table of contents
| SBUF(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | SBUF(9) | 
NAME¶
sbuf, sbuf_new,
    sbuf_new_auto,
    sbuf_new_for_sysctl,
    sbuf_clear, sbuf_get_flags,
    sbuf_set_flags,
    sbuf_clear_flags,
    sbuf_setpos, sbuf_bcat,
    sbuf_bcopyin, sbuf_bcpy,
    sbuf_cat, sbuf_copyin,
    sbuf_cpy, sbuf_printf,
    sbuf_vprintf, sbuf_putc,
    sbuf_set_drain, sbuf_trim,
    sbuf_error, sbuf_finish,
    sbuf_data, sbuf_len,
    sbuf_done, sbuf_delete,
    sbuf_start_section,
    sbuf_end_section,
    sbuf_hexdump, sbuf_putbuf
    — safe string composition
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
    <sys/types.h>
  
  #include <sys/sbuf.h>
typedef int (
  
  sbuf_drain_func) (
  
  void *arg, const char *data,
    int len);
  
  struct sbuf *
  
  sbuf_new(struct sbuf *s,
    char *buf, int length,
    int flags);
struct sbuf *
  
  sbuf_new_auto(void);
void
  
  sbuf_clear(struct sbuf *s);
int
  
  sbuf_get_flags(struct sbuf
  *s);
void
  
  sbuf_set_flags(struct sbuf *s,
    int flags);
void
  
  sbuf_clear_flags(struct sbuf *s,
    int flags);
int
  
  sbuf_setpos(struct sbuf *s,
    int pos);
int
  
  sbuf_bcat(struct sbuf *s,
    const void *buf, size_t
  len);
int
  
  sbuf_bcpy(struct sbuf *s,
    const void *buf, size_t
  len);
int
  
  sbuf_cat(struct sbuf *s,
    const char *str);
int
  
  sbuf_cpy(struct sbuf *s,
    const char *str);
int
  
  sbuf_printf(struct sbuf *s,
    const char *fmt, ...);
int
  
  sbuf_vprintf(struct sbuf *s,
    const char *fmt, va_list
  ap);
int
  
  sbuf_putc(struct sbuf *s,
    int c);
void
  
  sbuf_set_drain(struct sbuf *s,
    sbuf_drain_func *func, void
    *arg);
int
  
  sbuf_trim(struct sbuf *s);
int
  
  sbuf_error(struct sbuf *s);
int
  
  sbuf_finish(struct sbuf *s);
char *
  
  sbuf_data(struct sbuf *s);
ssize_t
  
  sbuf_len(struct sbuf *s);
int
  
  sbuf_done(struct sbuf *s);
void
  
  sbuf_delete(struct sbuf *s);
void
  
  sbuf_start_section(struct sbuf
    *s, ssize_t *old_lenp);
ssize_t
  
  sbuf_end_section(struct sbuf *s,
    ssize_t old_len, size_t pad,
    int c);
void
  
  sbuf_hexdump(struct sbuf *sb,
    void *ptr, int length,
    const char *hdr, int flags);
void
  
  sbuf_putbuf(struct sbuf *s);
#ifdef _KERNEL
#include
    <sys/types.h>
  
  #include <sys/sbuf.h>
int
  
  sbuf_bcopyin(struct sbuf *s,
    const void *uaddr, size_t
  len);
int
  
  sbuf_copyin(struct sbuf *s,
    const void *uaddr, size_t
  len);
#include
    <sys/sysctl.h>
struct sbuf *
  
  sbuf_new_for_sysctl(struct sbuf
    *s, char *buf, int length,
    struct sysctl_req *req);
#endif	/* _KERNEL */
DESCRIPTION¶
The sbuf family of functions allows one to
    safely allocate, compose and release strings in kernel or user space.
Instead of arrays of characters, these functions operate on
    structures called sbufs, defined in
    <sys/sbuf.h>.
Any errors encountered during the allocation or composition of the string will be latched in the data structure, making a single error test at the end of the composition sufficient to determine success or failure of the entire process.
The
    sbuf_new()
    function initializes the sbuf pointed to by its first
    argument. If that pointer is NULL,
    sbuf_new() allocates a struct
    sbuf using malloc(9). The buf
    argument is a pointer to a buffer in which to store the actual string; if it
    is NULL, sbuf_new() will
    allocate one using malloc(9). The
    length is the initial size of the storage buffer. The
    fourth argument, flags, may be comprised of the
    following flags:
- SBUF_FIXEDLEN
- The storage buffer is fixed at its initial size. Attempting to extend the sbuf beyond this size results in an overflow condition.
- SBUF_AUTOEXTEND
- This indicates that the storage buffer may be extended as necessary, so long as resources allow, to hold additional data.
- SBUF_INCLUDENUL
- This causes the final nulterm byte to be counted in the length of the data.
- SBUF_DRAINTOEOR
- Treat top-level sections started with
      sbuf_start_section() as a record boundary marker that will be used during drain operations to avoid records being split. If a record grows sufficiently large such that it fills the sbuf and therefore cannot be drained without being split, an error of EDEADLK is set.
Note that if buf is not
    NULL, it must point to an array of at least
    length characters. The result of accessing that array
    directly while it is in use by the sbuf is undefined.
The
    sbuf_new_auto()
    function is a shortcut for creating a completely dynamic
    sbuf. It is the equivalent of calling
    sbuf_new() with values NULL,
    NULL, 0, and
    SBUF_AUTOEXTEND.
The
    sbuf_new_for_sysctl()
    function will set up an sbuf with a drain function to use
    SYSCTL_OUT()
    when the internal buffer fills. Note that if the various functions which
    append to an sbuf are used while a non-sleepable lock is held, the user
    buffer should be wired using
    sysctl_wire_old_buffer().
The
    sbuf_delete()
    function clears the sbuf and frees any memory
    allocated for it. There must be a call to
    sbuf_delete() for every call to
    sbuf_new(). Any attempt to access the sbuf after it
    has been deleted will fail.
The
    sbuf_clear()
    function invalidates the contents of the sbuf and
    resets its position to zero.
The
    sbuf_get_flags()
    function returns the current user flags. The
    sbuf_set_flags()
    and sbuf_get_flags() functions set or clear one or
    more user flags, respectively. The user flags are described under the
    sbuf_new() function.
The
    sbuf_setpos()
    function sets the sbuf's end position to
    pos, which is a value between zero and one less than
    the size of the storage buffer. This effectively truncates the sbuf at the
    new position.
The
    sbuf_bcat()
    function appends the first len bytes from the buffer
    buf to the sbuf.
The
    sbuf_bcopyin()
    function copies len bytes from the specified userland
    address into the sbuf.
The
    sbuf_bcpy()
    function replaces the contents of the sbuf with the
    first len bytes from the buffer
    buf.
The
    sbuf_cat()
    function appends the NUL-terminated string str to the
    sbuf at the current position.
The
    sbuf_set_drain()
    function sets a drain function func for the
    sbuf, and records a pointer arg
    to be passed to the drain on callback. The drain function cannot be changed
    while sbuf_len is non-zero.
The registered drain function
    sbuf_drain_func will be called with the argument
    arg provided to
    sbuf_set_drain(),
    a pointer data to a byte string that is the contents
    of the sbuf, and the length len of the data. If the
    drain function exists, it will be called when the sbuf internal buffer is
    full, or on behalf of sbuf_finish(). The drain
    function may drain some or all of the data, but must drain at least 1 byte.
    The return value from the drain function, if positive, indicates how many
    bytes were drained. If negative, the return value indicates the negative
    error code which will be returned from this or a later call to
    sbuf_finish(). The returned drained length cannot be
    zero. To do unbuffered draining, initialize the sbuf with a two-byte buffer.
    The drain will be called for every byte added to the sbuf. The
    sbuf_bcopyin(),
    sbuf_copyin(), sbuf_trim(),
    and sbuf_data() functions cannot be used on an sbuf
    with a drain.
The
    sbuf_copyin()
    function copies a NUL-terminated string from the specified userland address
    into the sbuf. If the len
    argument is non-zero, no more than len characters (not
    counting the terminating NUL) are copied; otherwise the entire string, or as
    much of it as can fit in the sbuf, is copied.
The
    sbuf_cpy()
    function replaces the contents of the sbuf with those
    of the NUL-terminated string str. This is equivalent
    to calling sbuf_cat() with a fresh
    sbuf or one which position has been reset to zero with
    sbuf_clear() or
    sbuf_setpos().
The
    sbuf_printf()
    function formats its arguments according to the format string pointed to by
    fmt and appends the resulting string to the
    sbuf at the current position.
The
    sbuf_vprintf()
    function behaves the same as sbuf_printf() except
    that the arguments are obtained from the variable-length argument list
    ap.
The
    sbuf_putc()
    function appends the character c to the
    sbuf at the current position.
The
    sbuf_trim()
    function removes trailing whitespace from the
  sbuf.
The
    sbuf_error()
    function returns any error value that the sbuf may
    have accumulated, either from the drain function, or ENOMEM if the
    sbuf overflowed. This function is generally not needed
    and instead the error code from sbuf_finish() is the
    preferred way to discover whether an sbuf had an error.
The
    sbuf_finish()
    function will call the attached drain function if one exists until all the
    data in the sbuf is flushed. If there is no attached
    drain, sbuf_finish() NUL-terminates the
    sbuf. In either case it marks the
    sbuf as finished, which means that it may no longer be
    modified using sbuf_setpos(),
    sbuf_cat(), sbuf_cpy(),
    sbuf_printf() or
    sbuf_putc(), until
    sbuf_clear() is used to reset the sbuf.
The
    sbuf_data()
    function returns the actual string; sbuf_data() only
    works on a finished sbuf. The
    sbuf_len()
    function returns the length of the string. For an sbuf
    with an attached drain, sbuf_len() returns the
    length of the un-drained data.
    sbuf_done()
    returns non-zero if the sbuf is finished.
The
    sbuf_start_section()
    and
    sbuf_end_section()
    functions may be used for automatic section alignment. The arguments
    pad and c specify the padding
    size and a character used for padding. The arguments
    old_lenp and old_len are to save
    and restore the current section length when nested sections are used. For
    the top level section NULL and -1 can be specified
    for old_lenp and old_len
    respectively.
The
    sbuf_hexdump()
    function prints an array of bytes to the supplied sbuf, along with an ASCII
    representation of the bytes if possible. See the
    hexdump(3) man page for more details on the interface.
The
    sbuf_putbuf()
    function printfs the sbuf to stdout if in userland, and to the console and
    log if in the kernel. It does not drain the buffer or update any
  pointers.
NOTES¶
If an operation caused an sbuf to overflow,
    most subsequent operations on it will fail until the
    sbuf is finished using
    sbuf_finish() or reset using
    sbuf_clear(), or its position is reset to a value
    between 0 and one less than the size of its storage buffer using
    sbuf_setpos(), or it is reinitialized to a
    sufficiently short string using sbuf_cpy().
Drains in user-space will not always function as indicated. While the drain function will be called immediately on overflow from the sbuf_putc, sbuf_bcat, sbuf_cat functions, sbuf_printf and sbuf_vprintf currently have no way to determine whether there will be an overflow until after it occurs, and cannot do a partial expansion of the format string. Thus when using libsbuf the buffer may be extended to allow completion of a single printf call, even though a drain is attached.
RETURN VALUES¶
The sbuf_new() function returns
    NULL if it failed to allocate a storage buffer, and
    a pointer to the new sbuf otherwise.
The sbuf_setpos() function returns -1 if
    pos was invalid, and zero otherwise.
The sbuf_bcat(),
    sbuf_cat(), sbuf_cpy(),
    sbuf_printf(), sbuf_putc(),
    and sbuf_trim() functions all return -1 if the
    buffer overflowed, and zero otherwise.
The sbuf_error() function returns a
    non-zero value if the buffer has an overflow or drain error, and zero
    otherwise.
The sbuf_len() function returns -1 if the
    buffer overflowed.
The sbuf_copyin() function returns -1 if
    copying string from userland failed, and number of bytes copied
  otherwise.
The sbuf_end_section() function returns
    the section length or -1 if the buffer has an error.
The sbuf_finish(9)
    function (the kernel version) returns ENOMEM if the sbuf overflowed before
    being finished, or returns the error code from the drain if one is
  attached.
The sbuf_finish(3)
    function (the userland version) will return zero for success and -1 and set
    errno on error.
EXAMPLES¶
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/sbuf.h>
struct sbuf *sb;
sb = sbuf_new_auto();
sbuf_cat(sb, "Customers found:\n");
TAILQ_FOREACH(foo, &foolist, list) {
	sbuf_printf(sb, "   %4d %s\n", foo->index, foo->name);
	sbuf_printf(sb, "      Address: %s\n", foo->address);
	sbuf_printf(sb, "      Zip: %s\n", foo->zipcode);
}
if (sbuf_finish(sb) != 0) /* Check for any and all errors */
	err(1, "Could not generate message");
transmit_msg(sbuf_data(sb), sbuf_len(sb));
sbuf_delete(sb);
SEE ALSO¶
hexdump(3), printf(3), strcat(3), strcpy(3), copyin(9), copyinstr(9), printf(9)
HISTORY¶
The sbuf family of functions first
    appeared in FreeBSD 4.4.
AUTHORS¶
The sbuf family of functions was designed
    by Poul-Henning Kamp
    <phk@FreeBSD.org> and
    implemented by Dag-Erling Smørgrav
    <des@FreeBSD.org>.
    Additional improvements were suggested by Justin T.
    Gibbs
    <gibbs@FreeBSD.org>.
    Auto-extend support added by Kelly Yancey
    <kbyanc@FreeBSD.org>.
    Drain functionality added by Matthew Fleming
    <mdf@FreeBSD.org>.
This manual page was written by Dag-Erling Smørgrav <des@FreeBSD.org>.
| May 23, 2018 | Debian |