4coder/non-source/test_data/lots_of_files/_filbuf.c

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2018-03-16 18:19:11 +00:00
/***
*_filbuf.c - fill buffer and get character
*
* Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
*
*Purpose:
* defines _filbuf() - fill buffer and read first character, allocate
* buffer if there is none. Used from getc().
* defines _filwbuf() - fill buffer and read first wide character, allocate
* buffer if there is none. Used from getwc().
*
*Note:
* this file is included in safecrt.lib build directly, plese refer
* to safecrt_filwbuf.c
*
*******************************************************************************/
#include <cruntime.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <file2.h>
#include <io.h>
#include <dbgint.h>
#include <malloc.h>
#include <internal.h>
#include <msdos.h>
#include <wchar.h>
#include <mtdll.h>
#include <tchar.h>
#ifndef _UNICODE
/***
*int _filbuf(stream) - fill buffer and get first character
*
*Purpose:
* get a buffer if the file doesn't have one, read into it, return first
* char. try to get a buffer, if a user buffer is not assigned. called
* only from getc; intended for use only within library. assume no input
* stream is to remain unbuffered when memory is available unless it is
* marked _IONBF. at worst, give it a single char buffer. the need for a
* buffer, no matter how small, becomes evident when we consider the
* ungetc's necessary in scanf
*
* [NOTE: Multi-thread - _filbuf() assumes that the caller has aquired
* the stream lock, if needed.]
*
*Entry:
* FILE *stream - stream to read from
*
*Exit:
* returns first character from buffer (next character to be read)
* returns EOF if the FILE is actually a string, or not open for reading,
* or if open for writing or if no more chars to read.
* all fields in FILE structure may be changed except _file.
*
*Exceptions:
*
*******************************************************************************/
int __cdecl _filbuf (
FILE *str
)
#else /* _UNICODE */
/***
*int _filwbuf(stream) - fill buffer and get first wide character
*
*Purpose:
* get a buffer if the file doesn't have one, read into it, return first
* char. try to get a buffer, if a user buffer is not assigned. called
* only from getc; intended for use only within library. assume no input
* stream is to remain unbuffered when memory is available unless it is
* marked _IONBF. at worst, give it a single char buffer. the need for a
* buffer, no matter how small, becomes evident when we consider the
* ungetc's necessary in scanf
*
* [NOTE: Multi-thread - _filwbuf() assumes that the caller has aquired
* the stream lock, if needed.]
*
*Entry:
* FILE *stream - stream to read from
*
*Exit:
* returns first wide character from buffer (next character to be read)
* returns WEOF if the FILE is actually a string, or not open for reading,
* or if open for writing or if no more chars to read.
* all fields in FILE structure may be changed except _file.
*
*Exceptions:
*
*******************************************************************************/
int __cdecl _filwbuf (
FILE *str
)
#endif /* _UNICODE */
{
FILE *stream=NULL;
#ifdef _UNICODE
int is_split_character = 0;
unsigned char leftover_low_order_byte = 0;
#endif /* _UNICODE */
/* In safecrt, we assume we always have a buffer */
_VALIDATE_RETURN(str != NULL, EINVAL, _TEOF);
/* Init pointer to _iob2 entry. */
stream = str;
if (!inuse(stream) || stream->_flag & _IOSTRG)
return(_TEOF);
if (stream->_flag & _IOWRT)
{
stream->_flag |= _IOERR;
return(_TEOF);
}
stream->_flag |= _IOREAD;
/* Get a buffer, if necessary. */
if (!anybuf(stream))
{
#ifndef _SAFECRT_IMPL
_getbuf(stream);
#else /* _SAFECRT_IMPL */
/* In safecrt, we assume we always have a buffer */
_VALIDATE_RETURN(FALSE, EINVAL, _TEOF);
#endif /* _SAFECRT_IMPL */
}
else
{
#ifdef _UNICODE
/* When reading wchar_t elements, we must handle the case where a
two-byte character straddles the buffer boundary, with the low
order byte at the end of the old buffer and the high order byte
at the start of the new buffer.
We do this here: if there is exactly one character left in the
buffer, we store that and set the is_split_character flag. After
we load the new buffer, we'll or this low order byte into the
result. */
if (stream->_cnt == 1)
{
is_split_character = 1;
leftover_low_order_byte = (unsigned char)*stream->_ptr;
}
#endif /* _UNICODE */
stream->_ptr = stream->_base;
}
stream->_cnt = _read(_fileno(stream), stream->_base, stream->_bufsiz);
#ifndef _UNICODE
if ((stream->_cnt == 0) || (stream->_cnt == -1)) {
#else /* _UNICODE */
if ((stream->_cnt == 0) || (stream->_cnt == 1) || stream->_cnt == -1) {
#endif /* _UNICODE */
stream->_flag |= stream->_cnt ? _IOERR : _IOEOF;
stream->_cnt = 0;
return(_TEOF);
}
if ( !(stream->_flag & (_IOWRT|_IORW)) &&
((_osfile_safe(_fileno(stream)) & (FTEXT|FEOFLAG)) ==
(FTEXT|FEOFLAG)) )
{
stream->_flag |= _IOCTRLZ;
}
/* Check for small _bufsiz (_SMALL_BUFSIZ). If it is small and
if it is our buffer, then this must be the first _filbuf after
an fseek on a read-access-only stream. Restore _bufsiz to its
larger value (_INTERNAL_BUFSIZ) so that the next _filbuf call,
if one is made, will fill the whole buffer. */
if ( (stream->_bufsiz == _SMALL_BUFSIZ) && (stream->_flag &
_IOMYBUF) && !(stream->_flag & _IOSETVBUF) )
{
stream->_bufsiz = _INTERNAL_BUFSIZ;
}
#ifndef _UNICODE
stream->_cnt--;
return(0xff & *stream->_ptr++);
#else /* _UNICODE */
if (is_split_character)
{
/* If the character was split across buffers, we read only one byte
from the new buffer and or it with the leftover byte from the old
buffer. */
unsigned char high_order_byte = (unsigned char)(*stream->_ptr);
wchar_t result = (high_order_byte << 8) | leftover_low_order_byte;
--stream->_cnt;
++stream->_ptr;
return (result);
}
else
{
stream->_cnt -= sizeof(wchar_t);
return (0xffff & *((wchar_t *)(stream->_ptr))++);
}
#endif /* _UNICODE */
}