At present it is not possible to find out which part of the string is the
number part and which is before it. Add a new variant which provides this
feature, so we can separate the two in the caller.

Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <s...@chromium.org>
---

(no changes since v4)

Changes in v4:
- Use new Return style in function comments

Changes in v3:
- Add some tests, including one for 'abc123def456'
- Change the function to return a pointer to the first digit

 include/vsprintf.h | 18 ++++++++++++++++++
 lib/strto.c        | 14 ++++++++++++--
 test/str_ut.c      | 13 ++++++++++++-
 3 files changed, 42 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/include/vsprintf.h b/include/vsprintf.h
index 5172ceedec1..e006af200fd 100644
--- a/include/vsprintf.h
+++ b/include/vsprintf.h
@@ -121,6 +121,24 @@ long trailing_strtol(const char *str);
  */
 long trailing_strtoln(const char *str, const char *end);
 
+/**
+ * trailing_strtoln_end() - extract trailing integer from a fixed-length string
+ *
+ * Given a fixed-length string this finds a trailing number on the string
+ * and returns it. For example, "abc123" would return 123. Only the
+ * characters between @str and @end - 1 are examined. If @end is NULL, it is
+ * set to str + strlen(str).
+ *
+ * @str:       String to examine
+ * @end:       Pointer to end of string to examine, or NULL to use the
+ *             whole string
+ * @endp:      If non-NULL, this is set to point to the character where the
+ *     number starts, e.g. for "mmc0" this would be point to the '0'; if no
+ *     trailing number is found, it is set to the end of the string
+ * Return: training number if found, else -1
+ */
+long trailing_strtoln_end(const char *str, const char *end, char const **endp);
+
 /**
  * panic() - Print a message and reset/hang
  *
diff --git a/lib/strto.c b/lib/strto.c
index b1d803a77d9..6462d4fddf1 100644
--- a/lib/strto.c
+++ b/lib/strto.c
@@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ long long simple_strtoll(const char *cp, char **endp, 
unsigned int base)
        return simple_strtoull(cp, endp, base);
 }
 
-long trailing_strtoln(const char *str, const char *end)
+long trailing_strtoln_end(const char *str, const char *end, char const **endp)
 {
        const char *p;
 
@@ -192,14 +192,24 @@ long trailing_strtoln(const char *str, const char *end)
        p = end - 1;
        if (p > str && isdigit(*p)) {
                do {
-                       if (!isdigit(p[-1]))
+                       if (!isdigit(p[-1])) {
+                               if (endp)
+                                       *endp = p;
                                return dectoul(p, NULL);
+                       }
                } while (--p > str);
        }
+       if (endp)
+               *endp = end;
 
        return -1;
 }
 
+long trailing_strtoln(const char *str, const char *end)
+{
+       return trailing_strtoln_end(str, end, NULL);
+}
+
 long trailing_strtol(const char *str)
 {
        return trailing_strtoln(str, NULL);
diff --git a/test/str_ut.c b/test/str_ut.c
index 058b3594379..5a844347c2b 100644
--- a/test/str_ut.c
+++ b/test/str_ut.c
@@ -244,7 +244,9 @@ STR_TEST(str_xtoa, 0);
 
 static int str_trailing(struct unit_test_state *uts)
 {
-       char str1[] = "abc123def";
+       const char str1[] = "abc123def";
+       const char str2[] = "abc123def456";
+       const char *end;
 
        ut_asserteq(-1, trailing_strtol(""));
        ut_asserteq(-1, trailing_strtol("123"));
@@ -259,6 +261,15 @@ static int str_trailing(struct unit_test_state *uts)
 
        ut_asserteq(3, trailing_strtol("a3"));
 
+       ut_asserteq(123, trailing_strtoln_end(str1, str1 + 6, &end));
+       ut_asserteq(3, end - str1);
+
+       ut_asserteq(-1, trailing_strtoln_end(str1, str1 + 7, &end));
+       ut_asserteq(7, end - str1);
+
+       ut_asserteq(456, trailing_strtoln_end(str2, NULL, &end));
+       ut_asserteq(9, end - str2);
+
        return 0;
 }
 STR_TEST(str_trailing, 0);
-- 
2.36.0.rc2.479.g8af0fa9b8e-goog

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