test/buffercomp.c


Log

Author Commit Date CI Message
Pierre Le Marre 00e3058e 2023-11-06T21:53:51 Prevent recursive includes of keymap components - Add check for recursive includes of keymap components. It relies on limiting the include depth. The threshold is currently to 15, which seems reasonable with plenty of margin for keymaps in the wild. - Add corresponding new log message `recursive-include`. - Add tests for recursive includes.
Pierre Le Marre 82e9293e 2023-10-30T15:28:10 xkbcomp: early detection of invalid encoding
Pierre Le Marre f937c308 2023-10-29T07:31:34 xkbcomp: skip heading UTF-8 encoded BOM (U+FEFF) Leading BOM is legal and is used as a signature — an indication that an otherwise unmarked text file is in UTF-8. See: https://www.unicode.org/faq/utf_bom.html#bom5 for further details.
Peter Hutterer b06aedb8 2023-05-02T14:15:55 scanner: allow for a zero terminated string as keymap As the documentation for xkb_keymap_new_from_buffer() states, the "input string does not have to be zero-terminated". The actual implementation however failed with "unrecognized token/syntax error" when it encountered a null byte. Fix this by allowing a null byte at the last position of the buffer. Anything else is likely a client error anyway. Fixes #307
Ran Benita 40aab05e 2019-12-27T13:03:20 build: include config.h manually Previously we included it with an `-include` compiler directive. But that's not portable. And it's better to be explicit anyway. Every .c file should have `include "config.h"` first thing. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
David Herrmann 36f55c49 2013-03-11T12:53:39 keymap: add xkb_keymap_new_from_buffer() The current API doesn't allow the caller to create keymaps from mmap()'ed files. The problem is, xkb_keymap_new_from_string() requires a terminating 0 byte. However, there is no way to guarantee that when using mmap() so a user currently has to copy the whole file just to get the terminating zero byte (assuming they cannot use xkb_keymap_new_from_file()). This adds a new entry xkb_keymap_new_from_buffer() which takes a memory location and the buffer size in bytes. Internally, we depend on yy_scan_{string,byte}() helpers. According to flex documentation these already copy the input string because they are wrappers around yy_scan_buffer(). yy_scan_buffer() on the other hand has some insane requirements. The buffer must be writeable and the last two bytes must be ASCII-NUL. But the buffer may contain other 0 bytes just fine. Because we don't want these constraints in our public API, xkb_keymap_new_from_buffer() needs to create a copy of the input memory. But it then calls yy_scan_buffer() directly. Hence, we have the same number of buffer-copies as with *_from_string() but without the terminating 0 requirement. The explicit yy_scan_buffer() call is preferred over yy_scan_byte() so the buffer-copy operation is not hidden somewhere in flex. Maybe some day we no longer depend on flex and can have a zero-copy API. A user could mmap() a file and it would get parsed right from this buffer. But until then, we shouldn't expose this limitation in the API but instead provide an API that some day can work with zero-copy. Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com> [ran: rebased on top of my branch] Conflicts: Makefile.am src/xkbcomp/xkbcomp.c