| /* |
| * Copyright (C) 2016 The Android Open Source Project |
| * |
| * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| * You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| * |
| * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| * |
| * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| * limitations under the License. |
| */ |
| |
| // Local utilities (macros and free-standing functions). |
| |
| #ifndef LOCAL_UTILS_H_ |
| #define LOCAL_UTILS_H_ |
| |
| #include <limits> |
| #include <type_traits> |
| |
| #include "android-base/logging.h" |
| |
| // Converts the value SRC to a value of DST_TYPE, in the range of [MIN, MAX]. |
| // Values less than MIN are clamped to MIN, and values greater than MAX are |
| // clamped to MAX. Conversions are safe in the sense that the range is checked |
| // to be valid for both SRC and DST_TYPE, at compile-time. |
| // |
| // As compared to static_cast<>, SAFELY_CLAMP is a) more explicit, b) more |
| // flexible, and c) less prone to surprising conversions (e.g. -1 becoming |
| // UINT_MAX). |
| #define SAFELY_CLAMP(SRC, DST_TYPE, MIN, MAX) \ |
| local_utils::internal::SafelyClamp<decltype(SRC), DST_TYPE, MIN, MAX, MIN, \ |
| MAX>(SRC) |
| |
| // While attributes are standard in C++11, these attributes are not part of |
| // the standard. We use macros to abstract these attributes, to allow |
| // the code to compile with compilers that don't recognize these attributes. |
| #if defined(__clang__) |
| #define NONNULL [[gnu::nonnull]] /* NOLINT(whitespace/braces) */ |
| #define RETURNS_NONNULL [[gnu::returns_nonnull]] /* NOLINT ... */ |
| #else |
| #define NONNULL |
| #define RETURNS_NONNULL |
| #endif |
| |
| namespace android { |
| namespace wifilogd { |
| namespace local_utils { |
| |
| // Returns the value in |enum_value|, as the integral type underlying the |
| // enum. (E.g. uint8_t, int32_t, etc.) |
| template <typename T> |
| constexpr auto CastEnumToInteger(T enum_value) { |
| static_assert(std::is_enum<T>::value, "argument must be of an enum type"); |
| return static_cast<typename std::underlying_type<T>::type>(enum_value); |
| } |
| |
| // Copies a |T| out of |buf|, aborting if |buf| is too short to hold a |T|. |
| // |
| // As compared to accessing the underlying data using reinterpret_cast<>, |
| // CopyFromBufferOrDie() provides three benefits: |
| // 1. Guarantees that the returned header is properly aligned. While |
| // many processors support some unaligned reads, there are some |
| // exceptions. E.g, a 64-bit unaligned read on 32-bit ARM may cause |
| // a program to abort. |
| // 2. Removes the potential for bugs due to compiler optimizations based |
| // on type-based alias analysis. (These are the kinds of bugs that |
| // "strict-aliasing" warnings try to call out.) |
| // 3. Verifies that the source buffer is large enough to contain the |
| // data we're trying to read out. |
| template <typename T> |
| T CopyFromBufferOrDie(NONNULL const void* buf, size_t buf_len) { |
| static_assert(std::is_trivially_copyable<T>::value, |
| "CopyFromBufferOrDie can only copy trivially copyable types"); |
| T out; |
| CHECK(buf_len >= sizeof(out)); |
| std::memcpy(&out, buf, sizeof(out)); |
| return out; |
| } |
| |
| // Returns the maximal value representable by T. Generates a compile-time |
| // error if T is not an integral type. |
| template <typename T> |
| constexpr T GetMaxVal() { |
| // Give a useful error for non-numeric types, and avoid returning zero for |
| // pointers and C-style enums (http://stackoverflow.com/a/9201960). |
| static_assert(std::is_integral<T>::value, |
| "GetMaxVal requires an integral type"); |
| return std::numeric_limits<T>::max(); |
| } |
| |
| // Returns the maximal value representable by |t_instance|. Generates a |
| // compile-time error if |t_instance| is not an instance of an integral type. |
| template <typename T> |
| constexpr T GetMaxVal(const T& /* t_instance */) { |
| return GetMaxVal<T>(); |
| } |
| |
| // Returns true if |c| is a printable character, for ASCII data. |
| inline bool IsAsciiPrintable(uint8_t c) { |
| return (c == '\t' || c == '\n' || (c >= ' ' && c <= '~')); |
| } |
| |
| namespace internal { |
| |
| // Implements the functionality documented for the SAFELY_CLAMP macro. |
| // This function should be used via the SAFELY_CLAMP macro. |
| template <typename SrcType, typename DstType, SrcType MinAsSrcType, |
| SrcType MaxAsSrcType, DstType MinAsDstType, DstType MaxAsDstType> |
| DstType SafelyClamp(SrcType input) { |
| static_assert(std::is_integral<SrcType>::value, |
| "source type must be integral"); |
| static_assert(std::is_integral<DstType>::value, |
| "destination type must be integral"); |
| static_assert(MinAsSrcType < MaxAsSrcType, "invalid source range"); |
| static_assert(MinAsDstType < MaxAsDstType, "invalid destination range"); |
| // Clients should use the SAFELY_CLAMP macro, in which case this should never |
| // happen. (When the SAFELY_CLAMP macro is used, the values can only be |
| // unequal if there was a narrowing conversion. But, in that case, the value |
| // should have failed to match the template, since narrowing-conversions are |
| // not allowed for non-type template arguments. |
| // http://stackoverflow.com/a/24346350) |
| // |
| // Anyway, these checks provide a fail-safe, in case clients use the template |
| // function directly, and pass in inconsistent values for the range |
| // definition. |
| static_assert(MinAsSrcType == MinAsDstType, "inconsistent range min"); |
| static_assert(MaxAsSrcType == MaxAsDstType, "inconsistent range max"); |
| |
| if (input < MinAsSrcType) { |
| return MinAsDstType; |
| } else if (input > MaxAsSrcType) { |
| return MaxAsDstType; |
| } else { |
| // - Given that the template has matched, we know that MinAsSrcType, |
| // MaxAsSrcType, MinAsDstType, and MaxAsDstType are valid for their |
| // respective types. (See narrowing-conversion comment above.) |
| // - Given the static_assert()s above, we know that a) the ranges are |
| // well-formed, and that the b) source range is identical to the |
| // destination range. |
| // - Given the range checks above, we know that |input| is within the range. |
| // |
| // Hence, the value to be returned must be valid for DstType, and the |
| // expression below has the same value as |input|. |
| return static_cast<DstType>(input); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| } // namespace internal |
| |
| } // namespace local_utils |
| } // namespace wifilogd |
| } // namespace android |
| |
| #endif // LOCAL_UTILS_H_ |