1 /* 2 * Simple C functions to supplement the C library 3 * 4 * Copyright (c) 2006 Fabrice Bellard 5 * 6 * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy 7 * of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal 8 * in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights 9 * to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell 10 * copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is 11 * furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: 12 * 13 * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in 14 * all copies or substantial portions of the Software. 15 * 16 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR 17 * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, 18 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL 19 * THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER 20 * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, 21 * OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN 22 * THE SOFTWARE. 23 */ 24 25 #include "qemu/osdep.h" 26 #include "qemu/host-utils.h" 27 #include <math.h> 28 29 #include "qemu-common.h" 30 #include "qemu/sockets.h" 31 #include "qemu/iov.h" 32 #include "net/net.h" 33 #include "qemu/ctype.h" 34 #include "qemu/cutils.h" 35 #include "qemu/error-report.h" 36 37 void strpadcpy(char *buf, int buf_size, const char *str, char pad) 38 { 39 int len = qemu_strnlen(str, buf_size); 40 memcpy(buf, str, len); 41 memset(buf + len, pad, buf_size - len); 42 } 43 44 void pstrcpy(char *buf, int buf_size, const char *str) 45 { 46 int c; 47 char *q = buf; 48 49 if (buf_size <= 0) 50 return; 51 52 for(;;) { 53 c = *str++; 54 if (c == 0 || q >= buf + buf_size - 1) 55 break; 56 *q++ = c; 57 } 58 *q = '\0'; 59 } 60 61 /* strcat and truncate. */ 62 char *pstrcat(char *buf, int buf_size, const char *s) 63 { 64 int len; 65 len = strlen(buf); 66 if (len < buf_size) 67 pstrcpy(buf + len, buf_size - len, s); 68 return buf; 69 } 70 71 int strstart(const char *str, const char *val, const char **ptr) 72 { 73 const char *p, *q; 74 p = str; 75 q = val; 76 while (*q != '\0') { 77 if (*p != *q) 78 return 0; 79 p++; 80 q++; 81 } 82 if (ptr) 83 *ptr = p; 84 return 1; 85 } 86 87 int stristart(const char *str, const char *val, const char **ptr) 88 { 89 const char *p, *q; 90 p = str; 91 q = val; 92 while (*q != '\0') { 93 if (qemu_toupper(*p) != qemu_toupper(*q)) 94 return 0; 95 p++; 96 q++; 97 } 98 if (ptr) 99 *ptr = p; 100 return 1; 101 } 102 103 /* XXX: use host strnlen if available ? */ 104 int qemu_strnlen(const char *s, int max_len) 105 { 106 int i; 107 108 for(i = 0; i < max_len; i++) { 109 if (s[i] == '\0') { 110 break; 111 } 112 } 113 return i; 114 } 115 116 char *qemu_strsep(char **input, const char *delim) 117 { 118 char *result = *input; 119 if (result != NULL) { 120 char *p; 121 122 for (p = result; *p != '\0'; p++) { 123 if (strchr(delim, *p)) { 124 break; 125 } 126 } 127 if (*p == '\0') { 128 *input = NULL; 129 } else { 130 *p = '\0'; 131 *input = p + 1; 132 } 133 } 134 return result; 135 } 136 137 time_t mktimegm(struct tm *tm) 138 { 139 time_t t; 140 int y = tm->tm_year + 1900, m = tm->tm_mon + 1, d = tm->tm_mday; 141 if (m < 3) { 142 m += 12; 143 y--; 144 } 145 t = 86400ULL * (d + (153 * m - 457) / 5 + 365 * y + y / 4 - y / 100 + 146 y / 400 - 719469); 147 t += 3600 * tm->tm_hour + 60 * tm->tm_min + tm->tm_sec; 148 return t; 149 } 150 151 /* 152 * Make sure data goes on disk, but if possible do not bother to 153 * write out the inode just for timestamp updates. 154 * 155 * Unfortunately even in 2009 many operating systems do not support 156 * fdatasync and have to fall back to fsync. 157 */ 158 int qemu_fdatasync(int fd) 159 { 160 #ifdef CONFIG_FDATASYNC 161 return fdatasync(fd); 162 #else 163 return fsync(fd); 164 #endif 165 } 166 167 /** 168 * Sync changes made to the memory mapped file back to the backing 169 * storage. For POSIX compliant systems this will fallback 170 * to regular msync call. Otherwise it will trigger whole file sync 171 * (including the metadata case there is no support to skip that otherwise) 172 * 173 * @addr - start of the memory area to be synced 174 * @length - length of the are to be synced 175 * @fd - file descriptor for the file to be synced 176 * (mandatory only for POSIX non-compliant systems) 177 */ 178 int qemu_msync(void *addr, size_t length, int fd) 179 { 180 #ifdef CONFIG_POSIX 181 size_t align_mask = ~(qemu_real_host_page_size - 1); 182 183 /** 184 * There are no strict reqs as per the length of mapping 185 * to be synced. Still the length needs to follow the address 186 * alignment changes. Additionally - round the size to the multiple 187 * of PAGE_SIZE 188 */ 189 length += ((uintptr_t)addr & (qemu_real_host_page_size - 1)); 190 length = (length + ~align_mask) & align_mask; 191 192 addr = (void *)((uintptr_t)addr & align_mask); 193 194 return msync(addr, length, MS_SYNC); 195 #else /* CONFIG_POSIX */ 196 /** 197 * Perform the sync based on the file descriptor 198 * The sync range will most probably be wider than the one 199 * requested - but it will still get the job done 200 */ 201 return qemu_fdatasync(fd); 202 #endif /* CONFIG_POSIX */ 203 } 204 205 #ifndef _WIN32 206 /* Sets a specific flag */ 207 int fcntl_setfl(int fd, int flag) 208 { 209 int flags; 210 211 flags = fcntl(fd, F_GETFL); 212 if (flags == -1) 213 return -errno; 214 215 if (fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, flags | flag) == -1) 216 return -errno; 217 218 return 0; 219 } 220 #endif 221 222 static int64_t suffix_mul(char suffix, int64_t unit) 223 { 224 switch (qemu_toupper(suffix)) { 225 case 'B': 226 return 1; 227 case 'K': 228 return unit; 229 case 'M': 230 return unit * unit; 231 case 'G': 232 return unit * unit * unit; 233 case 'T': 234 return unit * unit * unit * unit; 235 case 'P': 236 return unit * unit * unit * unit * unit; 237 case 'E': 238 return unit * unit * unit * unit * unit * unit; 239 } 240 return -1; 241 } 242 243 /* 244 * Convert string to bytes, allowing either B/b for bytes, K/k for KB, 245 * M/m for MB, G/g for GB or T/t for TB. End pointer will be returned 246 * in *end, if not NULL. Return -ERANGE on overflow, and -EINVAL on 247 * other error. 248 */ 249 static int do_strtosz(const char *nptr, const char **end, 250 const char default_suffix, int64_t unit, 251 uint64_t *result) 252 { 253 int retval; 254 const char *endptr; 255 unsigned char c; 256 int mul_required = 0; 257 double val, mul, integral, fraction; 258 259 retval = qemu_strtod_finite(nptr, &endptr, &val); 260 if (retval) { 261 goto out; 262 } 263 fraction = modf(val, &integral); 264 if (fraction != 0) { 265 mul_required = 1; 266 } 267 c = *endptr; 268 mul = suffix_mul(c, unit); 269 if (mul >= 0) { 270 endptr++; 271 } else { 272 mul = suffix_mul(default_suffix, unit); 273 assert(mul >= 0); 274 } 275 if (mul == 1 && mul_required) { 276 retval = -EINVAL; 277 goto out; 278 } 279 /* 280 * Values near UINT64_MAX overflow to 2**64 when converting to double 281 * precision. Compare against the maximum representable double precision 282 * value below 2**64, computed as "the next value after 2**64 (0x1p64) in 283 * the direction of 0". 284 */ 285 if ((val * mul > nextafter(0x1p64, 0)) || val < 0) { 286 retval = -ERANGE; 287 goto out; 288 } 289 *result = val * mul; 290 retval = 0; 291 292 out: 293 if (end) { 294 *end = endptr; 295 } else if (*endptr) { 296 retval = -EINVAL; 297 } 298 299 return retval; 300 } 301 302 int qemu_strtosz(const char *nptr, const char **end, uint64_t *result) 303 { 304 return do_strtosz(nptr, end, 'B', 1024, result); 305 } 306 307 int qemu_strtosz_MiB(const char *nptr, const char **end, uint64_t *result) 308 { 309 return do_strtosz(nptr, end, 'M', 1024, result); 310 } 311 312 int qemu_strtosz_metric(const char *nptr, const char **end, uint64_t *result) 313 { 314 return do_strtosz(nptr, end, 'B', 1000, result); 315 } 316 317 /** 318 * Helper function for error checking after strtol() and the like 319 */ 320 static int check_strtox_error(const char *nptr, char *ep, 321 const char **endptr, int libc_errno) 322 { 323 assert(ep >= nptr); 324 if (endptr) { 325 *endptr = ep; 326 } 327 328 /* Turn "no conversion" into an error */ 329 if (libc_errno == 0 && ep == nptr) { 330 return -EINVAL; 331 } 332 333 /* Fail when we're expected to consume the string, but didn't */ 334 if (!endptr && *ep) { 335 return -EINVAL; 336 } 337 338 return -libc_errno; 339 } 340 341 /** 342 * Convert string @nptr to an integer, and store it in @result. 343 * 344 * This is a wrapper around strtol() that is harder to misuse. 345 * Semantics of @nptr, @endptr, @base match strtol() with differences 346 * noted below. 347 * 348 * @nptr may be null, and no conversion is performed then. 349 * 350 * If no conversion is performed, store @nptr in *@endptr and return 351 * -EINVAL. 352 * 353 * If @endptr is null, and the string isn't fully converted, return 354 * -EINVAL. This is the case when the pointer that would be stored in 355 * a non-null @endptr points to a character other than '\0'. 356 * 357 * If the conversion overflows @result, store INT_MAX in @result, 358 * and return -ERANGE. 359 * 360 * If the conversion underflows @result, store INT_MIN in @result, 361 * and return -ERANGE. 362 * 363 * Else store the converted value in @result, and return zero. 364 */ 365 int qemu_strtoi(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base, 366 int *result) 367 { 368 char *ep; 369 long long lresult; 370 371 assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1); 372 if (!nptr) { 373 if (endptr) { 374 *endptr = nptr; 375 } 376 return -EINVAL; 377 } 378 379 errno = 0; 380 lresult = strtoll(nptr, &ep, base); 381 if (lresult < INT_MIN) { 382 *result = INT_MIN; 383 errno = ERANGE; 384 } else if (lresult > INT_MAX) { 385 *result = INT_MAX; 386 errno = ERANGE; 387 } else { 388 *result = lresult; 389 } 390 return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno); 391 } 392 393 /** 394 * Convert string @nptr to an unsigned integer, and store it in @result. 395 * 396 * This is a wrapper around strtoul() that is harder to misuse. 397 * Semantics of @nptr, @endptr, @base match strtoul() with differences 398 * noted below. 399 * 400 * @nptr may be null, and no conversion is performed then. 401 * 402 * If no conversion is performed, store @nptr in *@endptr and return 403 * -EINVAL. 404 * 405 * If @endptr is null, and the string isn't fully converted, return 406 * -EINVAL. This is the case when the pointer that would be stored in 407 * a non-null @endptr points to a character other than '\0'. 408 * 409 * If the conversion overflows @result, store UINT_MAX in @result, 410 * and return -ERANGE. 411 * 412 * Else store the converted value in @result, and return zero. 413 * 414 * Note that a number with a leading minus sign gets converted without 415 * the minus sign, checked for overflow (see above), then negated (in 416 * @result's type). This is exactly how strtoul() works. 417 */ 418 int qemu_strtoui(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base, 419 unsigned int *result) 420 { 421 char *ep; 422 long long lresult; 423 424 assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1); 425 if (!nptr) { 426 if (endptr) { 427 *endptr = nptr; 428 } 429 return -EINVAL; 430 } 431 432 errno = 0; 433 lresult = strtoull(nptr, &ep, base); 434 435 /* Windows returns 1 for negative out-of-range values. */ 436 if (errno == ERANGE) { 437 *result = -1; 438 } else { 439 if (lresult > UINT_MAX) { 440 *result = UINT_MAX; 441 errno = ERANGE; 442 } else if (lresult < INT_MIN) { 443 *result = UINT_MAX; 444 errno = ERANGE; 445 } else { 446 *result = lresult; 447 } 448 } 449 return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno); 450 } 451 452 /** 453 * Convert string @nptr to a long integer, and store it in @result. 454 * 455 * This is a wrapper around strtol() that is harder to misuse. 456 * Semantics of @nptr, @endptr, @base match strtol() with differences 457 * noted below. 458 * 459 * @nptr may be null, and no conversion is performed then. 460 * 461 * If no conversion is performed, store @nptr in *@endptr and return 462 * -EINVAL. 463 * 464 * If @endptr is null, and the string isn't fully converted, return 465 * -EINVAL. This is the case when the pointer that would be stored in 466 * a non-null @endptr points to a character other than '\0'. 467 * 468 * If the conversion overflows @result, store LONG_MAX in @result, 469 * and return -ERANGE. 470 * 471 * If the conversion underflows @result, store LONG_MIN in @result, 472 * and return -ERANGE. 473 * 474 * Else store the converted value in @result, and return zero. 475 */ 476 int qemu_strtol(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base, 477 long *result) 478 { 479 char *ep; 480 481 assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1); 482 if (!nptr) { 483 if (endptr) { 484 *endptr = nptr; 485 } 486 return -EINVAL; 487 } 488 489 errno = 0; 490 *result = strtol(nptr, &ep, base); 491 return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno); 492 } 493 494 /** 495 * Convert string @nptr to an unsigned long, and store it in @result. 496 * 497 * This is a wrapper around strtoul() that is harder to misuse. 498 * Semantics of @nptr, @endptr, @base match strtoul() with differences 499 * noted below. 500 * 501 * @nptr may be null, and no conversion is performed then. 502 * 503 * If no conversion is performed, store @nptr in *@endptr and return 504 * -EINVAL. 505 * 506 * If @endptr is null, and the string isn't fully converted, return 507 * -EINVAL. This is the case when the pointer that would be stored in 508 * a non-null @endptr points to a character other than '\0'. 509 * 510 * If the conversion overflows @result, store ULONG_MAX in @result, 511 * and return -ERANGE. 512 * 513 * Else store the converted value in @result, and return zero. 514 * 515 * Note that a number with a leading minus sign gets converted without 516 * the minus sign, checked for overflow (see above), then negated (in 517 * @result's type). This is exactly how strtoul() works. 518 */ 519 int qemu_strtoul(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base, 520 unsigned long *result) 521 { 522 char *ep; 523 524 assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1); 525 if (!nptr) { 526 if (endptr) { 527 *endptr = nptr; 528 } 529 return -EINVAL; 530 } 531 532 errno = 0; 533 *result = strtoul(nptr, &ep, base); 534 /* Windows returns 1 for negative out-of-range values. */ 535 if (errno == ERANGE) { 536 *result = -1; 537 } 538 return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno); 539 } 540 541 /** 542 * Convert string @nptr to an int64_t. 543 * 544 * Works like qemu_strtol(), except it stores INT64_MAX on overflow, 545 * and INT_MIN on underflow. 546 */ 547 int qemu_strtoi64(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base, 548 int64_t *result) 549 { 550 char *ep; 551 552 assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1); 553 if (!nptr) { 554 if (endptr) { 555 *endptr = nptr; 556 } 557 return -EINVAL; 558 } 559 560 errno = 0; 561 /* FIXME This assumes int64_t is long long */ 562 *result = strtoll(nptr, &ep, base); 563 return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno); 564 } 565 566 /** 567 * Convert string @nptr to an uint64_t. 568 * 569 * Works like qemu_strtoul(), except it stores UINT64_MAX on overflow. 570 */ 571 int qemu_strtou64(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base, 572 uint64_t *result) 573 { 574 char *ep; 575 576 assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1); 577 if (!nptr) { 578 if (endptr) { 579 *endptr = nptr; 580 } 581 return -EINVAL; 582 } 583 584 errno = 0; 585 /* FIXME This assumes uint64_t is unsigned long long */ 586 *result = strtoull(nptr, &ep, base); 587 /* Windows returns 1 for negative out-of-range values. */ 588 if (errno == ERANGE) { 589 *result = -1; 590 } 591 return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno); 592 } 593 594 /** 595 * Convert string @nptr to a double. 596 * 597 * This is a wrapper around strtod() that is harder to misuse. 598 * Semantics of @nptr and @endptr match strtod() with differences 599 * noted below. 600 * 601 * @nptr may be null, and no conversion is performed then. 602 * 603 * If no conversion is performed, store @nptr in *@endptr and return 604 * -EINVAL. 605 * 606 * If @endptr is null, and the string isn't fully converted, return 607 * -EINVAL. This is the case when the pointer that would be stored in 608 * a non-null @endptr points to a character other than '\0'. 609 * 610 * If the conversion overflows, store +/-HUGE_VAL in @result, depending 611 * on the sign, and return -ERANGE. 612 * 613 * If the conversion underflows, store +/-0.0 in @result, depending on the 614 * sign, and return -ERANGE. 615 * 616 * Else store the converted value in @result, and return zero. 617 */ 618 int qemu_strtod(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, double *result) 619 { 620 char *ep; 621 622 if (!nptr) { 623 if (endptr) { 624 *endptr = nptr; 625 } 626 return -EINVAL; 627 } 628 629 errno = 0; 630 *result = strtod(nptr, &ep); 631 return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno); 632 } 633 634 /** 635 * Convert string @nptr to a finite double. 636 * 637 * Works like qemu_strtod(), except that "NaN" and "inf" are rejected 638 * with -EINVAL and no conversion is performed. 639 */ 640 int qemu_strtod_finite(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, double *result) 641 { 642 double tmp; 643 int ret; 644 645 ret = qemu_strtod(nptr, endptr, &tmp); 646 if (!ret && !isfinite(tmp)) { 647 if (endptr) { 648 *endptr = nptr; 649 } 650 ret = -EINVAL; 651 } 652 653 if (ret != -EINVAL) { 654 *result = tmp; 655 } 656 return ret; 657 } 658 659 /** 660 * Searches for the first occurrence of 'c' in 's', and returns a pointer 661 * to the trailing null byte if none was found. 662 */ 663 #ifndef HAVE_STRCHRNUL 664 const char *qemu_strchrnul(const char *s, int c) 665 { 666 const char *e = strchr(s, c); 667 if (!e) { 668 e = s + strlen(s); 669 } 670 return e; 671 } 672 #endif 673 674 /** 675 * parse_uint: 676 * 677 * @s: String to parse 678 * @value: Destination for parsed integer value 679 * @endptr: Destination for pointer to first character not consumed 680 * @base: integer base, between 2 and 36 inclusive, or 0 681 * 682 * Parse unsigned integer 683 * 684 * Parsed syntax is like strtoull()'s: arbitrary whitespace, a single optional 685 * '+' or '-', an optional "0x" if @base is 0 or 16, one or more digits. 686 * 687 * If @s is null, or @base is invalid, or @s doesn't start with an 688 * integer in the syntax above, set *@value to 0, *@endptr to @s, and 689 * return -EINVAL. 690 * 691 * Set *@endptr to point right beyond the parsed integer (even if the integer 692 * overflows or is negative, all digits will be parsed and *@endptr will 693 * point right beyond them). 694 * 695 * If the integer is negative, set *@value to 0, and return -ERANGE. 696 * 697 * If the integer overflows unsigned long long, set *@value to 698 * ULLONG_MAX, and return -ERANGE. 699 * 700 * Else, set *@value to the parsed integer, and return 0. 701 */ 702 int parse_uint(const char *s, unsigned long long *value, char **endptr, 703 int base) 704 { 705 int r = 0; 706 char *endp = (char *)s; 707 unsigned long long val = 0; 708 709 assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1); 710 if (!s) { 711 r = -EINVAL; 712 goto out; 713 } 714 715 errno = 0; 716 val = strtoull(s, &endp, base); 717 if (errno) { 718 r = -errno; 719 goto out; 720 } 721 722 if (endp == s) { 723 r = -EINVAL; 724 goto out; 725 } 726 727 /* make sure we reject negative numbers: */ 728 while (qemu_isspace(*s)) { 729 s++; 730 } 731 if (*s == '-') { 732 val = 0; 733 r = -ERANGE; 734 goto out; 735 } 736 737 out: 738 *value = val; 739 *endptr = endp; 740 return r; 741 } 742 743 /** 744 * parse_uint_full: 745 * 746 * @s: String to parse 747 * @value: Destination for parsed integer value 748 * @base: integer base, between 2 and 36 inclusive, or 0 749 * 750 * Parse unsigned integer from entire string 751 * 752 * Have the same behavior of parse_uint(), but with an additional check 753 * for additional data after the parsed number. If extra characters are present 754 * after the parsed number, the function will return -EINVAL, and *@v will 755 * be set to 0. 756 */ 757 int parse_uint_full(const char *s, unsigned long long *value, int base) 758 { 759 char *endp; 760 int r; 761 762 r = parse_uint(s, value, &endp, base); 763 if (r < 0) { 764 return r; 765 } 766 if (*endp) { 767 *value = 0; 768 return -EINVAL; 769 } 770 771 return 0; 772 } 773 774 int qemu_parse_fd(const char *param) 775 { 776 long fd; 777 char *endptr; 778 779 errno = 0; 780 fd = strtol(param, &endptr, 10); 781 if (param == endptr /* no conversion performed */ || 782 errno != 0 /* not representable as long; possibly others */ || 783 *endptr != '\0' /* final string not empty */ || 784 fd < 0 /* invalid as file descriptor */ || 785 fd > INT_MAX /* not representable as int */) { 786 return -1; 787 } 788 return fd; 789 } 790 791 /* 792 * Implementation of ULEB128 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LEB128) 793 * Input is limited to 14-bit numbers 794 */ 795 int uleb128_encode_small(uint8_t *out, uint32_t n) 796 { 797 g_assert(n <= 0x3fff); 798 if (n < 0x80) { 799 *out = n; 800 return 1; 801 } else { 802 *out++ = (n & 0x7f) | 0x80; 803 *out = n >> 7; 804 return 2; 805 } 806 } 807 808 int uleb128_decode_small(const uint8_t *in, uint32_t *n) 809 { 810 if (!(*in & 0x80)) { 811 *n = *in; 812 return 1; 813 } else { 814 *n = *in++ & 0x7f; 815 /* we exceed 14 bit number */ 816 if (*in & 0x80) { 817 return -1; 818 } 819 *n |= *in << 7; 820 return 2; 821 } 822 } 823 824 /* 825 * helper to parse debug environment variables 826 */ 827 int parse_debug_env(const char *name, int max, int initial) 828 { 829 char *debug_env = getenv(name); 830 char *inv = NULL; 831 long debug; 832 833 if (!debug_env) { 834 return initial; 835 } 836 errno = 0; 837 debug = strtol(debug_env, &inv, 10); 838 if (inv == debug_env) { 839 return initial; 840 } 841 if (debug < 0 || debug > max || errno != 0) { 842 warn_report("%s not in [0, %d]", name, max); 843 return initial; 844 } 845 return debug; 846 } 847 848 /* 849 * Helper to print ethernet mac address 850 */ 851 const char *qemu_ether_ntoa(const MACAddr *mac) 852 { 853 static char ret[18]; 854 855 snprintf(ret, sizeof(ret), "%02x:%02x:%02x:%02x:%02x:%02x", 856 mac->a[0], mac->a[1], mac->a[2], mac->a[3], mac->a[4], mac->a[5]); 857 858 return ret; 859 } 860 861 /* 862 * Return human readable string for size @val. 863 * @val can be anything that uint64_t allows (no more than "16 EiB"). 864 * Use IEC binary units like KiB, MiB, and so forth. 865 * Caller is responsible for passing it to g_free(). 866 */ 867 char *size_to_str(uint64_t val) 868 { 869 static const char *suffixes[] = { "", "Ki", "Mi", "Gi", "Ti", "Pi", "Ei" }; 870 uint64_t div; 871 int i; 872 873 /* 874 * The exponent (returned in i) minus one gives us 875 * floor(log2(val * 1024 / 1000). The correction makes us 876 * switch to the higher power when the integer part is >= 1000. 877 * (see e41b509d68afb1f for more info) 878 */ 879 frexp(val / (1000.0 / 1024.0), &i); 880 i = (i - 1) / 10; 881 div = 1ULL << (i * 10); 882 883 return g_strdup_printf("%0.3g %sB", (double)val / div, suffixes[i]); 884 } 885 886 int qemu_pstrcmp0(const char **str1, const char **str2) 887 { 888 return g_strcmp0(*str1, *str2); 889 } 890