//if substring was not found add the entire string
if (NULL == q) {
v = strlen(p);
- to_push = malloc(v + 1);
+ to_push = xbt_malloc(v + 1);
memcpy(to_push, p, v);
to_push[v] = '\0';
xbt_dynar_push(res, &to_push);
done = 1;
} else {
//get the appearance
- to_push = malloc(q - p + 1);
+ to_push = xbt_malloc(q - p + 1);
memcpy(to_push, p, q - p);
//add string terminator
to_push[q - p] = '\0';
*
* The string passed as argument must be writable (not const)
* The elements of the dynar are just parts of the string passed as argument.
+ * So if you don't store that argument elsewhere, you should free it in addition
+ * to freeing the dynar. This can be done by simply freeing the first argument
+ * of the dynar:
+ * free(xbt_dynar_get_ptr(dynar,0));
*
- * To free the structure constructed by this function, free the first element and free the dynar:
- *
- * free(xbt_dynar_get_ptr(dynar,0));
- * xbt_dynar_free(&dynar);
+ * Actually this function puts a bunch of \0 in the memory area you passed as
+ * argument to separate the elements, and pushes the address of each chunk
+ * in the resulting dynar. Yes, that's uneven. Yes, that's gory. But that's efficient.
*/
xbt_dynar_t xbt_str_split_quoted_in_place(char *s) {
xbt_dynar_t res = xbt_dynar_new(sizeof(char *), NULL);
beg = s;
- /* do not trim leading spaces: caller responsability to clean his cruft */
+ /* do not trim leading spaces: caller responsibility to clean his cruft */
end = beg;
while (!done) {
return res;
}
+/* @brief Retrun 1 if string 'str' starts with string 'start'
+ *
+ * \param str a string
+ * \param start the string to search in str
+ *
+ * \return 1 if 'str' starts with 'start'
+ */
+int xbt_str_start_with(const char* str, const char* start)
+{
+ int i;
+ size_t l_str = strlen(str);
+ size_t l_start = strlen(start);
+
+ if(l_start > l_str) return 0;
+
+ for(i = 0; i< l_start; i++){
+ if(str[i] != start[i]) return 0;
+ }
+
+ return 1;
+}
+
#ifdef SIMGRID_TEST
#include "xbt/str.h"