te Copyright (c) 2009, Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Copyright 2022 Tintri by DDN, Inc. All rights reserved. The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] STRING 9F "May 20, 2022"
NAME
string, strcasecmp, strncasecmp, strcat, strncat, strlcat, strchr,
strrchr, strcmp, strncmp, strcpy, strncpy, strlcpy, strfree, strspn,
strdup, ddi_strdup, strlen, strnlen, strtok_r - string operations
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/ddi.h>
#include <sys/sunddi.h>
int strcasecmp(const char *s1, const char *s2);
int strncasecmp(const char *s1, const char *s2, size_t n);
char *strcat(char * s1, const char * s2);
char *strncat(char * s1, const char * s2, size_t n);
size_t strlcat(char *dst, const char *src, size_t dstsize);
char *strchr(const char *str, int chr);
char *strrchr(const char *str, int chr);
int strcmp(const char *s1, const char *s2);
int strncmp(const char *s1, const char *s2, size_t n);
char *strcpy(char * dst, const char * src);
char *strncpy(char * dst, const char * src, size_t n);
size_t strlcpy(char *dst, const char *src, size_t dstsize);
void strfree(char *s);
size_t strspn(const char *s1, const char *s2);
char *strdup(const char *s1);
char *ddi_strdup(const char *s1, int flag);
size_t strlen(const char *s);
size_t strnlen(const char *s, size_t n);
char *strtok_r(char *s1, const char *s2, char **lasts);
INTERFACE LEVEL
illumos DDI specific (illumos DDI).
DESCRIPTION
The arguments
s,
s1, and
s2 point to strings (arrays of
characters terminated by a null character). The
strcat(),
strncat(),
strlcat(),
strcpy(),
strncpy(),
strlcpy(),
strfree(), and
strtok_r()\R functions all alter their
first argument.
Additionally, the strcpy() function does not check for overflow of the
array.
"strcasecmp(), strncasecmp()"
The
strcasecmp() and
strncasecmp() functions are case-insensitive
versions of
strcmp() and
strncmp() respectively, described below.
They assume the
ASCII character set and ignore differences in case when
comparing lower and upper case characters.
"strcat(), strncat(), and strlcat()"
The
strcat() function appends a copy of string
s2, including the
terminating null character, to the end of string
s1. The
strncat()
function appends at most
n characters of
s2 to
s1, not
including any terminating null character, and then appends a null character.
Each returns a pointer to the null-terminated result. The initial character of
s2 overrides the null character at the end of
s1. If copying takes
place between objects that overlap, the behavior of
strcat(),
strncat(), and
strlcat() is undefined.
The strlcat() function appends at most
(dstsize-strlen(dst)-1) characters of src to dst
(dstsize being the size of the string buffer dst). If the string
pointed to by dst contains a null-terminated string that fits into
dstsize bytes when strlcat() is called, the string pointed to by
dst will be a null-terminated string that fits in dstsize bytes
(including the terminating null character) when it completes, and the initial
character of src will override the null character at the end of
dst. If the string pointed to by dst is longer than dstsize
bytes when strlcat() is called, the string pointed to by dst will
not be changed. The function returns
min{dstsize,strlen(dst)}+strlen(src).
Buffer overflow can be checked as follows:
if (strlcat(dst, src, dstsize) >= dstsize)
return -1;
"strchr(), strrchr()"
The
strchr() function returns a pointer to the first occurrence of
c (converted to a
char) in string
s, or a null pointer if
c does not occur in the string. The
strrchr() function returns a
pointer to the last occurrence of
c. The null character terminating a
string is considered to be part of the string.
"strcmp(), strncmp()"
The
strcmp() function compares two strings byte-by-byte, according to the
ordering of your machine's character set. The function returns an integer
greater than, equal to, or less than 0, if the string pointed to by
s1
is greater than, equal to, or less than the string pointed to by
s2
respectively. The sign of a non-zero return value is determined by the sign of
the difference between the values of the first pair of bytes that differ in the
strings being compared. The
strncmp() function makes the same comparison
but looks at a maximum of
n bytes. Bytes following a null byte are not
compared.
"strcpy(), strncpy(), strlcpy()"
The
strcpy() function copies string
s2 to
s1, including the
terminating null character, stopping after the null character has been copied.
The
strncpy() function copies exactly
n bytes, truncating
s2
or adding null characters to
s1 if necessary. The result will not be
null-terminated if the length of
s2 is
n or more. Both the
strcpy() and
strncpy() functions return
s1. If copying takes
place between objects that overlap, the behavior of
strcpy(),
strncpy(), and
strlcpy() is undefined.
The strlcpy() function copies at most dstsize-1 characters
(dstsize being the size of the string buffer dst) from src
to dst, truncating src if necessary. The result is always
null-terminated. The function returns strlen(src). Buffer overflow
can be checked as follows:
if (strlcpy(dst, src, dstsize) >= dstsize)
return -1;
"strfree()"
The
strfree() function frees the memory associated with the string
pointed to by
s. This memory pointed to by
s must be of size
strlen(
s)+1, and must have been allocated (either directly or
indirectly) by
kmem_alloc(9F) or
kmem_zalloc(9F).
"strspn()"
The
strspn() function returns the length of the initial segment of string
s1 that consists entirely of characters from string
s2.
"strdup(), ddi_strdup()"
The
ddi_strdup() function returns a pointer to a new string that is a
duplicate of the string pointed to by
s1. The returned pointer can be
passed to
strfree() or
kmem_free(9F). The space for the new string
is obtained using
kmem_alloc(). flag can be either
KM_SLEEP or
KM_NOSLEEP, and determines whether the caller can sleep for memory.
KM_SLEEP allocations may sleep but are guaranteed to succeed.
KM_NOSLEEP allocations are guaranteed not to sleep but may fail (return
NULL) if no memory is currently available.
The strdup() function behaves the same as the ddi_strdup() when
called with the KM_SLEEP flag. This means that strdup() can sleep
until memory is available and will always succeed.
"strlen(), strnlen()"
The
strlen() function returns the number of bytes in
s, not
including the terminating null character.
The strnlen() function returns the smaller of n or the number of
bytes in s, not including the terminating null character. The
strnlen() function never examines more than n bytes of the string
pointed to by s.
"strtok_r()"
The
strtok_r() function considers the null-terminated string
s1 as
a sequence of zero or more text tokens separated by spans of one or more
characters from the separator string
s2. The argument
lasts points
to a user-provided pointer which points to stored information necessary for
strtok_r() to continue scanning the same string.
In the first call to strtok_r(), s1 points to a null-terminated
string, s2 to a null-terminated string of separator characters, and the
value pointed to by lasts is ignored. The strtok_r() function
returns a pointer to the first character of the first token, writes a null
character into s1 immediately following the returned token, and updates
the pointer to which lasts points.
In subsequent calls, s1 is a null pointer and lasts is unchanged
from the previous call so that subsequent calls move through the string
s1, returning successive tokens until no tokens remain. The separator
string s2 can be different from call to call. When no token remains in
s1, a null pointer is returned.
CONTEXT
The
strdup() and
ddi_strdup() functions can be called from user or
kernel context.
The ddi_strdup() function can be called from interrupt context only if
the KM_NOSLEEP flag is set.
All the other string manipulation functions can be called from user, interrupt,
or kernel context.
ATTRIBUTES
See
attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:
|
ATTRIBUTE TYPE ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
Interface Stability Committed |
|
SEE ALSO
string (3C), attributes (7), bcopy (9F), ddi_copyin (9F), kmem_alloc (9F)
Writing Device Drivers
NOTES
If copying takes place between objects that overlap, the behavior of
strlcat(),
strncat(),
strcpy(),
strlcpy(), and
strncpy() is undefined.