diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'generic/tclCmdIL.c')
-rw-r--r-- | generic/tclCmdIL.c | 246 |
1 files changed, 66 insertions, 180 deletions
diff --git a/generic/tclCmdIL.c b/generic/tclCmdIL.c index c288789..b94acda 100644 --- a/generic/tclCmdIL.c +++ b/generic/tclCmdIL.c @@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ * See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution of * this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. * - * RCS: @(#) $Id: tclCmdIL.c,v 1.106 2007/03/02 17:56:26 dgp Exp $ + * RCS: @(#) $Id: tclCmdIL.c,v 1.107 2007/03/07 22:34:02 dgp Exp $ */ #include "tclInt.h" @@ -2622,21 +2622,18 @@ Tcl_LindexObjCmd( * * Results: * Returns a pointer to the object extracted, or NULL if an error - * occurred. + * occurred. The returned object already includes one reference + * count for the pointer returned. * * Side effects: * None. * * Notes: - * If objv[1] can be parsed as a list, TclLindexList handles extraction - * of the desired element locally. Otherwise, it invokes TclLindexFlat to - * treat objv[1] as a scalar. - * - * The reference count of the returned object includes one reference - * corresponding to the pointer returned. Thus, the calling code will - * usually do something like: - * Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, result); - * Tcl_DecrRefCount(result); + * This procedure is implemented entirely as a wrapper around + * TclLindexFlat. All it does is reconfigure the argument format + * into the form required by TclLindexFlat, while taking care to + * manage shimmering in such a way that we tend to keep the most + * useful intreps and/or avoid the most expensive conversions. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ @@ -2648,15 +2645,10 @@ TclLindexList( Tcl_Obj *argPtr) /* Index or index list */ { - Tcl_Obj **elemPtrs; /* Elements of the list being manipulated. */ - int listLen; /* Length of the list being manipulated. */ int index; /* Index into the list. */ - int result; /* Result returned from a Tcl library call. */ - int i; /* Current index number. */ Tcl_Obj **indices; /* Array of list indices. */ int indexCount; /* Size of the array of list indices. */ - Tcl_Obj *oldListPtr; /* Temp location to preserve the list pointer - * when replacing it with a sublist. */ + Tcl_Obj *indexListCopy; /* * Determine whether argPtr designates a list or a single index. We have @@ -2673,108 +2665,30 @@ TclLindexList( return TclLindexFlat(interp, listPtr, 1, &argPtr); } - if (Tcl_ListObjGetElements(NULL,argPtr, &indexCount, &indices) != TCL_OK){ - /* - * argPtr designates something that is neither an index nor a - * well-formed list. Report the error via TclLindexFlat. - */ - - return TclLindexFlat(interp, listPtr, 1, &argPtr); - } - /* - * Record the reference to the list that we are maintaining in the - * activation record. + * Here we make a private copy of the index list argument to avoid + * any shimmering issues that might invalidate the indices array below + * while we are still using it. This is probably unnecessary. It + * does not appear that any damaging shimmering is possible, and no + * test has been devised to show any error when this private copy is + * not made. But it's cheap, and it offers some future-proofing + * insurance in case the TclLindexFlat implementation changes in some + * unexpected way, or some new form of trace or callback permits + * things to happen that the current implementation does not. */ - Tcl_IncrRefCount(listPtr); - - /* - * argPtr designates a list, and the 'else if' above has parsed it into - * indexCount and indices. - */ - - for (i=0 ; i<indexCount ; i++) { - /* - * Convert the current listPtr to a list if necessary. - */ - - result = Tcl_ListObjGetElements(interp, listPtr, &listLen, &elemPtrs); - if (result != TCL_OK) { - Tcl_DecrRefCount(listPtr); - return NULL; - } - - /* - * Get the index from indices[i] - */ - - result = TclGetIntForIndex(interp, indices[i], /*endValue*/ listLen-1, - &index); - if (result != TCL_OK) { - /* - * Index could not be parsed - */ - - Tcl_DecrRefCount(listPtr); - return NULL; - - } else if (index<0 || index>=listLen) { - /* - * Index is out of range - */ - - Tcl_DecrRefCount(listPtr); - listPtr = Tcl_NewObj(); - Tcl_IncrRefCount(listPtr); - return listPtr; - } - - /* - * Make sure listPtr still refers to a list object. If it shared a - * Tcl_Obj structure with the arguments, then it might have just been - * converted to something else. - */ - - if (listPtr->typePtr != &tclListType) { - result = Tcl_ListObjGetElements(interp, listPtr, &listLen, - &elemPtrs); - if (result != TCL_OK) { - Tcl_DecrRefCount(listPtr); - return NULL; - } - } - - /* - * Extract the pointer to the appropriate element - */ - - oldListPtr = listPtr; - listPtr = elemPtrs[index]; - Tcl_IncrRefCount(listPtr); - Tcl_DecrRefCount(oldListPtr); - + indexListCopy = TclListObjCopy(NULL, argPtr); + if (indexListCopy == NULL) { /* - * The work we did above may have caused the internal rep of *argPtr - * to change to something else. Get it back. + * argPtr designates something that is neither an index nor a + * well-formed list. Report the error via TclLindexFlat. */ - result = Tcl_ListObjGetElements(interp,argPtr, &indexCount, &indices); - if (result != TCL_OK) { - /* - * This can't happen unless some extension corrupted a Tcl_Obj. - */ - - Tcl_DecrRefCount(listPtr); - return NULL; - } + return TclLindexFlat(interp, listPtr, 1, &argPtr); } - - /* - * Return the last object extracted. Its reference count will include the - * reference being returned. - */ - + Tcl_ListObjGetElements(NULL, indexListCopy, &indexCount, &indices); + listPtr = TclLindexFlat(interp, listPtr, indexCount, indices); + Tcl_DecrRefCount(indexListCopy); return listPtr; } @@ -2783,21 +2697,23 @@ TclLindexList( * * TclLindexFlat -- * - * This procedure handles the 'lindex' command, given that the arguments - * to the command are known to be a flat list. + * This procedure is the core of the 'lindex' command, with all index + * arguments presented as a flat list. * * Results: - * Returns a standard Tcl result. + * Returns a pointer to the object extracted, or NULL if an error + * occurred. The returned object already includes one reference + * count for the pointer returned. * * Side effects: * None. * * Notes: - * This procedure is called from either tclExecute.c or Tcl_LindexObjCmd - * whenever either is presented with objc==2 or objc>=4. It is also - * called from TclLindexList for the objc==3 case once it is determined - * that objv[2] cannot be parsed as a list. - * + * The reference count of the returned object includes one reference + * corresponding to the pointer returned. Thus, the calling code will + * usually do something like: + * Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, result); + * Tcl_DecrRefCount(result); *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ @@ -2810,83 +2726,53 @@ TclLindexFlat( /* Array of pointers to Tcl objects that * represent the indices in the list. */ { - int i; /* Current list index. */ - int result; /* Result of Tcl library calls. */ - int listLen; /* Length of the current list being - * processed. */ - Tcl_Obj **elemPtrs; /* Array of pointers to the elements of the - * current list. */ - int index; /* Parsed version of the current element of - * indexArray. */ - Tcl_Obj *oldListPtr; /* Temporary to hold listPtr so that its ref - * count can be decremented. */ - - /* - * Record the reference to the 'listPtr' object that we are maintaining in - * the C activation record. - */ + int i; Tcl_IncrRefCount(listPtr); - for (i=0 ; i<indexCount ; i++) { - /* - * Convert the current listPtr to a list if necessary. - */ - - result = Tcl_ListObjGetElements(interp, listPtr, &listLen, &elemPtrs); - if (result != TCL_OK) { - Tcl_DecrRefCount(listPtr); - return NULL; - } + for (i=0 ; i<indexCount && listPtr ; i++) { + int index, listLen; + Tcl_Obj **elemPtrs; /* - * Get the index from objv[i]. + * Here we make a private copy of the current sublist, so we + * avoid any shimmering issues that might invalidate the elemPtr + * array below while we are still using it. See test lindex-8.4. */ - result = TclGetIntForIndex(interp, indexArray[i], - /*endValue*/ listLen-1, &index); - if (result != TCL_OK) { - /* - * Index could not be parsed. - */ + Tcl_Obj *sublistCopy = TclListObjCopy(interp, listPtr); - Tcl_DecrRefCount(listPtr); - return NULL; + Tcl_DecrRefCount(listPtr); + listPtr = NULL; - } else if (index<0 || index>=listLen) { + if (sublistCopy == NULL) { /* - * Index is out of range. + * The sublist is not a list at all. => error */ - Tcl_DecrRefCount(listPtr); - listPtr = Tcl_NewObj(); - Tcl_IncrRefCount(listPtr); - return listPtr; + break; } + Tcl_ListObjGetElements(NULL, sublistCopy, &listLen, &elemPtrs); - /* - * Make sure listPtr still refers to a list object. It might have been - * converted to something else above if objv[1] overlaps with one of - * the other parameters. - */ + if (TCL_OK == TclGetIntForIndex(interp, indexArray[i], + /*endValue*/ listLen-1, &index)) { + if (index<0 || index>=listLen) { + /* + * Index is out of range. Break out of loop with empty result. + */ - if (listPtr->typePtr != &tclListType) { - result = Tcl_ListObjGetElements(interp, listPtr, &listLen, - &elemPtrs); - if (result != TCL_OK) { - Tcl_DecrRefCount(listPtr); - return NULL; + listPtr = Tcl_NewObj(); + i = indexCount; + } else { + /* + * Extract the pointer to the appropriate element. + */ + + listPtr = elemPtrs[index]; } + Tcl_IncrRefCount(listPtr); } - - /* - * Extract the pointer to the appropriate element. - */ - - oldListPtr = listPtr; - listPtr = elemPtrs[index]; - Tcl_IncrRefCount(listPtr); - Tcl_DecrRefCount(oldListPtr); + Tcl_DecrRefCount(sublistCopy); } return listPtr; |