File kstr/kstr.md artifact b3e2b4c4d7 part of check-in 5393623a84
kstr
kstr is the libk string library. it uses the short naming convention with the glyph s
. kstr implies #include <k/mem.h>
.
types
struct kstr
struct kstr
is a structure for holding pascal strings (length-prefixed strings). it is the basic libk string type. note: if ptr.ref
≠ NULL and sz
= 0, the string's length is unknown and should be calculated by any function that operates on a kstr, storing the result in the object if possible.
* sz size
- length of string, excluding any null terminator
* kmptr ptr
- pointer to string in memory
struct ksraw
struct ksraw
is like kstr
except it uses raw char
pointers instead of a kmptr
.
* sz size
- length of string, excluding any null terminator
* char* ptr
- pointer to string in memory
struct ksbuf
struct ksbuf
is a structure used to hold buffers.
* sz size
- maximum size of buffer, including any null terminator
* char* buf
- region of memory to store buffer in
* ksalloc strat
- allocation strategy
* kmkind rule
- kind of allocator to use. only needs to be set if where
is NULL. see kmem.
* kmcell* where
- where to allocate the object, in case of pool or tree allocation.
struct kschain
struct kschain
is a structure used for string accumulators that works by aggregating pointers to strings, instead of copying the strings themselves.
* kschain_kind kind
- kind of chain
* kmkind rule
- kind of allocation to use if kind
≠ kschain_kind_linked
* pstr* ptrs
- pointer to pointer list
* sz ptrc
- number of pointers
* sz size
- total amount of space in ptrs
enum kschain_kind
kschain_kind_block
- occupies a single block of memorykschain_kind_linked
- uses a linked list, allocated and deallocated as necessary
enum ksalloc
enum ksalloc
is an enumerator that tells libk what strategy to use when filling a ksbuf
or kschain
struct.
* ksalloc_static
- do not allocate memory, fill an already-allocated, statically-sized array.
* ksalloc_alloc
- allocate a string in memory using the specified kind of allocator.
* ksalloc_dynamic
- fill an already-allocated array if possible, allocate a string in memory if the string length exceeds available space.
functions
kssz
size_t kssz(char* str, size_t max)
returns the number of characters in a C string, including the final null. will count at most max
characters if max
> 0.
kstr
kstr kstr(char* str, size_t max)
takes a C string and returns a P-string, calculating the length of str
and storing it in the return value. max
works as in kssz
.
kstoraw
ksraw ksref(kstr)
is a simple convenience function that returns the ksraw
form of a kstr
.
kscomp
char* kscomp(size_t ct, ksraw struct[], kmbuf* buf)
is a string composition function. it serves as an efficient, generalized replacement for functions like strcat
and strdup
.
to use kscomp, create an array of kstr
and fill it with the strings you wish to concatenate. for example, to programmatically generate an HTML link tag, you might use the following code.
char mem[512];
kmptr text = <...>;
char* src = <...>;
kmbuf buf = { sizeof mem, &mem, kmkind_none };
kstr chain[] = {
Kstr("<a href=\""), { 0, src }, Kstr("\">"),
ksref(text),
Kstr("</a>")
};
char* html = kscomp(Kmsz(chain), chain, &buf);
kscomp will only calculate the length of individual strings if they are not already known. when it needs to calculate the length of a string, it will store that length in the original array so repeated calls can be made without needing to repeatedly calculate the lengths. this is not always desirable, so the variant kscompc
exists, which is exactly the same as kscomp
in every respect except that chain
is not altered in any way.
macros
if KFclean
is not set when <k/str.h> is included, the following macros are defined.
Kstr(string)
- the compile-time equivalent tokstr()
.Kstr
takes a literal string and inserts the text{ sizeof (string), string }
into the document, suitable for initializing a kstr.