Files
swift-mirror/stdlib/core/StringBuffer.swift
Dave Abrahams 6c07fb4ad1 [stdlib] Revert UnsafePointer casting change
The syntax being reverted added busywork and noise to the common case
where you want to say "I have the right address, but the wrong type,"
without adding any real safety.

Also it eliminated the ability to write UnsafePointer<T>(otherPointer),
without adding ".self" to T.  Overall, it was not a win.

This reverts commits r21324 and r21342

Swift SVN r21424
2014-08-22 21:53:12 +00:00

232 lines
7.6 KiB
Swift

//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This source file is part of the Swift.org open source project
//
// Copyright (c) 2014 - 2015 Apple Inc. and the Swift project authors
// Licensed under Apache License v2.0 with Runtime Library Exception
//
// See http://swift.org/LICENSE.txt for license information
// See http://swift.org/CONTRIBUTORS.txt for the list of Swift project authors
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
struct _StringBufferIVars {
init(_ elementWidth: Int) {
_sanityCheck(elementWidth == 1 || elementWidth == 2)
usedEnd = .null()
capacityAndElementShift = elementWidth - 1
}
init(
usedEnd: UnsafeMutablePointer<RawByte>,
byteCapacity: Int,
elementWidth: Int
) {
_sanityCheck(elementWidth == 1 || elementWidth == 2)
_sanityCheck((byteCapacity & 0x1) == 0)
self.usedEnd = usedEnd
self.capacityAndElementShift = byteCapacity + (elementWidth - 1)
}
// This stored property should be stored at offset zero. We perform atomic
// operations on it using HeapBuffer's pointer.
var usedEnd: UnsafeMutablePointer<RawByte>
var capacityAndElementShift: Int
var byteCapacity: Int {
return capacityAndElementShift & ~0x1
}
var elementShift: Int {
return capacityAndElementShift & 0x1
}
}
// FIXME: Wanted this to be a subclass of
// HeapBuffer<_StringBufferIVars,UTF16.CodeUnit>, but
// <rdar://problem/15520519> (Can't call static method of derived
// class of generic class with dependent argument type) prevents it.
public struct _StringBuffer {
// Make this a buffer of UTF-16 code units so that it's properly
// aligned for them if that's what we store.
typealias _Storage = HeapBuffer<_StringBufferIVars, UTF16.CodeUnit>
init(_ storage: _Storage) {
_storage = storage
}
public init(capacity: Int, initialSize: Int, elementWidth: Int) {
_sanityCheck(elementWidth == 1 || elementWidth == 2)
_sanityCheck(initialSize <= capacity)
let elementShift = elementWidth - 1
// We need at least 1 extra byte if we're storing 8-bit elements,
// because indexing will always grab 2 consecutive bytes at a
// time.
let capacityBump = 1 - elementShift
// Used to round capacity up to nearest multiple of 16 bits, the
// element size of our storage.
let divRound = 1 - elementShift
_storage = _Storage(_Storage.Storage.self,
_StringBufferIVars(elementWidth),
(capacity + capacityBump + divRound) >> divRound
)
self.usedEnd = start + (initialSize << elementShift)
_storage.value.capacityAndElementShift
= ((_storage._capacity() - capacityBump) << 1) + elementShift
}
static func fromCodeUnits<
Encoding : UnicodeCodecType, Input : CollectionType // SequenceType?
where Input.Generator.Element == Encoding.CodeUnit
>(
encoding: Encoding.Type, input: Input, repairIllFormedSequences: Bool,
minimumCapacity: Int = 0
) -> (_StringBuffer?, hadError: Bool) {
// Determine how many UTF-16 code units we'll need
var inputStream = input.generate()
if let (utf16Count, isAscii) = UTF16.measure(encoding, input: inputStream,
repairIllFormedSequences: repairIllFormedSequences) {
// Allocate storage
var result = _StringBuffer(
capacity: max(utf16Count, minimumCapacity),
initialSize: utf16Count,
elementWidth: isAscii ? 1 : 2)
if isAscii {
var p = UnsafeMutablePointer<UTF8.CodeUnit>(result.start)
let hadError = transcode(encoding, UTF32.self, input.generate(),
SinkOf {
(p++).memory = UTF8.CodeUnit($0)
},
stopOnError: !repairIllFormedSequences)
_sanityCheck(!hadError, "string can not be ASCII if there were decoding errors")
return (result, hadError)
}
else {
var p = result._storage.baseAddress
let hadError = transcode(encoding, UTF16.self, input.generate(),
SinkOf {
(p++).memory = $0
},
stopOnError: !repairIllFormedSequences)
return (result, hadError)
}
} else {
return (.None, true)
}
}
/// a pointer to the start of this buffer's data area
public var start: UnsafeMutablePointer<RawByte> {
return UnsafeMutablePointer(_storage.baseAddress)
}
/// a past-the-end pointer for this buffer's stored data
var usedEnd: UnsafeMutablePointer<RawByte> {
get {
return _storage.value.usedEnd
}
set(newValue) {
_storage.value.usedEnd = newValue
}
}
var usedCount: Int {
return (usedEnd - start) >> elementShift
}
/// a past-the-end pointer for this buffer's available storage
var capacityEnd: UnsafeMutablePointer<RawByte> {
return start + _storage.value.byteCapacity
}
/// The number of elements that can be stored in this buffer
public var capacity: Int {
return _storage.value.byteCapacity >> elementShift
}
/// 1 if the buffer stores UTF-16; 0 otherwise
var elementShift: Int {
return _storage.value.elementShift
}
/// the number of bytes per element
var elementWidth: Int {
return elementShift + 1
}
// Return true iff we have the given capacity for the indicated
// substring. This is what we need to do so that users can call
// reserveCapacity on String and subsequently use that capacity, in
// two separate phases. Operations with one-phase growth should use
// "grow()," below.
func hasCapacity(
cap: Int, forSubRange r: Range<UnsafePointer<RawByte>>
) -> Bool {
// The substring to be grown could be pointing in the middle of this
// _StringBuffer.
let offset = (r.startIndex - UnsafePointer(start)) >> elementShift
return cap + offset <= capacity
}
/// Attempt to claim unused capacity in the buffer.
///
/// Operation succeeds if there is sufficient capacity, and either:
/// - the buffer is uniquely-refereced, or
/// - `oldUsedEnd` points to the end of the currently used capacity.
///
/// :param: oldUsedStart pointer to the substring that the caller tries
/// to extend.
/// :param: oldUsedEnd one-past-end pointer to the substring that the caller
/// tries to extend.
/// :param: newUsedCount the desired size of the substring.
mutating func grow(
subRange: Range<UnsafePointer<RawByte>>, var newUsedCount: Int
) -> Bool {
// The substring to be grown could be pointing in the middle of this
// _StringBuffer. Adjust the size so that it covers the imaginary
// substring from the start of the buffer to `oldUsedEnd`.
newUsedCount += (subRange.startIndex - UnsafePointer(start)) >> elementShift
if _slowPath(newUsedCount > capacity) {
return false
}
let newUsedEnd = start + (newUsedCount << elementShift)
if _fastPath(self._storage.isUniquelyReferenced()) {
usedEnd = newUsedEnd
return true
}
// Optimization: even if the buffer is shared, but the substring we are
// trying to grow is located at the end of the buffer, it can be grown in
// place. The operation should be implemented in a thread-safe way,
// though.
//
// if usedEnd == subRange.endIndex {
// usedEnd = newUsedEnd
// return true
// }
let usedEndPhysicalPtr =
UnsafeMutablePointer<UnsafeMutablePointer<RawByte>>(_storage._value)
var expected = UnsafeMutablePointer<RawByte>(subRange.endIndex)
if _stdlib_atomicCompareExchangeStrongPtr(
object: usedEndPhysicalPtr, expected: &expected, desired: newUsedEnd) {
return true
}
return false
}
var _anyObject: AnyObject? {
return _storage.storage != nil ? .Some(_storage.storage!) : .None
}
var _storage: _Storage
}