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construct/include/ircd/string_view.h
2017-10-03 04:17:10 -07:00

334 lines
9 KiB
C++

/*
* charybdis: 21st Century IRC++d
* util.h: Miscellaneous utilities
*
* Copyright (C) 2016 Charybdis Development Team
* Copyright (C) 2016 Jason Volk <jason@zemos.net>
*
* Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any
* purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
* copyright notice and this permission notice is present in all copies.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
* WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
* DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT,
* INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
* (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
* SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
* STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
* IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
* POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*
*/
#pragma once
#define HAVE_IRCD_STRING_VIEW_H
namespace ircd
{
struct string_view;
template<class T> struct vector_view;
template<class T = string_view> struct byte_view;
template<> struct byte_view<string_view>;
template<int (&test)(int) = std::isprint> auto ctype(const string_view &s);
size_t size(const string_view &);
bool operator!(const string_view &);
bool defined(const string_view &);
bool null(const string_view &);
}
/// Customized std::string_view (experimental TS / C++17)
///
/// This class adds iterator-based (char*, char*) construction to std::string_view which otherwise
/// takes traditional (char*, size_t) arguments. This allows boost::spirit grammars to create
/// string_view's using the raw[] directive achieving zero-copy/zero-allocation parsing.
///
struct ircd::string_view
:std::string_view
{
// (non-standard)
explicit operator bool() const
{
return !empty();
}
/// (non-standard) When data() != nullptr we consider the string defined
/// downstream in this project wrt JS/JSON. This is the bit of information
/// we're deciding on for defined|undefined. If this string_view is
/// constructed from a literal "" we must assert that inputs a valid pointer
/// in the std::string_view with length 0; stdlib can't optimize that with
/// a nullptr replacement.
bool undefined() const
{
return data() == nullptr;
}
bool defined() const
{
return !undefined();
}
/// (non-standard) After using data() == nullptr for undefined, we're fresh
/// out of legitimate bits here to represent the null type string. In this
/// case we expect a hack pointer of 0x1 which will mean JS null
bool null() const
{
return data() == reinterpret_cast<const char *>(0x1);
}
// (non-standard) our faux insert stub
// Tricks boost::spirit into thinking this is mutable string (hint: it's not).
// Instead, the raw[] directive in Qi grammar will use the iterator constructor only.
// __attribute__((error("string_view is not insertable (hint: use raw[] directive)")))
void insert(const iterator &, const char &)
{
assert(0);
}
// (non-standard) our iterator-based assign
string_view &assign(const char *const &begin, const char *const &end)
{
*this = std::string_view{begin, size_t(std::distance(begin, end))};
return *this;
}
// (non-standard) intuitive wrapper for remove_suffix.
// Unlike std::string, we can cheaply involve a reference to the removed character
// which still exists.
const char &pop_back()
{
const char &ret(back());
remove_suffix(1);
return ret;
}
// (non-standard) intuitive wrapper for remove_prefix.
// Unlike std::string, we can cheaply involve a reference to the removed character
// which still exists.
const char &pop_front()
{
const char &ret(front());
remove_prefix(1);
return ret;
}
/// (non-standard) resize viewer
void resize(const size_t &count)
{
*this = string_view{data(), data() + count};
}
// (non-standard) our iterator-based constructor
string_view(const char *const &begin, const char *const &end)
:std::string_view{begin, size_t(std::distance(begin, end))}
{}
// (non-standard) our iterator-based constructor
string_view(const std::string::const_iterator &begin, const std::string::const_iterator &end)
:string_view{&*begin, &*end}
{}
// (non-standard) our array based constructor
template<size_t SIZE>
string_view(const std::array<char, SIZE> &array)
:string_view
{
array.data(), std::find(array.begin(), array.end(), '\0')
}{}
// (non-standard) our buffer based constructor
template<size_t SIZE>
string_view(const char (&buf)[SIZE])
:string_view
{
buf, std::find(buf, buf + SIZE, '\0')
}{}
// Required due to current instability in stdlib
//string_view(const std::experimental::string_view &esv)
//:std::string_view{esv}
//{}
// Required due to current instability in stdlib
string_view(const std::experimental::fundamentals_v1::basic_string_view<char> &bsv)
:std::string_view{bsv}
{}
/// Our default constructor sets the elements to 0 for best behavior by
/// defined() and null() et al.
string_view()
:std::string_view{nullptr, 0}
{}
using std::string_view::string_view;
};
template<class T>
struct ircd::vector_view
{
using value_type = T;
using pointer = T *;
using reference = T &;
using difference_type = size_t;
using iterator = T *;
using const_iterator = const T *;
T *_data { nullptr };
T *_stop { nullptr };
public:
const T *data() const { return _data; }
T *data() { return _data; }
size_t size() const { return std::distance(_data, _stop); }
bool empty() const { return !size(); }
const_iterator begin() const { return data(); }
const_iterator end() const { return _stop; }
const_iterator cbegin() { return data(); }
const_iterator cend() { return _stop; }
iterator begin() { return data(); }
iterator end() { return _stop; }
const T &operator[](const size_t &pos) const
{
return *(data() + pos);
}
T &operator[](const size_t &pos)
{
return *(data() + pos);
}
const T &at(const size_t &pos) const
{
if(unlikely(pos >= size()))
throw std::out_of_range("vector_view::range_check");
return operator[](pos);
}
T &at(const size_t &pos)
{
if(unlikely(pos >= size()))
throw std::out_of_range("vector_view::range_check");
return operator[](pos);
}
vector_view(T *const &start, T *const &stop)
:_data{start}
,_stop{stop}
{}
vector_view(T *const &start, const size_t &size)
:vector_view{start, start + size}
{}
vector_view(const std::initializer_list<const T> &list)
:vector_view{std::begin(list), std::end(list)}
{}
template<class U,
class A>
vector_view(std::vector<U, A> &v)
:vector_view{v.data(), v.size()}
{}
template<size_t SIZE>
vector_view(T (&buffer)[SIZE])
:vector_view{buffer, SIZE}
{}
template<size_t SIZE>
vector_view(std::array<T, SIZE> &array)
:vector_view{array.data(), array.size()}
{}
vector_view() = default;
};
/// string_view -> bytes
template<class T>
struct ircd::byte_view
{
string_view s;
operator const T &() const
{
return *reinterpret_cast<const T *>(s.data());
}
byte_view(const string_view &s = {})
:s{s}
{
if(unlikely(sizeof(T) != s.size()))
throw std::bad_cast();
}
// bytes -> bytes (completeness)
byte_view(const T &t)
:s{byte_view<string_view>{t}}
{}
};
/// bytes -> string_view. A byte_view<string_view> is raw data of byte_view<T>.
///
/// This is an important specialization to take note of. When you see
/// byte_view<string_view> know that another type's bytes are being represented
/// by the string_view.
template<>
struct ircd::byte_view<ircd::string_view>
:string_view
{
template<class T>
byte_view(const T &t)
:string_view{reinterpret_cast<const char *>(&t), sizeof(T)}
{}
};
/// string_view -> string_view (completeness)
namespace ircd
{
template<> inline
byte_view<string_view>::byte_view(const string_view &t)
:string_view{t}
{}
}
inline bool
ircd::operator!(const string_view &str)
{
return str.empty();
}
inline bool
ircd::null(const string_view &str)
{
return str.null();
}
inline bool
ircd::defined(const string_view &str)
{
return str.defined();
}
inline size_t
ircd::size(const string_view &str)
{
return str.size();
}
template<int (&test)(int)>
auto
ircd::ctype(const string_view &s)
{
return ctype<test>(std::begin(s), std::end(s));
}