Ensure that all the necessary cleanup is performed in case the allocation fails
with an exception - files are closed, buffers are reclaimed, etc.
Any test that triggers a simulated out-of-memory condition is ran once again
with a throwing allocation function. Unobserved std::bad_alloc count as test
failures and require CHECK_ALLOC_FAIL macro.
Fixes#17.
Previously attributes that were copied with their node used string sharing,
but standalone attributes that were copied using xml_node::*_copy(xml_attribute)
were not.
If an out of memory error happens in load_file there's a danger of leaking
the FILE object. Since there is a limited supply of the objects we can easily
test that the leak does not happen.
as_utf8_end was used with std::string, where writing an extra zero-terminating
character should *probably* always work (at least if size is positive) but is
not ideal.
The only place that needed to zero-terminate was convert_path_heap.
Previously there was no guarantee that the tests that check for out of memory
handling behavior are actually correct - e.g. that they correctly simulate out
of memory conditions.
Now every simulated out of memory condition has to be "guarded" using
CHECK_ALLOC_FAIL. It makes sure that every piece of code that is supposed to
cause out-of-memory does so, and that no other code runs out of memory
unnoticed.
When parsing XPath variables, we need to perform a heap allocation; if it
fails, an xpath_exception instead of bad_alloc used to be thrown.
Now we throw the exception of a correct type so that xpath_exception means
'parsing error'.
This is mostly done using regex replaces of original Quickbook markup, plus a
bit of manual fixup for multiple references to the single point from different
lines that AsciiDoc does not seem to handle.
Previously we omitted extra whitespace for single PCDATA/CDATA children, but in
mixed content there was extra indentation before/after text nodes.
One of the problems with that is that the text that you saved is not exactly
the same as the parsing result using default flags (parse_trim_pcdata helps).
Another problem is that parse-format cycles do not have a fixed point for mixed
content - the result expands indefinitely. Some XML libraries, like Python
minidom, have the same issue, but this is definitely a problem.
Pretty-printing mixed content is hard. It seems that the only other sensible
choice is to switch mixed content nodes to raw formatting. In a way the code in
this change is a weaker version of that - it removes indentation around text
nodes but still keeps it around element siblings/children.
Thus we can switch to mixed-raw formatting at some point later, which will be
a superset of the current behavior.
To do this we have to either switch at the first text node (.NET XmlDocument
does that), or scan the children of each element for a possible text node and
switch before we output the first child.
The former behavior seems non-intuitive (and a bit broken); unfortunately, the
latter behavior can cost up to 20% of the output time for trees *without* mixed
content.
Fixes#13.
data/truncation.xml was corrupted at some point and was not actually valid.
Fix the file and make the test fail if we can't parse truncation.xml at all.
Since all string allocations are pointer-aligned to avoid aligning more
frequent node allocations, we can rely on that in string encoding.
Encoding page offset and block size in sizeof(void*) units increases the
maximum memory page size from 64k to 256k on 32-bit and 512k on 64-bit
platforms.
Fixes#35.
Also add new tests for translate. These are technically redundant since other
tests would catch the bug with the fixed comparison, but more tests is better.
The implementations generated a string with an internal null terminator; this
went unnoticed since unit test string verification did not perform string
equality check properly (it compared XPath string result as a C-string, thus
stopping at the first null terminator).
Fixes#36.
Align allocations to right end of page boundary to catch buffer overruns,
instead of unmapping on deallocations mark the page as no-access to guarantee
a page fault on use-after-free.
We test min/max and several different mantissas for the entire exponent range
for both float and double.
It's not clear whether all supported compilers provide an implementation of
sprintf/strtod that supports roundtripping so we may need to disable some of
these tests in the future.
Make float/double round-trip
This change also adds xml_text::set and xml_attribute::set_value overloads for float so that float is only printed using just enough digits to represent float, instead of enough digits to represent double.
It's sufficient to define PUGIXML_HEADER_ONLY anywhere now, source is included
automatically.
This is a second attempt; this time it includes a workaround for QMake bug
that caused it to generate incorrect Makefile.
Unfortunately, standard headers on MinGW32 insist on undefining off64_t
and _wfopen extensions if __STRICT_ANSI__ is true (e.g. C++11 mode). This
leads to compilation errors since b7a1fec started to use _wfopen in strict
mode. That change erroneously checked GCC version - however, the version
itself is irrelevant; the actual criteria is whether mingw64 runtime is
used.
off64_t is not useful on MinGW32 since we only need it to open large files
on 64-bit platforms; unfortunately, the lack of _wfopen means we won't be
able to support wide-char paths on Windows for MinGW32.
Fixes#24.
Since MinGW 4.5 does not define these functions if __STRICT_ANSI__ is defined
(in case of _wfopen it defines it inconsistently between stdio.h and wchar.h)
use the baseline functions for MinGW 4.5 and earlier.
Fixes#23.
Since copying no longer relies on child insertion we have to also reserve
space in the hash table for the allocator so that pointer manipulations are
guaranteed to succeed.