/************************************************* * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent * *************************************************/ /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2015 */ /* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */ /* This header file contains type definitions and macros that I use as "standard" in the code of Exim and its utilities. Make it idempotent because local_scan.h includes it and exim.h includes them both (to get this earlier). */ #ifndef MYTYPES_H #define MYTYPES_H #ifndef FALSE #define FALSE 0 #endif #ifndef TRUE #define TRUE 1 #endif #ifndef TRUE_UNSET #define TRUE_UNSET 2 #endif /* If gcc is being used to compile Exim, we can use its facility for checking the arguments of printf-like functions. This is done by a macro. */ #if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__) #define PRINTF_FUNCTION(A,B) __attribute__((format(printf,A,B))) #define ARG_UNUSED __attribute__((__unused__)) #else #define PRINTF_FUNCTION(A,B) #define ARG_UNUSED /**/ #endif #ifdef WANT_DEEPER_PRINTF_CHECKS #define ALMOST_PRINTF(A, B) PRINTF_FUNCTION(A, B) #else #define ALMOST_PRINTF(A, B) #endif /* Some operating systems (naughtily, imo) include a definition for "uchar" in the standard header files, so we use "uschar". Solaris has u_char in sys/types.h. This is just a typing convenience, of course. */ typedef unsigned char uschar; typedef int BOOL; /* We also have SIGNAL_BOOL, which requires signal.h be included, so is defined elsewhere */ /* These macros save typing for the casting that is needed to cope with the mess that is "char" in ISO/ANSI C. Having now been bitten enough times by systems where "char" is actually signed, I've converted Exim to use entirely unsigned chars, except in a few special places such as arguments that are almost always literal strings. */ #define CS (char *) #define CCS (const char *) #define CSS (char **) #define US (unsigned char *) #define CUS (const unsigned char *) #define USS (unsigned char **) #define CUSS (const unsigned char **) /* The C library string functions expect "char *" arguments. Use macros to avoid having to write a cast each time. We do this for string and file functions that are called quite often; for other calls to external libraries (which are on the whole special-purpose) we just use individual casts. */ #define Uatoi(s) atoi(CCS(s)) #define Uatol(s) atol(CCS(s)) #define Uchdir(s) chdir(CCS(s)) #define Uchmod(s,n) chmod(CCS(s),n) #define Uchown(s,n,m) chown(CCS(s),n,m) #define Ufgets(b,n,f) fgets(CS(b),n,f) #define Ufopen(s,t) fopen(CCS(s),CCS(t)) #define Ulink(s,t) link(CCS(s),CCS(t)) #define Ulstat(s,t) lstat(CCS(s),t) #ifdef O_BINARY /* This is for Cygwin, */ #define Uopen(s,n,m) open(CCS(s),(n)|O_BINARY,m) /* where all files must */ #else /* be opened as binary */ #define Uopen(s,n,m) open(CCS(s),n,m) /* to avoid problems */ #endif /* with CRLF endings. */ #define Uread(f,b,l) read(f,CS(b),l) #define Urename(s,t) rename(CCS(s),CCS(t)) #define Ustat(s,t) stat(CCS(s),t) #define Ustrcat(s,t) strcat(CS(s),CCS(t)) #define Ustrchr(s,n) US strchr(CCS(s),n) #define CUstrchr(s,n) CUS strchr(CCS(s),n) #define CUstrerror(n) CUS strerror(n) #define Ustrcmp(s,t) strcmp(CCS(s),CCS(t)) #define Ustrcpy(s,t) strcpy(CS(s),CCS(t)) #define Ustrcspn(s,t) strcspn(CCS(s),CCS(t)) #define Ustrftime(s,m,f,t) strftime(CS(s),m,f,t) #define Ustrlen(s) (int)strlen(CCS(s)) #define Ustrncat(s,t,n) strncat(CS(s),CCS(t),n) #define Ustrncmp(s,t,n) strncmp(CCS(s),CCS(t),n) #define Ustrncpy(s,t,n) strncpy(CS(s),CCS(t),n) #define Ustrpbrk(s,t) strpbrk(CCS(s),CCS(t)) #define Ustrrchr(s,n) US strrchr(CCS(s),n) #define CUstrrchr(s,n) CUS strrchr(CCS(s),n) #define Ustrspn(s,t) strspn(CCS(s),CCS(t)) #define Ustrstr(s,t) US strstr(CCS(s),CCS(t)) #define CUstrstr(s,t) CUS strstr(CCS(s),CCS(t)) #define Ustrtod(s,t) strtod(CCS(s),CSS(t)) #define Ustrtol(s,t,b) strtol(CCS(s),CSS(t),b) #define Ustrtoul(s,t,b) strtoul(CCS(s),CSS(t),b) #define Uunlink(s) unlink(CCS(s)) #endif /* End of mytypes.h */