, except that it ignores case in searching for
1935 the substring. Like @code{strcasecmp}, it is locale dependent how
1936 uppercase and lowercase characters are related, and arguments are
1937 multibyte strings.
1938
1939
1940 For example,
1941 @smallexample
1942 strcasestr ("hello, world", "L")
1943 @result{} "llo, world"
1944 strcasestr ("hello, World", "wo")
1945 @result{} "World"
1946 @end smallexample
1947 @end deftypefun
1948
1949
1950 @comment string.h
1951 @comment GNU
1952 @deftypefun {void *} memmem (const void *@var{haystack}, size_t @var{haystack-len},@*const void *@var{needle}, size_t @var{needle-len})
1953 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1954 This is like @code{strstr}, but @var{needle} and @var{haystack} are byte
1955 arrays rather than strings. @var{needle-len} is the
1956 length of @var{needle} and @var{haystack-len} is the length of
1957 @var{haystack}.@refill
1958
1959 This function is a GNU extension.
1960 @end deftypefun
1961
1962 @comment string.h
1963 @comment ISO
1964 @deftypefun size_t strspn (const char *@var{string}, const char *@var{skipset})
1965 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1966 The @code{strspn} (``string span'') function returns the length of the
1967 initial substring of @var{string} that consists entirely of bytes that
1968 are members of the set specified by the string @var{skipset}. The order
1969 of the bytes in @var{skipset} is not important.
1970
1971 For example,
1972 @smallexample
1973 strspn ("hello, world", "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz")
1974 @result{} 5
1975 @end smallexample
1976
1977 In a multibyte string, characters consisting of
1978 more than one byte are not treated as single entities. Each byte is treated
1979 separately. The function is not locale-dependent.
1980 @end deftypefun
1981
1982 @comment wchar.h
1983 @comment ISO
1984 @deftypefun size_t wcsspn (const wchar_t *@var{wstring}, const wchar_t *@var{skipset})
1985 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1986 The @code{wcsspn} (``wide character string span'') function returns the
1987 length of the initial substring of @var{wstring} that consists entirely
1988 of wide characters that are members of the set specified by the string
1989 @var{skipset}. The order of the wide characters in @var{skipset} is not
1990 important.
1991 @end deftypefun
1992
1993 @comment string.h
1994 @comment ISO
1995 @deftypefun size_t strcspn (const char *@var{string}, const char *@var{stopset})
1996 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
1997 The @code{strcspn} (``string complement span'') function returns the length
1998 of the initial substring of @var{string} that consists entirely of bytes
1999 that are @emph{not} members of the set specified by the string @var{stopset}.
2000 (In other words, it returns the offset of the first byte in @var{string}
2001 that is a member of the set @var{stopset}.)
2002
2003 For example,
2004 @smallexample
2005 strcspn ("hello, world", " \t\n,.;!?")
2006 @result{} 5
2007 @end smallexample
2008
2009 In a multibyte string, characters consisting of
2010 more than one byte are not treated as a single entities. Each byte is treated
2011 separately. The function is not locale-dependent.
2012 @end deftypefun
2013
2014 @comment wchar.h
2015 @comment ISO
2016 @deftypefun size_t wcscspn (const wchar_t *@var{wstring}, const wchar_t *@var{stopset})
2017 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2018 The @code{wcscspn} (``wide character string complement span'') function
2019 returns the length of the initial substring of @var{wstring} that
2020 consists entirely of wide characters that are @emph{not} members of the
2021 set specified by the string @var{stopset}. (In other words, it returns
2022 the offset of the first wide character in @var{string} that is a member of
2023 the set @var{stopset}.)
2024 @end deftypefun
2025
2026 @comment string.h
2027 @comment ISO
2028 @deftypefun {char *} strpbrk (const char *@var{string}, const char *@var{stopset})
2029 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2030 The @code{strpbrk} (``string pointer break'') function is related to
2031 @code{strcspn}, except that it returns a pointer to the first byte
2032 in @var{string} that is a member of the set @var{stopset} instead of the
2033 length of the initial substring. It returns a null pointer if no such
2034 byte from @var{stopset} is found.
2035
2036 @c @group Invalid outside the example.
2037 For example,
2038
2039 @smallexample
2040 strpbrk ("hello, world", " \t\n,.;!?")
2041 @result{} ", world"
2042 @end smallexample
2043 @c @end group
2044
2045 In a multibyte string, characters consisting of
2046 more than one byte are not treated as single entities. Each byte is treated
2047 separately. The function is not locale-dependent.
2048 @end deftypefun
2049
2050 @comment wchar.h
2051 @comment ISO
2052 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcspbrk (const wchar_t *@var{wstring}, const wchar_t *@var{stopset})
2053 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2054 The @code{wcspbrk} (``wide character string pointer break'') function is
2055 related to @code{wcscspn}, except that it returns a pointer to the first
2056 wide character in @var{wstring} that is a member of the set
2057 @var{stopset} instead of the length of the initial substring. It
2058 returns a null pointer if no such wide character from @var{stopset} is found.
2059 @end deftypefun
2060
2061
2062 @subsection Compatibility String Search Functions
2063
2064 @comment string.h
2065 @comment BSD
2066 @deftypefun {char *} index (const char *@var{string}, int @var{c})
2067 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2068 @code{index} is another name for @code{strchr}; they are exactly the same.
2069 New code should always use @code{strchr} since this name is defined in
2070 @w{ISO C} while @code{index} is a BSD invention which never was available
2071 on @w{System V} derived systems.
2072 @end deftypefun
2073
2074 @comment string.h
2075 @comment BSD
2076 @deftypefun {char *} rindex (const char *@var{string}, int @var{c})
2077 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2078 @code{rindex} is another name for @code{strrchr}; they are exactly the same.
2079 New code should always use @code{strrchr} since this name is defined in
2080 @w{ISO C} while @code{rindex} is a BSD invention which never was available
2081 on @w{System V} derived systems.
2082 @end deftypefun
2083
2084 @node Finding Tokens in a String
2085 @section Finding Tokens in a String
2086
2087 @cindex tokenizing strings
2088 @cindex breaking a string into tokens
2089 @cindex parsing tokens from a string
2090 It's fairly common for programs to have a need to do some simple kinds
2091 of lexical analysis and parsing, such as splitting a command string up
2092 into tokens. You can do this with the @code{strtok} function, declared
2093 in the header file @file{string.h}.
2094 @pindex string.h
2095
2096 @comment string.h
2097 @comment ISO
2098 @deftypefun {char *} strtok (char *restrict @var{newstring}, const char *restrict @var{delimiters})
2099 @safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:strtok}}@asunsafe{}@acsafe{}}
2100 A string can be split into tokens by making a series of calls to the
2101 function @code{strtok}.
2102
2103 The string to be split up is passed as the @var{newstring} argument on
2104 the first call only. The @code{strtok} function uses this to set up
2105 some internal state information. Subsequent calls to get additional
2106 tokens from the same string are indicated by passing a null pointer as
2107 the @var{newstring} argument. Calling @code{strtok} with another
2108 non-null @var{newstring} argument reinitializes the state information.
2109 It is guaranteed that no other library function ever calls @code{strtok}
2110 behind your back (which would mess up this internal state information).
2111
2112 The @var{delimiters} argument is a string that specifies a set of delimiters
2113 that may surround the token being extracted. All the initial bytes
2114 that are members of this set are discarded. The first byte that is
2115 @emph{not} a member of this set of delimiters marks the beginning of the
2116 next token. The end of the token is found by looking for the next
2117 byte that is a member of the delimiter set. This byte in the
2118 original string @var{newstring} is overwritten by a null byte, and the
2119 pointer to the beginning of the token in @var{newstring} is returned.
2120
2121 On the next call to @code{strtok}, the searching begins at the next
2122 byte beyond the one that marked the end of the previous token.
2123 Note that the set of delimiters @var{delimiters} do not have to be the
2124 same on every call in a series of calls to @code{strtok}.
2125
2126 If the end of the string @var{newstring} is reached, or if the remainder of
2127 string consists only of delimiter bytes, @code{strtok} returns
2128 a null pointer.
2129
2130 In a multibyte string, characters consisting of
2131 more than one byte are not treated as single entities. Each byte is treated
2132 separately. The function is not locale-dependent.
2133 @end deftypefun
2134
2135 @comment wchar.h
2136 @comment ISO
2137 @deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcstok (wchar_t *@var{newstring}, const wchar_t *@var{delimiters}, wchar_t **@var{save_ptr})
2138 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2139 A string can be split into tokens by making a series of calls to the
2140 function @code{wcstok}.
2141
2142 The string to be split up is passed as the @var{newstring} argument on
2143 the first call only. The @code{wcstok} function uses this to set up
2144 some internal state information. Subsequent calls to get additional
2145 tokens from the same wide string are indicated by passing a
2146 null pointer as the @var{newstring} argument, which causes the pointer
2147 previously stored in @var{save_ptr} to be used instead.
2148
2149 The @var{delimiters} argument is a wide string that specifies
2150 a set of delimiters that may surround the token being extracted. All
2151 the initial wide characters that are members of this set are discarded.
2152 The first wide character that is @emph{not} a member of this set of
2153 delimiters marks the beginning of the next token. The end of the token
2154 is found by looking for the next wide character that is a member of the
2155 delimiter set. This wide character in the original wide
2156 string @var{newstring} is overwritten by a null wide character, the
2157 pointer past the overwritten wide character is saved in @var{save_ptr},
2158 and the pointer to the beginning of the token in @var{newstring} is
2159 returned.
2160
2161 On the next call to @code{wcstok}, the searching begins at the next
2162 wide character beyond the one that marked the end of the previous token.
2163 Note that the set of delimiters @var{delimiters} do not have to be the
2164 same on every call in a series of calls to @code{wcstok}.
2165
2166 If the end of the wide string @var{newstring} is reached, or
2167 if the remainder of string consists only of delimiter wide characters,
2168 @code{wcstok} returns a null pointer.
2169 @end deftypefun
2170
2171 @strong{Warning:} Since @code{strtok} and @code{wcstok} alter the string
2172 they is parsing, you should always copy the string to a temporary buffer
2173 before parsing it with @code{strtok}/@code{wcstok} (@pxref{Copying Strings
2174 and Arrays}). If you allow @code{strtok} or @code{wcstok} to modify
2175 a string that came from another part of your program, you are asking for
2176 trouble; that string might be used for other purposes after
2177 @code{strtok} or @code{wcstok} has modified it, and it would not have
2178 the expected value.
2179
2180 The string that you are operating on might even be a constant. Then
2181 when @code{strtok} or @code{wcstok} tries to modify it, your program
2182 will get a fatal signal for writing in read-only memory. @xref{Program
2183 Error Signals}. Even if the operation of @code{strtok} or @code{wcstok}
2184 would not require a modification of the string (e.g., if there is
2185 exactly one token) the string can (and in the @glibcadj{} case will) be
2186 modified.
2187
2188 This is a special case of a general principle: if a part of a program
2189 does not have as its purpose the modification of a certain data
2190 structure, then it is error-prone to modify the data structure
2191 temporarily.
2192
2193 The function @code{strtok} is not reentrant, whereas @code{wcstok} is.
2194 @xref{Nonreentrancy}, for a discussion of where and why reentrancy is
2195 important.
2196
2197 Here is a simple example showing the use of @code{strtok}.
2198
2199 @comment Yes, this example has been tested.
2200 @smallexample
2201 #include <string.h>
2202 #include <stddef.h>
2203
2204 @dots{}
2205
2206 const char string[] = "words separated by spaces -- and, punctuation!";
2207 const char delimiters[] = " .,;:!-";
2208 char *token, *cp;
2209
2210 @dots{}
2211
2212 cp = strdupa (string); /* Make writable copy. */
2213 token = strtok (cp, delimiters); /* token => "words" */
2214 token = strtok (NULL, delimiters); /* token => "separated" */
2215 token = strtok (NULL, delimiters); /* token => "by" */
2216 token = strtok (NULL, delimiters); /* token => "spaces" */
2217 token = strtok (NULL, delimiters); /* token => "and" */
2218 token = strtok (NULL, delimiters); /* token => "punctuation" */
2219 token = strtok (NULL, delimiters); /* token => NULL */
2220 @end smallexample
2221
2222 @Theglibc{} contains two more functions for tokenizing a string
2223 which overcome the limitation of non-reentrancy. They are not
2224 available available for wide strings.
2225
2226 @comment string.h
2227 @comment POSIX
2228 @deftypefun {char *} strtok_r (char *@var{newstring}, const char *@var{delimiters}, char **@var{save_ptr})
2229 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2230 Just like @code{strtok}, this function splits the string into several
2231 tokens which can be accessed by successive calls to @code{strtok_r}.
2232 The difference is that, as in @code{wcstok}, the information about the
2233 next token is stored in the space pointed to by the third argument,
2234 @var{save_ptr}, which is a pointer to a string pointer. Calling
2235 @code{strtok_r} with a null pointer for @var{newstring} and leaving
2236 @var{save_ptr} between the calls unchanged does the job without
2237 hindering reentrancy.
2238
2239 This function is defined in POSIX.1 and can be found on many systems
2240 which support multi-threading.
2241 @end deftypefun
2242
2243 @comment string.h
2244 @comment BSD
2245 @deftypefun {char *} strsep (char **@var{string_ptr}, const char *@var{delimiter})
2246 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2247 This function has a similar functionality as @code{strtok_r} with the
2248 @var{newstring} argument replaced by the @var{save_ptr} argument. The
2249 initialization of the moving pointer has to be done by the user.
2250 Successive calls to @code{strsep} move the pointer along the tokens
2251 separated by @var{delimiter}, returning the address of the next token
2252 and updating @var{string_ptr} to point to the beginning of the next
2253 token.
2254
2255 One difference between @code{strsep} and @code{strtok_r} is that if the
2256 input string contains more than one byte from @var{delimiter} in a
2257 row @code{strsep} returns an empty string for each pair of bytes
2258 from @var{delimiter}. This means that a program normally should test
2259 for @code{strsep} returning an empty string before processing it.
2260
2261 This function was introduced in 4.3BSD and therefore is widely available.
2262 @end deftypefun
2263
2264 Here is how the above example looks like when @code{strsep} is used.
2265
2266 @comment Yes, this example has been tested.
2267 @smallexample
2268 #include <string.h>
2269 #include <stddef.h>
2270
2271 @dots{}
2272
2273 const char string[] = "words separated by spaces -- and, punctuation!";
2274 const char delimiters[] = " .,;:!-";
2275 char *running;
2276 char *token;
2277
2278 @dots{}
2279
2280 running = strdupa (string);
2281 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "words" */
2282 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "separated" */
2283 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "by" */
2284 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "spaces" */
2285 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "" */
2286 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "" */
2287 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "" */
2288 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "and" */
2289 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "" */
2290 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "punctuation" */
2291 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => "" */
2292 token = strsep (&running, delimiters); /* token => NULL */
2293 @end smallexample
2294
2295 @comment string.h
2296 @comment GNU
2297 @deftypefun {char *} basename (const char *@var{filename})
2298 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2299 The GNU version of the @code{basename} function returns the last
2300 component of the path in @var{filename}. This function is the preferred
2301 usage, since it does not modify the argument, @var{filename}, and
2302 respects trailing slashes. The prototype for @code{basename} can be
2303 found in @file{string.h}. Note, this function is overriden by the XPG
2304 version, if @file{libgen.h} is included.
2305
2306 Example of using GNU @code{basename}:
2307
2308 @smallexample
2309 #include <string.h>
2310
2311 int
2312 main (int argc, char *argv[])
2313 @{
2314 char *prog = basename (argv[0]);
2315
2316 if (argc < 2)
2317 @{
2318 fprintf (stderr, "Usage %s <arg>\n", prog);
2319 exit (1);
2320 @}
2321
2322 @dots{}
2323 @}
2324 @end smallexample
2325
2326 @strong{Portability Note:} This function may produce different results
2327 on different systems.
2328
2329 @end deftypefun
2330
2331 @comment libgen.h
2332 @comment XPG
2333 @deftypefun {char *} basename (char *@var{path})
2334 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2335 This is the standard XPG defined @code{basename}. It is similar in
2336 spirit to the GNU version, but may modify the @var{path} by removing
2337 trailing '/' bytes. If the @var{path} is made up entirely of '/'
2338 bytes, then "/" will be returned. Also, if @var{path} is
2339 @code{NULL} or an empty string, then "." is returned. The prototype for
2340 the XPG version can be found in @file{libgen.h}.
2341
2342 Example of using XPG @code{basename}:
2343
2344 @smallexample
2345 #include <libgen.h>
2346
2347 int
2348 main (int argc, char *argv[])
2349 @{
2350 char *prog;
2351 char *path = strdupa (argv[0]);
2352
2353 prog = basename (path);
2354
2355 if (argc < 2)
2356 @{
2357 fprintf (stderr, "Usage %s <arg>\n", prog);
2358 exit (1);
2359 @}
2360
2361 @dots{}
2362
2363 @}
2364 @end smallexample
2365 @end deftypefun
2366
2367 @comment libgen.h
2368 @comment XPG
2369 @deftypefun {char *} dirname (char *@var{path})
2370 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2371 The @code{dirname} function is the compliment to the XPG version of
2372 @code{basename}. It returns the parent directory of the file specified
2373 by @var{path}. If @var{path} is @code{NULL}, an empty string, or
2374 contains no '/' bytes, then "." is returned. The prototype for this
2375 function can be found in @file{libgen.h}.
2376 @end deftypefun
2377
2378 @node strfry
2379 @section strfry
2380
2381 The function below addresses the perennial programming quandary: ``How do
2382 I take good data in string form and painlessly turn it into garbage?''
2383 This is actually a fairly simple task for C programmers who do not use
2384 @theglibc{} string functions, but for programs based on @theglibc{},
2385 the @code{strfry} function is the preferred method for
2386 destroying string data.
2387
2388 The prototype for this function is in @file{string.h}.
2389
2390 @comment string.h
2391 @comment GNU
2392 @deftypefun {char *} strfry (char *@var{string})
2393 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2394 @c Calls initstate_r, time, getpid, strlen, and random_r.
2395
2396 @code{strfry} creates a pseudorandom anagram of a string, replacing the
2397 input with the anagram in place. For each position in the string,
2398 @code{strfry} swaps it with a position in the string selected at random
2399 (from a uniform distribution). The two positions may be the same.
2400
2401 The return value of @code{strfry} is always @var{string}.
2402
2403 @strong{Portability Note:} This function is unique to @theglibc{}.
2404
2405 @end deftypefun
2406
2407
2408 @node Trivial Encryption
2409 @section Trivial Encryption
2410 @cindex encryption
2411
2412
2413 The @code{memfrob} function converts an array of data to something
2414 unrecognizable and back again. It is not encryption in its usual sense
2415 since it is easy for someone to convert the encrypted data back to clear
2416 text. The transformation is analogous to Usenet's ``Rot13'' encryption
2417 method for obscuring offensive jokes from sensitive eyes and such.
2418 Unlike Rot13, @code{memfrob} works on arbitrary binary data, not just
2419 text.
2420 @cindex Rot13
2421
2422 For true encryption, @xref{Cryptographic Functions}.
2423
2424 This function is declared in @file{string.h}.
2425 @pindex string.h
2426
2427 @comment string.h
2428 @comment GNU
2429 @deftypefun {void *} memfrob (void *@var{mem}, size_t @var{length})
2430 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2431
2432 @code{memfrob} transforms (frobnicates) each byte of the data structure
2433 at @var{mem}, which is @var{length} bytes long, by bitwise exclusive
2434 oring it with binary 00101010. It does the transformation in place and
2435 its return value is always @var{mem}.
2436
2437 Note that @code{memfrob} a second time on the same data structure
2438 returns it to its original state.
2439
2440 This is a good function for hiding information from someone who doesn't
2441 want to see it or doesn't want to see it very much. To really prevent
2442 people from retrieving the information, use stronger encryption such as
2443 that described in @xref{Cryptographic Functions}.
2444
2445 @strong{Portability Note:} This function is unique to @theglibc{}.
2446
2447 @end deftypefun
2448
2449 @node Encode Binary Data
2450 @section Encode Binary Data
2451
2452 To store or transfer binary data in environments which only support text
2453 one has to encode the binary data by mapping the input bytes to
2454 bytes in the range allowed for storing or transferring. SVID
2455 systems (and nowadays XPG compliant systems) provide minimal support for
2456 this task.
2457
2458 @comment stdlib.h
2459 @comment XPG
2460 @deftypefun {char *} l64a (long int @var{n})
2461 @safety{@prelim{}@mtunsafe{@mtasurace{:l64a}}@asunsafe{}@acsafe{}}
2462 This function encodes a 32-bit input value using bytes from the
2463 basic character set. It returns a pointer to a 7 byte buffer which
2464 contains an encoded version of @var{n}. To encode a series of bytes the
2465 user must copy the returned string to a destination buffer. It returns
2466 the empty string if @var{n} is zero, which is somewhat bizarre but
2467 mandated by the standard.@*
2468 @strong{Warning:} Since a static buffer is used this function should not
2469 be used in multi-threaded programs. There is no thread-safe alternative
2470 to this function in the C library.@*
2471 @strong{Compatibility Note:} The XPG standard states that the return
2472 value of @code{l64a} is undefined if @var{n} is negative. In the GNU
2473 implementation, @code{l64a} treats its argument as unsigned, so it will
2474 return a sensible encoding for any nonzero @var{n}; however, portable
2475 programs should not rely on this.
2476
2477 To encode a large buffer @code{l64a} must be called in a loop, once for
2478 each 32-bit word of the buffer. For example, one could do something
2479 like this:
2480
2481 @smallexample
2482 char *
2483 encode (const void *buf, size_t len)
2484 @{
2485 /* @r{We know in advance how long the buffer has to be.} */
2486 unsigned char *in = (unsigned char *) buf;
2487 char *out = malloc (6 + ((len + 3) / 4) * 6 + 1);
2488 char *cp = out, *p;
2489
2490 /* @r{Encode the length.} */
2491 /* @r{Using `htonl' is necessary so that the data can be}
2492 @r{decoded even on machines with different byte order.}
2493 @r{`l64a' can return a string shorter than 6 bytes, so }
2494 @r{we pad it with encoding of 0 (}'.'@r{) at the end by }
2495 @r{hand.} */
2496
2497 p = stpcpy (cp, l64a (htonl (len)));
2498 cp = mempcpy (p, "......", 6 - (p - cp));
2499
2500 while (len > 3)
2501 @{
2502 unsigned long int n = *in++;
2503 n = (n << 8) | *in++;
2504 n = (n << 8) | *in++;
2505 n = (n << 8) | *in++;
2506 len -= 4;
2507 p = stpcpy (cp, l64a (htonl (n)));
2508 cp = mempcpy (p, "......", 6 - (p - cp));
2509 @}
2510 if (len > 0)
2511 @{
2512 unsigned long int n = *in++;
2513 if (--len > 0)
2514 @{
2515 n = (n << 8) | *in++;
2516 if (--len > 0)
2517 n = (n << 8) | *in;
2518 @}
2519 cp = stpcpy (cp, l64a (htonl (n)));
2520 @}
2521 *cp = '\0';
2522 return out;
2523 @}
2524 @end smallexample
2525
2526 It is strange that the library does not provide the complete
2527 functionality needed but so be it.
2528
2529 @end deftypefun
2530
2531 To decode data produced with @code{l64a} the following function should be
2532 used.
2533
2534 @comment stdlib.h
2535 @comment XPG
2536 @deftypefun {long int} a64l (const char *@var{string})
2537 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2538 The parameter @var{string} should contain a string which was produced by
2539 a call to @code{l64a}. The function processes at least 6 bytes of
2540 this string, and decodes the bytes it finds according to the table
2541 below. It stops decoding when it finds a byte not in the table,
2542 rather like @code{atoi}; if you have a buffer which has been broken into
2543 lines, you must be careful to skip over the end-of-line bytes.
2544
2545 The decoded number is returned as a @code{long int} value.
2546 @end deftypefun
2547
2548 The @code{l64a} and @code{a64l} functions use a base 64 encoding, in
2549 which each byte of an encoded string represents six bits of an
2550 input word. These symbols are used for the base 64 digits:
2551
2552 @multitable {xxxxx} {xxx} {xxx} {xxx} {xxx} {xxx} {xxx} {xxx} {xxx}
2553 @item @tab 0 @tab 1 @tab 2 @tab 3 @tab 4 @tab 5 @tab 6 @tab 7
2554 @item 0 @tab @code{.} @tab @code{/} @tab @code{0} @tab @code{1}
2555 @tab @code{2} @tab @code{3} @tab @code{4} @tab @code{5}
2556 @item 8 @tab @code{6} @tab @code{7} @tab @code{8} @tab @code{9}
2557 @tab @code{A} @tab @code{B} @tab @code{C} @tab @code{D}
2558 @item 16 @tab @code{E} @tab @code{F} @tab @code{G} @tab @code{H}
2559 @tab @code{I} @tab @code{J} @tab @code{K} @tab @code{L}
2560 @item 24 @tab @code{M} @tab @code{N} @tab @code{O} @tab @code{P}
2561 @tab @code{Q} @tab @code{R} @tab @code{S} @tab @code{T}
2562 @item 32 @tab @code{U} @tab @code{V} @tab @code{W} @tab @code{X}
2563 @tab @code{Y} @tab @code{Z} @tab @code{a} @tab @code{b}
2564 @item 40 @tab @code{c} @tab @code{d} @tab @code{e} @tab @code{f}
2565 @tab @code{g} @tab @code{h} @tab @code{i} @tab @code{j}
2566 @item 48 @tab @code{k} @tab @code{l} @tab @code{m} @tab @code{n}
2567 @tab @code{o} @tab @code{p} @tab @code{q} @tab @code{r}
2568 @item 56 @tab @code{s} @tab @code{t} @tab @code{u} @tab @code{v}
2569 @tab @code{w} @tab @code{x} @tab @code{y} @tab @code{z}
2570 @end multitable
2571
2572 This encoding scheme is not standard. There are some other encoding
2573 methods which are much more widely used (UU encoding, MIME encoding).
2574 Generally, it is better to use one of these encodings.
2575
2576 @node Argz and Envz Vectors
2577 @section Argz and Envz Vectors
2578
2579 @cindex argz vectors (string vectors)
2580 @cindex string vectors, null-byte separated
2581 @cindex argument vectors, null-byte separated
2582 @dfn{argz vectors} are vectors of strings in a contiguous block of
2583 memory, each element separated from its neighbors by null bytes
2584 (@code{'\0'}).
2585
2586 @cindex envz vectors (environment vectors)
2587 @cindex environment vectors, null-byte separated
2588 @dfn{Envz vectors} are an extension of argz vectors where each element is a
2589 name-value pair, separated by a @code{'='} byte (as in a Unix
2590 environment).
2591
2592 @menu
2593 * Argz Functions:: Operations on argz vectors.
2594 * Envz Functions:: Additional operations on environment vectors.
2595 @end menu
2596
2597 @node Argz Functions, Envz Functions, , Argz and Envz Vectors
2598 @subsection Argz Functions
2599
2600 Each argz vector is represented by a pointer to the first element, of
2601 type @code{char *}, and a size, of type @code{size_t}, both of which can
2602 be initialized to @code{0} to represent an empty argz vector. All argz
2603 functions accept either a pointer and a size argument, or pointers to
2604 them, if they will be modified.
2605
2606 The argz functions use @code{malloc}/@code{realloc} to allocate/grow
2607 argz vectors, and so any argz vector creating using these functions may
2608 be freed by using @code{free}; conversely, any argz function that may
2609 grow a string expects that string to have been allocated using
2610 @code{malloc} (those argz functions that only examine their arguments or
2611 modify them in place will work on any sort of memory).
2612 @xref{Unconstrained Allocation}.
2613
2614 All argz functions that do memory allocation have a return type of
2615 @code{error_t}, and return @code{0} for success, and @code{ENOMEM} if an
2616 allocation error occurs.
2617
2618 @pindex argz.h
2619 These functions are declared in the standard include file @file{argz.h}.
2620
2621 @comment argz.h
2622 @comment GNU
2623 @deftypefun {error_t} argz_create (char *const @var{argv}[], char **@var{argz}, size_t *@var{argz_len})
2624 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2625 The @code{argz_create} function converts the Unix-style argument vector
2626 @var{argv} (a vector of pointers to normal C strings, terminated by
2627 @code{(char *)0}; @pxref{Program Arguments}) into an argz vector with
2628 the same elements, which is returned in @var{argz} and @var{argz_len}.
2629 @end deftypefun
2630
2631 @comment argz.h
2632 @comment GNU
2633 @deftypefun {error_t} argz_create_sep (const char *@var{string}, int @var{sep}, char **@var{argz}, size_t *@var{argz_len})
2634 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2635 The @code{argz_create_sep} function converts the string
2636 @var{string} into an argz vector (returned in @var{argz} and
2637 @var{argz_len}) by splitting it into elements at every occurrence of the
2638 byte @var{sep}.
2639 @end deftypefun
2640
2641 @comment argz.h
2642 @comment GNU
2643 @deftypefun {size_t} argz_count (const char *@var{argz}, size_t @var{arg_len})
2644 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2645 Returns the number of elements in the argz vector @var{argz} and
2646 @var{argz_len}.
2647 @end deftypefun
2648
2649 @comment argz.h
2650 @comment GNU
2651 @deftypefun {void} argz_extract (const char *@var{argz}, size_t @var{argz_len}, char **@var{argv})
2652 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2653 The @code{argz_extract} function converts the argz vector @var{argz} and
2654 @var{argz_len} into a Unix-style argument vector stored in @var{argv},
2655 by putting pointers to every element in @var{argz} into successive
2656 positions in @var{argv}, followed by a terminator of @code{0}.
2657 @var{Argv} must be pre-allocated with enough space to hold all the
2658 elements in @var{argz} plus the terminating @code{(char *)0}
2659 (@code{(argz_count (@var{argz}, @var{argz_len}) + 1) * sizeof (char *)}
2660 bytes should be enough). Note that the string pointers stored into
2661 @var{argv} point into @var{argz}---they are not copies---and so
2662 @var{argz} must be copied if it will be changed while @var{argv} is
2663 still active. This function is useful for passing the elements in
2664 @var{argz} to an exec function (@pxref{Executing a File}).
2665 @end deftypefun
2666
2667 @comment argz.h
2668 @comment GNU
2669 @deftypefun {void} argz_stringify (char *@var{argz}, size_t @var{len}, int @var{sep})
2670 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2671 The @code{argz_stringify} converts @var{argz} into a normal string with
2672 the elements separated by the byte @var{sep}, by replacing each
2673 @code{'\0'} inside @var{argz} (except the last one, which terminates the
2674 string) with @var{sep}. This is handy for printing @var{argz} in a
2675 readable manner.
2676 @end deftypefun
2677
2678 @comment argz.h
2679 @comment GNU
2680 @deftypefun {error_t} argz_add (char **@var{argz}, size_t *@var{argz_len}, const char *@var{str})
2681 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2682 @c Calls strlen and argz_append.
2683 The @code{argz_add} function adds the string @var{str} to the end of the
2684 argz vector @code{*@var{argz}}, and updates @code{*@var{argz}} and
2685 @code{*@var{argz_len}} accordingly.
2686 @end deftypefun
2687
2688 @comment argz.h
2689 @comment GNU
2690 @deftypefun {error_t} argz_add_sep (char **@var{argz}, size_t *@var{argz_len}, const char *@var{str}, int @var{delim})
2691 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2692 The @code{argz_add_sep} function is similar to @code{argz_add}, but
2693 @var{str} is split into separate elements in the result at occurrences of
2694 the byte @var{delim}. This is useful, for instance, for
2695 adding the components of a Unix search path to an argz vector, by using
2696 a value of @code{':'} for @var{delim}.
2697 @end deftypefun
2698
2699 @comment argz.h
2700 @comment GNU
2701 @deftypefun {error_t} argz_append (char **@var{argz}, size_t *@var{argz_len}, const char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{buf_len})
2702 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2703 The @code{argz_append} function appends @var{buf_len} bytes starting at
2704 @var{buf} to the argz vector @code{*@var{argz}}, reallocating
2705 @code{*@var{argz}} to accommodate it, and adding @var{buf_len} to
2706 @code{*@var{argz_len}}.
2707 @end deftypefun
2708
2709 @comment argz.h
2710 @comment GNU
2711 @deftypefun {void} argz_delete (char **@var{argz}, size_t *@var{argz_len}, char *@var{entry})
2712 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2713 @c Calls free if no argument is left.
2714 If @var{entry} points to the beginning of one of the elements in the
2715 argz vector @code{*@var{argz}}, the @code{argz_delete} function will
2716 remove this entry and reallocate @code{*@var{argz}}, modifying
2717 @code{*@var{argz}} and @code{*@var{argz_len}} accordingly. Note that as
2718 destructive argz functions usually reallocate their argz argument,
2719 pointers into argz vectors such as @var{entry} will then become invalid.
2720 @end deftypefun
2721
2722 @comment argz.h
2723 @comment GNU
2724 @deftypefun {error_t} argz_insert (char **@var{argz}, size_t *@var{argz_len}, char *@var{before}, const char *@var{entry})
2725 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2726 @c Calls argz_add or realloc and memmove.
2727 The @code{argz_insert} function inserts the string @var{entry} into the
2728 argz vector @code{*@var{argz}} at a point just before the existing
2729 element pointed to by @var{before}, reallocating @code{*@var{argz}} and
2730 updating @code{*@var{argz}} and @code{*@var{argz_len}}. If @var{before}
2731 is @code{0}, @var{entry} is added to the end instead (as if by
2732 @code{argz_add}). Since the first element is in fact the same as
2733 @code{*@var{argz}}, passing in @code{*@var{argz}} as the value of
2734 @var{before} will result in @var{entry} being inserted at the beginning.
2735 @end deftypefun
2736
2737 @comment argz.h
2738 @comment GNU
2739 @deftypefun {char *} argz_next (const char *@var{argz}, size_t @var{argz_len}, const char *@var{entry})
2740 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2741 The @code{argz_next} function provides a convenient way of iterating
2742 over the elements in the argz vector @var{argz}. It returns a pointer
2743 to the next element in @var{argz} after the element @var{entry}, or
2744 @code{0} if there are no elements following @var{entry}. If @var{entry}
2745 is @code{0}, the first element of @var{argz} is returned.
2746
2747 This behavior suggests two styles of iteration:
2748
2749 @smallexample
2750 char *entry = 0;
2751 while ((entry = argz_next (@var{argz}, @var{argz_len}, entry)))
2752 @var{action};
2753 @end smallexample
2754
2755 (the double parentheses are necessary to make some C compilers shut up
2756 about what they consider a questionable @code{while}-test) and:
2757
2758 @smallexample
2759 char *entry;
2760 for (entry = @var{argz};
2761 entry;
2762 entry = argz_next (@var{argz}, @var{argz_len}, entry))
2763 @var{action};
2764 @end smallexample
2765
2766 Note that the latter depends on @var{argz} having a value of @code{0} if
2767 it is empty (rather than a pointer to an empty block of memory); this
2768 invariant is maintained for argz vectors created by the functions here.
2769 @end deftypefun
2770
2771 @comment argz.h
2772 @comment GNU
2773 @deftypefun error_t argz_replace (@w{char **@var{argz}, size_t *@var{argz_len}}, @w{const char *@var{str}, const char *@var{with}}, @w{unsigned *@var{replace_count}})
2774 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2775 Replace any occurrences of the string @var{str} in @var{argz} with
2776 @var{with}, reallocating @var{argz} as necessary. If
2777 @var{replace_count} is non-zero, @code{*@var{replace_count}} will be
2778 incremented by number of replacements performed.
2779 @end deftypefun
2780
2781 @node Envz Functions, , Argz Functions, Argz and Envz Vectors
2782 @subsection Envz Functions
2783
2784 Envz vectors are just argz vectors with additional constraints on the form
2785 of each element; as such, argz functions can also be used on them, where it
2786 makes sense.
2787
2788 Each element in an envz vector is a name-value pair, separated by a @code{'='}
2789 byte; if multiple @code{'='} bytes are present in an element, those
2790 after the first are considered part of the value, and treated like all other
2791 non-@code{'\0'} bytes.
2792
2793 If @emph{no} @code{'='} bytes are present in an element, that element is
2794 considered the name of a ``null'' entry, as distinct from an entry with an
2795 empty value: @code{envz_get} will return @code{0} if given the name of null
2796 entry, whereas an entry with an empty value would result in a value of
2797 @code{""}; @code{envz_entry} will still find such entries, however. Null
2798 entries can be removed with @code{envz_strip} function.
2799
2800 As with argz functions, envz functions that may allocate memory (and thus
2801 fail) have a return type of @code{error_t}, and return either @code{0} or
2802 @code{ENOMEM}.
2803
2804 @pindex envz.h
2805 These functions are declared in the standard include file @file{envz.h}.
2806
2807 @comment envz.h
2808 @comment GNU
2809 @deftypefun {char *} envz_entry (const char *@var{envz}, size_t @var{envz_len}, const char *@var{name})
2810 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2811 The @code{envz_entry} function finds the entry in @var{envz} with the name
2812 @var{name}, and returns a pointer to the whole entry---that is, the argz
2813 element which begins with @var{name} followed by a @code{'='} byte. If
2814 there is no entry with that name, @code{0} is returned.
2815 @end deftypefun
2816
2817 @comment envz.h
2818 @comment GNU
2819 @deftypefun {char *} envz_get (const char *@var{envz}, size_t @var{envz_len}, const char *@var{name})
2820 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2821 The @code{envz_get} function finds the entry in @var{envz} with the name
2822 @var{name} (like @code{envz_entry}), and returns a pointer to the value
2823 portion of that entry (following the @code{'='}). If there is no entry with
2824 that name (or only a null entry), @code{0} is returned.
2825 @end deftypefun
2826
2827 @comment envz.h
2828 @comment GNU
2829 @deftypefun {error_t} envz_add (char **@var{envz}, size_t *@var{envz_len}, const char *@var{name}, const char *@var{value})
2830 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2831 @c Calls envz_remove, which calls enz_entry and argz_delete, and then
2832 @c argz_add or equivalent code that reallocs and appends name=value.
2833 The @code{envz_add} function adds an entry to @code{*@var{envz}}
2834 (updating @code{*@var{envz}} and @code{*@var{envz_len}}) with the name
2835 @var{name}, and value @var{value}. If an entry with the same name
2836 already exists in @var{envz}, it is removed first. If @var{value} is
2837 @code{0}, then the new entry will the special null type of entry
2838 (mentioned above).
2839 @end deftypefun
2840
2841 @comment envz.h
2842 @comment GNU
2843 @deftypefun {error_t} envz_merge (char **@var{envz}, size_t *@var{envz_len}, const char *@var{envz2}, size_t @var{envz2_len}, int @var{override})
2844 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2845 The @code{envz_merge} function adds each entry in @var{envz2} to @var{envz},
2846 as if with @code{envz_add}, updating @code{*@var{envz}} and
2847 @code{*@var{envz_len}}. If @var{override} is true, then values in @var{envz2}
2848 will supersede those with the same name in @var{envz}, otherwise not.
2849
2850 Null entries are treated just like other entries in this respect, so a null
2851 entry in @var{envz} can prevent an entry of the same name in @var{envz2} from
2852 being added to @var{envz}, if @var{override} is false.
2853 @end deftypefun
2854
2855 @comment envz.h
2856 @comment GNU
2857 @deftypefun {void} envz_strip (char **@var{envz}, size_t *@var{envz_len})
2858 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
2859 The @code{envz_strip} function removes any null entries from @var{envz},
2860 updating @code{*@var{envz}} and @code{*@var{envz_len}}.
2861 @end deftypefun
2862
2863 @comment envz.h
2864 @comment GNU
2865 @deftypefun {void} envz_remove (char **@var{envz}, size_t *@var{envz_len}, const char *@var{name})
2866 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}}
2867 The @code{envz_remove} function removes an entry named @var{name} from
2868 @var{envz}, updating @code{*@var{envz}} and @code{*@var{envz_len}}.
2869 @end deftypefun
2870
2871 @c FIXME this are undocumented:
2872 @c strcasecmp_l @safety{@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} see strcasecmp