| #include "Python.h" |
| |
| /* snprintf() wrappers. If the platform has vsnprintf, we use it, else we |
| emulate it in a half-hearted way. Even if the platform has it, we wrap |
| it because platforms differ in what vsnprintf does in case the buffer |
| is too small: C99 behavior is to return the number of characters that |
| would have been written had the buffer not been too small, and to set |
| the last byte of the buffer to \0. At least MS _vsnprintf returns a |
| negative value instead, and fills the entire buffer with non-\0 data. |
| |
| The wrappers ensure that str[size-1] is always \0 upon return. |
| |
| PyOS_snprintf and PyOS_vsnprintf never write more than size bytes |
| (including the trailing '\0') into str. |
| |
| If the platform doesn't have vsnprintf, and the buffer size needed to |
| avoid truncation exceeds size by more than 512, Python aborts with a |
| Py_FatalError. |
| |
| Return value (rv): |
| |
| When 0 <= rv < size, the output conversion was unexceptional, and |
| rv characters were written to str (excluding a trailing \0 byte at |
| str[rv]). |
| |
| When rv >= size, output conversion was truncated, and a buffer of |
| size rv+1 would have been needed to avoid truncation. str[size-1] |
| is \0 in this case. |
| |
| When rv < 0, "something bad happened". str[size-1] is \0 in this |
| case too, but the rest of str is unreliable. It could be that |
| an error in format codes was detected by libc, or on platforms |
| with a non-C99 vsnprintf simply that the buffer wasn't big enough |
| to avoid truncation, or on platforms without any vsnprintf that |
| PyMem_Malloc couldn't obtain space for a temp buffer. |
| |
| CAUTION: Unlike C99, str != NULL and size > 0 are required. |
| */ |
| |
| int |
| PyOS_snprintf(char *str, size_t size, const char *format, ...) |
| { |
| int rc; |
| va_list va; |
| |
| va_start(va, format); |
| rc = PyOS_vsnprintf(str, size, format, va); |
| va_end(va); |
| return rc; |
| } |
| |
| int |
| PyOS_vsnprintf(char *str, size_t size, const char *format, va_list va) |
| { |
| int len; /* # bytes written, excluding \0 */ |
| #ifdef HAVE_SNPRINTF |
| #define _PyOS_vsnprintf_EXTRA_SPACE 1 |
| #else |
| #define _PyOS_vsnprintf_EXTRA_SPACE 512 |
| char *buffer; |
| #endif |
| assert(str != NULL); |
| assert(size > 0); |
| assert(format != NULL); |
| /* We take a size_t as input but return an int. Sanity check |
| * our input so that it won't cause an overflow in the |
| * vsnprintf return value or the buffer malloc size. */ |
| if (size > INT_MAX - _PyOS_vsnprintf_EXTRA_SPACE) { |
| len = -666; |
| goto Done; |
| } |
| |
| #ifdef HAVE_SNPRINTF |
| len = vsnprintf(str, size, format, va); |
| #else |
| /* Emulate it. */ |
| buffer = PyMem_MALLOC(size + _PyOS_vsnprintf_EXTRA_SPACE); |
| if (buffer == NULL) { |
| len = -666; |
| goto Done; |
| } |
| |
| len = vsprintf(buffer, format, va); |
| if (len < 0) |
| /* ignore the error */; |
| |
| else if ((size_t)len >= size + _PyOS_vsnprintf_EXTRA_SPACE) |
| Py_FatalError("Buffer overflow in PyOS_snprintf/PyOS_vsnprintf"); |
| |
| else { |
| const size_t to_copy = (size_t)len < size ? |
| (size_t)len : size - 1; |
| assert(to_copy < size); |
| memcpy(str, buffer, to_copy); |
| str[to_copy] = '\0'; |
| } |
| PyMem_FREE(buffer); |
| #endif |
| Done: |
| if (size > 0) |
| str[size-1] = '\0'; |
| return len; |
| #undef _PyOS_vsnprintf_EXTRA_SPACE |
| } |