#ifndef _UTIL_H #define _UTIL_H #include <stdarg.h> #include <stdbool.h> #include <getopt.h> /* * Copyright 2011 The Chromium Authors, All Rights Reserved. * Copyright 2008 Jon Loeliger, Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as * published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the * License, or (at your option) any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU * General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 * USA */ #define ARRAY_SIZE(x) (sizeof(x) / sizeof((x)[0])) static inline void __attribute__((noreturn)) die(const char *str, ...) { va_list ap; va_start(ap, str); fprintf(stderr, "FATAL ERROR: "); vfprintf(stderr, str, ap); va_end(ap); exit(1); } static inline void *xmalloc(size_t len) { void *new = malloc(len); if (!new) die("malloc() failed\n"); return new; } static inline void *xrealloc(void *p, size_t len) { void *new = realloc(p, len); if (!new) die("realloc() failed (len=%d)\n", len); return new; } extern char *xstrdup(const char *s); extern char *join_path(const char *path, const char *name); /** * Check a property of a given length to see if it is all printable and * has a valid terminator. The property can contain either a single string, * or multiple strings each of non-zero length. * * @param data The string to check * @param len The string length including terminator * @return 1 if a valid printable string, 0 if not */ bool util_is_printable_string(const void *data, int len); /* * Parse an escaped character starting at index i in string s. The resulting * character will be returned and the index i will be updated to point at the * character directly after the end of the encoding, this may be the '\0' * terminator of the string. */ char get_escape_char(const char *s, int *i); /** * Read a device tree file into a buffer. This will report any errors on * stderr. * * @param filename The filename to read, or - for stdin * @return Pointer to allocated buffer containing fdt, or NULL on error */ char *utilfdt_read(const char *filename); /** * Like utilfdt_read(), but also passes back the size of the file read. * * @param len If non-NULL, the amount of data we managed to read */ char *utilfdt_read_len(const char *filename, off_t *len); /** * Read a device tree file into a buffer. Does not report errors, but only * returns them. The value returned can be passed to strerror() to obtain * an error message for the user. * * @param filename The filename to read, or - for stdin * @param buffp Returns pointer to buffer containing fdt * @return 0 if ok, else an errno value representing the error */ int utilfdt_read_err(const char *filename, char **buffp); /** * Like utilfdt_read_err(), but also passes back the size of the file read. * * @param len If non-NULL, the amount of data we managed to read */ int utilfdt_read_err_len(const char *filename, char **buffp, off_t *len); /** * Write a device tree buffer to a file. This will report any errors on * stderr. * * @param filename The filename to write, or - for stdout * @param blob Poiner to buffer containing fdt * @return 0 if ok, -1 on error */ int utilfdt_write(const char *filename, const void *blob); /** * Write a device tree buffer to a file. Does not report errors, but only * returns them. The value returned can be passed to strerror() to obtain * an error message for the user. * * @param filename The filename to write, or - for stdout * @param blob Poiner to buffer containing fdt * @return 0 if ok, else an errno value representing the error */ int utilfdt_write_err(const char *filename, const void *blob); /** * Decode a data type string. The purpose of this string * * The string consists of an optional character followed by the type: * Modifier characters: * hh or b 1 byte * h 2 byte * l 4 byte, default * * Type character: * s string * i signed integer * u unsigned integer * x hex * * TODO: Implement ll modifier (8 bytes) * TODO: Implement o type (octal) * * @param fmt Format string to process * @param type Returns type found(s/d/u/x), or 0 if none * @param size Returns size found(1,2,4,8) or 4 if none * @return 0 if ok, -1 on error (no type given, or other invalid format) */ int utilfdt_decode_type(const char *fmt, int *type, int *size); /* * This is a usage message fragment for the -t option. It is the format * supported by utilfdt_decode_type. */ #define USAGE_TYPE_MSG \ "<type>\ts=string, i=int, u=unsigned, x=hex\n" \ "\tOptional modifier prefix:\n" \ "\t\thh or b=byte, h=2 byte, l=4 byte (default)"; /** * Print property data in a readable format to stdout * * Properties that look like strings will be printed as strings. Otherwise * the data will be displayed either as cells (if len is a multiple of 4 * bytes) or bytes. * * If len is 0 then this function does nothing. * * @param data Pointers to property data * @param len Length of property data */ void utilfdt_print_data(const char *data, int len); /** * Show source version and exit */ void util_version(void) __attribute__((noreturn)); /** * Show usage and exit * * This helps standardize the output of various utils. You most likely want * to use the usage() helper below rather than call this. * * @param errmsg If non-NULL, an error message to display * @param synopsis The initial example usage text (and possible examples) * @param short_opts The string of short options * @param long_opts The structure of long options * @param opts_help An array of help strings (should align with long_opts) */ void util_usage(const char *errmsg, const char *synopsis, const char *short_opts, struct option const long_opts[], const char * const opts_help[]) __attribute__((noreturn)); /** * Show usage and exit * * If you name all your usage variables with usage_xxx, then you can call this * help macro rather than expanding all arguments yourself. * * @param errmsg If non-NULL, an error message to display */ #define usage(errmsg) \ util_usage(errmsg, usage_synopsis, usage_short_opts, \ usage_long_opts, usage_opts_help) /** * Call getopt_long() with standard options * * Since all util code runs getopt in the same way, provide a helper. */ #define util_getopt_long() getopt_long(argc, argv, usage_short_opts, \ usage_long_opts, NULL) /* Helper for aligning long_opts array */ #define a_argument required_argument /* Helper for usage_short_opts string constant */ #define USAGE_COMMON_SHORT_OPTS "hV" /* Helper for usage_long_opts option array */ #define USAGE_COMMON_LONG_OPTS \ {"help", no_argument, NULL, 'h'}, \ {"version", no_argument, NULL, 'V'}, \ {NULL, no_argument, NULL, 0x0} /* Helper for usage_opts_help array */ #define USAGE_COMMON_OPTS_HELP \ "Print this help and exit", \ "Print version and exit", \ NULL /* Helper for getopt case statements */ #define case_USAGE_COMMON_FLAGS \ case 'h': usage(NULL); \ case 'V': util_version(); \ case '?': usage("unknown option"); #endif /* _UTIL_H */