/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * pg_get_line.c * fgets() with an expansible result buffer * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2024, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * * IDENTIFICATION * src/common/pg_get_line.c * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #ifndef FRONTEND #include "postgres.h" #else #include "postgres_fe.h" #endif #include #include "common/string.h" #include "lib/stringinfo.h" /* * pg_get_line() * * This is meant to be equivalent to fgets(), except that instead of * reading into a caller-supplied, fixed-size buffer, it reads into * a palloc'd (in frontend, really malloc'd) string, which is resized * as needed to handle indefinitely long input lines. The caller is * responsible for pfree'ing the result string when appropriate. * * As with fgets(), returns NULL if there is a read error or if no * characters are available before EOF. The caller can distinguish * these cases by checking ferror(stream). * * Since this is meant to be equivalent to fgets(), the trailing newline * (if any) is not stripped. Callers may wish to apply pg_strip_crlf(). * * Note that while I/O errors are reflected back to the caller to be * dealt with, an OOM condition for the palloc'd buffer will not be; * there'll be an ereport(ERROR) or exit(1) inside stringinfo.c. * * Also note that the palloc'd buffer is usually a lot longer than * strictly necessary, so it may be inadvisable to use this function * to collect lots of long-lived data. A less memory-hungry option * is to use pg_get_line_buf() or pg_get_line_append() in a loop, * then pstrdup() each line. * * prompt_ctx can optionally be provided to allow this function to be * canceled via an existing SIGINT signal handler that will longjmp to the * specified place only when *(prompt_ctx->enabled) is true. If canceled, * this function returns NULL, and prompt_ctx->canceled is set to true. */ char * pg_get_line(FILE *stream, PromptInterruptContext *prompt_ctx) { StringInfoData buf; initStringInfo(&buf); if (!pg_get_line_append(stream, &buf, prompt_ctx)) { /* ensure that free() doesn't mess up errno */ int save_errno = errno; pfree(buf.data); errno = save_errno; return NULL; } return buf.data; } /* * pg_get_line_buf() * * This has similar behavior to pg_get_line(), and thence to fgets(), * except that the collected data is returned in a caller-supplied * StringInfo buffer. This is a convenient API for code that just * wants to read and process one line at a time, without any artificial * limit on line length. * * Returns true if a line was successfully collected (including the * case of a non-newline-terminated line at EOF). Returns false if * there was an I/O error or no data was available before EOF. * (Check ferror(stream) to distinguish these cases.) * * In the false-result case, buf is reset to empty. */ bool pg_get_line_buf(FILE *stream, StringInfo buf) { /* We just need to drop any data from the previous call */ resetStringInfo(buf); return pg_get_line_append(stream, buf, NULL); } /* * pg_get_line_append() * * This has similar behavior to pg_get_line(), and thence to fgets(), * except that the collected data is appended to whatever is in *buf. * This is useful in preference to pg_get_line_buf() if the caller wants * to merge some lines together, e.g. to implement backslash continuation. * * Returns true if a line was successfully collected (including the * case of a non-newline-terminated line at EOF). Returns false if * there was an I/O error or no data was available before EOF. * (Check ferror(stream) to distinguish these cases.) * * In the false-result case, the contents of *buf are logically unmodified, * though it's possible that the buffer has been resized. * * prompt_ctx can optionally be provided to allow this function to be * canceled via an existing SIGINT signal handler that will longjmp to the * specified place only when *(prompt_ctx->enabled) is true. If canceled, * this function returns false, and prompt_ctx->canceled is set to true. */ bool pg_get_line_append(FILE *stream, StringInfo buf, PromptInterruptContext *prompt_ctx) { int orig_len = buf->len; if (prompt_ctx && sigsetjmp(*((sigjmp_buf *) prompt_ctx->jmpbuf), 1) != 0) { /* Got here with longjmp */ prompt_ctx->canceled = true; /* Discard any data we collected before detecting error */ buf->len = orig_len; buf->data[orig_len] = '\0'; return false; } /* Loop until newline or EOF/error */ for (;;) { char *res; /* Enable longjmp while waiting for input */ if (prompt_ctx) *(prompt_ctx->enabled) = true; /* Read some data, appending it to whatever we already have */ res = fgets(buf->data + buf->len, buf->maxlen - buf->len, stream); /* Disable longjmp again, then break if fgets failed */ if (prompt_ctx) *(prompt_ctx->enabled) = false; if (res == NULL) break; /* Got data, so update buf->len */ buf->len += strlen(buf->data + buf->len); /* Done if we have collected a newline */ if (buf->len > orig_len && buf->data[buf->len - 1] == '\n') return true; /* Make some more room in the buffer, and loop to read more data */ enlargeStringInfo(buf, 128); } /* Check for I/O errors and EOF */ if (ferror(stream) || buf->len == orig_len) { /* Discard any data we collected before detecting error */ buf->len = orig_len; buf->data[orig_len] = '\0'; return false; } /* No newline at EOF, but we did collect some data */ return true; }