mercurial/bitmanipulation.h
author Augie Fackler <augie@google.com>
Mon, 29 Oct 2018 16:23:42 -0400
branchstable
changeset 40426 588f1e9a4d16
parent 38303 1fb2510cf8c8
child 46707 eed42f1c22d6
permissions -rw-r--r--
http: work around custom http client classes that refuse extra attrs I have no idea what is going on with our custom http client code at Google, but it chokes on these extra attributes we're tucking on http clients. Since it feels more than a little wrong to just stuff extra data on a client, let's degrade gracefully when the client class refuses the attributes.

#ifndef _HG_BITMANIPULATION_H_
#define _HG_BITMANIPULATION_H_

#include <string.h>

#include "compat.h"

static inline uint32_t getbe32(const char *c)
{
	const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;

	return ((((uint32_t)d[0]) << 24) | (((uint32_t)d[1]) << 16) |
	        (((uint32_t)d[2]) << 8) | (d[3]));
}

static inline int16_t getbeint16(const char *c)
{
	const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;

	return ((d[0] << 8) | (d[1]));
}

static inline uint16_t getbeuint16(const char *c)
{
	const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;

	return ((d[0] << 8) | (d[1]));
}

static inline void putbe32(uint32_t x, char *c)
{
	c[0] = (x >> 24) & 0xff;
	c[1] = (x >> 16) & 0xff;
	c[2] = (x >> 8) & 0xff;
	c[3] = (x)&0xff;
}

static inline double getbefloat64(const char *c)
{
	const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;
	double ret;
	int i;
	uint64_t t = 0;
	for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) {
		t = (t << 8) + d[i];
	}
	memcpy(&ret, &t, sizeof(t));
	return ret;
}

#endif