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📄 read.c

📁 PostgreSQL7.4.6 for Linux
💻 C
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/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * read.c *	  routines to convert a string (legal ascii representation of node) back *	  to nodes * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2003, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * * IDENTIFICATION *	  $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/src/backend/nodes/read.c,v 1.35 2003/08/04 02:39:59 momjian Exp $ * * HISTORY *	  AUTHOR			DATE			MAJOR EVENT *	  Andrew Yu			Nov 2, 1994		file creation * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */#include "postgres.h"#include <ctype.h>#include <errno.h>#include "nodes/pg_list.h"#include "nodes/readfuncs.h"/* Static state for pg_strtok */static char *pg_strtok_ptr = NULL;/* * stringToNode - *	  returns a Node with a given legal ASCII representation */void *stringToNode(char *str){	char	   *save_strtok;	void	   *retval;	/*	 * We save and restore the pre-existing state of pg_strtok. This makes	 * the world safe for re-entrant invocation of stringToNode, without	 * incurring a lot of notational overhead by having to pass the	 * next-character pointer around through all the readfuncs.c code.	 */	save_strtok = pg_strtok_ptr;	pg_strtok_ptr = str;		/* point pg_strtok at the string to read */	retval = nodeRead(true);	/* do the reading */	pg_strtok_ptr = save_strtok;	return retval;}/***************************************************************************** * * the lisp token parser * *****************************************************************************//* * pg_strtok --- retrieve next "token" from a string. * * Works kinda like strtok, except it never modifies the source string. * (Instead of storing nulls into the string, the length of the token * is returned to the caller.) * Also, the rules about what is a token are hard-wired rather than being * configured by passing a set of terminating characters. * * The string is assumed to have been initialized already by stringToNode. * * The rules for tokens are: *	* Whitespace (space, tab, newline) always separates tokens. *	* The characters '(', ')', '{', '}' form individual tokens even *	  without any whitespace around them. *	* Otherwise, a token is all the characters up to the next whitespace *	  or occurrence of one of the four special characters. *	* A backslash '\' can be used to quote whitespace or one of the four *	  special characters, so that it is treated as a plain token character. *	  Backslashes themselves must also be backslashed for consistency. *	  Any other character can be, but need not be, backslashed as well. *	* If the resulting token is '<>' (with no backslash), it is returned *	  as a non-NULL pointer to the token but with length == 0.	Note that *	  there is no other way to get a zero-length token. * * Returns a pointer to the start of the next token, and the length of the * token (including any embedded backslashes!) in *length.	If there are * no more tokens, NULL and 0 are returned. * * NOTE: this routine doesn't remove backslashes; the caller must do so * if necessary (see "debackslash"). * * NOTE: prior to release 7.0, this routine also had a special case to treat * a token starting with '"' as extending to the next '"'.	This code was * broken, however, since it would fail to cope with a string containing an * embedded '"'.  I have therefore removed this special case, and instead * introduced rules for using backslashes to quote characters.	Higher-level * code should add backslashes to a string constant to ensure it is treated * as a single token. */char *pg_strtok(int *length){	char	   *local_str;		/* working pointer to string */	char	   *ret_str;		/* start of token to return */	local_str = pg_strtok_ptr;	while (*local_str == ' ' || *local_str == '\n' || *local_str == '\t')		local_str++;	if (*local_str == '\0')	{		*length = 0;		pg_strtok_ptr = local_str;		return NULL;			/* no more tokens */	}	/*	 * Now pointing at start of next token.	 */	ret_str = local_str;	if (*local_str == '(' || *local_str == ')' ||		*local_str == '{' || *local_str == '}')	{		/* special 1-character token */		local_str++;	}	else	{		/* Normal token, possibly containing backslashes */		while (*local_str != '\0' &&			   *local_str != ' ' && *local_str != '\n' &&			   *local_str != '\t' &&			   *local_str != '(' && *local_str != ')' &&			   *local_str != '{' && *local_str != '}')		{			if (*local_str == '\\' && local_str[1] != '\0')				local_str += 2;			else				local_str++;		}	}	*length = local_str - ret_str;	/* Recognize special case for "empty" token */	if (*length == 2 && ret_str[0] == '<' && ret_str[1] == '>')		*length = 0;	pg_strtok_ptr = local_str;	return ret_str;}/* * debackslash - *	  create a palloc'd string holding the given token. *	  any protective backslashes in the token are removed. */char *debackslash(char *token, int length){	char	   *result = palloc(length + 1);	char	   *ptr = result;	while (length > 0)	{		if (*token == '\\' && length > 1)			token++, length--;		*ptr++ = *token++;		length--;	}	*ptr = '\0';	return result;}#define RIGHT_PAREN (1000000 + 1)#define LEFT_PAREN	(1000000 + 2)#define NODE_SYM	(1000000 + 3)#define AT_SYMBOL	(1000000 + 4)#define ATOM_TOKEN	(1000000 + 5)/* * nodeTokenType - *	  returns the type of the node token contained in token. *	  It returns one of the following valid NodeTags: *		T_Integer, T_Float, T_String, T_BitString *	  and some of its own: *		RIGHT_PAREN, LEFT_PAREN, NODE_SYM, AT_SYMBOL, ATOM_TOKEN * *	  Assumption: the ascii representation is legal */static NodeTagnodeTokenType(char *token, int length){	NodeTag		retval;	char	   *numptr;	int			numlen;	/*	 * Check if the token is a number	 */	numptr = token;	numlen = length;	if (*numptr == '+' || *numptr == '-')		numptr++, numlen--;	if ((numlen > 0 && isdigit((unsigned char) *numptr)) ||	(numlen > 1 && *numptr == '.' && isdigit((unsigned char) numptr[1])))	{		/*		 * Yes.  Figure out whether it is integral or float; this requires		 * both a syntax check and a range check. strtol() can do both for		 * us. We know the token will end at a character that strtol will		 * stop at, so we do not need to modify the string.		 */		long		val;		char	   *endptr;		errno = 0;		val = strtol(token, &endptr, 10);		if (endptr != token + length || errno == ERANGE#ifdef HAVE_LONG_INT_64		/* if long > 32 bits, check for overflow of int4 */			|| val != (long) ((int32) val)#endif			)			return T_Float;		return T_Integer;	}	/*	 * these three cases do not need length checks, since pg_strtok() will	 * always treat them as single-byte tokens	 */	else if (*token == '(')		retval = LEFT_PAREN;	else if (*token == ')')		retval = RIGHT_PAREN;	else if (*token == '{')		retval = NODE_SYM;	else if (*token == '@' && length == 1)		retval = AT_SYMBOL;	else if (*token == '\"' && length > 1 && token[length - 1] == '\"')		retval = T_String;	else if (*token == 'b')		retval = T_BitString;	else		retval = ATOM_TOKEN;	return retval;}/* * nodeRead - *	  Slightly higher-level reader. * * This routine applies some semantic knowledge on top of the purely * lexical tokenizer pg_strtok().	It can read *	* Value token nodes (integers, floats, or strings); *	* General nodes (via parseNodeString() from readfuncs.c); *	* Lists of the above. * * We assume pg_strtok is already initialized with a string to read (hence * this should only be invoked from within a stringToNode operation). * Any callers should set read_car_only to true. */void *nodeRead(bool read_car_only){	char	   *token;	int			tok_len;	NodeTag		type;	Node	   *this_value,			   *return_value;	bool		make_dotted_pair_cell = false;	token = pg_strtok(&tok_len);	if (token == NULL)		return NULL;	type = nodeTokenType(token, tok_len);	switch (type)	{		case NODE_SYM:			this_value = parseNodeString();			token = pg_strtok(&tok_len);			if (token == NULL || token[0] != '}')				elog(ERROR, "did not find '}' at end of input node");			if (!read_car_only)				make_dotted_pair_cell = true;			else				make_dotted_pair_cell = false;			break;		case LEFT_PAREN:			if (!read_car_only)			{				List	   *l = makeNode(List);				lfirst(l) = nodeRead(false);				lnext(l) = nodeRead(false);				this_value = (Node *) l;			}			else				this_value = nodeRead(false);			break;		case RIGHT_PAREN:			this_value = NULL;			break;		case AT_SYMBOL:			this_value = NULL;			break;		case ATOM_TOKEN:			if (tok_len == 0)			{				/* must be "<>" */				this_value = NULL;				/*				 * It might be NULL but it is an atom!				 */				if (read_car_only)					make_dotted_pair_cell = false;				else					make_dotted_pair_cell = true;			}			else			{				/* !attention! result is not a Node.  Use with caution. */				this_value = (Node *) debackslash(token, tok_len);				make_dotted_pair_cell = true;			}			break;		case T_Integer:			/*			 * we know that the token terminates on a char atol will stop			 * at			 */			this_value = (Node *) makeInteger(atol(token));			make_dotted_pair_cell = true;			break;		case T_Float:			{				char	   *fval = (char *) palloc(tok_len + 1);				memcpy(fval, token, tok_len);				fval[tok_len] = '\0';				this_value = (Node *) makeFloat(fval);				make_dotted_pair_cell = true;			}			break;		case T_String:			/* need to remove leading and trailing quotes, and backslashes */			this_value = (Node *) makeString(debackslash(token + 1, tok_len - 2));			make_dotted_pair_cell = true;			break;		case T_BitString:			{				char	   *val = palloc(tok_len);				/* skip leading 'b' */				strncpy(val, token + 1, tok_len - 1);				val[tok_len - 1] = '\0';				this_value = (Node *) makeBitString(val);				break;			}		default:			elog(ERROR, "unrecognized node type: %d", (int) type);			this_value = NULL;	/* keep compiler happy */			break;	}	if (make_dotted_pair_cell)	{		List	   *l = makeNode(List);		lfirst(l) = this_value;		if (!read_car_only)			lnext(l) = nodeRead(false);		else			lnext(l) = NULL;		return_value = (Node *) l;	}	else		return_value = this_value;	return return_value;}

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