-/* $Id$ */
-
/* Internal PDCLib configuration <_PDCLIB_config.h>
(Generic Template)
Permission is granted to use, modify, and / or redistribute at will.
*/
+#ifndef _PDCLIB_CONFIG_H
+#define _PDCLIB_CONFIG_H _PDCLIB_CONFIG_H
+
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* Misc */
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* compiler manuals. */
#define _PDCLIB_SHRT_BYTES 2
#define _PDCLIB_INT_BYTES 4
+#ifdef __LP64__
+#define _PDCLIB_LONG_BYTES 8
+#else
#define _PDCLIB_LONG_BYTES 4
+#endif
#define _PDCLIB_LLONG_BYTES 8
/* <stdlib.h> defines the div() function family that allows taking quotient */
/* SHRT, INT, LONG, or LLONG (telling which values to use for the *_MIN and */
/* *_MAX limits); the lowercase define either short, int, long, or long long */
/* (telling the actual type to use). */
+/* The third define is the length modifier used for the type in printf() and */
+/* scanf() functions (used in <inttypes.h>). */
/* If you require a non-standard datatype to define the "usually fastest" */
/* types, PDCLib as-is doesn't support that. Please contact the author with */
/* details on your platform in that case, so support can be added. */
#define _PDCLIB_FAST8 INT
#define _PDCLIB_fast8 int
+#define _PDCLIB_FAST8_CONV
#define _PDCLIB_FAST16 INT
#define _PDCLIB_fast16 int
+#define _PDCLIB_FAST16_CONV
#define _PDCLIB_FAST32 INT
#define _PDCLIB_fast32 int
+#define _PDCLIB_FAST32_CONV
-#define _PDCLIB_FAST64 LLONG
-#define _PDCLIB_fast64 long long
+#define _PDCLIB_FAST64 LONG
+#define _PDCLIB_fast64 long
+#define _PDCLIB_FAST64_CONV l
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* What follows are a couple of "special" typedefs and their limits. Again, */
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* The result type of substracting two pointers */
-#define _PDCLIB_ptrdiff int
-#define _PDCLIB_PTRDIFF INT
+#define _PDCLIB_ptrdiff long
+#define _PDCLIB_PTRDIFF LONG
+#define _PDCLIB_PTR_CONV l
/* An integer type that can be accessed as atomic entity (think asynchronous
interrupts). The type itself is not defined in a freestanding environment,
but its limits are. (Don't ask.)
*/
+#define _PDCLIB_sig_atomic int
#define _PDCLIB_SIG_ATOMIC INT
/* Result type of the 'sizeof' operator (must be unsigned) */
-#define _PDCLIB_size unsigned int
-#define _PDCLIB_SIZE UINT
+#define _PDCLIB_size unsigned long
+#define _PDCLIB_SIZE ULONG
/* Large enough an integer to hold all character codes of the largest supported
locale.
*/
-#define _PDCLIB_wchar unsigned short
+#define _PDCLIB_wchar unsigned short
#define _PDCLIB_WCHAR USHRT
-#define _PDCLIB_intptr int
-#define _PDCLIB_INTPTR INT
+/* (Signed) integer type capable of taking the (cast) value of a void *, and
+ having the value cast back to void *, comparing equal to the original.
+*/
+#define _PDCLIB_intptr long
+#define _PDCLIB_INTPTR LONG
/* Largest supported integer type. Implementation note: see _PDCLIB_atomax(). */
#define _PDCLIB_intmax long long int
-#define _PDCLIB_INTMAX LLINT
+#define _PDCLIB_INTMAX LLONG
+#define _PDCLIB_MAX_CONV ll
/* You are also required to state the literal suffix for the intmax type */
#define _PDCLIB_INTMAX_LITERAL ll
+/* <inttypes.h> defines imaxdiv(), which is equivalent to the div() function */
+/* family (see further above) with intmax_t as basis. */
+
+struct _PDCLIB_imaxdiv_t
+{
+ _PDCLIB_intmax quot;
+ _PDCLIB_intmax rem;
+};
+
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* Floating Point */
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* Variable Length Parameter List Handling (<stdarg.h>)
The macros defined by <stdarg.h> are highly dependent on the calling
conventions used, and you probably have to replace them with builtins of
- your compiler. The following generic implementation works only for pure
+ your compiler.
+*/
+
+#ifdef __i386
+
+/* The following generic implementation works only for pure
stack-based architectures, and only if arguments are aligned to pointer
type. Credits to Michael Moody, who contributed this to the Public Domain.
*/
#define _PDCLIB_va_end( ap ) ( (ap) = (void *)0, (void)0 )
#define _PDCLIB_va_start( ap, parmN ) ( (ap) = (char *) &parmN + ( _PDCLIB_va_round(parmN) ), (void)0 )
+#elif __x86_64
+
+/* No way to cover x86_64 with a generic implementation, as it uses register-
+ based parameter passing. Using the GCC builtins here.
+*/
+typedef __builtin_va_list _PDCLIB_va_list;
+#define _PDCLIB_va_arg( ap, type ) ( __builtin_va_arg( ap, type ) )
+#define _PDCLIB_va_copy( dest, src ) ( __builtin_va_copy( dest, src ) )
+#define _PDCLIB_va_end( ap ) ( __builtin_va_end( ap ) )
+#define _PDCLIB_va_start( ap, parmN ) ( __builtin_va_start( ap, parmN ) )
+
+#else
+
+#error Please create your own _PDCLIB_config.h. Using the existing one as-is will not work.
+
+#endif
+
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/* OS "glue", part 1 */
/* These are values and data type definitions that you would have to adapt to */
/* Set this to the page size of your OS. If your OS does not support paging, set
to an appropriate value. (Too small, and malloc() will call the kernel too
- often. Too large, and you will waste memory.
+ often. Too large, and you will waste memory.)
*/
#define _PDCLIB_PAGESIZE 4096
-/* Set this to the minimum memory node size. Any malloc() for a smaller siz
- will be satisfied by a malloc() of this size instead.
+/* Set this to the minimum memory node size. Any malloc() for a smaller size
+ will be satisfied by a malloc() of this size instead (to avoid excessive
+ fragmentation).
*/
#define _PDCLIB_MINALLOC 8
/* I/O ---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
-/* The unique file descriptor returned by _PDCLIB_open(). */
+/* The type of the file descriptor returned by _PDCLIB_open(). */
typedef int _PDCLIB_fd_t;
/* The value (of type _PDCLIB_fd_t) returned by _PDCLIB_open() if the operation
failed.
*/
-#define _PDCLIB_NOHANDLE -1
-
-/* A type in which to store file offsets. See fgetpos() / fsetpos(). */
-/* FIXME: The 'int' types here are placeholders. When changed, check out
- stdinit.c, too. */
-typedef struct
-{
- int position;
- int mbstate;
-} _PDCLIB_fpos_t;
+#define _PDCLIB_NOHANDLE ( (_PDCLIB_fd_t) -1 )
/* The default size for file buffers. Must be at least 256. */
#define _PDCLIB_BUFSIZ 1024
/* The minimum number of files the implementation can open simultaneously. Must
- be at least 8.
+ be at least 8. Depends largely on how the bookkeeping is done by fopen() /
+ freopen() / fclose(). The example implementation limits the number of open
+ files only by available memory.
*/
#define _PDCLIB_FOPEN_MAX 8
/* Length of the longest filename the implementation guarantees to support. */
#define _PDCLIB_FILENAME_MAX 128
-/* Buffer size for tmpnam(). */
-#define _PDCLIB_L_tmpnam 100
+/* Maximum length of filenames generated by tmpnam(). (See tmpfile.c.) */
+#define _PDCLIB_L_tmpnam 46
/* Number of distinct file names that can be generated by tmpnam(). */
#define _PDCLIB_TMP_MAX 50
+
+/* The values of SEEK_SET, SEEK_CUR and SEEK_END, used by fseek().
+ Since at least one platform (POSIX) uses the same symbols for its own "seek"
+ function, we use whatever the host defines (if it does define them).
+*/
+#define _PDCLIB_SEEK_SET 0
+#define _PDCLIB_SEEK_CUR 1
+#define _PDCLIB_SEEK_END 2
+
+/* The number of characters that can be buffered with ungetc(). The standard
+ guarantees only one (1); anything larger would make applications relying on
+ this capability dependent on implementation-defined behaviour (not good).
+*/
+#define _PDCLIB_UNGETCBUFSIZE 1
+
+/* errno -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
+
+/* These are the values that _PDCLIB_errno can be set to by the library.
+
+ By keeping PDCLib's errno in the _PDCLIB_* namespace, the library is capable
+ to "translate" between errno values used by the hosting operating system and
+ those used and passed out by the library.
+
+ Example: In the example platform, the remove() function uses the unlink()
+ system call as backend. Linux sets its errno to EISDIR if you try to unlink()
+ a directory, but POSIX demands EPERM. Within the remove() function, you can
+ catch the 'errno == EISDIR', and set '_PDCLIB_errno = _PDCLIB_EPERM'. Anyone
+ using PDCLib's <errno.h> will "see" EPERM instead of EISDIR (the _PDCLIB_*
+ prefix removed by <errno.h> mechanics).
+
+ If you do not want that kind of translation, you might want to "match" the
+ values used by PDCLib with those used by the host OS, as to avoid confusion.
+
+ The standard only defines three distinct errno values: ERANGE, EDOM, and
+ EILSEQ. The standard leaves it up to "the implementation" whether there are
+ any more beyond those three. There is some controversy as to whether errno is
+ such a good idea at all, so you might want to come up with a different error
+ reporting facility for your platform. Since errno values beyond the three
+ defined by the standard are not portable anyway (unless you look at POSIX),
+ having your own error reporting facility would not hurt anybody either.
+*/
+#define _PDCLIB_ERANGE 1
+#define _PDCLIB_EDOM 2
+#define _PDCLIB_EILSEQ 3
+
+/* The following is not strictly "configuration", but there is no better place
+ to explain it than here.
+
+ PDCLib strives to be as generic as possible, so by default it does NOT define
+ any values beyond the three standard ones above, even where it would have
+ been prudent and convenient to do so. Any errno "caught" from the host OS,
+ and some internal error conditions as well, are all lumped together into the
+ value of '_PDCLIB_ERROR'.
+
+ '_PDCLIB_ERROR' is STRICLY meant as a PLACEHOLDER only.
+
+ You should NEVER ship an adaption of PDCLib still using that particular
+ value. You should NEVER write code that *tests* for that value. Indeed it is
+ not even conforming, since errno values should be defined as beginning with
+ an uppercase 'E', and there is no mechanics in <errno.h> to unmask that
+ particular value (for exactly that reason).
+
+ There also is no error message available for this value through either the
+ strerror() or perror() functions. It is being reported as "unknown" error.
+
+ The idea is that you scan the source of PDCLib for occurrences of this macro
+ and replace _PDCLIB_ERROR with whatever additional errno value you came up
+ with for your platform.
+
+ If you cannot find it within you to do that, tell your clients to check for
+ an errno value larger than zero. That, at least, would be standard compliant
+ (and fully portable).
+*/
+#define _PDCLIB_ERROR 4
+
+/* The maximum value that errno can be set to. This is used to set the size */
+/* of the array in struct lconv (<locale.h>) holding error messages for the */
+/* strerror() and perror() functions. (If you change this value because you */
+/* are using additional errno values, you *HAVE* to provide appropriate error */
+/* messages for *ALL* locales.) */
+/* Default is 4 (0, ERANGE, EDOM, EILSEQ). */
+#define _PDCLIB_ERRNO_MAX 4
+
+#endif