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Throughout the tree there's spurious use of spaces separating ++ and --
operators from their respective operands. Make ++ and -- operator
consistent with the majority of existing uses; discard the spaces.
rework C11 utf8.[ch] to use char32_t instead of uint32_t when referring
to unicode chars, to make things more expressive.
[
@zonque:
* rebased to current master
* use AC_CHECK_DECLS to detect availibility of char{16,32}_t
* make utf8_encoded_to_unichar() return int
]
Not every byte sequence is valid utf8. We allow escaping of non-utf8
sequences in strings by using octal and hexadecimal escape sequences
(\123 and \0xAB) for bytes at or above 128. Users of cunescape_one
could infer whether such use occured when they received an answer
between 128 and 256 in *ret (a non-ascii one byte character). But this
is subtle and misleading: the comments were wrong, because ascii is a
subset of unicode, so c != 0 did not mean non-unicode, but rather
ascii-subset-of-unicode-or-raw-byte. This was all rather confusing, so
make the "single byte" condition explicit.
I'm not convinced that allowing non-utf8 sequences to be produced is
useful in all cases where we allow it (e.g. in config files), but that
behaviour is unchanged, just made more explicit.
This also fixes an (invalid) gcc warning about unitialized variable
(*ret_unicode) in callers of cunescape_one.
3d793d2905 broke parsing of unit file
names that include backslashes, as extract_first_word() strips those.
Fix this, by introducing a new EXTRACT_RETAIN_ESCAPE flag which disables
looking at any flags, thus being compatible with the classic
FOREACH_WORD() behaviour.
Just skip them in place, instead of setting separator=true. We only do
that in a single place (while finding a separator outside of quote or
backslash states) so we don't really need a separate state for it.
Tested that no regressions were introduced in test-extract-word. Ran a
full `make check` and also installed the binaries on a test system and
did not see any issues related to parsing unit files or starting units
after a reboot.
Use inner loops to keep processing the same state, except when there is
a state change, then break back to the outer loop so that the correct
branch can be selected again.
Tested that no regressions were introduced in test-extract-word.
This will make it easier to use inner loops to keep looping in the same
state, by just updating p and c in the same way in the inner loops.
Tested that no regressions were created in test-extract-word.
Using `goto` might be appropriate for the "finish" cases but it was
really not necessary at this point of the code... Just use if/else
blocks to accomplish the same.
Confirmed that the test cases in test-extract-word keep working as
expected.
This block runs once before all the other handling, so move it outside
the main loop and put it in its own loop until it's finished doing its
job.
Tested by confirming `make check` (and particularly test-extract-word)
still passes and by booting a system with binaries including this
commit.
- Really warn in all error cases, not just some. We need to make sure
that all errors are logged to not confuse the user.
- Explicitly check for EINVAL error code before claiming anything about
invalid escapes, could be ENOMEM after all.