• Home
  • Line#
  • Scopes#
  • Navigate#
  • Raw
  • Download
1 // © 2018 and later: Unicode, Inc. and others.
2 // License & terms of use: http://www.unicode.org/copyright.html
3 //
4 // From the double-conversion library. Original license:
5 //
6 // Copyright 2010 the V8 project authors. All rights reserved.
7 // Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
8 // modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
9 // met:
10 //
11 //     * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
12 //       notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
13 //     * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
14 //       copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
15 //       disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided
16 //       with the distribution.
17 //     * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its
18 //       contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
19 //       from this software without specific prior written permission.
20 //
21 // THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
22 // "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
23 // LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
24 // A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
25 // OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
26 // SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
27 // LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
28 // DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
29 // THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
30 // (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
31 // OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
32 
33 // ICU PATCH: ifdef around UCONFIG_NO_FORMATTING
34 #include "unicode/utypes.h"
35 #if !UCONFIG_NO_FORMATTING
36 
37 #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UTILS_H_
38 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UTILS_H_
39 
40 // Use DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS to get unprefixed macros as was
41 // the case in double-conversion releases prior to 3.1.6
42 
43 #include <cstdlib>
44 #include <cstring>
45 
46 // For pre-C++11 compatibility
47 #if __cplusplus >= 201103L
48 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NULLPTR nullptr
49 #else
50 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NULLPTR NULL
51 #endif
52 
53 // ICU PATCH: Use U_ASSERT instead of <assert.h>
54 #include "uassert.h"
55 #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT
56 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(condition)         \
57     U_ASSERT(condition)
58 #endif
59 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(ASSERT)
60 #define ASSERT DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT
61 #endif
62 
63 #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNIMPLEMENTED
64 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNIMPLEMENTED() (abort())
65 #endif
66 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(UNIMPLEMENTED)
67 #define UNIMPLEMENTED DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNIMPLEMENTED
68 #endif
69 
70 #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NO_RETURN
71 #ifdef _MSC_VER
72 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NO_RETURN __declspec(noreturn)
73 #else
74 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NO_RETURN __attribute__((noreturn))
75 #endif
76 #endif
77 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(NO_RETURN)
78 #define NO_RETURN DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NO_RETURN
79 #endif
80 
81 #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNREACHABLE
82 #ifdef _MSC_VER
83 void DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NO_RETURN abort_noreturn();
abort_noreturn()84 inline void abort_noreturn() { abort(); }
85 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNREACHABLE()   (abort_noreturn())
86 #else
87 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNREACHABLE()   (abort())
88 #endif
89 #endif
90 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(UNREACHABLE)
91 #define UNREACHABLE DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNREACHABLE
92 #endif
93 
94 // Not all compilers support __has_attribute and combining a check for both
95 // ifdef and __has_attribute on the same preprocessor line isn't portable.
96 #ifdef __has_attribute
97 #   define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_HAS_ATTRIBUTE(x) __has_attribute(x)
98 #else
99 #   define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_HAS_ATTRIBUTE(x) 0
100 #endif
101 
102 #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNUSED
103 #if DOUBLE_CONVERSION_HAS_ATTRIBUTE(unused)
104 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNUSED __attribute__((unused))
105 #else
106 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNUSED
107 #endif
108 #endif
109 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(UNUSED)
110 #define UNUSED DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNUSED
111 #endif
112 
113 #if DOUBLE_CONVERSION_HAS_ATTRIBUTE(uninitialized)
114 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_STACK_UNINITIALIZED __attribute__((uninitialized))
115 #else
116 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_STACK_UNINITIALIZED
117 #endif
118 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(STACK_UNINITIALIZED)
119 #define STACK_UNINITIALIZED DOUBLE_CONVERSION_STACK_UNINITIALIZED
120 #endif
121 
122 // Double operations detection based on target architecture.
123 // Linux uses a 80bit wide floating point stack on x86. This induces double
124 // rounding, which in turn leads to wrong results.
125 // An easy way to test if the floating-point operations are correct is to
126 // evaluate: 89255.0/1e22. If the floating-point stack is 64 bits wide then
127 // the result is equal to 89255e-22.
128 // The best way to test this, is to create a division-function and to compare
129 // the output of the division with the expected result. (Inlining must be
130 // disabled.)
131 // On Linux,x86 89255e-22 != Div_double(89255.0/1e22)
132 //
133 // For example:
134 /*
135 // -- in div.c
136 double Div_double(double x, double y) { return x / y; }
137 
138 // -- in main.c
139 double Div_double(double x, double y);  // Forward declaration.
140 
141 int main(int argc, char** argv) {
142   return Div_double(89255.0, 1e22) == 89255e-22;
143 }
144 */
145 // Run as follows ./main || echo "correct"
146 //
147 // If it prints "correct" then the architecture should be here, in the "correct" section.
148 #if defined(_M_X64) || defined(__x86_64__) || \
149     defined(__ARMEL__) || defined(__avr32__) || defined(_M_ARM) || defined(_M_ARM64) || \
150     defined(__hppa__) || defined(__ia64__) || \
151     defined(__mips__) || \
152     defined(__loongarch__) || \
153     defined(__nios2__) || defined(__ghs) || \
154     defined(__powerpc__) || defined(__ppc__) || defined(__ppc64__) || \
155     defined(_POWER) || defined(_ARCH_PPC) || defined(_ARCH_PPC64) || \
156     defined(__sparc__) || defined(__sparc) || defined(__s390__) || \
157     defined(__SH4__) || defined(__alpha__) || \
158     defined(_MIPS_ARCH_MIPS32R2) || defined(__ARMEB__) ||\
159     defined(__AARCH64EL__) || defined(__aarch64__) || defined(__AARCH64EB__) || \
160     defined(__riscv) || defined(__e2k__) || \
161     defined(__or1k__) || defined(__arc__) || defined(__ARC64__) || \
162     defined(__microblaze__) || defined(__XTENSA__) || \
163     defined(__EMSCRIPTEN__) || defined(__wasm32__)
164 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS 1
165 #elif defined(__mc68000__) || \
166     defined(__pnacl__) || defined(__native_client__)
167 #undef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS
168 #elif defined(_M_IX86) || defined(__i386__) || defined(__i386)
169 #if defined(_WIN32)
170 // Windows uses a 64bit wide floating point stack.
171 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS 1
172 #else
173 #undef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS
174 #endif  // _WIN32
175 #else
176 #error Target architecture was not detected as supported by Double-Conversion.
177 #endif
178 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS)
179 #define CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS DOUBLE_CONVERSION_CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS
180 #endif
181 
182 #if defined(_WIN32) && !defined(__MINGW32__)
183 
184 typedef signed char int8_t;
185 typedef unsigned char uint8_t;
186 typedef short int16_t;  // NOLINT
187 typedef unsigned short uint16_t;  // NOLINT
188 typedef int int32_t;
189 typedef unsigned int uint32_t;
190 typedef __int64 int64_t;
191 typedef unsigned __int64 uint64_t;
192 // intptr_t and friends are defined in crtdefs.h through stdio.h.
193 
194 #else
195 
196 #include <stdint.h>
197 
198 #endif
199 
200 typedef uint16_t uc16;
201 
202 // The following macro works on both 32 and 64-bit platforms.
203 // Usage: instead of writing 0x1234567890123456
204 //      write DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UINT64_2PART_C(0x12345678,90123456);
205 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UINT64_2PART_C(a, b) (((static_cast<uint64_t>(a) << 32) + 0x##b##u))
206 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(UINT64_2PART_C)
207 #define UINT64_2PART_C DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UINT64_2PART_C
208 #endif
209 
210 // The expression DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ARRAY_SIZE(a) is a compile-time constant of type
211 // size_t which represents the number of elements of the given
212 // array. You should only use DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ARRAY_SIZE on statically allocated
213 // arrays.
214 #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ARRAY_SIZE
215 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ARRAY_SIZE(a)                                   \
216   ((sizeof(a) / sizeof(*(a))) /                         \
217   static_cast<size_t>(!(sizeof(a) % sizeof(*(a)))))
218 #endif
219 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(ARRAY_SIZE)
220 #define ARRAY_SIZE DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ARRAY_SIZE
221 #endif
222 
223 // A macro to disallow the evil copy constructor and operator= functions
224 // This should be used in the private: declarations for a class
225 #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN
226 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(TypeName)      \
227   TypeName(const TypeName&);                    \
228   void operator=(const TypeName&)
229 #endif
230 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(DC_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN)
231 #define DC_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN
232 #endif
233 
234 // A macro to disallow all the implicit constructors, namely the
235 // default constructor, copy constructor and operator= functions.
236 //
237 // This should be used in the private: declarations for a class
238 // that wants to prevent anyone from instantiating it. This is
239 // especially useful for classes containing only static methods.
240 #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS
241 #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS(TypeName) \
242   TypeName();                                    \
243   DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(TypeName)
244 #endif
245 #if defined(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NON_PREFIXED_MACROS) && !defined(DC_DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS)
246 #define DC_DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS
247 #endif
248 
249 // ICU PATCH: Wrap in ICU namespace
250 U_NAMESPACE_BEGIN
251 
252 namespace double_conversion {
253 
StrLength(const char * string)254 inline int StrLength(const char* string) {
255   size_t length = strlen(string);
256   DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(length == static_cast<size_t>(static_cast<int>(length)));
257   return static_cast<int>(length);
258 }
259 
260 // This is a simplified version of V8's Vector class.
261 template <typename T>
262 class Vector {
263  public:
Vector()264   Vector() : start_(DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NULLPTR), length_(0) {}
Vector(T * data,int len)265   Vector(T* data, int len) : start_(data), length_(len) {
266     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(len == 0 || (len > 0 && data != DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NULLPTR));
267   }
268 
269   // Returns a vector using the same backing storage as this one,
270   // spanning from and including 'from', to but not including 'to'.
SubVector(int from,int to)271   Vector<T> SubVector(int from, int to) {
272     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(to <= length_);
273     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(from < to);
274     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(0 <= from);
275     return Vector<T>(start() + from, to - from);
276   }
277 
278   // Returns the length of the vector.
length()279   int length() const { return length_; }
280 
281   // Returns whether or not the vector is empty.
is_empty()282   bool is_empty() const { return length_ == 0; }
283 
284   // Returns the pointer to the start of the data in the vector.
start()285   T* start() const { return start_; }
286 
287   // Access individual vector elements - checks bounds in debug mode.
288   T& operator[](int index) const {
289     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(0 <= index && index < length_);
290     return start_[index];
291   }
292 
first()293   T& first() { return start_[0]; }
294 
last()295   T& last() { return start_[length_ - 1]; }
296 
pop_back()297   void pop_back() {
298     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(!is_empty());
299     --length_;
300   }
301 
302  private:
303   T* start_;
304   int length_;
305 };
306 
307 
308 // Helper class for building result strings in a character buffer. The
309 // purpose of the class is to use safe operations that checks the
310 // buffer bounds on all operations in debug mode.
311 class StringBuilder {
312  public:
StringBuilder(char * buffer,int buffer_size)313   StringBuilder(char* buffer, int buffer_size)
314       : buffer_(buffer, buffer_size), position_(0) { }
315 
~StringBuilder()316   ~StringBuilder() { if (!is_finalized()) Finalize(); }
317 
size()318   int size() const { return buffer_.length(); }
319 
320   // Get the current position in the builder.
position()321   int position() const {
322     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(!is_finalized());
323     return position_;
324   }
325 
326   // Reset the position.
Reset()327   void Reset() { position_ = 0; }
328 
329   // Add a single character to the builder. It is not allowed to add
330   // 0-characters; use the Finalize() method to terminate the string
331   // instead.
AddCharacter(char c)332   void AddCharacter(char c) {
333     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(c != '\0');
334     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(!is_finalized() && position_ < buffer_.length());
335     buffer_[position_++] = c;
336   }
337 
338   // Add an entire string to the builder. Uses strlen() internally to
339   // compute the length of the input string.
AddString(const char * s)340   void AddString(const char* s) {
341     AddSubstring(s, StrLength(s));
342   }
343 
344   // Add the first 'n' characters of the given string 's' to the
345   // builder. The input string must have enough characters.
AddSubstring(const char * s,int n)346   void AddSubstring(const char* s, int n) {
347     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(!is_finalized() && position_ + n < buffer_.length());
348     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(static_cast<size_t>(n) <= strlen(s));
349     memmove(&buffer_[position_], s, static_cast<size_t>(n));
350     position_ += n;
351   }
352 
353 
354   // Add character padding to the builder. If count is non-positive,
355   // nothing is added to the builder.
AddPadding(char c,int count)356   void AddPadding(char c, int count) {
357     for (int i = 0; i < count; i++) {
358       AddCharacter(c);
359     }
360   }
361 
362   // Finalize the string by 0-terminating it and returning the buffer.
Finalize()363   char* Finalize() {
364     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(!is_finalized() && position_ < buffer_.length());
365     buffer_[position_] = '\0';
366     // Make sure nobody managed to add a 0-character to the
367     // buffer while building the string.
368     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(strlen(buffer_.start()) == static_cast<size_t>(position_));
369     position_ = -1;
370     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(is_finalized());
371     return buffer_.start();
372   }
373 
374  private:
375   Vector<char> buffer_;
376   int position_;
377 
is_finalized()378   bool is_finalized() const { return position_ < 0; }
379 
380   DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS(StringBuilder);
381 };
382 
383 // The type-based aliasing rule allows the compiler to assume that pointers of
384 // different types (for some definition of different) never alias each other.
385 // Thus the following code does not work:
386 //
387 // float f = foo();
388 // int fbits = *(int*)(&f);
389 //
390 // The compiler 'knows' that the int pointer can't refer to f since the types
391 // don't match, so the compiler may cache f in a register, leaving random data
392 // in fbits.  Using C++ style casts makes no difference, however a pointer to
393 // char data is assumed to alias any other pointer.  This is the 'memcpy
394 // exception'.
395 //
396 // Bit_cast uses the memcpy exception to move the bits from a variable of one
397 // type of a variable of another type.  Of course the end result is likely to
398 // be implementation dependent.  Most compilers (gcc-4.2 and MSVC 2005)
399 // will completely optimize BitCast away.
400 //
401 // There is an additional use for BitCast.
402 // Recent gccs will warn when they see casts that may result in breakage due to
403 // the type-based aliasing rule.  If you have checked that there is no breakage
404 // you can use BitCast to cast one pointer type to another.  This confuses gcc
405 // enough that it can no longer see that you have cast one pointer type to
406 // another thus avoiding the warning.
407 template <class Dest, class Source>
BitCast(const Source & source)408 Dest BitCast(const Source& source) {
409   // Compile time assertion: sizeof(Dest) == sizeof(Source)
410   // A compile error here means your Dest and Source have different sizes.
411 #if __cplusplus >= 201103L
412   static_assert(sizeof(Dest) == sizeof(Source),
413                 "source and destination size mismatch");
414 #else
415   DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNUSED
416   typedef char VerifySizesAreEqual[sizeof(Dest) == sizeof(Source) ? 1 : -1];
417 #endif
418 
419   Dest dest;
420   memmove(&dest, &source, sizeof(dest));
421   return dest;
422 }
423 
424 template <class Dest, class Source>
BitCast(Source * source)425 Dest BitCast(Source* source) {
426   return BitCast<Dest>(reinterpret_cast<uintptr_t>(source));
427 }
428 
429 }  // namespace double_conversion
430 
431 // ICU PATCH: Close ICU namespace
432 U_NAMESPACE_END
433 
434 #endif  // DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UTILS_H_
435 #endif // ICU PATCH: close #if !UCONFIG_NO_FORMATTING
436