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diff --git a/tcl8.6/doc/interp.n b/tcl8.6/doc/interp.n new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1c9618a --- /dev/null +++ b/tcl8.6/doc/interp.n @@ -0,0 +1,910 @@ +'\" +'\" Copyright (c) 1995-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc. +'\" Copyright (c) 2004 Donal K. Fellows +'\" Copyright (c) 2006-2008 Joe Mistachkin. +'\" +'\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution +'\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. +'\" +.TH interp n 8.6 Tcl "Tcl Built-In Commands" +.so man.macros +.BS +'\" Note: do not modify the .SH NAME line immediately below! +.SH NAME +interp \- Create and manipulate Tcl interpreters +.SH SYNOPSIS +\fBinterp \fIsubcommand \fR?\fIarg arg ...\fR? +.BE +.SH DESCRIPTION +.PP +This command makes it possible to create one or more new Tcl +interpreters that co-exist with the creating interpreter in the +same application. The creating interpreter is called the \fImaster\fR +and the new interpreter is called a \fIslave\fR. +A master can create any number of slaves, and each slave can +itself create additional slaves for which it is master, resulting +in a hierarchy of interpreters. +.PP +Each interpreter is independent from the others: it has its own name +space for commands, procedures, and global variables. +A master interpreter may create connections between its slaves and +itself using a mechanism called an \fIalias\fR. An \fIalias\fR is +a command in a slave interpreter which, when invoked, causes a +command to be invoked in its master interpreter or in another slave +interpreter. The only other connections between interpreters are +through environment variables (the \fBenv\fR variable), which are +normally shared among all interpreters in the application, +and by resource limit exceeded callbacks. Note that the +name space for files (such as the names returned by the \fBopen\fR command) +is no longer shared between interpreters. Explicit commands are provided to +share files and to transfer references to open files from one interpreter +to another. +.PP +The \fBinterp\fR command also provides support for \fIsafe\fR +interpreters. A safe interpreter is a slave whose functions have +been greatly restricted, so that it is safe to execute untrusted +scripts without fear of them damaging other interpreters or the +application's environment. For example, all IO channel creation +commands and subprocess creation commands are made inaccessible to safe +interpreters. +See \fBSAFE INTERPRETERS\fR below for more information on +what features are present in a safe interpreter. +The dangerous functionality is not removed from the safe interpreter; +instead, it is \fIhidden\fR, so that only trusted interpreters can obtain +access to it. For a detailed explanation of hidden commands, see +\fBHIDDEN COMMANDS\fR, below. +The alias mechanism can be used for protected communication (analogous to a +kernel call) between a slave interpreter and its master. +See \fBALIAS INVOCATION\fR, below, for more details +on how the alias mechanism works. +.PP +A qualified interpreter name is a proper Tcl lists containing a subset of its +ancestors in the interpreter hierarchy, terminated by the string naming the +interpreter in its immediate master. Interpreter names are relative to the +interpreter in which they are used. For example, if +.QW \fBa\fR +is a slave of the current interpreter and it has a slave +.QW \fBa1\fR , +which in turn has a slave +.QW \fBa11\fR , +the qualified name of +.QW \fBa11\fR +in +.QW \fBa\fR +is the list +.QW "\fBa1 a11\fR" . +.PP +The \fBinterp\fR command, described below, accepts qualified interpreter +names as arguments; the interpreter in which the command is being evaluated +can always be referred to as \fB{}\fR (the empty list or string). Note that +it is impossible to refer to a master (ancestor) interpreter by name in a +slave interpreter except through aliases. Also, there is no global name by +which one can refer to the first interpreter created in an application. +Both restrictions are motivated by safety concerns. +.SH "THE INTERP COMMAND" +.PP +The \fBinterp\fR command is used to create, delete, and manipulate +slave interpreters, and to share or transfer +channels between interpreters. It can have any of several forms, depending +on the \fIsubcommand\fR argument: +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBalias\fR \fIsrcPath\fR \fIsrcToken\fR +. +Returns a Tcl list whose elements are the \fItargetCmd\fR and +\fIarg\fRs associated with the alias represented by \fIsrcToken\fR +(this is the value returned when the alias was +created; it is possible that the name of the source command in the +slave is different from \fIsrcToken\fR). +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBalias\fR \fIsrcPath\fR \fIsrcToken\fR \fB{}\fR +. +Deletes the alias for \fIsrcToken\fR in the slave interpreter identified by +\fIsrcPath\fR. +\fIsrcToken\fR refers to the value returned when the alias +was created; if the source command has been renamed, the renamed +command will be deleted. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBalias\fR \fIsrcPath\fR \fIsrcCmd\fR \fItargetPath\fR \fItargetCmd \fR?\fIarg arg ...\fR? +. +This command creates an alias between one slave and another (see the +\fBalias\fR slave command below for creating aliases between a slave +and its master). In this command, either of the slave interpreters +may be anywhere in the hierarchy of interpreters under the interpreter +invoking the command. +\fISrcPath\fR and \fIsrcCmd\fR identify the source of the alias. +\fISrcPath\fR is a Tcl list whose elements select a particular +interpreter. For example, +.QW "\fBa b\fR" +identifies an interpreter +.QW \fBb\fR , +which is a slave of interpreter +.QW \fBa\fR , +which is a slave of the invoking interpreter. An empty list specifies +the interpreter invoking the command. \fIsrcCmd\fR gives the name of +a new command, which will be created in the source interpreter. +\fITargetPath\fR and \fItargetCmd\fR specify a target interpreter +and command, and the \fIarg\fR arguments, if any, specify additional +arguments to \fItargetCmd\fR which are prepended to any arguments specified +in the invocation of \fIsrcCmd\fR. +\fITargetCmd\fR may be undefined at the time of this call, or it may +already exist; it is not created by this command. +The alias arranges for the given target command to be invoked +in the target interpreter whenever the given source command is +invoked in the source interpreter. See \fBALIAS INVOCATION\fR below for +more details. +The command returns a token that uniquely identifies the command created +\fIsrcCmd\fR, even if the command is renamed afterwards. The token may but +does not have to be equal to \fIsrcCmd\fR. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBaliases \fR?\fIpath\fR? +. +This command returns a Tcl list of the tokens of all the source commands for +aliases defined in the interpreter identified by \fIpath\fR. The tokens +correspond to the values returned when +the aliases were created (which may not be the same +as the current names of the commands). +.TP +\fBinterp bgerror \fIpath\fR ?\fIcmdPrefix\fR? +. +This command either gets or sets the current background exception handler +for the interpreter identified by \fIpath\fR. If \fIcmdPrefix\fR is +absent, the current background exception handler is returned, and if it is +present, it is a list of words (of minimum length one) that describes +what to set the interpreter's background exception handler to. See the +\fBBACKGROUND EXCEPTION HANDLING\fR section for more details. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBcancel \fR?\fB\-unwind\fR? ?\fB\-\|\-\fR? ?\fIpath\fR? ?\fIresult\fR? +.VS 8.6 +Cancels the script being evaluated in the interpreter identified by +\fIpath\fR. Without the \fB\-unwind\fR switch the evaluation stack for +the interpreter is unwound until an enclosing catch command is found or +there are no further invocations of the interpreter left on the call +stack. With the \fB\-unwind\fR switch the evaluation stack for the +interpreter is unwound without regard to any intervening catch command +until there are no further invocations of the interpreter left on the +call stack. The \fB\-\|\-\fR switch can be used to mark the end of +switches; it may be needed if \fIpath\fR is an unusual value such +as \fB\-safe\fR. If \fIresult\fR is present, it will be used as the +error message string; otherwise, a default error message string will be +used. +.VE 8.6 +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBcreate \fR?\fB\-safe\fR? ?\fB\-\|\-\fR? ?\fIpath\fR? +. +Creates a slave interpreter identified by \fIpath\fR and a new command, +called a \fIslave command\fR. The name of the slave command is the last +component of \fIpath\fR. The new slave interpreter and the slave command +are created in the interpreter identified by the path obtained by removing +the last component from \fIpath\fR. For example, if \fIpath\fR is \fBa b +c\fR then a new slave interpreter and slave command named \fBc\fR are +created in the interpreter identified by the path \fBa b\fR. +The slave command may be used to manipulate the new interpreter as +described below. If \fIpath\fR is omitted, Tcl creates a unique name of the +form \fBinterp\fIx\fR, where \fIx\fR is an integer, and uses it for the +interpreter and the slave command. If the \fB\-safe\fR switch is specified +(or if the master interpreter is a safe interpreter), the new slave +interpreter will be created as a safe interpreter with limited +functionality; otherwise the slave will include the full set of Tcl +built-in commands and variables. The \fB\-\|\-\fR switch can be used to +mark the end of switches; it may be needed if \fIpath\fR is an unusual +value such as \fB\-safe\fR. The result of the command is the name of the +new interpreter. The name of a slave interpreter must be unique among all +the slaves for its master; an error occurs if a slave interpreter by the +given name already exists in this master. +The initial recursion limit of the slave interpreter is set to the +current recursion limit of its parent interpreter. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBdebug \fIpath\fR ?\fB\-frame\fR ?\fIbool\fR?? +. +Controls whether frame-level stack information is captured in the +slave interpreter identified by \fIpath\fR. If no arguments are +given, option and current setting are returned. If \fB\-frame\fR +is given, the debug setting is set to the given boolean if provided +and the current setting is returned. +This only affects the output of \fBinfo frame\fR, in that exact +frame-level information for command invocation at the bytecode level +is only captured with this setting on. +.RS +.PP +For example, with code like +.PP +.CS +\fBproc\fR mycontrol {... script} { + ... + \fBuplevel\fR 1 $script + ... +} + +\fBproc\fR dosomething {...} { + ... + mycontrol { + somecode + } +} +.CE +.PP +the standard setting will provide a relative line number for the +command \fBsomecode\fR and the relevant frame will be of type +\fBeval\fR. With frame-debug active on the other hand the tracking +extends so far that the system will be able to determine the file and +absolute line number of this command, and return a frame of type +\fBsource\fR. This more exact information is paid for with slower +execution of all commands. +.PP +Note that once it is on, this flag cannot be switched back off: such +attempts are silently ignored. This is needed to maintain the +consistency of the underlying interpreter's state. +.RE +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBdelete \fR?\fIpath ...?\fR +. +Deletes zero or more interpreters given by the optional \fIpath\fR +arguments, and for each interpreter, it also deletes its slaves. The +command also deletes the slave command for each interpreter deleted. +For each \fIpath\fR argument, if no interpreter by that name +exists, the command raises an error. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBeval\fR \fIpath arg \fR?\fIarg ...\fR? +. +This command concatenates all of the \fIarg\fR arguments in the same +fashion as the \fBconcat\fR command, then evaluates the resulting string as +a Tcl script in the slave interpreter identified by \fIpath\fR. The result +of this evaluation (including all \fBreturn\fR options, +such as \fB\-errorinfo\fR and \fB\-errorcode\fR information, if an +error occurs) is returned to the invoking interpreter. +Note that the script will be executed in the current context stack frame of the +\fIpath\fR interpreter; this is so that the implementations (in a master +interpreter) of aliases in a slave interpreter can execute scripts in +the slave that find out information about the slave's current state +and stack frame. +.TP +\fBinterp exists \fIpath\fR +. +Returns \fB1\fR if a slave interpreter by the specified \fIpath\fR +exists in this master, \fB0\fR otherwise. If \fIpath\fR is omitted, the +invoking interpreter is used. +.TP +\fBinterp expose \fIpath\fR \fIhiddenName\fR ?\fIexposedCmdName\fR? +. +Makes the hidden command \fIhiddenName\fR exposed, eventually bringing +it back under a new \fIexposedCmdName\fR name (this name is currently +accepted only if it is a valid global name space name without any ::), +in the interpreter +denoted by \fIpath\fR. +If an exposed command with the targeted name already exists, this command +fails. +Hidden commands are explained in more detail in \fBHIDDEN COMMANDS\fR, below. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBhide\fR \fIpath\fR \fIexposedCmdName\fR ?\fIhiddenCmdName\fR? +. +Makes the exposed command \fIexposedCmdName\fR hidden, renaming +it to the hidden command \fIhiddenCmdName\fR, or keeping the same name if +\fIhiddenCmdName\fR is not given, in the interpreter denoted +by \fIpath\fR. +If a hidden command with the targeted name already exists, this command +fails. +Currently both \fIexposedCmdName\fR and \fIhiddenCmdName\fR can +not contain namespace qualifiers, or an error is raised. +Commands to be hidden by \fBinterp hide\fR are looked up in the global +namespace even if the current namespace is not the global one. This +prevents slaves from fooling a master interpreter into hiding the wrong +command, by making the current namespace be different from the global one. +Hidden commands are explained in more detail in \fBHIDDEN COMMANDS\fR, below. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBhidden\fR \fIpath\fR +. +Returns a list of the names of all hidden commands in the interpreter +identified by \fIpath\fR. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBinvokehidden\fR \fIpath\fR ?\fI\-option ...\fR? \fIhiddenCmdName\fR ?\fIarg ...\fR? +. +Invokes the hidden command \fIhiddenCmdName\fR with the arguments supplied +in the interpreter denoted by \fIpath\fR. No substitutions or evaluation +are applied to the arguments. Three \fI\-option\fRs are supported, all +of which start with \fB\-\fR: \fB\-namespace\fR (which takes a single +argument afterwards, \fInsName\fR), \fB\-global\fR, and \fB\-\|\-\fR. +If the \fB\-namespace\fR flag is present, the hidden command is invoked in +the namespace called \fInsName\fR in the target interpreter. +If the \fB\-global\fR flag is present, the hidden command is invoked at the +global level in the target interpreter; otherwise it is invoked at the +current call frame and can access local variables in that and outer call +frames. +The \fB\-\|\-\fR flag allows the \fIhiddenCmdName\fR argument to start with a +.QW \- +character, and is otherwise unnecessary. +If both the \fB\-namespace\fR and \fB\-global\fR flags are present, the +\fB\-namespace\fR flag is ignored. +Note that the hidden command will be executed (by default) in the +current context stack frame of the \fIpath\fR interpreter. +Hidden commands are explained in more detail in \fBHIDDEN COMMANDS\fR, below. +.TP +\fBinterp issafe\fR ?\fIpath\fR? +. +Returns \fB1\fR if the interpreter identified by the specified \fIpath\fR +is safe, \fB0\fR otherwise. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBlimit\fR \fIpath\fR \fIlimitType\fR ?\fI\-option\fR? ?\fIvalue\fR \fI...\fR? +. +Sets up, manipulates and queries the configuration of the resource +limit \fIlimitType\fR for the interpreter denoted by \fIpath\fR. If +no \fI\-option\fR is specified, return the current configuration of the +limit. If \fI\-option\fR is the sole argument, return the value of that +option. Otherwise, a list of \fI\-option\fR/\fIvalue\fR argument pairs +must supplied. See \fBRESOURCE LIMITS\fR below for a more detailed +explanation of what limits and options are supported. +.TP +\fBinterp marktrusted\fR \fIpath\fR +. +Marks the interpreter identified by \fIpath\fR as trusted. Does +not expose the hidden commands. This command can only be invoked from a +trusted interpreter. +The command has no effect if the interpreter identified by \fIpath\fR is +already trusted. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBrecursionlimit\fR \fIpath\fR ?\fInewlimit\fR? +. +Returns the maximum allowable nesting depth for the interpreter +specified by \fIpath\fR. If \fInewlimit\fR is specified, +the interpreter recursion limit will be set so that nesting +of more than \fInewlimit\fR calls to \fBTcl_Eval\fR +and related procedures in that interpreter will return an error. +The \fInewlimit\fR value is also returned. +The \fInewlimit\fR value must be a positive integer between 1 and the +maximum value of a non-long integer on the platform. +.RS +.PP +The command sets the maximum size of the Tcl call stack only. It cannot +by itself prevent stack overflows on the C stack being used by the +application. If your machine has a limit on the size of the C stack, you +may get stack overflows before reaching the limit set by the command. If +this happens, see if there is a mechanism in your system for increasing +the maximum size of the C stack. +.RE +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBshare\fR \fIsrcPath channelId destPath\fR +. +Causes the IO channel identified by \fIchannelId\fR to become shared +between the interpreter identified by \fIsrcPath\fR and the interpreter +identified by \fIdestPath\fR. Both interpreters have the same permissions +on the IO channel. +Both interpreters must close it to close the underlying IO channel; IO +channels accessible in an interpreter are automatically closed when an +interpreter is destroyed. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBslaves\fR ?\fIpath\fR? +. +Returns a Tcl list of the names of all the slave interpreters associated +with the interpreter identified by \fIpath\fR. If \fIpath\fR is omitted, +the invoking interpreter is used. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBtarget\fR \fIpath alias\fR +. +Returns a Tcl list describing the target interpreter for an alias. The +alias is specified with an interpreter path and source command name, just +as in \fBinterp alias\fR above. The name of the target interpreter is +returned as an interpreter path, relative to the invoking interpreter. +If the target interpreter for the alias is the invoking interpreter then an +empty list is returned. If the target interpreter for the alias is not the +invoking interpreter or one of its descendants then an error is generated. +The target command does not have to be defined at the time of this invocation. +.TP +\fBinterp\fR \fBtransfer\fR \fIsrcPath channelId destPath\fR +. +Causes the IO channel identified by \fIchannelId\fR to become available in +the interpreter identified by \fIdestPath\fR and unavailable in the +interpreter identified by \fIsrcPath\fR. +.SH "SLAVE COMMAND" +.PP +For each slave interpreter created with the \fBinterp\fR command, a +new Tcl command is created in the master interpreter with the same +name as the new interpreter. This command may be used to invoke +various operations on the interpreter. It has the following +general form: +.PP +.CS +\fIslave command \fR?\fIarg arg ...\fR? +.CE +.PP +\fISlave\fR is the name of the interpreter, and \fIcommand\fR +and the \fIarg\fRs determine the exact behavior of the command. +The valid forms of this command are: +.TP +\fIslave \fBaliases\fR +. +Returns a Tcl list whose elements are the tokens of all the +aliases in \fIslave\fR. The tokens correspond to the values returned when +the aliases were created (which may not be the same +as the current names of the commands). +.TP +\fIslave \fBalias \fIsrcToken\fR +. +Returns a Tcl list whose elements are the \fItargetCmd\fR and +\fIarg\fRs associated with the alias represented by \fIsrcToken\fR +(this is the value returned when the alias was +created; it is possible that the actual source command in the +slave is different from \fIsrcToken\fR). +.TP +\fIslave \fBalias \fIsrcToken \fB{}\fR +. +Deletes the alias for \fIsrcToken\fR in the slave interpreter. +\fIsrcToken\fR refers to the value returned when the alias +was created; if the source command has been renamed, the renamed +command will be deleted. +.TP +\fIslave \fBalias \fIsrcCmd targetCmd \fR?\fIarg ..\fR? +. +Creates an alias such that whenever \fIsrcCmd\fR is invoked +in \fIslave\fR, \fItargetCmd\fR is invoked in the master. +The \fIarg\fR arguments will be passed to \fItargetCmd\fR as additional +arguments, prepended before any arguments passed in the invocation of +\fIsrcCmd\fR. +See \fBALIAS INVOCATION\fR below for details. +The command returns a token that uniquely identifies the command created +\fIsrcCmd\fR, even if the command is renamed afterwards. The token may but +does not have to be equal to \fIsrcCmd\fR. +.TP +\fIslave \fBbgerror\fR ?\fIcmdPrefix\fR? +. +This command either gets or sets the current background exception handler +for the \fIslave\fR interpreter. If \fIcmdPrefix\fR is +absent, the current background exception handler is returned, and if it is +present, it is a list of words (of minimum length one) that describes +what to set the interpreter's background exception handler to. See the +\fBBACKGROUND EXCEPTION HANDLING\fR section for more details. +.TP +\fIslave \fBeval \fIarg \fR?\fIarg ..\fR? +. +This command concatenates all of the \fIarg\fR arguments in +the same fashion as the \fBconcat\fR command, then evaluates +the resulting string as a Tcl script in \fIslave\fR. +The result of this evaluation (including all \fBreturn\fR options, +such as \fB\-errorinfo\fR and \fB\-errorcode\fR information, if an +error occurs) is returned to the invoking interpreter. +Note that the script will be executed in the current context stack frame +of \fIslave\fR; this is so that the implementations (in a master +interpreter) of aliases in a slave interpreter can execute scripts in +the slave that find out information about the slave's current state +and stack frame. +.TP +\fIslave \fBexpose \fIhiddenName \fR?\fIexposedCmdName\fR? +. +This command exposes the hidden command \fIhiddenName\fR, eventually bringing +it back under a new \fIexposedCmdName\fR name (this name is currently +accepted only if it is a valid global name space name without any ::), +in \fIslave\fR. +If an exposed command with the targeted name already exists, this command +fails. +For more details on hidden commands, see \fBHIDDEN COMMANDS\fR, below. +.TP +\fIslave \fBhide \fIexposedCmdName\fR ?\fIhiddenCmdName\fR? +. +This command hides the exposed command \fIexposedCmdName\fR, renaming it to +the hidden command \fIhiddenCmdName\fR, or keeping the same name if the +argument is not given, in the \fIslave\fR interpreter. +If a hidden command with the targeted name already exists, this command +fails. +Currently both \fIexposedCmdName\fR and \fIhiddenCmdName\fR can +not contain namespace qualifiers, or an error is raised. +Commands to be hidden are looked up in the global +namespace even if the current namespace is not the global one. This +prevents slaves from fooling a master interpreter into hiding the wrong +command, by making the current namespace be different from the global one. +For more details on hidden commands, see \fBHIDDEN COMMANDS\fR, below. +.TP +\fIslave \fBhidden\fR +. +Returns a list of the names of all hidden commands in \fIslave\fR. +.TP +\fIslave \fBinvokehidden\fR ?\fI\-option ...\fR? \fIhiddenName \fR?\fIarg ..\fR? +. +This command invokes the hidden command \fIhiddenName\fR with the +supplied arguments, in \fIslave\fR. No substitutions or evaluations are +applied to the arguments. Three \fI\-option\fRs are supported, all +of which start with \fB\-\fR: \fB\-namespace\fR (which takes a single +argument afterwards, \fInsName\fR), \fB\-global\fR, and \fB\-\|\-\fR. +If the \fB\-namespace\fR flag is given, the hidden command is invoked in +the specified namespace in the slave. +If the \fB\-global\fR flag is given, the command is invoked at the global +level in the slave; otherwise it is invoked at the current call frame and +can access local variables in that or outer call frames. +The \fB\-\|\-\fR flag allows the \fIhiddenCmdName\fR argument to start with a +.QW \- +character, and is otherwise unnecessary. +If both the \fB\-namespace\fR and \fB\-global\fR flags are given, the +\fB\-namespace\fR flag is ignored. +Note that the hidden command will be executed (by default) in the +current context stack frame of \fIslave\fR. +For more details on hidden commands, +see \fBHIDDEN COMMANDS\fR, below. +.TP +\fIslave \fBissafe\fR +. +Returns \fB1\fR if the slave interpreter is safe, \fB0\fR otherwise. +.TP +\fIslave \fBlimit\fR \fIlimitType\fR ?\fI\-option\fR? ?\fIvalue\fR \fI...\fR? +. +Sets up, manipulates and queries the configuration of the resource +limit \fIlimitType\fR for the slave interpreter. If no \fI\-option\fR +is specified, return the current configuration of the limit. If +\fI\-option\fR is the sole argument, return the value of that option. +Otherwise, a list of \fI\-option\fR/\fIvalue\fR argument pairs must +supplied. See \fBRESOURCE LIMITS\fR below for a more detailed explanation of +what limits and options are supported. +.TP +\fIslave \fBmarktrusted\fR +. +Marks the slave interpreter as trusted. Can only be invoked by a +trusted interpreter. This command does not expose any hidden +commands in the slave interpreter. The command has no effect if the slave +is already trusted. +.TP +\fIslave\fR \fBrecursionlimit\fR ?\fInewlimit\fR? +. +Returns the maximum allowable nesting depth for the \fIslave\fR interpreter. +If \fInewlimit\fR is specified, the recursion limit in \fIslave\fR will be +set so that nesting of more than \fInewlimit\fR calls to \fBTcl_Eval()\fR +and related procedures in \fIslave\fR will return an error. +The \fInewlimit\fR value is also returned. +The \fInewlimit\fR value must be a positive integer between 1 and the +maximum value of a non-long integer on the platform. +.RS +.PP +The command sets the maximum size of the Tcl call stack only. It cannot +by itself prevent stack overflows on the C stack being used by the +application. If your machine has a limit on the size of the C stack, you +may get stack overflows before reaching the limit set by the command. If +this happens, see if there is a mechanism in your system for increasing +the maximum size of the C stack. +.RE +.SH "SAFE INTERPRETERS" +.PP +A safe interpreter is one with restricted functionality, so that +is safe to execute an arbitrary script from your worst enemy without +fear of that script damaging the enclosing application or the rest +of your computing environment. In order to make an interpreter +safe, certain commands and variables are removed from the interpreter. +For example, commands to create files on disk are removed, and the +\fBexec\fR command is removed, since it could be used to cause damage +through subprocesses. +Limited access to these facilities can be provided, by creating +aliases to the master interpreter which check their arguments carefully +and provide restricted access to a safe subset of facilities. +For example, file creation might be allowed in a particular subdirectory +and subprocess invocation might be allowed for a carefully selected and +fixed set of programs. +.PP +A safe interpreter is created by specifying the \fB\-safe\fR switch +to the \fBinterp create\fR command. Furthermore, any slave created +by a safe interpreter will also be safe. +.PP +A safe interpreter is created with exactly the following set of +built-in commands: +.DS +.ta 1.2i 2.4i 3.6i +\fBafter\fR \fBappend\fR \fBapply\fR \fBarray\fR +\fBbinary\fR \fBbreak\fR \fBcatch\fR \fBchan\fR +\fBclock\fR \fBclose\fR \fBconcat\fR \fBcontinue\fR +\fBdict\fR \fBeof\fR \fBerror\fR \fBeval\fR +\fBexpr\fR \fBfblocked\fR \fBfcopy\fR \fBfileevent\fR +\fBflush\fR \fBfor\fR \fBforeach\fR \fBformat\fR +\fBgets\fR \fBglobal\fR \fBif\fR \fBincr\fR +\fBinfo\fR \fBinterp\fR \fBjoin\fR \fBlappend\fR +\fBlassign\fR \fBlindex\fR \fBlinsert\fR \fBlist\fR +\fBllength\fR \fBlrange\fR \fBlrepeat\fR \fBlreplace\fR +\fBlsearch\fR \fBlset\fR \fBlsort\fR \fBnamespace\fR +\fBpackage\fR \fBpid\fR \fBproc\fR \fBputs\fR +\fBread\fR \fBregexp\fR \fBregsub\fR \fBrename\fR +\fBreturn\fR \fBscan\fR \fBseek\fR \fBset\fR +\fBsplit\fR \fBstring\fR \fBsubst\fR \fBswitch\fR +\fBtell\fR \fBtime\fR \fBtrace\fR \fBunset\fR +\fBupdate\fR \fBuplevel\fR \fBupvar\fR \fBvariable\fR +\fBvwait\fR \fBwhile\fR +.DE +The following commands are hidden by \fBinterp create\fR when it +creates a safe interpreter: +.DS +.ta 1.2i 2.4i 3.6i +\fBcd\fR \fBencoding\fR \fBexec\fR \fBexit\fR +\fBfconfigure\fR \fBfile\fR \fBglob\fR \fBload\fR +\fBopen\fR \fBpwd\fR \fBsocket\fR \fBsource\fR +\fBunload\fR +.DE +These commands can be recreated later as Tcl procedures or aliases, or +re-exposed by \fBinterp expose\fR. +.PP +The following commands from Tcl's library of support procedures are +not present in a safe interpreter: +.DS +.ta 1.6i 3.2i +\fBauto_exec_ok\fR \fBauto_import\fR \fBauto_load\fR +\fBauto_load_index\fR \fBauto_qualify\fR \fBunknown\fR +.DE +Note in particular that safe interpreters have no default \fBunknown\fR +command, so Tcl's default autoloading facilities are not available. +Autoload access to Tcl's commands that are normally autoloaded: +.DS +.ta 2.1i +\fBauto_mkindex\fR \fBauto_mkindex_old\fR +\fBauto_reset\fR \fBhistory\fR +\fBparray\fR \fBpkg_mkIndex\fR +\fB::pkg::create\fR \fB::safe::interpAddToAccessPath\fR +\fB::safe::interpCreate\fR \fB::safe::interpConfigure\fR +\fB::safe::interpDelete\fR \fB::safe::interpFindInAccessPath\fR +\fB::safe::interpInit\fR \fB::safe::setLogCmd\fR +\fBtcl_endOfWord\fR \fBtcl_findLibrary\fR +\fBtcl_startOfNextWord\fR \fBtcl_startOfPreviousWord\fR +\fBtcl_wordBreakAfter\fR \fBtcl_wordBreakBefore\fR +.DE +can only be provided by explicit definition of an \fBunknown\fR command +in the safe interpreter. This will involve exposing the \fBsource\fR +command. This is most easily accomplished by creating the safe interpreter +with Tcl's \fBSafe\-Tcl\fR mechanism. \fBSafe\-Tcl\fR provides safe +versions of \fBsource\fR, \fBload\fR, and other Tcl commands needed +to support autoloading of commands and the loading of packages. +.PP +In addition, the \fBenv\fR variable is not present in a safe interpreter, +so it cannot share environment variables with other interpreters. The +\fBenv\fR variable poses a security risk, because users can store +sensitive information in an environment variable. For example, the PGP +manual recommends storing the PGP private key protection password in +the environment variable \fIPGPPASS\fR. Making this variable available +to untrusted code executing in a safe interpreter would incur a +security risk. +.PP +If extensions are loaded into a safe interpreter, they may also restrict +their own functionality to eliminate unsafe commands. For a discussion of +management of extensions for safety see the manual entries for +\fBSafe\-Tcl\fR and the \fBload\fR Tcl command. +.PP +A safe interpreter may not alter the recursion limit of any interpreter, +including itself. +.SH "ALIAS INVOCATION" +.PP +The alias mechanism has been carefully designed so that it can +be used safely when an untrusted script is executing +in a safe slave and the target of the alias is a trusted +master. The most important thing in guaranteeing safety is to +ensure that information passed from the slave to the master is +never evaluated or substituted in the master; if this were to +occur, it would enable an evil script in the slave to invoke +arbitrary functions in the master, which would compromise security. +.PP +When the source for an alias is invoked in the slave interpreter, the +usual Tcl substitutions are performed when parsing that command. +These substitutions are carried out in the source interpreter just +as they would be for any other command invoked in that interpreter. +The command procedure for the source command takes its arguments +and merges them with the \fItargetCmd\fR and \fIarg\fRs for the +alias to create a new array of arguments. If the words +of \fIsrcCmd\fR were +.QW "\fIsrcCmd arg1 arg2 ... argN\fR" , +the new set of words will be +.QW "\fItargetCmd arg arg ... arg arg1 arg2 ... argN\fR" , +where \fItargetCmd\fR and \fIarg\fRs are the values supplied when the +alias was created. \fITargetCmd\fR is then used to locate a command +procedure in the target interpreter, and that command procedure +is invoked with the new set of arguments. An error occurs if +there is no command named \fItargetCmd\fR in the target interpreter. +No additional substitutions are performed on the words: the +target command procedure is invoked directly, without +going through the normal Tcl evaluation mechanism. +Substitutions are thus performed on each word exactly once: +\fItargetCmd\fR and \fIargs\fR were substituted when parsing the command +that created the alias, and \fIarg1 - argN\fR are substituted when +the alias's source command is parsed in the source interpreter. +.PP +When writing the \fItargetCmd\fRs for aliases in safe interpreters, +it is very important that the arguments to that command never be +evaluated or substituted, since this would provide an escape +mechanism whereby the slave interpreter could execute arbitrary +code in the master. This in turn would compromise the security +of the system. +.SH "HIDDEN COMMANDS" +.PP +Safe interpreters greatly restrict the functionality available to Tcl +programs executing within them. +Allowing the untrusted Tcl program to have direct access to this +functionality is unsafe, because it can be used for a variety of +attacks on the environment. +However, there are times when there is a legitimate need to use the +dangerous functionality in the context of the safe interpreter. For +example, sometimes a program must be \fBsource\fRd into the interpreter. +Another example is Tk, where windows are bound to the hierarchy of windows +for a specific interpreter; some potentially dangerous functions, e.g. +window management, must be performed on these windows within the +interpreter context. +.PP +The \fBinterp\fR command provides a solution to this problem in the form of +\fIhidden commands\fR. Instead of removing the dangerous commands entirely +from a safe interpreter, these commands are hidden so they become +unavailable to Tcl scripts executing in the interpreter. However, such +hidden commands can be invoked by any trusted ancestor of the safe +interpreter, in the context of the safe interpreter, using \fBinterp +invoke\fR. Hidden commands and exposed commands reside in separate name +spaces. It is possible to define a hidden command and an exposed command by +the same name within one interpreter. +.PP +Hidden commands in a slave interpreter can be invoked in the body of +procedures called in the master during alias invocation. For example, an +alias for \fBsource\fR could be created in a slave interpreter. When it is +invoked in the slave interpreter, a procedure is called in the master +interpreter to check that the operation is allowable (e.g. it asks to +source a file that the slave interpreter is allowed to access). The +procedure then it invokes the hidden \fBsource\fR command in the slave +interpreter to actually source in the contents of the file. Note that two +commands named \fBsource\fR exist in the slave interpreter: the alias, and +the hidden command. +.PP +Because a master interpreter may invoke a hidden command as part of +handling an alias invocation, great care must be taken to avoid evaluating +any arguments passed in through the alias invocation. +Otherwise, malicious slave interpreters could cause a trusted master +interpreter to execute dangerous commands on their behalf. See the section +on \fBALIAS INVOCATION\fR for a more complete discussion of this topic. +To help avoid this problem, no substitutions or evaluations are +applied to arguments of \fBinterp invokehidden\fR. +.PP +Safe interpreters are not allowed to invoke hidden commands in themselves +or in their descendants. This prevents safe slaves from gaining access to +hidden functionality in themselves or their descendants. +.PP +The set of hidden commands in an interpreter can be manipulated by a trusted +interpreter using \fBinterp expose\fR and \fBinterp hide\fR. The \fBinterp +expose\fR command moves a hidden command to the +set of exposed commands in the interpreter identified by \fIpath\fR, +potentially renaming the command in the process. If an exposed command by +the targeted name already exists, the operation fails. Similarly, +\fBinterp hide\fR moves an exposed command to the set of hidden commands in +that interpreter. Safe interpreters are not allowed to move commands +between the set of hidden and exposed commands, in either themselves or +their descendants. +.PP +Currently, the names of hidden commands cannot contain namespace +qualifiers, and you must first rename a command in a namespace to the +global namespace before you can hide it. +Commands to be hidden by \fBinterp hide\fR are looked up in the global +namespace even if the current namespace is not the global one. This +prevents slaves from fooling a master interpreter into hiding the wrong +command, by making the current namespace be different from the global one. +.SH "RESOURCE LIMITS" +.PP +Every interpreter has two kinds of resource limits that may be imposed by any +master interpreter upon its slaves. Command limits (of type \fBcommand\fR) +restrict the total number of Tcl commands that may be executed by an +interpreter (as can be inspected via the \fBinfo cmdcount\fR command), and +time limits (of type \fBtime\fR) place a limit by which execution within the +interpreter must complete. Note that time limits are expressed as +\fIabsolute\fR times (as in \fBclock seconds\fR) and not relative times (as in +\fBafter\fR) because they may be modified after creation. +.PP +When a limit is exceeded for an interpreter, first any handler callbacks +defined by master interpreters are called. If those callbacks increase or +remove the limit, execution within the (previously) limited interpreter +continues. If the limit is still in force, an error is generated at that point +and normal processing of errors within the interpreter (by the \fBcatch\fR +command) is disabled, so the error propagates outwards (building a stack-trace +as it goes) to the point where the limited interpreter was invoked (e.g. by +\fBinterp eval\fR) where it becomes the responsibility of the calling code to +catch and handle. +.SS "LIMIT OPTIONS" +.PP +Every limit has a number of options associated with it, some of which are +common across all kinds of limits, and others of which are particular to the +kind of limit. +.TP +\fB\-command\fR +. +This option (common for all limit types) specifies (if non-empty) a Tcl script +to be executed in the global namespace of the interpreter reading and writing +the option when the particular limit in the limited interpreter is exceeded. +The callback may modify the limit on the interpreter if it wishes the limited +interpreter to continue executing. If the callback generates an exception, it +is reported through the background exception mechanism (see +\fBBACKGROUND EXCEPTION HANDLING\fR). +Note that the callbacks defined by one interpreter are +completely isolated from the callbacks defined by another, and that the order +in which those callbacks are called is undefined. +.TP +\fB\-granularity\fR +. +This option (common for all limit types) specifies how frequently (out of the +points when the Tcl interpreter is in a consistent state where limit checking +is possible) that the limit is actually checked. This allows the tuning of how +frequently a limit is checked, and hence how often the limit-checking overhead +(which may be substantial in the case of time limits) is incurred. +.TP +\fB\-milliseconds\fR +. +This option specifies the number of milliseconds after the moment defined in +the \fB\-seconds\fR option that the time limit will fire. It should only ever +be specified in conjunction with the \fB\-seconds\fR option (whether it was +set previously or is being set this invocation.) +.TP +\fB\-seconds\fR +. +This option specifies the number of seconds after the epoch (see \fBclock +seconds\fR) that the time limit for the interpreter will be triggered. The +limit will be triggered at the start of the second unless specified at a +sub-second level using the \fB\-milliseconds\fR option. This option may be the +empty string, which indicates that a time limit is not set for the +interpreter. +.TP +\fB\-value\fR +. +This option specifies the number of commands that the interpreter may execute +before triggering the command limit. This option may be the empty string, +which indicates that a command limit is not set for the interpreter. +.PP +Where an interpreter with a resource limit set on it creates a slave +interpreter, that slave interpreter will have resource limits imposed on it +that are at least as restrictive as the limits on the creating master +interpreter. If the master interpreter of the limited master wishes to relax +these conditions, it should hide the \fBinterp\fR command in the child and +then use aliases and the \fBinterp invokehidden\fR subcommand to provide such +access as it chooses to the \fBinterp\fR command to the limited master as +necessary. +.SH "BACKGROUND EXCEPTION HANDLING" +.PP +When an exception happens in a situation where it cannot be reported directly up +the stack (e.g. when processing events in an \fBupdate\fR or \fBvwait\fR call) +the exception is instead reported through the background exception handling mechanism. +Every interpreter has a background exception handler registered; the default exception +handler arranges for the \fBbgerror\fR command in the interpreter's global +namespace to be called, but other exception handlers may be installed and process +background exceptions in substantially different ways. +.PP +A background exception handler consists of a non-empty list of words to which will +be appended two further words at invocation time. The first word will be the +interpreter result at time of the exception, typically an error message, +and the second will be the dictionary of return options at the time of +the exception. These are the same values that \fBcatch\fR can capture +when it controls script evaluation in a non-background situation. +The resulting list will then be executed +in the interpreter's global namespace without further substitutions being +performed. +.SH CREDITS +The safe interpreter mechanism is based on the Safe-Tcl prototype implemented +by Nathaniel Borenstein and Marshall Rose. +.SH EXAMPLES +.PP +Creating and using an alias for a command in the current interpreter: +.PP +.CS +\fBinterp alias\fR {} getIndex {} lsearch {alpha beta gamma delta} +set idx [getIndex delta] +.CE +.PP +Executing an arbitrary command in a safe interpreter where every +invocation of \fBlappend\fR is logged: +.PP +.CS +set i [\fBinterp create\fR -safe] +\fBinterp hide\fR $i lappend +\fBinterp alias\fR $i lappend {} loggedLappend $i +proc loggedLappend {i args} { + puts "logged invocation of lappend $args" + \fBinterp invokehidden\fR $i lappend {*}$args +} +\fBinterp eval\fR $i $someUntrustedScript +.CE +.PP +Setting a resource limit on an interpreter so that an infinite loop +terminates. +.PP +.CS +set i [\fBinterp create\fR] +\fBinterp limit\fR $i command -value 1000 +\fBinterp eval\fR $i { + set x 0 + while {1} { + puts "Counting up... [incr x]" + } +} +.CE +.SH "SEE ALSO" +bgerror(n), load(n), safe(n), Tcl_CreateSlave(3), Tcl_Eval(3), Tcl_BackgroundException(3) +.SH KEYWORDS +alias, master interpreter, safe interpreter, slave interpreter +'\"Local Variables: +'\"mode: nroff +'\"End: |