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diff --git a/tcl8.6/doc/load.n b/tcl8.6/doc/load.n new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2ab8f2e --- /dev/null +++ b/tcl8.6/doc/load.n @@ -0,0 +1,196 @@ +'\" +'\" Copyright (c) 1995-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc. +'\" +'\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution +'\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. +'\" +.TH load n 7.5 Tcl "Tcl Built-In Commands" +.so man.macros +.BS +'\" Note: do not modify the .SH NAME line immediately below! +.SH NAME +load \- Load machine code and initialize new commands +.SH SYNOPSIS +\fBload\fR ?\fB\-global\fR? ?\fB\-lazy\fR? ?\fB\-\-\fR? \fIfileName\fR +.br +\fBload\fR ?\fB\-global\fR? ?\fB\-lazy\fR? ?\fB\-\-\fR? \fIfileName packageName\fR +.br +\fBload\fR ?\fB\-global\fR? ?\fB\-lazy\fR? ?\fB\-\-\fR? \fIfileName packageName interp\fR +.BE +.SH DESCRIPTION +.PP +This command loads binary code from a file into the +application's address space and calls an initialization procedure +in the package to incorporate it into an interpreter. \fIfileName\fR +is the name of the file containing the code; its exact form varies +from system to system but on most systems it is a shared library, +such as a \fB.so\fR file under Solaris or a DLL under Windows. +\fIpackageName\fR is the name of the package, and is used to +compute the name of an initialization procedure. +\fIinterp\fR is the path name of the interpreter into which to load +the package (see the \fBinterp\fR manual entry for details); +if \fIinterp\fR is omitted, it defaults to the +interpreter in which the \fBload\fR command was invoked. +.PP +Once the file has been loaded into the application's address space, +one of two initialization procedures will be invoked in the new code. +Typically the initialization procedure will add new commands to a +Tcl interpreter. +The name of the initialization procedure is determined by +\fIpackageName\fR and whether or not the target interpreter +is a safe one. For normal interpreters the name of the initialization +procedure will have the form \fIpkg\fB_Init\fR, where \fIpkg\fR +is the same as \fIpackageName\fR except that the first letter is +converted to upper case and all other letters +are converted to lower case. For example, if \fIpackageName\fR is +\fBfoo\fR or \fBFOo\fR, the initialization procedure's name will +be \fBFoo_Init\fR. +.PP +If the target interpreter is a safe interpreter, then the name +of the initialization procedure will be \fIpkg\fB_SafeInit\fR +instead of \fIpkg\fB_Init\fR. +The \fIpkg\fB_SafeInit\fR function should be written carefully, so that it +initializes the safe interpreter only with partial functionality provided +by the package that is safe for use by untrusted code. For more information +on Safe\-Tcl, see the \fBsafe\fR manual entry. +.PP +The initialization procedure must match the following prototype: +.PP +.CS +typedef int \fBTcl_PackageInitProc\fR( + Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR); +.CE +.PP +The \fIinterp\fR argument identifies the interpreter in which the +package is to be loaded. The initialization procedure must return +\fBTCL_OK\fR or \fBTCL_ERROR\fR to indicate whether or not it completed +successfully; in the event of an error it should set the interpreter's result +to point to an error message. The result of the \fBload\fR command +will be the result returned by the initialization procedure. +.PP +The actual loading of a file will only be done once for each \fIfileName\fR +in an application. If a given \fIfileName\fR is loaded into multiple +interpreters, then the first \fBload\fR will load the code and +call the initialization procedure; subsequent \fBload\fRs will +call the initialization procedure without loading the code again. +For Tcl versions lower than 8.5, it is not possible to unload or reload a +package. From version 8.5 however, the \fBunload\fR command allows the unloading +of libraries loaded with \fBload\fR, for libraries that are aware of the +Tcl's unloading mechanism. +.PP +The \fBload\fR command also supports packages that are statically +linked with the application, if those packages have been registered +by calling the \fBTcl_StaticPackage\fR procedure. +If \fIfileName\fR is an empty string, then \fIpackageName\fR must +be specified. +.PP +If \fIpackageName\fR is omitted or specified as an empty string, +Tcl tries to guess the name of the package. +This may be done differently on different platforms. +The default guess, which is used on most UNIX platforms, is to +take the last element of \fIfileName\fR, strip off the first +three characters if they are \fBlib\fR, and use any following +alphabetic and underline characters as the module name. +For example, the command \fBload libxyz4.2.so\fR uses the module +name \fBxyz\fR and the command \fBload bin/last.so {}\fR uses the +module name \fBlast\fR. +.PP +If \fIfileName\fR is an empty string, then \fIpackageName\fR must +be specified. +The \fBload\fR command first searches for a statically loaded package +(one that has been registered by calling the \fBTcl_StaticPackage\fR +procedure) by that name; if one is found, it is used. +Otherwise, the \fBload\fR command searches for a dynamically loaded +package by that name, and uses it if it is found. If several +different files have been \fBload\fRed with different versions of +the package, Tcl picks the file that was loaded first. +.PP +If \fB\-global\fR is specified preceding the filename, all symbols +found in the shared library are exported for global use by other +libraries. The option \fB\-lazy\fR delays the actual loading of +symbols until their first actual use. The options may be abbreviated. +The option \fB\-\-\fR indicates the end of the options, and should +be used if you wish to use a filename which starts with \fB\-\fR +and you provide a packageName to the \fBload\fR command. +.PP +On platforms which do not support the \fB\-global\fR or \fB\-lazy\fR +options, the options still exist but have no effect. Note that use +of the \fB\-global\fR or \fB\-lazy\fR option may lead to crashes +in your application later (in case of symbol conflicts resp. missing +symbols), which cannot be detected during the \fBload\fR. So, only +use this when you know what you are doing, you will not get a nice +error message when something is wrong with the loaded library. +.SH "PORTABILITY ISSUES" +.TP +\fBWindows\fR\0\0\0\0\0 +. +When a load fails with +.QW "library not found" +error, it is also possible +that a dependent library was not found. To see the dependent libraries, +type +.QW "dumpbin -imports <dllname>" +in a DOS console to see what the library must import. +When loading a DLL in the current directory, Windows will ignore +.QW ./ +as a path specifier and use a search heuristic to find the DLL instead. +To avoid this, load the DLL with: +.RS +.PP +.CS +\fBload\fR [file join [pwd] mylib.DLL] +.CE +.RE +.SH BUGS +.PP +If the same file is \fBload\fRed by different \fIfileName\fRs, it will +be loaded into the process's address space multiple times. The +behavior of this varies from system to system (some systems may +detect the redundant loads, others may not). +.SH EXAMPLE +.PP +The following is a minimal extension: +.PP +.CS +#include <tcl.h> +#include <stdio.h> +static int fooCmd(ClientData clientData, + Tcl_Interp *interp, int objc, Tcl_Obj *const objv[]) { + printf("called with %d arguments\en", objc); + return TCL_OK; +} +int Foo_Init(Tcl_Interp *interp) { + if (Tcl_InitStubs(interp, "8.1", 0) == NULL) { + return TCL_ERROR; + } + printf("creating foo command"); + Tcl_CreateObjCommand(interp, "foo", fooCmd, NULL, NULL); + return TCL_OK; +} +.CE +.PP +When built into a shared/dynamic library with a suitable name +(e.g. \fBfoo.dll\fR on Windows, \fBlibfoo.so\fR on Solaris and Linux) +it can then be loaded into Tcl with the following: +.PP +.CS +# Load the extension +switch $tcl_platform(platform) { + windows { + \fBload\fR [file join [pwd] foo.dll] + } + unix { + \fBload\fR [file join [pwd] libfoo[info sharedlibextension]] + } +} + +# Now execute the command defined by the extension +foo +.CE +.SH "SEE ALSO" +info sharedlibextension, package(n), Tcl_StaticPackage(3), safe(n) +.SH KEYWORDS +binary code, dynamic library, load, safe interpreter, shared library +'\"Local Variables: +'\"mode: nroff +'\"End: |