/*1* jinclude.h2*3* Copyright (C) 1991-1994, Thomas G. Lane.4* This file is part of the Independent JPEG Group's software.5* For conditions of distribution and use, see the accompanying README file.6*7* This file exists to provide a single place to fix any problems with8* including the wrong system include files. (Common problems are taken9* care of by the standard jconfig symbols, but on really weird systems10* you may have to edit this file.)11*12* NOTE: this file is NOT intended to be included by applications using the13* JPEG library. Most applications need only include jpeglib.h.14*/151617/* Include auto-config file to find out which system include files we need. */1819#include "jconfig.h" /* auto configuration options */20#define JCONFIG_INCLUDED /* so that jpeglib.h doesn't do it again */2122/*23* We need the NULL macro and size_t typedef.24* On an ANSI-conforming system it is sufficient to include <stddef.h>.25* Otherwise, we get them from <stdlib.h> or <stdio.h>; we may have to26* pull in <sys/types.h> as well.27* Note that the core JPEG library does not require <stdio.h>;28* only the default error handler and data source/destination modules do.29* But we must pull it in because of the references to FILE in jpeglib.h.30* You can remove those references if you want to compile without <stdio.h>.31*/3233#ifdef HAVE_STDDEF_H34#include <stddef.h>35#endif3637#ifdef HAVE_STDLIB_H38#include <stdlib.h>39#endif4041#ifdef NEED_SYS_TYPES_H42#include <sys/types.h>43#endif4445#include <stdio.h>4647/*48* We need memory copying and zeroing functions, plus strncpy().49* ANSI and System V implementations declare these in <string.h>.50* BSD doesn't have the mem() functions, but it does have bcopy()/bzero().51* Some systems may declare memset and memcpy in <memory.h>.52*53* NOTE: we assume the size parameters to these functions are of type size_t.54* Change the casts in these macros if not!55*/5657#ifdef NEED_BSD_STRINGS5859#include <strings.h>60#define MEMZERO(target,size) bzero((void *)(target), (size_t)(size))61#define MEMCOPY(dest,src,size) bcopy((const void *)(src), (void *)(dest), (size_t)(size))6263#else /* not BSD, assume ANSI/SysV string lib */6465#include <string.h>66#define MEMZERO(target,size) memset((void *)(target), 0, (size_t)(size))67#define MEMCOPY(dest,src,size) memcpy((void *)(dest), (const void *)(src), (size_t)(size))6869#endif7071/*72* In ANSI C, and indeed any rational implementation, size_t is also the73* type returned by sizeof(). However, it seems there are some irrational74* implementations out there, in which sizeof() returns an int even though75* size_t is defined as long or unsigned long. To ensure consistent results76* we always use this SIZEOF() macro in place of using sizeof() directly.77*/7879#define SIZEOF(object) ((size_t) sizeof(object))8081/*82* The modules that use fread() and fwrite() always invoke them through83* these macros. On some systems you may need to twiddle the argument casts.84* CAUTION: argument order is different from underlying functions!85*/8687#define JFREAD(file,buf,sizeofbuf) \88((size_t) fread((void *) (buf), (size_t) 1, (size_t) (sizeofbuf), (file)))89#define JFWRITE(file,buf,sizeofbuf) \90((size_t) fwrite((const void *) (buf), (size_t) 1, (size_t) (sizeofbuf), (file)))919293