1File : README
2Author : Richard A. O'Keefe.
3Updated: 30 April 1984
4Purpose: Explain the new strings package.
5
6 The UNIX string libraries (described in the string(3) manual page)
7differ from UNIX to UNIX (e.g. strtok is not in V7 or 4.1bsd). Worse,
8the sources are not in the public domain, so that if there is a string
9routine which is nearly what you want but not quite you can't take a
10copy and modify it. And of course C programmers on non-UNIX systems
11are at the mercy of their supplier.
12
13 This package was designed to let me do reasonable things with C's
14strings whatever UNIX (V7, PaNiX, UX63, 4.1bsd) I happen to be using.
15Everything in the System III manual is here and does just what the S3
16manual says it does. There are also lots of new goodies. I'm sorry
17about the names, but the routines do have to work on asphyxiated-at-
18birth systems which truncate identifiers. The convention is that a
19routine is called
20 str [n] [c] <operation>
21If there is an "n", it means that the function takes an (int) "length"
22argument, which bounds the number of characters to be moved or looked
23at. If the function has a "set" argument, a "c" in the name indicates
24that the complement of the set is used. Functions or variables whose
25names start with _ are support routines which aren't really meant for
26general use. I don't know what the "p" is doing in "strpbrk", but it
27is there in the S3 manual so it's here too. "istrtok" does not follow
28this rule, but with 7 letters what can you do?
29
30 I have included new versions of atoi(3) and atol(3) as well. They
31use a new primitive str2int, which takes a pair of bounds and a radix,
32and does much more thorough checking than the normal atoi and atol do.
33The result returned by atoi & atol is valid if and only if errno == 0.
34There is also an output conversion routine int2str, with itoa and ltoa
35as interface macros. Only after writing int2str did I notice that the
36str2int routine has no provision for unsigned numbers. On reflection,
37I don't greatly care. I'm afraid that int2str may depend on your "C"
38compiler in unexpected ways. Do check the code with -S.
39
40 Several of these routines have "asm" inclusions conditional on the
41VaxAsm option. These insertions can make the routines which have them
42quite a bit faster, but there is a snag. The VAX architects, for some
43reason best known to themselves and their therapists, decided that all
44"strings" were shorter than 2^16 bytes. Even when the length operands
45are in 32-bit registers, only 16 bits count. So the "asm" versions do
46not work for long strings. If you can guarantee that all your strings
47will be short, define VaxAsm in the makefile, but in general, and when
48using other machines, do not define it.
49
50 To use this library, you need the "strings.a" library file and the
51"strings.h" and "ctypes.h" header files. The other header files are
52for compiling the library itself, though if you are hacking extensions
53you may find them useful. General users really shouldn't see them.
54I've defined a few macros I find useful in "strings.h"; if you have no
55need for "index", "rindex", "streql", and "beql", just edit them out.
56On the 4.1bsd system I am using declaring all these functions 'extern'
57does not mean that they will all be loaded; but only the ones you use.
58When using lesser systems you may find it necessary to break strings.h
59up, or you could get by with just adding "extern" declarations for the
60functions you want as you need them. Many of these functions have the
61same names as functions in the "standard C library", by design as this
62is a replacement/reimplementation of part of that library. So you may
63have to talk the loader into loading this library first. Again, I've
64found no problems on 4.1bsd.
65
66 You may wonder at my failure to provide manual pages for this code.
67For the things in V7, 4.?, or SIII, you should be able to use whichever
68manual page came with that system, and anything I might write would be
69so like it as to raise suspicions of violating AT&T copyrights. In the
70sources you will find comments which provide far more documentation for
71these routines than AT&T ever provided for their strings stuff, I just
72don't happen to have put it in nroff -man form. Had I done so, the .3
73files would have outbulked the .c files!
74
75 These files are in the public domain. This includes getopt.c, which
76is the work of Henry Spencer, University of Toronto Zoology, who says of
77it "None of this software is derived from Bell software. I had no access
78to the source for Bell's versions at the time I wrote it. This software
79is hereby explicitly placed in the public domain. It may be used for
80any purpose on any machine by anyone." I would greatly prefer it if *my*
81material received no military use.
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