1
0
mirror of https://git.tartarus.org/simon/putty.git synced 2025-01-09 09:27:59 +00:00
putty-source/marshal.h
Simon Tatham 4fa3480444 Formatting: realign run-on parenthesised stuff.
My bulk indentation check also turned up a lot of cases where a run-on
function call or if statement didn't have its later lines aligned
correctly relative to the open paren.

I think this is quite easy to do by getting things out of
sync (editing the first line of the function call and forgetting to
update the rest, perhaps even because you never _saw_ the rest during
a search-replace). But a few didn't quite fit into that pattern, in
particular an outright misleading case in unix/askpass.c where the
second line of a call was aligned neatly below the _wrong_ one of the
open parens on the opening line.

Restored as many alignments as I could easily find.
2022-08-03 20:48:46 +01:00

360 lines
15 KiB
C

#ifndef PUTTY_MARSHAL_H
#define PUTTY_MARSHAL_H
#include "defs.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
/*
* A sort of 'abstract base class' or 'interface' or 'trait' which is
* the common feature of all types that want to accept data formatted
* using the SSH binary conventions of uint32, string, mpint etc.
*/
struct BinarySink {
void (*write)(BinarySink *sink, const void *data, size_t len);
void (*writefmtv)(BinarySink *sink, const char *fmt, va_list ap);
BinarySink *binarysink_;
};
/*
* To define a structure type as a valid target for binary formatted
* data, put 'BinarySink_IMPLEMENTATION' in its declaration, and when
* an instance is set up, use 'BinarySink_INIT' to initialise the
* 'base class' state, providing a function pointer to be the
* implementation of the write() call above.
*/
#define BinarySink_IMPLEMENTATION BinarySink binarysink_[1]
#define BinarySink_INIT(obj, writefn) \
((obj)->binarysink_->write = (writefn), \
(obj)->binarysink_->writefmtv = NULL, \
(obj)->binarysink_->binarysink_ = (obj)->binarysink_)
/*
* To define a larger structure type as a valid BinarySink in such a
* way that it will delegate the write method to some other object,
* put 'BinarySink_DELEGATE_IMPLEMENTATION' in its declaration, and
* when an instance is set up, use 'BinarySink_DELEGATE_INIT' to point
* at the object it wants to delegate to.
*
* In such a delegated structure, you might sometimes want to have the
* delegation stop being valid (e.g. it might be delegating to an
* object that only sometimes exists). You can null out the delegate
* pointer using BinarySink_DELEGATE_CLEAR.
*/
#define BinarySink_DELEGATE_IMPLEMENTATION BinarySink *binarysink_
#define BinarySink_DELEGATE_INIT(obj, othersink) \
((obj)->binarysink_ = BinarySink_UPCAST(othersink))
#define BinarySink_DELEGATE_CLEAR(obj) ((obj)->binarysink_ = NULL)
/*
* The implementing type's write function will want to downcast its
* 'BinarySink *' parameter back to the more specific type. Also,
* sometimes you'll want to upcast a pointer to a particular
* implementing type into an abstract 'BinarySink *' to pass to
* generic subroutines not defined in this file. These macros do that
* job.
*
* Importantly, BinarySink_UPCAST can also be applied to a BinarySink
* * itself (and leaves it unchanged). That's achieved by a small
* piece of C trickery: implementing structures and the BinarySink
* structure itself both contain a field called binarysink_, but in
* implementing objects it's a BinarySink[1] whereas in the abstract
* type it's a 'BinarySink *' pointing back to the same structure,
* meaning that you can say 'foo->binarysink_' in either case and get
* a pointer type by different methods.
*/
#define BinarySink_DOWNCAST(object, type) \
TYPECHECK((object) == ((type *)0)->binarysink_, \
((type *)(((char *)(object)) - offsetof(type, binarysink_))))
#define BinarySink_UPCAST(object) \
TYPECHECK((object)->binarysink_ == (BinarySink *)0, \
(object)->binarysink_)
/*
* If you structure-copy an object that's implementing BinarySink,
* then that tricky self-pointer in its trait subobject will point to
* the wrong place. You could call BinarySink_INIT again, but this
* macro is terser and does all that's needed to fix up the copied
* object.
*/
#define BinarySink_COPIED(obj) \
((obj)->binarysink_->binarysink_ = (obj)->binarysink_)
/*
* The put_* macros are the main client to this system. Any structure
* which implements the BinarySink 'trait' is valid for use as the
* first parameter of any of these put_* macros.
*/
/* Basic big-endian integer types. */
#define put_byte(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_byte(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
#define put_uint16(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_uint16(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
#define put_uint32(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_uint32(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
#define put_uint64(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_uint64(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
/* SSH booleans, encoded as a single byte storing either 0 or 1. */
#define put_bool(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_bool(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
/* SSH strings, with a leading uint32 length field. 'stringz' is a
* convenience function that takes an ordinary C zero-terminated
* string as input. 'stringsb' takes a strbuf * as input, and
* finalises it as a side effect (handy for multi-level marshalling in
* which you use these same functions to format an inner blob of data
* that then gets wrapped into a string container in an outer one). */
#define put_string(bs, val, len) \
BinarySink_put_string(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs),val,len)
#define put_stringpl(bs, ptrlen) \
BinarySink_put_stringpl(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs),ptrlen)
#define put_stringz(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_stringz(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
#define put_stringsb(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_stringsb(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
/* Other string outputs: 'asciz' emits the string data directly into
* the output including the terminating \0, and 'pstring' emits the
* string in Pascal style with a leading _one_-byte length field.
* pstring can fail if the string is too long. */
#define put_asciz(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_asciz(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
#define put_pstring(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_pstring(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
/* Multiprecision integers, in both the SSH-1 and SSH-2 formats. */
#define put_mp_ssh1(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_mp_ssh1(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
#define put_mp_ssh2(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_mp_ssh2(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val)
/* Padding with a specified byte. */
#define put_padding(bs, len, padbyte) \
BinarySink_put_padding(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), len, padbyte)
/* Fallback: just emit raw data bytes, using a syntax that matches the
* rest of these macros. */
#define put_data(bs, val, len) \
BinarySink_put_data(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), val, len)
#define put_datapl(bs, pl) \
BinarySink_put_datapl(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), pl)
#define put_dataz(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_datapl(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), ptrlen_from_asciz(val))
#define put_datalit(bs, val) \
BinarySink_put_datapl(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), PTRLEN_LITERAL(val))
/* Emit printf-formatted data, with no terminator. */
#define put_fmt(bs, ...) \
BinarySink_put_fmt(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), __VA_ARGS__)
#define put_fmtv(bs, fmt, ap) \
BinarySink_put_fmtv(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), fmt, ap)
/* More complicated function implemented in write_c_string_literal.c */
#define put_c_string_literal(bs, str) \
BinarySink_put_c_string_literal(BinarySink_UPCAST(bs), str)
/*
* The underlying real C functions that implement most of those
* macros. Generally you won't want to call these directly, because
* they have such cumbersome names; you call the wrapper macros above
* instead.
*
* A few functions whose wrapper macros are defined above are actually
* declared in other headers, so as to guarantee that the
* declaration(s) of their other parameter type(s) are in scope.
*/
void BinarySink_put_data(BinarySink *, const void *data, size_t len);
void BinarySink_put_datapl(BinarySink *, ptrlen);
void BinarySink_put_padding(BinarySink *, size_t len, unsigned char padbyte);
void BinarySink_put_byte(BinarySink *, unsigned char);
void BinarySink_put_bool(BinarySink *, bool);
void BinarySink_put_uint16(BinarySink *, unsigned long);
void BinarySink_put_uint32(BinarySink *, unsigned long);
void BinarySink_put_uint64(BinarySink *, uint64_t);
void BinarySink_put_string(BinarySink *, const void *data, size_t len);
void BinarySink_put_stringpl(BinarySink *, ptrlen);
void BinarySink_put_stringz(BinarySink *, const char *str);
void BinarySink_put_stringsb(BinarySink *, strbuf *);
void BinarySink_put_asciz(BinarySink *, const char *str);
bool BinarySink_put_pstring(BinarySink *, const char *str);
void BinarySink_put_mp_ssh1(BinarySink *bs, mp_int *x);
void BinarySink_put_mp_ssh2(BinarySink *bs, mp_int *x);
void BinarySink_put_fmt(BinarySink *, const char *fmt, ...) PRINTF_LIKE(2, 3);
void BinarySink_put_fmtv(BinarySink *, const char *fmt, va_list ap);
void BinarySink_put_c_string_literal(BinarySink *, ptrlen);
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/*
* A complementary trait structure for _un_-marshalling.
*
* This structure contains client-visible data fields rather than
* methods, because that seemed more useful than leaving it totally
* opaque. But it's still got the self-pointer system that will allow
* the set of get_* macros to target one of these itself or any other
* type that 'derives' from it. So, for example, an SSH packet
* structure can act as a BinarySource while also having additional
* fields like the packet type.
*/
typedef enum BinarySourceError {
BSE_NO_ERROR,
BSE_OUT_OF_DATA,
BSE_INVALID
} BinarySourceError;
struct BinarySource {
/*
* (data, len) is the data block being decoded. pos is the current
* position within the block.
*/
const void *data;
size_t pos, len;
/*
* 'err' indicates whether a decoding error has happened at any
* point. Once this has been set to something other than
* BSE_NO_ERROR, it shouldn't be changed by any unmarshalling
* function. So you can safely do a long sequence of get_foo()
* operations and then test err just once at the end, rather than
* having to conditionalise every single get.
*
* The unmarshalling functions should always return some value,
* even if a decoding error occurs. Generally on error they'll
* return zero (if numeric) or the empty string (if string-based),
* or some other appropriate default value for more complicated
* types.
*
* If the usual return value is dynamically allocated (e.g. a
* bignum, or a normal C 'char *' string), then the error value is
* also dynamic in the same way. So you have to free exactly the
* same set of things whether or not there was a decoding error,
* which simplifies exit paths - for example, you could call a big
* pile of get_foo functions, then put the actual handling of the
* results under 'if (!get_err(src))', and then free everything
* outside that if.
*/
BinarySourceError err;
/*
* Self-pointer for the implicit derivation trick, same as
* BinarySink above.
*/
BinarySource *binarysource_;
};
/*
* Implementation macros, similar to BinarySink.
*/
#define BinarySource_IMPLEMENTATION BinarySource binarysource_[1]
static inline void BinarySource_INIT__(BinarySource *src, ptrlen data)
{
src->data = data.ptr;
src->len = data.len;
src->pos = 0;
src->err = BSE_NO_ERROR;
src->binarysource_ = src;
}
#define BinarySource_BARE_INIT_PL(obj, pl) \
TYPECHECK(&(obj)->binarysource_ == (BinarySource **)0, \
BinarySource_INIT__(obj, pl))
#define BinarySource_BARE_INIT(obj, data_, len_) \
BinarySource_BARE_INIT_PL(obj, make_ptrlen(data_, len_))
#define BinarySource_INIT_PL(obj, pl) \
TYPECHECK(&(obj)->binarysource_ == (BinarySource (*)[1])0, \
BinarySource_INIT__(BinarySource_UPCAST(obj), pl))
#define BinarySource_INIT(obj, data_, len_) \
BinarySource_INIT_PL(obj, make_ptrlen(data_, len_))
#define BinarySource_DOWNCAST(object, type) \
TYPECHECK((object) == ((type *)0)->binarysource_, \
((type *)(((char *)(object)) - offsetof(type, binarysource_))))
#define BinarySource_UPCAST(object) \
TYPECHECK((object)->binarysource_ == (BinarySource *)0, \
(object)->binarysource_)
#define BinarySource_COPIED(obj) \
((obj)->binarysource_->binarysource_ = (obj)->binarysource_)
#define BinarySource_REWIND_TO(src, pos) \
BinarySource_REWIND_TO__((src)->binarysource_, pos)
#define BinarySource_REWIND(src) \
BinarySource_REWIND_TO__((src)->binarysource_, 0)
#define get_data(src, len) \
BinarySource_get_data(BinarySource_UPCAST(src), len)
#define get_byte(src) \
BinarySource_get_byte(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_bool(src) \
BinarySource_get_bool(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_uint16(src) \
BinarySource_get_uint16(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_uint32(src) \
BinarySource_get_uint32(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_uint64(src) \
BinarySource_get_uint64(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_string(src) \
BinarySource_get_string(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_asciz(src) \
BinarySource_get_asciz(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_chars(src, include) \
BinarySource_get_chars(BinarySource_UPCAST(src), include)
#define get_nonchars(src, exclude) \
BinarySource_get_nonchars(BinarySource_UPCAST(src), exclude)
#define get_chomped_line(src) \
BinarySource_get_chomped_line(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_pstring(src) \
BinarySource_get_pstring(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_mp_ssh1(src) \
BinarySource_get_mp_ssh1(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_mp_ssh2(src) \
BinarySource_get_mp_ssh2(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_rsa_ssh1_pub(src, rsa, order) \
BinarySource_get_rsa_ssh1_pub(BinarySource_UPCAST(src), rsa, order)
#define get_rsa_ssh1_priv(src, rsa) \
BinarySource_get_rsa_ssh1_priv(BinarySource_UPCAST(src), rsa)
#define get_rsa_ssh1_priv_agent(src) \
BinarySource_get_rsa_ssh1_priv_agent(BinarySource_UPCAST(src))
#define get_err(src) (BinarySource_UPCAST(src)->err)
#define get_avail(src) (BinarySource_UPCAST(src)->len - \
BinarySource_UPCAST(src)->pos)
#define get_ptr(src) \
((const void *)( \
(const unsigned char *)(BinarySource_UPCAST(src)->data) + \
BinarySource_UPCAST(src)->pos))
ptrlen BinarySource_get_data(BinarySource *, size_t);
unsigned char BinarySource_get_byte(BinarySource *);
bool BinarySource_get_bool(BinarySource *);
unsigned BinarySource_get_uint16(BinarySource *);
unsigned long BinarySource_get_uint32(BinarySource *);
uint64_t BinarySource_get_uint64(BinarySource *);
ptrlen BinarySource_get_string(BinarySource *);
const char *BinarySource_get_asciz(BinarySource *);
ptrlen BinarySource_get_chars(BinarySource *, const char *include_set);
ptrlen BinarySource_get_nonchars(BinarySource *, const char *exclude_set);
ptrlen BinarySource_get_chomped_line(BinarySource *);
ptrlen BinarySource_get_pstring(BinarySource *);
mp_int *BinarySource_get_mp_ssh1(BinarySource *src);
mp_int *BinarySource_get_mp_ssh2(BinarySource *src);
void BinarySource_REWIND_TO__(BinarySource *src, size_t pos);
/*
* A couple of useful standard BinarySink implementations, which live
* as sensibly here as anywhere else: one that makes a BinarySink
* whose effect is to write to a stdio stream, and one whose effect is
* to append to a bufchain.
*/
struct stdio_sink {
FILE *fp;
BinarySink_IMPLEMENTATION;
};
struct bufchain_sink {
bufchain *ch;
BinarySink_IMPLEMENTATION;
};
void stdio_sink_init(stdio_sink *sink, FILE *fp);
void bufchain_sink_init(bufchain_sink *sink, bufchain *ch);
#endif /* PUTTY_MARSHAL_H */