tvl-depot/absl/strings/string_view.h
Abseil Team 518f17501e Export of internal Abseil changes
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79913a12f0cad4baf948430315aabf53f03b6475 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Don't inline (Un)LockSlow.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 302502344

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6b340e80f0690655f24799c8de6707b3a95b8579 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:

Add hardening assertions to absl::optional's dereference operators

PiperOrigin-RevId: 302492862

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a9951bf4852d8c1aec472cb4b539830411270e4c by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:

Correctly add hardware AES compiler flags under Linux X86-64
Fixes #643

PiperOrigin-RevId: 302490673

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314c3621ee4d57b6bc8d64338a1f1d48a69741d1 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:

Upgrade to hardening assertions in absl::Span::remove_prefix and absl::Span::remove_suffix

PiperOrigin-RevId: 302481191

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a142b8c6c62705c5f0d4fe3113150f0c0b7822b9 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:

Update docker containers to Bazel 2.2.0, GCC 9.3, and new Clang snapshot

PiperOrigin-RevId: 302454042

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afedeb70a2adc87010030c9ba6f06fe35ec26407 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:

Add hardening assertions for the preconditions of absl::FixedArray

PiperOrigin-RevId: 302441767

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44442bfbc0a9a742df32f07cee86a47712efb8b4 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:

Fix new Clang warning about SpinLock doing operations on enums of different types

PiperOrigin-RevId: 302430387

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69eaff7f97231779f696321c2ba8b88debf6dd9e by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:

Convert precondition assertions to ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT for
absl::InlinedVector

PiperOrigin-RevId: 302427894

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26b6db906a0942fd18583dc2cdd1bab32919d964 by Gennadiy Rozental <rogeeff@google.com>:

Internal change

PiperOrigin-RevId: 302425283

--
e62e81422979e922505d2cd9000e1de58123c088 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:

Add an option to build Abseil in hardened mode

In hardened mode, the ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT() macro is active even
when NDEBUG is defined. This allows Abseil to perform runtime checks
even in release mode. This should be used to implement things like
bounds checks that could otherwise lead to security vulnerabilities.

Use the new assertion in absl::string_view and absl::Span to test it.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 302119187
GitOrigin-RevId: 79913a12f0cad4baf948430315aabf53f03b6475
Change-Id: I0cc3341fd333a1df313167bab72dc5a759c4a048
2020-03-23 16:24:45 -04:00

623 lines
22 KiB
C++

//
// Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
//
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// File: string_view.h
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
//
// This file contains the definition of the `absl::string_view` class. A
// `string_view` points to a contiguous span of characters, often part or all of
// another `std::string`, double-quoted string literal, character array, or even
// another `string_view`.
//
// This `absl::string_view` abstraction is designed to be a drop-in
// replacement for the C++17 `std::string_view` abstraction.
#ifndef ABSL_STRINGS_STRING_VIEW_H_
#define ABSL_STRINGS_STRING_VIEW_H_
#include <algorithm>
#include <cassert>
#include <cstddef>
#include <cstring>
#include <iosfwd>
#include <iterator>
#include <limits>
#include <string>
#include "absl/base/config.h"
#include "absl/base/internal/throw_delegate.h"
#include "absl/base/macros.h"
#include "absl/base/optimization.h"
#include "absl/base/port.h"
#ifdef ABSL_USES_STD_STRING_VIEW
#include <string_view> // IWYU pragma: export
namespace absl {
ABSL_NAMESPACE_BEGIN
using std::string_view;
ABSL_NAMESPACE_END
} // namespace absl
#else // ABSL_USES_STD_STRING_VIEW
#if ABSL_HAVE_BUILTIN(__builtin_memcmp) || \
(defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
#define ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_MEMCMP __builtin_memcmp
#else // ABSL_HAVE_BUILTIN(__builtin_memcmp)
#define ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_MEMCMP memcmp
#endif // ABSL_HAVE_BUILTIN(__builtin_memcmp)
namespace absl {
ABSL_NAMESPACE_BEGIN
// absl::string_view
//
// A `string_view` provides a lightweight view into the string data provided by
// a `std::string`, double-quoted string literal, character array, or even
// another `string_view`. A `string_view` does *not* own the string to which it
// points, and that data cannot be modified through the view.
//
// You can use `string_view` as a function or method parameter anywhere a
// parameter can receive a double-quoted string literal, `const char*`,
// `std::string`, or another `absl::string_view` argument with no need to copy
// the string data. Systematic use of `string_view` within function arguments
// reduces data copies and `strlen()` calls.
//
// Because of its small size, prefer passing `string_view` by value:
//
// void MyFunction(absl::string_view arg);
//
// If circumstances require, you may also pass one by const reference:
//
// void MyFunction(const absl::string_view& arg); // not preferred
//
// Passing by value generates slightly smaller code for many architectures.
//
// In either case, the source data of the `string_view` must outlive the
// `string_view` itself.
//
// A `string_view` is also suitable for local variables if you know that the
// lifetime of the underlying object is longer than the lifetime of your
// `string_view` variable. However, beware of binding a `string_view` to a
// temporary value:
//
// // BAD use of string_view: lifetime problem
// absl::string_view sv = obj.ReturnAString();
//
// // GOOD use of string_view: str outlives sv
// std::string str = obj.ReturnAString();
// absl::string_view sv = str;
//
// Due to lifetime issues, a `string_view` is sometimes a poor choice for a
// return value and usually a poor choice for a data member. If you do use a
// `string_view` this way, it is your responsibility to ensure that the object
// pointed to by the `string_view` outlives the `string_view`.
//
// A `string_view` may represent a whole string or just part of a string. For
// example, when splitting a string, `std::vector<absl::string_view>` is a
// natural data type for the output.
//
// When constructed from a source which is NUL-terminated, the `string_view`
// itself will not include the NUL-terminator unless a specific size (including
// the NUL) is passed to the constructor. As a result, common idioms that work
// on NUL-terminated strings do not work on `string_view` objects. If you write
// code that scans a `string_view`, you must check its length rather than test
// for nul, for example. Note, however, that nuls may still be embedded within
// a `string_view` explicitly.
//
// You may create a null `string_view` in two ways:
//
// absl::string_view sv;
// absl::string_view sv(nullptr, 0);
//
// For the above, `sv.data() == nullptr`, `sv.length() == 0`, and
// `sv.empty() == true`. Also, if you create a `string_view` with a non-null
// pointer then `sv.data() != nullptr`. Thus, you can use `string_view()` to
// signal an undefined value that is different from other `string_view` values
// in a similar fashion to how `const char* p1 = nullptr;` is different from
// `const char* p2 = "";`. However, in practice, it is not recommended to rely
// on this behavior.
//
// Be careful not to confuse a null `string_view` with an empty one. A null
// `string_view` is an empty `string_view`, but some empty `string_view`s are
// not null. Prefer checking for emptiness over checking for null.
//
// There are many ways to create an empty string_view:
//
// const char* nullcp = nullptr;
// // string_view.size() will return 0 in all cases.
// absl::string_view();
// absl::string_view(nullcp, 0);
// absl::string_view("");
// absl::string_view("", 0);
// absl::string_view("abcdef", 0);
// absl::string_view("abcdef" + 6, 0);
//
// All empty `string_view` objects whether null or not, are equal:
//
// absl::string_view() == absl::string_view("", 0)
// absl::string_view(nullptr, 0) == absl::string_view("abcdef"+6, 0)
class string_view {
public:
using traits_type = std::char_traits<char>;
using value_type = char;
using pointer = char*;
using const_pointer = const char*;
using reference = char&;
using const_reference = const char&;
using const_iterator = const char*;
using iterator = const_iterator;
using const_reverse_iterator = std::reverse_iterator<const_iterator>;
using reverse_iterator = const_reverse_iterator;
using size_type = size_t;
using difference_type = std::ptrdiff_t;
static constexpr size_type npos = static_cast<size_type>(-1);
// Null `string_view` constructor
constexpr string_view() noexcept : ptr_(nullptr), length_(0) {}
// Implicit constructors
template <typename Allocator>
string_view( // NOLINT(runtime/explicit)
const std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, Allocator>&
str) noexcept
// This is implemented in terms of `string_view(p, n)` so `str.size()`
// doesn't need to be reevaluated after `ptr_` is set.
: string_view(str.data(), str.size()) {}
// Implicit constructor of a `string_view` from NUL-terminated `str`. When
// accepting possibly null strings, use `absl::NullSafeStringView(str)`
// instead (see below).
constexpr string_view(const char* str) // NOLINT(runtime/explicit)
: ptr_(str),
length_(str ? CheckLengthInternal(StrlenInternal(str)) : 0) {}
// Implicit constructor of a `string_view` from a `const char*` and length.
constexpr string_view(const char* data, size_type len)
: ptr_(data), length_(CheckLengthInternal(len)) {}
// NOTE: Harmlessly omitted to work around gdb bug.
// constexpr string_view(const string_view&) noexcept = default;
// string_view& operator=(const string_view&) noexcept = default;
// Iterators
// string_view::begin()
//
// Returns an iterator pointing to the first character at the beginning of the
// `string_view`, or `end()` if the `string_view` is empty.
constexpr const_iterator begin() const noexcept { return ptr_; }
// string_view::end()
//
// Returns an iterator pointing just beyond the last character at the end of
// the `string_view`. This iterator acts as a placeholder; attempting to
// access it results in undefined behavior.
constexpr const_iterator end() const noexcept { return ptr_ + length_; }
// string_view::cbegin()
//
// Returns a const iterator pointing to the first character at the beginning
// of the `string_view`, or `end()` if the `string_view` is empty.
constexpr const_iterator cbegin() const noexcept { return begin(); }
// string_view::cend()
//
// Returns a const iterator pointing just beyond the last character at the end
// of the `string_view`. This pointer acts as a placeholder; attempting to
// access its element results in undefined behavior.
constexpr const_iterator cend() const noexcept { return end(); }
// string_view::rbegin()
//
// Returns a reverse iterator pointing to the last character at the end of the
// `string_view`, or `rend()` if the `string_view` is empty.
const_reverse_iterator rbegin() const noexcept {
return const_reverse_iterator(end());
}
// string_view::rend()
//
// Returns a reverse iterator pointing just before the first character at the
// beginning of the `string_view`. This pointer acts as a placeholder;
// attempting to access its element results in undefined behavior.
const_reverse_iterator rend() const noexcept {
return const_reverse_iterator(begin());
}
// string_view::crbegin()
//
// Returns a const reverse iterator pointing to the last character at the end
// of the `string_view`, or `crend()` if the `string_view` is empty.
const_reverse_iterator crbegin() const noexcept { return rbegin(); }
// string_view::crend()
//
// Returns a const reverse iterator pointing just before the first character
// at the beginning of the `string_view`. This pointer acts as a placeholder;
// attempting to access its element results in undefined behavior.
const_reverse_iterator crend() const noexcept { return rend(); }
// Capacity Utilities
// string_view::size()
//
// Returns the number of characters in the `string_view`.
constexpr size_type size() const noexcept {
return length_;
}
// string_view::length()
//
// Returns the number of characters in the `string_view`. Alias for `size()`.
constexpr size_type length() const noexcept { return size(); }
// string_view::max_size()
//
// Returns the maximum number of characters the `string_view` can hold.
constexpr size_type max_size() const noexcept { return kMaxSize; }
// string_view::empty()
//
// Checks if the `string_view` is empty (refers to no characters).
constexpr bool empty() const noexcept { return length_ == 0; }
// string_view::operator[]
//
// Returns the ith element of the `string_view` using the array operator.
// Note that this operator does not perform any bounds checking.
constexpr const_reference operator[](size_type i) const {
return ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(i < size()), ptr_[i];
}
// string_view::at()
//
// Returns the ith element of the `string_view`. Bounds checking is performed,
// and an exception of type `std::out_of_range` will be thrown on invalid
// access.
constexpr const_reference at(size_type i) const {
return ABSL_PREDICT_TRUE(i < size())
? ptr_[i]
: ((void)base_internal::ThrowStdOutOfRange(
"absl::string_view::at"),
ptr_[i]);
}
// string_view::front()
//
// Returns the first element of a `string_view`.
constexpr const_reference front() const {
return ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(!empty()), ptr_[0];
}
// string_view::back()
//
// Returns the last element of a `string_view`.
constexpr const_reference back() const {
return ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(!empty()), ptr_[size() - 1];
}
// string_view::data()
//
// Returns a pointer to the underlying character array (which is of course
// stored elsewhere). Note that `string_view::data()` may contain embedded nul
// characters, but the returned buffer may or may not be NUL-terminated;
// therefore, do not pass `data()` to a routine that expects a NUL-terminated
// string.
constexpr const_pointer data() const noexcept { return ptr_; }
// Modifiers
// string_view::remove_prefix()
//
// Removes the first `n` characters from the `string_view`. Note that the
// underlying string is not changed, only the view.
void remove_prefix(size_type n) {
ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(n <= length_);
ptr_ += n;
length_ -= n;
}
// string_view::remove_suffix()
//
// Removes the last `n` characters from the `string_view`. Note that the
// underlying string is not changed, only the view.
void remove_suffix(size_type n) {
ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(n <= length_);
length_ -= n;
}
// string_view::swap()
//
// Swaps this `string_view` with another `string_view`.
void swap(string_view& s) noexcept {
auto t = *this;
*this = s;
s = t;
}
// Explicit conversion operators
// Converts to `std::basic_string`.
template <typename A>
explicit operator std::basic_string<char, traits_type, A>() const {
if (!data()) return {};
return std::basic_string<char, traits_type, A>(data(), size());
}
// string_view::copy()
//
// Copies the contents of the `string_view` at offset `pos` and length `n`
// into `buf`.
size_type copy(char* buf, size_type n, size_type pos = 0) const {
if (ABSL_PREDICT_FALSE(pos > length_)) {
base_internal::ThrowStdOutOfRange("absl::string_view::copy");
}
size_type rlen = (std::min)(length_ - pos, n);
if (rlen > 0) {
const char* start = ptr_ + pos;
traits_type::copy(buf, start, rlen);
}
return rlen;
}
// string_view::substr()
//
// Returns a "substring" of the `string_view` (at offset `pos` and length
// `n`) as another string_view. This function throws `std::out_of_bounds` if
// `pos > size`.
constexpr string_view substr(size_type pos, size_type n = npos) const {
return ABSL_PREDICT_FALSE(pos > length_)
? (base_internal::ThrowStdOutOfRange(
"absl::string_view::substr"),
string_view())
: string_view(ptr_ + pos, Min(n, length_ - pos));
}
// string_view::compare()
//
// Performs a lexicographical comparison between the `string_view` and
// another `absl::string_view`, returning -1 if `this` is less than, 0 if
// `this` is equal to, and 1 if `this` is greater than the passed string
// view. Note that in the case of data equality, a further comparison is made
// on the respective sizes of the two `string_view`s to determine which is
// smaller, equal, or greater.
constexpr int compare(string_view x) const noexcept {
return CompareImpl(length_, x.length_,
Min(length_, x.length_) == 0
? 0
: ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_MEMCMP(
ptr_, x.ptr_, Min(length_, x.length_)));
}
// Overload of `string_view::compare()` for comparing a substring of the
// 'string_view` and another `absl::string_view`.
int compare(size_type pos1, size_type count1, string_view v) const {
return substr(pos1, count1).compare(v);
}
// Overload of `string_view::compare()` for comparing a substring of the
// `string_view` and a substring of another `absl::string_view`.
int compare(size_type pos1, size_type count1, string_view v, size_type pos2,
size_type count2) const {
return substr(pos1, count1).compare(v.substr(pos2, count2));
}
// Overload of `string_view::compare()` for comparing a `string_view` and a
// a different C-style string `s`.
int compare(const char* s) const { return compare(string_view(s)); }
// Overload of `string_view::compare()` for comparing a substring of the
// `string_view` and a different string C-style string `s`.
int compare(size_type pos1, size_type count1, const char* s) const {
return substr(pos1, count1).compare(string_view(s));
}
// Overload of `string_view::compare()` for comparing a substring of the
// `string_view` and a substring of a different C-style string `s`.
int compare(size_type pos1, size_type count1, const char* s,
size_type count2) const {
return substr(pos1, count1).compare(string_view(s, count2));
}
// Find Utilities
// string_view::find()
//
// Finds the first occurrence of the substring `s` within the `string_view`,
// returning the position of the first character's match, or `npos` if no
// match was found.
size_type find(string_view s, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
// Overload of `string_view::find()` for finding the given character `c`
// within the `string_view`.
size_type find(char c, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
// string_view::rfind()
//
// Finds the last occurrence of a substring `s` within the `string_view`,
// returning the position of the first character's match, or `npos` if no
// match was found.
size_type rfind(string_view s, size_type pos = npos) const
noexcept;
// Overload of `string_view::rfind()` for finding the last given character `c`
// within the `string_view`.
size_type rfind(char c, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
// string_view::find_first_of()
//
// Finds the first occurrence of any of the characters in `s` within the
// `string_view`, returning the start position of the match, or `npos` if no
// match was found.
size_type find_first_of(string_view s, size_type pos = 0) const
noexcept;
// Overload of `string_view::find_first_of()` for finding a character `c`
// within the `string_view`.
size_type find_first_of(char c, size_type pos = 0) const
noexcept {
return find(c, pos);
}
// string_view::find_last_of()
//
// Finds the last occurrence of any of the characters in `s` within the
// `string_view`, returning the start position of the match, or `npos` if no
// match was found.
size_type find_last_of(string_view s, size_type pos = npos) const
noexcept;
// Overload of `string_view::find_last_of()` for finding a character `c`
// within the `string_view`.
size_type find_last_of(char c, size_type pos = npos) const
noexcept {
return rfind(c, pos);
}
// string_view::find_first_not_of()
//
// Finds the first occurrence of any of the characters not in `s` within the
// `string_view`, returning the start position of the first non-match, or
// `npos` if no non-match was found.
size_type find_first_not_of(string_view s, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
// Overload of `string_view::find_first_not_of()` for finding a character
// that is not `c` within the `string_view`.
size_type find_first_not_of(char c, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
// string_view::find_last_not_of()
//
// Finds the last occurrence of any of the characters not in `s` within the
// `string_view`, returning the start position of the last non-match, or
// `npos` if no non-match was found.
size_type find_last_not_of(string_view s,
size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
// Overload of `string_view::find_last_not_of()` for finding a character
// that is not `c` within the `string_view`.
size_type find_last_not_of(char c, size_type pos = npos) const
noexcept;
private:
static constexpr size_type kMaxSize =
(std::numeric_limits<difference_type>::max)();
static constexpr size_type CheckLengthInternal(size_type len) {
return ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(len <= kMaxSize), len;
}
static constexpr size_type StrlenInternal(const char* str) {
#if defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER >= 1910 && !defined(__clang__)
// MSVC 2017+ can evaluate this at compile-time.
const char* begin = str;
while (*str != '\0') ++str;
return str - begin;
#elif ABSL_HAVE_BUILTIN(__builtin_strlen) || \
(defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
// GCC has __builtin_strlen according to
// https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.7.0/gcc/Other-Builtins.html, but
// ABSL_HAVE_BUILTIN doesn't detect that, so we use the extra checks above.
// __builtin_strlen is constexpr.
return __builtin_strlen(str);
#else
return str ? strlen(str) : 0;
#endif
}
static constexpr size_t Min(size_type length_a, size_type length_b) {
return length_a < length_b ? length_a : length_b;
}
static constexpr int CompareImpl(size_type length_a, size_type length_b,
int compare_result) {
return compare_result == 0 ? static_cast<int>(length_a > length_b) -
static_cast<int>(length_a < length_b)
: (compare_result < 0 ? -1 : 1);
}
const char* ptr_;
size_type length_;
};
// This large function is defined inline so that in a fairly common case where
// one of the arguments is a literal, the compiler can elide a lot of the
// following comparisons.
constexpr bool operator==(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
return x.size() == y.size() &&
(x.empty() ||
ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_MEMCMP(x.data(), y.data(), x.size()) == 0);
}
constexpr bool operator!=(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
return !(x == y);
}
constexpr bool operator<(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
return x.compare(y) < 0;
}
constexpr bool operator>(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
return y < x;
}
constexpr bool operator<=(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
return !(y < x);
}
constexpr bool operator>=(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
return !(x < y);
}
// IO Insertion Operator
std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& o, string_view piece);
ABSL_NAMESPACE_END
} // namespace absl
#undef ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_MEMCMP
#endif // ABSL_USES_STD_STRING_VIEW
namespace absl {
ABSL_NAMESPACE_BEGIN
// ClippedSubstr()
//
// Like `s.substr(pos, n)`, but clips `pos` to an upper bound of `s.size()`.
// Provided because std::string_view::substr throws if `pos > size()`
inline string_view ClippedSubstr(string_view s, size_t pos,
size_t n = string_view::npos) {
pos = (std::min)(pos, static_cast<size_t>(s.size()));
return s.substr(pos, n);
}
// NullSafeStringView()
//
// Creates an `absl::string_view` from a pointer `p` even if it's null-valued.
// This function should be used where an `absl::string_view` can be created from
// a possibly-null pointer.
constexpr string_view NullSafeStringView(const char* p) {
return p ? string_view(p) : string_view();
}
ABSL_NAMESPACE_END
} // namespace absl
#endif // ABSL_STRINGS_STRING_VIEW_H_