Dynamic Arrays
lib/array.h
and lib/array-decl.h
describes Dovecot's type-safe dynamic arrays. Trying to add wrong typed elements gives a compiler warning.
Declaring
Arrays can be declared in two ways:
Directly:
cARRAY(int) numbers; ARRAY(struct foo) foos;
Via predefined type:
cARRAY_DEFINE_TYPE(foo, struct foo); ... ARRAY_TYPE(foo) foos;
The main reason to define a type for an array is to be able to pass the array as a function parameter, like:
void func(ARRAY_TYPE(foo) *foos) { .. }
Trying to do the same with ARRAY()
will generate a compiler warning about type mismatch. lib/array-decl.h
defines several commonly used types.
Initializing
Arrays are typically initialized by calling i_array_init()
, p_array_init()
or t_array_init()
depending on where you want to allocate the memory from. Arrays are internally handled as buffers, sp the initial size is just multiplied by element size and passed to buffer_create_dynamic()
.
Example:
ARRAY(struct foo *) foo;
i_array_init(&foo, 32); /* initialize array with 32 elements until it needs to be grown */
Arrays can be freed with array_free()
, but this isn't necessary if the memory gets freed by other means (i.e. it was allocated from alloconly-pool or data stack).
Writing
array_push_back(array, data)
Append one element to the end of the array.
array_push_front(array, data)
Prepend one element to the beginning of the array.
array_append(array, data, count)
Append multiple elements to the end of the array.
array_append_zero(array)
Append a zero-filled element to the end of the array.
array_append_array(dest, src)
Append src array to the end of the dest array.
array_copy(dest, dest_idx, src, src_idx, count)
Copy (overwrite) a slice of the src array over the dest array.
array_insert(array, idx, data, count)
Insert element at the specified index (0 = first)
array_idx_set(array, idx, data)
Replace data at the specified index.
If index points after the end of the array, the other newly added elements are zero-filled.
array_idx_clear(array, idx)
Zero-fill the data at the specified index.
If index points after the end of the array, the other newly added elements are zero-filled.
array_delete(array, idx, count)
Delete the specified slice of the array.
array_pop_back(array)
Delete the last element of the array.
array_pop_front(array)
Delete the first element of the array.
array_clear(array)
Delete all elements in the array.
Reading
Usually array is read by going through all of its elements. This can be done by returning all the elements:
unsigned int count;
const struct foo *foo = array_get(&array, &count);
struct foo *foo = array_get_modifiable(&array, &count);
or the array can also be iterated easily:
const struct foo *foo;
array_foreach(&foo_array, foo) {
/* foo changes in each iteration */
}
struct foo *foo;
array_foreach_modifiable(&foo_array, foo) {
...
}
The _modifiable()
versions return a non-const pointer.
Arrays that are pointers-to-pointers can be iterated like:
ARRAY(struct foo *) foo_array;
struct foo *const *foop;
array_foreach(&foo_array, foop) {
struct foo *foo = foop;
}
Or more simply using array_foreach_elem()
:
ARRAY(struct foo *) foo_array;
struct foo *foo;
array_foreach_elem(&foo_array, foo) {
...
}
Note that deleting an element while iterating will cause the iteration to skip over the next element. So deleting a single element and breaking out of the loop is fine, but continuing the loop is likely a bug. Use instead:
array_foreach_reverse(&foo_array, foo) {
if (want_delete(foo))
array_delete(&foo_array, array_foreach_idx(&foo_array, foo), 1);
}
There's also an equivalent array_foreach_reverse_modifiable()
.
It's a bug to attempt to use the read functions before the array is initialized. Use array_is_created()
to check if it's initialized.
There are also array_idx_elem()
and array_foreach_elem()
to access arrays of pointers more easily. They work by making a copy of the dereferenced pointer. For example:
ARRAY(const char *) strings;
// array_idx() requires dereferencing:
const char *const *strp = array_idx(&strings, idx);
printf("%s\n", *strp);
// array_idx_elem() dereferences already:
printf("%s\n", array_idx_elem(&strings, idx));
// array_foreach() requires dereferencing:
const char *const *strp;
array_foreach(&strings, strp)
printf("%s\n", *strp);
// array_foreach_elem() dereferences already:
const char *str;
array_foreach_elem(&strings, str)
printf("%s\n", str);
array_idx(array, idx)
Return a const pointer to the specified index.
Assert-crashes if the index doesn't already exist.
array_front(array)
Return a const pointer to the first element in the array.
Assert-crashes if the array is empty.
array_back(array)
Return a const pointer to the last element in the array.
Assert-crashes if the array is empty.
array_count(array)
Return the number of elements in an array.
array_is_empty(array)
Return TRUE if array has zero elements.
array_not_empty(array)
Return TRUE if array has more than zero elements.
Unsafe Read/Write
Functions below have similar problems to buffer's*_unsafe()
functions. Memory returned by them must not be accessed after calls to other array_*()
modifying functions, because they may reallocate the array elsewhere in memory.
array_append_space(array)
Append a new element into the array and return a writable pointer to it.
array_insert_space(array, idx)
Insert a new element into the array and return a writable pointer to it.
array_idx_get_space(array, idx)
Return a writable pointer to the specified index in the array.
If index points after the end of the array, the newly added elements are zero-filled.
array_get_modifiable(array, &count)
Return a non-const pointer to all the elements in the array and the number of elements in the array.
array_idx_modifiable(array, idx)
Return a non-const pointer to the specified index.
Assert-crashes if the index doesn't already exist.
See also array_idx_get_space()
.
array_front_modifiable(array)
Return a non-const pointer to the first element in the array.
Assert-crashes if the array is empty.
array_back_modifiable(array)
Return a non-const pointer to the last element in the array.
Assert-crashes if the array is empty.
Others
array_cmp(array1, array2)
Return TRUE if the arrays contain exactly the same content.
array_reverse(array)
Reverse all elements in the array.
array_sort(array, cmp_func)
Type-safe wrapper for qsort()
.
The parameters in the cmp_func
should be the same type as the array instead of const void *
.
array_bsearch(array, key, cmp_func)
Type-safe wrapper for bsearch()
, similar to array_sort()
.
array_equal_fn(array1, array2, cmp_func)
Return TRUE if arrays are equal.
Each element in the array is compared with the cmp_func
.
array_equal_fn_ctx(array1, array2, cmp_func, context)
Like array_equal_fn()
, except cmp_func
has a context parameter.
array_lsearch(array, key, cmp_func)
Returns a const pointer to the first element where cmp_func(key, element)==0
.
array_lsearch_modifiable(array, key, cmp_func)
Returns a non-const pointer to the first element where cmp_func(key, element)==0
.