/* Author : Stephen Smalley, */ /* FLASK */ /* * A double-ended queue is a singly linked list of * elements of arbitrary type that may be accessed * at either end. */ #ifndef _QUEUE_H_ #define _QUEUE_H_ typedef void *queue_element_t; typedef struct queue_node *queue_node_ptr_t; typedef struct queue_node { queue_element_t element; queue_node_ptr_t next; } queue_node_t; typedef struct queue_info { queue_node_ptr_t head; queue_node_ptr_t tail; } queue_info_t; typedef queue_info_t *queue_t; queue_t queue_create(void); int queue_insert(queue_t, queue_element_t); int queue_push(queue_t, queue_element_t); queue_element_t queue_remove(queue_t); queue_element_t queue_head(queue_t); void queue_destroy(queue_t); /* Applies the specified function f to each element in the specified queue. In addition to passing the element to f, queue_map passes the specified void* pointer to f on each invocation. If f returns a non-zero status, then queue_map will cease iterating through the hash table and will propagate the error return to its caller. */ int queue_map(queue_t, int (*f) (queue_element_t, void *), void *); /* Same as queue_map, except that if f returns a non-zero status, then the element will be removed from the queue and the g function will be applied to the element. */ void queue_map_remove_on_error(queue_t, int (*f) (queue_element_t, void *), void (*g) (queue_element_t, void *), void *); #endif /* FLASK */