|
|
| |
Gtk2::CodeGen(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Gtk2::CodeGen(3) |
Gtk2::CodeGen - code generation utilities for Glib-based bindings.
# usually in Makefile.PL
use Gtk2::CodeGen;
# most common, use all defaults
Gtk2::CodeGen->parse_maps ('myprefix');
Gtk2::CodeGen->write_boot;
# more exotic, change everything
Gtk2::CodeGen->parse_maps ('foo',
input => 'foo.maps',
header => 'foo-autogen.h',
typemap => 'foo.typemap',
register => 'register-foo.xsh');
Gtk2::CodeGen->write_boot (filename => 'bootfoo.xsh',
glob => 'Foo*.xs',
ignore => '^(Foo|Foo::Bar)$');
This module packages some of the boilerplate code needed for performing code
generation typically used by perl bindings for gobject-based libraries, using
the Glib module as a base.
The default output filenames are in the subdirectory 'build',
which usually will be present if you are using ExtUtils::Depends (as most
Glib-based extensions probably should).
- Gtk2::CodeGen->write_boot;
- Gtk2::CodeGen->write_boot (KEY => VAL, ...)
- Many GObject-based libraries to be bound to perl will be too large to put
in a single XS file; however, a single PM file typically only bootstraps
one XS file's code. "write_boot"
generates an XSH file to be included from the BOOT section of that one
bootstrapped module, calling the boot code for all the other XS files in
the project.
Options are passed to the function in a set of key/val pairs,
and all options may default.
filename the name of the output file to be created.
the default is 'build/boot.xsh'.
glob a glob pattern that specifies the names of
the xs files to scan for MODULE lines.
the default is 'xs/*.xs'.
xs_files use this to supply an explicit list of file
names (as an array reference) to use instead
of a glob pattern. the default is to use
the glob pattern.
ignore regular expression matching any and all
module names which should be ignored, i.e.
NOT included in the list of symbols to boot.
this parameter is extremely important for
avoiding infinite loops at startup; see the
discussion for an explanation and rationale.
the default is '^[^:]+$', or, any name that
contains no colons, i.e., any toplevel
package name.
This function performs a glob (using perl's builtin glob
operator) on the pattern specified by the 'glob' option to retrieve a
list of file names. It then scans each file in that list for lines
matching the pattern "^MODULE" -- that is, the MODULE
directive in an XS file. The module name is pulled out and matched
against the regular expression specified by the ignore parameter. If
this module is not to be ignored, we next check to see if the name has
been seen. If not, the name will be converted to a boot symbol
(basically, s/:/_/ and prepend "boot_") and this symbol will
be added to a call to GPERL_CALL_BOOT in the generated file; it is then
marked as seen so we don't call it again.
What is this all about, you ask? In order to bind an XSub to
perl, the C function must be registered with the interpreter. This is
the function of the "boot" code, which is typically called in
the bootstrapping process. However, when multiple XS files are used with
only one PM file, some other mechanism must call the boot code from each
XS file before any of the function therein will be available.
A typical setup for a multiple-XS, single-PM module will be to
call the various bits of boot code from the BOOT: section of the
toplevel module's XS file.
To use Gtk2 as an example, when you do 'use Gtk2', Gtk2.pm
calls bootstrap on Gtk2, which calls the C function boot_Gtk2. This
function calls the boot symbols for all the other xs files in the
module. The distinction is that the toplevel module, Gtk2, has no colons
in its name.
"xsubpp" generates the boot
function's name by replacing the colons in the MODULE name with
underscores and prepending "boot_". We need to be careful not
to include the boot code for the bootstrapped module, (say Toplevel, or
Gtk2, or whatever) because the bootstrap code in Toplevel.pm will call
boot_Toplevel when loaded, and boot_Toplevel should actually include the
file we are creating here.
The default value for the ignore parameter ignores any name
not containing colons, because it is assumed that this will be a
toplevel module, and any other packages/modules it boots will be
below this namespace, i.e., they will contain colons. This
assumption holds true for Gtk2 and Gnome2, but obviously fails for
something like Gnome2::Canvas. To boot that module properly, you must
use a regular expression such as "^Gnome2::Canvas$".
Note that you can, of course, match more than just one name,
e.g. "^(Foo|Foo::Bar)$", if you wanted to have Foo::Bar be
included in the same dynamically loaded object but only be booted when
absolutely necessary. (If you get that to work, more power to you.)
Also, since this code scans for ^MODULE, you must comment the
MODULE section out with leading # marks if you want to hide it from
"write_boot".
- Gtk2::CodeGen->parse_maps (PREFIX, [KEY => VAL, ...])
- Convention within Glib/Gtk2 and friends is to use preprocessor macros in
the style of SvMyType and newSVMyType to get values in and out of perl,
and to use those same macros from both hand-written code as well as the
typemaps. However, if you have a lot of types in your library (such as the
nearly 200 types in Gtk+ 2.x), then writing those macros becomes
incredibly tedious, especially so when you factor in all of the variants
and such.
So, this function can turn a flat file containing terse
descriptions of the types into a header containing all the cast macros,
a typemap file using them, and an XSH file containing the proper code to
register each of those types (to be included by your module's BOOT
code).
The PREFIX is mandatory, and is used in some of the
resulting filenames, You can also override the defaults by providing
key=>val pairs:
input input file name. default is 'maps'. if this
key's value is an array reference, all the
filenames in the array will be scanned.
header name of the header file to create, default is
build/$prefix-autogen.h
typemap name of the typemap file to create, default is
build/$prefix.typemap
register name of the xsh file to contain all of the
type registrations, default is build/register.xsh
the maps file is a table of type descriptions, one per line,
with fields separated by whitespace. the fields should be:
TYPE macro e.g., GTK_TYPE_WIDGET
class name e.g. GtkWidget, name of the C type
base type one of GObject, GBoxed, GEnum, GFlags.
GtkObject is also supported, but the
distinction is no longer necessary as
of Glib 0.26.
package name of the perl package to which this
class name should be mapped, e.g.
Gtk2::Widget
As a special case, you can also use this same format to
register error domains; in this case two of the four columns take on
slightly different meanings:
domain macro e.g., GDK_PIXBUF_ERROR
enum type macro e.g., GDK_TYPE_PIXBUF_ERROR
base type GError
package name of the Perl package to which this
class name should be mapped, e.g.,
Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf::Error.
- Gtk2::CodeGen->generate_constants_wrappers (KEY => VAL, ...)
- Generates an XS file with XSUB wrappers for C constants. The key-value
pairs may contain one or more of the following keys:
- prefix: Specifies the package name the functions should be put
into.
- lists: Reference to an array of filenames which specify the
constants that should be wrapped.
- xs_file: The name of the XS file that should be created.
- header: The name of the header file that should be included in the
generated XS file.
- export_tag: The name of the Exporter tag that should be used for
the constants wrappers.
All of the keys have mostly sane defaults.
Don't forget to add the generated XS file to the list of XS files
to be compiled.
The lists describing the constants to be wrapped should have the
following format:
CONSTANT_NAME [ \t+ CONSTANT_CONVERTER ]
That is, the constant's name optionally followed by a tab and the
converter that is to be used to convert the constant to a Perl scalar. If
CONSTANT_CONVERTER is a simple string like 'newSViv' it will be used as
follows to get a Perl scalar: CONSTANT_CONVERTER (CONSTANT_NAME). If it
contains '$var', as in 'newSVpv ($var, 0)', then '$var' will be replaced
with CONSTANT_NAME and the resulting string will be used for conversion.
The default for CONSTANT_CONVERTER is 'newSViv'.
Glib::CodeGen does the actual work; Gtk2::CodeGen is now just a wrapper which
adds support for gtk-specific types.
muppet <scott at asofyet dot org>
Copyright (C) 2003-2005, 2013 by the gtk2-perl team (see the file AUTHORS for
the full list)
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
This library 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 Library
General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301
USA.
Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. Output converted with ManDoc. |