//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Borrowed initially from https://github.com/mpaland/printf
// Copyright (C) Marco Paland 2014-2019, PALANDesign Hannover, Germany
// Copyright (C) Proxmark3 contributors. See AUTHORS.md for details.
//
// This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
// it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
// the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
// (at your option) any later version.
//
// This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
// GNU General Public License for more details.
//
// See LICENSE.txt for the text of the license.
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Tiny printf, sprintf and (v)snprintf implementation, optimized for speed on
// embedded systems with a very limited resources. These routines are thread
// safe and reentrant!
// Use this instead of the bloated standard/newlib printf cause these use
// malloc for printf (and may not be thread safe).
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

#ifndef _PRINTF_H_
#define _PRINTF_H_

#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include <stdarg.h>

/**
 * Output a character to a custom device like UART, used by the printf() function
 * This function is declared here only. You have to write your custom implementation somewhere
 * \param character Character to output
 */
void _putchar(char character);


/**
 * Tiny printf implementation
 * You have to implement _putchar if you use printf()
 * To avoid conflicts with the regular printf() API it is overridden by macro defines
 * and internal underscore-appended functions like printf_() are used
 * \param format A string that specifies the format of the output
 * \return The number of characters that are written into the array, not counting the terminating null character
 */
#define printf printf_
int printf_(const char *format, ...);


/**
 * Tiny sprintf implementation
 * Due to security reasons (buffer overflow) YOU SHOULD CONSIDER USING (V)SNPRINTF INSTEAD!
 * \param buffer A pointer to the buffer where to store the formatted string. MUST be big enough to store the output!
 * \param format A string that specifies the format of the output
 * \return The number of characters that are WRITTEN into the buffer, not counting the terminating null character
 */
#define sprintf sprintf_
int sprintf_(char *buffer, const char *format, ...);


/**
 * Tiny snprintf/vsnprintf implementation
 * \param buffer A pointer to the buffer where to store the formatted string
 * \param count The maximum number of characters to store in the buffer, including a terminating null character
 * \param format A string that specifies the format of the output
 * \param va A value identifying a variable arguments list
 * \return The number of characters that COULD have been written into the buffer, not counting the terminating
 *         null character. A value equal or larger than count indicates truncation. Only when the returned value
 *         is non-negative and less than count, the string has been completely written.
 */
#define snprintf  snprintf_
#define vsnprintf vsnprintf_
int  snprintf_(char *buffer, size_t count, const char *format, ...);
int vsnprintf_(char *buffer, size_t count, const char *format, va_list va);


/**
 * Tiny vprintf implementation
 * \param format A string that specifies the format of the output
 * \param va A value identifying a variable arguments list
 * \return The number of characters that are WRITTEN into the buffer, not counting the terminating null character
 */
#define vprintf vprintf_
int vprintf_(const char *format, va_list va);


/**
 * printf with output function
 * You may use this as dynamic alternative to printf() with its fixed _putchar() output
 * \param out An output function which takes one character and an argument pointer
 * \param arg An argument pointer for user data passed to output function
 * \param format A string that specifies the format of the output
 * \return The number of characters that are sent to the output function, not counting the terminating null character
 */
int fctprintf(void (*out)(char character, void *arg), void *arg, const char *format, ...);

#endif  // _PRINTF_H_