package bbolt import ( "reflect" "unsafe" ) func unsafeAdd(base unsafe.Pointer, offset uintptr) unsafe.Pointer { return unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(base) + offset) } func unsafeIndex(base unsafe.Pointer, offset uintptr, elemsz uintptr, n int) unsafe.Pointer { return unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(base) + offset + uintptr(n)*elemsz) } func unsafeByteSlice(base unsafe.Pointer, offset uintptr, i, j int) []byte { // See: https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/cgo#turning-c-arrays-into-go-slices // // This memory is not allocated from C, but it is unmanaged by Go's // garbage collector and should behave similarly, and the compiler // should produce similar code. Note that this conversion allows a // subslice to begin after the base address, with an optional offset, // while the URL above does not cover this case and only slices from // index 0. However, the wiki never says that the address must be to // the beginning of a C allocation (or even that malloc was used at // all), so this is believed to be correct. return (*[maxAllocSize]byte)(unsafeAdd(base, offset))[i:j:j] } // unsafeSlice modifies the data, len, and cap of a slice variable pointed to by // the slice parameter. This helper should be used over other direct // manipulation of reflect.SliceHeader to prevent misuse, namely, converting // from reflect.SliceHeader to a Go slice type. func unsafeSlice(slice, data unsafe.Pointer, len int) { s := (*reflect.SliceHeader)(slice) s.Data = uintptr(data) s.Cap = len s.Len = len }