view mercurial/bitmanipulation.h @ 46325:e5e6282fa66a

hghave: split apart testing for the curses module and `tic` executable ef771d329961 skipped the check for the `tic` executable, because the curses module alone on Windows is enough to pass the `test-*-curses.t` tests. However, `test-status-color.t` uses this same check and explicitly invoked the executable, which fails on Windows. From the cursory searching I did, curses on unix requires `tic`, which I assume is why they were tied together in the first place. So this continues to require both to get past the curses guards on non Windows platforms. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9814
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sun, 17 Jan 2021 22:25:15 -0500
parents 1fb2510cf8c8
children eed42f1c22d6
line wrap: on
line source

#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