Added some notes about libvirt string/memory/buffer functions

This commit is contained in:
Daniel P. Berrange 2008-05-08 14:49:53 +00:00
parent 021bd31706
commit d9691ab277
2 changed files with 119 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -1,3 +1,7 @@
Thu May 8 10:36:11 EST 2008 Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
* HACKING: Added notes on string/memory/buffer internal APIs
Thu May 8 10:36:11 EST 2008 Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com> Thu May 8 10:36:11 EST 2008 Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
* src/xm_internal.c, src/xend_internal.c: Added 'bus' attribute * src/xm_internal.c, src/xend_internal.c: Added 'bus' attribute

115
HACKING
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@ -43,3 +43,118 @@ Note that sometimes you'll have to postprocess that output further, by
piping it through "expand -i", since some leading TABs can get through. piping it through "expand -i", since some leading TABs can get through.
Usually they're in macro definitions or strings, and should be converted Usually they're in macro definitions or strings, and should be converted
anyhow. anyhow.
Low level memory management
===========================
Use of the malloc/free/realloc/calloc APIs is deprecated in the libvirt
codebase, because they encourage a number of serious coding bugs and do
not enable compile time verification of checks for NULL. Instead of these
routines, use the macros from memory.h
- eg to allocate a single object:
virDomainPtr domain;
if (VIR_ALLOC(domain) < 0) {
__virRaiseError(VIR_ERROR_NO_MEMORY)
return NULL;
}
- eg to allocate an array of objects
virDomainPtr domains;
int ndomains = 10;
if (VIR_ALLOC_N(domains, ndomains) < 0) {
__virRaiseError(VIR_ERROR_NO_MEMORY)
return NULL;
}
- eg to allocate an array of object pointers
virDomainPtr *domains;
int ndomains = 10;
if (VIR_ALLOC_N(domains, ndomains) < 0) {
__virRaiseError(VIR_ERROR_NO_MEMORY)
return NULL;
}
- eg to re-allocate the array of domains to be longer
ndomains = 20
if (VIR_REALLOC_N(domains, ndomains) < 0) {
__virRaiseError(VIR_ERROR_NO_MEMORY)
return NULL;
}
- eg to free the domain
VIR_FREE(domain);
String comparisons
==================
Do not use the strcmp, strncmp, etc functions directly. Instead use
one of the following semantically named macros
- For strict equality:
STREQ(a,b)
STRNEQ(a,b)
- For case sensitive equality:
STRCASEEQ(a,b)
STRCASENEQ(a,b)
- For strict equality of a substring:
STREQLEN(a,b,n)
STRNEQLEN(a,b,n)
- For case sensitive equality of a substring:
STRCASEEQLEN(a,b,n)
STRCASENEQLEN(a,b,n)
- For strict equality of a prefix:
STRPREFIX(a,b)
Variable length string buffer
=============================
If there is a need for complex string concatenations, avoid using
the usual sequence of malloc/strcpy/strcat/snprintf functions and
make use of the virBuffer API described in buf.h
eg typical usage is as follows:
char *
somefunction(...) {
virBuffer buf = VIR_BUFFER_INITIALIZER;
...
virBufferAddLit(&buf, "<domain>\n");
virBufferVSprint(&buf, " <memory>%d</memory>\n", memory);
...
virBufferAddLit(&buf, "</domain>\n");
....
if (virBufferError(&buf)) {
__virRaiseError(...);
return NULL;
}
return virBufferContentAndReset(&buf);
}