1 | /*
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2 |
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3 | Copyright 1995, 1998 The Open Group
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4 |
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5 | Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and its
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6 | documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that
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7 | the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that
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8 | copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting
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9 | documentation.
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10 |
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11 | The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
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12 | included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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13 |
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14 | THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
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15 | EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
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16 | MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
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17 | IN NO EVENT SHALL THE OPEN GROUP BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR
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18 | OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
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19 | ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
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20 | OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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21 |
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22 | Except as contained in this notice, the name of The Open Group shall
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23 | not be used in advertising or otherwise to promote the sale, use or
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24 | other dealings in this Software without prior written authorization
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25 | from The Open Group.
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26 |
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27 | */
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28 |
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29 | /*
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30 | A Set Abstract Data Type (ADT) for the RECORD Extension
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31 | David P. Wiggins
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32 | 7/25/95
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33 |
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34 | The RECORD extension server code needs to maintain sets of numbers
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35 | that designate protocol message types. In most cases the interval of
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36 | numbers starts at 0 and does not exceed 255, but in a few cases (minor
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37 | opcodes of extension requests) the maximum is 65535. This disparity
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38 | suggests that a single set representation may not be suitable for all
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39 | sets, especially given that server memory is precious. We introduce a
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40 | set ADT to hide implementation differences so that multiple
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41 | simultaneous set representations can exist. A single interface is
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42 | presented to the set user regardless of the implementation in use for
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43 | a particular set.
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44 |
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45 | The existing RECORD SI appears to require only four set operations:
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46 | create (given a list of members), destroy, see if a particular number
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47 | is a member of the set, and iterate over the members of a set. Though
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48 | many more set operations are imaginable, to keep the code space down,
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49 | we won't provide any more operations than are needed.
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50 |
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51 | The following types and functions/macros define the ADT.
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52 | */
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53 |
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54 | /* an interval of set members */
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55 | typedef struct {
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56 | CARD16 first;
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57 | CARD16 last;
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58 | } RecordSetInterval;
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59 |
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60 | typedef struct _RecordSetRec *RecordSetPtr; /* primary set type */
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61 |
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62 | typedef void *RecordSetIteratePtr;
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63 |
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64 | /* table of function pointers for set operations.
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65 | set users should never declare a variable of this type.
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66 | */
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67 | typedef struct {
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68 | void (*DestroySet)(
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69 | RecordSetPtr pSet
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70 | );
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71 | unsigned long (*IsMemberOfSet)(
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72 | RecordSetPtr pSet,
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73 | int possible_member
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74 | );
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75 | RecordSetIteratePtr (*IterateSet)(
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76 | RecordSetPtr pSet,
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77 | RecordSetIteratePtr pIter,
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78 | RecordSetInterval *interval
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79 | );
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80 | } RecordSetOperations;
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81 |
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82 | /* "base class" for sets.
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83 | set users should never declare a variable of this type.
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84 | */
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85 | typedef struct _RecordSetRec {
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86 | RecordSetOperations *ops;
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87 | } RecordSetRec;
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88 |
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89 | RecordSetPtr RecordCreateSet(
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90 | RecordSetInterval *intervals,
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91 | int nintervals,
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92 | void *pMem,
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93 | int memsize
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94 | );
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95 | /*
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96 | RecordCreateSet creates and returns a new set having members specified
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97 | by intervals and nintervals. nintervals is the number of RecordSetInterval
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98 | structures pointed to by intervals. The elements belonging to the new
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99 | set are determined as follows. For each RecordSetInterval structure, the
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100 | elements between first and last inclusive are members of the new set.
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101 | If a RecordSetInterval's first field is greater than its last field, the
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102 | results are undefined. It is valid to create an empty set (nintervals ==
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103 | 0). If RecordCreateSet returns NULL, the set could not be created due
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104 | to resource constraints.
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105 | */
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106 |
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107 | int RecordSetMemoryRequirements(
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108 | RecordSetInterval * /*pIntervals*/,
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109 | int /*nintervals*/,
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110 | int * /*alignment*/
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111 | );
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112 |
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113 | #define RecordDestroySet(_pSet) \
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114 | /* void */ (*_pSet->ops->DestroySet)(/* RecordSetPtr */ _pSet)
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115 | /*
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116 | RecordDestroySet frees all resources used by _pSet. _pSet should not be
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117 | used after it is destroyed.
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118 | */
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119 |
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120 | #define RecordIsMemberOfSet(_pSet, _m) \
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121 | /* unsigned long */ (*_pSet->ops->IsMemberOfSet)(/* RecordSetPtr */ _pSet, \
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122 | /* int */ _m)
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123 | /*
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124 | RecordIsMemberOfSet returns a non-zero value if _m is a member of
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125 | _pSet, else it returns zero.
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126 | */
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127 |
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128 | #define RecordIterateSet(_pSet, _pIter, _interval) \
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129 | /* RecordSetIteratePtr */ (*_pSet->ops->IterateSet)(/* RecordSetPtr */ _pSet,\
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130 | /* RecordSetIteratePtr */ _pIter, /* RecordSetInterval */ _interval)
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131 | /*
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132 | RecordIterateSet returns successive intervals of members of _pSet. If
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133 | _pIter is NULL, the first interval of set members is copied into _interval.
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134 | The return value should be passed as _pIter in the next call to
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135 | RecordIterateSet to obtain the next interval. When the return value is
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136 | NULL, there were no more intervals in the set, and nothing is copied into
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137 | the _interval parameter. Intervals appear in increasing numerical order
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138 | with no overlap between intervals. As such, the list of intervals produced
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139 | by RecordIterateSet may not match the list of intervals that were passed
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140 | in RecordCreateSet. Typical usage:
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141 |
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142 | pIter = NULL;
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143 | while (pIter = RecordIterateSet(pSet, pIter, &interval))
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144 | {
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145 | process interval;
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146 | }
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147 | */
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