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critcl(n) |
C Runtime In Tcl (CriTcl) |
critcl(n) |
critcl - Critcl - Package Reference
package require Tcl 8.4
package require critcl ?3.1.18?
package require platform ?1.0.2?
package require md5 ?2?
::critcl::ccode fragment
::critcl::ccommand tclname cname
::critcl::ccommand tclname arguments
body ?option value...?
::critcl::cdata tclname data
::critcl::cconst tclname resulttype
value
::critcl::cdefines list of glob patterns
?namespace?
::critcl::cproc name arguments
resulttype body ?option value...?
::critcl::cproc name arguments
resulttype
::critcl::cinit text externals
::critcl::include path
::critcl::api import name version
::critcl::api function resulttype name
arguments
::critcl::api header ?glob pattern...?
::critcl::api extheader ?file...?
::critcl::license author ?text...?
::critcl::summary text
::critcl::description text
::critcl::subject ?key...?
::critcl::meta key ?word...?
::critcl::meta? key
::critcl::buildrequirement script
::critcl::cheaders ?arg...?
::critcl::csources ?glob pattern...?
::critcl::clibraries ?glob pattern...?
::critcl::source glob pattern
::critcl::tsources glob pattern...
::critcl::owns glob pattern...
::critcl::cflags ?arg...?
::critcl::ldflags ?arg...?
::critcl::framework ?arg...?
::critcl::tcl version
::critcl::tk
::critcl::preload lib...
::critcl::debug area...
::critcl::check ?label? text
::critcl::checklink ?label? text
::critcl::msg ?-nonewline? msg
::critcl::print ?-nonewline? ?chan?
msg
::critcl::compiled
::critcl::compiling
::critcl::done
::critcl::failed
::critcl::load
::critcl::config option ?val?
::critcl::cache ?path?
::critcl::clean_cache ?pattern...?
::critcl::readconfig path
::critcl::showconfig ?chan?
::critcl::showallconfig ?chan?
::critcl::chooseconfig target
?nomatcherr?
::critcl::setconfig target
::critcl::actualtarget
::critcl::buildforpackage ?flag?
::critcl::cnothingtodo file
::critcl::cresults ?file?
::critcl::crosscheck
::critcl::error msg
::critcl::knowntargets
::critcl::sharedlibext
::critcl::targetconfig
::critcl::buildplatform
::critcl::targetplatform
::critcl::cobjects ?glob pattern...?
::critcl::scan path
::critcl::name2c name
::critcl::argnames arguments
::critcl::argcnames arguments
::critcl::argcsignature arguments
::critcl::argvardecls arguments
::critcl::argconversion arguments ?n?
::critcl::argoptional arguments
::critcl::argdefaults arguments
::critcl::argsupport arguments
::critcl::userconfig define name
description type ?default?
::critcl::userconfig query name
::critcl::userconfig set name
value
::critcl::at::caller
::critcl::at::caller offset
::critcl::at::caller offset level
::critcl::at::here
::critcl::at::get*
::critcl::at::get
::critcl::at::= file line
::critcl::at::incr n...
::critcl::at::incrt str...
::critcl::at::caller!
::critcl::at::caller! offset
::critcl::at::caller! offset level
::critcl::at::here!
::critcl::collect_begin
::critcl::collect_end
::critcl::collect script
::critcl::make path contents
::critcl::has-resulttype name
::critcl::resulttype name body
?ctype?
::critcl::resulttype name =
origname
::critcl::has-argtype name
::critcl::argtype name body ?ctype?
?ctypefun?
::critcl::argtype name = origname
::critcl::argtypesupport name code
?guard?
::critcl::argtyperelease name code
::preload library
C Runtime In Tcl, or CriTcl , is a system for compiling C code
embedded in Tcl on the fly and either loading the resulting objects into Tcl
for immediate use or packaging them for distribution. Use CriTcl to
improve performance by rewriting in C those routines that are performance
bottlenecks.
The critcl package is the core of the system. For an
overview of the complete system, see Introduction To CriTcl. For the
usage of the standalone critcl program, see CriTcl
Application. This core package maybe be used to embed C code into Tcl
scripts. It also provides access to the internals that other parts of the
core use and which are of interest to those wishing to understand the
internal workings of the core and of the API it provides to the CriTcl
Application. These advanced sections are marked as such so that those
simply wishing to use the package can skip them.
This package resides in the Core Package Layer of CriTcl.
+----------------+
|Applications |
| critcl |
| critcl::app |
+----------------+
*================*
|Core Packages |
| critcl |
| critcl::util |
*================*
+----------------+
|Support Packages|
| stubs::* |
| md5, platform |
| ... |
+----------------+
A short note ahead of the documentation: Instead of repeatedly talking about
"a Tcl script with embbedded C code", or "a Tcl script
containing Critcl commands", we call such a script a Critcl
script. A file containing a Critcl script usually has the extension
.tcl or .critcl.
The following commands append C code fragments to the current module. Fragments
appear in the module in the order they are appended, so the earlier fragments
(variables, functions, macros, etc.) are visible to later fragments.
- ::critcl::ccode fragment
- Appends the C code in fragment to the current module and returns
the empty string. See Runtime Behaviour.
- ::critcl::ccommand tclname cname
- As documented below, except that cname is the name of a C function
that already exists.
- ::critcl::ccommand tclname arguments body
?option value...?
- Appends the code to create a Tcl command named tclname and a
corresponding C function whose body is body and which behaves as
documented for Tcl's own Tcl_CreateObjCommand
[https://www.tcl-lang.org/man/tcl/TclLib/CrtObjCmd.htm].
aguments is a list of zero to four names for the
standard arguments clientdata, interp, objc, and
objv. The standard default names are used in place of any missing
names. This is a more low-level way than critcl::cproc to define
a command, as processing of the items in objv is left to the
author, affording complete control over the handling of the arguments to
the command. See section Runtime Behaviour.
Returns the empty string.
Each option may be one of:
- -clientdata c-expression
- Provides the client data for the new command. NULL by default.
- -delproc c-expression
- Provides a function pointer of type Tcl_CmdDeleteProc
[https://www.tcl-lang.org/man/tcl/TclLib/CrtObjCmd.htm] as the deletion
function for the new command. NULL by default.
- -cname boolean
- If false (the default), a name for the corresponding C function is
automatically derived from the fully-qualified tclname. Otherwise,
name of the C function is the last component of tclname.
- ::critcl::cdata tclname data
- Appends the code to create a new Tcl command named tclname which
returns data as a ByteArray result.
Returns the empty string.
- ::critcl::cconst tclname resulttype value
- Appends the code to create a new Tcl command named tclname which
returns the constant value having the Tcl type resulttype.
value can be a C macro or a function call (including the
parentheses) to any visible C function that does not take arguments.
Unlike critcl::cdata, resulttype can be any type known to
critcl::cproc. Its semantics are equivalent to:
cproc $tclname {} $resulttype "return $value ;"
This is more efficient than critcl::cproc since there is no
C function generated.
Returns the empty string.
- ::critcl::cdefines list of glob patterns
?namespace?
- Arranges for C enum and #define values that match one of the
patterns in glob patterns to be created in the namespace
namespace, each variable having the same as the corresponding C
item. The default namespace is the global namespace. A pattern that
matches nothing is ignored.
The Tcl variables are created when the module is compiled,
using the preprocessor in order to properly find all matching C
definitions.
Produces no C code. The desired C definitions must already
exist.
- ::critcl::cproc name arguments resulttype
body ?option value...?
- Appends a function having body as its body, another shim function
to perform the needed conversions, and the code to create a corresponding
Tcl command named tclname. Unlike critcl::ccommand the
arguments and result are typed, and Critcl generates the code to convert
between Tcl_Obj values and C data types. See also Runtime
Behaviour.
Returns the empty string.
- string option
- Each may be one of:
- -cname boolean
- If false (the default), a name for the corresponding C function is
automatically derived from the fully-qualified tclname. Otherwise,
name of the C function is the last component of tclname.
- -pass-cdata boolean
- If false (the default), the shim function performing the conversion
to and from Tcl level does not pass the ClientData as the first argument
to the function.
- -arg-offset int
- A non-negative integer, 0 by default, indicating the number of
hidden arguments preceding the actual procedure arguments. Used by
higher-order code generators where there are prefix arguments which are
not directly seen by the function but which influence argument counting
and extraction.
- string resulttype
- May be one of the following predefined types or a custom type. For the
latter see section Advanced: Extending cproc. Unless otherwise
noted, the Tcl return code is always TCL_OK. Before going into the
details first a quick overview:
Critcl type | C type | Tcl type | Notes
------------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
void | n/a | n/a | Always OK. Body sets result
ok | int | n/a | Result code. Body sets result
------------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
int | int | Int |
boolean | | | Alias of int above
bool | | | Alias of int above
long | long | Long |
wideint | Tcl_WideInt | WideInt |
double | double | Double |
float | float | Double |
------------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
char* | char* | String | Makes a copy
vstring | | | Alias of char* above
const char* | const char* | | Behavior of char* above
------------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
string | | String | Freeable string set directly
| | | No copy is made
dstring | | | Alias of string above
------------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
| | | For all below: Null is ERROR
| | | Body has to set any message
Tcl_Obj* | Tcl_Obj* | Any | refcount --
object | | | Alias of Tcl_Obj* above
Tcl_Obj*0 | | Any | refcount unchanged
object0 | | | Alias of Tcl_Obj*0 above
------------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
known-channel | Tcl_Channel | String | Assumes to already be registered
new-channel | Tcl_Channel | String | New channel, will be registered
- And now the details:
- Tcl_Obj*
- object
- If the returned Tcl_Obj* is NULL, the Tcl return code is
TCL_ERROR and the function should set an error mesage
[https://www.tcl-lang.org/man/tcl/TclLib/SetResult.htm] as the interpreter
result. Otherwise, the returned Tcl_Obj* is set as the interpreter
result.
Note that setting an error message requires the function body
to have access to the interpreter the function is running in. See the
argument type Tcl_Interp* for the details on how to make that
happen.
Note further that the returned Tcl_Obj* should have a
reference count greater than 0. This is because the converter
decrements the reference count to release possession after setting the
interpreter result. It assumes that the function incremented the
reference count of the returned Tcl_Obj*. If a Tcl_Obj*
with a reference count of 0 were returned, the reference count
would become 1 when set as the interpreter result, and
immediately thereafter be decremented to 0 again, causing the
memory to be freed. The system is then likely to crash at some point
after the return due to reuse of the freed memory.
- Tcl_Obj*0
- object0
- Like Tcl_Obj* except that this conversion assumes that the returned
value has a reference count of 0 and does not decrement it.
Returning a value whose reference count is greater than 0 is
therefore likely to cause a memory leak.
Note that setting an error message requires the function body
to have access to the interpreter the function is running in. See the
argument type Tcl_Interp* for the details on how to make that
happen.
- new-channel
- A String Tcl_Obj holding the name of the returned
Tcl_Channel is set as the interpreter result. The channel is
further assumed to be new, and therefore registered with the
interpreter to make it known.
- known-channel
- A String Tcl_Obj holding the name of the returned
Tcl_Channel is set as the interpreter result. The channel is
further assumed to be already registered with the interpreter.
- return-channel
- This type is a variant of new-channel above. It varies slightly
from it in the registration sequence to be properly complementary to the
argument type take-channel. A String Tcl_Obj holding the
name of the returned Tcl_Channel is set as the interpreter result.
The channel is further assumed to be new, and therefore registered
with the interpreter to make it known.
- char*
- vstring
- A String Tcl_Obj holding a copy of the returned char*
is set as the interpreter result. If the value is allocated then the
function itself and the extension it is a part of are responsible for
releasing the memory when the data is not in use any longer.
- const char*
- Like char* above, except that the returned string is
const-qualified.
- string
- dstring
- The returned char* is directly set as the interpreter result
without making a copy. Therefore it must be dynamically allocated
via Tcl_Alloc. Release happens automatically when the Interpreter
finds that the value is not required any longer.
- double
- float
- The returned double or float is converted to a Double
Tcl_Obj and set as the interpreter result.
- boolean
- bool
- The returned int value is converted to an Int Tcl_Obj and
set as the interpreter result.
- int
- The returned int value is converted to an Int Tcl_Obj and
set as the interpreter result.
- long
- The returned long int value is converted to a Long Tcl_Obj
and set as the interpreter result.
- wideint
- The returned Tcl_WideInt value is converted to a WideInt
Tcl_Obj and set as the interpreter result.
- ok
- The returned int value becomes the Tcl return code. The interpreter
result is left untouched and can be set by the function if desired. Note
that doing this requires the function body to have access to the
interpreter the function is running in. See the argument type
Tcl_Interp* for the details on how to make that happen.
- void
- The function does not return a value. The interpreter result is left
untouched and can be set by the function if desired.
- list arguments
- Is a multi-dictionary where each key is an argument type and its value is
the argument name. For example:
Each argument name must be a valid C identifier.
If the name is a list containing two items, the first item is the
name and the second item is the default value. A limited form of variadic
arguments can be accomplished using such default values. For example:
- Here x is an optional argument of type int with a default
value of 1.
Argument conversion is completely bypassed when the argument
is not provided, so a custom converter doing validation does not get the
chance to validate the default value. In this case, the value should be
checked in the body of the function.
Each argument type may be one of the following predefined
types or a custom type. For the latter see Advanced: Extending
cproc. Before going into the details first a quick overview:
Critcl type | C type | Tcl type | Notes
----------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
Tcl_Interp* | Tcl_Interp* | n/a | Special, only first
----------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
Tcl_Obj* | Tcl_Obj* | Any | Read-only
object | | | Alias of Tcl_Obj* above
list | critcl_list | List | Read-only
----------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
char* | const char* | Any | Read-only, string rep
pstring | critcl_pstring | Any | Read-only
bytes | critcl_bytes | ByteArray | Read-only
----------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
int | int | Int |
long | long | Long |
wideint | Tcl_WideInt | WideInt |
double | double | Double |
float | float | Double |
----------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
X > 0 | | | For X in int ... float above.
X >= 0 | | | C types as per the base type X.
X < 0 | | | Allowed argument values are
X <= 0 | | | restricted as per the shown
X > 1 | | | relation
X >= 1 | | |
X < 1 | | | This is not a general mechanism
X <= 1 | | | open to other values. Only 0/1.
----------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
boolean | int | Boolean |
bool | | | Alias of boolean above
----------- | -------------- | --------- | ------------------------------
bytearray | | | DEPRECATED
rawchar | | | DEPRECATED
rawchar* | | | DEPRECATED
double* | | | DEPRECATED
float* | | | DEPRECATED
int* | | | DEPRECATED
void* | | | DEPRECATED
- And now the details:
- Tcl_Interp*
- Attention: This is a special argument type. It can
only be used by the first argument of a function. Any other
argument using it will cause critcl to throw an error.
When used, the argument will contain a reference to the
current interpreter that the function body may use. Furthermore the
argument will not be an argument of the Tcl command for the
function.
This is useful when the function has to do more than simply
returning a value. Examples would be setting up error messages on
failure, or querying the interpreter for variables and other data.
- Tcl_Obj*
- object
- The function takes an argument of type Tcl_Obj*. No argument
checking is done. The Tcl level word is passed to the argument as-is. Note
that this value must be treated as read-only (except for hidden
changes to its intrep, i.e. shimmering).
- pstring
- The function takes an argument of type critcl_pstring containing
the original Tcl_Obj* reference of the Tcl argument, plus the
length of the string and a pointer to the character array.
typedef struct critcl_pstring {
Tcl_Obj* o;
const char* s;
int len;
} critcl_pstring;
- Note the const. The string is read-only. Any modification
can have arbitrary effects, from pulling out the rug under the script
because of string value and internal representation not matching anymore,
up to crashes anytime later.
- list
- The function takes an argument of type critcl_list containing the
original Tcl_Obj* reference of the Tcl argument, plus the length of
the Tcl list and a pointer to the array of the list elements.
typedef struct critcl_list {
Tcl_Obj* o;
Tcl_Obj* const* v;
int c;
} critcl_list;
- The Tcl argument must be convertible to List, an error is thrown
otherwise.
Note the const. The list is read-only. Any
modification can have arbitrary effects, from pulling out the rug under
the script because of string value and internal representation not
matching anymore, up to crashes anytime later.
- bytearray
- rawchar*
- rawchar
- The function takes an argument of type char*. The Tcl argument must
be convertible to ByteArray, an error is thrown otherwise.
Note that the length of the ByteArray is not passed
to the function, making this type not very usable.
Attention: These types are considered
DEPRECATED. It is planned to remove their documentation in
release 3.2, and their implementation in release 3.3. Their deprecation
can be undone if good use cases are shown.
- bytes
- This is the new and usable ByteArray type.
The function takes an argument of type critcl_bytes
containing the original Tcl_Obj* reference of the Tcl argument,
plus the length of the byte array and a pointer to the byte data.
typedef struct critcl_bytes {
Tcl_Obj* o;
const unsigned char* s;
int len;
} critcl_list;
- The Tcl argument must be convertible to ByteArray, an error is
thrown otherwise.
Note the const. The bytes are read-only. Any
modification can have arbitrary effects, from pulling out the rug under
the script because of string value and internal representation not
matching anymore, up to crashes anytime later.
- char*
- The function takes an argument of type const char*. The string
representation of the Tcl argument is passed in.
Note the const. The string is read-only. Any
modification can have arbitrary effects, from pulling out the rug under
the script because of string value and internal representation not
matching anymore, up to crashes anytime later.
- double
- The function takes an argument of type double. The Tcl argument
must be convertible to Double, an error is thrown otherwise.
- double > 0
- double >= 0
- double < 0
- double <= 0
- double > 1
- double >= 1
- double < 1
- double <= 1
- These are variants of double above, restricting the argument value
to the shown relation. An error is thrown for Tcl arguments outside of the
specified range. Note: This is not a general range specification
syntax. Only the listed types exist.
- float
- The function takes an argument of type float. The Tcl argument must
be convertible to Double, an error is thrown otherwise.
- float > 0
- float >= 0
- float < 0
- float <= 0
- float > 1
- float >= 1
- float < 1
- float <= 1
- These are variants of float above, restricting the argument value
to the shown relation. An error is thrown for Tcl arguments outside of the
specified range. Note: This is not a general range specification
syntax. Only the listed types exist.
- boolean
- bool
- The function takes an argument of type int. The Tcl argument must
be convertible to Boolean, an error is thrown otherwise.
- channel
- The function takes an argument of type Tcl_Channel. The Tcl
argument must be convertible to type Channel, an error is thrown
otherwise. The channel is further assumed to be already registered
with the interpreter.
- unshared-channel
- This type is an extension of channel above. All of the information
above applies.
Beyond that the channel must not be shared by multiple
interpreters, an error is thrown otherwise.
- take-channel
- This type is an extension of unshared-channel above. All of the
information above applies.
Beyond that the code removes the channel from the current
interpreter without closing it, and disables all pre-existing event
handling for it.
With this the function takes full ownership of the channel in
question, taking it away from the interpreter invoking it. It is then
responsible for the lifecycle of the channel, up to and including
closing it.
Should the system the function is a part of wish to return
control of the channel back to the interpeter it then has to use the
result type return-channel. This will undo the registration
changes made by this argument type. Note however that the removal
of pre-existing event handling done here cannot be undone.
Attention Removal from the interpreter without closing
the channel is effected by incrementing the channel's reference count
without providing an interpreter, before decrementing the same for the
current interpreter. This leaves the overall reference count intact
without causing Tcl to close it when it is removed from the interpreter
structures. At this point the channel is effectively a globally-owned
part of the system not associated with any interpreter.
The complementary result type then runs this sequence in
reverse. And if the channel is never returned to Tcl either the function
or the system it is a part of have to unregister the global reference
when they are done with it.
- int
- The function takes an argument of type int. The Tcl argument must
be convertible to Int, an error is thrown otherwise.
- int > 0
- int >= 0
- int < 0
- int <= 0
- int > 1
- int >= 1
- int < 1
- int <= 1
- These are variants of int above, restricting the argument value to
the shown relation. An error is thrown for Tcl arguments outside of the
specified range. Note: This is not a general range specification
syntax. Only the listed types exist.
- long
- The function takes an argument of type long int. The Tcl argument
must be convertible to Long, an error is thrown otherwise.
- long > 0
- long >= 0
- long < 0
- long <= 0
- long > 1
- long >= 1
- long < 1
- long <= 1
- These are variants of long above, restricting the argument value to
the shown relation. An error is thrown for Tcl arguments outside of the
specified range. Note: This is not a general range specification
syntax. Only the listed types exist.
- wideint
- The function takes an argument of type Tcl_WideInt. The Tcl
argument must be convertible to WideInt, an error is thrown
otherwise.
- wideint > 0
- wideint >= 0
- wideint < 0
- wideint <= 0
- wideint > 1
- wideint >= 1
- wideint < 1
- wideint <= 1
- These are variants of wideint above, restricting the argument value
to the shown relation. An error is thrown for Tcl arguments outside of the
specified range. Note: This is not a general range specification
syntax. Only the listed types exist.
- void*
- double*
- float*
- int*
- The function takes an argument of the same-named C type. The Tcl argument
must be convertible to ByteArray, an error is thrown otherwise. The bytes
in the ByteArray are then re-interpreted as the raw representation of a
single C pointer of the given type which is then passed as argument to the
function. In other words, this is for Tcl values somehow holding raw C
pointers, i.e. memory addresses.
Attention: These types are considered
DEPRECATED. It is planned to remove their documentation in
release 3.2, and their implementation in release 3.3. Their deprecation
can be undone if good use cases are shown.
- ::critcl::cproc name arguments resulttype
- As documented below, but used when the C function named name
already exists.
- ::critcl::cinit text externals
- Appends the C code in text and externals, but only after all
the other fragments appended by the previously-listed commands regardless
of their placement in the Critcl script relative to this command.
Thus, all their content is visible. See also Runtime Behaviour.
The C code in text is placed into the body of the
initialization function of the shared library backing the Critcl
script, and is executed when this library is loaded into the
interpreter. It has access to the variable Tcl_Interp* interp
referencing the Tcl interpreter currently being initialized.
externals is placed outside and just before the
initialization function, making it a good place for any external symbols
required by initialization function, but which should not be accessible
by any other parts of the C code.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
Returns the empty string.
- ::critcl::include path
- This command is a convenient shorthand for
critcl::code {
#include <${path}>
}
Critcl versions 3 and later provide critcl::api to create and manipulate
stubs tables, Tcl's dynamic linking mechanism handling the resolution of
symbols between C extensions. See http://wiki.tcl-lang.org/285 for an
introduction, and section Stubs Tables for the details of Critcl's
particular variant.
Importing stubs tables, i.e. APIs, from another extension:
- ::critcl::api import name version
- Adds the following include directives into the Critcl script
and each of its companion ".c" files:
- [1]
- #include <name/nameDecls.h>
- [2]
- #include <name/nameStubLib.h>
- Returns an error if "name" isn't in the search
path for the compiler. See critcl::cheaders and the critcl
application's -I and -includedir options.
Important: If name is a fully-qualified name in
a non-global namespace, e.g. "c::stack", the namespace
separators "::" are converted into underscores ("_")
in path names, C code, etc.
name/nameDecls.h contains the stubs table type
declarations, mapping macros, etc., and may include package-specific
headers. See critcl::api header, below. An #include
directive is added at the beginning of the generated code for Critcl
script and at the beginning of each of its companion
".c" files.
name/nameStubLib.h contains the stubs table
variable definition and the function to initialize it. An
#include directive for it is added to the initialization code for
the Critcl script , along with a call to the initializer
function.
If "name/name.decls"
accompanies name/nameDecls.h, it should contain the
external representation of the stubs table used to generate the headers.
The file is read and the internal representation of the stubs table
returned for use by the importing package. Otherwise, the empy string is
returned.
One possible use would be the automatic generation of C code
calling on the functions listed in the imported API.
When generating a TEA package the names of the imported APIs
are used to declare configure options with which the user can
declare a non-standard directory for the headers of the API. Any API
name is translated into a single configure option
--with-name-include.
Declaration and export of a stubs table, i.e. API, for the
Critcl script:
- ::critcl::api function resulttype name
arguments
- Adds to the public API of the Critcl script the signature for the
function named name and having the signature specified by
arguments and resulttype. Code is generated for a
".decls" file, the corresponding public headers, and a
stubs table usable by critcl::api import.
arguments is a multidict where each key is an argument
type and its value is the argument name, and resulttype is a C
type.
- ::critcl::api header ?glob pattern...?
- Each file matching a glob pattern is copied into the directory
containing the generated headers, and an #include directive for it
is added to "Decls.h" for the Critcl script.
Returns an error if a glob pattern matches nothing.
A pattern for a relative path is resolved relative to the
directory containing the Critcl script.
- ::critcl::api extheader ?file...?
- Like ::critcl::api header, but each file should exist in the
external development environment. An #include directive is added to
"fooDecls.h", but file is not copied to the
package header directory. file is not a glob pattern as Critcl has
no context, i.e directory, in which to expand such patterns.
As with the headers for an imported API, an #include
directive is added to the generated code for the Critcl script and to
each companion ".c" file.
In "compile & run" mode the generated header files
and any companion headers are placed in the Result Cache subdirectory
for the Critcl script. This directory is added to the include search
path of any other package importing this API and and building in mode
"compile & run".
In "generate package" mode -includedir specifies
the subdirectory in the package to place the generated headers in. This
directory is added to the search paths for header files, ensuring that a
package importing an API finds it if the package exporting that API used the
same setting for -includedir.
In "generate TEA" mode the static scanner recognizes
critcl::api header as a source of companion files. It also uses data
from calls to critcl::api import to add support for
--with-foo-include options into the generated
"configure(.in)" so that a user may specify custom
locations for the headers of any imported API.
Critcl versions 3 and later can create TEApot meta-data to be placed into
"teapot.txt" in a format suitable for use by the TEApot
tools [http://docs.activestate.com/activetcl/8.5/tpm/toc.html].
In version 2, some meta data support was already present through
::critcl::license, but this was only used to generate
"license.txt".
- ::critcl::license author ?text...?
- Ignored in "compile & run" mode.
In "generate package" mode provides information
about the author of the package and the license for the package.
text arguments are concatenated to form the text of the
license, which is written to "license.terms" in the
same directory as "pkgIndex.tcl". If no text is
provided the license is read from "license.terms" in
the same directory as the Critcl script.
This information takes precedence over any information
specified through the generic API ::critcl::meta. It is
additionally placed into the meta data file
"teapot.txt" under the keys as::author and
license.
- ::critcl::summary text
- Ignored in "compile & run" mode.
In "generate package" mode places a short,
preferably one-line description of the package into the meta data file
"teapot.txt" under the key summary. This
information takes precedence over information specified through the
generic API ::critcl::meta.
- ::critcl::description text
- Ignored in "compile & run" mode.
In "generate package" mode places a longer
description of the package into the meta data file
"teapot.txt", under the key description. The
data specified by this command takes precedence over any information
specified through the generic API ::critcl::meta.
- ::critcl::subject ?key...?
- Ignored in "compile & run" mode.
In "generate package" mode places each key
into the meta data file "teapot.txt", under the key
subject. This information takes precedence over any information
specified through the generic API ::critcl::meta.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
- ::critcl::meta key ?word...?
- Provides arbitrary meta data outside of the following reserved keys:
as::author, as::build::date, description,
license, name, platform, require
subject, summary, and version, Its behaviour is like
::critcl::subject in that it treats all keys as list of words, with
each call providing one or more words for the key, and multiple calls
extending the data for an existing key, if not reserved.
While it is possible to declare information for one of the
reserved keys with this command such data is ignored when the final meta
data is assembled and written.
Use the commands ::critcl::license,
::critcl::summary, ::critcl::description
::critcl::subject, package require, and package
provide to declare data for the reserved keys.
The information for the reserved keys as::build::date
and platform is automatically generated by critcl
itself.
- ::critcl::meta? key
- Returns the value in the metadata associated with key.
Used primarily to retrieve the name of the package from within
utility packages having to adapt C code templates to their environment.
For example, critcl::class uses does this.
- ::critcl::buildrequirement script
- Provides control over the capturing of dependencies declared via
package require. script is evaluated and any dependencies
declared within are ignored, i.e. not recorded in the meta data.
These commands control the details of compilation and linking a Critcl
script. The information is used only to compile/link the object for the
Critcl script. For example, information for "FOO.tcl"
is kept separate from information for "BAR.tcl".
- ::critcl::cheaders ?arg...?
- Provides additional header locations.
Each argument is a glob pattern. If an argument begins with
- it is an argument to the compiler. Otherwise the parent
directory of each matching path is a directory to be searched for header
files. Returns an error if a pattern matches no files. A pattern for a
relative path is resolved relative to the directory containing the
Critcl script.
#include lines are not automatically generated for
matching header files. Use critcl::include or
critcl::ccode as necessary to add them.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
- ::critcl::csources ?glob pattern...?
- Matching paths become inputs to the compilation of the current object
along with the sources for the current Critcl script. Returns an
error if no paths match a pattern. A pattern for a relative path is
resolved relative to the directory containing the Critcl script.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
- ::critcl::clibraries ?glob pattern...?
- provides the link step with additional libraries and library locations. A
glob pattern that begins with - is added as an argument to
the linker. Otherwise matching files are linked into the shared library.
Returns an error if no paths match a pattern. A pattern for a relative
path is resolved relative to the directory containing the Critcl
script.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
- ::critcl::source glob pattern
- Evaluates as scripts the files matching each glob pattern. Returns
an error if there are no matching files. A pattern for a relative path is
resolved relative to the directory containing the Critcl
script.
- ::critcl::tsources glob pattern...
- Provides the information about additional Tcl script files to source when
the shared library is loaded.
Matching paths are made available to the generated shared
library when it is loaded for the current Critcl script. Returns
an error if a pattern matches no files. A pattern for a relative path is
resolved relative to the directory containing the Critcl
script.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
After the shared library has been loaded, the declared files
are sourced in the same order that they were provided as arguments.
- ::critcl::owns glob pattern...
- Ignored in "compile and run" and "generate package"
modes. In "generate TEA" mode each file matching a glob
pattern is a file to be included in the TEA extension but that could
not be ascertained as such from previous commands like
critcl::csources and critcl::tsources, either because of
they were specified dynamically or because they were directly
sourced.
- ::critcl::cflags ?arg...?
-
Each arg is an argument to the compiler.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
- ::critcl::ldflags ?arg...?
-
Each arg is an argument to the linker.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
- ::critcl::framework ?arg...?
- Each arg is the name of a framework to link on MacOS X. This
command is ignored if OS X is not the target so that frameworks can be
specified unconditionally.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
- ::critcl::tcl version
- Specifies the minimum version of the Tcl runtime to compile and link the
package for. The default is 8.4.
- ::critcl::tk
- Arranges to include the Tk headers and link to the Tk stubs.
- ::critcl::preload lib...
- Arranges for the external shared library lib to be loaded before
the shared library for the Critcl script is loaded.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
Each library FOO is searched for in the directories
listed below, in the order listed. The search stops at the first
existing path. Additional notes:
- platform is the placeholder for the target platform of the
package.
- The extension ".so" is the placeholder for whatever
actual extension is used by the target platform for its shared
libraries.
- The search is relative to the current working directory.
- And now the paths, depending on the exact form of the library name:
- FOO
- [1]
- FOO.so
- [2]
- FOO/FOO.so
- [3]
- FOO/platform/FOO.so
- PATH/FOO
- The exact set searched depends on the existence of directory
"PATH/FOO". If it exists, critcl searches
- [1]
- FOO.so
- [2]
- PATH/FOO/FOO.so
- [3]
- PATH/FOO/platform/FOO.so
- Otherwise it searches
- [1]
- FOO.so
- [2]
- PATH/FOO.so
- [3]
- PATH/platform/FOO.so
- instead.
- /PATH/FOO
- Even when specifying FOO with an absolute path the first path searched is
relative to the current working directory.
- [1]
- FOO.so
- [2]
- /PATH/FOO.so
- [3]
- /PATH/platform/FOO.so
- For developers who want to understand or modify the internals of the
critcl package, Preloading functionality explains how
preloading is implemented.
- ::critcl::debug area...
- Specifies what debugging features to activate. Internally each area is
translated into area-specific flags for the compiler which are then handed
over to critcl::cflags.
- memory
- Specifies Tcl memory debugging.
- symbols
- Specifies compilation and linking with debugging symbols for use by a
debugger or other tool.
- all
- Specifies all available debugging.
The following commands control compilation and linking.
- ::critcl::check ?label? text
- Returns a true if the C code in text compiles sucessfully,
and false otherwise. Used to check for availability of features in
the build environment. If provided, label is used to uniquely mark
the results in the generated log.
- ::critcl::checklink ?label? text
- Like critcl::check but also links the compiled objects, returning
true if the link is successful and false otherwise. If
specified, label is used to uniquely mark the results in the
generated log.
- ::critcl::msg ?-nonewline? msg
- Scripts using critcl::check and critcl::checklink can use
this command to report results. Does nothing in compile & run
mode. Tools like the CriTcl Aplication may redefine this command to
implement their own message reporting. For example, critcl::app and
any packages built on it print messages to stdout.
- ::critcl::print ?-nonewline? ?chan? msg
- Used by the Critcl internals to report activity. By default, effectively
the same thing as ::puts. Tools directly using either the Critcl
package or the Critcl application package may redefine this procedure to
implement their own output functionality.
For example, the newest revisions of Kettle
[https://chiselapp.com/user/andreas_kupries/repository/Kettle/index] use
this to highlight build warnings.
- ::critcl::compiled
- Returns true if the current Critcl script is already
compiled and false otherwise.
Enables a Critcl script used as its own Tcl companion
file (see critcl::tsources) to distinguish between being sourced
for compilation in compile & run mode and being sourced from
either the result of generate package mode or during the load
phase of compile & run mode. The result is false in
the first case and true in the later two cases.
- ::critcl::compiling
- Returns true if a working C compiler is available and false
otherwise.
- ::critcl::done
- Returns true when Critcl script has been built and
false otherwise. Only useful from within a Critcl script.
Enables the Tcl parts of a Critcl script to distinguish between
prebuilt package mode and compile & run mode.
See also Modes Of Operation/Use.
- ::critcl::failed
- Returns true if the Critcl script could not be built, and
false otherwise. Forces the building of the package if it hasn't
already been done, but not its loading. Thus, a Critcl script can
check itself for availability of the compiled components. Only useful from
within a Critcl script.
- ::critcl::load
- Like critcl::failed except that it also forces the loading of the
generated shared library, and that it returns true on success and
false on failure. Thus, a Critcl script can check itself for
availability of the compiled components. Only useful from within a
Critcl script.
The following command manages global settings, i.e. configuration options which
are independent of any Critcl script.
This command should not be needed to write a Critcl script.
It is a management command which is only useful to the CriTcl
Application or similar tools.
- ::critcl::config option ?val?
- Sets and returns the following global configuration options:
- force bool
- When false (the default), the C files are not built if there is a
cached shared library.
- lines bool
- When true (the default), #line directives are embedded into the
generated C code.
This facility requires the use of a tclsh that provides
info frame. Otherwise, no #line directives are emitted.
The command is supported by Tcl 8.5 and higher. It is also supported by
Tcl 8.4 provided that it was compiled with the define
-DTCL_TIP280. An example of such is ActiveState's ActiveTcl.
Developers of higher-level packages generating their own C
code, either directly or indirectly through critcl, should also read
section Advanced: Location management to see how critcl helps
them in generating their directives. Examples of such packages come with
critcl itself. See critcl::iassoc and critcl::class.
- trace bool
- When false (the default), no code tracing the entry and exit of
Critcl-backed commands in the Critcl script is inserted. Insertion
of such code implicitly activates the tracing facility in general. See
critcl::cutil.
- I path
- A single global include path to use for all files. Not set by
default.
- combine enum
- dynamic (the default)
- Object files have the suffix _pic.
- static
- Object files have the suffix _stub.
- standalone
- Object files have no suffix, and the generated C files are compiled
without using Tcl/Tk stubs. The result are object files usable for static
linking into a big shell.
- language string
- keepsrc bool
- When false (the default), the generated ".c" files
are deleted after the ".o" files have been built.
- outdir directory
- The directory where to place a generated shared library. By default, it is
placed into the Result Cache.
The following commands control the Result Cache. These commands are not
needed to simply write a Critcl script.
- ::critcl::cache ?path?
- Sets and returns the path to the directory for the package's result cache.
The default location is
"~/.critcl/[platform::generic]" and usually does not
require any changes.
- ::critcl::clean_cache ?pattern...?
- Cleans the result cache, i.e. removes any and all files and directories in
it. If one or more patterns are specified then only the files and
directories matching them are removed.
The following commands manage the build configuration, i.e. the per-platform
information about compilers, linkers, and their commandline options. These
commands are not needed to simply write a Critcl script.
- ::critcl::readconfig path
- Reads the build configuration file at path and configures the
package using the information for the target platform.
- ::critcl::showconfig ?chan?
- Converts the active build configuration into a human-readable string and
returns it, or if chan is provided prints the result to that
channel.
- ::critcl::showallconfig ?chan?
- Converts the set of all known build configurations from the currently
active build configuration file last set with critcl::readconfig
into a string and returns it, or if chan is provided, prints it to
that channel.
- ::critcl::chooseconfig target ?nomatcherr?
- Matches target against all known targets, returning a list
containing all the matching ones. This search is first done on an exact
basis, and then via glob matching. If no known target matches the argument
the default is to return an empty list. However, if the boolean
nomatcherr is specified and set an error is thrown using
critcl::error instead.
- ::critcl::setconfig target
- Configures the package to use the settings of target.
The following commands provide tools like CriTcl Application or similar
with deeper access to the package's internals. These commands are not needed
to simply write a Critcl script.
- ::critcl::actualtarget
- Returns the platform identifier for the target platform, i.e. the platform
to build for. Unlike ::critcl::targetplatform this is the true
target, with any cross-compilation information resolved.
- ::critcl::buildforpackage ?flag?
- Signals whether the next file is to be built for inclusion into a package.
If not specified the flag defaults to true, i.e. building
for a package. This disables a number of things in the backend, namely the
linking of that file into a shared library and the loading of that
library. It is expected that the build results are later wrapped into a
larger collection.
- ::critcl::cnothingtodo file
- Checks whether there is anything to build for file.
- ::critcl::cresults ?file?
- Returns information about building file, or info script If
file is not provided. The result in question is a dictionary
containing the following items:
- clibraries
- A list of external shared libraries and/or directories needed to link
file.
- ldflags
- A list of linker flags needed to link file.
- license
- The text of the license for the package file is located in.
- mintcl
- The minimum version of Tcl required by the package file is in to
run successfully. A proper Tcl version number.
- objects
- A list of object files to link into file.
- preload
- A list of libraries to be preloaded in order to sucessfully load and use
file.
- tk
- true if file requires Tk and false otherwise.
- tsources
- A list of companion ".tcl" files to source in order to
load and use the Critcl script file.
- log
- The full build log generated by the compiler/linker, including command
line data from critcl, and other things.
- exl
- The raw build log generated by the compiler/linker. Contains the output
generated by the invoked applications.
- ::critcl::crosscheck
- Determines whether the package is configured for cross-compilation and
prints a message to the standard error channel if so.
- ::critcl::error msg
- Used to report internal errors. The default implementation simply returns
the error. Tools like the CriTcl Application are allowed to
redefine this procedure to perform their own way of error reporting. There
is one constraint they are not allowed to change: The procedure must
not return to the caller.
- ::critcl::knowntargets
- Returns a list of the identifiers of all targets found during the last
invocation of critcl::readconfig.
- ::critcl::sharedlibext
- Returns the file extension for shared libraries on the target
platform.
- ::critcl::targetconfig
- Returns the identifier of the target to build for, as specified by either
the user or the system.
- ::critcl::buildplatform
- Returns the identifier of the build platform, i.e. where the package is
running on.
- ::critcl::targetplatform
- Returns the identifier of the target platform, i.e. the platform to
compile for. In contrast to ::critcl::actualtarget this may be the
name of a cross-compilation target.
- ::critcl::cobjects ?glob pattern...?
- Like ::critcl::clibraries, but instead of matching libraries, each
glob pattern matches object files to be linked into the shared
object (at compile time, not runtime). If a glob pattern matches
nothing an error is returned. Not listed in Control & Interface
because it is of no use to package writers. Only tools like the CriTcl
Application need it.
A pattern for a relative path is resolved relative to the
directory containing the Critcl script.
Calls to this command are cumulative.
- ::critcl::scan path
- The main entry point to Critcl's static code scanner. Used by tools to
implement processing modes like the assembly of a directory hierarchy
containing a TEA-lookalike buildystem, etc.
Scans path and returns a dictionary containing the
following items:
- version
- Package version.
- org
- Author(ing organization).
- files
- List of the companion files, relative to the directory of the input
file.
- ::critcl::name2c name
- Given the Tcl-level identifier name, returns a list containing the
following details of its conversion to C:
- Tcl namespace prefix
- C namespace prefix
- Tcl base name
- C base name
For use by utilities that provide Tcl commands without going
through standard commands like critcl::ccommand or
critcl::cproc. critcl::class does this.
For advanced use, the following commands used by critcl::cproc itself are
exposed.
- ::critcl::argnames arguments
- Given an argument declaration as documented for critcl::cproc,
returns a list of the corresponding user-visible names.
- ::critcl::argcnames arguments
- Given an argument declaration as documented for critcl::cproc,
returns a list of the corresponding C variable names for the user-visible
names. The names returned here match the names used in the declarations
and code returned by ::critcl::argvardecls and
::critcl::argconversion.
- ::critcl::argcsignature arguments
- Given an argument declaration as documented for critcl::cproc,
returns a list of the corresponding C parameter declarations.
- ::critcl::argvardecls arguments
- Given an argument declaration as documented for critcl::cproc,
returns a list of the corresponding C variable declarations. The names
used in these declarations match the names returned by
::critcl::argcnames.
- ::critcl::argconversion arguments ?n?
- Given an argument declaration as documented for critcl::cproc,
returns a list of C code fragments converting the user visible arguments
found in the declaration from Tcl_Obj* to C types. The names used in these
statements match the names returned by ::critcl::argcnames.
The generated code assumes that the procedure arguments start
at index n of the objv array. The default is 1.
- ::critcl::argoptional arguments
- Given an argument declaration as documented for critcl::cproc,
returns a list of boolean values indicating which arguments are optional
(true), and which are not (false).
- ::critcl::argdefaults arguments
- Given an argument declaration as documented for critcl::cproc,
returns a list containing the default values for all optional
arguments.
- ::critcl::argsupport arguments
- Given an argument declaration as documented for critcl::cproc,
returns a list of C code fragments needed to define the necessary
supporting types.
This package provides one command for the management of package-specific, i.e.
developer-specified custom build configuration options.
- ::critcl::userconfig define name description
type ?default?
- This command defines custom build configuration option, with
description, type and optional default value.
The type can be either bool, or a list of values.
- [1]
- For bool the default value, if specified, must be a boolean. If it
is not specified it defaults to true.
- [2]
- For a list of values the default value, if specified, must be a value
found in this list. If it is not specified it defaults to the first value
of the list.
The description serves as in-code documentation of the
meaning of the option and is otherwise ignored. When generating a TEA
wrapper the description is used for the configure option derived from
the option declared by the command.
A boolean option FOO are translated into a pair of
configure options, --enable-FOO and
--disable-FOO, whereas an option whose type is a list
of values is translated into a single configure option
--with-FOO.
- ::critcl::userconfig query name
- This command queries the database of custom build configuration option for
the current ".critcl" file and returns the chosen value.
This may be the default if no value was set via ::critcl::userconfig
set.
It is at this point that definitions and set values are
brought together, with the latter validated against the definition.
- ::critcl::userconfig set name value
- This command is for use by a tool, like the critcl application, to
specify values for custom build configuration options.
At the time this command is used only the association between
option name and value is recorded, and nothing else is done. This
behaviour is necessary as the system may not know if an option of the
specified name exists when the command is invoked, nor its type.
Any and all validation is defered to when the value of an
option is asked for via ::critcl::userconfig query.
This means that it is possible to set values for any option we
like, and the value will take effect only if such an option is both
defined and used later on.
First a small introduction for whose asking themselves ´what is location
management' ?
By default critcl embeds #line directives into the
generated C code so that any errors, warnings and notes found by the C
compiler during compilation will refer to the ".critcl"
file the faulty code comes from, instead of the generated
".c" file.
This facility requires the use of a tclsh that provides info
frame. Otherwise, no #line directives are emitted. The command is
supported by Tcl 8.5 and higher. It is also supported by Tcl 8.4 provided
that it was compiled with the define -DTCL_TIP280. An example of such
is ActiveState's ActiveTcl.
Most users will not care about this feature beyond simply wanting
it to work and getting proper code references when reading compiler
output.
Developers of higher-level packages generating their own C code
however should care about this, to ensure that their generated code contains
proper references as well. Especially as this is key to separating bugs
concerning code generated by the package itself and bug in the user's code
going into the package, if any.
Examples of such packages come with critcl itself, see the
implementation of packages critcl::iassoc and
critcl::class.
To help such developers eight commands are provided to manage such
location information. These are listed below.
A main concept is that they all operate on a single stored
location, setting, returning and clearing it. Note that this location
information is completely independent of the generation of #line
directives within critcl itself.
- ::critcl::at::caller
- This command stores the location of the caller of the current procedure as
a tuple of file name and linenumber. Any previously stored location is
overwritten. The result of the command is the empty string.
- ::critcl::at::caller offset
- As above, the stored line number is modified by the specified offset. In
essence an implicit call of critcl::at::incr.
- ::critcl::at::caller offset level
- As above, but the level the location information is taken from is modified
as well. Level 0 is the caller, -1 its caller, etc.
- ::critcl::at::here
- This command stores the current location in the current procedure as a
tuple of file name and linenumber. Any previously stored location is
overwritten. The result of the command is the empty string.
In terms of ::critcl::at::caller this is equivalent
to
- ::critcl::at::get*
- This command takes the stored location and returns a formatted
#line directive ready for embedding into some C code. The stored
location is left untouched. Note that the directive contains its own
closing newline.
For proper nesting and use it is recommended that such
directives are always added to the beginning of a code fragment. This
way, should deeper layers add their own directives these will come
before ours and thus be inactive. End result is that the outermost layer
generating a directive will 'win', i.e. have its directive used. As it
should be.
- ::critcl::at::get
- This command is like the above, except that it also clears the stored
location.
- ::critcl::at::= file line
- This command allows the caller to set the stored location to anything they
want, outside of critcl's control. The result of the command is the empty
string.
- ::critcl::at::incr n...
- ::critcl::at::incrt str...
- These commands allow the user to modify the line number of the stored
location, changing it incrementally. The increment is specified as either
a series of integer numbers (incr), or a series of strings to
consider (incrt). In case of the latter the delta is the number of
lines endings found in the strings.
- ::critcl::at::caller!
- ::critcl::at::caller! offset
- ::critcl::at::caller! offset level
- ::critcl::at::here!
- These are convenience commands combining caller and here
with get. I.e. they store the location and immediately return it
formatted as proper #line directive. Also note that after their use
the stored location is cleared.
Diversions are for higher-level packages generating their own C code, to make
their use of critcl's commands generating Embedded C Code easier.
These commands normally generate all of their C code for the
current ".critcl" file, which may not be what is wanted by
a higher-level package.
With a diversion the generator output can be redirected into
memory and from there on then handled and processed as the caller desires
before it is committed to an actual ".c" file.
An example of such a package comes with critcl itself, see the
implementation of package critcl::class.
To help such developers three commands are provided to manage
diversions and the collection of C code in memory. These are:
- ::critcl::collect_begin
- This command starts the diversion of C code collection into memory.
The result of the command is the empty string.
Multiple calls are allowed, with each call opening a new
nesting level of diversion.
- ::critcl::collect_end
- This command end the diversion of C code collection into memory and
returns the collected C code.
If multiple levels of diversion are open the call only closes
and returns the data from the last level.
The command will throw an error if no diversion is active,
indicating a mismatch in the pairing of collect_begin and
collect_end.
- ::critcl::collect script
- This is a convenience command which runs the script under diversion
and returns the collected C code, ensuring the correct pairing of
collect_begin and collect_end.
While file generation is related to the diversions explained in the previous
section they are not the same. Even so, like diversions this feature is for
higher-level packages generating their own C code.
Three examples of utility packages using this facility comes with
critcl itself. See the implementations of packages critcl::literals,
critcl::bitmap, and critcl::enum.
When splitting a package implementation into pieces it is often
sensible to have a number of pure C companion files containing low-level
code, yet these files may require information about the code in the main
".critcl" file. Such declarations are normally not
exportable and using the stub table support does not make sense, as this is
completely internal to the package.
With the file generation command below the main
".critcl" file can generate any number of header files for
the C companions to pick up.
- ::critcl::make path contents
- This command creates the file path in a location where the C
companion files of the package are able to pick it up by simple inclusion
of path during their compilation, without interfering with the
outer system at all.
The generated file will contain the specified
contents.
While the critcl::cproc command understands the most common C types (see
section Embedded C Code), sometimes this is not enough.
To get around this limitation the commands in this section enable
users of critcl to extend the set of argument and result types
understood by critcl::cproc. In other words, they allow them to
define their own, custom, types.
- ::critcl::has-resulttype name
- This command tests if the named result-type is known or not. It returns a
boolean value, true if the type is known and false
otherwise.
- ::critcl::resulttype name body ?ctype?
- This command defines the result type name, and associates it with
the C code doing the conversion (body) from C to Tcl. The C return
type of the associated function, also the C type of the result variable,
is ctype. This type defaults to name if it is not specified.
If name is already declared an error is thrown.
Attention! The standard result type void is special as it
has no accompanying result variable. This cannot be expressed by this
extension command.
The body's responsibility is the conversion of the
functions result into a Tcl result and a Tcl status. The first has to be
set into the interpreter we are in, and the second has to be
returned.
The C code of body is guaranteed to be called last in
the wrapper around the actual implementation of the cproc in
question and has access to the following environment:
- interp
- A Tcl_Interp* typed C variable referencing the interpreter the result has
to be stored into.
- rv
- The C variable holding the result to convert, of type ctype.
- As examples here are the definitions of two standard result types:
resulttype int {
Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_NewIntObj(rv));
return TCL_OK;
}
resulttype ok {
/* interp result must be set by cproc body */
return rv;
} int
- ::critcl::resulttype name = origname
- This form of the resulttype command declares name as an
alias of result type origname, which has to be defined already. If
this is not the case an error is thrown.
- ::critcl::has-argtype name
- This command tests if the named argument-type is known or not. It returns
a boolean value, true if the type is known and false
otherwise.
- ::critcl::argtype name body ?ctype?
?ctypefun?
- This command defines the argument type name, and associates it with
the C code doing the conversion (body) from Tcl to C. ctype
is the C type of the variable to hold the conversion result and
ctypefun is the type of the function argument itself. Both types
default to name if they are the empty string or are not provided.
If name is already declared an error is thrown.
body is a C code fragment that converts a Tcl_Obj* into
a C value which is stored in a helper variable in the underlying
function.
body is called inside its own code block to isolate
local variables, and the following items are in scope:
- interp
- A variable of type Tcl_Interp* which is the interpreter the code is
running in.
- @@
- A placeholder for an expression that evaluates to the Tcl_Obj* to
convert.
- @A
- A placeholder for the name of the variable to store the converted argument
into.
- As examples, here are the definitions of two standard argument types:
argtype int {
if (Tcl_GetIntFromObj(interp, @@, &@A) != TCL_OK) return TCL_ERROR;
}
argtype float {
double t;
if (Tcl_GetDoubleFromObj(interp, @@, &t) != TCL_OK) return TCL_ERROR;
@A = (float) t;
}
- ::critcl::argtype name = origname
- This form of the argtype command declares name as an alias
of argument type origname, which has to be defined already. If this
is not the case an error is thrown.
- ::critcl::argtypesupport name code
?guard?
- This command defines a C code fragment for the already defined argument
type name which is inserted before all functions using that type.
Its purpose is the definition of any supporting C types needed by the
argument type. If the type is used by many functions the system ensures
that only the first of the multiple insertions of the code fragment is
active, and the others disabled. The guard identifier is normally derived
from name, but can also be set explicitly, via guard. This
latter allows different custom types to share a common support structure
without having to perform their own guarding.
- ::critcl::argtyperelease name code
- This command defines a C code fragment for the already defined argument
type name which is inserted whenever the worker function of a
critcl::cproc returns to the shim. It is the responsibility of this
fragment to unconditionally release any resources the
critcl::argtype conversion code allocated. An example of this are
the variadic types for the support of the special, variadic
args argument to critcl::cproc's. They allocate a C array
for the collected arguments which has to be released when the worker
returns. This command defines the C code for doing that.
CriTcl can be used in three different modes of operation, called
- [1]
- Compile & Run, and
- [2]
- Generate Package
- [3]
- Generate TEA Package
Compile & Run was the original mode and is the default
for critcl_pkg. Collects the C fragments from the Critcl
script, builds them as needed, and caches the results to improve load
times later.
The second mode, Generate Package, was introduced to enable
the creation of (prebuilt) deliverable packages which do not depend on the
existence of a build system, i.e. C compiler, on the target machine. This
was originally done through the experimental Critbind tool, and is
now handled by the CriTcl Application, also named critcl.
Newly introduced with Critcl version 3 is Generate TEA
Package. This mode constructs a directory hierarchy from the package
which can later be built like a regular TEA package, i.e. using
.../configure --prefix ...
make all isntall
Regarding the caching of results please read the section about the
Result Cache fore more details.
The default behaviour of critcl, the package is to defer the compilation,
linking, and loading of any C code as much as possible, given that this is an
expensive operation, mainly in the time required. In other words, the C code
embedded into a ".critcl" file is built only when the first C
command or procedure it provides is invoked. This part of the system uses
standard functionality built into the Tcl core, i.e. the auto_index
variable to map from commands to scripts providing them and the unknown
command using this information when the command is needed.
A limitation of this behaviour is that it is not possible
to just use info commands check for the existence of a critcl defined
command. It is also necessary to search in the auto_index array, in
case it has not been build yet.
This behaviour can be changed by using the control command
critcl::load. When invoked, the building, including loading of the
result, is forced. After this command has been invoked for a
".critcl" file further definition of C code in this file is
not allowed any longer.
Each ".critcl" file is backed by a single private
".c" file containing that code, plus the boilerplate
necessary for its compilation and linking as a single shared library.
The Embedded C Code fragments appear in that file in the
exact same order they were defined in the ".critcl" file,
with one exception. The C code provided via critcl::cinit is put
after all other fragments. In other words all fragments have access to the
symbols defined by earlier fragments, and the critcl::cinit fragment
has access to all, regardless of its placement in the
".critcl" file.
Note: A limitation of the current system is the near
impossibility of C level access between different critcl-based packages. The
issue is not the necessity of writing and sharing the proper extern
statements, but that the management (export and import) of package-specific
stubs-tables is not supported. This means that dependent parts have to be
forcibly loaded before their user, with all that entails. See section
Runtime Behaviour for the relevant critcl limitation, and remember
that many older platforms do not support the necessary resolution of
symbols, the reason why stubs were invented for Tcl in the first place.
The compilation of C code is time-consuming critcl not only defers it as
much as possible, as described in section Runtime Behaviour, but also
caches the results.
This means that on the first use of a ".critcl"
file "FOO.tcl" the resulting object file and shared library
are saved into the cache, and on future uses of the same file reused, i.e.
loaded directly without requiring compilation, provided that the contents of
"FOO.tcl" did not change.
The change detection is based MD5 hashes. A single hash is
computed for each ".critcl" file, based on hashes for all C
code fragments and configuration options, i.e. everything which affects the
resulting binary.
As long as the input file doesn't change as per the hash a
previously built shared library found in the cache is reused, bypassing the
compilation and link stages.
The command to manage the cache are found in section Result
Cache Management. Note however that they are useful only to tools based
on the package, like the CriTcl Application. Package writers have no
need of them.
As a last note, the default directory for the cache is chosen
based on the chosen build target. This means that the cache can be put on a
shared (network) filesystem without having to fear interference between
machines of different architectures.
The audience of this section are developers wishing to understand and possibly
modify the internals of critcl package and application. Package writers can
skip this section.
It explains how the preloading of external libraries is
realized.
Whenever a package declares libraries for preloading critcl will
build a supporting shared library providing a Tcl package named
"preload". This package is not distributed separately, but as part
of the package requiring the preload functionality. This support package
exports a single Tcl command
- ::preload library
- which is invoked once per libraries to preload, with the absolute path of
that library. The command then loads the library.
On windows the command will further use the Tcl command
::critcl::runtime::precopy to copy the library to the
disk, should its path be in a virtual filesystem which doesn't directly
support the loading of a shared library from it.
The command ::critcl::runtime::precopy is provided by the
file "critcl-rt.tcl" in the generated package, as is the
command ::critcl::runtime::loadlib which generates the ifneeded
script expected by Tcl's package management. This generated ifneeded
script contains the invocations of ::preload.
The C code for the supporting library is found in the file
"critcl_c/preload.c", which is part of the critcl
package.
The Tcl code for the supporting runtime
"critcl-rt.tcl" is found in the file
"runtime.tcl", which is part of the critcl::app
package.
The audience of this section are developers wishing to understand and possibly
modify the internals of critcl package and application. Package writers can
skip this section.
It explains the syntax of configuration files and the
configuration keys used by critcl to configure its build backend,
i.e. how this part of the system accesses compiler, linker, etc.
It is recommended to open the file containing the standard
configurations ("path/to/critcl/Config") in the editor of
your choice when reading this section of the documentation, using it as an
extended set of examples going beyond the simple defaults shown here.
First, the keys and the meaning of their values, plus examples
drawn from the standard configurations distributed with the package. Note
that when writing a custom configuration it is not necessary to specify all
the keys listed below, but only those whose default values are wrong or
insufficient for the platform in question.
- version
- The command to print the compiler version number. Defaults to
- compile
- The command to compile a single C source file to an object file. Defaults
to
- debug_memory
- The list of flags for the compiler to enable memory debugging in Tcl.
Defaults to
- debug_symbols
- The list of flags for the compiler to add symbols to the object files and
the resulting library. Defaults to
- include
- The compiler flag to add an include directory. Defaults to
- tclstubs
- The compiler flag to set USE_TCL_STUBS. Defaults to
- tkstubs
- The compiler flag to set USE_TK_STUBS. Defaults to
- threadflags
- The list of compiler flags to enable a threaded build. Defaults to
-DUSE_THREAD_ALLOC=1 -D_REENTRANT=1 -D_THREAD_SAFE=1
-DHAVE_PTHREAD_ATTR_SETSTACKSIZE=1 -DHAVE_READDIR_R=1
-DTCL_THREADS=1
- .
- noassert
- The compiler flag to turn off assertions in Tcl code. Defaults to
- optimize
- The compiler flag to specify optimization level. Defaults to
- output
- The compiler flags to set the output file of a compilation. Defaults
to
NOTE the use of Tcl commands and variables here. At the
time critcl uses the value of this key the value of the referenced
variable is substituted into it. The named variable is the only variable
whose value is defined for this substitution.
- object
- The file extension for object files on the platform. Defaults to
- preproc_define
- The command to preprocess a C source file without compiling it, but
leaving #define's in the output. Defaults to
- preproc_enum
- See preproc_define, except that #define's are not left in the
output. Defaults to
- link
- The command to link one or more object files and create a shared library.
Defaults to
- link_preload
- The list of linker flags to use when dependent libraries are pre-loaded.
Defaults to
--unresolved-symbols=ignore-in-shared-libs
- strip
- The flag to tell the linker to strip symbols from the shared library.
Defaults to
- ldoutput
- Like output, but for the linker. Defaults to the value of
output.
- link_debug
- The list of linker flags needed to build a shared library with symbols.
Defaults to the empty string. One platform requiring this are all variants
of Windows, which uses
-debug:full -debugtype:cv
- link_release
- The list of linker flags needed to build a shared library without symbols,
i.e. a regular build. Defaults to the empty string. One platform requiring
this are all variants of Windows, which uses
-release -opt:ref -opt:icf,3 -ws:aggressive
- sharedlibext
- The file extension for shared library files on the platform. Defaults
to
[info sharedlibextension]
- platform
- The identifier of the platform used in generated packages. Defaults
to
- target
- The presence of this key marks the configuration as a cross-compilation
target and the value is the actual platform identifier of the target. No
default.
The syntax expected from configuration files is governed by the
rules below. Again, it is recommended to open the file containing the
standard configurations ("path/to/critcl/Config") in the
editor of your choice when reading this section of the documentation, using
it as an extended set of examples for the syntax>
- [1]
- Each logical line of the configuration file consists of one or more
physical lines. In case of the latter the physical lines have to follow
each other and all but the first must be marked by a trailing backslash.
This is the same marker for continuation lines as used by Tcl
itself.
- [2]
- A (logical) line starting with the character "#" (modulo
whitespace) is a comment which runs until the end of the line, and is
otherwise ignored.
- [3]
- A (logical) line starting with the word "if" (modulo whitespace)
is interpreted as Tcl's if command and executed as such. I.e. this
command has to follow Tcl's syntax for the command, which may stretch
across multiple logical lines. The command will be run in a save
interpreter.
- [4]
- A (logical) line starting with the word "set" (modulo
whitespace) is interpreted as Tcl's set command and executed as
such. I.e. this command has to follow Tcl's syntax for the command, which
may stretch across multiple logical lines. The command will be run in a
save interpreter.
- [5]
- A line of the form "platform variable
value" defines a platform specific configuration variable and
value. The variable has to be the name of one of the configuration
keys listed earlier in this section, and the platform string
identifies the platform the setting is for. All settings with the same
identification string form the configuration block for this
platform.
- [6]
- A line of the special form "platform when
expression" marks the platform and all the settings in
its configuration block as conditional on the expression.
If the build platform is not a prefix of platform, nor
vice versa the whole block is ignored. Otherwise the expression
is evaluated via expr, in the same safe interpreter used to run
any set and if commands found in the configuration file
(see above).
If the expression evaluates to true this configuration
block is considered to be the build platform fo the host and chosen as
the default configuration. An large example of of this feature is the
handling of OS X found in the standard configuration file, where it
selects the architectures to build based on the version of the operating
system, the available SDK, etc. I.e. it chooses whether the output is
universal or not, and whether it is old-style (ix86 + ppc) versus
new-style (ix86 32+64) of universality.
- [7]
- A line of the special form "platform copy
sourceplatform" copies the configuration variables and values
currently defined in the configuration block for
sourceplatform to that of platform, overwriting existing
values, and creating missing ones. Variables of platform not
defined by by sourceplatform are not touched.
The copied values can be overridden later in the configuration
file. Multiple copy lines may exist for a platform and be
intermixed with normal configuration definitions. Only the last
definition of a variable is used.
- [8]
- At last, a line of the form "variable value"
defines a default configuration variable and value.
also wishing to interface with stubs as they are understood and used by critcl,
either by exporting their own stubs table to a critcl-based extension, or
importing a stubs table of a critcl-based extension into their own.
To this end we describe the stubs table information of a package
foo.
- [1]
- Note that the differences in the capitalization of "foo",
"Foo", "FOO", etc. below demonstrate how to capitalize
the actual package name in each context.
- [2]
- All relevant files must be available in a sub-directory
"foo" which can be found on the include search
paths.
- [3]
- The above directory may contain a file "foo.decls". If
present it is assumed to contain the external representation of the stubs
table the headers mentioned in the following items are based on.
critcl is able to use such a file to give the importing
package programmatic access to the imported API, for automatic code
generation and the like.
- [4]
- The above directory must contain a header file
"fooDecls.h". This file declares the exported API.
It is used by both exporting and importing packages. It is usually
generated and must contain (in the order specified):
- [1]
- the declarations of the exported, i.e. public, functions of
foo,
- [2]
- the declaration of structure "FooStubs" for the stub table,
- [3]
- the C preprocessor macros which route the invocations of the public
functions through the stubs table.
These macros must be defined if, and only if, the C
preprocessor macro USE_FOO_STUBS is defined. Package foo does not
define this macro, as it is allowed to use the exported functions
directly. All importing packages however must define this macro, to
ensure that they do not use any of the exported functions
directly, but only through the stubs table.
- [4]
- If the exported functions need additional types for their proper
declaration then these types should be put into a separate header file (of
arbitrary name) and "fooDecls.h" should contain an
#include directive to this header at the top.
A very reduced, yet also complete example, from a package for
low-level random number generator functions can be found at the end of this
section.
- [5]
- The above directory must contain a header file
"fooStubLib.h". This file defines everything
needed to use the API of foo. Consequently it is used only by
importing packages. It is usually generated and must contain (in the order
specified):
- [1]
- An #include directive for "tcl.h", with USE_TCL_STUBS
surely defined.
- [2]
- An #include directive for "fooDecls.h", with
USE_FOO_STUBS surely defined.
- [3]
- A definition of the stubs table variable, i.e.
const FooStubs* fooStubsPtr;
- [4]
- A definition of the stubs initializer function, like
char *
Foo_InitStubs(Tcl_Interp *interp, CONST char *version, int exact)
{
/*
* Boiler plate C code initalizing the stubs table variable,
* i.e. "fooStubsPtr".
*/
CONST char *actualVersion;
actualVersion = Tcl_PkgRequireEx(interp, "foo", version,
exact, (ClientData *) &fooStubsPtr);
if (!actualVersion) {
return NULL;
}
if (!fooStubsPtr) {
Tcl_SetResult(interp,
"This implementation of Foo does not support stubs",
TCL_STATIC);
return NULL;
}
return (char*) actualVersion;
}
- This header file must be included by an importing package exactly
once, so that it contains only one definition of both stubs table and
stubs initializer function.
The importing package's initialization function must further
contain a statement like
if (!Foo_InitStubs (ip, "1", 0)) {
return TCL_ERROR;
}
- which invokes foo's stubs initializer function to set the local
stub table up.
For a complete example of such a header file see below, at the
end of this section.
- [6]
- The last item above, about "fooStubLib.h" differs
from the regular stub stable system used by Tcl. The regular system
assumes that a static library "libfoostub.a" was
installed by package foo, and links it.
IMVHO critcl's approach is simpler, using only header
files found in a single location, vs. header files and static library
found in multiple, different locations.
A second simplification is that we avoid having to extend
critcl's compiler backend with settings for the creation of static
libraries.
Below is a complete set of example header files, reduced, yet
still complete, from a package for low-level random number generator
functions:
- "rngDecls.h":
#ifndef rng_DECLS_H
#define rng_DECLS_H
#include <tcl.h>
/*
* Exported function declarations:
*/
/* 0 */
EXTERN void rng_bernoulli(double p, int*v);
typedef struct RngStubs {
int magic;
const struct RngStubHooks *hooks;
void (*rng_bernoulli) (double p, int*v); /* 0 */
} RngStubs;
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
extern const RngStubs *rngStubsPtr;
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#if defined(USE_RNG_STUBS)
/*
* Inline function declarations:
*/
#define rng_bernoulli (rngStubsPtr->rng_bernoulli) /* 0 */
#endif /* defined(USE_RNG_STUBS) */
#endif /* rng_DECLS_H */
- "rngStubLib.h":
/*
* rngStubLib.c --
*
* Stub object that will be statically linked into extensions that wish
* to access rng.
*/
#ifndef USE_TCL_STUBS
#define USE_TCL_STUBS
#endif
#undef USE_TCL_STUB_PROCS
#include <tcl.h>
#ifndef USE_RNG_STUBS
#define USE_RNG_STUBS
#endif
#undef USE_RNG_STUB_PROCS
#include "rngDecls.h"
/*
* Ensure that Rng_InitStubs is built as an exported symbol. The other stub
* functions should be built as non-exported symbols.
*/
#undef TCL_STORAGE_CLASS
#define TCL_STORAGE_CLASS DLLEXPORT
const RngStubs* rngStubsPtr;
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* Rng_InitStubs --
*
* Checks that the correct version of Rng is loaded and that it
* supports stubs. It then initialises the stub table pointers.
*
* Results:
* The actual version of Rng that satisfies the request, or
* NULL to indicate that an error occurred.
*
* Side effects:
* Sets the stub table pointers.
*
*----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifdef Rng_InitStubs
#undef Rng_InitStubs
#endif
char *
Rng_InitStubs(Tcl_Interp *interp, CONST char *version, int exact)
{
CONST char *actualVersion;
actualVersion = Tcl_PkgRequireEx(interp, "rng", version,
exact, (ClientData *) &rngStubsPtr);
if (!actualVersion) {
return NULL;
}
if (!rngStubsPtr) {
Tcl_SetResult(interp,
"This implementation of Rng does not support stubs",
TCL_STATIC);
return NULL;
}
return (char*) actualVersion;
}
See section "Embedding C" in Using CriTcl.
The latest changes are found at the top.
- [1]
- Attention: While the overall version (of the bundle) moves to
3.1.18.1 the versions of packages critcl and critcl::app are
unchanged.
- [2]
- Bugfix Generally removed a number of 8.5-isms which slipped into
3.1.18, breaking ability to use it with Tcl 8.4.
- [3]
- Bugfix Corrected broken build.tcl uninstall.
- [4]
- Bugfix Package critcl::class bumped to version 1.1.1. Fixed
partial template substitution breaking compilation of the generated
code.
- [1]
- Feature (Developer support). Merged pull request #96 from
sebres/main-direct-invoke. Enables direct invokation of the
"main.tcl" file for starkits from within a dev checkout,
i.e. outside of a starkit, or starpack.
- [2]
- Feature. Added channel types to the set of builtin argument and result
types. The argument types are for simple channel access, access requiring
unshared channels, and taking the channel fully into the C level, away
from Tcl. The result type comes in variants for newly created channels,
known channels, and to return taken channels back to Tcl. The first will
register the returned value in the interpreter, the second assumes that it
already is.
- [3]
- Bugfix. Issue #96. Reworked the documentation around the argument type
Tcl_Interp* to make its special status more visible, explain uses,
and call it out from result types where its use will be necessary or at
least useful.
- [4]
- Feature. Package critcl::class bumped to version 1.1. Extended with
the ability to create a C API for classes, and the ability to disable the
generation of the Tcl API.
- [5]
- Bugfix. Merged pull request #99 from pooryorick/master. Fixes to the
target directory calculations done by the install code.
- [6]
- Merged pull request #94 from andreas-kupries/documentation. A larger
documentation cleanup. The main work was done by pooryorick, followed by
tweaks done by myself.
- [7]
- Extended the test suite with lots of cases based on the examples for the
various generator packages. IOW the new test cases replicate/encapsulate
the examples and demonstrate that the packages used by the examples
generate working code.
- [8]
- Bugfix. Issue #95. Changed the field critcl_bytes.s to unsigned
char* to match Tcl's type. Further constified the field to make clear
that read-only usage is the common case for it.
- [9]
- Bugfix/Feature. Package critcl::cutil bumped to version 0.2. Fixed
missing inclusion of header "string.h" in
"critcl_alloc.h", needed for memcpy in macro
STREP. Added macros ALLOC_PLUS and STRDUP. Moved
documentation of STREP... macros into proper place (alloc section,
not assert).
- [10]
- Merged pull request #83 from apnadkarni/vc-fixes. Removed deprecated -Gs
for MSVC builds, and other Windows fixups.
- [11]
- Feature. Package critcl::iassoc bumped to version 1.1. Refactored
internals to generate an include header for use by .c files. This now
matches what other generator packages do. The template file is inlined and
removed.
- [12]
- Merged pull request #82 from gahr/home-symlink Modified tests to handle
possibility of $HOME a symlink.
- [13]
- Merged pull request #81 from gahr/test-not-installed Modified test support
to find uninstalled critcl packages when running tests. Handles all but
critcl::md5.
- [14]
- Merged pull request #85 from snoe925/issue-84 to fix Issue #84 breaking
installation on OSX.
- [15]
- Merged pull request #87 from apnadkarni/tea-fixes to fix Issue #86, broken
-tea option, generating an incomplete package.
- [16]
- Feature. New package critcl::callback providing C-level functions
and data structures to manage callbacks from C to Tcl.
- [17]
- Feature. Package critcl::literals bumped to version 1.3. Added mode
+list enabling the conversion of multiple literals into a list of
their strings.
- [18]
- Feature. Package critcl::enum bumped to version 1.1. Added basic
mode handling, supporting tcl (default) and +list (extension
enabling the conversion of multiple enum values into a list of their
strings).
- [19]
- Feature. Package critcl::emap bumped to version 1.2. Extended
existing mode handling with +list extension enabling the conversion
of multiple emap values into a list of their strings.
- [20]
- Feature. Extended the set of available types by applying a few range
restrictions to the scalar types (int, long, wideint,
double, float).
Example: int > 0 is now a viable type name.
This is actually more limited than the description might let
you believe.
See the package reference for the details.
- [1]
- Extension: Allow duplicate arg- and result-type definitions if they are
fully identical.
- [2]
- Bugfix. The application mishandled the possibility of identical-named
critcl::tsources. Possible because critcl::tsources can be
in subdirectories, a structure which is not retained in the
assembled package, causing such files to overwrite each other and at least
one lost. Fixed by adding a serial number to the file names in the
assembled package.
- [3]
- Bugfix in the static scanner which made it loose requirement information.
Further added code to generally cleanup results at the end (removal of
duplicates, mainly).
- [4]
- Bugfix: Fixed issue #76. Support installation directories which are not in
the auto_path. Without the patch the installed critcl will
not find its own packages and fail. Thank you to Simon Bachmann
[https://github.com/lupylucke] for the report and patch, and then his
patience with me to getting to actually apply it.
- [5]
- Bugfix: Fixed issue #75. Extended critcl::include to now take
multiple paths.
- [6]
- Added new compatibility package lmap84.
- [7]
- Fixed typos in various documentation files.
- [8]
- Fixed bug introduced by commit 86f415dd30 (3.1.16 release). The separation
of critcl::ccode into user and work layers means that location
retrieval has to go one more level up to find the user location.
- [9]
- New supporting package critcl::cutil. Provides common C level
facilities useful to packages (assertions, tracing, memory allocation
shorthands).
- [10]
- Modified package critcl to make use of the new tracing facilities
to provide tracing of arguments and results for critcl::ccommand
and critcl::cproc invokations.
- [11]
- Modified packages critcl and critcl::class to provide better
function names for (class) method tracing. Bumped package
critcl::class to version 1.0.7.
- [12]
- Extended the support package critcl::literals with limited
configurability. It is now able to generate code for C-level access to the
pool without Tcl types (Mode c). The previously existing
functionality is accesssible under mode tcl, which also is the
default. Both modes can be used together.
- [13]
- Extended the support package critcl::emap with limited
configurability. It is now able to generate code for C-level access to the
mapping without Tcl types (Mode c). The previously existing
functionality is accessible under mode tcl, which also is the
default. Both modes can be used together.
- [1]
- New feature. Extended critcl::cproc's argument handling to allow
arbitrary mixing of required and optional arguments.
- [2]
- New feature. Potential Incompatibility.
Extended critcl::cproc's argument handling to treat an
argument args as variadic if it is the last argument of the
procedure.
- [3]
- New feature. Added two introspection commands, critcl::has-argtype
and critcl::has-resulttype. These enable a user to test if a
specific (named) type conversion is implemented or not.
- [4]
- Added new result type Tcl_Obj*0, with alias object0. The
difference to Tcl_Obj* is in the reference counting.
- [5]
- Extended the command critcl::argtypesupport with new optional
argument through which to explicitly specify the identifier for guarding
against multiple definitions.
- [6]
- Bugfix: Fixed problem with the implementation of issue #54 (See 3.1.14).
Always create the secondary log file. Otherwise end-of-log handling may
break, unconditionally assuming its existence.
- [7]
- Bugfix: Fixed problem with the internal change to the hook
HandleDeclAfterBuild. Corrected the forgotten
critcl::cconst.
- [8]
- Debugging aid: Added comment holding the name of the result type when
emitting result conversions.
- [9]
- Bugfix: Fixed issue #60. Unbundled the package directories containing
multiple packages. All directories under "lib/" now
contain exactly one package.
- [10]
- Bugfix: Fixed issue #62, a few dict exists commands operating on a
fixed string instead of a variable.
- [11]
- Bugfix: Fixed issue #56. Release builders are reminded to run the
tests.
- [12]
- Bugfix: Fixed issue #55. For FreeBSD critcl's platform package now
identifies the Kernel ABI version. Initialization of the cache directory
now also uses platform::identify for the default path, instead of
platform::generic.
- [13]
- Bugfix: Fixed issue #58. Simplified the setup and use of md5. Critcl now
makes use of its own package for md5, using itself to built it. There is
no chicken/egg problem with this as the -pkg mode used for this
does not use md5. That is limited to mode compile & run.
- [1]
- Fixed version number bogosity with 3.1.14.
- [1]
- Fixed issue #36. Added message to target all of the Makefile
generated for TEA mode. Additionally tweaked other parts of the output to
be less noisy.
- [2]
- Accepted request implied in issue #54. Unconditionally save the
compiler/linker build log into key log of the dictionary returned
by cresults, and save a copy of only the execution output in the
new key exl ("execution log").
- [3]
- Fixed issue #53. Clarified the documentation of commands
critcl::load and critcl::failed with regard to their results
and the throwing of errors (does not happen).
- [4]
- Fixed issue #48. Modified mode "compile & run" to allow new
declarations in a file, after it was build, instead of erroring out. The
new decls are build when needed. Mode "precompile" is unchanged
and will continue to trap the situation.
- [5]
- Fixed issue #52. Updated the local Tcl/Tk headers to 8.4.20, 8.5.13, and
8.6.4.
- [6]
- Fixed issue #45. New feature command critcl::cconst.
- [7]
- critcl::util: New command locate to find a file across a set
of paths, and report an error when not found. This is for use in
autoconf-like header-searches and similar configuration tests.
- [8]
- Modified 'AbortWhenCalledAfterBuild' to dump the entire stack (info
frame!). This should make it easier to determine the location of the
troubling declaration.
- [1]
- Merged PR #43. Fixed bug loading adjunct Tcl sources.
- [2]
- Fixes in documentation and generated code of package
"critcl::enum". Bumped to version 1.0.1.
- [3]
- Fixes in documentation of package "critcl::bitmap".
- [4]
- New package "critcl::emap". In essence a variant or cross of
"critcl::bitmap" with behaviour like
"critcl::enum".
- [5]
- Merged PR #49. Fixed documentation typo.
- [6]
- Merged PR #46. Fixed documentation typo.
- [7]
- Merged PR #47. Fixes to test results to match the accumulated code
changes. Also made portable across Tcl versions (varying error
syntax).
- [8]
- New predefined argument- and result-type "wideint" mapping to
Tcl_WideInt.
- [9]
- New predefined argument-type "bytes" mapping to tuple of
byte-array data and length. Note: The existing "bytearray" type
(and its aliases) was left untouched, to keep backward compatibility.
- [10]
- Modified the internal interface between the Tcl shim and C function
underneath "critcl::cproc" with respect to the handling of
optional arguments. An optional argument "X" now induces the use
of two C arguments, "X" and "has_X". The new argument
"has_X" is of boolean (int) type. It is set to true when X is
set, and set to false when X has the default value. C code which cares
about knowing if the argument is default or not is now able to check that
quickly, without having to code the default value inside. NOTE: This
change is visible in the output of the advanced commands
"argcnames", "argcsignature", "argvardecls",
and "argconversion".
- [11]
- Fixed issue #50 and documented the availability of variable
"interp" (type Tcl_Interp*) within "critcl::cinit" C
code fragments. Note that while the old, undocumented name of the
variable, "ip", is still usable, it is deprecated. It will be
fully removed in two releases, i.e. for release 3.1.15. The variable name
was changed to be consistent with other code environments.
- [12]
- Fixed issue #51. Disabled the generation of #line directives for
"critcl::config lines 0" coming from template files, or code
generated with them before the final value of this setting was known.
- [13]
- Fixed issue with handling of namespaced package names in
"critcl::iassoc". Equivalent to a bug in
"critcl::class" fixed for critcl 3.1.1, critcl::class 1.0.1.
Note: "literals", "enum", "emap", and
"bitmap" do not require a fix as they are all built on top of
"iassoc".
- [1]
- Fixed issue 42. Clear ::errorInfo immediately after startup to prevent
leakage of irrelevant (caught) errors into our script and confusing the
usage code.
- [2]
- Fixed issue 40. Keep the order of libraries, and allow duplicates. Both
are things which are occasionally required for proper linking.
- [3]
- Extended the utility package critcl::literals to declare a cproc
result-type for a pool.
Further fixed the generated header to handle multiple
inclusion.
Bumped version to 1.1.
- [4]
- Fixed issue with utility package critcl::bitmap.
Fixed the generated header to handle multiple inclusion.
Bumped version to 1.0.1.
- [5]
- Created new utility package critcl::enum for the quick and easy
setup and use of mappings between C values and Tcl strings. Built on top
of critcl::literals.
- [6]
- Added examples demonstrating the use of the utility packages
critcl::literals, critcl::bitmap, and
critcl::enum
- [1]
- Fixed issue #37, via pull request #38, with thanks to Jos DeCoster.
Information was stored into the v::delproc and v::clientdata arrays using
a different key than when retrieving the same information, thus failing
the latter.
- [2]
- New convenience command critcl::include for easy inclusion of
headers and other C files.
- [3]
- New command critcl::make to generate a local header of other C
files for use by other parts of a package through inclusion.
- [4]
- New utility package critcl::literals for quick and easy setup of
and access to pools of fixed Tcl_Obj* strings. Built on top of
critcl::iassoc.
- [5]
- New utility package critcl::bitmap for quick and easy setup and use
of mappings between C bitsets and Tcl lists whose string elements
represent that set. Built on top of critcl::iassoc.
- [1]
- Fixed code version numbering forgotten with 3.1.9.
- [2]
- Fixed issue #35. In package mode (-pkg) the object cache directory is
unique to the process, thus we do not need content-hashing to generate
unique file names. A simple counter is sufficient and much faster.
Note that mode "compile & run" is not as blessed
and still uses content-hasing with md5 to ensure unique file names in
its per-user object cache.
- [3]
- Fixed issue where the ccommand forgot to use its body as input for
the UUID generation. Thus ignoring changes to it in mode compile &
run, and not rebuilding a library for changed sources. Bug and fix
reported by Peter Spjuth.
- [1]
- Fixed issue #27. Added missing platform definitions for various alternate
linux and OS X targets.
- [2]
- Fixed issue #28. Added missing -mXX flags for linking at the
linux-{32,64}-* targets.
- [3]
- Fixed issue #29. Replaced the use of raw "cheaders" information
in the processing of "cdefines" with the proper include
directives derived from it.
- [4]
- Fixed the issue behind rejected pull request #30 by Andrew Shadura.
Dynamically extract the stubs variable declarations from the Tcl header
files and generate matching variable definitions for use in the package
code. The generated code will now be always consistent with the headers,
even when critcl's own copy of them is replaced by system headers.
- [5]
- Fixed issue #31. Accepted patch by Andrew Shadura, with changes
(comments), for easier integration of critcl with OS package systems,
replacing critcl's copies of Tcl headers with their own.
- [6]
- Fixed issue #32. Merged pull request by Andrew Shadura. Various typos in
documentation and comments.
- [7]
- Fixed issue #34. Handle files starting with a dot better.
- [1]
- Fixed issue with package indices generated for Tcl 8.4. Join the list of
commands with semi-colon, not newline.
- [2]
- Fixed issue #26 which brought up use-cases I had forgotten to consider
while fixing bug #21 (see critcl 3.1.6).
- [1]
- Fixed issue #24. Extract and unconditionally display compiler warnings
found in the build log. Prevents users from missing warnings which, while
not causing the build to fail, may still indicate problems.
- [2]
- New feature. Output hook. All non-messaging user output is now routed
through the command critcl::print, and users are allowed to
override it when using the critcl application-as-package.
- [3]
- New feature, by Ashok P. Nadkarni. Platform configurations can inherit
values from configurations defined before them.
- [1]
- Fixed issue #21. While the multi-definition of the stub-table pointer
variables was ok with for all the C linkers seen so far C++ linkers did
not like this at all. Reworked the code to ensure that this set of
variables is generated only once, in the wrapper around all the pieces to
assemble.
- [2]
- Fixed issue #22, the handling of the command identifier arguments of
critcl::ccommand, critcl::cproc, and critcl::cdata.
We now properly allow any Tcl identifier and generate proper internal C
identifiers from them.
As part of this the signature of command critcl::name2c
changed. The command now delivers a list of four values instead of
three. The new value was added at the end.
Further adapted the implementation of package
critcl::class, a user of critcl::name2c. This package is
now at version 1.0.6 and requires critcl 3.1.6
Lastly fixed the mis-handling of option -cname in
critcl::ccommand, and critcl::cproc.
- [3]
- Fixed issue #23.
- [1]
- Fixed issue #19. Made the regular expression extracting the MSVC version
number more general to make it work on german language systems. This may
have to be revisited in the future, for other Windows locales.
- [2]
- Fixed issue #20. Made option -tea work on windows, at least in a unix
emulation environment like msys/mingw.
- [1]
- Bugfix in package critcl::class. Generate a dummy field in the
class structure if the class has no class variables. Without this change
the structure would be empty, and a number of compilers are not able to
handle such a type.
- [2]
- Fixed a typo which broke the win64 configuration.
- [3]
- Fixed issue #16, a typo in the documentation of command
critcl::class.
- [1]
- Enhancement. In detail:
- [2]
- Added new argument type "pstring", for "Pascal
String", a counted string, i.e. a combination of string pointer and
string length.
- [3]
- Added new methods critcl::argtypesupport and
::critcl::argsupport to define and use additional supporting code
for an argument type, here used by "pstring" above to define the
necessary structure.
- [4]
- Semi-bugfixes in the packages critcl::class and
critcl::iassoc. Pragmas for the AS meta data scanner to ensure that
the template files are made part of the package. Versions bumped to 1.0.4
and 1.0.1 respectively.
- [1]
- Enhancement. In detail:
- [2]
- Extended critcl::cproc to be able to handle optional arguments, in
a limited way. This is automatically available to critcl::class
cproc-based methods as well.
- [3]
- Bugfix in lassign emulation for Tcl 8.4. Properly set unused
variables to the empty string. Bumped version of emulation package
lassign84 to 1.0.1.
- [1]
- Bugfixes all around. In detail:
- [2]
- Fixed the generation of wrong#args errors for critcl::cproc and
derived code (critcl::class cproc-based methods). Use NULL if there
are no arguments, and take the offset into account.
- [3]
- Fixed the handling of package names by critcl::class. Forgot that
they may contain namespace separators. Bumped to version 1.0.1.
- [4]
- Extended a critcl::class generated error message in instance
creation for clarity. Bumped to version 1.0.2.
- [1]
- Added a new higher-level package critcl::iassoc.
This package simplifies the creation of code associating data
with an interpreter via Tcl's Tcl_(Get|Set)AssocData() APIs. The
user can concentrate on his data while all the necessary boilerplate C
code to support this is generated by the package.
This package uses several of the new features which were added
to the core critcl package, see below.
- [2]
- Added the higher-level package critcl::class.
This package simplifies the creation of C level objects with
class and instance commands. The user can write a class definition with
class- and instance-variables and -methods similar to a TclOO class,
with all the necessary boilerplate C code to support this generated by
the package.
This package uses several of the new features which were added
to the core critcl package, see below.
- [3]
- Extended the API for handling TEApot metadata. Added the command
critcl::meta? to query the stored information. Main use currently
envisioned is retrieval of the current package's name by utility commands,
for use in constructed names. This particular information is always
available due to the static scan of the package file on execution of the
first critcl command.
The new packages critcl::iassoc and
critcl::class (see above) are users of this command.
- [4]
- Extended the API with a command, critcl::name2c, exposing the
process of converting a Tcl name into base name, namespace, and C
namespace. This enables higher-level code generators to generate the same
type of C identifiers as critcl itself.
The new package critcl::class (see above) is a user of
this command.
- [5]
- Extended the API with a command, critcl::source, executing critcl
commands found in a separate file in the context of the current file. This
enables easier management of larger bodies of code as it allows the user
to split such up into easier to digest smaller chunks without causing the
generation of multiple packages.
- [6]
- Related to the previous item, extended the API with commands to divert
collection of generated C code into memory. This makes it easier to use
the commands for embedded C code in higher-level code generators.
See the section Advanced: Diversions for details of the
provided commands.
The new package critcl::class (see above) is a user of
these facilities.
- [7]
- Extended the API with commands helping developers with the generation of
proper C #line directives. This allows higher-level code generators
to generate and insert their own directives, ensuring that compile errors
in their code are properly attributed.
See the section Advanced: Location management for
details of the provided commands.
The new packages critcl::iassoc and
critcl::class (see above) are users of these facilities.
- [8]
- Extended the API with commands giving users the ability to define custom
argument and result types for ::critcl::cproc.
See the section Advanced: Extending cproc for details
of the provided commands.
- [1]
- Fixed the code generated by critcl::c++command. The emitted code
handed a non-static string table to Tcl_GetIndexFromObj, in
violation of the contract, which requires the table to have a fixed
address. This was a memory smash waiting to happen. Thanks to Brian
Griffin for alrerting us to the general problem.
- [1]
- Fixed github issue 10. The critcl application now delivers a proper exit
code (1) on build failure, instead of always indicating success (status
0).
- [2]
- Fixed github issue 13. Handling of bufferoverflowU.lib for release builds
was inconsistent with handling for debug builds. It is now identically
handled (conditional) by both cases.
- [3]
- Documentation cleanup, mainly in the installation guide, and the README.md
shown by github
- [1]
- Fixed bug in the new code for #line pragmas triggered when specifying C
code without leading whitespace.
- [2]
- Extended the documentation to have manpages for the license, source
retrieval, installer, and developer's guides.
- [1]
- Fixed generation of the package's initname when the incoming code is read
from stdin and has no proper path.
- [2]
- Fixed github issue 11. Now using /LIBPATH instead of -L on Windows
(libinclude configuration setting).
- [3]
- Extended critcl to handle -l:path format of -l options. GNU ld 2.22+
handles this by searching for the path as is. Good when specifying static
libraries, as plain -l looks for shared libraries in preference over
static. critcl handles it now, as older GNU ld's do not understand it, nor
the various vendor-specific linkers.
- [4]
- Fixed github issue #12. Critcl now determines the version of MSVC in use
and uses it to switch between various link debug options. Simplified the
handling of bufferoverflowU.lib also, making use of the same mechanism and
collapsing the two configurations sections we had back into one.
- [5]
- Reworked the insertion of #line pragmas into the generated C code to avoid
limitations on the line number argument imposed by various compilers, and
be more accurate.
- [6]
- Modified argument processing. Option -libdir now also implies -L for its
argument.
- [7]
- Extended handling of option -show (critcl::showconfig) to list the
path of the configuration file the data is coming from. Good for debugging
configuration processing.
- [8]
- Extended the build script with targets to regenerate the embedded
documentation, and diagrams, and to generate a release.
- [1]
- Fixed github issues 5 and 8, for the example build.tcl scripts. Working
around a missing variable ::errorInfo. It should always be present,
however there seem to be revisions of Tcl around which violate this
assumption.
- [1]
- Fixed issue in compile-and-run mode where commands put into the auto_index
are not found by Tcl's [unknown] command.
- [2]
- Fixed an array key mismatch breaking usage of client data and delete
function for procedure. Reported by Jos DeCoster, with patch.
- [3]
- Implemented a command line option -L, an equivalent of option
-I, just for library search paths.
- [4]
- Fixed github issues 5 and 8. Working around a missing variable
::errorInfo. It should always be present, however there seem to be
revisions of Tcl around which violate this assumption.
- [1]
- Bugfixes all around. In detail:
- [2]
- Fixed recording of Tcl version requirements. Keep package name and version
together, unbreaking generated meta data and generated package load
command.
- [3]
- Fixed the build scripts: When installing, or wrapping for TEA, generate
any missing directories
- [4]
- Modified the build scripts to properly exit the application when the
window of their GUI is closed through the (X) button.
- [5]
- Removed an 8.5-ism (open wb) which had slipped into the main build
script.
- [6]
- Modified the example build scripts to separate the output for the
different examples (and packages) by adding empty lines.
- [7]
- stack::c example bugfix: Include API declarations for use in the companion
files.
- [8]
- Extended the documentation: Noted the need for a working installation of a
C compiler.
- [9]
- Extended the Windows target definitions and code to handle the manifest
files used by modern MS development environments. Note that this code
handles both possibilities, environment using manifests, and (old(er))
environments without.
- [10]
- Extended the Windows 64bit target definitions and code to auto-detect the
need for the helper library "bufferoverflowU.lib" and
reconfigure the compile and link commands appropriately. We assume that
the library must be linked when present. This should be no harm if the
library is present, yet not needed. Just superfluous. We search for the
library in the paths specified by the environment variable LIB.
- [1]
- The command critcl::platform was deprecated in version 2.1,
superceded by critcl::targetplatform, yet kept for compatibility.
Now it has been removed.
- [2]
- The command critcl::compiled was kept with in version 2.1 with
semantics in contradiction to its, for compatibility. This contradiction
has been removed, changing the visible semantics of the command to be in
line with its name.
- [3]
- The change to version 3 became necessary because of the two incompatible
visible changes above.
- [4]
- Extended the application package with code handling a new option
-tea. Specifying this option invokes a special mode where critcl
generates a TEA package, i.e. wraps the input into a directory hierarchy
and support files which provide it TEA-lookalike buildsystem.
This new option, and -pkg, exclude each other. If both
are specified the last used option takes precedence.
The generated package directory hierarchy is mostly
self-contained, but not fully. It requires not only a working
installation of Tcl, but also working installations of the packages
md5 and cmdline. Both of these are provided by the
Tcllib bundle. Not required, but recommended to have installed
are any of the packages which can accelerate md5's operation, i.e.
cryptkit, tcllibc, or Trf.
- [5]
- Extended the critcl package with a new command critcl::scan taking
the path to a ".critcl" file, statically scanning it, and
returning license, version, a list of its companion files, list of
imported APIs, and list of developer-specified custom configuration
options. This data is the foundation for the TEA wrapping described above.
Note that this is a static scan. While the other build
modes can (must) execute the ".critcl" file and make
platform-specific decisions regarding the assembled C code, companion
files, etc. the TEA wrap mode is not in a position to make
platform-specific decisions. It has to wrap everything which might
conceivably be needed when actually building. Hence the static scan.
This has however its own set of problems, namely the inability to figure
out any dynamic construction of companion file paths, at least on its
own. Thus:
- [6]
- Extended the API used by critcl-based packages with the command
critcl::owns. While this command is ignored by the regular build
modes the static scanner described above takes its arguments as the names
of companion files which have to be wrapped into the TEA package and could
not be figured by the scanner otherwise, like because of dynamic paths to
critcl::tsources, critcl::csources, getting sourced
directly, or simply being adjunct datafiles.
- [7]
- Extended the API used by critcl-based packages with the command
critcl::api for the management of stubs tables, be it their use,
and/or declaration and export.
Please see section Stubs Table Management of the
critcl package documentation for details.
- [8]
- Extended the API used by critcl-based packages with the command
critcl::userconfig for the management of developer-specified custom
configuration options, be it their use and/or declaration.
Please see section Custom Build Configuration of the
critcl package documentation for details.
- [9]
- Extended the API used by critcl-based packages with the commands
critcl::description, critcl::summary,
critcl::subject, critcl::meta, and
critcl::buildrequirement for the declaration of TEApot meta data
for/about the package.
Please see section Package Meta Data of the
critcl package documentation for details.
- [1]
- Fixed bug where critcl::tsources interpreted relative paths as
relative to the current working directory instead of relative to the
".critcl" file using the command, as all other commands
of this type do.
- [2]
- Fixed internals, preventing information collected for multiple
".critcl" files to leak between them. Notably,
critcl::tk is not a global configuration option anymore.
- [3]
- Fixed the command critcl::license to be a null-operation in mode
"compile & run", instead of throwing an error.
- [4]
- Fixed the critcl application's interference with the "compile &
run" result cache in -pkg mode by having it use a wholly
separate (and by default transient) directory for that mode.
- [5]
- Fixed bug where changes to a ".critcl" file did not
result in a rebuild for mode "compile & run". All relevant
API commands now ensure UUID changes.
- [6]
- Fixed bug in the backend handling of critcl::debug where the
companion c-sources of a ".critcl" file were not compiled
with debug options, although the ".critcl" file was.
- [7]
- Fixed bug in critcl::debug which prevented recognition of mode
"all" when it was not the first argument to the command.
- [8]
- Fixed bug in "preload.c" preventing its compilation on
non-windows platforms.
- [9]
- Fixed long-standing bug in the handling of namespace qualifiers in the
command name argument of critcl::cproc and critcl::ccommand.
It is now possible to specify a fully qualified command name without
issues.
- [10]
- Extended/reworked critcl::tsources to be the canonical way of
declaring ".tcl" companion files even for mode
"compile & run".
- [11]
- Extended/reworked critcl::tsources to allow the use of a
".critcl" file as its own Tcl companion file.
- [12]
- Extended critcl::framework to internally check for OS X build
target, and to ignore the declaration if its not.
- [13]
- Extended critcl::failed to be callable more than once in a
".critcl" file. The first call forces the build, if it
was not done already, to get the result. Further calls return the cached
result of the first call.
- [14]
- Extended the handling of environment variable CC in the code determining
the compiler to use to deal with (i.e. remove) paths to the compiler,
compiler file extensions, and compiler options specified after the
compiler itself, leaving only the bare name of the compiler.
- [15]
- Extended the code handling the search for preloaded libraries to print the
paths it searched, making debugging of a search failure easier.
- [16]
- A new command critcl::tcl can be used to declare the version of Tcl
minimally needed to build and run the ".critcl" file and
package. Defaults to 8.4 if not declared. Extended critcl to have the
stubs and headers for all of Tcl 8.4, 8.5, and 8.6.
- [17]
- A new command critcl::load forces the build and load of a
".critcl" file. This is the official way for overriding
critcl's default lazy-build-&-load-on-demand scheme for mode
"compile & run".
Note that after using critcl::load /
critcl::failed in a ".critcl" file it is not
possible to use critcl commands in that file anymore. Doing so will
throw an error.
- [18]
- Extended the generation of '#line' pragmas to use info frame (if
available) to provide the C compiler with exact line numbers into the
".critcl" file for the reporting of warnings and
errors.
- [19]
- Extended critcl::check with logging to help with debugging
build-time checks of the environment, plus an additional optional argument
to provide labeling.
- [20]
- Added a new command critcl::checklink which not only tries to check
the environment via compiling the code, but also its linkability.
- [21]
- Added a new command critcl::msg for messaging, like command
critcl::error is for error reporting. Likewise this is a hook a
user of the package is allowed to override. The default implementation,
used by mode compile & run does nothing. The implementation for
mode generate package prints the message to stdout.
Envisioned use is for the reporting of results determined by
critcl::check and critcl::checklink during building, to
help with debugging when something goes wrong with a check.
- [22]
- Exposed the argument processing internals of critcl::proc for use
by advanced users. The new commands are
- [1]
- critcl::argnames
- [2]
- critcl::argcnames
- [3]
- critcl::argcsignature
- [4]
- critcl::argvardecls
- [5]
- critcl::argconversion
- Please see section Advanced Embedded C Code of the critcl
package documentation for details.
- [23]
- Extended the critcl package to intercept package provide and
record the file -> package name mapping. Plus other internal changes
now allow the use of namespaced package names while still using proper
path names and init function.
- [24]
- Dropped the unused commands critcl::optimize and
critcl::include.
- [25]
- Dropped -lib mode from the critcl application.
- [26]
- Dropped remnants of support for Tcl 8.3 and before.
Jean Claude Wippler, Steve Landers, Andreas Kupries
This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and
other problems. Please report them at
https://github.com/andreas-kupries/critcl/issues. Ideas for
enhancements you may have for either package, application, and/or the
documentation are also very welcome and should be reported at
https://github.com/andreas-kupries/critcl/issues as well.
C code, Embedded C Code, code generator, compile & run, compiler, dynamic
code generation, dynamic compilation, generate package, linker, on demand
compilation, on-the-fly compilation
Copyright (c) Jean-Claude Wippler
Copyright (c) Steve Landers
Copyright (c) 2011-2018 Andreas Kupries
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