Rationale: with osmo_escape_str(), you get the escaped contents of the string,
but not so graceful handling of NULL strings. The caller needs to quote it, and
for NULL strings not quote it.
osmo_quote_str() is like osmo_escape_str() but always quotes a non-NULL string,
and for a NULL string returns a literal NULL, i.e. it should (tm) give the
exact C representation of a string.
That's useful in testing, to show exactly what char* situation we have, without
jumping through hoops like
if (str)
printf("\"%s\"", osmo_escape_str(str, -1));
else
printf("NULL");
Copy the unit test for osmo_escape_str() and adjust. To indicate that the
double quotes are returned by osmo_quote_str(), use single quotes in the test
printf()s.
I considered allowing to pick the quoting characters by further arguments, but
that complicates things: we'd need to escape the quoting characters. Just
hardcode double quotes like C.
Change-Id: I6f1b3709b32c23fc52f70ad9ecc9439c62b02a12
It seems with default flags in_buf was being memzeroed by the compiler.
When compiling with -O0, that's not the case anymore and printf prints
after first 16 bytes, printing extra garbage which doesn't match the
expected output.
Change-Id: I736c1e4d625f647d3bb794fa717256e9dbf36e87
To report invalid characters in identifiers, it is desirable to escape any
weird characters. Otherwise we might print stray newlines or control characters
in the log output.
ctrl_test.c already uses a print_escaped() function, which will be replaced by
osmo_escape_str() in a subsequent patch.
control_cmd.c will use osmo_escape_str() to log invalid identifiers.
Change-Id: Ic685eb63dead3967d01aaa4f1e9899e5461ca49a
Sounds stupid, but we actually didn't support hex nibbles in one of
the two directions of the conversion, so let's make sure we test for
this.
Change-Id: I8445da54cc4f9b1cd64f286c2b238f4f7c87accb
This is particularly useful for hex dumps containing spaces found in a log
(e.g. osmo-nitb authentication rand token), which can now be passed in quotes
to osmo-auc-gen without having to edit the spaces away.
Change-Id: Ib7af07f674a2d26c8569acdee98835fb3e626c45
For some reason the structure is closer to be a LV (length
and value). The value is actually a tag but it is counted
inside the length. Introduce an overload of the parse function
to provide an offset for the length. This will be taken from
the returned length.
In the osmo-bts and libosmo-abis code the hexdump routine is used
for every incoming/outgoing packet (including voice frames) and the
usage of snprintf showed up inside profiles.
There is a semantic change when more than 4096 characters are used.
The code will now truncate at byte boundaries (and not nibbles).
Code:
static const int lengths[] = { 23, 1000, 52 };
char buf[4096];
int i;
for (i = 0; i < 30000; ++i)
char *res = osmo_hexdump(buf, lengths[i & 3]);
Results:
before: after:
real 0m3.233s real 0m0.085s
user 0m3.212s user 0m0.084s
sys 0m0.000s sys 0m0.000s