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Diffstat (limited to 'rubbos/app/httpd-2.0.64/srclib/apr/include/apr_pools.h')
-rw-r--r-- | rubbos/app/httpd-2.0.64/srclib/apr/include/apr_pools.h | 664 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 664 deletions
diff --git a/rubbos/app/httpd-2.0.64/srclib/apr/include/apr_pools.h b/rubbos/app/httpd-2.0.64/srclib/apr/include/apr_pools.h deleted file mode 100644 index 2f4353f0..00000000 --- a/rubbos/app/httpd-2.0.64/srclib/apr/include/apr_pools.h +++ /dev/null @@ -1,664 +0,0 @@ -/* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more - * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with - * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. - * The ASF licenses this file to You 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 - * - * http://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. - */ - -#ifndef APR_POOLS_H -#define APR_POOLS_H - -/** - * @file apr_pools.h - * @brief APR memory allocation - * - * Resource allocation routines... - * - * designed so that we don't have to keep track of EVERYTHING so that - * it can be explicitly freed later (a fundamentally unsound strategy --- - * particularly in the presence of die()). - * - * Instead, we maintain pools, and allocate items (both memory and I/O - * handlers) from the pools --- currently there are two, one for per - * transaction info, and one for config info. When a transaction is over, - * we can delete everything in the per-transaction apr_pool_t without fear, - * and without thinking too hard about it either. - */ - -#include "apr.h" -#include "apr_errno.h" -#include "apr_general.h" /* for APR_STRINGIFY */ -#define APR_WANT_MEMFUNC /**< for no good reason? */ -#include "apr_want.h" - -#ifdef __cplusplus -extern "C" { -#endif - -/** - * @defgroup apr_pools Memory Pool Functions - * @ingroup APR - * @{ - */ - -/** The fundamental pool type */ -typedef struct apr_pool_t apr_pool_t; - - -/** - * Declaration helper macro to construct apr_foo_pool_get()s. - * - * This standardized macro is used by opaque (APR) data types to return - * the apr_pool_t that is associated with the data type. - * - * APR_POOL_DECLARE_ACCESSOR() is used in a header file to declare the - * accessor function. A typical usage and result would be: - * <pre> - * APR_POOL_DECLARE_ACCESSOR(file); - * becomes: - * APR_DECLARE(apr_pool_t *) apr_file_pool_get(apr_file_t *ob); - * </pre> - * @remark Doxygen unwraps this macro (via doxygen.conf) to provide - * actual help for each specific occurance of apr_foo_pool_get. - * @remark the linkage is specified for APR. It would be possible to expand - * the macros to support other linkages. - */ -#define APR_POOL_DECLARE_ACCESSOR(type) \ - APR_DECLARE(apr_pool_t *) apr_##type##_pool_get \ - (const apr_##type##_t *the##type) - -/** - * Implementation helper macro to provide apr_foo_pool_get()s. - * - * In the implementation, the APR_POOL_IMPLEMENT_ACCESSOR() is used to - * actually define the function. It assumes the field is named "pool". - */ -#define APR_POOL_IMPLEMENT_ACCESSOR(type) \ - APR_DECLARE(apr_pool_t *) apr_##type##_pool_get \ - (const apr_##type##_t *the##type) \ - { return the##type->pool; } - - -/** - * Pool debug levels - * - * <pre> - * | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | - * --------------------------------- - * | | | | | | | | x | General debug code enabled (usefull in - * combination with --with-efence). - * - * | | | | | | | x | | Verbose output on stderr (report - * CREATE, CLEAR, DESTROY). - * - * | | | | x | | | | | Verbose output on stderr (report - * PALLOC, PCALLOC). - * - * | | | | | | x | | | Lifetime checking. On each use of a - * pool, check its lifetime. If the pool - * is out of scope, abort(). - * In combination with the verbose flag - * above, it will output LIFE in such an - * event prior to aborting. - * - * | | | | | x | | | | Pool owner checking. On each use of a - * pool, check if the current thread is the - * pools owner. If not, abort(). In - * combination with the verbose flag above, - * it will output OWNER in such an event - * prior to aborting. Use the debug - * function apr_pool_owner_set() to switch - * a pools ownership. - * - * When no debug level was specified, assume general debug mode. - * If level 0 was specified, debugging is switched off - * </pre> - */ -#if defined(APR_POOL_DEBUG) -#if (APR_POOL_DEBUG != 0) && (APR_POOL_DEBUG - 0 == 0) -#undef APR_POOL_DEBUG -#define APR_POOL_DEBUG 1 -#endif -#else -#define APR_POOL_DEBUG 0 -#endif - -/** the place in the code where the particular function was called */ -#define APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__ __FILE__ ":" APR_STRINGIFY(__LINE__) - - - -/** A function that is called when allocation fails. */ -typedef int (*apr_abortfunc_t)(int retcode); - -/* - * APR memory structure manipulators (pools, tables, and arrays). - */ - -/* - * Initialization - */ - -/** - * Setup all of the internal structures required to use pools - * @remark Programs do NOT need to call this directly. APR will call this - * automatically from apr_initialize. - * @internal - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_pool_initialize(void); - -/** - * Tear down all of the internal structures required to use pools - * @remark Programs do NOT need to call this directly. APR will call this - * automatically from apr_terminate. - * @internal - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_terminate(void); - - -/* - * Pool creation/destruction - */ - -#include "apr_allocator.h" - -/** - * Create a new pool. - * @param newpool The pool we have just created. - * @param parent The parent pool. If this is NULL, the new pool is a root - * pool. If it is non-NULL, the new pool will inherit all - * of its parent pool's attributes, except the apr_pool_t will - * be a sub-pool. - * @param abort_fn A function to use if the pool cannot allocate more memory. - * @param allocator The allocator to use with the new pool. If NULL the - * allocator of the parent pool will be used. - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_pool_create_ex(apr_pool_t **newpool, - apr_pool_t *parent, - apr_abortfunc_t abort_fn, - apr_allocator_t *allocator); - -/** - * Debug version of apr_pool_create_ex. - * @param newpool @see apr_pool_create. - * @param parent @see apr_pool_create. - * @param abort_fn @see apr_pool_create. - * @param allocator @see apr_pool_create. - * @param file_line Where the function is called from. - * This is usually APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__. - * @remark Only available when APR_POOL_DEBUG is defined. - * Call this directly if you have you apr_pool_create_ex - * calls in a wrapper function and wish to override - * the file_line argument to reflect the caller of - * your wrapper function. If you do not have - * apr_pool_create_ex in a wrapper, trust the macro - * and don't call apr_pool_create_ex_debug directly. - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_pool_create_ex_debug(apr_pool_t **newpool, - apr_pool_t *parent, - apr_abortfunc_t abort_fn, - apr_allocator_t *allocator, - const char *file_line); - -#if APR_POOL_DEBUG -#define apr_pool_create_ex(newpool, parent, abort_fn, allocator) \ - apr_pool_create_ex_debug(newpool, parent, abort_fn, allocator, \ - APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__) -#endif - -/** - * Create a new pool. - * @param newpool The pool we have just created. - * @param parent The parent pool. If this is NULL, the new pool is a root - * pool. If it is non-NULL, the new pool will inherit all - * of its parent pool's attributes, except the apr_pool_t will - * be a sub-pool. - */ -#if defined(DOXYGEN) -APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_pool_create(apr_pool_t **newpool, - apr_pool_t *parent); -#else -#if APR_POOL_DEBUG -#define apr_pool_create(newpool, parent) \ - apr_pool_create_ex_debug(newpool, parent, NULL, NULL, \ - APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__) -#else -#define apr_pool_create(newpool, parent) \ - apr_pool_create_ex(newpool, parent, NULL, NULL) -#endif -#endif - -/** @deprecated @see apr_pool_create_ex */ -#if APR_POOL_DEBUG -#define apr_pool_sub_make(newpool, parent, abort_fn) \ - (void)apr_pool_create_ex_debug(newpool, parent, abort_fn, \ - NULL, \ - APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__) -#else -#define apr_pool_sub_make(newpool, parent, abort_fn) \ - (void)apr_pool_create_ex(newpool, parent, abort_fn, NULL) -#endif - -/** - * Find the pools allocator - * @param pool The pool to get the allocator from. - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_allocator_t *) apr_pool_allocator_get(apr_pool_t *pool); - -/** - * Clear all memory in the pool and run all the cleanups. This also destroys all - * subpools. - * @param p The pool to clear - * @remark This does not actually free the memory, it just allows the pool - * to re-use this memory for the next allocation. - * @see apr_pool_destroy() - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_clear(apr_pool_t *p); - -/** - * Debug version of apr_pool_clear. - * @param p See: apr_pool_clear. - * @param file_line Where the function is called from. - * This is usually APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__. - * @remark Only available when APR_POOL_DEBUG is defined. - * Call this directly if you have you apr_pool_clear - * calls in a wrapper function and wish to override - * the file_line argument to reflect the caller of - * your wrapper function. If you do not have - * apr_pool_clear in a wrapper, trust the macro - * and don't call apr_pool_destroy_clear directly. - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_clear_debug(apr_pool_t *p, - const char *file_line); - -#if APR_POOL_DEBUG -#define apr_pool_clear(p) \ - apr_pool_clear_debug(p, APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__) -#endif - -/** - * Destroy the pool. This takes similar action as apr_pool_clear() and then - * frees all the memory. - * @param p The pool to destroy - * @remark This will actually free the memory - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_destroy(apr_pool_t *p); - -/** - * Debug version of apr_pool_destroy. - * @param p See: apr_pool_destroy. - * @param file_line Where the function is called from. - * This is usually APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__. - * @remark Only available when APR_POOL_DEBUG is defined. - * Call this directly if you have you apr_pool_destroy - * calls in a wrapper function and wish to override - * the file_line argument to reflect the caller of - * your wrapper function. If you do not have - * apr_pool_destroy in a wrapper, trust the macro - * and don't call apr_pool_destroy_debug directly. - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_destroy_debug(apr_pool_t *p, - const char *file_line); - -#if APR_POOL_DEBUG -#define apr_pool_destroy(p) \ - apr_pool_destroy_debug(p, APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__) -#endif - - -/* - * Memory allocation - */ - -/** - * Allocate a block of memory from a pool - * @param p The pool to allocate from - * @param size The amount of memory to allocate - * @return The allocated memory - */ -APR_DECLARE(void *) apr_palloc(apr_pool_t *p, apr_size_t size); - -/** - * Debug version of apr_palloc - * @param p See: apr_palloc - * @param size See: apr_palloc - * @param file_line Where the function is called from. - * This is usually APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__. - * @return See: apr_palloc - */ -APR_DECLARE(void *) apr_palloc_debug(apr_pool_t *p, apr_size_t size, - const char *file_line); - -#if APR_POOL_DEBUG -#define apr_palloc(p, size) \ - apr_palloc_debug(p, size, APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__) -#endif - -/** - * Allocate a block of memory from a pool and set all of the memory to 0 - * @param p The pool to allocate from - * @param size The amount of memory to allocate - * @return The allocated memory - */ -#if defined(DOXYGEN) -APR_DECLARE(void *) apr_pcalloc(apr_pool_t *p, apr_size_t size); -#elif !APR_POOL_DEBUG -#define apr_pcalloc(p, size) memset(apr_palloc(p, size), 0, size) -#endif - -/** - * Debug version of apr_pcalloc - * @param p See: apr_pcalloc - * @param size See: apr_pcalloc - * @param file_line Where the function is called from. - * This is usually APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__. - * @return See: apr_pcalloc - */ -APR_DECLARE(void *) apr_pcalloc_debug(apr_pool_t *p, apr_size_t size, - const char *file_line); - -#if APR_POOL_DEBUG -#define apr_pcalloc(p, size) \ - apr_pcalloc_debug(p, size, APR_POOL__FILE_LINE__) -#endif - - -/* - * Pool Properties - */ - -/** - * Set the function to be called when an allocation failure occurs. - * @remark If the program wants APR to exit on a memory allocation error, - * then this function can be called to set the callback to use (for - * performing cleanup and then exiting). If this function is not called, - * then APR will return an error and expect the calling program to - * deal with the error accordingly. - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_abort_set(apr_abortfunc_t abortfunc, - apr_pool_t *pool); - -/** @deprecated @see apr_pool_abort_set */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_set_abort(apr_abortfunc_t abortfunc, - apr_pool_t *pool); - -/** - * Get the abort function associated with the specified pool. - * @param pool The pool for retrieving the abort function. - * @return The abort function for the given pool. - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_abortfunc_t) apr_pool_abort_get(apr_pool_t *pool); - -/** @deprecated @see apr_pool_abort_get */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_abortfunc_t) apr_pool_get_abort(apr_pool_t *pool); - -/** - * Get the parent pool of the specified pool. - * @param pool The pool for retrieving the parent pool. - * @return The parent of the given pool. - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_pool_t *) apr_pool_parent_get(apr_pool_t *pool); - -/** @deprecated @see apr_pool_parent_get */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_pool_t *) apr_pool_get_parent(apr_pool_t *pool); - -/** - * Determine if pool a is an ancestor of pool b - * @param a The pool to search - * @param b The pool to search for - * @return True if a is an ancestor of b, NULL is considered an ancestor - * of all pools. - */ -APR_DECLARE(int) apr_pool_is_ancestor(apr_pool_t *a, apr_pool_t *b); - -/** - * Tag a pool (give it a name) - * @param pool The pool to tag - * @param tag The tag - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_tag(apr_pool_t *pool, const char *tag); - - -/* - * User data management - */ - -/** - * Set the data associated with the current pool - * @param data The user data associated with the pool. - * @param key The key to use for association - * @param cleanup The cleanup program to use to cleanup the data (NULL if none) - * @param pool The current pool - * @warning The data to be attached to the pool should have a life span - * at least as long as the pool it is being attached to. - * - * Users of APR must take EXTREME care when choosing a key to - * use for their data. It is possible to accidentally overwrite - * data by choosing a key that another part of the program is using. - * Therefore it is advised that steps are taken to ensure that unique - * keys are used for all of the userdata objects in a particular pool - * (the same key in two different pools or a pool and one of its - * subpools is okay) at all times. Careful namespace prefixing of - * key names is a typical way to help ensure this uniqueness. - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_pool_userdata_set( - const void *data, - const char *key, - apr_status_t (*cleanup)(void *), - apr_pool_t *pool); - -/** - * Set the data associated with the current pool - * @param data The user data associated with the pool. - * @param key The key to use for association - * @param cleanup The cleanup program to use to cleanup the data (NULL if none) - * @param pool The current pool - * @note same as apr_pool_userdata_set(), except that this version doesn't - * make a copy of the key (this function is useful, for example, when - * the key is a string literal) - * @warning This should NOT be used if the key could change addresses by - * any means between the apr_pool_userdata_setn() call and a - * subsequent apr_pool_userdata_get() on that key, such as if a - * static string is used as a userdata key in a DSO and the DSO could - * be unloaded and reloaded between the _setn() and the _get(). You - * MUST use apr_pool_userdata_set() in such cases. - * @warning More generally, the key and the data to be attached to the - * pool should have a life span at least as long as the pool itself. - * - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_pool_userdata_setn( - const void *data, - const char *key, - apr_status_t (*cleanup)(void *), - apr_pool_t *pool); - -/** - * Return the data associated with the current pool. - * @param data The user data associated with the pool. - * @param key The key for the data to retrieve - * @param pool The current pool. - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_pool_userdata_get(void **data, const char *key, - apr_pool_t *pool); - - -/* - * Cleanup - * - * Cleanups are performed in the reverse order they were registered. That is: - * Last In, First Out. - */ - -/** - * Register a function to be called when a pool is cleared or destroyed - * @param p The pool register the cleanup with - * @param data The data to pass to the cleanup function. - * @param plain_cleanup The function to call when the pool is cleared - * or destroyed - * @param child_cleanup The function to call when a child process is being - * shutdown - this function is called in the child, obviously! - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_cleanup_register( - apr_pool_t *p, - const void *data, - apr_status_t (*plain_cleanup)(void *), - apr_status_t (*child_cleanup)(void *)); - -/** - * Remove a previously registered cleanup function - * @param p The pool remove the cleanup from - * @param data The data to remove from cleanup - * @param cleanup The function to remove from cleanup - * @remarks For some strange reason only the plain_cleanup is handled by this - * function - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_cleanup_kill(apr_pool_t *p, const void *data, - apr_status_t (*cleanup)(void *)); - -/** - * Replace the child cleanup of a previously registered cleanup - * @param p The pool of the registered cleanup - * @param data The data of the registered cleanup - * @param plain_cleanup The plain cleanup function of the registered cleanup - * @param child_cleanup The function to register as the child cleanup - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_child_cleanup_set( - apr_pool_t *p, - const void *data, - apr_status_t (*plain_cleanup)(void *), - apr_status_t (*child_cleanup)(void *)); - -/** - * Run the specified cleanup function immediately and unregister it. Use - * @a data instead of the data that was registered with the cleanup. - * @param p The pool remove the cleanup from - * @param data The data to remove from cleanup - * @param cleanup The function to remove from cleanup - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_pool_cleanup_run( - apr_pool_t *p, - void *data, - apr_status_t (*cleanup)(void *)); - -/** - * An empty cleanup function - * @param data The data to cleanup - */ -APR_DECLARE_NONSTD(apr_status_t) apr_pool_cleanup_null(void *data); - -/* Preparing for exec() --- close files, etc., but *don't* flush I/O - * buffers, *don't* wait for subprocesses, and *don't* free any memory. - */ -/** - * Run all of the child_cleanups, so that any unnecessary files are - * closed because we are about to exec a new program - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_cleanup_for_exec(void); - - -/** - * @defgroup PoolDebug Pool Debugging functions. - * - * pools have nested lifetimes -- sub_pools are destroyed when the - * parent pool is cleared. We allow certain liberties with operations - * on things such as tables (and on other structures in a more general - * sense) where we allow the caller to insert values into a table which - * were not allocated from the table's pool. The table's data will - * remain valid as long as all the pools from which its values are - * allocated remain valid. - * - * For example, if B is a sub pool of A, and you build a table T in - * pool B, then it's safe to insert data allocated in A or B into T - * (because B lives at most as long as A does, and T is destroyed when - * B is cleared/destroyed). On the other hand, if S is a table in - * pool A, it is safe to insert data allocated in A into S, but it - * is *not safe* to insert data allocated from B into S... because - * B can be cleared/destroyed before A is (which would leave dangling - * pointers in T's data structures). - * - * In general we say that it is safe to insert data into a table T - * if the data is allocated in any ancestor of T's pool. This is the - * basis on which the APR_POOL_DEBUG code works -- it tests these ancestor - * relationships for all data inserted into tables. APR_POOL_DEBUG also - * provides tools (apr_pool_find, and apr_pool_is_ancestor) for other - * folks to implement similar restrictions for their own data - * structures. - * - * However, sometimes this ancestor requirement is inconvenient -- - * sometimes we're forced to create a sub pool (such as through - * apr_sub_req_lookup_uri), and the sub pool is guaranteed to have - * the same lifetime as the parent pool. This is a guarantee implemented - * by the *caller*, not by the pool code. That is, the caller guarantees - * they won't destroy the sub pool individually prior to destroying the - * parent pool. - * - * In this case the caller must call apr_pool_join() to indicate this - * guarantee to the APR_POOL_DEBUG code. There are a few examples spread - * through the standard modules. - * - * These functions are only implemented when #APR_POOL_DEBUG is set. - * - * @{ - */ -#if APR_POOL_DEBUG || defined(DOXYGEN) -/** - * Guarantee that a subpool has the same lifetime as the parent. - * @param p The parent pool - * @param sub The subpool - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_join(apr_pool_t *p, apr_pool_t *sub); - -/** - * Find a pool from something allocated in it. - * @param mem The thing allocated in the pool - * @return The pool it is allocated in - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_pool_t *) apr_pool_find(const void *mem); - -/** - * Report the number of bytes currently in the pool - * @param p The pool to inspect - * @param recurse Recurse/include the subpools' sizes - * @return The number of bytes - */ -APR_DECLARE(apr_size_t) apr_pool_num_bytes(apr_pool_t *p, int recurse); - -/** - * Lock a pool - * @param pool The pool to lock - * @param flag The flag - */ -APR_DECLARE(void) apr_pool_lock(apr_pool_t *pool, int flag); - -/* @} */ - -#else /* APR_POOL_DEBUG or DOXYGEN */ - -#ifdef apr_pool_join -#undef apr_pool_join -#endif -#define apr_pool_join(a,b) - -#ifdef apr_pool_lock -#undef apr_pool_lock -#endif -#define apr_pool_lock(pool, lock) - -#endif /* APR_POOL_DEBUG or DOXYGEN */ - -/** @} */ - -#ifdef __cplusplus -} -#endif - -#endif /* !APR_POOLS_H */ |