222 lines
5.7 KiB
C
222 lines
5.7 KiB
C
/*++
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Copyright (c) 1991 Microsoft Corporation
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Module Name:
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rcunicod.c
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Abstract:
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Routines added to rcpp to support 16-bit unicode file parsing.
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Note that as of Aug 91, rcpp will not fully transfer the unicode
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characters but only the string constants are guaranteed to be passed
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cleanly.
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Author:
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David J. Marsyla (t-davema) 25-Aug-1991
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Revision History:
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--*/
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#include "rc.h"
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extern BOOL WINAPI LocalIsTextUnicode(CONST LPVOID Buffer, int Size, LPINT Result);
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INT
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DetermineFileType (
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IN PFILE fpInputFile
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)
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/*++
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Routine Description:
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This function is used to determine what type of file is being read.
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Note, the file is returned to it's proper position after function.
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Arguments:
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fpInputFile - File pointer to file we are checking, must be
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open with read permissions.
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Return Value:
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DFT_FILE_IS_UNKNOWN - It was impossible to determine what type of file
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we were checking. This usually happens when EOF
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is unexpectedly reached.
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DFT_FILE_IS_8_BIT - File was determined to be in standard 8-bit
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format.
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DFT_FILE_IS_16_BIT - File was determined to be a 16 bit unicode file
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which can be directly read into a WCHAR array.
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DFT_FILE_IS_16_BIT_REV - File was determined to be a 16 bit unicode file
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which has it's bytes reversed in order.
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--*/
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{
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LONG lStartFilePos; // Storage for file position.
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BYTE buf[DFT_TEST_SIZE+2];
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LONG chRead;
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INT val = 0xFFFF;
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INT fFileType;
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//
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// Store position so we can get back to it.
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//
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lStartFilePos = ftell (fpInputFile);
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//
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// Make sure we start on an even byte to simplify routines.
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//
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if (lStartFilePos % 2)
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fgetc (fpInputFile);
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chRead = fread (buf, 1, DFT_TEST_SIZE, fpInputFile);
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memset (buf + chRead, 0, sizeof(WCHAR));
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if (LocalIsTextUnicode (buf, chRead, &val))
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{
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if ((val & IS_TEXT_UNICODE_REVERSE_SIGNATURE) == IS_TEXT_UNICODE_REVERSE_SIGNATURE)
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fFileType = DFT_FILE_IS_16_BIT_REV;
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else
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fFileType = DFT_FILE_IS_16_BIT;
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}
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else
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fFileType = DFT_FILE_IS_8_BIT;
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//
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// Return to starting file position. (usually beginning)
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//
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fseek (fpInputFile, lStartFilePos, SEEK_SET);
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return (fFileType);
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}
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INT
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DetermineSysEndianType (
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VOID
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)
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/*++
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Routine Description:
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This function is used to determine how the current system stores its
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integers in memory.
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For those of us who are confused by little endian and big endian formats,
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here is a brief recap.
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Little Endian: (This is used on Intel 80x86 chips. The MIPS RS4000 chip
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is switchable, but will run in little endian format for NT.)
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This is where the high order bytes of a short or long are stored higher
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in memory. For example the number 0x80402010 is stored as follows.
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Address: Value:
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00 10
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01 20
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02 40
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03 80
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This looks backwards when memory is dumped in order: 10 20 40 80
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Big Endian: (This is not currently used on any NT systems but hey, this
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is supposed to be portable!!)
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This is where the high order bytes of a short or long are stored lower
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in memory. For example the number 0x80402010 is stored as follows.
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Address: Value:
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00 80
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01 40
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02 20
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03 10
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This looks correct when memory is dumped in order: 80 40 20 10
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Arguments:
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None.
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Return Value:
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DSE_SYS_LITTLE_ENDIAN - The system stores integers in little endian
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format. (this is 80x86 default).
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DSE_SYS_BIG_ENDIAN - The system stores integers in big endian format.
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--*/
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{
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INT nCheckInteger;
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CHAR rgchTestBytes [sizeof (INT)];
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//
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// Clear the test bytes to zero.
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//
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*((INT *)rgchTestBytes) = 0;
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//
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// Set first to some value.
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//
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rgchTestBytes [0] = (CHAR)0xFF;
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//
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// Map it to an integer.
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//
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nCheckInteger = *((INT *)rgchTestBytes);
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//
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// See if value was stored in low order of integer.
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// If so then system is little endian.
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//
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if (nCheckInteger == 0xFF)
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return (DSE_SYS_LITTLE_ENDIAN);
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else
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return (DSE_SYS_LITTLE_ENDIAN);
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}
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//
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// UnicodeCommandLine
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//
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// Makes a Unicode buffer copy of command line argv arguments
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//
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WCHAR ** UnicodeCommandLine (int argc, char ** argv)
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{
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WCHAR ** argv_U;
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WCHAR ** pU;
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WCHAR * str;
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int nbytes;
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int i;
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// Calculate the size of buffer
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for (i = 0, nbytes = 0; i < argc; i++)
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nbytes += strlen(argv[i]) + 1;
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nbytes *= sizeof(WCHAR);
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/* allocate space for argv[] vector and strings */
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argv_U = (WCHAR **) MyAlloc((argc + 1) * sizeof(WCHAR *) + nbytes);
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if (!argv_U)
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return (NULL);
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/* store args and argv ptrs in just allocated block */
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str = (WCHAR *)(((PBYTE)argv_U) + (argc + 1) * sizeof(WCHAR *));
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for (i = 0, pU = argv_U; i < argc; i++)
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{
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*pU++ = str;
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nbytes = strlen(argv[i]) + 1;
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MultiByteToWideChar (CP_ACP, MB_PRECOMPOSED, argv[i], nbytes, str, nbytes);
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str += nbytes;
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}
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*pU = NULL;
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return (argv_U);
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}
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