xref: /qemu/util/cutils.c (revision 27a4a30e)
1 /*
2  * Simple C functions to supplement the C library
3  *
4  * Copyright (c) 2006 Fabrice Bellard
5  *
6  * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
7  * of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
8  * in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
9  * to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
10  * copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
11  * furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
12  *
13  * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
14  * all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
15  *
16  * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
17  * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
18  * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
19  * THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
20  * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
21  * OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
22  * THE SOFTWARE.
23  */
24 
25 #include "qemu/osdep.h"
26 #include "qemu/host-utils.h"
27 #include <math.h>
28 
29 #include "qemu-common.h"
30 #include "qemu/sockets.h"
31 #include "qemu/iov.h"
32 #include "net/net.h"
33 #include "qemu/ctype.h"
34 #include "qemu/cutils.h"
35 #include "qemu/error-report.h"
36 
37 void strpadcpy(char *buf, int buf_size, const char *str, char pad)
38 {
39     int len = qemu_strnlen(str, buf_size);
40     memcpy(buf, str, len);
41     memset(buf + len, pad, buf_size - len);
42 }
43 
44 void pstrcpy(char *buf, int buf_size, const char *str)
45 {
46     int c;
47     char *q = buf;
48 
49     if (buf_size <= 0)
50         return;
51 
52     for(;;) {
53         c = *str++;
54         if (c == 0 || q >= buf + buf_size - 1)
55             break;
56         *q++ = c;
57     }
58     *q = '\0';
59 }
60 
61 /* strcat and truncate. */
62 char *pstrcat(char *buf, int buf_size, const char *s)
63 {
64     int len;
65     len = strlen(buf);
66     if (len < buf_size)
67         pstrcpy(buf + len, buf_size - len, s);
68     return buf;
69 }
70 
71 int strstart(const char *str, const char *val, const char **ptr)
72 {
73     const char *p, *q;
74     p = str;
75     q = val;
76     while (*q != '\0') {
77         if (*p != *q)
78             return 0;
79         p++;
80         q++;
81     }
82     if (ptr)
83         *ptr = p;
84     return 1;
85 }
86 
87 int stristart(const char *str, const char *val, const char **ptr)
88 {
89     const char *p, *q;
90     p = str;
91     q = val;
92     while (*q != '\0') {
93         if (qemu_toupper(*p) != qemu_toupper(*q))
94             return 0;
95         p++;
96         q++;
97     }
98     if (ptr)
99         *ptr = p;
100     return 1;
101 }
102 
103 /* XXX: use host strnlen if available ? */
104 int qemu_strnlen(const char *s, int max_len)
105 {
106     int i;
107 
108     for(i = 0; i < max_len; i++) {
109         if (s[i] == '\0') {
110             break;
111         }
112     }
113     return i;
114 }
115 
116 char *qemu_strsep(char **input, const char *delim)
117 {
118     char *result = *input;
119     if (result != NULL) {
120         char *p;
121 
122         for (p = result; *p != '\0'; p++) {
123             if (strchr(delim, *p)) {
124                 break;
125             }
126         }
127         if (*p == '\0') {
128             *input = NULL;
129         } else {
130             *p = '\0';
131             *input = p + 1;
132         }
133     }
134     return result;
135 }
136 
137 time_t mktimegm(struct tm *tm)
138 {
139     time_t t;
140     int y = tm->tm_year + 1900, m = tm->tm_mon + 1, d = tm->tm_mday;
141     if (m < 3) {
142         m += 12;
143         y--;
144     }
145     t = 86400ULL * (d + (153 * m - 457) / 5 + 365 * y + y / 4 - y / 100 +
146                  y / 400 - 719469);
147     t += 3600 * tm->tm_hour + 60 * tm->tm_min + tm->tm_sec;
148     return t;
149 }
150 
151 /*
152  * Make sure data goes on disk, but if possible do not bother to
153  * write out the inode just for timestamp updates.
154  *
155  * Unfortunately even in 2009 many operating systems do not support
156  * fdatasync and have to fall back to fsync.
157  */
158 int qemu_fdatasync(int fd)
159 {
160 #ifdef CONFIG_FDATASYNC
161     return fdatasync(fd);
162 #else
163     return fsync(fd);
164 #endif
165 }
166 
167 /**
168  * Sync changes made to the memory mapped file back to the backing
169  * storage. For POSIX compliant systems this will fallback
170  * to regular msync call. Otherwise it will trigger whole file sync
171  * (including the metadata case there is no support to skip that otherwise)
172  *
173  * @addr   - start of the memory area to be synced
174  * @length - length of the are to be synced
175  * @fd     - file descriptor for the file to be synced
176  *           (mandatory only for POSIX non-compliant systems)
177  */
178 int qemu_msync(void *addr, size_t length, int fd)
179 {
180 #ifdef CONFIG_POSIX
181     size_t align_mask = ~(qemu_real_host_page_size - 1);
182 
183     /**
184      * There are no strict reqs as per the length of mapping
185      * to be synced. Still the length needs to follow the address
186      * alignment changes. Additionally - round the size to the multiple
187      * of PAGE_SIZE
188      */
189     length += ((uintptr_t)addr & (qemu_real_host_page_size - 1));
190     length = (length + ~align_mask) & align_mask;
191 
192     addr = (void *)((uintptr_t)addr & align_mask);
193 
194     return msync(addr, length, MS_SYNC);
195 #else /* CONFIG_POSIX */
196     /**
197      * Perform the sync based on the file descriptor
198      * The sync range will most probably be wider than the one
199      * requested - but it will still get the job done
200      */
201     return qemu_fdatasync(fd);
202 #endif /* CONFIG_POSIX */
203 }
204 
205 #ifndef _WIN32
206 /* Sets a specific flag */
207 int fcntl_setfl(int fd, int flag)
208 {
209     int flags;
210 
211     flags = fcntl(fd, F_GETFL);
212     if (flags == -1)
213         return -errno;
214 
215     if (fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, flags | flag) == -1)
216         return -errno;
217 
218     return 0;
219 }
220 #endif
221 
222 static int64_t suffix_mul(char suffix, int64_t unit)
223 {
224     switch (qemu_toupper(suffix)) {
225     case 'B':
226         return 1;
227     case 'K':
228         return unit;
229     case 'M':
230         return unit * unit;
231     case 'G':
232         return unit * unit * unit;
233     case 'T':
234         return unit * unit * unit * unit;
235     case 'P':
236         return unit * unit * unit * unit * unit;
237     case 'E':
238         return unit * unit * unit * unit * unit * unit;
239     }
240     return -1;
241 }
242 
243 /*
244  * Convert string to bytes, allowing either B/b for bytes, K/k for KB,
245  * M/m for MB, G/g for GB or T/t for TB. End pointer will be returned
246  * in *end, if not NULL. Return -ERANGE on overflow, and -EINVAL on
247  * other error.
248  */
249 static int do_strtosz(const char *nptr, const char **end,
250                       const char default_suffix, int64_t unit,
251                       uint64_t *result)
252 {
253     int retval;
254     const char *endptr;
255     unsigned char c;
256     int mul_required = 0;
257     double val, mul, integral, fraction;
258 
259     retval = qemu_strtod_finite(nptr, &endptr, &val);
260     if (retval) {
261         goto out;
262     }
263     fraction = modf(val, &integral);
264     if (fraction != 0) {
265         mul_required = 1;
266     }
267     c = *endptr;
268     mul = suffix_mul(c, unit);
269     if (mul >= 0) {
270         endptr++;
271     } else {
272         mul = suffix_mul(default_suffix, unit);
273         assert(mul >= 0);
274     }
275     if (mul == 1 && mul_required) {
276         retval = -EINVAL;
277         goto out;
278     }
279     /*
280      * Values near UINT64_MAX overflow to 2**64 when converting to double
281      * precision.  Compare against the maximum representable double precision
282      * value below 2**64, computed as "the next value after 2**64 (0x1p64) in
283      * the direction of 0".
284      */
285     if ((val * mul > nextafter(0x1p64, 0)) || val < 0) {
286         retval = -ERANGE;
287         goto out;
288     }
289     *result = val * mul;
290     retval = 0;
291 
292 out:
293     if (end) {
294         *end = endptr;
295     } else if (*endptr) {
296         retval = -EINVAL;
297     }
298 
299     return retval;
300 }
301 
302 int qemu_strtosz(const char *nptr, const char **end, uint64_t *result)
303 {
304     return do_strtosz(nptr, end, 'B', 1024, result);
305 }
306 
307 int qemu_strtosz_MiB(const char *nptr, const char **end, uint64_t *result)
308 {
309     return do_strtosz(nptr, end, 'M', 1024, result);
310 }
311 
312 int qemu_strtosz_metric(const char *nptr, const char **end, uint64_t *result)
313 {
314     return do_strtosz(nptr, end, 'B', 1000, result);
315 }
316 
317 /**
318  * Helper function for error checking after strtol() and the like
319  */
320 static int check_strtox_error(const char *nptr, char *ep,
321                               const char **endptr, int libc_errno)
322 {
323     assert(ep >= nptr);
324     if (endptr) {
325         *endptr = ep;
326     }
327 
328     /* Turn "no conversion" into an error */
329     if (libc_errno == 0 && ep == nptr) {
330         return -EINVAL;
331     }
332 
333     /* Fail when we're expected to consume the string, but didn't */
334     if (!endptr && *ep) {
335         return -EINVAL;
336     }
337 
338     return -libc_errno;
339 }
340 
341 /**
342  * Convert string @nptr to an integer, and store it in @result.
343  *
344  * This is a wrapper around strtol() that is harder to misuse.
345  * Semantics of @nptr, @endptr, @base match strtol() with differences
346  * noted below.
347  *
348  * @nptr may be null, and no conversion is performed then.
349  *
350  * If no conversion is performed, store @nptr in *@endptr and return
351  * -EINVAL.
352  *
353  * If @endptr is null, and the string isn't fully converted, return
354  * -EINVAL.  This is the case when the pointer that would be stored in
355  * a non-null @endptr points to a character other than '\0'.
356  *
357  * If the conversion overflows @result, store INT_MAX in @result,
358  * and return -ERANGE.
359  *
360  * If the conversion underflows @result, store INT_MIN in @result,
361  * and return -ERANGE.
362  *
363  * Else store the converted value in @result, and return zero.
364  */
365 int qemu_strtoi(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base,
366                 int *result)
367 {
368     char *ep;
369     long long lresult;
370 
371     assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1);
372     if (!nptr) {
373         if (endptr) {
374             *endptr = nptr;
375         }
376         return -EINVAL;
377     }
378 
379     errno = 0;
380     lresult = strtoll(nptr, &ep, base);
381     if (lresult < INT_MIN) {
382         *result = INT_MIN;
383         errno = ERANGE;
384     } else if (lresult > INT_MAX) {
385         *result = INT_MAX;
386         errno = ERANGE;
387     } else {
388         *result = lresult;
389     }
390     return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno);
391 }
392 
393 /**
394  * Convert string @nptr to an unsigned integer, and store it in @result.
395  *
396  * This is a wrapper around strtoul() that is harder to misuse.
397  * Semantics of @nptr, @endptr, @base match strtoul() with differences
398  * noted below.
399  *
400  * @nptr may be null, and no conversion is performed then.
401  *
402  * If no conversion is performed, store @nptr in *@endptr and return
403  * -EINVAL.
404  *
405  * If @endptr is null, and the string isn't fully converted, return
406  * -EINVAL.  This is the case when the pointer that would be stored in
407  * a non-null @endptr points to a character other than '\0'.
408  *
409  * If the conversion overflows @result, store UINT_MAX in @result,
410  * and return -ERANGE.
411  *
412  * Else store the converted value in @result, and return zero.
413  *
414  * Note that a number with a leading minus sign gets converted without
415  * the minus sign, checked for overflow (see above), then negated (in
416  * @result's type).  This is exactly how strtoul() works.
417  */
418 int qemu_strtoui(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base,
419                  unsigned int *result)
420 {
421     char *ep;
422     long long lresult;
423 
424     assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1);
425     if (!nptr) {
426         if (endptr) {
427             *endptr = nptr;
428         }
429         return -EINVAL;
430     }
431 
432     errno = 0;
433     lresult = strtoull(nptr, &ep, base);
434 
435     /* Windows returns 1 for negative out-of-range values.  */
436     if (errno == ERANGE) {
437         *result = -1;
438     } else {
439         if (lresult > UINT_MAX) {
440             *result = UINT_MAX;
441             errno = ERANGE;
442         } else if (lresult < INT_MIN) {
443             *result = UINT_MAX;
444             errno = ERANGE;
445         } else {
446             *result = lresult;
447         }
448     }
449     return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno);
450 }
451 
452 /**
453  * Convert string @nptr to a long integer, and store it in @result.
454  *
455  * This is a wrapper around strtol() that is harder to misuse.
456  * Semantics of @nptr, @endptr, @base match strtol() with differences
457  * noted below.
458  *
459  * @nptr may be null, and no conversion is performed then.
460  *
461  * If no conversion is performed, store @nptr in *@endptr and return
462  * -EINVAL.
463  *
464  * If @endptr is null, and the string isn't fully converted, return
465  * -EINVAL.  This is the case when the pointer that would be stored in
466  * a non-null @endptr points to a character other than '\0'.
467  *
468  * If the conversion overflows @result, store LONG_MAX in @result,
469  * and return -ERANGE.
470  *
471  * If the conversion underflows @result, store LONG_MIN in @result,
472  * and return -ERANGE.
473  *
474  * Else store the converted value in @result, and return zero.
475  */
476 int qemu_strtol(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base,
477                 long *result)
478 {
479     char *ep;
480 
481     assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1);
482     if (!nptr) {
483         if (endptr) {
484             *endptr = nptr;
485         }
486         return -EINVAL;
487     }
488 
489     errno = 0;
490     *result = strtol(nptr, &ep, base);
491     return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno);
492 }
493 
494 /**
495  * Convert string @nptr to an unsigned long, and store it in @result.
496  *
497  * This is a wrapper around strtoul() that is harder to misuse.
498  * Semantics of @nptr, @endptr, @base match strtoul() with differences
499  * noted below.
500  *
501  * @nptr may be null, and no conversion is performed then.
502  *
503  * If no conversion is performed, store @nptr in *@endptr and return
504  * -EINVAL.
505  *
506  * If @endptr is null, and the string isn't fully converted, return
507  * -EINVAL.  This is the case when the pointer that would be stored in
508  * a non-null @endptr points to a character other than '\0'.
509  *
510  * If the conversion overflows @result, store ULONG_MAX in @result,
511  * and return -ERANGE.
512  *
513  * Else store the converted value in @result, and return zero.
514  *
515  * Note that a number with a leading minus sign gets converted without
516  * the minus sign, checked for overflow (see above), then negated (in
517  * @result's type).  This is exactly how strtoul() works.
518  */
519 int qemu_strtoul(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base,
520                  unsigned long *result)
521 {
522     char *ep;
523 
524     assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1);
525     if (!nptr) {
526         if (endptr) {
527             *endptr = nptr;
528         }
529         return -EINVAL;
530     }
531 
532     errno = 0;
533     *result = strtoul(nptr, &ep, base);
534     /* Windows returns 1 for negative out-of-range values.  */
535     if (errno == ERANGE) {
536         *result = -1;
537     }
538     return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno);
539 }
540 
541 /**
542  * Convert string @nptr to an int64_t.
543  *
544  * Works like qemu_strtol(), except it stores INT64_MAX on overflow,
545  * and INT64_MIN on underflow.
546  */
547 int qemu_strtoi64(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base,
548                  int64_t *result)
549 {
550     char *ep;
551 
552     assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1);
553     if (!nptr) {
554         if (endptr) {
555             *endptr = nptr;
556         }
557         return -EINVAL;
558     }
559 
560     /* This assumes int64_t is long long TODO relax */
561     QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(int64_t) != sizeof(long long));
562     errno = 0;
563     *result = strtoll(nptr, &ep, base);
564     return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno);
565 }
566 
567 /**
568  * Convert string @nptr to an uint64_t.
569  *
570  * Works like qemu_strtoul(), except it stores UINT64_MAX on overflow.
571  */
572 int qemu_strtou64(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, int base,
573                   uint64_t *result)
574 {
575     char *ep;
576 
577     assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1);
578     if (!nptr) {
579         if (endptr) {
580             *endptr = nptr;
581         }
582         return -EINVAL;
583     }
584 
585     /* This assumes uint64_t is unsigned long long TODO relax */
586     QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(uint64_t) != sizeof(unsigned long long));
587     errno = 0;
588     *result = strtoull(nptr, &ep, base);
589     /* Windows returns 1 for negative out-of-range values.  */
590     if (errno == ERANGE) {
591         *result = -1;
592     }
593     return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno);
594 }
595 
596 /**
597  * Convert string @nptr to a double.
598   *
599  * This is a wrapper around strtod() that is harder to misuse.
600  * Semantics of @nptr and @endptr match strtod() with differences
601  * noted below.
602  *
603  * @nptr may be null, and no conversion is performed then.
604  *
605  * If no conversion is performed, store @nptr in *@endptr and return
606  * -EINVAL.
607  *
608  * If @endptr is null, and the string isn't fully converted, return
609  * -EINVAL. This is the case when the pointer that would be stored in
610  * a non-null @endptr points to a character other than '\0'.
611  *
612  * If the conversion overflows, store +/-HUGE_VAL in @result, depending
613  * on the sign, and return -ERANGE.
614  *
615  * If the conversion underflows, store +/-0.0 in @result, depending on the
616  * sign, and return -ERANGE.
617  *
618  * Else store the converted value in @result, and return zero.
619  */
620 int qemu_strtod(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, double *result)
621 {
622     char *ep;
623 
624     if (!nptr) {
625         if (endptr) {
626             *endptr = nptr;
627         }
628         return -EINVAL;
629     }
630 
631     errno = 0;
632     *result = strtod(nptr, &ep);
633     return check_strtox_error(nptr, ep, endptr, errno);
634 }
635 
636 /**
637  * Convert string @nptr to a finite double.
638  *
639  * Works like qemu_strtod(), except that "NaN" and "inf" are rejected
640  * with -EINVAL and no conversion is performed.
641  */
642 int qemu_strtod_finite(const char *nptr, const char **endptr, double *result)
643 {
644     double tmp;
645     int ret;
646 
647     ret = qemu_strtod(nptr, endptr, &tmp);
648     if (!ret && !isfinite(tmp)) {
649         if (endptr) {
650             *endptr = nptr;
651         }
652         ret = -EINVAL;
653     }
654 
655     if (ret != -EINVAL) {
656         *result = tmp;
657     }
658     return ret;
659 }
660 
661 /**
662  * Searches for the first occurrence of 'c' in 's', and returns a pointer
663  * to the trailing null byte if none was found.
664  */
665 #ifndef HAVE_STRCHRNUL
666 const char *qemu_strchrnul(const char *s, int c)
667 {
668     const char *e = strchr(s, c);
669     if (!e) {
670         e = s + strlen(s);
671     }
672     return e;
673 }
674 #endif
675 
676 /**
677  * parse_uint:
678  *
679  * @s: String to parse
680  * @value: Destination for parsed integer value
681  * @endptr: Destination for pointer to first character not consumed
682  * @base: integer base, between 2 and 36 inclusive, or 0
683  *
684  * Parse unsigned integer
685  *
686  * Parsed syntax is like strtoull()'s: arbitrary whitespace, a single optional
687  * '+' or '-', an optional "0x" if @base is 0 or 16, one or more digits.
688  *
689  * If @s is null, or @base is invalid, or @s doesn't start with an
690  * integer in the syntax above, set *@value to 0, *@endptr to @s, and
691  * return -EINVAL.
692  *
693  * Set *@endptr to point right beyond the parsed integer (even if the integer
694  * overflows or is negative, all digits will be parsed and *@endptr will
695  * point right beyond them).
696  *
697  * If the integer is negative, set *@value to 0, and return -ERANGE.
698  *
699  * If the integer overflows unsigned long long, set *@value to
700  * ULLONG_MAX, and return -ERANGE.
701  *
702  * Else, set *@value to the parsed integer, and return 0.
703  */
704 int parse_uint(const char *s, unsigned long long *value, char **endptr,
705                int base)
706 {
707     int r = 0;
708     char *endp = (char *)s;
709     unsigned long long val = 0;
710 
711     assert((unsigned) base <= 36 && base != 1);
712     if (!s) {
713         r = -EINVAL;
714         goto out;
715     }
716 
717     errno = 0;
718     val = strtoull(s, &endp, base);
719     if (errno) {
720         r = -errno;
721         goto out;
722     }
723 
724     if (endp == s) {
725         r = -EINVAL;
726         goto out;
727     }
728 
729     /* make sure we reject negative numbers: */
730     while (qemu_isspace(*s)) {
731         s++;
732     }
733     if (*s == '-') {
734         val = 0;
735         r = -ERANGE;
736         goto out;
737     }
738 
739 out:
740     *value = val;
741     *endptr = endp;
742     return r;
743 }
744 
745 /**
746  * parse_uint_full:
747  *
748  * @s: String to parse
749  * @value: Destination for parsed integer value
750  * @base: integer base, between 2 and 36 inclusive, or 0
751  *
752  * Parse unsigned integer from entire string
753  *
754  * Have the same behavior of parse_uint(), but with an additional check
755  * for additional data after the parsed number. If extra characters are present
756  * after the parsed number, the function will return -EINVAL, and *@v will
757  * be set to 0.
758  */
759 int parse_uint_full(const char *s, unsigned long long *value, int base)
760 {
761     char *endp;
762     int r;
763 
764     r = parse_uint(s, value, &endp, base);
765     if (r < 0) {
766         return r;
767     }
768     if (*endp) {
769         *value = 0;
770         return -EINVAL;
771     }
772 
773     return 0;
774 }
775 
776 int qemu_parse_fd(const char *param)
777 {
778     long fd;
779     char *endptr;
780 
781     errno = 0;
782     fd = strtol(param, &endptr, 10);
783     if (param == endptr /* no conversion performed */                    ||
784         errno != 0      /* not representable as long; possibly others */ ||
785         *endptr != '\0' /* final string not empty */                     ||
786         fd < 0          /* invalid as file descriptor */                 ||
787         fd > INT_MAX    /* not representable as int */) {
788         return -1;
789     }
790     return fd;
791 }
792 
793 /*
794  * Implementation of  ULEB128 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LEB128)
795  * Input is limited to 14-bit numbers
796  */
797 int uleb128_encode_small(uint8_t *out, uint32_t n)
798 {
799     g_assert(n <= 0x3fff);
800     if (n < 0x80) {
801         *out = n;
802         return 1;
803     } else {
804         *out++ = (n & 0x7f) | 0x80;
805         *out = n >> 7;
806         return 2;
807     }
808 }
809 
810 int uleb128_decode_small(const uint8_t *in, uint32_t *n)
811 {
812     if (!(*in & 0x80)) {
813         *n = *in;
814         return 1;
815     } else {
816         *n = *in++ & 0x7f;
817         /* we exceed 14 bit number */
818         if (*in & 0x80) {
819             return -1;
820         }
821         *n |= *in << 7;
822         return 2;
823     }
824 }
825 
826 /*
827  * helper to parse debug environment variables
828  */
829 int parse_debug_env(const char *name, int max, int initial)
830 {
831     char *debug_env = getenv(name);
832     char *inv = NULL;
833     long debug;
834 
835     if (!debug_env) {
836         return initial;
837     }
838     errno = 0;
839     debug = strtol(debug_env, &inv, 10);
840     if (inv == debug_env) {
841         return initial;
842     }
843     if (debug < 0 || debug > max || errno != 0) {
844         warn_report("%s not in [0, %d]", name, max);
845         return initial;
846     }
847     return debug;
848 }
849 
850 /*
851  * Helper to print ethernet mac address
852  */
853 const char *qemu_ether_ntoa(const MACAddr *mac)
854 {
855     static char ret[18];
856 
857     snprintf(ret, sizeof(ret), "%02x:%02x:%02x:%02x:%02x:%02x",
858              mac->a[0], mac->a[1], mac->a[2], mac->a[3], mac->a[4], mac->a[5]);
859 
860     return ret;
861 }
862 
863 /*
864  * Return human readable string for size @val.
865  * @val can be anything that uint64_t allows (no more than "16 EiB").
866  * Use IEC binary units like KiB, MiB, and so forth.
867  * Caller is responsible for passing it to g_free().
868  */
869 char *size_to_str(uint64_t val)
870 {
871     static const char *suffixes[] = { "", "Ki", "Mi", "Gi", "Ti", "Pi", "Ei" };
872     uint64_t div;
873     int i;
874 
875     /*
876      * The exponent (returned in i) minus one gives us
877      * floor(log2(val * 1024 / 1000).  The correction makes us
878      * switch to the higher power when the integer part is >= 1000.
879      * (see e41b509d68afb1f for more info)
880      */
881     frexp(val / (1000.0 / 1024.0), &i);
882     i = (i - 1) / 10;
883     div = 1ULL << (i * 10);
884 
885     return g_strdup_printf("%0.3g %sB", (double)val / div, suffixes[i]);
886 }
887 
888 int qemu_pstrcmp0(const char **str1, const char **str2)
889 {
890     return g_strcmp0(*str1, *str2);
891 }
892