Initial commit of OpenSPARC T2 design and verification files.
[OpenSPARC-T2-DV] / tools / perl-5.8.0 / lib / 5.8.0 / pod / perlxs.pod
CommitLineData
86530b38
AT
1=head1 NAME
2
3perlxs - XS language reference manual
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7=head2 Introduction
8
9XS is an interface description file format used to create an extension
10interface between Perl and C code (or a C library) which one wishes
11to use with Perl. The XS interface is combined with the library to
12create a new library which can then be either dynamically loaded
13or statically linked into perl. The XS interface description is
14written in the XS language and is the core component of the Perl
15extension interface.
16
17An B<XSUB> forms the basic unit of the XS interface. After compilation
18by the B<xsubpp> compiler, each XSUB amounts to a C function definition
19which will provide the glue between Perl calling conventions and C
20calling conventions.
21
22The glue code pulls the arguments from the Perl stack, converts these
23Perl values to the formats expected by a C function, call this C function,
24transfers the return values of the C function back to Perl.
25Return values here may be a conventional C return value or any C
26function arguments that may serve as output parameters. These return
27values may be passed back to Perl either by putting them on the
28Perl stack, or by modifying the arguments supplied from the Perl side.
29
30The above is a somewhat simplified view of what really happens. Since
31Perl allows more flexible calling conventions than C, XSUBs may do much
32more in practice, such as checking input parameters for validity,
33throwing exceptions (or returning undef/empty list) if the return value
34from the C function indicates failure, calling different C functions
35based on numbers and types of the arguments, providing an object-oriented
36interface, etc.
37
38Of course, one could write such glue code directly in C. However, this
39would be a tedious task, especially if one needs to write glue for
40multiple C functions, and/or one is not familiar enough with the Perl
41stack discipline and other such arcana. XS comes to the rescue here:
42instead of writing this glue C code in long-hand, one can write
43a more concise short-hand I<description> of what should be done by
44the glue, and let the XS compiler B<xsubpp> handle the rest.
45
46The XS language allows one to describe the mapping between how the C
47routine is used, and how the corresponding Perl routine is used. It
48also allows creation of Perl routines which are directly translated to
49C code and which are not related to a pre-existing C function. In cases
50when the C interface coincides with the Perl interface, the XSUB
51declaration is almost identical to a declaration of a C function (in K&R
52style). In such circumstances, there is another tool called C<h2xs>
53that is able to translate an entire C header file into a corresponding
54XS file that will provide glue to the functions/macros described in
55the header file.
56
57The XS compiler is called B<xsubpp>. This compiler creates
58the constructs necessary to let an XSUB manipulate Perl values, and
59creates the glue necessary to let Perl call the XSUB. The compiler
60uses B<typemaps> to determine how to map C function parameters
61and output values to Perl values and back. The default typemap
62(which comes with Perl) handles many common C types. A supplementary
63typemap may also be needed to handle any special structures and types
64for the library being linked.
65
66A file in XS format starts with a C language section which goes until the
67first C<MODULE =Z<>> directive. Other XS directives and XSUB definitions
68may follow this line. The "language" used in this part of the file
69is usually referred to as the XS language. B<xsubpp> recognizes and
70skips POD (see L<perlpod>) in both the C and XS language sections, which
71allows the XS file to contain embedded documentation.
72
73See L<perlxstut> for a tutorial on the whole extension creation process.
74
75Note: For some extensions, Dave Beazley's SWIG system may provide a
76significantly more convenient mechanism for creating the extension
77glue code. See http://www.swig.org/ for more information.
78
79=head2 On The Road
80
81Many of the examples which follow will concentrate on creating an interface
82between Perl and the ONC+ RPC bind library functions. The rpcb_gettime()
83function is used to demonstrate many features of the XS language. This
84function has two parameters; the first is an input parameter and the second
85is an output parameter. The function also returns a status value.
86
87 bool_t rpcb_gettime(const char *host, time_t *timep);
88
89From C this function will be called with the following
90statements.
91
92 #include <rpc/rpc.h>
93 bool_t status;
94 time_t timep;
95 status = rpcb_gettime( "localhost", &timep );
96
97If an XSUB is created to offer a direct translation between this function
98and Perl, then this XSUB will be used from Perl with the following code.
99The $status and $timep variables will contain the output of the function.
100
101 use RPC;
102 $status = rpcb_gettime( "localhost", $timep );
103
104The following XS file shows an XS subroutine, or XSUB, which
105demonstrates one possible interface to the rpcb_gettime()
106function. This XSUB represents a direct translation between
107C and Perl and so preserves the interface even from Perl.
108This XSUB will be invoked from Perl with the usage shown
109above. Note that the first three #include statements, for
110C<EXTERN.h>, C<perl.h>, and C<XSUB.h>, will always be present at the
111beginning of an XS file. This approach and others will be
112expanded later in this document.
113
114 #include "EXTERN.h"
115 #include "perl.h"
116 #include "XSUB.h"
117 #include <rpc/rpc.h>
118
119 MODULE = RPC PACKAGE = RPC
120
121 bool_t
122 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
123 char *host
124 time_t &timep
125 OUTPUT:
126 timep
127
128Any extension to Perl, including those containing XSUBs,
129should have a Perl module to serve as the bootstrap which
130pulls the extension into Perl. This module will export the
131extension's functions and variables to the Perl program and
132will cause the extension's XSUBs to be linked into Perl.
133The following module will be used for most of the examples
134in this document and should be used from Perl with the C<use>
135command as shown earlier. Perl modules are explained in
136more detail later in this document.
137
138 package RPC;
139
140 require Exporter;
141 require DynaLoader;
142 @ISA = qw(Exporter DynaLoader);
143 @EXPORT = qw( rpcb_gettime );
144
145 bootstrap RPC;
146 1;
147
148Throughout this document a variety of interfaces to the rpcb_gettime()
149XSUB will be explored. The XSUBs will take their parameters in different
150orders or will take different numbers of parameters. In each case the
151XSUB is an abstraction between Perl and the real C rpcb_gettime()
152function, and the XSUB must always ensure that the real rpcb_gettime()
153function is called with the correct parameters. This abstraction will
154allow the programmer to create a more Perl-like interface to the C
155function.
156
157=head2 The Anatomy of an XSUB
158
159The simplest XSUBs consist of 3 parts: a description of the return
160value, the name of the XSUB routine and the names of its arguments,
161and a description of types or formats of the arguments.
162
163The following XSUB allows a Perl program to access a C library function
164called sin(). The XSUB will imitate the C function which takes a single
165argument and returns a single value.
166
167 double
168 sin(x)
169 double x
170
171Optionally, one can merge the description of types and the list of
172argument names, rewriting this as
173
174 double
175 sin(double x)
176
177This makes this XSUB look similar to an ANSI C declaration. An optional
178semicolon is allowed after the argument list, as in
179
180 double
181 sin(double x);
182
183Parameters with C pointer types can have different semantic: C functions
184with similar declarations
185
186 bool string_looks_as_a_number(char *s);
187 bool make_char_uppercase(char *c);
188
189are used in absolutely incompatible manner. Parameters to these functions
190could be described B<xsubpp> like this:
191
192 char * s
193 char &c
194
195Both these XS declarations correspond to the C<char*> C type, but they have
196different semantics, see L<"The & Unary Operator">.
197
198It is convenient to think that the indirection operator
199C<*> should be considered as a part of the type and the address operator C<&>
200should be considered part of the variable. See L<"The Typemap">
201for more info about handling qualifiers and unary operators in C types.
202
203The function name and the return type must be placed on
204separate lines and should be flush left-adjusted.
205
206 INCORRECT CORRECT
207
208 double sin(x) double
209 double x sin(x)
210 double x
211
212The rest of the function description may be indented or left-adjusted. The
213following example shows a function with its body left-adjusted. Most
214examples in this document will indent the body for better readability.
215
216 CORRECT
217
218 double
219 sin(x)
220 double x
221
222More complicated XSUBs may contain many other sections. Each section of
223an XSUB starts with the corresponding keyword, such as INIT: or CLEANUP:.
224However, the first two lines of an XSUB always contain the same data:
225descriptions of the return type and the names of the function and its
226parameters. Whatever immediately follows these is considered to be
227an INPUT: section unless explicitly marked with another keyword.
228(See L<The INPUT: Keyword>.)
229
230An XSUB section continues until another section-start keyword is found.
231
232=head2 The Argument Stack
233
234The Perl argument stack is used to store the values which are
235sent as parameters to the XSUB and to store the XSUB's
236return value(s). In reality all Perl functions (including non-XSUB
237ones) keep their values on this stack all the same time, each limited
238to its own range of positions on the stack. In this document the
239first position on that stack which belongs to the active
240function will be referred to as position 0 for that function.
241
242XSUBs refer to their stack arguments with the macro B<ST(x)>, where I<x>
243refers to a position in this XSUB's part of the stack. Position 0 for that
244function would be known to the XSUB as ST(0). The XSUB's incoming
245parameters and outgoing return values always begin at ST(0). For many
246simple cases the B<xsubpp> compiler will generate the code necessary to
247handle the argument stack by embedding code fragments found in the
248typemaps. In more complex cases the programmer must supply the code.
249
250=head2 The RETVAL Variable
251
252The RETVAL variable is a special C variable that is declared automatically
253for you. The C type of RETVAL matches the return type of the C library
254function. The B<xsubpp> compiler will declare this variable in each XSUB
255with non-C<void> return type. By default the generated C function
256will use RETVAL to hold the return value of the C library function being
257called. In simple cases the value of RETVAL will be placed in ST(0) of
258the argument stack where it can be received by Perl as the return value
259of the XSUB.
260
261If the XSUB has a return type of C<void> then the compiler will
262not declare a RETVAL variable for that function. When using
263a PPCODE: section no manipulation of the RETVAL variable is required, the
264section may use direct stack manipulation to place output values on the stack.
265
266If PPCODE: directive is not used, C<void> return value should be used
267only for subroutines which do not return a value, I<even if> CODE:
268directive is used which sets ST(0) explicitly.
269
270Older versions of this document recommended to use C<void> return
271value in such cases. It was discovered that this could lead to
272segfaults in cases when XSUB was I<truly> C<void>. This practice is
273now deprecated, and may be not supported at some future version. Use
274the return value C<SV *> in such cases. (Currently C<xsubpp> contains
275some heuristic code which tries to disambiguate between "truly-void"
276and "old-practice-declared-as-void" functions. Hence your code is at
277mercy of this heuristics unless you use C<SV *> as return value.)
278
279=head2 The MODULE Keyword
280
281The MODULE keyword is used to start the XS code and to specify the package
282of the functions which are being defined. All text preceding the first
283MODULE keyword is considered C code and is passed through to the output with
284POD stripped, but otherwise untouched. Every XS module will have a
285bootstrap function which is used to hook the XSUBs into Perl. The package
286name of this bootstrap function will match the value of the last MODULE
287statement in the XS source files. The value of MODULE should always remain
288constant within the same XS file, though this is not required.
289
290The following example will start the XS code and will place
291all functions in a package named RPC.
292
293 MODULE = RPC
294
295=head2 The PACKAGE Keyword
296
297When functions within an XS source file must be separated into packages
298the PACKAGE keyword should be used. This keyword is used with the MODULE
299keyword and must follow immediately after it when used.
300
301 MODULE = RPC PACKAGE = RPC
302
303 [ XS code in package RPC ]
304
305 MODULE = RPC PACKAGE = RPCB
306
307 [ XS code in package RPCB ]
308
309 MODULE = RPC PACKAGE = RPC
310
311 [ XS code in package RPC ]
312
313The same package name can be used more than once, allowing for
314non-contiguous code. This is useful if you have a stronger ordering
315principle than package names.
316
317Although this keyword is optional and in some cases provides redundant
318information it should always be used. This keyword will ensure that the
319XSUBs appear in the desired package.
320
321=head2 The PREFIX Keyword
322
323The PREFIX keyword designates prefixes which should be
324removed from the Perl function names. If the C function is
325C<rpcb_gettime()> and the PREFIX value is C<rpcb_> then Perl will
326see this function as C<gettime()>.
327
328This keyword should follow the PACKAGE keyword when used.
329If PACKAGE is not used then PREFIX should follow the MODULE
330keyword.
331
332 MODULE = RPC PREFIX = rpc_
333
334 MODULE = RPC PACKAGE = RPCB PREFIX = rpcb_
335
336=head2 The OUTPUT: Keyword
337
338The OUTPUT: keyword indicates that certain function parameters should be
339updated (new values made visible to Perl) when the XSUB terminates or that
340certain values should be returned to the calling Perl function. For
341simple functions which have no CODE: or PPCODE: section,
342such as the sin() function above, the RETVAL variable is
343automatically designated as an output value. For more complex functions
344the B<xsubpp> compiler will need help to determine which variables are output
345variables.
346
347This keyword will normally be used to complement the CODE: keyword.
348The RETVAL variable is not recognized as an output variable when the
349CODE: keyword is present. The OUTPUT: keyword is used in this
350situation to tell the compiler that RETVAL really is an output
351variable.
352
353The OUTPUT: keyword can also be used to indicate that function parameters
354are output variables. This may be necessary when a parameter has been
355modified within the function and the programmer would like the update to
356be seen by Perl.
357
358 bool_t
359 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
360 char *host
361 time_t &timep
362 OUTPUT:
363 timep
364
365The OUTPUT: keyword will also allow an output parameter to
366be mapped to a matching piece of code rather than to a
367typemap.
368
369 bool_t
370 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
371 char *host
372 time_t &timep
373 OUTPUT:
374 timep sv_setnv(ST(1), (double)timep);
375
376B<xsubpp> emits an automatic C<SvSETMAGIC()> for all parameters in the
377OUTPUT section of the XSUB, except RETVAL. This is the usually desired
378behavior, as it takes care of properly invoking 'set' magic on output
379parameters (needed for hash or array element parameters that must be
380created if they didn't exist). If for some reason, this behavior is
381not desired, the OUTPUT section may contain a C<SETMAGIC: DISABLE> line
382to disable it for the remainder of the parameters in the OUTPUT section.
383Likewise, C<SETMAGIC: ENABLE> can be used to reenable it for the
384remainder of the OUTPUT section. See L<perlguts> for more details
385about 'set' magic.
386
387=head2 The NO_OUTPUT Keyword
388
389The NO_OUTPUT can be placed as the first token of the XSUB. This keyword
390indicates that while the C subroutine we provide an interface to has
391a non-C<void> return type, the return value of this C subroutine should not
392be returned from the generated Perl subroutine.
393
394With this keyword present L<The RETVAL Variable> is created, and in the
395generated call to the subroutine this variable is assigned to, but the value
396of this variable is not going to be used in the auto-generated code.
397
398This keyword makes sense only if C<RETVAL> is going to be accessed by the
399user-supplied code. It is especially useful to make a function interface
400more Perl-like, especially when the C return value is just an error condition
401indicator. For example,
402
403 NO_OUTPUT int
404 delete_file(char *name)
405 POSTCALL:
406 if (RETVAL != 0)
407 croak("Error %d while deleting file '%s'", RETVAL, name);
408
409Here the generated XS function returns nothing on success, and will die()
410with a meaningful error message on error.
411
412=head2 The CODE: Keyword
413
414This keyword is used in more complicated XSUBs which require
415special handling for the C function. The RETVAL variable is
416still declared, but it will not be returned unless it is specified
417in the OUTPUT: section.
418
419The following XSUB is for a C function which requires special handling of
420its parameters. The Perl usage is given first.
421
422 $status = rpcb_gettime( "localhost", $timep );
423
424The XSUB follows.
425
426 bool_t
427 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
428 char *host
429 time_t timep
430 CODE:
431 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( host, &timep );
432 OUTPUT:
433 timep
434 RETVAL
435
436=head2 The INIT: Keyword
437
438The INIT: keyword allows initialization to be inserted into the XSUB before
439the compiler generates the call to the C function. Unlike the CODE: keyword
440above, this keyword does not affect the way the compiler handles RETVAL.
441
442 bool_t
443 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
444 char *host
445 time_t &timep
446 INIT:
447 printf("# Host is %s\n", host );
448 OUTPUT:
449 timep
450
451Another use for the INIT: section is to check for preconditions before
452making a call to the C function:
453
454 long long
455 lldiv(a,b)
456 long long a
457 long long b
458 INIT:
459 if (a == 0 && b == 0)
460 XSRETURN_UNDEF;
461 if (b == 0)
462 croak("lldiv: cannot divide by 0");
463
464=head2 The NO_INIT Keyword
465
466The NO_INIT keyword is used to indicate that a function
467parameter is being used only as an output value. The B<xsubpp>
468compiler will normally generate code to read the values of
469all function parameters from the argument stack and assign
470them to C variables upon entry to the function. NO_INIT
471will tell the compiler that some parameters will be used for
472output rather than for input and that they will be handled
473before the function terminates.
474
475The following example shows a variation of the rpcb_gettime() function.
476This function uses the timep variable only as an output variable and does
477not care about its initial contents.
478
479 bool_t
480 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
481 char *host
482 time_t &timep = NO_INIT
483 OUTPUT:
484 timep
485
486=head2 Initializing Function Parameters
487
488C function parameters are normally initialized with their values from
489the argument stack (which in turn contains the parameters that were
490passed to the XSUB from Perl). The typemaps contain the
491code segments which are used to translate the Perl values to
492the C parameters. The programmer, however, is allowed to
493override the typemaps and supply alternate (or additional)
494initialization code. Initialization code starts with the first
495C<=>, C<;> or C<+> on a line in the INPUT: section. The only
496exception happens if this C<;> terminates the line, then this C<;>
497is quietly ignored.
498
499The following code demonstrates how to supply initialization code for
500function parameters. The initialization code is eval'd within double
501quotes by the compiler before it is added to the output so anything
502which should be interpreted literally [mainly C<$>, C<@>, or C<\\>]
503must be protected with backslashes. The variables $var, $arg,
504and $type can be used as in typemaps.
505
506 bool_t
507 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
508 char *host = (char *)SvPV($arg,PL_na);
509 time_t &timep = 0;
510 OUTPUT:
511 timep
512
513This should not be used to supply default values for parameters. One
514would normally use this when a function parameter must be processed by
515another library function before it can be used. Default parameters are
516covered in the next section.
517
518If the initialization begins with C<=>, then it is output in
519the declaration for the input variable, replacing the initialization
520supplied by the typemap. If the initialization
521begins with C<;> or C<+>, then it is performed after
522all of the input variables have been declared. In the C<;>
523case the initialization normally supplied by the typemap is not performed.
524For the C<+> case, the declaration for the variable will include the
525initialization from the typemap. A global
526variable, C<%v>, is available for the truly rare case where
527information from one initialization is needed in another
528initialization.
529
530Here's a truly obscure example:
531
532 bool_t
533 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
534 time_t &timep ; /* \$v{timep}=@{[$v{timep}=$arg]} */
535 char *host + SvOK($v{timep}) ? SvPV($arg,PL_na) : NULL;
536 OUTPUT:
537 timep
538
539The construct C<\$v{timep}=@{[$v{timep}=$arg]}> used in the above
540example has a two-fold purpose: first, when this line is processed by
541B<xsubpp>, the Perl snippet C<$v{timep}=$arg> is evaluated. Second,
542the text of the evaluated snippet is output into the generated C file
543(inside a C comment)! During the processing of C<char *host> line,
544$arg will evaluate to C<ST(0)>, and C<$v{timep}> will evaluate to
545C<ST(1)>.
546
547=head2 Default Parameter Values
548
549Default values for XSUB arguments can be specified by placing an
550assignment statement in the parameter list. The default value may
551be a number, a string or the special string C<NO_INIT>. Defaults should
552always be used on the right-most parameters only.
553
554To allow the XSUB for rpcb_gettime() to have a default host
555value the parameters to the XSUB could be rearranged. The
556XSUB will then call the real rpcb_gettime() function with
557the parameters in the correct order. This XSUB can be called
558from Perl with either of the following statements:
559
560 $status = rpcb_gettime( $timep, $host );
561
562 $status = rpcb_gettime( $timep );
563
564The XSUB will look like the code which follows. A CODE:
565block is used to call the real rpcb_gettime() function with
566the parameters in the correct order for that function.
567
568 bool_t
569 rpcb_gettime(timep,host="localhost")
570 char *host
571 time_t timep = NO_INIT
572 CODE:
573 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( host, &timep );
574 OUTPUT:
575 timep
576 RETVAL
577
578=head2 The PREINIT: Keyword
579
580The PREINIT: keyword allows extra variables to be declared immediately
581before or after the declarations of the parameters from the INPUT: section
582are emitted.
583
584If a variable is declared inside a CODE: section it will follow any typemap
585code that is emitted for the input parameters. This may result in the
586declaration ending up after C code, which is C syntax error. Similar
587errors may happen with an explicit C<;>-type or C<+>-type initialization of
588parameters is used (see L<"Initializing Function Parameters">). Declaring
589these variables in an INIT: section will not help.
590
591In such cases, to force an additional variable to be declared together
592with declarations of other variables, place the declaration into a
593PREINIT: section. The PREINIT: keyword may be used one or more times
594within an XSUB.
595
596The following examples are equivalent, but if the code is using complex
597typemaps then the first example is safer.
598
599 bool_t
600 rpcb_gettime(timep)
601 time_t timep = NO_INIT
602 PREINIT:
603 char *host = "localhost";
604 CODE:
605 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( host, &timep );
606 OUTPUT:
607 timep
608 RETVAL
609
610For this particular case an INIT: keyword would generate the
611same C code as the PREINIT: keyword. Another correct, but error-prone example:
612
613 bool_t
614 rpcb_gettime(timep)
615 time_t timep = NO_INIT
616 CODE:
617 char *host = "localhost";
618 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( host, &timep );
619 OUTPUT:
620 timep
621 RETVAL
622
623Another way to declare C<host> is to use a C block in the CODE: section:
624
625 bool_t
626 rpcb_gettime(timep)
627 time_t timep = NO_INIT
628 CODE:
629 {
630 char *host = "localhost";
631 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( host, &timep );
632 }
633 OUTPUT:
634 timep
635 RETVAL
636
637The ability to put additional declarations before the typemap entries are
638processed is very handy in the cases when typemap conversions manipulate
639some global state:
640
641 MyObject
642 mutate(o)
643 PREINIT:
644 MyState st = global_state;
645 INPUT:
646 MyObject o;
647 CLEANUP:
648 reset_to(global_state, st);
649
650Here we suppose that conversion to C<MyObject> in the INPUT: section and from
651MyObject when processing RETVAL will modify a global variable C<global_state>.
652After these conversions are performed, we restore the old value of
653C<global_state> (to avoid memory leaks, for example).
654
655There is another way to trade clarity for compactness: INPUT sections allow
656declaration of C variables which do not appear in the parameter list of
657a subroutine. Thus the above code for mutate() can be rewritten as
658
659 MyObject
660 mutate(o)
661 MyState st = global_state;
662 MyObject o;
663 CLEANUP:
664 reset_to(global_state, st);
665
666and the code for rpcb_gettime() can be rewritten as
667
668 bool_t
669 rpcb_gettime(timep)
670 time_t timep = NO_INIT
671 char *host = "localhost";
672 C_ARGS:
673 host, &timep
674 OUTPUT:
675 timep
676 RETVAL
677
678=head2 The SCOPE: Keyword
679
680The SCOPE: keyword allows scoping to be enabled for a particular XSUB. If
681enabled, the XSUB will invoke ENTER and LEAVE automatically.
682
683To support potentially complex type mappings, if a typemap entry used
684by an XSUB contains a comment like C</*scope*/> then scoping will
685be automatically enabled for that XSUB.
686
687To enable scoping:
688
689 SCOPE: ENABLE
690
691To disable scoping:
692
693 SCOPE: DISABLE
694
695=head2 The INPUT: Keyword
696
697The XSUB's parameters are usually evaluated immediately after entering the
698XSUB. The INPUT: keyword can be used to force those parameters to be
699evaluated a little later. The INPUT: keyword can be used multiple times
700within an XSUB and can be used to list one or more input variables. This
701keyword is used with the PREINIT: keyword.
702
703The following example shows how the input parameter C<timep> can be
704evaluated late, after a PREINIT.
705
706 bool_t
707 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
708 char *host
709 PREINIT:
710 time_t tt;
711 INPUT:
712 time_t timep
713 CODE:
714 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( host, &tt );
715 timep = tt;
716 OUTPUT:
717 timep
718 RETVAL
719
720The next example shows each input parameter evaluated late.
721
722 bool_t
723 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
724 PREINIT:
725 time_t tt;
726 INPUT:
727 char *host
728 PREINIT:
729 char *h;
730 INPUT:
731 time_t timep
732 CODE:
733 h = host;
734 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( h, &tt );
735 timep = tt;
736 OUTPUT:
737 timep
738 RETVAL
739
740Since INPUT sections allow declaration of C variables which do not appear
741in the parameter list of a subroutine, this may be shortened to:
742
743 bool_t
744 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
745 time_t tt;
746 char *host;
747 char *h = host;
748 time_t timep;
749 CODE:
750 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( h, &tt );
751 timep = tt;
752 OUTPUT:
753 timep
754 RETVAL
755
756(We used our knowledge that input conversion for C<char *> is a "simple" one,
757thus C<host> is initialized on the declaration line, and our assignment
758C<h = host> is not performed too early. Otherwise one would need to have the
759assignment C<h = host> in a CODE: or INIT: section.)
760
761=head2 The IN/OUTLIST/IN_OUTLIST/OUT/IN_OUT Keywords
762
763In the list of parameters for an XSUB, one can precede parameter names
764by the C<IN>/C<OUTLIST>/C<IN_OUTLIST>/C<OUT>/C<IN_OUT> keywords.
765C<IN> keyword is the default, the other keywords indicate how the Perl
766interface should differ from the C interface.
767
768Parameters preceded by C<OUTLIST>/C<IN_OUTLIST>/C<OUT>/C<IN_OUT>
769keywords are considered to be used by the C subroutine I<via
770pointers>. C<OUTLIST>/C<OUT> keywords indicate that the C subroutine
771does not inspect the memory pointed by this parameter, but will write
772through this pointer to provide additional return values.
773
774Parameters preceded by C<OUTLIST> keyword do not appear in the usage
775signature of the generated Perl function.
776
777Parameters preceded by C<IN_OUTLIST>/C<IN_OUT>/C<OUT> I<do> appear as
778parameters to the Perl function. With the exception of
779C<OUT>-parameters, these parameters are converted to the corresponding
780C type, then pointers to these data are given as arguments to the C
781function. It is expected that the C function will write through these
782pointers.
783
784The return list of the generated Perl function consists of the C return value
785from the function (unless the XSUB is of C<void> return type or
786C<The NO_OUTPUT Keyword> was used) followed by all the C<OUTLIST>
787and C<IN_OUTLIST> parameters (in the order of appearance). On the
788return from the XSUB the C<IN_OUT>/C<OUT> Perl parameter will be
789modified to have the values written by the C function.
790
791For example, an XSUB
792
793 void
794 day_month(OUTLIST day, IN unix_time, OUTLIST month)
795 int day
796 int unix_time
797 int month
798
799should be used from Perl as
800
801 my ($day, $month) = day_month(time);
802
803The C signature of the corresponding function should be
804
805 void day_month(int *day, int unix_time, int *month);
806
807The C<IN>/C<OUTLIST>/C<IN_OUTLIST>/C<IN_OUT>/C<OUT> keywords can be
808mixed with ANSI-style declarations, as in
809
810 void
811 day_month(OUTLIST int day, int unix_time, OUTLIST int month)
812
813(here the optional C<IN> keyword is omitted).
814
815The C<IN_OUT> parameters are identical with parameters introduced with
816L<The & Unary Operator> and put into the C<OUTPUT:> section (see
817L<The OUTPUT: Keyword>). The C<IN_OUTLIST> parameters are very similar,
818the only difference being that the value C function writes through the
819pointer would not modify the Perl parameter, but is put in the output
820list.
821
822The C<OUTLIST>/C<OUT> parameter differ from C<IN_OUTLIST>/C<IN_OUT>
823parameters only by the initial value of the Perl parameter not
824being read (and not being given to the C function - which gets some
825garbage instead). For example, the same C function as above can be
826interfaced with as
827
828 void day_month(OUT int day, int unix_time, OUT int month);
829
830or
831
832 void
833 day_month(day, unix_time, month)
834 int &day = NO_INIT
835 int unix_time
836 int &month = NO_INIT
837 OUTPUT:
838 day
839 month
840
841However, the generated Perl function is called in very C-ish style:
842
843 my ($day, $month);
844 day_month($day, time, $month);
845
846=head2 The C<length(NAME)> Keyword
847
848If one of the input arguments to the C function is the length of a string
849argument C<NAME>, one can substitute the name of the length-argument by
850C<length(NAME)> in the XSUB declaration. This argument must be omited when
851the generated Perl function is called. E.g.,
852
853 void
854 dump_chars(char *s, short l)
855 {
856 short n = 0;
857 while (n < l) {
858 printf("s[%d] = \"\\%#03o\"\n", n, (int)s[n]);
859 n++;
860 }
861 }
862
863 MODULE = x PACKAGE = x
864
865 void dump_chars(char *s, short length(s))
866
867should be called as C<dump_chars($string)>.
868
869This directive is supported with ANSI-type function declarations only.
870
871=head2 Variable-length Parameter Lists
872
873XSUBs can have variable-length parameter lists by specifying an ellipsis
874C<(...)> in the parameter list. This use of the ellipsis is similar to that
875found in ANSI C. The programmer is able to determine the number of
876arguments passed to the XSUB by examining the C<items> variable which the
877B<xsubpp> compiler supplies for all XSUBs. By using this mechanism one can
878create an XSUB which accepts a list of parameters of unknown length.
879
880The I<host> parameter for the rpcb_gettime() XSUB can be
881optional so the ellipsis can be used to indicate that the
882XSUB will take a variable number of parameters. Perl should
883be able to call this XSUB with either of the following statements.
884
885 $status = rpcb_gettime( $timep, $host );
886
887 $status = rpcb_gettime( $timep );
888
889The XS code, with ellipsis, follows.
890
891 bool_t
892 rpcb_gettime(timep, ...)
893 time_t timep = NO_INIT
894 PREINIT:
895 char *host = "localhost";
896 STRLEN n_a;
897 CODE:
898 if( items > 1 )
899 host = (char *)SvPV(ST(1), n_a);
900 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( host, &timep );
901 OUTPUT:
902 timep
903 RETVAL
904
905=head2 The C_ARGS: Keyword
906
907The C_ARGS: keyword allows creating of XSUBS which have different
908calling sequence from Perl than from C, without a need to write
909CODE: or PPCODE: section. The contents of the C_ARGS: paragraph is
910put as the argument to the called C function without any change.
911
912For example, suppose that a C function is declared as
913
914 symbolic nth_derivative(int n, symbolic function, int flags);
915
916and that the default flags are kept in a global C variable
917C<default_flags>. Suppose that you want to create an interface which
918is called as
919
920 $second_deriv = $function->nth_derivative(2);
921
922To do this, declare the XSUB as
923
924 symbolic
925 nth_derivative(function, n)
926 symbolic function
927 int n
928 C_ARGS:
929 n, function, default_flags
930
931=head2 The PPCODE: Keyword
932
933The PPCODE: keyword is an alternate form of the CODE: keyword and is used
934to tell the B<xsubpp> compiler that the programmer is supplying the code to
935control the argument stack for the XSUBs return values. Occasionally one
936will want an XSUB to return a list of values rather than a single value.
937In these cases one must use PPCODE: and then explicitly push the list of
938values on the stack. The PPCODE: and CODE: keywords should not be used
939together within the same XSUB.
940
941The actual difference between PPCODE: and CODE: sections is in the
942initialization of C<SP> macro (which stands for the I<current> Perl
943stack pointer), and in the handling of data on the stack when returning
944from an XSUB. In CODE: sections SP preserves the value which was on
945entry to the XSUB: SP is on the function pointer (which follows the
946last parameter). In PPCODE: sections SP is moved backward to the
947beginning of the parameter list, which allows C<PUSH*()> macros
948to place output values in the place Perl expects them to be when
949the XSUB returns back to Perl.
950
951The generated trailer for a CODE: section ensures that the number of return
952values Perl will see is either 0 or 1 (depending on the C<void>ness of the
953return value of the C function, and heuristics mentioned in
954L<"The RETVAL Variable">). The trailer generated for a PPCODE: section
955is based on the number of return values and on the number of times
956C<SP> was updated by C<[X]PUSH*()> macros.
957
958Note that macros C<ST(i)>, C<XST_m*()> and C<XSRETURN*()> work equally
959well in CODE: sections and PPCODE: sections.
960
961The following XSUB will call the C rpcb_gettime() function
962and will return its two output values, timep and status, to
963Perl as a single list.
964
965 void
966 rpcb_gettime(host)
967 char *host
968 PREINIT:
969 time_t timep;
970 bool_t status;
971 PPCODE:
972 status = rpcb_gettime( host, &timep );
973 EXTEND(SP, 2);
974 PUSHs(sv_2mortal(newSViv(status)));
975 PUSHs(sv_2mortal(newSViv(timep)));
976
977Notice that the programmer must supply the C code necessary
978to have the real rpcb_gettime() function called and to have
979the return values properly placed on the argument stack.
980
981The C<void> return type for this function tells the B<xsubpp> compiler that
982the RETVAL variable is not needed or used and that it should not be created.
983In most scenarios the void return type should be used with the PPCODE:
984directive.
985
986The EXTEND() macro is used to make room on the argument
987stack for 2 return values. The PPCODE: directive causes the
988B<xsubpp> compiler to create a stack pointer available as C<SP>, and it
989is this pointer which is being used in the EXTEND() macro.
990The values are then pushed onto the stack with the PUSHs()
991macro.
992
993Now the rpcb_gettime() function can be used from Perl with
994the following statement.
995
996 ($status, $timep) = rpcb_gettime("localhost");
997
998When handling output parameters with a PPCODE section, be sure to handle
999'set' magic properly. See L<perlguts> for details about 'set' magic.
1000
1001=head2 Returning Undef And Empty Lists
1002
1003Occasionally the programmer will want to return simply
1004C<undef> or an empty list if a function fails rather than a
1005separate status value. The rpcb_gettime() function offers
1006just this situation. If the function succeeds we would like
1007to have it return the time and if it fails we would like to
1008have undef returned. In the following Perl code the value
1009of $timep will either be undef or it will be a valid time.
1010
1011 $timep = rpcb_gettime( "localhost" );
1012
1013The following XSUB uses the C<SV *> return type as a mnemonic only,
1014and uses a CODE: block to indicate to the compiler
1015that the programmer has supplied all the necessary code. The
1016sv_newmortal() call will initialize the return value to undef, making that
1017the default return value.
1018
1019 SV *
1020 rpcb_gettime(host)
1021 char * host
1022 PREINIT:
1023 time_t timep;
1024 bool_t x;
1025 CODE:
1026 ST(0) = sv_newmortal();
1027 if( rpcb_gettime( host, &timep ) )
1028 sv_setnv( ST(0), (double)timep);
1029
1030The next example demonstrates how one would place an explicit undef in the
1031return value, should the need arise.
1032
1033 SV *
1034 rpcb_gettime(host)
1035 char * host
1036 PREINIT:
1037 time_t timep;
1038 bool_t x;
1039 CODE:
1040 ST(0) = sv_newmortal();
1041 if( rpcb_gettime( host, &timep ) ){
1042 sv_setnv( ST(0), (double)timep);
1043 }
1044 else{
1045 ST(0) = &PL_sv_undef;
1046 }
1047
1048To return an empty list one must use a PPCODE: block and
1049then not push return values on the stack.
1050
1051 void
1052 rpcb_gettime(host)
1053 char *host
1054 PREINIT:
1055 time_t timep;
1056 PPCODE:
1057 if( rpcb_gettime( host, &timep ) )
1058 PUSHs(sv_2mortal(newSViv(timep)));
1059 else{
1060 /* Nothing pushed on stack, so an empty
1061 * list is implicitly returned. */
1062 }
1063
1064Some people may be inclined to include an explicit C<return> in the above
1065XSUB, rather than letting control fall through to the end. In those
1066situations C<XSRETURN_EMPTY> should be used, instead. This will ensure that
1067the XSUB stack is properly adjusted. Consult L<perlguts/"API LISTING"> for
1068other C<XSRETURN> macros.
1069
1070Since C<XSRETURN_*> macros can be used with CODE blocks as well, one can
1071rewrite this example as:
1072
1073 int
1074 rpcb_gettime(host)
1075 char *host
1076 PREINIT:
1077 time_t timep;
1078 CODE:
1079 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( host, &timep );
1080 if (RETVAL == 0)
1081 XSRETURN_UNDEF;
1082 OUTPUT:
1083 RETVAL
1084
1085In fact, one can put this check into a POSTCALL: section as well. Together
1086with PREINIT: simplifications, this leads to:
1087
1088 int
1089 rpcb_gettime(host)
1090 char *host
1091 time_t timep;
1092 POSTCALL:
1093 if (RETVAL == 0)
1094 XSRETURN_UNDEF;
1095
1096=head2 The REQUIRE: Keyword
1097
1098The REQUIRE: keyword is used to indicate the minimum version of the
1099B<xsubpp> compiler needed to compile the XS module. An XS module which
1100contains the following statement will compile with only B<xsubpp> version
11011.922 or greater:
1102
1103 REQUIRE: 1.922
1104
1105=head2 The CLEANUP: Keyword
1106
1107This keyword can be used when an XSUB requires special cleanup procedures
1108before it terminates. When the CLEANUP: keyword is used it must follow
1109any CODE:, PPCODE:, or OUTPUT: blocks which are present in the XSUB. The
1110code specified for the cleanup block will be added as the last statements
1111in the XSUB.
1112
1113=head2 The POSTCALL: Keyword
1114
1115This keyword can be used when an XSUB requires special procedures
1116executed after the C subroutine call is performed. When the POSTCALL:
1117keyword is used it must precede OUTPUT: and CLEANUP: blocks which are
1118present in the XSUB.
1119
1120See examples in L<"The NO_OUTPUT Keyword"> and L<"Returning Undef And Empty Lists">.
1121
1122The POSTCALL: block does not make a lot of sense when the C subroutine
1123call is supplied by user by providing either CODE: or PPCODE: section.
1124
1125=head2 The BOOT: Keyword
1126
1127The BOOT: keyword is used to add code to the extension's bootstrap
1128function. The bootstrap function is generated by the B<xsubpp> compiler and
1129normally holds the statements necessary to register any XSUBs with Perl.
1130With the BOOT: keyword the programmer can tell the compiler to add extra
1131statements to the bootstrap function.
1132
1133This keyword may be used any time after the first MODULE keyword and should
1134appear on a line by itself. The first blank line after the keyword will
1135terminate the code block.
1136
1137 BOOT:
1138 # The following message will be printed when the
1139 # bootstrap function executes.
1140 printf("Hello from the bootstrap!\n");
1141
1142=head2 The VERSIONCHECK: Keyword
1143
1144The VERSIONCHECK: keyword corresponds to B<xsubpp>'s C<-versioncheck> and
1145C<-noversioncheck> options. This keyword overrides the command line
1146options. Version checking is enabled by default. When version checking is
1147enabled the XS module will attempt to verify that its version matches the
1148version of the PM module.
1149
1150To enable version checking:
1151
1152 VERSIONCHECK: ENABLE
1153
1154To disable version checking:
1155
1156 VERSIONCHECK: DISABLE
1157
1158=head2 The PROTOTYPES: Keyword
1159
1160The PROTOTYPES: keyword corresponds to B<xsubpp>'s C<-prototypes> and
1161C<-noprototypes> options. This keyword overrides the command line options.
1162Prototypes are enabled by default. When prototypes are enabled XSUBs will
1163be given Perl prototypes. This keyword may be used multiple times in an XS
1164module to enable and disable prototypes for different parts of the module.
1165
1166To enable prototypes:
1167
1168 PROTOTYPES: ENABLE
1169
1170To disable prototypes:
1171
1172 PROTOTYPES: DISABLE
1173
1174=head2 The PROTOTYPE: Keyword
1175
1176This keyword is similar to the PROTOTYPES: keyword above but can be used to
1177force B<xsubpp> to use a specific prototype for the XSUB. This keyword
1178overrides all other prototype options and keywords but affects only the
1179current XSUB. Consult L<perlsub/Prototypes> for information about Perl
1180prototypes.
1181
1182 bool_t
1183 rpcb_gettime(timep, ...)
1184 time_t timep = NO_INIT
1185 PROTOTYPE: $;$
1186 PREINIT:
1187 char *host = "localhost";
1188 STRLEN n_a;
1189 CODE:
1190 if( items > 1 )
1191 host = (char *)SvPV(ST(1), n_a);
1192 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( host, &timep );
1193 OUTPUT:
1194 timep
1195 RETVAL
1196
1197If the prototypes are enabled, you can disable it locally for a given
1198XSUB as in the following example:
1199
1200 void
1201 rpcb_gettime_noproto()
1202 PROTOTYPE: DISABLE
1203 ...
1204
1205=head2 The ALIAS: Keyword
1206
1207The ALIAS: keyword allows an XSUB to have two or more unique Perl names
1208and to know which of those names was used when it was invoked. The Perl
1209names may be fully-qualified with package names. Each alias is given an
1210index. The compiler will setup a variable called C<ix> which contain the
1211index of the alias which was used. When the XSUB is called with its
1212declared name C<ix> will be 0.
1213
1214The following example will create aliases C<FOO::gettime()> and
1215C<BAR::getit()> for this function.
1216
1217 bool_t
1218 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
1219 char *host
1220 time_t &timep
1221 ALIAS:
1222 FOO::gettime = 1
1223 BAR::getit = 2
1224 INIT:
1225 printf("# ix = %d\n", ix );
1226 OUTPUT:
1227 timep
1228
1229=head2 The OVERLOAD: Keyword
1230
1231Instead of writing an overloaded interface using pure Perl, you
1232can also use the OVERLOAD keyword to define additional Perl names
1233for your functions (like the ALIAS: keyword above). However, the
1234overloaded functions must be defined with three parameters (except
1235for the nomethod() function which needs four parameters). If any
1236function has the OVERLOAD: keyword, several additional lines
1237will be defined in the c file generated by xsubpp in order to
1238register with the overload magic.
1239
1240Since blessed objects are actually stored as RV's, it is useful
1241to use the typemap features to preprocess parameters and extract
1242the actual SV stored within the blessed RV. See the sample for
1243T_PTROBJ_SPECIAL below.
1244
1245To use the OVERLOAD: keyword, create an XS function which takes
1246three input parameters ( or use the c style '...' definition) like
1247this:
1248
1249 SV *
1250 cmp (lobj, robj, swap)
1251 My_Module_obj lobj
1252 My_Module_obj robj
1253 IV swap
1254 OVERLOAD: cmp <=>
1255 { /* function defined here */}
1256
1257In this case, the function will overload both of the three way
1258comparison operators. For all overload operations using non-alpha
1259characters, you must type the parameter without quoting, seperating
1260multiple overloads with whitespace. Note that "" (the stringify
1261overload) should be entered as \"\" (i.e. escaped).
1262
1263=head2 The INTERFACE: Keyword
1264
1265This keyword declares the current XSUB as a keeper of the given
1266calling signature. If some text follows this keyword, it is
1267considered as a list of functions which have this signature, and
1268should be attached to the current XSUB.
1269
1270For example, if you have 4 C functions multiply(), divide(), add(),
1271subtract() all having the signature:
1272
1273 symbolic f(symbolic, symbolic);
1274
1275you can make them all to use the same XSUB using this:
1276
1277 symbolic
1278 interface_s_ss(arg1, arg2)
1279 symbolic arg1
1280 symbolic arg2
1281 INTERFACE:
1282 multiply divide
1283 add subtract
1284
1285(This is the complete XSUB code for 4 Perl functions!) Four generated
1286Perl function share names with corresponding C functions.
1287
1288The advantage of this approach comparing to ALIAS: keyword is that there
1289is no need to code a switch statement, each Perl function (which shares
1290the same XSUB) knows which C function it should call. Additionally, one
1291can attach an extra function remainder() at runtime by using
1292
1293 CV *mycv = newXSproto("Symbolic::remainder",
1294 XS_Symbolic_interface_s_ss, __FILE__, "$$");
1295 XSINTERFACE_FUNC_SET(mycv, remainder);
1296
1297say, from another XSUB. (This example supposes that there was no
1298INTERFACE_MACRO: section, otherwise one needs to use something else instead of
1299C<XSINTERFACE_FUNC_SET>, see the next section.)
1300
1301=head2 The INTERFACE_MACRO: Keyword
1302
1303This keyword allows one to define an INTERFACE using a different way
1304to extract a function pointer from an XSUB. The text which follows
1305this keyword should give the name of macros which would extract/set a
1306function pointer. The extractor macro is given return type, C<CV*>,
1307and C<XSANY.any_dptr> for this C<CV*>. The setter macro is given cv,
1308and the function pointer.
1309
1310The default value is C<XSINTERFACE_FUNC> and C<XSINTERFACE_FUNC_SET>.
1311An INTERFACE keyword with an empty list of functions can be omitted if
1312INTERFACE_MACRO keyword is used.
1313
1314Suppose that in the previous example functions pointers for
1315multiply(), divide(), add(), subtract() are kept in a global C array
1316C<fp[]> with offsets being C<multiply_off>, C<divide_off>, C<add_off>,
1317C<subtract_off>. Then one can use
1318
1319 #define XSINTERFACE_FUNC_BYOFFSET(ret,cv,f) \
1320 ((XSINTERFACE_CVT(ret,))fp[CvXSUBANY(cv).any_i32])
1321 #define XSINTERFACE_FUNC_BYOFFSET_set(cv,f) \
1322 CvXSUBANY(cv).any_i32 = CAT2( f, _off )
1323
1324in C section,
1325
1326 symbolic
1327 interface_s_ss(arg1, arg2)
1328 symbolic arg1
1329 symbolic arg2
1330 INTERFACE_MACRO:
1331 XSINTERFACE_FUNC_BYOFFSET
1332 XSINTERFACE_FUNC_BYOFFSET_set
1333 INTERFACE:
1334 multiply divide
1335 add subtract
1336
1337in XSUB section.
1338
1339=head2 The INCLUDE: Keyword
1340
1341This keyword can be used to pull other files into the XS module. The other
1342files may have XS code. INCLUDE: can also be used to run a command to
1343generate the XS code to be pulled into the module.
1344
1345The file F<Rpcb1.xsh> contains our C<rpcb_gettime()> function:
1346
1347 bool_t
1348 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
1349 char *host
1350 time_t &timep
1351 OUTPUT:
1352 timep
1353
1354The XS module can use INCLUDE: to pull that file into it.
1355
1356 INCLUDE: Rpcb1.xsh
1357
1358If the parameters to the INCLUDE: keyword are followed by a pipe (C<|>) then
1359the compiler will interpret the parameters as a command.
1360
1361 INCLUDE: cat Rpcb1.xsh |
1362
1363=head2 The CASE: Keyword
1364
1365The CASE: keyword allows an XSUB to have multiple distinct parts with each
1366part acting as a virtual XSUB. CASE: is greedy and if it is used then all
1367other XS keywords must be contained within a CASE:. This means nothing may
1368precede the first CASE: in the XSUB and anything following the last CASE: is
1369included in that case.
1370
1371A CASE: might switch via a parameter of the XSUB, via the C<ix> ALIAS:
1372variable (see L<"The ALIAS: Keyword">), or maybe via the C<items> variable
1373(see L<"Variable-length Parameter Lists">). The last CASE: becomes the
1374B<default> case if it is not associated with a conditional. The following
1375example shows CASE switched via C<ix> with a function C<rpcb_gettime()>
1376having an alias C<x_gettime()>. When the function is called as
1377C<rpcb_gettime()> its parameters are the usual C<(char *host, time_t *timep)>,
1378but when the function is called as C<x_gettime()> its parameters are
1379reversed, C<(time_t *timep, char *host)>.
1380
1381 long
1382 rpcb_gettime(a,b)
1383 CASE: ix == 1
1384 ALIAS:
1385 x_gettime = 1
1386 INPUT:
1387 # 'a' is timep, 'b' is host
1388 char *b
1389 time_t a = NO_INIT
1390 CODE:
1391 RETVAL = rpcb_gettime( b, &a );
1392 OUTPUT:
1393 a
1394 RETVAL
1395 CASE:
1396 # 'a' is host, 'b' is timep
1397 char *a
1398 time_t &b = NO_INIT
1399 OUTPUT:
1400 b
1401 RETVAL
1402
1403That function can be called with either of the following statements. Note
1404the different argument lists.
1405
1406 $status = rpcb_gettime( $host, $timep );
1407
1408 $status = x_gettime( $timep, $host );
1409
1410=head2 The & Unary Operator
1411
1412The C<&> unary operator in the INPUT: section is used to tell B<xsubpp>
1413that it should convert a Perl value to/from C using the C type to the left
1414of C<&>, but provide a pointer to this value when the C function is called.
1415
1416This is useful to avoid a CODE: block for a C function which takes a parameter
1417by reference. Typically, the parameter should be not a pointer type (an
1418C<int> or C<long> but not an C<int*> or C<long*>).
1419
1420The following XSUB will generate incorrect C code. The B<xsubpp> compiler will
1421turn this into code which calls C<rpcb_gettime()> with parameters C<(char
1422*host, time_t timep)>, but the real C<rpcb_gettime()> wants the C<timep>
1423parameter to be of type C<time_t*> rather than C<time_t>.
1424
1425 bool_t
1426 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
1427 char *host
1428 time_t timep
1429 OUTPUT:
1430 timep
1431
1432That problem is corrected by using the C<&> operator. The B<xsubpp> compiler
1433will now turn this into code which calls C<rpcb_gettime()> correctly with
1434parameters C<(char *host, time_t *timep)>. It does this by carrying the
1435C<&> through, so the function call looks like C<rpcb_gettime(host, &timep)>.
1436
1437 bool_t
1438 rpcb_gettime(host,timep)
1439 char *host
1440 time_t &timep
1441 OUTPUT:
1442 timep
1443
1444=head2 Inserting POD, Comments and C Preprocessor Directives
1445
1446C preprocessor directives are allowed within BOOT:, PREINIT: INIT:, CODE:,
1447PPCODE:, POSTCALL:, and CLEANUP: blocks, as well as outside the functions.
1448Comments are allowed anywhere after the MODULE keyword. The compiler will
1449pass the preprocessor directives through untouched and will remove the
1450commented lines. POD documentation is allowed at any point, both in the
1451C and XS language sections. POD must be terminated with a C<=cut> command;
1452C<xsubpp> will exit with an error if it does not. It is very unlikely that
1453human generated C code will be mistaken for POD, as most indenting styles
1454result in whitespace in front of any line starting with C<=>. Machine
1455generated XS files may fall into this trap unless care is taken to
1456ensure that a space breaks the sequence "\n=".
1457
1458Comments can be added to XSUBs by placing a C<#> as the first
1459non-whitespace of a line. Care should be taken to avoid making the
1460comment look like a C preprocessor directive, lest it be interpreted as
1461such. The simplest way to prevent this is to put whitespace in front of
1462the C<#>.
1463
1464If you use preprocessor directives to choose one of two
1465versions of a function, use
1466
1467 #if ... version1
1468 #else /* ... version2 */
1469 #endif
1470
1471and not
1472
1473 #if ... version1
1474 #endif
1475 #if ... version2
1476 #endif
1477
1478because otherwise B<xsubpp> will believe that you made a duplicate
1479definition of the function. Also, put a blank line before the
1480#else/#endif so it will not be seen as part of the function body.
1481
1482=head2 Using XS With C++
1483
1484If an XSUB name contains C<::>, it is considered to be a C++ method.
1485The generated Perl function will assume that
1486its first argument is an object pointer. The object pointer
1487will be stored in a variable called THIS. The object should
1488have been created by C++ with the new() function and should
1489be blessed by Perl with the sv_setref_pv() macro. The
1490blessing of the object by Perl can be handled by a typemap. An example
1491typemap is shown at the end of this section.
1492
1493If the return type of the XSUB includes C<static>, the method is considered
1494to be a static method. It will call the C++
1495function using the class::method() syntax. If the method is not static
1496the function will be called using the THIS-E<gt>method() syntax.
1497
1498The next examples will use the following C++ class.
1499
1500 class color {
1501 public:
1502 color();
1503 ~color();
1504 int blue();
1505 void set_blue( int );
1506
1507 private:
1508 int c_blue;
1509 };
1510
1511The XSUBs for the blue() and set_blue() methods are defined with the class
1512name but the parameter for the object (THIS, or "self") is implicit and is
1513not listed.
1514
1515 int
1516 color::blue()
1517
1518 void
1519 color::set_blue( val )
1520 int val
1521
1522Both Perl functions will expect an object as the first parameter. In the
1523generated C++ code the object is called C<THIS>, and the method call will
1524be performed on this object. So in the C++ code the blue() and set_blue()
1525methods will be called as this:
1526
1527 RETVAL = THIS->blue();
1528
1529 THIS->set_blue( val );
1530
1531You could also write a single get/set method using an optional argument:
1532
1533 int
1534 color::blue( val = NO_INIT )
1535 int val
1536 PROTOTYPE $;$
1537 CODE:
1538 if (items > 1)
1539 THIS->set_blue( val );
1540 RETVAL = THIS->blue();
1541 OUTPUT:
1542 RETVAL
1543
1544If the function's name is B<DESTROY> then the C++ C<delete> function will be
1545called and C<THIS> will be given as its parameter. The generated C++ code for
1546
1547 void
1548 color::DESTROY()
1549
1550will look like this:
1551
1552 color *THIS = ...; // Initialized as in typemap
1553
1554 delete THIS;
1555
1556If the function's name is B<new> then the C++ C<new> function will be called
1557to create a dynamic C++ object. The XSUB will expect the class name, which
1558will be kept in a variable called C<CLASS>, to be given as the first
1559argument.
1560
1561 color *
1562 color::new()
1563
1564The generated C++ code will call C<new>.
1565
1566 RETVAL = new color();
1567
1568The following is an example of a typemap that could be used for this C++
1569example.
1570
1571 TYPEMAP
1572 color * O_OBJECT
1573
1574 OUTPUT
1575 # The Perl object is blessed into 'CLASS', which should be a
1576 # char* having the name of the package for the blessing.
1577 O_OBJECT
1578 sv_setref_pv( $arg, CLASS, (void*)$var );
1579
1580 INPUT
1581 O_OBJECT
1582 if( sv_isobject($arg) && (SvTYPE(SvRV($arg)) == SVt_PVMG) )
1583 $var = ($type)SvIV((SV*)SvRV( $arg ));
1584 else{
1585 warn( \"${Package}::$func_name() -- $var is not a blessed SV reference\" );
1586 XSRETURN_UNDEF;
1587 }
1588
1589=head2 Interface Strategy
1590
1591When designing an interface between Perl and a C library a straight
1592translation from C to XS (such as created by C<h2xs -x>) is often sufficient.
1593However, sometimes the interface will look
1594very C-like and occasionally nonintuitive, especially when the C function
1595modifies one of its parameters, or returns failure inband (as in "negative
1596return values mean failure"). In cases where the programmer wishes to
1597create a more Perl-like interface the following strategy may help to
1598identify the more critical parts of the interface.
1599
1600Identify the C functions with input/output or output parameters. The XSUBs for
1601these functions may be able to return lists to Perl.
1602
1603Identify the C functions which use some inband info as an indication
1604of failure. They may be
1605candidates to return undef or an empty list in case of failure. If the
1606failure may be detected without a call to the C function, you may want to use
1607an INIT: section to report the failure. For failures detectable after the C
1608function returns one may want to use a POSTCALL: section to process the
1609failure. In more complicated cases use CODE: or PPCODE: sections.
1610
1611If many functions use the same failure indication based on the return value,
1612you may want to create a special typedef to handle this situation. Put
1613
1614 typedef int negative_is_failure;
1615
1616near the beginning of XS file, and create an OUTPUT typemap entry
1617for C<negative_is_failure> which converts negative values to C<undef>, or
1618maybe croak()s. After this the return value of type C<negative_is_failure>
1619will create more Perl-like interface.
1620
1621Identify which values are used by only the C and XSUB functions
1622themselves, say, when a parameter to a function should be a contents of a
1623global variable. If Perl does not need to access the contents of the value
1624then it may not be necessary to provide a translation for that value
1625from C to Perl.
1626
1627Identify the pointers in the C function parameter lists and return
1628values. Some pointers may be used to implement input/output or
1629output parameters, they can be handled in XS with the C<&> unary operator,
1630and, possibly, using the NO_INIT keyword.
1631Some others will require handling of types like C<int *>, and one needs
1632to decide what a useful Perl translation will do in such a case. When
1633the semantic is clear, it is advisable to put the translation into a typemap
1634file.
1635
1636Identify the structures used by the C functions. In many
1637cases it may be helpful to use the T_PTROBJ typemap for
1638these structures so they can be manipulated by Perl as
1639blessed objects. (This is handled automatically by C<h2xs -x>.)
1640
1641If the same C type is used in several different contexts which require
1642different translations, C<typedef> several new types mapped to this C type,
1643and create separate F<typemap> entries for these new types. Use these
1644types in declarations of return type and parameters to XSUBs.
1645
1646=head2 Perl Objects And C Structures
1647
1648When dealing with C structures one should select either
1649B<T_PTROBJ> or B<T_PTRREF> for the XS type. Both types are
1650designed to handle pointers to complex objects. The
1651T_PTRREF type will allow the Perl object to be unblessed
1652while the T_PTROBJ type requires that the object be blessed.
1653By using T_PTROBJ one can achieve a form of type-checking
1654because the XSUB will attempt to verify that the Perl object
1655is of the expected type.
1656
1657The following XS code shows the getnetconfigent() function which is used
1658with ONC+ TIRPC. The getnetconfigent() function will return a pointer to a
1659C structure and has the C prototype shown below. The example will
1660demonstrate how the C pointer will become a Perl reference. Perl will
1661consider this reference to be a pointer to a blessed object and will
1662attempt to call a destructor for the object. A destructor will be
1663provided in the XS source to free the memory used by getnetconfigent().
1664Destructors in XS can be created by specifying an XSUB function whose name
1665ends with the word B<DESTROY>. XS destructors can be used to free memory
1666which may have been malloc'd by another XSUB.
1667
1668 struct netconfig *getnetconfigent(const char *netid);
1669
1670A C<typedef> will be created for C<struct netconfig>. The Perl
1671object will be blessed in a class matching the name of the C
1672type, with the tag C<Ptr> appended, and the name should not
1673have embedded spaces if it will be a Perl package name. The
1674destructor will be placed in a class corresponding to the
1675class of the object and the PREFIX keyword will be used to
1676trim the name to the word DESTROY as Perl will expect.
1677
1678 typedef struct netconfig Netconfig;
1679
1680 MODULE = RPC PACKAGE = RPC
1681
1682 Netconfig *
1683 getnetconfigent(netid)
1684 char *netid
1685
1686 MODULE = RPC PACKAGE = NetconfigPtr PREFIX = rpcb_
1687
1688 void
1689 rpcb_DESTROY(netconf)
1690 Netconfig *netconf
1691 CODE:
1692 printf("Now in NetconfigPtr::DESTROY\n");
1693 free( netconf );
1694
1695This example requires the following typemap entry. Consult the typemap
1696section for more information about adding new typemaps for an extension.
1697
1698 TYPEMAP
1699 Netconfig * T_PTROBJ
1700
1701This example will be used with the following Perl statements.
1702
1703 use RPC;
1704 $netconf = getnetconfigent("udp");
1705
1706When Perl destroys the object referenced by $netconf it will send the
1707object to the supplied XSUB DESTROY function. Perl cannot determine, and
1708does not care, that this object is a C struct and not a Perl object. In
1709this sense, there is no difference between the object created by the
1710getnetconfigent() XSUB and an object created by a normal Perl subroutine.
1711
1712=head2 The Typemap
1713
1714The typemap is a collection of code fragments which are used by the B<xsubpp>
1715compiler to map C function parameters and values to Perl values. The
1716typemap file may consist of three sections labelled C<TYPEMAP>, C<INPUT>, and
1717C<OUTPUT>. An unlabelled initial section is assumed to be a C<TYPEMAP>
1718section. The INPUT section tells
1719the compiler how to translate Perl values
1720into variables of certain C types. The OUTPUT section tells the compiler
1721how to translate the values from certain C types into values Perl can
1722understand. The TYPEMAP section tells the compiler which of the INPUT and
1723OUTPUT code fragments should be used to map a given C type to a Perl value.
1724The section labels C<TYPEMAP>, C<INPUT>, or C<OUTPUT> must begin
1725in the first column on a line by themselves, and must be in uppercase.
1726
1727The default typemap in the C<lib/ExtUtils> directory of the Perl source
1728contains many useful types which can be used by Perl extensions. Some
1729extensions define additional typemaps which they keep in their own directory.
1730These additional typemaps may reference INPUT and OUTPUT maps in the main
1731typemap. The B<xsubpp> compiler will allow the extension's own typemap to
1732override any mappings which are in the default typemap.
1733
1734Most extensions which require a custom typemap will need only the TYPEMAP
1735section of the typemap file. The custom typemap used in the
1736getnetconfigent() example shown earlier demonstrates what may be the typical
1737use of extension typemaps. That typemap is used to equate a C structure
1738with the T_PTROBJ typemap. The typemap used by getnetconfigent() is shown
1739here. Note that the C type is separated from the XS type with a tab and
1740that the C unary operator C<*> is considered to be a part of the C type name.
1741
1742 TYPEMAP
1743 Netconfig *<tab>T_PTROBJ
1744
1745Here's a more complicated example: suppose that you wanted C<struct
1746netconfig> to be blessed into the class C<Net::Config>. One way to do
1747this is to use underscores (_) to separate package names, as follows:
1748
1749 typedef struct netconfig * Net_Config;
1750
1751And then provide a typemap entry C<T_PTROBJ_SPECIAL> that maps underscores to
1752double-colons (::), and declare C<Net_Config> to be of that type:
1753
1754
1755 TYPEMAP
1756 Net_Config T_PTROBJ_SPECIAL
1757
1758 INPUT
1759 T_PTROBJ_SPECIAL
1760 if (sv_derived_from($arg, \"${(my $ntt=$ntype)=~s/_/::/g;\$ntt}\")) {
1761 IV tmp = SvIV((SV*)SvRV($arg));
1762 $var = ($type) tmp;
1763 }
1764 else
1765 croak(\"$var is not of type ${(my $ntt=$ntype)=~s/_/::/g;\$ntt}\")
1766
1767 OUTPUT
1768 T_PTROBJ_SPECIAL
1769 sv_setref_pv($arg, \"${(my $ntt=$ntype)=~s/_/::/g;\$ntt}\",
1770 (void*)$var);
1771
1772The INPUT and OUTPUT sections substitute underscores for double-colons
1773on the fly, giving the desired effect. This example demonstrates some
1774of the power and versatility of the typemap facility.
1775
1776=head2 Safely Storing Static Data in XS
1777
1778Starting with Perl 5.8, a macro framework has been defined to allow
1779static data to be safely stored in XS modules that will be accessed from
1780a multi-threaded Perl.
1781
1782Although primarily designed for use with multi-threaded Perl, the macros
1783have been designed so that they will work with non-threaded Perl as well.
1784
1785It is therefore strongly recommended that these macros be used by all
1786XS modules that make use of static data.
1787
1788The easiest way to get a template set of macros to use is by specifying
1789the C<-g> (C<--global>) option with h2xs (see L<h2xs>).
1790
1791Below is an example module that makes use of the macros.
1792
1793 #include "EXTERN.h"
1794 #include "perl.h"
1795 #include "XSUB.h"
1796
1797 /* Global Data */
1798
1799 #define MY_CXT_KEY "BlindMice::_guts" XS_VERSION
1800
1801 typedef struct {
1802 int count;
1803 char name[3][100];
1804 } my_cxt_t;
1805
1806 START_MY_CXT
1807
1808 MODULE = BlindMice PACKAGE = BlindMice
1809
1810 BOOT:
1811 {
1812 MY_CXT_INIT;
1813 MY_CXT.count = 0;
1814 strcpy(MY_CXT.name[0], "None");
1815 strcpy(MY_CXT.name[1], "None");
1816 strcpy(MY_CXT.name[2], "None");
1817 }
1818
1819 int
1820 newMouse(char * name)
1821 char * name;
1822 PREINIT:
1823 dMY_CXT;
1824 CODE:
1825 if (MY_CXT.count >= 3) {
1826 warn("Already have 3 blind mice") ;
1827 RETVAL = 0;
1828 }
1829 else {
1830 RETVAL = ++ MY_CXT.count;
1831 strcpy(MY_CXT.name[MY_CXT.count - 1], name);
1832 }
1833
1834 char *
1835 get_mouse_name(index)
1836 int index
1837 CODE:
1838 dMY_CXT;
1839 RETVAL = MY_CXT.lives ++;
1840 if (index > MY_CXT.count)
1841 croak("There are only 3 blind mice.");
1842 else
1843 RETVAL = newSVpv(MY_CXT.name[index - 1]);
1844
1845
1846B<REFERENCE>
1847
1848=over 5
1849
1850=item MY_CXT_KEY
1851
1852This macro is used to define a unique key to refer to the static data
1853for an XS module. The suggested naming scheme, as used by h2xs, is to
1854use a string that consists of the module name, the string "::_guts"
1855and the module version number.
1856
1857 #define MY_CXT_KEY "MyModule::_guts" XS_VERSION
1858
1859=item typedef my_cxt_t
1860
1861This struct typedef I<must> always be called C<my_cxt_t> -- the other
1862C<CXT*> macros assume the existence of the C<my_cxt_t> typedef name.
1863
1864Declare a typedef named C<my_cxt_t> that is a structure that contains
1865all the data that needs to be interpreter-local.
1866
1867 typedef struct {
1868 int some_value;
1869 } my_cxt_t;
1870
1871=item START_MY_CXT
1872
1873Always place the START_MY_CXT macro directly after the declaration
1874of C<my_cxt_t>.
1875
1876=item MY_CXT_INIT
1877
1878The MY_CXT_INIT macro initialises storage for the C<my_cxt_t> struct.
1879
1880It I<must> be called exactly once -- typically in a BOOT: section.
1881
1882=item dMY_CXT
1883
1884Use the dMY_CXT macro (a declaration) in all the functions that access
1885MY_CXT.
1886
1887=item MY_CXT
1888
1889Use the MY_CXT macro to access members of the C<my_cxt_t> struct. For
1890example, if C<my_cxt_t> is
1891
1892 typedef struct {
1893 int index;
1894 } my_cxt_t;
1895
1896then use this to access the C<index> member
1897
1898 dMY_CXT;
1899 MY_CXT.index = 2;
1900
1901=back
1902
1903=head1 EXAMPLES
1904
1905File C<RPC.xs>: Interface to some ONC+ RPC bind library functions.
1906
1907 #include "EXTERN.h"
1908 #include "perl.h"
1909 #include "XSUB.h"
1910
1911 #include <rpc/rpc.h>
1912
1913 typedef struct netconfig Netconfig;
1914
1915 MODULE = RPC PACKAGE = RPC
1916
1917 SV *
1918 rpcb_gettime(host="localhost")
1919 char *host
1920 PREINIT:
1921 time_t timep;
1922 CODE:
1923 ST(0) = sv_newmortal();
1924 if( rpcb_gettime( host, &timep ) )
1925 sv_setnv( ST(0), (double)timep );
1926
1927 Netconfig *
1928 getnetconfigent(netid="udp")
1929 char *netid
1930
1931 MODULE = RPC PACKAGE = NetconfigPtr PREFIX = rpcb_
1932
1933 void
1934 rpcb_DESTROY(netconf)
1935 Netconfig *netconf
1936 CODE:
1937 printf("NetconfigPtr::DESTROY\n");
1938 free( netconf );
1939
1940File C<typemap>: Custom typemap for RPC.xs.
1941
1942 TYPEMAP
1943 Netconfig * T_PTROBJ
1944
1945File C<RPC.pm>: Perl module for the RPC extension.
1946
1947 package RPC;
1948
1949 require Exporter;
1950 require DynaLoader;
1951 @ISA = qw(Exporter DynaLoader);
1952 @EXPORT = qw(rpcb_gettime getnetconfigent);
1953
1954 bootstrap RPC;
1955 1;
1956
1957File C<rpctest.pl>: Perl test program for the RPC extension.
1958
1959 use RPC;
1960
1961 $netconf = getnetconfigent();
1962 $a = rpcb_gettime();
1963 print "time = $a\n";
1964 print "netconf = $netconf\n";
1965
1966 $netconf = getnetconfigent("tcp");
1967 $a = rpcb_gettime("poplar");
1968 print "time = $a\n";
1969 print "netconf = $netconf\n";
1970
1971
1972=head1 XS VERSION
1973
1974This document covers features supported by C<xsubpp> 1.935.
1975
1976=head1 AUTHOR
1977
1978Originally written by Dean Roehrich <F<roehrich@cray.com>>.
1979
1980Maintained since 1996 by The Perl Porters <F<perlbug@perl.org>>.