Files
git-mirror/quote.h
Denton Liu 554544276a *.[ch]: remove extern from function declarations using spatch
There has been a push to remove extern from function declarations.
Remove some instances of "extern" for function declarations which are
caught by Coccinelle. Note that Coccinelle has some difficulty with
processing functions with `__attribute__` or varargs so some `extern`
declarations are left behind to be dealt with in a future patch.

This was the Coccinelle patch used:

	@@
	type T;
	identifier f;
	@@
	- extern
	  T f(...);

and it was run with:

	$ git ls-files \*.{c,h} |
		grep -v ^compat/ |
		xargs spatch --sp-file contrib/coccinelle/noextern.cocci --in-place

Files under `compat/` are intentionally excluded as some are directly
copied from external sources and we should avoid churning them as much
as possible.

Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2019-05-05 15:20:06 +09:00

84 lines
3.1 KiB
C

#ifndef QUOTE_H
#define QUOTE_H
struct strbuf;
/* Help to copy the thing properly quoted for the shell safety.
* any single quote is replaced with '\'', any exclamation point
* is replaced with '\!', and the whole thing is enclosed in a
* single quote pair.
*
* For example, if you are passing the result to system() as an
* argument:
*
* sprintf(cmd, "foobar %s %s", sq_quote(arg0), sq_quote(arg1))
*
* would be appropriate. If the system() is going to call ssh to
* run the command on the other side:
*
* sprintf(cmd, "git-diff-tree %s %s", sq_quote(arg0), sq_quote(arg1));
* sprintf(rcmd, "ssh %s %s", sq_quote(host), sq_quote(cmd));
*
* Note that the above examples leak memory! Remember to free result from
* sq_quote() in a real application.
*
* sq_quote_buf() writes to an existing buffer of specified size; it
* will return the number of characters that would have been written
* excluding the final null regardless of the buffer size.
*
* sq_quotef() quotes the entire formatted string as a single result.
*/
void sq_quote_buf(struct strbuf *, const char *src);
void sq_quote_argv(struct strbuf *, const char **argv);
extern void sq_quotef(struct strbuf *, const char *fmt, ...);
/*
* These match their non-pretty variants, except that they avoid
* quoting when there are no exotic characters. These should only be used for
* human-readable output, as sq_dequote() is not smart enough to dequote it.
*/
void sq_quote_buf_pretty(struct strbuf *, const char *src);
void sq_quote_argv_pretty(struct strbuf *, const char **argv);
/* This unwraps what sq_quote() produces in place, but returns
* NULL if the input does not look like what sq_quote would have
* produced.
*/
char *sq_dequote(char *);
/*
* Same as the above, but can be used to unwrap many arguments in the
* same string separated by space. Like sq_quote, it works in place,
* modifying arg and appending pointers into it to argv.
*/
int sq_dequote_to_argv(char *arg, const char ***argv, int *nr, int *alloc);
/*
* Same as above, but store the unquoted strings in an argv_array. We will
* still modify arg in place, but unlike sq_dequote_to_argv, the argv_array
* will duplicate and take ownership of the strings.
*/
struct argv_array;
int sq_dequote_to_argv_array(char *arg, struct argv_array *);
int unquote_c_style(struct strbuf *, const char *quoted, const char **endp);
size_t quote_c_style(const char *name, struct strbuf *, FILE *, int no_dq);
void quote_two_c_style(struct strbuf *, const char *, const char *, int);
void write_name_quoted(const char *name, FILE *, int terminator);
void write_name_quoted_relative(const char *name, const char *prefix,
FILE *fp, int terminator);
/* quote path as relative to the given prefix */
char *quote_path_relative(const char *in, const char *prefix,
struct strbuf *out);
/* quoting as a string literal for other languages */
void perl_quote_buf(struct strbuf *sb, const char *src);
void python_quote_buf(struct strbuf *sb, const char *src);
void tcl_quote_buf(struct strbuf *sb, const char *src);
void basic_regex_quote_buf(struct strbuf *sb, const char *src);
#endif