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  1// SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause OR GPL-2.0
  2/*******************************************************************************
  3 *
  4 * Module Name: utstrtoul64 - String-to-integer conversion support for both
  5 *                            64-bit and 32-bit integers
  6 *
  7 ******************************************************************************/
  8
  9#include <acpi/acpi.h>
 10#include "accommon.h"
 11
 12#define _COMPONENT          ACPI_UTILITIES
 13ACPI_MODULE_NAME("utstrtoul64")
 14
 15/*******************************************************************************
 16 *
 17 * This module contains the top-level string to 64/32-bit unsigned integer
 18 * conversion functions:
 19 *
 20 *  1) A standard strtoul() function that supports 64-bit integers, base
 21 *     8/10/16, with integer overflow support. This is used mainly by the
 22 *     iASL compiler, which implements tighter constraints on integer
 23 *     constants than the runtime (interpreter) integer-to-string conversions.
 24 *  2) Runtime "Explicit conversion" as defined in the ACPI specification.
 25 *  3) Runtime "Implicit conversion" as defined in the ACPI specification.
 26 *
 27 * Current users of this module:
 28 *
 29 *  iASL        - Preprocessor (constants and math expressions)
 30 *  iASL        - Main parser, conversion of constants to integers
 31 *  iASL        - Data Table Compiler parser (constants and math expressions)
 32 *  interpreter - Implicit and explicit conversions, GPE method names
 33 *  interpreter - Repair code for return values from predefined names
 34 *  debugger    - Command line input string conversion
 35 *  acpi_dump   - ACPI table physical addresses
 36 *  acpi_exec   - Support for namespace overrides
 37 *
 38 * Notes concerning users of these interfaces:
 39 *
 40 * acpi_gbl_integer_byte_width is used to set the 32/64 bit limit for explicit
 41 * and implicit conversions. This global must be set to the proper width.
 42 * For the core ACPICA code, the width depends on the DSDT version. For the
 43 * acpi_ut_strtoul64 interface, all conversions are 64 bits. This interface is
 44 * used primarily for iASL, where the default width is 64 bits for all parsers,
 45 * but error checking is performed later to flag cases where a 64-bit constant
 46 * is wrongly defined in a 32-bit DSDT/SSDT.
 47 *
 48 * In ACPI, the only place where octal numbers are supported is within
 49 * the ASL language itself. This is implemented via the main acpi_ut_strtoul64
 50 * interface. According the ACPI specification, there is no ACPI runtime
 51 * support (explicit/implicit) for octal string conversions.
 52 *
 53 ******************************************************************************/
 54/*******************************************************************************
 55 *
 56 * FUNCTION:    acpi_ut_strtoul64
 57 *
 58 * PARAMETERS:  string                  - Null terminated input string,
 59 *                                        must be a valid pointer
 60 *              return_value            - Where the converted integer is
 61 *                                        returned. Must be a valid pointer
 62 *
 63 * RETURN:      Status and converted integer. Returns an exception on a
 64 *              64-bit numeric overflow
 65 *
 66 * DESCRIPTION: Convert a string into an unsigned integer. Always performs a
 67 *              full 64-bit conversion, regardless of the current global
 68 *              integer width. Supports Decimal, Hex, and Octal strings.
 69 *
 70 * Current users of this function:
 71 *
 72 *  iASL        - Preprocessor (constants and math expressions)
 73 *  iASL        - Main ASL parser, conversion of ASL constants to integers
 74 *  iASL        - Data Table Compiler parser (constants and math expressions)
 75 *  interpreter - Repair code for return values from predefined names
 76 *  acpi_dump   - ACPI table physical addresses
 77 *  acpi_exec   - Support for namespace overrides
 78 *
 79 ******************************************************************************/
 80acpi_status acpi_ut_strtoul64(char *string, u64 *return_value)
 81{
 82	acpi_status status = AE_OK;
 83	u8 original_bit_width;
 84	u32 base = 10;		/* Default is decimal */
 85
 86	ACPI_FUNCTION_TRACE_STR(ut_strtoul64, string);
 87
 88	*return_value = 0;
 89
 90	/* A NULL return string returns a value of zero */
 91
 92	if (*string == 0) {
 93		return_ACPI_STATUS(AE_OK);
 94	}
 95
 96	if (!acpi_ut_remove_whitespace(&string)) {
 97		return_ACPI_STATUS(AE_OK);
 98	}
 99
100	/*
101	 * 1) Check for a hex constant. A "0x" prefix indicates base 16.
102	 */
103	if (acpi_ut_detect_hex_prefix(&string)) {
104		base = 16;
105	}
106
107	/*
108	 * 2) Check for an octal constant, defined to be a leading zero
109	 * followed by sequence of octal digits (0-7)
110	 */
111	else if (acpi_ut_detect_octal_prefix(&string)) {
112		base = 8;
113	}
114
115	if (!acpi_ut_remove_leading_zeros(&string)) {
116		return_ACPI_STATUS(AE_OK);	/* Return value 0 */
117	}
118
119	/*
120	 * Force a full 64-bit conversion. The caller (usually iASL) must
121	 * check for a 32-bit overflow later as necessary (If current mode
122	 * is 32-bit, meaning a 32-bit DSDT).
123	 */
124	original_bit_width = acpi_gbl_integer_bit_width;
125	acpi_gbl_integer_bit_width = 64;
126
127	/*
128	 * Perform the base 8, 10, or 16 conversion. A 64-bit numeric overflow
129	 * will return an exception (to allow iASL to flag the statement).
130	 */
131	switch (base) {
132	case 8:
133		status = acpi_ut_convert_octal_string(string, return_value);
134		break;
135
136	case 10:
137		status = acpi_ut_convert_decimal_string(string, return_value);
138		break;
139
140	case 16:
141	default:
142		status = acpi_ut_convert_hex_string(string, return_value);
143		break;
144	}
145
146	/* Only possible exception from above is a 64-bit overflow */
147
148	acpi_gbl_integer_bit_width = original_bit_width;
149	return_ACPI_STATUS(status);
150}
151
152/*******************************************************************************
153 *
154 * FUNCTION:    acpi_ut_implicit_strtoul64
155 *
156 * PARAMETERS:  string                  - Null terminated input string,
157 *                                        must be a valid pointer
158 *
159 * RETURN:      Converted integer
160 *
161 * DESCRIPTION: Perform a 64-bit conversion with restrictions placed upon
162 *              an "implicit conversion" by the ACPI specification. Used by
163 *              many ASL operators that require an integer operand, and support
164 *              an automatic (implicit) conversion from a string operand
165 *              to the final integer operand. The major restriction is that
166 *              only hex strings are supported.
167 *
168 * -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
169 *
170 * Base is always 16, either with or without the 0x prefix. Decimal and
171 * Octal strings are not supported, as per the ACPI specification.
172 *
173 * Examples (both are hex values):
174 *      Add ("BA98", Arg0, Local0)
175 *      Subtract ("0x12345678", Arg1, Local1)
176 *
177 * Conversion rules as extracted from the ACPI specification:
178 *
179 *  The converted integer is initialized to the value zero.
180 *  The ASCII string is always interpreted as a hexadecimal constant.
181 *
182 *  1)  According to the ACPI specification, a "0x" prefix is not allowed.
183 *      However, ACPICA allows this as an ACPI extension on general
184 *      principle. (NO ERROR)
185 *
186 *  2)  The conversion terminates when the size of an integer is reached
187 *      (32 or 64 bits). There are no numeric overflow conditions. (NO ERROR)
188 *
189 *  3)  The first non-hex character terminates the conversion and returns
190 *      the current accumulated value of the converted integer (NO ERROR).
191 *
192 *  4)  Conversion of a null (zero-length) string to an integer is
193 *      technically not allowed. However, ACPICA allows this as an ACPI
194 *      extension. The conversion returns the value 0. (NO ERROR)
195 *
196 * NOTE: There are no error conditions returned by this function. At
197 * the minimum, a value of zero is returned.
198 *
199 * Current users of this function:
200 *
201 *  interpreter - All runtime implicit conversions, as per ACPI specification
202 *  iASL        - Data Table Compiler parser (constants and math expressions)
203 *
204 ******************************************************************************/
205
206u64 acpi_ut_implicit_strtoul64(char *string)
207{
208	u64 converted_integer = 0;
209
210	ACPI_FUNCTION_TRACE_STR(ut_implicit_strtoul64, string);
211
212	if (!acpi_ut_remove_whitespace(&string)) {
213		return_VALUE(0);
214	}
215
216	/*
217	 * Per the ACPI specification, only hexadecimal is supported for
218	 * implicit conversions, and the "0x" prefix is "not allowed".
219	 * However, allow a "0x" prefix as an ACPI extension.
220	 */
221	acpi_ut_remove_hex_prefix(&string);
222
223	if (!acpi_ut_remove_leading_zeros(&string)) {
224		return_VALUE(0);
225	}
226
227	/*
228	 * Ignore overflow as per the ACPI specification. This is implemented by
229	 * ignoring the return status from the conversion function called below.
230	 * On overflow, the input string is simply truncated.
231	 */
232	acpi_ut_convert_hex_string(string, &converted_integer);
233	return_VALUE(converted_integer);
234}
235
236/*******************************************************************************
237 *
238 * FUNCTION:    acpi_ut_explicit_strtoul64
239 *
240 * PARAMETERS:  string                  - Null terminated input string,
241 *                                        must be a valid pointer
242 *
243 * RETURN:      Converted integer
244 *
245 * DESCRIPTION: Perform a 64-bit conversion with the restrictions placed upon
246 *              an "explicit conversion" by the ACPI specification. The
247 *              main restriction is that only hex and decimal are supported.
248 *
249 * -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
250 *
251 * Base is either 10 (default) or 16 (with 0x prefix). Octal (base 8) strings
252 * are not supported, as per the ACPI specification.
253 *
254 * Examples:
255 *      to_integer ("1000")     Decimal
256 *      to_integer ("0xABCD")   Hex
257 *
258 * Conversion rules as extracted from the ACPI specification:
259 *
260 *  1)  The input string is either a decimal or hexadecimal numeric string.
261 *      A hex value must be prefixed by "0x" or it is interpreted as decimal.
262 *
263 *  2)  The value must not exceed the maximum of an integer value
264 *      (32 or 64 bits). The ACPI specification states the behavior is
265 *      "unpredictable", so ACPICA matches the behavior of the implicit
266 *      conversion case. There are no numeric overflow conditions. (NO ERROR)
267 *
268 *  3)  Behavior on the first non-hex character is not defined by the ACPI
269 *      specification (for the to_integer operator), so ACPICA matches the
270 *      behavior of the implicit conversion case. It terminates the
271 *      conversion and returns the current accumulated value of the converted
272 *      integer. (NO ERROR)
273 *
274 *  4)  Conversion of a null (zero-length) string to an integer is
275 *      technically not allowed. However, ACPICA allows this as an ACPI
276 *      extension. The conversion returns the value 0. (NO ERROR)
277 *
278 * NOTE: There are no error conditions returned by this function. At the
279 * minimum, a value of zero is returned.
280 *
281 * Current users of this function:
282 *
283 *  interpreter - Runtime ASL to_integer operator, as per the ACPI specification
284 *
285 ******************************************************************************/
286
287u64 acpi_ut_explicit_strtoul64(char *string)
288{
289	u64 converted_integer = 0;
290	u32 base = 10;		/* Default is decimal */
291
292	ACPI_FUNCTION_TRACE_STR(ut_explicit_strtoul64, string);
293
294	if (!acpi_ut_remove_whitespace(&string)) {
295		return_VALUE(0);
296	}
297
298	/*
299	 * Only Hex and Decimal are supported, as per the ACPI specification.
300	 * A "0x" prefix indicates hex; otherwise decimal is assumed.
301	 */
302	if (acpi_ut_detect_hex_prefix(&string)) {
303		base = 16;
304	}
305
306	if (!acpi_ut_remove_leading_zeros(&string)) {
307		return_VALUE(0);
308	}
309
310	/*
311	 * Ignore overflow as per the ACPI specification. This is implemented by
312	 * ignoring the return status from the conversion functions called below.
313	 * On overflow, the input string is simply truncated.
314	 */
315	switch (base) {
316	case 10:
317	default:
318		acpi_ut_convert_decimal_string(string, &converted_integer);
319		break;
320
321	case 16:
322		acpi_ut_convert_hex_string(string, &converted_integer);
323		break;
324	}
325
326	return_VALUE(converted_integer);
327}