/* * psql - the PostgreSQL interactive terminal * * Copyright (c) 2000-2024, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * * This implements a sort of variable repository. One could also think of it * as a cheap version of an associative array. Each variable has a string * name and a string value. The value can't be NULL, or more precisely * that's not distinguishable from the variable being unset. * * src/bin/psql/variables.h */ #ifndef VARIABLES_H #define VARIABLES_H /* * Variables can be given "assign hook" functions. The assign hook can * prevent invalid values from being assigned, and can update internal C * variables to keep them in sync with the variable's current value. * * An assign hook function is called before any attempted assignment, with the * proposed new value of the variable (or with NULL, if an \unset is being * attempted). If it returns false, the assignment doesn't occur --- it * should print an error message with pg_log_error() to tell the user why. * * When an assign hook function is installed with SetVariableHooks(), it is * called with the variable's current value (or with NULL, if it wasn't set * yet). But its return value is ignored in this case. The hook should be * set before any possibly-invalid value can be assigned. */ typedef bool (*VariableAssignHook) (const char *newval); /* * Variables can also be given "substitute hook" functions. The substitute * hook can replace values (including NULL) with other values, allowing * normalization of variable contents. For example, for a boolean variable, * we wish to interpret "\unset FOO" as "\set FOO off", and we can do that * by installing a substitute hook. (We can use the same substitute hook * for all bool or nearly-bool variables, which is why this responsibility * isn't part of the assign hook.) * * The substitute hook is called before any attempted assignment, and before * the assign hook if any, passing the proposed new value of the variable as a * malloc'd string (or NULL, if an \unset is being attempted). It can return * the same value, or a different malloc'd string, or modify the string * in-place. It should free the passed-in value if it's not returning it. * The substitute hook generally should not complain about erroneous values; * that's a job for the assign hook. * * When a substitute hook is installed with SetVariableHooks(), it is applied * to the variable's current value (typically NULL, if it wasn't set yet). * That also happens before applying the assign hook. */ typedef char *(*VariableSubstituteHook) (char *newval); /* * Data structure representing one variable. * * Note: if value == NULL then the variable is logically unset, but we are * keeping the struct around so as not to forget about its hook function(s). */ struct _variable { char *name; char *value; VariableSubstituteHook substitute_hook; VariableAssignHook assign_hook; struct _variable *next; }; /* Data structure representing a set of variables */ typedef struct _variable *VariableSpace; VariableSpace CreateVariableSpace(void); const char *GetVariable(VariableSpace space, const char *name); bool ParseVariableBool(const char *value, const char *name, bool *result); bool ParseVariableNum(const char *value, const char *name, int *result); void PrintVariables(VariableSpace space); bool SetVariable(VariableSpace space, const char *name, const char *value); bool SetVariableBool(VariableSpace space, const char *name); bool DeleteVariable(VariableSpace space, const char *name); void SetVariableHooks(VariableSpace space, const char *name, VariableSubstituteHook shook, VariableAssignHook ahook); bool VariableHasHook(VariableSpace space, const char *name); void PsqlVarEnumError(const char *name, const char *value, const char *suggestions); #endif /* VARIABLES_H */