1 /** @file
2     Copying Functions for <string.h>.
3 
4     Copyright (c) 2010 - 2011, Intel Corporation. All rights reserved.<BR>
5     This program and the accompanying materials are licensed and made available under
6     the terms and conditions of the BSD License that accompanies this distribution.
7     The full text of the license may be found at
8     http://opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php.
9 
10     THE PROGRAM IS DISTRIBUTED UNDER THE BSD LICENSE ON AN "AS IS" BASIS,
11     WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR REPRESENTATIONS OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED.
12 **/
13 #include  <Uefi.h>
14 #include  <Library/BaseLib.h>
15 #include  <Library/BaseMemoryLib.h>
16 
17 #include  <LibConfig.h>
18 
19 #include  <stdlib.h>
20 #include  <string.h>
21 
22 /** Do not define memcpy for IPF+GCC or ARM/AARCH64+GCC builds.
23     For IPF, using a GCC compiler, the memcpy function is converted to
24     CopyMem by objcpy during build.
25     For ARM/AARCH64, the memcpy function is provided by the CompilerIntrinsics library.
26 **/
27 #if !((defined(MDE_CPU_IPF) || defined(MDE_CPU_ARM) || defined(MDE_CPU_AARCH64)) && defined(__GNUC__))
28 /** The memcpy function copies n characters from the object pointed to by s2
29     into the object pointed to by s1.
30 
31     The implementation is reentrant and handles the case where s2 overlaps s1.
32 
33     @return   The memcpy function returns the value of s1.
34 **/
35 void *
memcpy(void * __restrict s1,const void * __restrict s2,size_t n)36 memcpy(void * __restrict s1, const void * __restrict s2, size_t n)
37 {
38   return CopyMem( s1, s2, n);
39 }
40 #endif  /* !(defined(MDE_CPU_IPF) && defined(__GCC)) */
41 
42 #if !(defined(MDE_CPU_ARM) && defined(__GNUC__))
43 /** The memmove function copies n characters from the object pointed to by s2
44     into the object pointed to by s1. Copying takes place as if the n
45     characters from the object pointed to by s2 are first copied into a
46     temporary array of n characters that does not overlap the objects pointed
47     to by s1 and s2, and then the n characters from the temporary array are
48     copied into the object pointed to by s1.
49 
50     This is a version of memcpy that is guaranteed to work when s1 and s2
51     overlap.  Since our implementation of memcpy already handles overlap,
52     memmove can be identical to memcpy.
53 
54     @return   The memmove function returns the value of s1.
55 **/
56 void *
memmove(void * s1,const void * s2,size_t n)57 memmove(void *s1, const void *s2, size_t n)
58 {
59   return CopyMem( s1, s2, n);
60 }
61 #endif
62 
63 /** The strcpy function copies the string pointed to by s2 (including the
64     terminating null character) into the array pointed to by s1. If copying
65     takes place between objects that overlap, the behavior is undefined.
66 
67     @return   The strcpy function returns the value of s1.
68 **/
69 char *
strcpy(char * __restrict s1,const char * __restrict s2)70 strcpy(char * __restrict s1, const char * __restrict s2)
71 {
72   //char *s1ret = s1;
73 
74   //while ( *s1++ = *s2++)  /* Empty Body */;
75   //return(s1ret);
76   return AsciiStrCpy( s1, s2);
77 }
78 
79 /** The strncpy function copies not more than n characters (characters that
80     follow a null character are not copied) from the array pointed to by s2 to
81     the array pointed to by s1. If copying takes place between objects that
82     overlap, the behavior is undefined.
83 
84     If the array pointed to by s2 is a string that is shorter than n
85     characters, null characters are appended to the copy in the array pointed
86     to by s1, until n characters in all have been written.
87 
88     @return   The strncpy function returns the value of s1.
89 **/
strncpy(char * __restrict s1,const char * __restrict s2,size_t n)90 char     *strncpy(char * __restrict s1, const char * __restrict s2, size_t n)
91 {
92   return AsciiStrnCpy( s1, s2, n);
93   //char *dest = s1;
94 
95   //while(n != 0) {
96   //  --n;
97   //  if((*dest++ = *s2++) == '\0')  break;
98   //}
99   //while(n != 0) {
100   //  *dest++ = '\0';
101   //  --n;
102   //}
103   //return (s1);
104 }
105 
106 /** The strncpyX function copies not more than n-1 characters (characters that
107     follow a null character are not copied) from the array pointed to by s2 to
108     the array pointed to by s1. Array s1 is guaranteed to be NULL terminated.
109     If copying takes place between objects that overlap,
110     the behavior is undefined.
111 
112     strncpyX exists because normal strncpy does not indicate if the copy was
113     terminated because of exhausting the buffer or reaching the end of s2.
114 
115     @return   The strncpyX function returns 0 if the copy operation was
116               terminated because it reached the end of s1.  Otherwise,
117               a non-zero value is returned indicating how many characters
118               remain in s1.
119 **/
strncpyX(char * __restrict s1,const char * __restrict s2,size_t n)120 int strncpyX(char * __restrict s1, const char * __restrict s2, size_t n)
121 {
122   int NumLeft;
123 
124   for( ; n != 0; --n) {
125     if((*s1++ = *s2++) == '\0')  break;
126   }
127   NumLeft = (int)n;
128 
129   for( --s1; n != 0; --n) {
130     *s1++ = '\0';
131   }
132 
133   return NumLeft;   // Zero if we ran out of buffer ( strlen(s1) < strlen(s2) )
134 }
135 
136 /** NetBSD Compatibility Function strdup creates a duplicate copy of a string. **/
137 char *
strdup(const char * str)138 strdup(const char *str)
139 {
140   size_t len;
141   char *copy;
142 
143   len = strlen(str) + 1;
144   if ((copy = malloc(len)) == NULL)
145     return (NULL);
146   memcpy(copy, str, len);
147   return (copy);
148 }
149