/****************************************************************** * * * strsafe.h -- This module defines safer C library string * * routine replacements. These are meant to make C * * a bit more safe in reference to security and * * robustness * * * * Copyright (c) Microsoft Corp. All rights reserved. * * Ported to Unix by Ben Allison - Nullsoft, Inc. * * * ******************************************************************/ #pragma once #ifdef _WIN32 #include #else #pragma once #include // for _vsnprintf, _vsnwprintf, getc, getwc #include // for memset #include // for va_start, etc. #include #include #ifndef _HRESULT_DEFINED #define _HRESULT_DEFINED typedef long HRESULT; #endif // !_HRESULT_DEFINED #ifndef SUCCEEDED #define SUCCEEDED(hr) ((HRESULT)(hr) >= 0) #endif #ifndef FAILED #define FAILED(hr) ((HRESULT)(hr) < 0) #endif #ifndef S_OK #define S_OK ((HRESULT)0x00000000L) #endif #ifdef __cplusplus #define _STRSAFE_EXTERN_C extern "C" #else #define _STRSAFE_EXTERN_C extern #endif // If you do not want to use these functions inline (and instead want to link w/ strsafe.lib), then // #define STRSAFE_LIB before including this header file. #ifndef _WIN32 #define __inline inline #define __stdcall #endif #if defined(STRSAFE_LIB) #define STRSAFEAPI _STRSAFE_EXTERN_C HRESULT __stdcall #pragma comment(lib, "./strsafe.lib") #elif defined(STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL) #define STRSAFEAPI _STRSAFE_EXTERN_C __declspec(dllexport) HRESULT __stdcall #else #define STRSAFEAPI __inline HRESULT __stdcall #define STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // Some functions always run inline because they use stdin and we want to avoid building multiple // versions of strsafe lib depending on if you use msvcrt, libcmt, etc. #define STRSAFE_INLINE_API __inline HRESULT __stdcall // The user can request no "Cb" or no "Cch" fuctions, but not both! #if defined(STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS) && defined(STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS) #error cannot specify both STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS and STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS !! #endif // This should only be defined when we are building strsafe.lib #ifdef STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL #define STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // If both strsafe.h and ntstrsafe.h are included, only use definitions from one. #ifndef _NTSTRSAFE_H_INCLUDED_ #define STRSAFE_MAX_CCH 2147483647 // max # of characters we support (same as INT_MAX) // Flags for controling the Ex functions // // STRSAFE_FILL_BYTE(0xFF) 0x000000FF // bottom byte specifies fill pattern #define STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS 0x00000100 // treat null as TEXT("") -- don't fault on NULL buffers #define STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL 0x00000200 // fill in extra space behind the null terminator #define STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE 0x00000400 // on failure, overwrite pszDest with fill pattern and null terminate it #define STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE 0x00000800 // on failure, set *pszDest = TEXT('\0') #define STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION 0x00001000 // instead of returning a truncated result, copy/append nothing to pszDest and null terminate it #define STRSAFE_VALID_FLAGS (0x000000FF | STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS | STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL | STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE | STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE | STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION) // helper macro to set the fill character and specify buffer filling #define STRSAFE_FILL_BYTE(x) ((unsigned long)((x & 0x000000FF) | STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL)) #define STRSAFE_FAILURE_BYTE(x) ((unsigned long)((x & 0x000000FF) | STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE)) #define STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags) ((int)(dwFlags & 0x000000FF)) #endif // _NTSTRSAFE_H_INCLUDED_ // STRSAFE error return codes // #define STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER ((HRESULT)0x8007007AL) // 0x7A = 122L = ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER #define STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER ((HRESULT)0x80070057L) // 0x57 = 87L = ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER #define STRSAFE_E_END_OF_FILE ((HRESULT)0x80070026L) // 0x26 = 38L = ERROR_HANDLE_EOF // prototypes for the worker functions #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCopyWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc); STRSAFEAPI StringCopyExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); STRSAFEAPI StringCopyNWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchSrc); STRSAFEAPI StringCopyNExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); STRSAFEAPI StringCatWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc); STRSAFEAPI StringCatExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); STRSAFEAPI StringCatNWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchMaxAppend); STRSAFEAPI StringCatNExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchMaxAppend, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); STRSAFEAPI StringVPrintfWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList); STRSAFEAPI StringVPrintfExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList); STRSAFEAPI StringLengthWorkerA(const char* psz, size_t cchMax, size_t* pcch); #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #ifndef STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL // these functions are always inline STRSAFE_INLINE_API StringGetsExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #endif #ifdef _NTSTRSAFE_H_INCLUDED_ #pragma warning(push) #pragma warning(disable : 4995) #endif // _NTSTRSAFE_H_INCLUDED_ #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchCopy( OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cchDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strcpy'. The size of the destination buffer (in characters) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This routine is not a replacement for strncpy. That function will pad the destination string with extra null termination characters if the count is greater than the length of the source string, and it will fail to null terminate the destination string if the source string length is greater than or equal to the count. You can not blindly use this instead of strncpy: it is common for code to use it to "patch" strings and you would introduce errors if the code started null terminating in the middle of the string. This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the string was copied without truncation and null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases as much of pszSrc will be copied to pszDest as possible, and pszDest will be null terminated. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. length must be = (_tcslen(src) + 1) to hold all of the source including the null terminator pszSrc - source string which must be null terminated Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL. See StringCchCopyEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all copied and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the copy operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function. --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchCopyA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc); #define StringCchCopy StringCchCopyA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchCopyA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringCopyWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszSrc); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbCopy( OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cbDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strcpy'. The size of the destination buffer (in bytes) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This routine is not a replacement for strncpy. That function will pad the destination string with extra null termination characters if the count is greater than the length of the source string, and it will fail to null terminate the destination string if the source string length is greater than or equal to the count. You can not blindly use this instead of strncpy: it is common for code to use it to "patch" strings and you would introduce errors if the code started null terminating in the middle of the string. This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the string was copied without truncation and null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases as much of pszSrc will be copied to pszDest as possible, and pszDest will be null terminated. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. length must be = ((_tcslen(src) + 1) * sizeof(TCHAR)) to hold all of the source including the null terminator pszSrc - source string which must be null terminated Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL. See StringCbCopyEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all copied and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the copy operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function. --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbCopyA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc); #define StringCbCopy StringCbCopyA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbCopyA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; // convert to count of characters cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringCopyWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszSrc); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchCopyEx( OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cchDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc OPTIONAL, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcchRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strcpy' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCchCopy, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of characters left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. length must be = (_tcslen(pszSrc) + 1) to hold all of the source including the null terminator pszSrc - source string which must be null terminated ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function copied any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcchRemaining - if pcchRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of characters left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")). this flag is useful for emulating functions like lstrcpy STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION / STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER. Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszSrc may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all copied and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the copy operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchCopyExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #define StringCchCopyEx StringCchCopyExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchCopyExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cbDest; // safe to multiply cchDest * sizeof(char) since cchDest < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 cbDest = cchDest * sizeof(char); hr = StringCopyExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, pszSrc, ppszDestEnd, pcchRemaining, dwFlags); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbCopyEx( OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cbDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc OPTIONAL, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcbRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strcpy' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCbCopy, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of bytes left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. length must be ((_tcslen(pszSrc) + 1) * sizeof(TCHAR)) to hold all of the source including the null terminator pszSrc - source string which must be null terminated ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function copied any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcbRemaining - pcbRemaining is non-null,the function will return the number of bytes left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")). this flag is useful for emulating functions like lstrcpy STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION / STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER. Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszSrc may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all copied and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the copy operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbCopyExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #define StringCbCopyEx StringCbCopyExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbCopyExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringCopyExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, pszSrc, ppszDestEnd, &cchRemaining, dwFlags); } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (pcbRemaining) { // safe to multiply cchRemaining * sizeof(char) since cchRemaining < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 *pcbRemaining = (cchRemaining * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char)); } } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchCopyN( OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cchDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc, IN size_t cchSrc ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strncpy'. The size of the destination buffer (in characters) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This routine is meant as a replacement for strncpy, but it does behave differently. This function will not pad the destination buffer with extra null termination characters if cchSrc is greater than the length of pszSrc. This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the entire string or the first cchSrc characters were copied without truncation and the resultant destination string was null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases as much of pszSrc will be copied to pszDest as possible, and pszDest will be null terminated. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. length must be = (_tcslen(src) + 1) to hold all of the source including the null terminator pszSrc - source string cchSrc - maximum number of characters to copy from source string, not including the null terminator. Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL. See StringCchCopyNEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all copied and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the copy operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function. --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchCopyNA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchSrc); #define StringCchCopyN StringCchCopyNA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchCopyNA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchSrc) { HRESULT hr; if ((cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) || (cchSrc > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringCopyNWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszSrc, cchSrc); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbCopyN( OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cbDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc, IN size_t cbSrc ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strncpy'. The size of the destination buffer (in bytes) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This routine is meant as a replacement for strncpy, but it does behave differently. This function will not pad the destination buffer with extra null termination characters if cbSrc is greater than the size of pszSrc. This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the entire string or the first cbSrc characters were copied without truncation and the resultant destination string was null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases as much of pszSrc will be copied to pszDest as possible, and pszDest will be null terminated. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. length must be = ((_tcslen(src) + 1) * sizeof(TCHAR)) to hold all of the source including the null terminator pszSrc - source string cbSrc - maximum number of bytes to copy from source string, not including the null terminator. Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL. See StringCbCopyEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all copied and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the copy operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function. --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbCopyNA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cbSrc); #define StringCbCopyN StringCbCopyNA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbCopyNA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cbSrc) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; size_t cchSrc; // convert to count of characters cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); cchSrc = cbSrc / sizeof(char); if ((cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) || (cchSrc > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringCopyNWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszSrc, cchSrc); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchCopyNEx( OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cchDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc OPTIONAL, IN size_t cchSrc, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcchRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strncpy' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCchCopyN, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of characters left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. This routine is meant as a replacement for strncpy, but it does behave differently. This function will not pad the destination buffer with extra null termination characters if cchSrc is greater than the length of pszSrc. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. length must be = (_tcslen(pszSrc) + 1) to hold all of the source including the null terminator pszSrc - source string cchSrc - maximum number of characters to copy from the source string ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function copied any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcchRemaining - if pcchRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of characters left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")). this flag is useful for emulating functions like lstrcpy STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION / STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER. Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszSrc may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all copied and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the copy operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchCopyNExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #define StringCchCopyNEx StringCchCopyNExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchCopyNExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr; if ((cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) || (cchSrc > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cbDest; // safe to multiply cchDest * sizeof(char) since cchDest < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 cbDest = cchDest * sizeof(char); hr = StringCopyNExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, pszSrc, cchSrc, ppszDestEnd, pcchRemaining, dwFlags); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbCopyNEx( OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cbDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc OPTIONAL, IN size_t cbSrc, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcbRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strncpy' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCbCopyN, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of bytes left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. This routine is meant as a replacement for strncpy, but it does behave differently. This function will not pad the destination buffer with extra null termination characters if cbSrc is greater than the size of pszSrc. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. length must be ((_tcslen(pszSrc) + 1) * sizeof(TCHAR)) to hold all of the source including the null terminator pszSrc - source string cbSrc - maximum number of bytes to copy from source string ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function copied any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcbRemaining - pcbRemaining is non-null,the function will return the number of bytes left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")). this flag is useful for emulating functions like lstrcpy STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION / STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER. Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszSrc may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all copied and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the copy operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbCopyNExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cbSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #define StringCbCopyNEx StringCbCopyNExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbCopyNExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cbSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; size_t cchSrc; size_t cchRemaining = 0; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); cchSrc = cbSrc / sizeof(char); if ((cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) || (cchSrc > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringCopyNExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, pszSrc, cchSrc, ppszDestEnd, &cchRemaining, dwFlags); } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (pcbRemaining) { // safe to multiply cchRemaining * sizeof(char) since cchRemaining < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 *pcbRemaining = (cchRemaining * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char)); } } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchCat( IN OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cchDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strcat'. The size of the destination buffer (in characters) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the string was concatenated without truncation and null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases as much of pszSrc will be appended to pszDest as possible, and pszDest will be null terminated. Arguments: pszDest - destination string which must be null terminated cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. length must be = (_tcslen(pszDest) + _tcslen(pszSrc) + 1) to hold all of the combine string plus the null terminator pszSrc - source string which must be null terminated Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL. See StringCchCatEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all concatenated and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchCatA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc); #define StringCchCat StringCchCatA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchCatA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringCatWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszSrc); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbCat( IN OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cbDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strcat'. The size of the destination buffer (in bytes) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the string was concatenated without truncation and null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases as much of pszSrc will be appended to pszDest as possible, and pszDest will be null terminated. Arguments: pszDest - destination string which must be null terminated cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. length must be = ((_tcslen(pszDest) + _tcslen(pszSrc) + 1) * sizeof(TCHAR) to hold all of the combine string plus the null terminator pszSrc - source string which must be null terminated Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL. See StringCbCatEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all concatenated and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbCatA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc); #define StringCbCat StringCbCatA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbCatA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringCatWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszSrc); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchCatEx( IN OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cchDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc OPTIONAL, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcchRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strcat' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCchCat, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of characters left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string which must be null terminated cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters length must be (_tcslen(pszDest) + _tcslen(pszSrc) + 1) to hold all of the combine string plus the null terminator. pszSrc - source string which must be null terminated ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function appended any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcchRemaining - if pcchRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of characters left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")). this flag is useful for emulating functions like lstrcat STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any pre-existing or truncated string STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any pre-existing or truncated string STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION if the function returns STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER, pszDest will not contain a truncated string, it will remain unchanged. Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszSrc may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all concatenated and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchCatExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #define StringCchCatEx StringCchCatExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchCatExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cbDest; // safe to multiply cchDest * sizeof(char) since cchDest < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 cbDest = cchDest * sizeof(char); hr = StringCatExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, pszSrc, ppszDestEnd, pcchRemaining, dwFlags); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbCatEx( IN OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cbDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc OPTIONAL, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcbRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strcat' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCbCat, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of bytes left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string which must be null terminated cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. length must be ((_tcslen(pszDest) + _tcslen(pszSrc) + 1) * sizeof(TCHAR) to hold all of the combine string plus the null terminator. pszSrc - source string which must be null terminated ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function appended any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcbRemaining - if pcbRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of bytes left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")). this flag is useful for emulating functions like lstrcat STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any pre-existing or truncated string STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any pre-existing or truncated string STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION if the function returns STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER, pszDest will not contain a truncated string, it will remain unchanged. Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszSrc may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all concatenated and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbCatExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #define StringCbCatEx StringCbCatExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbCatExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringCatExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, pszSrc, ppszDestEnd, &cchRemaining, dwFlags); } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (pcbRemaining) { // safe to multiply cchRemaining * sizeof(char) since cchRemaining < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 *pcbRemaining = (cchRemaining * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char)); } } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchCatN( IN OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cchDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc, IN size_t cchMaxAppend ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strncat'. The size of the destination buffer (in characters) is a parameter as well as the maximum number of characters to append, excluding the null terminator. This function will not write past the end of the destination buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate pszDest (unless it is zero length). This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if all of pszSrc or the first cchMaxAppend characters were appended to the destination string and it was null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases as much of pszSrc will be appended to pszDest as possible, and pszDest will be null terminated. Arguments: pszDest - destination string which must be null terminated cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. length must be (_tcslen(pszDest) + min(cchMaxAppend, _tcslen(pszSrc)) + 1) to hold all of the combine string plus the null terminator. pszSrc - source string cchMaxAppend - maximum number of characters to append Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL. See StringCchCatNEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if all of pszSrc or the first cchMaxAppend characters were concatenated to pszDest and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchCatNA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchMaxAppend); #define StringCchCatN StringCchCatNA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchCatNA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchMaxAppend) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringCatNWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszSrc, cchMaxAppend); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbCatN( IN OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cbDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc, IN size_t cbMaxAppend ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strncat'. The size of the destination buffer (in bytes) is a parameter as well as the maximum number of bytes to append, excluding the null terminator. This function will not write past the end of the destination buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate pszDest (unless it is zero length). This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if all of pszSrc or the first cbMaxAppend bytes were appended to the destination string and it was null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases as much of pszSrc will be appended to pszDest as possible, and pszDest will be null terminated. Arguments: pszDest - destination string which must be null terminated cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. length must be ((_tcslen(pszDest) + min(cbMaxAppend / sizeof(TCHAR), _tcslen(pszSrc)) + 1) * sizeof(TCHAR) to hold all of the combine string plus the null terminator. pszSrc - source string cbMaxAppend - maximum number of bytes to append Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL. See StringCbCatNEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if all of pszSrc or the first cbMaxAppend bytes were concatenated to pszDest and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbCatNA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cbMaxAppend); #define StringCbCatN StringCbCatNA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbCatNA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cbMaxAppend) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cchMaxAppend; cchMaxAppend = cbMaxAppend / sizeof(char); hr = StringCatNWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszSrc, cchMaxAppend); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchCatNEx( IN OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cchDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc OPTIONAL, IN size_t cchMaxAppend, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcchRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strncat', with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCchCatN, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of characters left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string which must be null terminated cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. length must be (_tcslen(pszDest) + min(cchMaxAppend, _tcslen(pszSrc)) + 1) to hold all of the combine string plus the null terminator. pszSrc - source string cchMaxAppend - maximum number of characters to append ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function appended any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcchRemaining - if pcchRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of characters left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")) STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any pre-existing or truncated string STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any pre-existing or truncated string STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION if the function returns STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER, pszDest will not contain a truncated string, it will remain unchanged. Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszSrc may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if all of pszSrc or the first cchMaxAppend characters were concatenated to pszDest and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchCatNExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchMaxAppend, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #define StringCchCatNEx StringCchCatNExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchCatNExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchMaxAppend, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cbDest; // safe to multiply cchDest * sizeof(char) since cchDest < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 cbDest = cchDest * sizeof(char); hr = StringCatNExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, pszSrc, cchMaxAppend, ppszDestEnd, pcchRemaining, dwFlags); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbCatNEx( IN OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cbDest, IN LPCTSTR pszSrc OPTIONAL, IN size_t cbMaxAppend, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcchRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strncat', with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCbCatN, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of bytes left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string which must be null terminated cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. length must be ((_tcslen(pszDest) + min(cbMaxAppend / sizeof(TCHAR), _tcslen(pszSrc)) + 1) * sizeof(TCHAR) to hold all of the combine string plus the null terminator. pszSrc - source string cbMaxAppend - maximum number of bytes to append ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function appended any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcbRemaining - if pcbRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of bytes left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")) STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any pre-existing or truncated string STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any pre-existing or truncated string STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION if the function returns STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER, pszDest will not contain a truncated string, it will remain unchanged. Notes: Behavior is undefined if source and destination strings overlap. pszDest and pszSrc should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszSrc may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if all of pszSrc or the first cbMaxAppend bytes were concatenated to pszDest and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbCatNExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cbMaxAppend, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #define StringCbCatNEx StringCbCatNExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbCatNExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cbMaxAppend, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cchMaxAppend; cchMaxAppend = cbMaxAppend / sizeof(char); hr = StringCatNExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, pszSrc, cchMaxAppend, ppszDestEnd, &cchRemaining, dwFlags); } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (pcbRemaining) { // safe to multiply cchRemaining * sizeof(char) since cchRemaining < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 *pcbRemaining = (cchRemaining * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char)); } } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchVPrintf( OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cchDest, IN LPCTSTR pszFormat, IN va_list argList ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'vsprintf'. The size of the destination buffer (in characters) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the string was printed without truncation and null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases it will return a truncated version of the ideal result. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters length must be sufficient to hold the resulting formatted string, including the null terminator. pszFormat - format string which must be null terminated argList - va_list from the variable arguments according to the stdarg.h convention Notes: Behavior is undefined if destination, format strings or any arguments strings overlap. pszDest and pszFormat should not be NULL. See StringCchVPrintfEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if there was sufficient space in the dest buffer for the resultant string and it was null terminated. failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the print operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchVPrintfA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList); #define StringCchVPrintf StringCchVPrintfA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchVPrintfA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringVPrintfWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszFormat, argList); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbVPrintf( OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cbDest, IN LPCTSTR pszFormat, IN va_list argList ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'vsprintf'. The size of the destination buffer (in bytes) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the string was printed without truncation and null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases it will return a truncated version of the ideal result. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes length must be sufficient to hold the resulting formatted string, including the null terminator. pszFormat - format string which must be null terminated argList - va_list from the variable arguments according to the stdarg.h convention Notes: Behavior is undefined if destination, format strings or any arguments strings overlap. pszDest and pszFormat should not be NULL. See StringCbVPrintfEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if there was sufficient space in the dest buffer for the resultant string and it was null terminated. failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the print operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbVPrintfA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList); #define StringCbVPrintf StringCbVPrintfA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbVPrintfA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringVPrintfWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszFormat, argList); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchPrintf( OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cchDest, IN LPCTSTR pszFormat, ... ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'sprintf'. The size of the destination buffer (in characters) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the string was printed without truncation and null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases it will return a truncated version of the ideal result. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters length must be sufficient to hold the resulting formatted string, including the null terminator. pszFormat - format string which must be null terminated ... - additional parameters to be formatted according to the format string Notes: Behavior is undefined if destination, format strings or any arguments strings overlap. pszDest and pszFormat should not be NULL. See StringCchPrintfEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if there was sufficient space in the dest buffer for the resultant string and it was null terminated. failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the print operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchPrintfA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszFormat, ...); #define StringCchPrintf StringCchPrintfA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchPrintfA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszFormat, ...) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { va_list argList; va_start(argList, pszFormat); hr = StringVPrintfWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszFormat, argList); va_end(argList); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbPrintf( OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cbDest, IN LPCTSTR pszFormat, ... ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'sprintf'. The size of the destination buffer (in bytes) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the string was printed without truncation and null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. In failure cases it will return a truncated version of the ideal result. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes length must be sufficient to hold the resulting formatted string, including the null terminator. pszFormat - format string which must be null terminated ... - additional parameters to be formatted according to the format string Notes: Behavior is undefined if destination, format strings or any arguments strings overlap. pszDest and pszFormat should not be NULL. See StringCbPrintfEx if you require the handling of NULL values. Return Value: S_OK - if there was sufficient space in the dest buffer for the resultant string and it was null terminated. failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the print operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbPrintfA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszFormat, ...); #define StringCbPrintf StringCbPrintfA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbPrintfA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszFormat, ...) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { va_list argList; va_start(argList, pszFormat); hr = StringVPrintfWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, pszFormat, argList); va_end(argList); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchPrintfEx( OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cchDest, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcchRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags, IN LPCTSTR pszFormat OPTIONAL, ... ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'sprintf' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCchPrintf, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of characters left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. length must be sufficient to contain the resulting formatted string plus the null terminator. ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function printed any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcchRemaining - if pcchRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of characters left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")) STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION / STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER. pszFormat - format string which must be null terminated ... - additional parameters to be formatted according to the format string Notes: Behavior is undefined if destination, format strings or any arguments strings overlap. pszDest and pszFormat should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszFormat may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all concatenated and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the print operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchPrintfExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags, const char* pszFormat, ...); #define StringCchPrintfEx StringCchPrintfExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchPrintfExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags, const char* pszFormat, ...) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cbDest; va_list argList; // safe to multiply cchDest * sizeof(char) since cchDest < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 cbDest = cchDest * sizeof(char); va_start(argList, pszFormat); hr = StringVPrintfExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, ppszDestEnd, pcchRemaining, dwFlags, pszFormat, argList); va_end(argList); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbPrintfEx( OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cbDest, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcbRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags, IN LPCTSTR pszFormat OPTIONAL, ... ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'sprintf' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCbPrintf, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of bytes left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. length must be sufficient to contain the resulting formatted string plus the null terminator. ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function printed any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcbRemaining - if pcbRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of bytes left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")) STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION / STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER. pszFormat - format string which must be null terminated ... - additional parameters to be formatted according to the format string Notes: Behavior is undefined if destination, format strings or any arguments strings overlap. pszDest and pszFormat should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszFormat may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all concatenated and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the print operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbPrintfExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags, const char* pszFormat, ...); #define StringCbPrintfEx StringCbPrintfExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbPrintfExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags, const char* pszFormat, ...) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { va_list argList; va_start(argList, pszFormat); hr = StringVPrintfExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, ppszDestEnd, &cchRemaining, dwFlags, pszFormat, argList); va_end(argList); } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (pcbRemaining) { // safe to multiply cchRemaining * sizeof(char) since cchRemaining < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 *pcbRemaining = (cchRemaining * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char)); } } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchVPrintfEx( OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cchDest, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcchRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags, IN LPCTSTR pszFormat OPTIONAL, IN va_list argList ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'vsprintf' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCchVPrintf, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of characters left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. length must be sufficient to contain the resulting formatted string plus the null terminator. ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function printed any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcchRemaining - if pcchRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of characters left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")) STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION / STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER. pszFormat - format string which must be null terminated argList - va_list from the variable arguments according to the stdarg.h convention Notes: Behavior is undefined if destination, format strings or any arguments strings overlap. pszDest and pszFormat should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszFormat may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all concatenated and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the print operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchVPrintfExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList); #define StringCchVPrintfEx StringCchVPrintfExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchVPrintfExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cbDest; // safe to multiply cchDest * sizeof(char) since cchDest < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 cbDest = cchDest * sizeof(char); hr = StringVPrintfExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, ppszDestEnd, pcchRemaining, dwFlags, pszFormat, argList); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbVPrintfEx( OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cbDest, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcbRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags, IN LPCTSTR pszFormat OPTIONAL, IN va_list argList ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'vsprintf' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCbVPrintf, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of characters left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. length must be sufficient to contain the resulting formatted string plus the null terminator. ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function printed any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcbRemaining - if pcbRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of bytes left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")) STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION / STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. This will overwrite any truncated string returned when the failure is STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER. pszFormat - format string which must be null terminated argList - va_list from the variable arguments according to the stdarg.h convention Notes: Behavior is undefined if destination, format strings or any arguments strings overlap. pszDest and pszFormat should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed, both pszDest and pszFormat may be NULL. An error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored due to insufficient space. Return Value: S_OK - if there was source data and it was all concatenated and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that the print operation failed due to insufficient space. When this error occurs, the destination buffer is modified to contain a truncated version of the ideal result and is null terminated. This is useful for situations where truncation is ok. It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbVPrintfExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList); #define StringCbVPrintfEx StringCbVPrintfExA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbVPrintfExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringVPrintfExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, ppszDestEnd, &cchRemaining, dwFlags, pszFormat, argList); } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (pcbRemaining) { // safe to multiply cchRemaining * sizeof(char) since cchRemaining < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 *pcbRemaining = (cchRemaining * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char)); } } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchGets( OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cchDest ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'gets'. The size of the destination buffer (in characters) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This routine is not a replacement for fgets. That function does not replace newline characters with a null terminator. This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if any characters were read from stdin and copied to pszDest and pszDest was null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. Notes: pszDest should not be NULL. See StringCchGetsEx if you require the handling of NULL values. cchDest must be > 1 for this function to succeed. Return Value: S_OK - data was read from stdin and copied, and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_END_OF_FILE / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_HANDLE_EOF - this return value indicates an error or end-of-file condition, use feof or ferror to determine which one has occured. STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that there was insufficient space in the destination buffer to copy any data It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function. --*/ #ifndef STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL STRSAFE_INLINE_API StringCchGetsA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest); #define StringCchGets StringCchGetsA STRSAFE_INLINE_API StringCchGetsA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cbDest; // safe to multiply cchDest * sizeof(char) since cchDest < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 cbDest = cchDest * sizeof(char); hr = StringGetsExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, NULL, NULL, 0); } return hr; } #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #endif // !STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbGets( OUT LPTSTR pszDest, IN size_t cbDest ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'gets'. The size of the destination buffer (in bytes) is a parameter and this function will not write past the end of this buffer and it will ALWAYS null terminate the destination buffer (unless it is zero length). This routine is not a replacement for fgets. That function does not replace newline characters with a null terminator. This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if any characters were read from stdin and copied to pszDest and pszDest was null terminated, otherwise it will return a failure code. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. Notes: pszDest should not be NULL. See StringCbGetsEx if you require the handling of NULL values. cbDest must be > sizeof(TCHAR) for this function to succeed. Return Value: S_OK - data was read from stdin and copied, and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_END_OF_FILE / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_HANDLE_EOF - this return value indicates an error or end-of-file condition, use feof or ferror to determine which one has occured. STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that there was insufficient space in the destination buffer to copy any data It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function. --*/ #ifndef STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL STRSAFE_INLINE_API StringCbGetsA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest); #define StringCbGets StringCbGetsA STRSAFE_INLINE_API StringCbGetsA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; // convert to count of characters cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringGetsExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, NULL, NULL, 0); } return hr; } #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #endif // !STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchGetsEx( OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cchDest, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcchRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'gets' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCchGets, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of characters left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cchDest - size of destination buffer in characters. ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function copied any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcchRemaining - if pcchRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of characters left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")). STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION / STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. Notes: pszDest should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed and pszDest is NULL, an error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored cchDest must be > 1 for this function to succeed. Return Value: S_OK - data was read from stdin and copied, and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_END_OF_FILE / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_HANDLE_EOF - this return value indicates an error or end-of-file condition, use feof or ferror to determine which one has occured. STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that there was insufficient space in the destination buffer to copy any data It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function. --*/ #ifndef STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL STRSAFE_INLINE_API StringCchGetsExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #define StringCchGetsEx StringCchGetsExA STRSAFE_INLINE_API StringCchGetsExA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr; if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cbDest; // safe to multiply cchDest * sizeof(char) since cchDest < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 cbDest = cchDest * sizeof(char); hr = StringGetsExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, ppszDestEnd, pcchRemaining, dwFlags); } return hr; } #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #endif // !STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbGetsEx( OUT LPTSTR pszDest OPTIONAL, IN size_t cbDest, OUT LPTSTR* ppszDestEnd OPTIONAL, OUT size_t* pcbRemaining OPTIONAL, IN DWORD dwFlags ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'gets' with some additional parameters. In addition to functionality provided by StringCbGets, this routine also returns a pointer to the end of the destination string and the number of characters left in the destination string including the null terminator. The flags parameter allows additional controls. Arguments: pszDest - destination string cbDest - size of destination buffer in bytes. ppszDestEnd - if ppszDestEnd is non-null, the function will return a pointer to the end of the destination string. If the function copied any data, the result will point to the null termination character pcbRemaining - if pbRemaining is non-null, the function will return the number of bytes left in the destination string, including the null terminator dwFlags - controls some details of the string copy: STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL if the function succeeds, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill the uninitialize part of destination buffer behind the null terminator STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS treat NULL string pointers like empty strings (TEXT("")). STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the low byte of dwFlags will be used to fill all of the destination buffer, and it will be null terminated. STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION / STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE if the function fails, the destination buffer will be set to the empty string. Notes: pszDest should not be NULL unless the STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS flag is specified. If STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS is passed and pszDest is NULL, an error may still be returned even though NULLS are ignored cbDest must be > sizeof(TCHAR) for this function to succeed Return Value: S_OK - data was read from stdin and copied, and the resultant dest string was null terminated failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases STRSAFE_E_END_OF_FILE / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_HANDLE_EOF - this return value indicates an error or end-of-file condition, use feof or ferror to determine which one has occured. STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER / HRESULT_CODE(hr) == ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER - this return value is an indication that there was insufficient space in the destination buffer to copy any data It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function. --*/ #ifndef STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL STRSAFE_INLINE_API StringCbGetsExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags); #define StringCbGetsEx StringCbGetsExA STRSAFE_INLINE_API StringCbGetsExA(char* pszDest, size_t cbDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcbRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; cchDest = cbDest / sizeof(char); if (cchDest > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringGetsExWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, cbDest, ppszDestEnd, &cchRemaining, dwFlags); } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_END_OF_FILE)) { if (pcbRemaining) { // safe to multiply cchRemaining * sizeof(char) since cchRemaining < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 *pcbRemaining = (cchRemaining * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char)); } } return hr; } #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS #endif // !STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCchLength( IN LPCTSTR psz, IN size_t cchMax, OUT size_t* pcch OPTIONAL ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strlen'. It is used to make sure a string is not larger than a given length, and it optionally returns the current length in characters not including the null terminator. This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the string is non-null and the length including the null terminator is less than or equal to cchMax characters. Arguments: psz - string to check the length of cchMax - maximum number of characters including the null terminator that psz is allowed to contain pcch - if the function succeeds and pcch is non-null, the current length in characters of psz excluding the null terminator will be returned. This out parameter is equivalent to the return value of strlen(psz) Notes: psz can be null but the function will fail cchMax should be greater than zero or the function will fail Return Value: S_OK - psz is non-null and the length including the null terminator is less than or equal to cchMax characters failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function. --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCchLengthA(const char* psz, size_t cchMax, size_t* pcch); #define StringCchLength StringCchLengthA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCchLengthA(const char* psz, size_t cchMax, size_t* pcch) { HRESULT hr; if ((psz == NULL) || (cchMax > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringLengthWorkerA(psz, cchMax, pcch); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CCH_FUNCTIONS #ifndef STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS /*++ STDAPI StringCbLength( IN LPCTSTR psz, IN size_t cbMax, OUT size_t* pcb OPTIONAL ); Routine Description: This routine is a safer version of the C built-in function 'strlen'. It is used to make sure a string is not larger than a given length, and it optionally returns the current length in bytes not including the null terminator. This function returns a hresult, and not a pointer. It returns S_OK if the string is non-null and the length including the null terminator is less than or equal to cbMax bytes. Arguments: psz - string to check the length of cbMax - maximum number of bytes including the null terminator that psz is allowed to contain pcb - if the function succeeds and pcb is non-null, the current length in bytes of psz excluding the null terminator will be returned. This out parameter is equivalent to the return value of strlen(psz) * sizeof(TCHAR) Notes: psz can be null but the function will fail cbMax should be greater than or equal to sizeof(TCHAR) or the function will fail Return Value: S_OK - psz is non-null and the length including the null terminator is less than or equal to cbMax bytes failure - you can use the macro HRESULT_CODE() to get a win32 error code for all hresult failure cases It is strongly recommended to use the SUCCEEDED() / FAILED() macros to test the return value of this function. --*/ STRSAFEAPI StringCbLengthA(const char* psz, size_t cchMax, size_t* pcch); #define StringCbLength StringCbLengthA #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCbLengthA(const char* psz, size_t cbMax, size_t* pcb) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchMax; size_t cch = 0; cchMax = cbMax / sizeof(char); if ((psz == NULL) || (cchMax > STRSAFE_MAX_CCH)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = StringLengthWorkerA(psz, cchMax, &cch); } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) && pcb) { // safe to multiply cch * sizeof(char) since cch < STRSAFE_MAX_CCH and sizeof(char) is 1 *pcb = cch * sizeof(char); } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #endif // !STRSAFE_NO_CB_FUNCTIONS // these are the worker functions that actually do the work #ifdef STRSAFE_INLINE STRSAFEAPI StringCopyWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc) { HRESULT hr = S_OK; if (cchDest == 0) { // can not null terminate a zero-byte dest buffer hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { while (cchDest && (*pszSrc != '\0')) { *pszDest++ = *pszSrc++; cchDest--; } if (cchDest == 0) { // we are going to truncate pszDest pszDest--; hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } *pszDest= '\0'; } return hr; } STRSAFEAPI StringCopyExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr = S_OK; char* pszDestEnd = pszDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; // ASSERT(cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) || // cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char))); // only accept valid flags if (dwFlags & (~STRSAFE_VALID_FLAGS)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS) { if (pszDest == NULL) { if ((cchDest != 0) || (cbDest != 0)) { // NULL pszDest and non-zero cchDest/cbDest is invalid hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } } if (pszSrc == NULL) { pszSrc = ""; } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { if (cchDest == 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = 0; // only fail if there was actually src data to copy if (*pszSrc != '\0') { if (pszDest == NULL) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } } } else { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; while (cchRemaining && (*pszSrc != '\0')) { *pszDestEnd++= *pszSrc++; cchRemaining--; } if (cchRemaining > 0) { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL) { memset(pszDestEnd + 1, STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags), ((cchRemaining - 1) * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char))); } } else { // we are going to truncate pszDest pszDestEnd--; cchRemaining++; hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } } if (FAILED(hr)) { if (pszDest) { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE) { memset(pszDest, STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags), cbDest); if (STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags) == 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; } else if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchDest - 1; cchRemaining = 1; // null terminate the end of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } if (dwFlags & (STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE | STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION)) { if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; // null terminate the beginning of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (ppszDestEnd) { *ppszDestEnd = pszDestEnd; } if (pcchRemaining) { *pcchRemaining = cchRemaining; } } return hr; } STRSAFEAPI StringCopyNWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchSrc) { HRESULT hr = S_OK; if (cchDest == 0) { // can not null terminate a zero-byte dest buffer hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { while (cchDest && cchSrc && (*pszSrc != '\0')) { *pszDest++= *pszSrc++; cchDest--; cchSrc--; } if (cchDest == 0) { // we are going to truncate pszDest pszDest--; hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } *pszDest= '\0'; } return hr; } STRSAFEAPI StringCopyNExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr = S_OK; char* pszDestEnd = pszDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; // ASSERT(cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) || // cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char))); // only accept valid flags if (dwFlags & (~STRSAFE_VALID_FLAGS)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS) { if (pszDest == NULL) { if ((cchDest != 0) || (cbDest != 0)) { // NULL pszDest and non-zero cchDest/cbDest is invalid hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } } if (pszSrc == NULL) { pszSrc = ""; } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { if (cchDest == 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = 0; // only fail if there was actually src data to copy if (*pszSrc != '\0') { if (pszDest == NULL) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } } } else { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; while (cchRemaining && cchSrc && (*pszSrc != '\0')) { *pszDestEnd++= *pszSrc++; cchRemaining--; cchSrc--; } if (cchRemaining > 0) { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL) { memset(pszDestEnd + 1, STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags), ((cchRemaining - 1) * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char))); } } else { // we are going to truncate pszDest pszDestEnd--; cchRemaining++; hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } } if (FAILED(hr)) { if (pszDest) { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE) { memset(pszDest, STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags), cbDest); if (STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags) == 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; } else if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchDest - 1; cchRemaining = 1; // null terminate the end of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } if (dwFlags & (STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE | STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION)) { if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; // null terminate the beginning of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (ppszDestEnd) { *ppszDestEnd = pszDestEnd; } if (pcchRemaining) { *pcchRemaining = cchRemaining; } } return hr; } STRSAFEAPI StringCatWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDestCurrent; hr = StringLengthWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, &cchDestCurrent); if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { hr = StringCopyWorkerA(pszDest + cchDestCurrent, cchDest - cchDestCurrent, pszSrc); } return hr; } STRSAFEAPI StringCatExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr = S_OK; char* pszDestEnd = pszDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; // ASSERT(cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) || // cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char))); // only accept valid flags if (dwFlags & (~STRSAFE_VALID_FLAGS)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { size_t cchDestCurrent; if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS) { if (pszDest == NULL) { if ((cchDest == 0) && (cbDest == 0)) { cchDestCurrent = 0; } else { // NULL pszDest and non-zero cchDest/cbDest is invalid hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } } else { hr = StringLengthWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, &cchDestCurrent); if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchDestCurrent; cchRemaining = cchDest - cchDestCurrent; } } if (pszSrc == NULL) { pszSrc = ""; } } else { hr = StringLengthWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, &cchDestCurrent); if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchDestCurrent; cchRemaining = cchDest - cchDestCurrent; } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { if (cchDest == 0) { // only fail if there was actually src data to append if (*pszSrc != '\0') { if (pszDest == NULL) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } } } else { // we handle the STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE and STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE cases below, so do not pass // those flags through hr = StringCopyExWorkerA(pszDestEnd, cchRemaining, (cchRemaining * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char)), pszSrc, &pszDestEnd, &cchRemaining, dwFlags & (~(STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE | STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE))); } } } if (FAILED(hr)) { if (pszDest) { // STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION is taken care of by StringCopyExWorkerA() if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE) { memset(pszDest, STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags), cbDest); if (STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags) == 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; } else if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchDest - 1; cchRemaining = 1; // null terminate the end of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE) { if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; // null terminate the beginning of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (ppszDestEnd) { *ppszDestEnd = pszDestEnd; } if (pcchRemaining) { *pcchRemaining = cchRemaining; } } return hr; } STRSAFEAPI StringCatNWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchMaxAppend) { HRESULT hr; size_t cchDestCurrent; hr = StringLengthWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, &cchDestCurrent); if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { hr = StringCopyNWorkerA(pszDest + cchDestCurrent, cchDest - cchDestCurrent, pszSrc, cchMaxAppend); } return hr; } STRSAFEAPI StringCatNExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, const char* pszSrc, size_t cchMaxAppend, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr = S_OK; char* pszDestEnd = pszDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; size_t cchDestCurrent = 0; // ASSERT(cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) || // cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char))); // only accept valid flags if (dwFlags & (~STRSAFE_VALID_FLAGS)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS) { if (pszDest == NULL) { if ((cchDest == 0) && (cbDest == 0)) { cchDestCurrent = 0; } else { // NULL pszDest and non-zero cchDest/cbDest is invalid hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } } else { hr = StringLengthWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, &cchDestCurrent); if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchDestCurrent; cchRemaining = cchDest - cchDestCurrent; } } if (pszSrc == NULL) { pszSrc = ""; } } else { hr = StringLengthWorkerA(pszDest, cchDest, &cchDestCurrent); if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchDestCurrent; cchRemaining = cchDest - cchDestCurrent; } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { if (cchDest == 0) { // only fail if there was actually src data to append if (*pszSrc != '\0') { if (pszDest == NULL) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } } } else { // we handle the STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE and STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE cases below, so do not pass // those flags through hr = StringCopyNExWorkerA(pszDestEnd, cchRemaining, (cchRemaining * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char)), pszSrc, cchMaxAppend, &pszDestEnd, &cchRemaining, dwFlags & (~(STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE | STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE))); } } } if (FAILED(hr)) { if (pszDest) { // STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION is taken care of by StringCopyNExWorkerA() if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE) { memset(pszDest, STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags), cbDest); if (STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags) == 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; } else if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchDest - 1; cchRemaining = 1; // null terminate the end of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } if (dwFlags & (STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE)) { if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; // null terminate the beginning of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (ppszDestEnd) { *ppszDestEnd = pszDestEnd; } if (pcchRemaining) { *pcchRemaining = cchRemaining; } } return hr; } STRSAFEAPI StringVPrintfWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList) { HRESULT hr = S_OK; if (cchDest == 0) { // can not null terminate a zero-byte dest buffer hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { int iRet; size_t cchMax; // leave the last space for the null terminator cchMax = cchDest - 1; iRet = vsnprintf(pszDest, cchMax, pszFormat, argList); // ASSERT((iRet < 0) || (((size_t)iRet) <= cchMax)); if ((iRet < 0) || (((size_t)iRet) > cchMax)) { // need to null terminate the string pszDest += cchMax; *pszDest = '\0'; // we have truncated pszDest hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } else if (((size_t)iRet) == cchMax) { // need to null terminate the string pszDest += cchMax; *pszDest = '\0'; } } return hr; } STRSAFEAPI StringVPrintfExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags, const char* pszFormat, va_list argList) { HRESULT hr = S_OK; char* pszDestEnd = pszDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; // ASSERT(cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) || // cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char))); // only accept valid flags if (dwFlags & (~STRSAFE_VALID_FLAGS)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS) { if (pszDest == NULL) { if ((cchDest != 0) || (cbDest != 0)) { // NULL pszDest and non-zero cchDest/cbDest is invalid hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } } if (pszFormat == NULL) { pszFormat = ""; } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { if (cchDest == 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = 0; // only fail if there was actually a non-empty format string if (*pszFormat != '\0') { if (pszDest == NULL) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } } } else { int iRet; size_t cchMax; // leave the last space for the null terminator cchMax = cchDest - 1; iRet = vsnprintf(pszDest, cchMax, pszFormat, argList); // ASSERT((iRet < 0) || (((size_t)iRet) <= cchMax)); if ((iRet < 0) || (((size_t)iRet) > cchMax)) { // we have truncated pszDest pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchMax; cchRemaining = 1; // need to null terminate the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } else if (((size_t)iRet) == cchMax) { // string fit perfectly pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchMax; cchRemaining = 1; // need to null terminate the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } else if (((size_t)iRet) < cchMax) { // there is extra room pszDestEnd = pszDest + iRet; cchRemaining = cchDest - iRet; if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL) { memset(pszDestEnd + 1, STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags), ((cchRemaining - 1) * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char))); } } } } } if (FAILED(hr)) { if (pszDest) { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE) { memset(pszDest, STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags), cbDest); if (STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags) == 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; } else if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchDest - 1; cchRemaining = 1; // null terminate the end of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } if (dwFlags & (STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE | STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION)) { if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; // null terminate the beginning of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { if (ppszDestEnd) { *ppszDestEnd = pszDestEnd; } if (pcchRemaining) { *pcchRemaining = cchRemaining; } } return hr; } STRSAFEAPI StringLengthWorkerA(const char* psz, size_t cchMax, size_t* pcch) { HRESULT hr = S_OK; size_t cchMaxPrev = cchMax; while (cchMax && (*psz != '\0')) { psz++; cchMax--; } if (cchMax == 0) { // the string is longer than cchMax hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) && pcch) { *pcch = cchMaxPrev - cchMax; } return hr; } #endif // STRSAFE_INLINE #ifndef STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL STRSAFE_INLINE_API StringGetsExWorkerA(char* pszDest, size_t cchDest, size_t cbDest, char** ppszDestEnd, size_t* pcchRemaining, unsigned long dwFlags) { HRESULT hr = S_OK; char* pszDestEnd = pszDest; size_t cchRemaining = 0; // ASSERT(cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) || // cbDest == (cchDest * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char))); // only accept valid flags if (dwFlags & (~STRSAFE_VALID_FLAGS)) { hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } else { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_IGNORE_NULLS) { if (pszDest == NULL) { if ((cchDest != 0) || (cbDest != 0)) { // NULL pszDest and non-zero cchDest/cbDest is invalid hr = STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER; } } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr)) { if (cchDest <= 1) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; if (cchDest == 1) { *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } hr = STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER; } else { char ch; pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; while ((cchRemaining > 1) && (ch = (char)getc(stdin)) != '\n') { if (ch == EOF) { if (pszDestEnd == pszDest) { // we failed to read anything from stdin hr = STRSAFE_E_END_OF_FILE; } break; } *pszDestEnd = ch; pszDestEnd++; cchRemaining--; } if (cchRemaining > 0) { // there is extra room if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_FILL_BEHIND_NULL) { memset(pszDestEnd + 1, STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags), ((cchRemaining - 1) * sizeof(char)) + (cbDest % sizeof(char))); } } *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } } if (FAILED(hr)) { if (pszDest) { if (dwFlags & STRSAFE_FILL_ON_FAILURE) { memset(pszDest, STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags), cbDest); if (STRSAFE_GET_FILL_PATTERN(dwFlags) == 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; } else if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest + cchDest - 1; cchRemaining = 1; // null terminate the end of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } if (dwFlags & (STRSAFE_NULL_ON_FAILURE | STRSAFE_NO_TRUNCATION)) { if (cchDest > 0) { pszDestEnd = pszDest; cchRemaining = cchDest; // null terminate the beginning of the string *pszDestEnd = '\0'; } } } } if (SUCCEEDED(hr) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER) || (hr == STRSAFE_E_END_OF_FILE)) { if (ppszDestEnd) { *ppszDestEnd = pszDestEnd; } if (pcchRemaining) { *pcchRemaining = cchRemaining; } } return hr; } #endif // !STRSAFE_LIB_IMPL // Do not call these functions, they are worker functions for internal use within this file #ifdef DEPRECATE_SUPPORTED #pragma deprecated(StringCopyWorkerA) #pragma deprecated(StringCopyWorkerW) #pragma deprecated(StringCopyExWorkerA) #pragma deprecated(StringCopyExWorkerW) #pragma deprecated(StringCatWorkerA) #pragma deprecated(StringCatWorkerW) #pragma deprecated(StringCatExWorkerA) #pragma deprecated(StringCatExWorkerW) #pragma deprecated(StringCatNWorkerA) #pragma deprecated(StringCatNWorkerW) #pragma deprecated(StringCatNExWorkerA) #pragma deprecated(StringCatNExWorkerW) #pragma deprecated(StringVPrintfWorkerA) #pragma deprecated(StringVPrintfWorkerW) #pragma deprecated(StringVPrintfExWorkerA) #pragma deprecated(StringVPrintfExWorkerW) #pragma deprecated(StringLengthWorkerA) #pragma deprecated(StringLengthWorkerW) #else #define StringCopyWorkerA StringCopyWorkerA_instead_use_StringCchCopyA_or_StringCchCopyExA; #define StringCopyWorkerW StringCopyWorkerW_instead_use_StringCchCopyW_or_StringCchCopyExW; #define StringCopyExWorkerA StringCopyExWorkerA_instead_use_StringCchCopyA_or_StringCchCopyExA; #define StringCopyExWorkerW StringCopyExWorkerW_instead_use_StringCchCopyW_or_StringCchCopyExW; #define StringCatWorkerA StringCatWorkerA_instead_use_StringCchCatA_or_StringCchCatExA; #define StringCatWorkerW StringCatWorkerW_instead_use_StringCchCatW_or_StringCchCatExW; #define StringCatExWorkerA StringCatExWorkerA_instead_use_StringCchCatA_or_StringCchCatExA; #define StringCatExWorkerW StringCatExWorkerW_instead_use_StringCchCatW_or_StringCchCatExW; #define StringCatNWorkerA StringCatNWorkerA_instead_use_StringCchCatNA_or_StrincCbCatNA; #define StringCatNWorkerW StringCatNWorkerW_instead_use_StringCchCatNW_or_StringCbCatNW; #define StringCatNExWorkerA StringCatNExWorkerA_instead_use_StringCchCatNExA_or_StringCbCatNExA; #define StringCatNExWorkerW StringCatNExWorkerW_instead_use_StringCchCatNExW_or_StringCbCatNExW; #define StringVPrintfWorkerA StringVPrintfWorkerA_instead_use_StringCchVPrintfA_or_StringCchVPrintfExA; #define StringVPrintfWorkerW StringVPrintfWorkerW_instead_use_StringCchVPrintfW_or_StringCchVPrintfExW; #define StringVPrintfExWorkerA StringVPrintfExWorkerA_instead_use_StringCchVPrintfA_or_StringCchVPrintfExA; #define StringVPrintfExWorkerW StringVPrintfExWorkerW_instead_use_StringCchVPrintfW_or_StringCchVPrintfExW; #define StringLengthWorkerA StringLengthWorkerA_instead_use_StringCchLengthA_or_StringCbLengthA; #define StringLengthWorkerW StringLengthWorkerW_instead_use_StringCchLengthW_or_StringCbLengthW; #endif // !DEPRECATE_SUPPORTED #ifdef _NTSTRSAFE_H_INCLUDED_ #pragma warning(pop) #endif // _NTSTRSAFE_H_INCLUDED_ #endif