use uintptr_t instead of size_t

master
leitner 19 years ago
parent 3c291ea2a8
commit a1215d9f0a

@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
#ifndef RANGECHECK_H
#define RANGECHECK_H
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <stddef.h>
/* return 0 for range error / overflow, 1 for ok */
@ -16,14 +17,14 @@ __static inline int range_ptrinbuf(const void* buf,size_t len,const void* ptr) {
register const char* c=(const char*)buf; /* no pointer arithmetic on void* */
return (c && /* is buf non-NULL? */
#if (__GNUC__ == 4) && (__GNUC_MINOR__ == 1)
((size_t)c)+len>(size_t)c && /* gcc 4.1 miscompiles this test */
((uintptr_t)c)+len>(uintptr_t)c && /* gcc 4.1 miscompiles this test */
#else
c+len>c && /* catch integer overflows and fail if buffer is 0 bytes long */
/* because then ptr can't point _in_ the buffer */
#endif
(size_t)((const char*)ptr-c)<len); /* this one is a little tricky.
(uintptr_t)((const char*)ptr-c)<len); /* this one is a little tricky.
"ptr-c" checks the offset of ptr in the buffer is inside the buffer size.
Now, ptr-c can underflow; say it is -1. When we cast it to size_t, it becomes
Now, ptr-c can underflow; say it is -1. When we cast it to uintptr_t, it becomes
a very large number. */
}
@ -32,7 +33,7 @@ __static inline int range_ptrinbuf(const void* buf,size_t len,const void* ptr) {
* Does NOT check whether buf has a non-zero length! */
__static inline int range_validbuf(const void* buf,size_t len) {
#if (__GNUC__ == 4) && (__GNUC_MINOR__ == 1)
return (buf && (size_t)buf+len>=(size_t)buf); /* gcc 4.1 miscompiles this test */
return (buf && (uintptr_t)buf+len>=(uintptr_t)buf); /* gcc 4.1 miscompiles this test */
#else
return (buf && (const char*)buf+len>=(const char*)buf);
#endif

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