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author | dgp <dgp@users.sourceforge.net> | 2021-11-05 19:47:03 (GMT) |
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committer | dgp <dgp@users.sourceforge.net> | 2021-11-05 19:47:03 (GMT) |
commit | cf9ec4f29ada714b10771db9437f510c4f0a4c94 (patch) | |
tree | e886fd3f7bf3d55633a79ee36bbdfe71ed420c81 | |
parent | 1a396e5b24dc1eb61a3fde1e602cf95ab4c1e659 (diff) | |
download | tcl-cf9ec4f29ada714b10771db9437f510c4f0a4c94.zip tcl-cf9ec4f29ada714b10771db9437f510c4f0a4c94.tar.gz tcl-cf9ec4f29ada714b10771db9437f510c4f0a4c94.tar.bz2 |
Adapt documentation of the *ByteArray* routines to better match Tcl
library functioning post-TIP 568.
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ByteArrObj.3 | 148 |
1 files changed, 105 insertions, 43 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ByteArrObj.3 b/doc/ByteArrObj.3 index 0703164..13aa012 100644 --- a/doc/ByteArrObj.3 +++ b/doc/ByteArrObj.3 @@ -50,57 +50,119 @@ Caller may pass NULL when it does not need this information. .SH DESCRIPTION .PP -These procedures are used to create, modify, and read Tcl byte-array values -from C code. Byte-array values are typically used to hold the -results of binary IO operations, data structures created with the -\fBbinary\fR command, or other information, such as encrypted data, -represented as arbitrary binary data. -A byte-array is an array of 8-bit quantities (the integer range 0 - 255) -with no inherent meaning. When a byte-array value must be processed as -a string, the sequence of \fBN\fR bytes is transformed into the corresponding -sequence of \fBN\fR characters, where each byte value transforms to the same +These routines are used to create, modify, store, transfer, and retrieve +arbitrary binary data in Tcl values. Specifically, data that can be +represented as a sequence of arbitrary byte values is supported. +This includes data read from binary channels, values created by the +\fBbinary\fR command, encrypted data, or other information representable as +a finite byte sequence. +.PP +A byte is an 8-bit quantity with no inherent meaning. When the 8 bits are +interpreted as an integer value, the range of possible values is (0-255). +The C type best suited to store a byte is the \fBunsigned char\fR. +An \fBunsigned char\fR array of size \fIN\fR stores an aribtrary binary +value of size \fIN\fR bytes. We call this representation a byte-array. +Here we document the routines that allow us to operate on Tcl values as +byte-arrays. +.PP +All Tcl values must correspond to a string representation. +When a byte-array value must be processed as a string, the sequence +of \fIN\fR bytes is transformed into the corresponding sequence +of \fIN\fR characters, where each byte value transforms to the same character codepoint value in the range (U+0000 - U+00FF). Obtaining the string representation of a byte-array value (by calling -\fBTcl_GetStringFromObj\fR) produces this string in Tcl's usual +\fBTcl_GetStringFromObj\fR) produces this string in Tcl's usual Modified UTF-8 encoding. .PP \fBTcl_NewByteArrayObj\fR and \fBTcl_SetByteArrayObj\fR create a new value or overwrite an existing unshared value, respectively, -to hold a byte-array value of \fInumBytes\fR bytes. \fBTcl_NewByteArrayObj\fR +to hold a byte-array value of \fInumBytes\fR bytes. When a caller +passes a non-NULL value of \fIbytes\fR, it must point to memory from +which \fInumBytes\fR bytes can be read. These routines +allocate \fInumBytes\fR bytes of memory, copy \fInumBytes\fR +bytes from \fIbytes\fR into it, and keep the result in the internal +representation of the new or overwritten value. +When the caller passes a NULL value of \fIbytes\fR, the data copying +step is skipped, and the bytes stored in the value are undefined. +A \fIbytes\fR value of NULL is useful only when the caller will arrange +to write known contents into the byte-array through a pointer retrieved +by a call to one of the routines explained below. \fBTcl_NewByteArrayObj\fR returns a pointer to the created value with a reference count of zero. \fBTcl_SetByteArrayObj\fR overwrites and invalidates any old contents -as appropriate, and keeps the same reference count (0 or 1). When -the \fIbytes\fR argument passed to either routine is not NULL, \fInumBytes\fR -bytes are copied from \fIbytes\fR into the new value. When -the \fIbytes\fR argument passed to either routine is NULL, the -contents of the resulting byte array value are undefined. A \fIbytes\fR -value of NULL is useful only when the caller will arrange to write -known contents into the byte array through a pointer retrieved by a call -to one of the routines explained below. Such manipulation must be performed -only on unshared values, and accompanied by all appropriate invalidations. +of the unshared \fIobjPtr\fR as appropriate, and keeps its reference +count (0 or 1) unchanged. The value produced by these routines has no +string representation. Any memory allocation failure may cause a panic. +Note that the type of the \fInumBytes\fR argument is \fBint\fR; consequently +the largest byte-array value that can be produced by these routines is one +holding \fBINT_MAX\fR bytes. Note also that the string representation of +any Tcl value is limited to \fBINT_MAX\fR bytes, so caution should be +taken with any byte-array of more than \fBINT_MAX / 2\fR bytes. .PP -\fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR converts a Tcl value to byte-array type and -returns a pointer to the value's new internal representation as an array of -bytes. The number of bytes in this array is stored in \fInumBytesPtr\fR if -\fInumBytesPtr\fR is non-NULL. The storage for the array of bytes is owned by -the value and should not be freed. The contents of the array may be -modified by the caller only if the value is not shared and the caller -invalidates the string representation. +\fBTcl_GetBytesFromObj\fR performs the opposite function of +\fBTcl_SetByteArrayObj\fR, providing access to read a byte-array from +a Tcl value that was previously written into it. When \fIobjPtr\fR +is a value previously produced by \fBTcl_NewByteArrayObj\fR or +\fBTcl_SetByteArrayObj\fR, then \fBTcl_GetBytesFromObj\fR returns +a pointer to the byte-array kept in the value's internal representation. +If the caller provides a non-NULL value for \fInumBytesPtr\fR, it must +point to memory where \fBTcl_GetBytesFromObj\fR can write the number +of bytes in the value's internal byte-array. With both pieces of +information, the caller is able to retrieve any information about the +contents of that byte-array that it seeks. When \fIobjPtr\fR does +not already contain an internal byte-array, \fBTcl_GetBytesFromObj\fR +will try to create one from the value's string representation. Any +string value that does not include any character codepoints outside +the range (U+0000 - U+00FF) will successfully translate to a unique +byte-array value. With the created byte-array, the routine returns +as before. For any string representation which does contain +a forbidden character codepoint, the conversion fails, and +\fBTcl_GetBytesFromObj\fR returns NULL to signal that failure. On +failure, nothing will be written to \fInumBytesPtr\fR, and if +the \fIinterp\fR argument is non-NULL, then error messages and +codes are left in it recording the error. .PP -\fBTcl_GetBytesFromObj\fR does almost the same as \fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR, -the difference is that this function can error if the object contains -characters > 255. If \fBinterp\fR is not NULL, an error-message will be left there. +\fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR performs nearly the same function as +\fBTcl_GetBytesFromObj\fR. They differ only in the circumstance when +a byte-array internal value must be created by transformation of +a string representation, and that string representation contains a +character with codepoint greater than U+00FF. Instead of failing +the conversion, \fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR will use the 8 least +significant bits of each codepoint to produce a valid byte value +from any character codepoint value. In any other circumstance, +\fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR performs just as \fBTcl_GetBytesFromObj\fR +does. Since the conversion cannot fail, \fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR +has no need for an \fIinterp\fR argument to record any errors and +the caller can assume \fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR does not return NULL. .PP -\fBTcl_SetByteArrayLength\fR converts the Tcl value to byte-array type -and changes the number of bytes in the value's internal representation as an -array of bytes. If \fInumBytes\fR is greater than the space currently -allocated for the array, the array is reallocated be large enough to store -the larger number of bytes; the newly allocated bytes at the end of the -array have arbitrary values. If -\fInumBytes\fR is less than the space currently allocated for the array, -the length of array is reduced to the new length. The return value is a -pointer to the value's new array of bytes. - +\fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR must be used with caution. Because of the +truncation on conversion, the byte-array made available to the caller +cannot reliably complete a round-trip back to the original string +representation. This creates opportunities for bugs due to blindness +to differences in values. This routine exists in this form primarily +for compatibility with codebases written for earlier releases of Tcl. +It is expected this routine will incompatibly change in Tcl 9 so that +it also signals failed conversions with a NULL return. +.PP +On success, both \fBTcl_GetByteFromObj\fR and \fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR +return a pointer into the internal representation of a \fBTcl_Obj\fR. +That pointer must not be freed by the caller, and should not be retained +for use beyond the known time the internal representation of the value +has not been disturbed. The pointer may be used to overwrite the byte +contents of the internal representation, so long as the value is unshared +and any string representation is invalidated. +.PP +\fBTcl_SetByteArrayLength\fR enables a caller to change the size of a +byte-array in the internal representation of an unshared \fIobjPtr\fR to +become \fInumBytes\fR bytes. This is most often useful after the +bytes of the internal byte-array have been directly overwritten and it +has been discovered that the required size differs from the first +estimate used in the allocation. \fBTcl_SetByteArrayLength\fR returns +a pointer to the resized byte-array. Along with such resizing, any +string representation of \fIobjPtr\fR must be invalidated. If resizing +grows the byte-array, the new byte values are undefined. If \fIobjPtr\fR +does not already possess an internal byte-array, one is produced in the +same way that \fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR does, with all the cautions +that go along with that. .SH "REFERENCE COUNT MANAGEMENT" .PP \fBTcl_NewByteArrayObj\fR always returns a zero-reference object, much @@ -110,11 +172,11 @@ like \fBTcl_NewObj\fR. reference count of their \fIobjPtr\fR arguments, but do require that the object be unshared. .PP -\fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR does not modify the reference count of its -\fIobjPtr\fR argument; it only reads. +\fBTcl_GetBytesFromObj\fR and \fBTcl_GetByteArrayFromObj\fR do not modify +the reference count of \fIobjPtr\fR; they only read. .SH "SEE ALSO" Tcl_GetStringFromObj, Tcl_NewObj, Tcl_IncrRefCount, Tcl_DecrRefCount .SH KEYWORDS -value, binary data, byte array, utf, unicode, internationalization +value, binary data, byte array, utf, unicode |