sd_id128_to_string, SD_ID128_TO_STRING, SD_ID128_STRING_MAX, sd_id128_to_uuid_string, SD_ID128_TO_UUID_STRING, SD_ID128_UUID_STRING_MAX, sd_id128_from_string — Format or parse 128-bit IDs as strings
#include <systemd/sd-id128.h>
#define SD_ID128_STRING_MAX 33U
#define SD_ID128_UUID_STRING_MAX 37U
#define SD_ID128_TO_STRING(id) …
#define SD_ID128_TO_UUID_STRING(id) …
char *sd_id128_to_string( | sd_id128_t id, char s[static SD_ID128_STRING_MAX]) ; |
char *sd_id128_uuid_string( | sd_id128_t id, char s[static SD_ID128_UUID_STRING_MAX]) ; |
int sd_id128_from_string( | const char *s, sd_id128_t *ret) ; |
sd_id128_to_string()
formats a 128-bit ID as a character string. It expects
the ID and a string array capable of storing 33 characters
(SD_ID128_STRING_MAX
). The ID will be formatted as 32 lowercase hexadecimal digits
and be terminated by a NUL
byte.
SD_ID128_TO_STRING()
is a macro that wraps
sd_id128_to_string()
and passes an appropriately sized buffer as second argument,
allocated as C99 compound literal. Each use will thus implicitly acquire a suitable buffer on the stack
which remains valid until the end of the current code block. This is usually the simplest way to acquire
a string representation of a 128-bit ID in a buffer that is valid in the current code block.
sd_id128_to_uuid_string()
and SD_ID128_TO_UUID_STRING()
are similar to these two functions/macros, but format the 128-bit values as RFC4122 UUIDs, i.e. a series
of 36 lowercase hexadeciaml digits and dashes, terminated by a NUL
byte.
sd_id128_from_string()
implements the reverse operation: it takes a 33
character string with 32 hexadecimal digits (either lowercase or uppercase, terminated by
NUL
) and parses them back into a 128-bit ID returned in
ret
. Alternatively, this call can also parse a 37-character string with a 128-bit
ID formatted as RFC UUID. If ret
is passed as NULL
the
function will validate the passed ID string, but not actually return it in parsed form.
Note that when formatting and parsing 36 character UUIDs this is done strictly in Big Endian byte order, i.e. according to RFC4122 Variant 1 rules, even if the UUID encodes a different variant. This matches behaviour in various other Linux userspace tools. It's probably wise to avoid UUIDs of other variant types.
For more information about the "sd_id128_t
" type see
sd-id128(3). Note that
these calls operate the same way on all architectures, i.e. the results do not depend on
endianness.
When formatting a 128-bit ID into a string, it is often easier to use a format string for
printf(3). This
is easily done using the SD_ID128_FORMAT_STR
and
SD_ID128_FORMAT_VAL()
macros. For more information see
sd-id128(3).
sd_id128_to_string()
always succeeds and returns a pointer to the string array
passed in. sd_id128_from_string()
returns 0 on success, in which case
ret
is filled in, or a negative errno-style error code.
Functions described here are available as a shared
library, which can be compiled against and linked to with the
libsystemd
pkg-config(1)
file.
The code described here uses
getenv(3),
which is declared to be not multi-thread-safe. This means that the code calling the functions described
here must not call
setenv(3)
from a parallel thread. It is recommended to only do calls to setenv()
from an early phase of the program when no other threads have been started.