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authorH. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>2016-02-09 18:08:47 -0800
committerH. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>2016-02-09 18:08:47 -0800
commitf2f897a1762fab84d2905f32b1c15dd7b42abb56 (patch)
treea38f51d3f1fcbf44afddb4736d549c12eaf491be /gpxe/src/core/stringextra.c
parent72d2959272b4616f17a97667e6dfa9d06bf109a3 (diff)
downloadsyslinux-f2f897a1762fab84d2905f32b1c15dd7b42abb56.tar.gz
gpxe: delete long since obsolete snapshot of gPXE
gPXE has been deprecated in favor of iPXE for many, many years now. It is much better than users get it directly from the iPXE project, since we should no longer need any special modifications for Syslinux use. Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'gpxe/src/core/stringextra.c')
-rw-r--r--gpxe/src/core/stringextra.c273
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 273 deletions
diff --git a/gpxe/src/core/stringextra.c b/gpxe/src/core/stringextra.c
deleted file mode 100644
index c2be4fc4..00000000
--- a/gpxe/src/core/stringextra.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,273 +0,0 @@
-/*
- * Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Linus Torvalds
- * Copyright (C) 2004 Tobias Lorenz
- *
- * string handling functions
- * based on linux/lib/string.c
- *
- * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as
- * published by the Free Software Foundation.
- */
-
-/*
- * stupid library routines.. The optimized versions should generally be found
- * as inline code in <asm-xx/string.h>
- *
- * These are buggy as well..
- *
- * * Fri Jun 25 1999, Ingo Oeser <ioe@informatik.tu-chemnitz.de>
- * - Added strsep() which will replace strtok() soon (because strsep() is
- * reentrant and should be faster). Use only strsep() in new code, please.
- */
-
-/*
- * these are the standard string functions that are currently not used by
- * any code in etherboot. put into a separate file to avoid linking them in
- * with the rest of string.o
- * if anything ever does want to use a function of these, consider moving
- * the function in question back into string.c
- */
-
-#include <stdint.h>
-#include <stdlib.h>
-#include <string.h>
-#include <ctype.h>
-
-/* *** FROM string.c *** */
-
-#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_STRNICMP
-/**
- * strnicmp - Case insensitive, length-limited string comparison
- * @s1: One string
- * @s2: The other string
- * @len: the maximum number of characters to compare
- */
-int strnicmp(const char *s1, const char *s2, size_t len)
-{
- /* Yes, Virginia, it had better be unsigned */
- unsigned char c1, c2;
-
- c1 = 0; c2 = 0;
- if (len) {
- do {
- c1 = *s1; c2 = *s2;
- s1++; s2++;
- if (!c1)
- break;
- if (!c2)
- break;
- if (c1 == c2)
- continue;
- c1 = tolower(c1);
- c2 = tolower(c2);
- if (c1 != c2)
- break;
- } while (--len);
- }
- return (int)c1 - (int)c2;
-}
-#endif
-
-char * ___strtok;
-
-#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_STRNCAT
-/**
- * strncat - Append a length-limited, %NUL-terminated string to another
- * @dest: The string to be appended to
- * @src: The string to append to it
- * @count: The maximum numbers of bytes to copy
- *
- * Note that in contrast to strncpy, strncat ensures the result is
- * terminated.
- */
-char * strncat(char *dest, const char *src, size_t count)
-{
- char *tmp = dest;
-
- if (count) {
- while (*dest)
- dest++;
- while ((*dest++ = *src++)) {
- if (--count == 0) {
- *dest = '\0';
- break;
- }
- }
- }
-
- return tmp;
-}
-#endif
-
-#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_STRSPN
-/**
- * strspn - Calculate the length of the initial substring of @s which only
- * contain letters in @accept
- * @s: The string to be searched
- * @accept: The string to search for
- */
-size_t strspn(const char *s, const char *accept)
-{
- const char *p;
- const char *a;
- size_t count = 0;
-
- for (p = s; *p != '\0'; ++p) {
- for (a = accept; *a != '\0'; ++a) {
- if (*p == *a)
- break;
- }
- if (*a == '\0')
- return count;
- ++count;
- }
-
- return count;
-}
-#endif
-
-#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_STRCSPN
-/**
- * strcspn - Calculate the length of the initial substring of @s which only
- * contain letters not in @reject
- * @s: The string to be searched
- * @accept: The string to search for
- */
-size_t strcspn(const char *s, const char *reject)
-{
- const char *p;
- const char *r;
- size_t count = 0;
-
- for (p = s; *p != '\0'; ++p) {
- for (r = reject; *r != '\0'; ++r) {
- if (*p == *r)
- return count;
- }
- ++count;
- }
-
- return count;
-}
-#endif
-
-#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_STRPBRK
-/**
- * strpbrk - Find the first occurrence of a set of characters
- * @cs: The string to be searched
- * @ct: The characters to search for
- */
-char * strpbrk(const char * cs,const char * ct)
-{
- const char *sc1,*sc2;
-
- for( sc1 = cs; *sc1 != '\0'; ++sc1) {
- for( sc2 = ct; *sc2 != '\0'; ++sc2) {
- if (*sc1 == *sc2)
- return (char *) sc1;
- }
- }
- return NULL;
-}
-#endif
-
-#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_STRTOK
-/**
- * strtok - Split a string into tokens
- * @s: The string to be searched
- * @ct: The characters to search for
- *
- * WARNING: strtok is deprecated, use strsep instead.
- */
-char * strtok(char * s,const char * ct)
-{
- char *sbegin, *send;
-
- sbegin = s ? s : ___strtok;
- if (!sbegin) {
- return NULL;
- }
- sbegin += strspn(sbegin,ct);
- if (*sbegin == '\0') {
- ___strtok = NULL;
- return( NULL );
- }
- send = strpbrk( sbegin, ct);
- if (send && *send != '\0')
- *send++ = '\0';
- ___strtok = send;
- return (sbegin);
-}
-#endif
-
-#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_STRSEP
-/**
- * strsep - Split a string into tokens
- * @s: The string to be searched
- * @ct: The characters to search for
- *
- * strsep() updates @s to point after the token, ready for the next call.
- *
- * It returns empty tokens, too, behaving exactly like the libc function
- * of that name. In fact, it was stolen from glibc2 and de-fancy-fied.
- * Same semantics, slimmer shape. ;)
- */
-char * strsep(char **s, const char *ct)
-{
- char *sbegin = *s, *end;
-
- if (sbegin == NULL)
- return NULL;
-
- end = strpbrk(sbegin, ct);
- if (end)
- *end++ = '\0';
- *s = end;
-
- return sbegin;
-}
-#endif
-
-#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_BCOPY
-/**
- * bcopy - Copy one area of memory to another
- * @src: Where to copy from
- * @dest: Where to copy to
- * @count: The size of the area.
- *
- * Note that this is the same as memcpy(), with the arguments reversed.
- * memcpy() is the standard, bcopy() is a legacy BSD function.
- *
- * You should not use this function to access IO space, use memcpy_toio()
- * or memcpy_fromio() instead.
- */
-char * bcopy(const char * src, char * dest, int count)
-{
- return memmove(dest,src,count);
-}
-#endif
-
-#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_MEMSCAN
-/**
- * memscan - Find a character in an area of memory.
- * @addr: The memory area
- * @c: The byte to search for
- * @size: The size of the area.
- *
- * returns the address of the first occurrence of @c, or 1 byte past
- * the area if @c is not found
- */
-void * memscan(const void * addr, int c, size_t size)
-{
- unsigned char * p = (unsigned char *) addr;
-
- while (size) {
- if (*p == c)
- return (void *) p;
- p++;
- size--;
- }
- return (void *) p;
-}
-#endif