Rizin
unix-like reverse engineering framework and cli tools
gzlog.h
Go to the documentation of this file.
1 /* gzlog.h
2  Copyright (C) 2004, 2008, 2012 Mark Adler, all rights reserved
3  version 2.2, 14 Aug 2012
4 
5  This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied
6  warranty. In no event will the author be held liable for any damages
7  arising from the use of this software.
8 
9  Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any purpose,
10  including commercial applications, and to alter it and redistribute it
11  freely, subject to the following restrictions:
12 
13  1. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not
14  claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this software
15  in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation would be
16  appreciated but is not required.
17  2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be
18  misrepresented as being the original software.
19  3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution.
20 
21  Mark Adler madler@alumni.caltech.edu
22  */
23 
24 /* Version History:
25  1.0 26 Nov 2004 First version
26  2.0 25 Apr 2008 Complete redesign for recovery of interrupted operations
27  Interface changed slightly in that now path is a prefix
28  Compression now occurs as needed during gzlog_write()
29  gzlog_write() now always leaves the log file as valid gzip
30  2.1 8 Jul 2012 Fix argument checks in gzlog_compress() and gzlog_write()
31  2.2 14 Aug 2012 Clean up signed comparisons
32  */
33 
34 /*
35  The gzlog object allows writing short messages to a gzipped log file,
36  opening the log file locked for small bursts, and then closing it. The log
37  object works by appending stored (uncompressed) data to the gzip file until
38  1 MB has been accumulated. At that time, the stored data is compressed, and
39  replaces the uncompressed data in the file. The log file is truncated to
40  its new size at that time. After each write operation, the log file is a
41  valid gzip file that can decompressed to recover what was written.
42 
43  The gzlog operations can be interupted at any point due to an application or
44  system crash, and the log file will be recovered the next time the log is
45  opened with gzlog_open().
46  */
47 
48 #ifndef GZLOG_H
49 #define GZLOG_H
50 
51 /* gzlog object type */
52 typedef void gzlog;
53 
54 /* Open a gzlog object, creating the log file if it does not exist. Return
55  NULL on error. Note that gzlog_open() could take a while to complete if it
56  has to wait to verify that a lock is stale (possibly for five minutes), or
57  if there is significant contention with other instantiations of this object
58  when locking the resource. path is the prefix of the file names created by
59  this object. If path is "foo", then the log file will be "foo.gz", and
60  other auxiliary files will be created and destroyed during the process:
61  "foo.dict" for a compression dictionary, "foo.temp" for a temporary (next)
62  dictionary, "foo.add" for data being added or compressed, "foo.lock" for the
63  lock file, and "foo.repairs" to log recovery operations performed due to
64  interrupted gzlog operations. A gzlog_open() followed by a gzlog_close()
65  will recover a previously interrupted operation, if any. */
66 gzlog *gzlog_open(char *path);
67 
68 /* Write to a gzlog object. Return zero on success, -1 if there is a file i/o
69  error on any of the gzlog files (this should not happen if gzlog_open()
70  succeeded, unless the device has run out of space or leftover auxiliary
71  files have permissions or ownership that prevent their use), -2 if there is
72  a memory allocation failure, or -3 if the log argument is invalid (e.g. if
73  it was not created by gzlog_open()). This function will write data to the
74  file uncompressed, until 1 MB has been accumulated, at which time that data
75  will be compressed. The log file will be a valid gzip file upon successful
76  return. */
77 int gzlog_write(gzlog *log, void *data, size_t len);
78 
79 /* Force compression of any uncompressed data in the log. This should be used
80  sparingly, if at all. The main application would be when a log file will
81  not be appended to again. If this is used to compress frequently while
82  appending, it will both significantly increase the execution time and
83  reduce the compression ratio. The return codes are the same as for
84  gzlog_write(). */
86 
87 /* Close a gzlog object. Return zero on success, -3 if the log argument is
88  invalid. The log object is freed, and so cannot be referenced again. */
89 int gzlog_close(gzlog *log);
90 
91 #endif
size_t len
Definition: 6502dis.c:15
static static fork const void static count static fd const char const char static newpath const char static path const char path
Definition: sflib.h:35
void gzlog
Definition: gzlog.h:52
int gzlog_write(gzlog *log, void *data, size_t len)
Definition: gzlog.c:997
int gzlog_compress(gzlog *log)
Definition: gzlog.c:910
int gzlog_close(gzlog *log)
Definition: gzlog.c:1044
gzlog * gzlog_open(char *path)
Definition: gzlog.c:867
Definition: gzlog.c:289