* <len> lengths are encoded in a single value or in a 5 bytes value.
* If the first byte value (as an unsigned 8 bit value) is between 0 and
* 252, it's a single-byte length. If it is 253 then a four bytes unsigned
- * integer follows (in the host byte ordering). A value fo 255 is used to
+ * integer follows (in the host byte ordering). A value of 255 is used to
* signal the end of the hash. The special value 254 is used to mark
* empty space that can be used to add new key/value pairs.
*
- * <free> is the number of free unused bytes
- * after the string, resulting from modification of values associated to a
- * key (for instance if "foo" is set to "bar', and later "foo" will be se to
- * "hi", I'll have a free byte to use if the value will enlarge again later,
- * or even in order to add a key/value pair if it fits.
+ * <free> is the number of free unused bytes after the string, resulting
+ * from modification of values associated to a key. For instance if "foo"
+ * is set to "bar", and later "foo" will be set to "hi", it will have a
+ * free byte to use if the value will enlarge again later, or even in
+ * order to add a key/value pair if it fits.
*
* <free> is always an unsigned 8 bit number, because if after an
* update operation there are more than a few free bytes, the zipmap will be
#include <string.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include "zmalloc.h"
-#include "endian.h"
+#include "endianconv.h"
#define ZIPMAP_BIGLEN 254
#define ZIPMAP_END 255
return zm;
}
-/* Call it before to iterate trought elements via zipmapNext() */
+/* Call before iterating through elements via zipmapNext() */
unsigned char *zipmapRewind(unsigned char *zm) {
return zm+1;
}
vlen, vlen, value);
}
}
- printf("\nIterate trought elements:\n");
+ printf("\nIterate through elements:\n");
{
unsigned char *i = zipmapRewind(zm);
unsigned char *key, *value;