/
physfs_internal.h
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/*
* Internal function/structure declaration. Do NOT include in your
* application.
*
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* Please see the file LICENSE.txt in the source's root directory.
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*
* This file written by Ryan C. Gordon.
*/
#ifndef _INCLUDE_PHYSFS_INTERNAL_H_
#define _INCLUDE_PHYSFS_INTERNAL_H_
#ifndef __PHYSICSFS_INTERNAL__
#error Do not include this header from your applications.
#endif
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#include "physfs.h"
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/* The holy trinity. */
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
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#include "physfs_platforms.h"
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#include <assert.h>
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/* !!! FIXME: remove this when revamping stack allocation code... */
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#if defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__MINGW32__) || defined(__WATCOMC__)
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#include <malloc.h>
#endif
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#if PHYSFS_PLATFORM_SOLARIS
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#include <alloca.h>
#endif
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#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
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#ifdef __GNUC__
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#define PHYSFS_MINIMUM_GCC_VERSION(major, minor) \
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( ((__GNUC__ << 16) + __GNUC_MINOR__) >= (((major) << 16) + (minor)) )
#else
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#define PHYSFS_MINIMUM_GCC_VERSION(major, minor) (0)
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#endif
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#ifdef __cplusplus
/* C++ always has a real inline keyword. */
#elif (defined macintosh) && !(defined __MWERKS__)
# define inline
#elif (defined _MSC_VER)
# define inline __inline
#endif
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#if PHYSFS_PLATFORM_LINUX && !defined(_FILE_OFFSET_BITS)
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#define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64
#endif
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/*
* Interface for small allocations. If you need a little scratch space for
* a throwaway buffer or string, use this. It will make small allocations
* on the stack if possible, and use allocator.Malloc() if they are too
* large. This helps reduce malloc pressure.
* There are some rules, though:
* NEVER return a pointer from this, as stack-allocated buffers go away
* when your function returns.
* NEVER allocate in a loop, as stack-allocated pointers will pile up. Call
* a function that uses smallAlloc from your loop, so the allocation can
* free each time.
* NEVER call smallAlloc with any complex expression (it's a macro that WILL
* have side effects...it references the argument multiple times). Use a
* variable or a literal.
* NEVER free a pointer from this with anything but smallFree. It will not
* be a valid pointer to the allocator, regardless of where the memory came
* from.
* NEVER realloc a pointer from this.
* NEVER forget to use smallFree: it may not be a pointer from the stack.
* NEVER forget to check for NULL...allocation can fail here, of course!
*/
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#define __PHYSFS_SMALLALLOCTHRESHOLD 256
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void *__PHYSFS_initSmallAlloc(void *ptr, PHYSFS_uint64 len);
#define __PHYSFS_smallAlloc(bytes) ( \
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__PHYSFS_initSmallAlloc( \
(((bytes) < __PHYSFS_SMALLALLOCTHRESHOLD) ? \
alloca((size_t)((bytes)+sizeof(void*))) : NULL), (bytes)) \
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)
void __PHYSFS_smallFree(void *ptr);
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/* Use the allocation hooks. */
#define malloc(x) Do not use malloc() directly.
#define realloc(x, y) Do not use realloc() directly.
#define free(x) Do not use free() directly.
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/* !!! FIXME: add alloca check here. */
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#ifndef PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_ZIP
#define PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_ZIP 1
#endif
#ifndef PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_7Z
#define PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_7Z 0
#endif
#ifndef PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_GRP
#define PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_GRP 0
#endif
#ifndef PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_HOG
#define PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_HOG 0
#endif
#ifndef PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_MVL
#define PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_MVL 0
#endif
#ifndef PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_WAD
#define PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_WAD 0
#endif
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#ifndef PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_SLB
#define PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_SLB 0
#endif
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#ifndef PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_ISO9660
#define PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_ISO9660 0
#endif
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#ifndef PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_VDF
#define PHYSFS_SUPPORTS_VDF 0
#endif
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/* The latest supported PHYSFS_Io::version value. */
#define CURRENT_PHYSFS_IO_API_VERSION 0
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/* The latest supported PHYSFS_Archiver::version value. */
#define CURRENT_PHYSFS_ARCHIVER_API_VERSION 0
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/* This byteorder stuff was lifted from SDL. https://www.libsdl.org/ */
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#define PHYSFS_LIL_ENDIAN 1234
#define PHYSFS_BIG_ENDIAN 4321
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#ifdef __linux__
#include <endian.h>
#define PHYSFS_BYTEORDER __BYTE_ORDER
#else /* __linux__ */
#if defined(__hppa__) || \
defined(__m68k__) || defined(mc68000) || defined(_M_M68K) || \
(defined(__MIPS__) && defined(__MISPEB__)) || \
defined(__ppc__) || defined(__POWERPC__) || defined(_M_PPC) || \
defined(__sparc__)
#define PHYSFS_BYTEORDER PHYSFS_BIG_ENDIAN
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#else
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#define PHYSFS_BYTEORDER PHYSFS_LIL_ENDIAN
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#endif
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#endif /* __linux__ */
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/*
* When sorting the entries in an archive, we use a modified QuickSort.
* When there are less then PHYSFS_QUICKSORT_THRESHOLD entries left to sort,
* we switch over to a BubbleSort for the remainder. Tweak to taste.
*
* You can override this setting by defining PHYSFS_QUICKSORT_THRESHOLD
* before #including "physfs_internal.h".
*/
#ifndef PHYSFS_QUICKSORT_THRESHOLD
#define PHYSFS_QUICKSORT_THRESHOLD 4
#endif
/*
* Sort an array (or whatever) of (max) elements. This uses a mixture of
* a QuickSort and BubbleSort internally.
* (cmpfn) is used to determine ordering, and (swapfn) does the actual
* swapping of elements in the list.
*/
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void __PHYSFS_sort(void *entries, size_t max,
int (*cmpfn)(void *, size_t, size_t),
void (*swapfn)(void *, size_t, size_t));
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/*
* This isn't a formal error code, it's just for BAIL_MACRO.
* It means: there was an error, but someone else already set it for us.
*/
#define ERRPASS PHYSFS_ERR_OK
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/* These get used all over for lessening code clutter. */
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#define BAIL_MACRO(e, r) do { if (e) PHYSFS_setErrorCode(e); return r; } while (0)
#define BAIL_IF_MACRO(c, e, r) do { if (c) { if (e) PHYSFS_setErrorCode(e); return r; } } while (0)
#define BAIL_MACRO_MUTEX(e, m, r) do { if (e) PHYSFS_setErrorCode(e); __PHYSFS_platformReleaseMutex(m); return r; } while (0)
#define BAIL_IF_MACRO_MUTEX(c, e, m, r) do { if (c) { if (e) PHYSFS_setErrorCode(e); __PHYSFS_platformReleaseMutex(m); return r; } } while (0)
#define GOTO_MACRO(e, g) do { if (e) PHYSFS_setErrorCode(e); goto g; } while (0)
#define GOTO_IF_MACRO(c, e, g) do { if (c) { if (e) PHYSFS_setErrorCode(e); goto g; } } while (0)
#define GOTO_MACRO_MUTEX(e, m, g) do { if (e) PHYSFS_setErrorCode(e); __PHYSFS_platformReleaseMutex(m); goto g; } while (0)
#define GOTO_IF_MACRO_MUTEX(c, e, m, g) do { if (c) { if (e) PHYSFS_setErrorCode(e); __PHYSFS_platformReleaseMutex(m); goto g; } } while (0)
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#define __PHYSFS_ARRAYLEN(x) ( (sizeof (x)) / (sizeof (x[0])) )
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#ifdef PHYSFS_NO_64BIT_SUPPORT
#define __PHYSFS_SI64(x) ((PHYSFS_sint64) (x))
#define __PHYSFS_UI64(x) ((PHYSFS_uint64) (x))
#elif (defined __GNUC__)
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#define __PHYSFS_SI64(x) x##LL
#define __PHYSFS_UI64(x) x##ULL
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#elif (defined _MSC_VER)
#define __PHYSFS_SI64(x) x##i64
#define __PHYSFS_UI64(x) x##ui64
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#else
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#define __PHYSFS_SI64(x) ((PHYSFS_sint64) (x))
#define __PHYSFS_UI64(x) ((PHYSFS_uint64) (x))
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#endif
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/*
* Check if a ui64 will fit in the platform's address space.
* The initial sizeof check will optimize this macro out entirely on
* 64-bit (and larger?!) platforms, and the other condition will
* return zero or non-zero if the variable will fit in the platform's
* size_t, suitable to pass to malloc. This is kinda messy, but effective.
*/
#define __PHYSFS_ui64FitsAddressSpace(s) ( \
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(sizeof (PHYSFS_uint64) <= sizeof (size_t)) || \
((s) < (__PHYSFS_UI64(0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF) >> (64-(sizeof(size_t)*8)))) \
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)
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/*
* This is a strcasecmp() or stricmp() replacement that expects both strings
* to be in UTF-8 encoding. It will do "case folding" to decide if the
* Unicode codepoints in the strings match.
*
* It will report which string is "greater than" the other, but be aware that
* this doesn't necessarily mean anything: 'a' may be "less than" 'b', but
* a random Kanji codepoint has no meaningful alphabetically relationship to
* a Greek Lambda, but being able to assign a reliable "value" makes sorting
* algorithms possible, if not entirely sane. Most cases should treat the
* return value as "equal" or "not equal".
*/
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int __PHYSFS_utf8stricmp(const char *s1, const char *s2);
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/*
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* This works like __PHYSFS_utf8stricmp(), but takes a character (NOT BYTE
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* COUNT) argument, like strcasencmp().
*/
int __PHYSFS_utf8strnicmp(const char *s1, const char *s2, PHYSFS_uint32 l);
/*
* stricmp() that guarantees to only work with low ASCII. The C runtime
* stricmp() might try to apply a locale/codepage/etc, which we don't want.
*/
int __PHYSFS_stricmpASCII(const char *s1, const char *s2);
/*
* strnicmp() that guarantees to only work with low ASCII. The C runtime
* strnicmp() might try to apply a locale/codepage/etc, which we don't want.
*/
int __PHYSFS_strnicmpASCII(const char *s1, const char *s2, PHYSFS_uint32 l);
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/*
* Like strdup(), but uses the current PhysicsFS allocator.
*/
char *__PHYSFS_strdup(const char *str);
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/*
* Give a hash value for a C string (uses djb's xor hashing algorithm).
*/
PHYSFS_uint32 __PHYSFS_hashString(const char *str, size_t len);
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/*
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* The current allocator. Not valid before PHYSFS_init is called!
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*/
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extern PHYSFS_Allocator __PHYSFS_AllocatorHooks;
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/* convenience macro to make this less cumbersome internally... */
#define allocator __PHYSFS_AllocatorHooks
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/*
* Create a PHYSFS_Io for a file in the physical filesystem.
* This path is in platform-dependent notation. (mode) must be 'r', 'w', or
* 'a' for Read, Write, or Append.
*/
PHYSFS_Io *__PHYSFS_createNativeIo(const char *path, const int mode);
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/*
* Create a PHYSFS_Io for a buffer of memory (READ-ONLY). If you already
* have one of these, just use its duplicate() method, and it'll increment
* its refcount without allocating a copy of the buffer.
*/
PHYSFS_Io *__PHYSFS_createMemoryIo(const void *buf, PHYSFS_uint64 len,
void (*destruct)(void *));
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/*
* Read (len) bytes from (io) into (buf). Returns non-zero on success,
* zero on i/o error. Literally: "return (io->read(io, buf, len) == len);"
*/
int __PHYSFS_readAll(PHYSFS_Io *io, void *buf, const PHYSFS_uint64 len);
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/* These are shared between some archivers. */
typedef struct
{
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char name[64];
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PHYSFS_uint32 startPos;
PHYSFS_uint32 size;
} UNPKentry;
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void UNPK_closeArchive(void *opaque);
void *UNPK_openArchive(PHYSFS_Io *io,UNPKentry *e,const PHYSFS_uint32 n);
void UNPK_enumerateFiles(void *opaque, const char *dname,
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PHYSFS_EnumFilesCallback cb,
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const char *origdir, void *callbackdata);
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PHYSFS_Io *UNPK_openRead(void *opaque, const char *name);
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PHYSFS_Io *UNPK_openWrite(void *opaque, const char *name);
PHYSFS_Io *UNPK_openAppend(void *opaque, const char *name);
int UNPK_remove(void *opaque, const char *name);
int UNPK_mkdir(void *opaque, const char *name);
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int UNPK_stat(void *opaque, const char *fn, PHYSFS_Stat *st);
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/*--------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/*--------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/*------------ ----------------*/
/*------------ You MUST implement the following functions ----------------*/
/*------------ if porting to a new platform. ----------------*/
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/*------------ (see platform/unix.c for an example) ----------------*/
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/*------------ ----------------*/
/*--------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/*--------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/*
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* The dir separator; '/' on unix, '\\' on win32, ":" on MacOS, etc...
* Obviously, this isn't a function. If you need more than one char for this,
* you'll need to pull some old pieces of PhysicsFS out of revision control.
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*/
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#if PHYSFS_PLATFORM_WINDOWS || PHYSFS_PLATFORM_OS2
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#define __PHYSFS_platformDirSeparator '\\'
#else
#define __PHYSFS_platformDirSeparator '/'
#endif
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/*
* Initialize the platform. This is called when PHYSFS_init() is called from
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* the application.
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*
* Return zero if there was a catastrophic failure (which prevents you from
* functioning at all), and non-zero otherwise.
*/
int __PHYSFS_platformInit(void);
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/*
* Deinitialize the platform. This is called when PHYSFS_deinit() is called
* from the application. You can use this to clean up anything you've
* allocated in your platform driver.
*
* Return zero if there was a catastrophic failure (which prevents you from
* functioning at all), and non-zero otherwise.
*/
int __PHYSFS_platformDeinit(void);
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/*
* Open a file for reading. (filename) is in platform-dependent notation. The
* file pointer should be positioned on the first byte of the file.
*
* The return value will be some platform-specific datatype that is opaque to
* the caller; it could be a (FILE *) under Unix, or a (HANDLE *) under win32.
*
* The same file can be opened for read multiple times, and each should have
* a unique file handle; this is frequently employed to prevent race
* conditions in the archivers.
*
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* Call PHYSFS_setErrorCode() and return (NULL) if the file can't be opened.
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*/
void *__PHYSFS_platformOpenRead(const char *filename);
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/*
* Open a file for writing. (filename) is in platform-dependent notation. If
* the file exists, it should be truncated to zero bytes, and if it doesn't
* exist, it should be created as a zero-byte file. The file pointer should
* be positioned on the first byte of the file.
*
* The return value will be some platform-specific datatype that is opaque to
* the caller; it could be a (FILE *) under Unix, or a (HANDLE *) under win32,
* etc.
*
* Opening a file for write multiple times has undefined results.
*
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* Call PHYSFS_setErrorCode() and return (NULL) if the file can't be opened.
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*/
void *__PHYSFS_platformOpenWrite(const char *filename);
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/*
* Open a file for appending. (filename) is in platform-dependent notation. If
* the file exists, the file pointer should be place just past the end of the
* file, so that the first write will be one byte after the current end of
* the file. If the file doesn't exist, it should be created as a zero-byte
* file. The file pointer should be positioned on the first byte of the file.
*
* The return value will be some platform-specific datatype that is opaque to
* the caller; it could be a (FILE *) under Unix, or a (HANDLE *) under win32,
* etc.
*
* Opening a file for append multiple times has undefined results.
*
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* Call PHYSFS_setErrorCode() and return (NULL) if the file can't be opened.
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*/
void *__PHYSFS_platformOpenAppend(const char *filename);
/*
* Read more data from a platform-specific file handle. (opaque) should be
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* cast to whatever data type your platform uses. Read a maximum of (len)
* 8-bit bytes to the area pointed to by (buf). If there isn't enough data
* available, return the number of bytes read, and position the file pointer
* immediately after those bytes.
* On success, return (len) and position the file pointer immediately past
* the end of the last read byte. Return (-1) if there is a catastrophic
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* error, and call PHYSFS_setErrorCode() to describe the problem; the file
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* pointer should not move in such a case. A partial read is success; only
* return (-1) on total failure; presumably, the next read call after a
* partial read will fail as such.
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*/
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PHYSFS_sint64 __PHYSFS_platformRead(void *opaque, void *buf, PHYSFS_uint64 len);
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/*
* Write more data to a platform-specific file handle. (opaque) should be
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* cast to whatever data type your platform uses. Write a maximum of (len)
* 8-bit bytes from the area pointed to by (buffer). If there is a problem,
* return the number of bytes written, and position the file pointer
* immediately after those bytes. Return (-1) if there is a catastrophic
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* error, and call PHYSFS_setErrorCode() to describe the problem; the file
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* pointer should not move in such a case. A partial write is success; only
* return (-1) on total failure; presumably, the next write call after a
* partial write will fail as such.
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*/
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PHYSFS_sint64 __PHYSFS_platformWrite(void *opaque, const void *buffer,
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PHYSFS_uint64 len);
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/*
* Set the file pointer to a new position. (opaque) should be cast to
* whatever data type your platform uses. (pos) specifies the number
* of 8-bit bytes to seek to from the start of the file. Seeking past the
* end of the file is an error condition, and you should check for it.
*
* Not all file types can seek; this is to be expected by the caller.
*
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* On error, call PHYSFS_setErrorCode() and return zero. On success, return
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* a non-zero value.
*/
int __PHYSFS_platformSeek(void *opaque, PHYSFS_uint64 pos);
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/*
* Get the file pointer's position, in an 8-bit byte offset from the start of
* the file. (opaque) should be cast to whatever data type your platform
* uses.
*
* Not all file types can "tell"; this is to be expected by the caller.
*
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* On error, call PHYSFS_setErrorCode() and return -1. On success, return >= 0.
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*/
PHYSFS_sint64 __PHYSFS_platformTell(void *opaque);
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/*
* Determine the current size of a file, in 8-bit bytes, from an open file.
*
* The caller expects that this information may not be available for all
* file types on all platforms.
*
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* Return -1 if you can't do it, and call PHYSFS_setErrorCode(). Otherwise,
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* return the file length in 8-bit bytes.
*/
PHYSFS_sint64 __PHYSFS_platformFileLength(void *handle);
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/*
* !!! FIXME: comment me.
*/
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int __PHYSFS_platformStat(const char *fn, PHYSFS_Stat *stat);
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/*
* Flush any pending writes to disk. (opaque) should be cast to whatever data
* type your platform uses. Be sure to check for errors; the caller expects
* that this function can fail if there was a flushing error, etc.
*
* Return zero on failure, non-zero on success.
*/
int __PHYSFS_platformFlush(void *opaque);
/*
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* Close file and deallocate resources. (opaque) should be cast to whatever
* data type your platform uses. This should close the file in any scenario:
* flushing is a separate function call, and this function should never fail.
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*
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* You should clean up all resources associated with (opaque); the pointer
* will be considered invalid after this call.
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*/
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void __PHYSFS_platformClose(void *opaque);
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/*
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* Platform implementation of PHYSFS_getCdRomDirsCallback()...
* CD directories are discovered and reported to the callback one at a time.
* Pointers passed to the callback are assumed to be invalid to the
* application after the callback returns, so you can free them or whatever.
* Callback does not assume results will be sorted in any meaningful way.
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*/
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void __PHYSFS_platformDetectAvailableCDs(PHYSFS_StringCallback cb, void *data);
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/*
* Calculate the base dir, if your platform needs special consideration.
* Just return NULL if the standard routines will suffice. (see
* calculateBaseDir() in physfs.c ...)
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* Your string must end with a dir separator if you don't return NULL.
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* Caller will allocator.Free() the retval if it's not NULL.
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*/
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char *__PHYSFS_platformCalcBaseDir(const char *argv0);
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/*
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* Get the platform-specific user dir.
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* As of PhysicsFS 2.1, returning NULL means fatal error.
* Your string must end with a dir separator if you don't return NULL.
* Caller will allocator.Free() the retval if it's not NULL.
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*/
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char *__PHYSFS_platformCalcUserDir(void);
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/* This is the cached version from PHYSFS_init(). This is a fast call. */
const char *__PHYSFS_getUserDir(void); /* not deprecated internal version. */
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/*
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* Get the platform-specific pref dir.
* Returning NULL means fatal error.
* Your string must end with a dir separator if you don't return NULL.
* Caller will allocator.Free() the retval if it's not NULL.
* Caller will make missing directories if necessary; this just reports
* the final path.
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*/
char *__PHYSFS_platformCalcPrefDir(const char *org, const char *app);
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/*
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* Return a pointer that uniquely identifies the current thread.
* On a platform without threading, (0x1) will suffice. These numbers are
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* arbitrary; the only requirement is that no two threads have the same
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* pointer.
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*/
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void *__PHYSFS_platformGetThreadID(void);
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/*
* Enumerate a directory of files. This follows the rules for the
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* PHYSFS_Archiver::enumerateFiles() method, except that the
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* (dirName) that is passed to this function is converted to
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* platform-DEPENDENT notation by the caller. The PHYSFS_Archiver version
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* uses platform-independent notation. Note that ".", "..", and other
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* meta-entries should always be ignored.
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*/
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void __PHYSFS_platformEnumerateFiles(const char *dirname,
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PHYSFS_EnumFilesCallback callback,
const char *origdir,
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void *callbackdata);
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/*
* Make a directory in the actual filesystem. (path) is specified in
* platform-dependent notation. On error, return zero and set the error
* message. Return non-zero on success.
*/
int __PHYSFS_platformMkDir(const char *path);
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/*
* Remove a file or directory entry in the actual filesystem. (path) is
* specified in platform-dependent notation. Note that this deletes files
* _and_ directories, so you might need to do some determination.
* Non-empty directories should report an error and not delete themselves
* or their contents.
*
* Deleting a symlink should remove the link, not what it points to.
*
* On error, return zero and set the error message. Return non-zero on success.
*/
int __PHYSFS_platformDelete(const char *path);
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/*
* Create a platform-specific mutex. This can be whatever datatype your
* platform uses for mutexes, but it is cast to a (void *) for abstractness.
*
* Return (NULL) if you couldn't create one. Systems without threads can
* return any arbitrary non-NULL value.
*/
void *__PHYSFS_platformCreateMutex(void);
/*
* Destroy a platform-specific mutex, and clean up any resources associated
* with it. (mutex) is a value previously returned by
* __PHYSFS_platformCreateMutex(). This can be a no-op on single-threaded
* platforms.
*/
void __PHYSFS_platformDestroyMutex(void *mutex);
/*
* Grab possession of a platform-specific mutex. Mutexes should be recursive;
* that is, the same thread should be able to call this function multiple
* times in a row without causing a deadlock. This function should block
* until a thread can gain possession of the mutex.
*
* Return non-zero if the mutex was grabbed, zero if there was an
* unrecoverable problem grabbing it (this should not be a matter of
* timing out! We're talking major system errors; block until the mutex
* is available otherwise.)
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*
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* _DO NOT_ call PHYSFS_setErrorCode() in here! Since setErrorCode calls this
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* function, you'll cause an infinite recursion. This means you can't
* use the BAIL_*MACRO* macros, either.
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*/
int __PHYSFS_platformGrabMutex(void *mutex);
/*
* Relinquish possession of the mutex when this method has been called
* once for each time that platformGrabMutex was called. Once possession has
* been released, the next thread in line to grab the mutex (if any) may
* proceed.
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*
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* _DO NOT_ call PHYSFS_setErrorCode() in here! Since setErrorCode calls this
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* function, you'll cause an infinite recursion. This means you can't
* use the BAIL_*MACRO* macros, either.
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*/
void __PHYSFS_platformReleaseMutex(void *mutex);
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/*
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* Called at the start of PHYSFS_init() to prepare the allocator, if the user
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* hasn't selected their own allocator via PHYSFS_setAllocator().
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* If the platform has a custom allocator, it should fill in the fields of
* (a) with the proper function pointers and return non-zero.
* If the platform just wants to use malloc()/free()/etc, return zero
* immediately and the higher level will handle it. The Init and Deinit
* fields of (a) are optional...set them to NULL if you don't need them.
* Everything else must be implemented. All rules follow those for
* PHYSFS_setAllocator(). If Init isn't NULL, it will be called shortly
* after this function returns non-zero.
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*/
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int __PHYSFS_platformSetDefaultAllocator(PHYSFS_Allocator *a);
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#ifdef __cplusplus
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}
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#endif
#endif
/* end of physfs_internal.h ... */