Windows2003-3790/windows/appcompat/shims/lib/argva.cpp

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2001-01-01 00:00:00 +01:00
/***
*argvw.c - create Unicode version of argv arguments
*
* Copyright (c) 1989-1993, Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
*
*Purpose:
* processes program command line
*
*Revision History:
08/14/2001 robkenny Moved code inside the ShimLib namespace.
*
*******************************************************************************/
// This routine actually lives in shell32.dll,
// we have a private copy so we don't have to link to the library.
#include <windows.h>
#include "StrSafe.h"
namespace ShimLib
{
/***
*void Parse_Cmdline(cmdstart, argv, lpstr, numargs, numbytes)
*
*Purpose:
* Parses the command line and sets up the Unicode argv[] array.
* On entry, cmdstart should point to the command line,
* argv should point to memory for the argv array, lpstr
* points to memory to place the text of the arguments.
* If these are NULL, then no storing (only counting)
* is done. On exit, *numargs has the number of
* arguments (plus one for a final NULL argument),
* and *numbytes has the number of bytes used in the buffer
* pointed to by args.
*
*Entry:
* LPSTR cmdstart - pointer to command line of the form
* <progname><nul><args><nul>
* TCHAR **argv - where to build argv array; NULL means don't
* build array
* LPSTR lpstr - where to place argument text; NULL means don't
* store text
*
*Exit:
* no return value
* INT *numargs - returns number of argv entries created
* INT *numbytes - number of bytes used in args buffer
*
*Exceptions:
*
*******************************************************************************/
void Parse_CmdlineA (
LPCSTR cmdstart,
LPSTR* argv,
LPSTR lpstr,
INT * numargs,
INT * numbytes
)
{
LPCSTR p;
char c;
INT inquote; /* 1 = inside quotes */
INT copychar; /* 1 = copy char to *args */
WORD numslash; /* num of backslashes seen */
*numbytes = 0;
*numargs = 1; /* the program name at least */
/* first scan the program name, copy it, and count the bytes */
p = cmdstart;
if (argv)
*argv++ = lpstr;
/* A quoted program name is handled here. The handling is much
simpler than for other arguments. Basically, whatever lies
between the leading double-quote and next one, or a terminal null
character is simply accepted. Fancier handling is not required
because the program name must be a legal NTFS/HPFS file name.
Note that the double-quote characters are not copied, nor do they
contribute to numbytes. */
if (*p == TEXT('\"'))
{
/* scan from just past the first double-quote through the next
double-quote, or up to a null, whichever comes first */
while ((*(++p) != TEXT('\"')) && (*p != TEXT('\0')))
{
*numbytes += sizeof(char);
if (lpstr)
*lpstr++ = *p;
}
/* append the terminating null */
*numbytes += sizeof(char);
if (lpstr)
*lpstr++ = TEXT('\0');
/* if we stopped on a double-quote (usual case), skip over it */
if (*p == TEXT('\"'))
p++;
}
else
{
/* Not a quoted program name */
do {
*numbytes += sizeof(char);
if (lpstr)
*lpstr++ = *p;
c = (char) *p++;
} while (c > TEXT(' '));
if (c == TEXT('\0'))
{
p--;
}
else
{
if (lpstr)
*(lpstr - 1) = TEXT('\0');
}
}
inquote = 0;
/* loop on each argument */
for ( ; ; )
{
if (*p)
{
while (*p == TEXT(' ') || *p == TEXT('\t'))
++p;
}
if (*p == TEXT('\0'))
break; /* end of args */
/* scan an argument */
if (argv)
*argv++ = lpstr; /* store ptr to arg */
++*numargs;
/* loop through scanning one argument */
for ( ; ; )
{
copychar = 1;
/* Rules: 2N backslashes + " ==> N backslashes and begin/end quote
2N+1 backslashes + " ==> N backslashes + literal "
N backslashes ==> N backslashes */
numslash = 0;
while (*p == TEXT('\\'))
{
/* count number of backslashes for use below */
++p;
++numslash;
}
if (*p == TEXT('\"'))
{
/* if 2N backslashes before, start/end quote, otherwise
copy literally */
if (numslash % 2 == 0)
{
if (inquote)
if (p[1] == TEXT('\"'))
p++; /* Double quote inside quoted string */
else /* skip first quote char and copy second */
copychar = 0;
else
copychar = 0; /* don't copy quote */
inquote = !inquote;
}
numslash /= 2; /* divide numslash by two */
}
/* copy slashes */
while (numslash--)
{
if (lpstr)
*lpstr++ = TEXT('\\');
*numbytes += sizeof(char);
}
/* if at end of arg, break loop */
if (*p == TEXT('\0') || (!inquote && (*p == TEXT(' ') || *p == TEXT('\t'))))
break;
/* copy character into argument */
if (copychar)
{
if (lpstr)
*lpstr++ = *p;
*numbytes += sizeof(char);
}
++p;
}
/* null-terminate the argument */
if (lpstr)
*lpstr++ = TEXT('\0'); /* terminate string */
*numbytes += sizeof(char);
}
}
/***
*CommandLineToArgvW - set up Unicode "argv" for C programs
*
*Purpose:
* Read the command line and create the argv array for C
* programs.
*
*Entry:
* Arguments are retrieved from the program command line
*
*Exit:
* "argv" points to a null-terminated list of pointers to UNICODE
* strings, each of which is an argument from the command line.
* The list of pointers is also located on the heap or stack.
*
*Exceptions:
* Terminates with out of memory error if no memory to allocate.
*
*******************************************************************************/
LPSTR * _CommandLineToArgvA (LPCSTR lpCmdLine, int*pNumArgs)
{
LPSTR*argv_U;
LPCSTR cmdstart; /* start of command line to parse */
INT numbytes;
if (pNumArgs == NULL) {
SetLastError(ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER);
return NULL;
}
cmdstart = lpCmdLine;
/* first find out how much space is needed to store args */
Parse_CmdlineA(cmdstart, NULL, NULL, pNumArgs, &numbytes);
/* allocate space for argv[] vector and strings */
argv_U = (LPSTR*)LocalAlloc(LMEM_ZEROINIT,
(*pNumArgs + 1) * sizeof(LPSTR) + numbytes);
if (!argv_U) {
SetLastError(ERROR_NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY);
return (NULL);
}
/* store args and argv ptrs in just allocated block */
Parse_CmdlineA(cmdstart,
argv_U,
(LPSTR)(((LPBYTE)argv_U) + *pNumArgs * sizeof(LPSTR)),
pNumArgs,
&numbytes);
return argv_U;
}
}; // end of namespace ShimLib