index cf4e27eca022ba6f61282c7c90653ecc908e8b38..e529fb9ceec24749aca3efdf8841bbc2dd073e23 100644 (file)
--- a/src/include/core/data.h
+++ b/src/include/core/data.h
#include "core/time.h"
#include <inttypes.h>
+#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
};
#define SDB_TYPE_TO_STRING(t) \
- (((t) == SDB_TYPE_INTEGER) ? "INTEGER" \
+ (((t) == SDB_TYPE_NULL) ? "NULL" \
+ : ((t) == SDB_TYPE_INTEGER) ? "INTEGER" \
: ((t) == SDB_TYPE_DECIMAL) ? "DECIMAL" \
: ((t) == SDB_TYPE_STRING) ? "STRING" \
: ((t) == SDB_TYPE_DATETIME) ? "DATETIME" \
* either datum is NULL or if the type is SDB_TYPE_NULL or if the string or
* binary datum is NULL.
*/
-_Bool
+bool
sdb_data_isnull(const sdb_data_t *datum);
/*
* sdb_data_inarray:
* Determine whether a datum is included in an array based on the usual
* comparison function of the value's type. The element type of the array has
- * to match the type of the value.
+ * to match the type of the value. The value may be another array. In that
+ * case, the element types have to match and the function returns true if all
+ * elements of the first array are included in the second where order does not
+ * matter.
*/
-_Bool
+bool
sdb_data_inarray(const sdb_data_t *value, const sdb_data_t *array);
+/*
+ * sdb_data_array_get:
+ * Get the i-th value stored in the specified array and store an alias in
+ * 'value'. Storing an alias means that the value points to the actual array
+ * element. Do *not* free the value after using it (i.e., don't use
+ * sdb_data_free_datum).
+ *
+ * Returns:
+ * - 0 on success
+ * - a negative value else
+ */
+int
+sdb_data_array_get(const sdb_data_t *array, size_t i, sdb_data_t *value);
+
/*
* Operators supported by sdb_data_eval_expr.
*/
* - the number of characters written to the buffer (excluding the terminated
* null byte) or the number of characters which would have been written in
* case the output was truncated
- * - a negative value else
*/
-int
+size_t
sdb_data_format(const sdb_data_t *datum, char *buf, size_t buflen, int quoted);
/*
@@ -284,24 +302,16 @@ sdb_data_format(const sdb_data_t *datum, char *buf, size_t buflen, int quoted);
* character of the string is "0"), sedecimal (base 16, if the string includes
* the "0x" prefix), or decimal. Decimal numbers may also be "infinity" or
* "NaN" or may use a decimal exponent. Date-time values are expected to be
- * specified as (floating point) number of seconds since the epoch. For string
- * and binary data, the input string is passed to the datum. The function does
- * not allocate new memory for that purpose. Use sdb_data_copy() if you want
- * to do that. For regex data, the input string is copied to newly allocated
- * memory and also compiled to a regex. Use sdb_data_free_datum() to free the
- * dynamically allocated memory.
- *
- * The input string may be stored in 'data', that is, the function may be used
- * to do an inline cast from a string to any other type. It is the callers
- * responsibility to free the memory used by the string in case the target
- * type does not keep a reference to it.
+ * specified as (floating point) number of seconds since the epoch. New memory
+ * will be allocated as necessary and will have to be free'd using
+ * sdb_data_free_datum().
*
* Returns:
* - 0 on success
* - a negative value else
*/
int
-sdb_data_parse(char *str, int type, sdb_data_t *data);
+sdb_data_parse(const char *str, int type, sdb_data_t *data);
/*
* sdb_data_sizeof: