postgresql/src/common/psprintf.c

191 lines
5.3 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* psprintf.c
* sprintf into an allocated-on-demand buffer
*
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2016, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* src/common/psprintf.c
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifndef FRONTEND
#include "postgres.h"
#include "utils/memutils.h"
#else
#include "postgres_fe.h"
/* It's possible we could use a different value for this in frontend code */
#define MaxAllocSize ((Size) 0x3fffffff) /* 1 gigabyte - 1 */
#endif
/*
* psprintf
*
* Format text data under the control of fmt (an sprintf-style format string)
* and return it in an allocated-on-demand buffer. The buffer is allocated
* with palloc in the backend, or malloc in frontend builds. Caller is
* responsible to free the buffer when no longer needed, if appropriate.
*
* Errors are not returned to the caller, but are reported via elog(ERROR)
* in the backend, or printf-to-stderr-and-exit() in frontend builds.
* One should therefore think twice about using this in libpq.
*/
char *
psprintf(const char *fmt,...)
{
size_t len = 128; /* initial assumption about buffer size */
for (;;)
{
char *result;
va_list args;
size_t newlen;
/*
* Allocate result buffer. Note that in frontend this maps to malloc
* with exit-on-error.
*/
result = (char *) palloc(len);
/* Try to format the data. */
va_start(args, fmt);
newlen = pvsnprintf(result, len, fmt, args);
va_end(args);
if (newlen < len)
return result; /* success */
/* Release buffer and loop around to try again with larger len. */
pfree(result);
len = newlen;
}
}
/*
* pvsnprintf
*
* Attempt to format text data under the control of fmt (an sprintf-style
* format string) and insert it into buf (which has length len, len > 0).
*
* If successful, return the number of bytes emitted, not counting the
* trailing zero byte. This will always be strictly less than len.
*
* If there's not enough space in buf, return an estimate of the buffer size
* needed to succeed (this *must* be more than the given len, else callers
* might loop infinitely).
*
* Other error cases do not return, but exit via elog(ERROR) or exit().
* Hence, this shouldn't be used inside libpq.
*
* This function exists mainly to centralize our workarounds for
* non-C99-compliant vsnprintf implementations. Generally, any call that
* pays any attention to the return value should go through here rather
* than calling snprintf or vsnprintf directly.
*
* Note that the semantics of the return value are not exactly C99's.
* First, we don't promise that the estimated buffer size is exactly right;
* callers must be prepared to loop multiple times to get the right size.
* Second, we return the recommended buffer size, not one less than that;
* this lets overflow concerns be handled here rather than in the callers.
*/
size_t
pvsnprintf(char *buf, size_t len, const char *fmt, va_list args)
{
int nprinted;
Assert(len > 0);
errno = 0;
/*
* Assert check here is to catch buggy vsnprintf that overruns the
* specified buffer length. Solaris 7 in 64-bit mode is an example of a
* platform with such a bug.
*/
#ifdef USE_ASSERT_CHECKING
buf[len - 1] = '\0';
#endif
nprinted = vsnprintf(buf, len, fmt, args);
Assert(buf[len - 1] == '\0');
/*
* If vsnprintf reports an error other than ENOMEM, fail. The possible
* causes of this are not user-facing errors, so elog should be enough.
*/
if (nprinted < 0 && errno != 0 && errno != ENOMEM)
{
#ifndef FRONTEND
elog(ERROR, "vsnprintf failed: %m");
#else
fprintf(stderr, "vsnprintf failed: %s\n", strerror(errno));
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
#endif
}
/*
* Note: some versions of vsnprintf return the number of chars actually
* stored, not the total space needed as C99 specifies. And at least one
* returns -1 on failure. Be conservative about believing whether the
* print worked.
*/
if (nprinted >= 0 && (size_t) nprinted < len - 1)
{
/* Success. Note nprinted does not include trailing null. */
return (size_t) nprinted;
}
if (nprinted >= 0 && (size_t) nprinted > len)
{
/*
* This appears to be a C99-compliant vsnprintf, so believe its
* estimate of the required space. (If it's wrong, the logic will
* still work, but we may loop multiple times.) Note that the space
* needed should be only nprinted+1 bytes, but we'd better allocate
* one more than that so that the test above will succeed next time.
*
* In the corner case where the required space just barely overflows,
* fall through so that we'll error out below (possibly after
* looping).
*/
if ((size_t) nprinted <= MaxAllocSize - 2)
return nprinted + 2;
}
/*
* Buffer overrun, and we don't know how much space is needed. Estimate
* twice the previous buffer size, but not more than MaxAllocSize; if we
* are already at MaxAllocSize, choke. Note we use this palloc-oriented
* overflow limit even when in frontend.
*/
if (len >= MaxAllocSize)
{
#ifndef FRONTEND
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_PROGRAM_LIMIT_EXCEEDED),
errmsg("out of memory")));
#else
fprintf(stderr, _("out of memory\n"));
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
#endif
}
if (len >= MaxAllocSize / 2)
return MaxAllocSize;
return len * 2;
}