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#ifndef PARSE_H
#define PARSE_H
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include "strbuf.h"
#include "vcal.h"
#define TYPE vcomponent
#include "linked_list.h"
#undef TYPE
/*
* The standard says that no line should be longer than 75 octets.
* This sets the default amount of memory to allocate for each string,
* but strings are reallocated when needed.
*/
#define SEGSIZE 75
typedef enum {
p_key, p_value, p_param_name, p_param_value, p_escape
} part_context;
/*
* Struct holding most state information needed while parsing.
* Kept together for simplicity.
*/
typedef struct {
char* filename;
llist<strbuf> key_stack;
llist<vcomponent> comp_stack;
/* Number for unfolded lines */
int line;
int column;
/* Actuall lines and columns from file */
int pline;
int pcolumn;
strbuf str;
} parse_ctx;
INIT_F(parse_ctx, char* filename);
FREE_F(parse_ctx);
int handle_kv(
content_line* cline,
parse_ctx* ctx
);
int parse_file(char* filename, FILE* f, vcomponent* cal);
/*
* Input
* f: file to get characters from
* ctx: current parse context
* c: last read character
* output:
* 0: line folded
* 1: line ended
*
* A carrige return means that the current line is at an
* end. The following character should always be \n.
* However, if the first character on the next line is a
* whitespace then the two lines should be concatenated.
*
* NOTE
* The above is true according to the standard. But I have
* found files with only NL. The code below ends line on the
* first of NL or CR, and then ensures that the program thinks
* it got the expected CRNL.
*/
int fold(FILE* f, parse_ctx* ctx, char c);
#endif /* PARSE_H */
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