/*++ Copyright (c) 1992 Microsoft Corporation Module Name: packstr.c Abstract: Contains functions for packing strings into buffers that also contain structures. Author: Dan Lafferty (danl) 13-Jan-1992 Environment: User Mode -Win32 Revision History: 13-Jan-1992 danl stole from netlib. 27-May-1992 JohnRo RAID 9829: winsvc.h and related file cleanup. Fixed a UNICODE-related bug. --*/ #include #include // IN, OUT, etc. #include // My prototypes. #include // strncpy #include // wcsncpy BOOL ScCopyStringToBufferW ( IN LPCWSTR String OPTIONAL, IN DWORD CharacterCount, IN LPCWSTR FixedDataEnd, IN OUT LPWSTR *EndOfVariableData, OUT LPWSTR *VariableDataPointer, IN const LPBYTE lpBufferStart OPTIONAL ) /*++ Routine Description: This routine puts a single variable-length string into an output buffer. The string is not written if it would overwrite the last fixed structure in the buffer. The code is swiped from svcsupp.c written by DavidTr. Sample usage: LPBYTE FixedDataEnd = OutputBuffer + sizeof(WKSTA_INFO_202); LPWSTR EndOfVariableData = OutputBuffer + OutputBufferSize; // // Copy user name // ScCopyStringToBuffer( UserInfo->UserName.Buffer; UserInfo->UserName.Length; FixedDataEnd, &EndOfVariableData, &WkstaInfo->wki202_username, NULL ); Arguments: String - Supplies a pointer to the source string to copy into the output buffer. If String is null then a pointer to a zero terminator is inserted into output buffer. CharacterCount - Supplies the length of String, not including zero terminator. (This in units of characters - not bytes). FixedDataEnd - Supplies a pointer to just after the end of the last fixed structure in the buffer. EndOfVariableData - Supplies an address to a pointer to just after the last position in the output buffer that variable data can occupy. Returns a pointer to the string written in the output buffer. VariableDataPointer - Supplies a pointer to the place in the fixed portion of the output buffer where a pointer or offset to the variable data should be written. Pointer vs. offset is decided based on the presence of lpBufferStart lpBufferStart - If NULL, VariableDataPointer should be filled with a pointer to the string written into the buffer. If non-NULL, VariableDataPointer should be filled with an offset to the string written into the buffer. Return Value: Returns TRUE if string fits into output buffer, FALSE otherwise. --*/ { DWORD CharsNeeded = (CharacterCount + 1); // // Determine if string will fit, allowing for a zero terminator. If no, // just set the pointer to NULL. // if ((*EndOfVariableData - CharsNeeded) >= FixedDataEnd) { // // It fits. Move EndOfVariableData pointer up to the location where // we will write the string. // *EndOfVariableData -= CharsNeeded; // // Copy the string to the buffer if it is not null. // if (CharacterCount > 0 && String != NULL) { wcsncpy(*EndOfVariableData, String, CharacterCount); } // // Set the zero terminator. // *(*EndOfVariableData + CharacterCount) = L'\0'; // // Set up the pointer in the fixed data portion to point to where the // string is written. // if (lpBufferStart != NULL) { *(LPDWORD) VariableDataPointer = (DWORD) ((LPBYTE) *EndOfVariableData - lpBufferStart); } else { *VariableDataPointer = *EndOfVariableData; } return TRUE; } else { // // It doesn't fit. Set the offset to NULL. // if (lpBufferStart != NULL) { *(LPDWORD) VariableDataPointer = 0; } else { *VariableDataPointer = NULL; } return FALSE; } } // ScCopyStringToBuffer