freebsd-skq/gnu/usr.bin/gdb/libiberty/concat.c
Jordan K. Hubbard 01db5e69c1 Hurrah! Let the champagne flow, the olive oil barrel be opened and
the wild, slippery orgy commence!

Gary Jennejohn, too studly for his own good, has finally come through with
the new, improved gdb 4.13.  This gdb features:

o	kgdb support - if this works (and I urge folks to test it), we can
	finally purge the old and hateful version of kgdb from our source
	tree.

o	attach/detach support.  See comments in README.FreeBSD for more
	details.

o	Well, it's newer.  Our previous version was 4.11.

Comments and flames to gj, of course! :-)

Thanks, Gary.  Much appreciated.  The previous state of gdb/kgdb has been a
thorn in all of our sides for some time..
Submitted by:	gj
1994-12-30 23:27:33 +00:00

168 lines
3.8 KiB
C

/* Concatenate variable number of strings.
Copyright (C) 1991, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Written by Fred Fish @ Cygnus Support
This file is part of the libiberty library.
Libiberty is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
Libiberty is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with libiberty; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
/*
NAME
concat -- concatenate a variable number of strings
SYNOPSIS
#include <varargs.h>
char *concat (s1, s2, s3, ..., NULL)
DESCRIPTION
Concatenate a variable number of strings and return the result
in freshly malloc'd memory.
Returns NULL if insufficient memory is available. The argument
list is terminated by the first NULL pointer encountered. Pointers
to empty strings are ignored.
NOTES
This function uses xmalloc() which is expected to be a front end
function to malloc() that deals with low memory situations. In
typical use, if malloc() returns NULL then xmalloc() diverts to an
error handler routine which never returns, and thus xmalloc will
never return a NULL pointer. If the client application wishes to
deal with low memory situations itself, it should supply an xmalloc
that just directly invokes malloc and blindly returns whatever
malloc returns.
*/
#include "ansidecl.h"
#include "libiberty.h"
#ifdef ANSI_PROTOTYPES
#include <stdarg.h>
#else
#include <varargs.h>
#endif
#ifdef __STDC__
#include <stddef.h>
extern size_t strlen (const char *s);
#else
extern int strlen ();
#endif
#define NULLP (char *)0
/* VARARGS */
#ifdef ANSI_PROTOTYPES
char *
concat (const char *first, ...)
#else
char *
concat (va_alist)
va_dcl
#endif
{
register int length;
register char *newstr;
register char *end;
register const char *arg;
va_list args;
#ifndef ANSI_PROTOTYPES
const char *first;
#endif
/* First compute the size of the result and get sufficient memory. */
#ifdef ANSI_PROTOTYPES
va_start (args, first);
#else
va_start (args);
first = va_arg (args, const char *);
#endif
if (first == NULLP)
length = 0;
else
{
length = strlen (first);
while ((arg = va_arg (args, const char *)) != NULLP)
{
length += strlen (arg);
}
}
newstr = (char *) xmalloc (length + 1);
va_end (args);
/* Now copy the individual pieces to the result string. */
if (newstr != NULLP)
{
#ifdef ANSI_PROTOTYPES
va_start (args, first);
#else
va_start (args);
first = va_arg (args, const char *);
#endif
end = newstr;
if (first != NULLP)
{
arg = first;
while (*arg)
{
*end++ = *arg++;
}
while ((arg = va_arg (args, const char *)) != NULLP)
{
while (*arg)
{
*end++ = *arg++;
}
}
}
*end = '\000';
va_end (args);
}
return (newstr);
}
#ifdef MAIN
/* Simple little test driver. */
#include <stdio.h>
int
main ()
{
printf ("\"\" = \"%s\"\n", concat (NULLP));
printf ("\"a\" = \"%s\"\n", concat ("a", NULLP));
printf ("\"ab\" = \"%s\"\n", concat ("a", "b", NULLP));
printf ("\"abc\" = \"%s\"\n", concat ("a", "b", "c", NULLP));
printf ("\"abcd\" = \"%s\"\n", concat ("ab", "cd", NULLP));
printf ("\"abcde\" = \"%s\"\n", concat ("ab", "c", "de", NULLP));
printf ("\"abcdef\" = \"%s\"\n", concat ("", "a", "", "bcd", "ef", NULLP));
return 0;
}
#endif