openssl/crypto/stack/stack.c

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/* crypto/stack/stack.c */
/* Copyright (C) 1995-1998 Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com)
* All rights reserved.
*
* This package is an SSL implementation written
* by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com).
* The implementation was written so as to conform with Netscapes SSL.
*
* This library is free for commercial and non-commercial use as long as
* the following conditions are aheared to. The following conditions
* apply to all code found in this distribution, be it the RC4, RSA,
* lhash, DES, etc., code; not just the SSL code. The SSL documentation
* included with this distribution is covered by the same copyright terms
* except that the holder is Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com).
*
* Copyright remains Eric Young's, and as such any Copyright notices in
* the code are not to be removed.
* If this package is used in a product, Eric Young should be given attribution
* as the author of the parts of the library used.
* This can be in the form of a textual message at program startup or
* in documentation (online or textual) provided with the package.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
* must display the following acknowledgement:
* "This product includes cryptographic software written by
* Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com)"
* The word 'cryptographic' can be left out if the rouines from the library
* being used are not cryptographic related :-).
* 4. If you include any Windows specific code (or a derivative thereof) from
* the apps directory (application code) you must include an acknowledgement:
* "This product includes software written by Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com)"
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ERIC YOUNG ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* The licence and distribution terms for any publically available version or
* derivative of this code cannot be changed. i.e. this code cannot simply be
* copied and put under another distribution licence
* [including the GNU Public Licence.]
*/
/* Code for stacks
* Author - Eric Young v 1.0
* 1.2 eay 12-Mar-97 - Modified sk_find so that it _DOES_ return the
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* lowest index for the searched item.
*
* 1.1 eay - Take from netdb and added to SSLeay
*
* 1.0 eay - First version 29/07/92
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include "cryptlib.h"
#include <openssl/stack.h>
#undef MIN_NODES
#define MIN_NODES 4
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const char *STACK_version="Stack" OPENSSL_VERSION_PTEXT;
#include <errno.h>
This is the first of two commits (didn't want to dump them all into the same one). However, the first will temporarily break things until the second comes through. :-) The safestack.h handling was mapping compare callbacks that externally are of the type (int (*)(type **,type **)) into the underlying callback type used by stack.[ch], which is (int (*)(void *,void *)). After some degree of digging, it appears that the callback type in the underlying stack code should use double pointers too - when the compare operations are invoked (from sk_find and sk_sort), they are being used by bsearch and qsort to compare two pointers to pointers. This change corrects the prototyping (by only casting to the (void*,void*) form at the moment it is needed by bsearch and qsort) and makes the mapping in safestack.h more transparent. It also changes from "void*" to "char*" to stay in keeping with stack.[ch]'s assumed base type of "char". Also - the "const" situation was that safestack.h was throwing away "const"s, and to compound the problem - a close examination of stack.c showed that (const char **) is not really achieving what it is supposed to when the callback is being invoked, what is needed is (const char * const *). So the underlying stack.[ch] and the mapping macros in safestack.h have all been altered to correct this. What will follow are the vast quantities of "const" corrections required in stack-dependant code that was being let "slip" through when safestack.h was discarding "const"s. These now all come up as compiler warnings.
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int (*sk_set_cmp_func(STACK *sk, int (*c)(const char * const *,const char * const *)))
(const char * const *, const char * const *)
{
This is the first of two commits (didn't want to dump them all into the same one). However, the first will temporarily break things until the second comes through. :-) The safestack.h handling was mapping compare callbacks that externally are of the type (int (*)(type **,type **)) into the underlying callback type used by stack.[ch], which is (int (*)(void *,void *)). After some degree of digging, it appears that the callback type in the underlying stack code should use double pointers too - when the compare operations are invoked (from sk_find and sk_sort), they are being used by bsearch and qsort to compare two pointers to pointers. This change corrects the prototyping (by only casting to the (void*,void*) form at the moment it is needed by bsearch and qsort) and makes the mapping in safestack.h more transparent. It also changes from "void*" to "char*" to stay in keeping with stack.[ch]'s assumed base type of "char". Also - the "const" situation was that safestack.h was throwing away "const"s, and to compound the problem - a close examination of stack.c showed that (const char **) is not really achieving what it is supposed to when the callback is being invoked, what is needed is (const char * const *). So the underlying stack.[ch] and the mapping macros in safestack.h have all been altered to correct this. What will follow are the vast quantities of "const" corrections required in stack-dependant code that was being let "slip" through when safestack.h was discarding "const"s. These now all come up as compiler warnings.
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int (*old)(const char * const *,const char * const *)=sk->comp;
if (sk->comp != c)
sk->sorted=0;
sk->comp=c;
return old;
}
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STACK *sk_dup(STACK *sk)
{
STACK *ret;
char **s;
if ((ret=sk_new(sk->comp)) == NULL) goto err;
s=(char **)OPENSSL_realloc((char *)ret->data,
(unsigned int)sizeof(char *)*sk->num_alloc);
if (s == NULL) goto err;
ret->data=s;
ret->num=sk->num;
memcpy(ret->data,sk->data,sizeof(char *)*sk->num);
ret->sorted=sk->sorted;
ret->num_alloc=sk->num_alloc;
ret->comp=sk->comp;
return(ret);
err:
if(ret)
sk_free(ret);
return(NULL);
}
STACK *sk_new_null(void)
{
return sk_new((int (*)(const char * const *, const char * const *))0);
}
This is the first of two commits (didn't want to dump them all into the same one). However, the first will temporarily break things until the second comes through. :-) The safestack.h handling was mapping compare callbacks that externally are of the type (int (*)(type **,type **)) into the underlying callback type used by stack.[ch], which is (int (*)(void *,void *)). After some degree of digging, it appears that the callback type in the underlying stack code should use double pointers too - when the compare operations are invoked (from sk_find and sk_sort), they are being used by bsearch and qsort to compare two pointers to pointers. This change corrects the prototyping (by only casting to the (void*,void*) form at the moment it is needed by bsearch and qsort) and makes the mapping in safestack.h more transparent. It also changes from "void*" to "char*" to stay in keeping with stack.[ch]'s assumed base type of "char". Also - the "const" situation was that safestack.h was throwing away "const"s, and to compound the problem - a close examination of stack.c showed that (const char **) is not really achieving what it is supposed to when the callback is being invoked, what is needed is (const char * const *). So the underlying stack.[ch] and the mapping macros in safestack.h have all been altered to correct this. What will follow are the vast quantities of "const" corrections required in stack-dependant code that was being let "slip" through when safestack.h was discarding "const"s. These now all come up as compiler warnings.
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STACK *sk_new(int (*c)(const char * const *, const char * const *))
{
STACK *ret;
int i;
if ((ret=(STACK *)OPENSSL_malloc(sizeof(STACK))) == NULL)
goto err;
if ((ret->data=(char **)OPENSSL_malloc(sizeof(char *)*MIN_NODES)) == NULL)
goto err;
for (i=0; i<MIN_NODES; i++)
ret->data[i]=NULL;
ret->comp=c;
ret->num_alloc=MIN_NODES;
ret->num=0;
ret->sorted=0;
return(ret);
err:
if(ret)
OPENSSL_free(ret);
return(NULL);
}
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int sk_insert(STACK *st, char *data, int loc)
{
char **s;
if(st == NULL) return 0;
if (st->num_alloc <= st->num+1)
{
s=(char **)OPENSSL_realloc((char *)st->data,
(unsigned int)sizeof(char *)*st->num_alloc*2);
if (s == NULL)
return(0);
st->data=s;
st->num_alloc*=2;
}
if ((loc >= (int)st->num) || (loc < 0))
st->data[st->num]=data;
else
{
int i;
char **f,**t;
f=(char **)st->data;
t=(char **)&(st->data[1]);
for (i=st->num; i>=loc; i--)
t[i]=f[i];
#ifdef undef /* no memmove on sunos :-( */
memmove( (char *)&(st->data[loc+1]),
(char *)&(st->data[loc]),
sizeof(char *)*(st->num-loc));
#endif
st->data[loc]=data;
}
st->num++;
st->sorted=0;
return(st->num);
}
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char *sk_delete_ptr(STACK *st, char *p)
{
int i;
for (i=0; i<st->num; i++)
if (st->data[i] == p)
return(sk_delete(st,i));
return(NULL);
}
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char *sk_delete(STACK *st, int loc)
{
char *ret;
int i,j;
if ((st == NULL) || (st->num == 0) || (loc < 0)
|| (loc >= st->num)) return(NULL);
ret=st->data[loc];
if (loc != st->num-1)
{
j=st->num-1;
for (i=loc; i<j; i++)
st->data[i]=st->data[i+1];
/* In theory memcpy is not safe for this
* memcpy( &(st->data[loc]),
* &(st->data[loc+1]),
* sizeof(char *)*(st->num-loc-1));
*/
}
st->num--;
return(ret);
}
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int sk_find(STACK *st, char *data)
{
char **r;
int i;
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int (*comp_func)(const void *,const void *);
if(st == NULL) return -1;
if (st->comp == NULL)
{
for (i=0; i<st->num; i++)
if (st->data[i] == data)
return(i);
return(-1);
}
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sk_sort(st);
if (data == NULL) return(-1);
This is the first of two commits (didn't want to dump them all into the same one). However, the first will temporarily break things until the second comes through. :-) The safestack.h handling was mapping compare callbacks that externally are of the type (int (*)(type **,type **)) into the underlying callback type used by stack.[ch], which is (int (*)(void *,void *)). After some degree of digging, it appears that the callback type in the underlying stack code should use double pointers too - when the compare operations are invoked (from sk_find and sk_sort), they are being used by bsearch and qsort to compare two pointers to pointers. This change corrects the prototyping (by only casting to the (void*,void*) form at the moment it is needed by bsearch and qsort) and makes the mapping in safestack.h more transparent. It also changes from "void*" to "char*" to stay in keeping with stack.[ch]'s assumed base type of "char". Also - the "const" situation was that safestack.h was throwing away "const"s, and to compound the problem - a close examination of stack.c showed that (const char **) is not really achieving what it is supposed to when the callback is being invoked, what is needed is (const char * const *). So the underlying stack.[ch] and the mapping macros in safestack.h have all been altered to correct this. What will follow are the vast quantities of "const" corrections required in stack-dependant code that was being let "slip" through when safestack.h was discarding "const"s. These now all come up as compiler warnings.
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/* This (and the "qsort" below) are the two places in OpenSSL
* where we need to convert from our standard (type **,type **)
* compare callback type to the (void *,void *) type required by
* bsearch. However, the "data" it is being called(back) with are
* not (type *) pointers, but the *pointers* to (type *) pointers,
* so we get our extra level of pointer dereferencing that way. */
comp_func=(int (*)(const void *,const void *))(st->comp);
r=(char **)bsearch(&data,(char *)st->data,
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st->num,sizeof(char *), comp_func);
if (r == NULL) return(-1);
i=(int)(r-st->data);
for ( ; i>0; i--)
This is the first of two commits (didn't want to dump them all into the same one). However, the first will temporarily break things until the second comes through. :-) The safestack.h handling was mapping compare callbacks that externally are of the type (int (*)(type **,type **)) into the underlying callback type used by stack.[ch], which is (int (*)(void *,void *)). After some degree of digging, it appears that the callback type in the underlying stack code should use double pointers too - when the compare operations are invoked (from sk_find and sk_sort), they are being used by bsearch and qsort to compare two pointers to pointers. This change corrects the prototyping (by only casting to the (void*,void*) form at the moment it is needed by bsearch and qsort) and makes the mapping in safestack.h more transparent. It also changes from "void*" to "char*" to stay in keeping with stack.[ch]'s assumed base type of "char". Also - the "const" situation was that safestack.h was throwing away "const"s, and to compound the problem - a close examination of stack.c showed that (const char **) is not really achieving what it is supposed to when the callback is being invoked, what is needed is (const char * const *). So the underlying stack.[ch] and the mapping macros in safestack.h have all been altered to correct this. What will follow are the vast quantities of "const" corrections required in stack-dependant code that was being let "slip" through when safestack.h was discarding "const"s. These now all come up as compiler warnings.
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/* This needs a cast because the type being pointed to from
* the "&" expressions are (char *) rather than (const char *).
* For an explanation, read:
* http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/C-faq/q11.10.html :-) */
if ((*st->comp)((const char * const *)&(st->data[i-1]),
(const char * const *)&data) < 0)
break;
return(i);
}
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int sk_push(STACK *st, char *data)
{
return(sk_insert(st,data,st->num));
}
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int sk_unshift(STACK *st, char *data)
{
return(sk_insert(st,data,0));
}
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char *sk_shift(STACK *st)
{
if (st == NULL) return(NULL);
if (st->num <= 0) return(NULL);
return(sk_delete(st,0));
}
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char *sk_pop(STACK *st)
{
if (st == NULL) return(NULL);
if (st->num <= 0) return(NULL);
return(sk_delete(st,st->num-1));
}
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void sk_zero(STACK *st)
{
if (st == NULL) return;
if (st->num <= 0) return;
memset((char *)st->data,0,sizeof(st->data)*st->num);
st->num=0;
}
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void sk_pop_free(STACK *st, void (*func)(void *))
{
int i;
if (st == NULL) return;
for (i=0; i<st->num; i++)
if (st->data[i] != NULL)
func(st->data[i]);
sk_free(st);
}
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void sk_free(STACK *st)
{
if (st == NULL) return;
if (st->data != NULL) OPENSSL_free(st->data);
OPENSSL_free(st);
}
int sk_num(const STACK *st)
{
if(st == NULL) return -1;
return st->num;
}
char *sk_value(const STACK *st, int i)
{
if(st == NULL) return NULL;
return st->data[i];
}
char *sk_set(STACK *st, int i, char *value)
{
if(st == NULL) return NULL;
return (st->data[i] = value);
}
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void sk_sort(STACK *st)
{
if (st && !st->sorted)
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{
int (*comp_func)(const void *,const void *);
/* same comment as in sk_find ... previously st->comp was declared
* as a (void*,void*) callback type, but this made the population
* of the callback pointer illogical - our callbacks compare
* type** with type**, so we leave the casting until absolutely
* necessary (ie. "now"). */
comp_func=(int (*)(const void *,const void *))(st->comp);
qsort(st->data,st->num,sizeof(char *), comp_func);
st->sorted=1;
}
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}