ExtUtils::ParseXS::Utilities - Subroutines used with ExtUtils::ParseXS
use ExtUtils::ParseXS::Utilities qw(
standard_typemap_locations
trim_whitespace
C_string
valid_proto_string
process_typemaps
map_type
standard_XS_defs
C_func_signature
analyze_preprocessor_statement
set_cond
Warn
blurt
death
check_conditional_preprocessor_statements
escape_file_for_line_directive
report_typemap_failure
);
The following functions are not considered to be part of the public interface. They are documented here for the benefit of future maintainers of this module.
standard_typemap_locations()
Purpose
Provide a list of filepaths where typemap files may be found. The filepaths -- relative paths to files (not just directory paths) -- appear in this list in lowest-to-highest priority.
The highest priority is to look in the current directory.
'typemap'
The second and third highest priorities are to look in the parent of the current directory and a directory called lib/ExtUtils underneath the parent directory.
'../typemap',
'../lib/ExtUtils/typemap',
The fourth through ninth highest priorities are to look in the corresponding grandparent, great-grandparent and great-great-grandparent directories.
'../../typemap',
'../../lib/ExtUtils/typemap',
'../../../typemap',
'../../../lib/ExtUtils/typemap',
'../../../../typemap',
'../../../../lib/ExtUtils/typemap',
The tenth and subsequent priorities are to look in directories named ExtUtils which are subdirectories of directories found in @INC
-- provided a file named typemap actually exists in such a directory. Example:
'/usr/local/lib/perl5/5.10.1/ExtUtils/typemap',
However, these filepaths appear in the list returned by standard_typemap_locations()
in reverse order, i.e., lowest-to-highest.
'/usr/local/lib/perl5/5.10.1/ExtUtils/typemap',
'../../../../lib/ExtUtils/typemap',
'../../../../typemap',
'../../../lib/ExtUtils/typemap',
'../../../typemap',
'../../lib/ExtUtils/typemap',
'../../typemap',
'../lib/ExtUtils/typemap',
'../typemap',
'typemap'
Arguments
my @stl = standard_typemap_locations( \@INC );
Reference to @INC
.
Return Value
Array holding list of directories to be searched for typemap files.
trim_whitespace()
Purpose
Perform an in-place trimming of leading and trailing whitespace from the first argument provided to the function.
Argument
trim_whitespace($arg);
Return Value
None. Remember: this is an in-place modification of the argument.
C_string()
Purpose
Escape backslashes (\
) in prototype strings.
Arguments
$ProtoThisXSUB = C_string($_);
String needing escaping.
Return Value
Properly escaped string.
valid_proto_string()
Purpose
Validate prototype string.
Arguments
String needing checking.
Return Value
Upon success, returns the same string passed as argument.
Upon failure, returns 0
.
process_typemaps()
Purpose
Process all typemap files.
Arguments
my $typemaps_object = process_typemaps( $args{typemap}, $pwd );
List of two elements: typemap
element from %args
; current working directory.
Return Value
Upon success, returns an ExtUtils::Typemaps object.
map_type($self, $type, $varname)
Returns a mapped version of the C type $type
. In particular, it converts Foo::bar
to Foo__bar
, converts the special array(type,n)
into type *
, and inserts $varname
(if present) into any function pointer type. So ...(*)...
becomes ...(* foo)...
.
standard_XS_defs()
Purpose
Writes to the .c
output file certain preprocessor directives and function headers needed in all such files.
Arguments
None.
Return Value
Returns true.
C_func_signature()
Purpose
Generate the argument list to be applied to the call to the "real" C library function which is wrapped by the xsub. It is is the same as the xsub's arguments, except that any initial method pointer is deleted, and args marked as *OUT*
are prefixed with '&'.
Arguments
$sig_string = $self->C_func_signature($argsref, $class);
$argref
is an array reference containing the xsub's parameters.
$class
if defined, indicates that this is a method.
Return Value
A string such as 'foo, &bar, baz'
analyze_preprocessor_statement()
Purpose
Process a CPP conditional line (#if
etc), to keep track of conditional nesting. In particular, it updates @{$self->{XS_parse_stack}}
which contains the current list of nested conditions, and $self->{XS_parse_stack_top_if_idx}
which indicates the most recent if
in that stack. So an #if
pushes, an #endif
pops, an #else
modifies etc. Each element is a hash of the form:
{
type => 'if',
varname => 'XSubPPtmpAAAA', # maintained by caller
# XS functions defined within this branch of the
# conditional (maintained by caller)
functions => {
'Foo::Bar::baz' => 1,
...
}
# XS functions seen within any previous branch
other_functions => {... }
It also updates $self->{bootcode_early}
and $self->{bootcode_late}
with extra CPP directives.
Arguments
$self->analyze_preprocessor_statement($statement);
set_cond()
Purpose
Return a string containing a snippet of C code which tests for the 'wrong number of arguments passed' condition, depending on whether there are default arguments or ellipsis.
Arguments
ellipsis
true if the xsub's signature has a trailing , ...
.
$min_args
the smallest number of args which may be passed.
$num_args
the number of parameters in the signature.
Return Value
The text of a short C code snippet.
current_line_number()
Purpose
Figures out the current line number in the XS file.
Arguments
$self
Return Value
The current line number.
There are four main methods for reporting warnings and errors.
$self->Warn(@messages)
This is equivalent to:
warn "@messages in foo.xs, line 123\n";
The file and line number are based on the file currently being parsed. It is intended for use where you wish to warn, but can continue parsing and still generate a correct C output file.
$self->blurt(@messages)
This is equivalent to Warn
, except that it also increments the internal error count (which can be retrieved with report_error_count()
). It is used to report an error, but where parsing can continue (so typically for a semantic error rather than a syntax error). It is expected that the caller will eventually signal failure in some fashion. For example, xsubpp
has this as its last line:
exit($self->report_error_count() ? 1 : 0);
$self->death(@messages)
This normally equivalent to:
$self->Warn(@messages);
exit(1);
It is used for something like a syntax error, where parsing can't continue. However, this is inconvenient for testing purposes, as the error can't be trapped. So if $self
is created with the die_on_error
flag, or if $ExtUtils::ParseXS::DIE_ON_ERROR
is true when process_file() is called, then instead it will die() with that message.
$self->WarnHint(@messages, $hints)
This is a more obscure twin to Warn
, which does the same as Warn
, but afterwards, outputs any lines contained in the $hints
string, with each line wrapped in parentheses. For example:
$self->WarnHint(@messages,
"Have you set the foo switch?\nSee the manual for further info");
check_conditional_preprocessor_statements()
Purpose
Warn if the lines in @{ $self->{line} }
don't have balanced #if
, endif
etc.
Arguments
None
Return Value
None
escape_file_for_line_directive()
Purpose
Escapes a given code source name (typically a file name but can also be a command that was read from) so that double-quotes and backslashes are escaped.
Arguments
A string.
Return Value
A string with escapes for double-quotes and backslashes.
report_typemap_failure
Purpose
Do error reporting for missing typemaps.
Arguments
The ExtUtils::ParseXS
object.
An ExtUtils::Typemaps
object.
The string that represents the C type that was not found in the typemap.
Optionally, the string death
or blurt
to choose whether the error is immediately fatal or not. Default: blurt
Return Value
Returns nothing. Depending on the arguments, this may call death
or blurt
, the former of which is fatal.