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Diffstat (limited to 'library/auto.tcl')
-rw-r--r-- | library/auto.tcl | 553 |
1 files changed, 553 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/library/auto.tcl b/library/auto.tcl new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7e43aaf --- /dev/null +++ b/library/auto.tcl @@ -0,0 +1,553 @@ +# auto.tcl -- +# +# utility procs formerly in init.tcl dealing with auto execution +# of commands and can be auto loaded themselves. +# +# RCS: @(#) $Id: auto.tcl,v 1.2 1999/04/16 00:46:56 stanton Exp $ +# +# Copyright (c) 1991-1993 The Regents of the University of California. +# Copyright (c) 1994-1998 Sun Microsystems, Inc. +# +# See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution +# of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. +# + +# auto_reset -- +# +# Destroy all cached information for auto-loading and auto-execution, +# so that the information gets recomputed the next time it's needed. +# Also delete any procedures that are listed in the auto-load index +# except those defined in this file. +# +# Arguments: +# None. + +proc auto_reset {} { + global auto_execs auto_index auto_oldpath + foreach p [info procs] { + if {[info exists auto_index($p)] && ![string match auto_* $p] + && ([lsearch -exact {unknown pkg_mkIndex tclPkgSetup + tcl_findLibrary pkg_compareExtension + tclMacPkgSearch tclPkgUnknown} $p] < 0)} { + rename $p {} + } + } + catch {unset auto_execs} + catch {unset auto_index} + catch {unset auto_oldpath} +} + +# tcl_findLibrary -- +# +# This is a utility for extensions that searches for a library directory +# using a canonical searching algorithm. A side effect is to source +# the initialization script and set a global library variable. +# +# Arguments: +# basename Prefix of the directory name, (e.g., "tk") +# version Version number of the package, (e.g., "8.0") +# patch Patchlevel of the package, (e.g., "8.0.3") +# initScript Initialization script to source (e.g., tk.tcl) +# enVarName environment variable to honor (e.g., TK_LIBRARY) +# varName Global variable to set when done (e.g., tk_library) + +proc tcl_findLibrary {basename version patch initScript enVarName varName} { + upvar #0 $varName the_library + global env errorInfo + + set dirs {} + set errors {} + + # The C application may have hardwired a path, which we honor + + if {[info exist the_library] && [string compare $the_library {}]} { + lappend dirs $the_library + } else { + + # Do the canonical search + + # 1. From an environment variable, if it exists + + if {[info exists env($enVarName)]} { + lappend dirs $env($enVarName) + } + + # 2. Relative to the Tcl library + + lappend dirs [file join [file dirname [info library]] \ + $basename$version] + + # 3. Various locations relative to the executable + # ../lib/foo1.0 (From bin directory in install hierarchy) + # ../../lib/foo1.0 (From bin/arch directory in install hierarchy) + # ../library (From unix directory in build hierarchy) + # ../../library (From unix/arch directory in build hierarchy) + # ../../foo1.0b1/library (From unix directory in parallel build hierarchy) + # ../../../foo1.0b1/library (From unix/arch directory in parallel build hierarchy) + + set parentDir [file dirname [file dirname [info nameofexecutable]]] + set grandParentDir [file dirname $parentDir] + lappend dirs [file join $parentDir lib $basename$version] + lappend dirs [file join $grandParentDir lib $basename$version] + lappend dirs [file join $parentDir library] + lappend dirs [file join $grandParentDir library] + if {![regexp {.*[ab][0-9]*} $patch ver]} { + set ver $version + } + lappend dirs [file join $grandParentDir $basename$ver library] + lappend dirs [file join [file dirname $grandParentDir] $basename$ver library] + } + foreach i $dirs { + set the_library $i + set file [file join $i $initScript] + + # source everything when in a safe interpreter because + # we have a source command, but no file exists command + + if {[interp issafe] || [file exists $file]} { + if {![catch {uplevel #0 [list source $file]} msg]} { + return + } else { + append errors "$file: $msg\n$errorInfo\n" + } + } + } + set msg "Can't find a usable $initScript in the following directories: \n" + append msg " $dirs\n\n" + append msg "$errors\n\n" + append msg "This probably means that $basename wasn't installed properly.\n" + error $msg +} + + +# ---------------------------------------------------------------------- +# auto_mkindex +# ---------------------------------------------------------------------- +# The following procedures are used to generate the tclIndex file +# from Tcl source files. They use a special safe interpreter to +# parse Tcl source files, writing out index entries as "proc" +# commands are encountered. This implementation won't work in a +# safe interpreter, since a safe interpreter can't create the +# special parser and mess with its commands. + +if {[interp issafe]} { + return ;# Stop sourcing the file here +} + +# auto_mkindex -- +# Regenerate a tclIndex file from Tcl source files. Takes as argument +# the name of the directory in which the tclIndex file is to be placed, +# followed by any number of glob patterns to use in that directory to +# locate all of the relevant files. +# +# Arguments: +# dir - Name of the directory in which to create an index. +# args - Any number of additional arguments giving the +# names of files within dir. If no additional +# are given auto_mkindex will look for *.tcl. + +proc auto_mkindex {dir args} { + global errorCode errorInfo + + if {[interp issafe]} { + error "can't generate index within safe interpreter" + } + + set oldDir [pwd] + cd $dir + set dir [pwd] + + append index "# Tcl autoload index file, version 2.0\n" + append index "# This file is generated by the \"auto_mkindex\" command\n" + append index "# and sourced to set up indexing information for one or\n" + append index "# more commands. Typically each line is a command that\n" + append index "# sets an element in the auto_index array, where the\n" + append index "# element name is the name of a command and the value is\n" + append index "# a script that loads the command.\n\n" + if {$args == ""} { + set args *.tcl + } + + auto_mkindex_parser::init + foreach file [eval glob $args] { + if {[catch {auto_mkindex_parser::mkindex $file} msg] == 0} { + append index $msg + } else { + set code $errorCode + set info $errorInfo + cd $oldDir + error $msg $info $code + } + } + auto_mkindex_parser::cleanup + + set fid [open "tclIndex" w] + puts $fid $index nonewline + close $fid + cd $oldDir +} + +# Original version of auto_mkindex that just searches the source +# code for "proc" at the beginning of the line. + +proc auto_mkindex_old {dir args} { + global errorCode errorInfo + set oldDir [pwd] + cd $dir + set dir [pwd] + append index "# Tcl autoload index file, version 2.0\n" + append index "# This file is generated by the \"auto_mkindex\" command\n" + append index "# and sourced to set up indexing information for one or\n" + append index "# more commands. Typically each line is a command that\n" + append index "# sets an element in the auto_index array, where the\n" + append index "# element name is the name of a command and the value is\n" + append index "# a script that loads the command.\n\n" + if {$args == ""} { + set args *.tcl + } + foreach file [eval glob $args] { + set f "" + set error [catch { + set f [open $file] + while {[gets $f line] >= 0} { + if {[regexp {^proc[ ]+([^ ]*)} $line match procName]} { + set procName [lindex [auto_qualify $procName "::"] 0] + append index "set [list auto_index($procName)]" + append index " \[list source \[file join \$dir [list $file]\]\]\n" + } + } + close $f + } msg] + if {$error} { + set code $errorCode + set info $errorInfo + catch {close $f} + cd $oldDir + error $msg $info $code + } + } + set f "" + set error [catch { + set f [open tclIndex w] + puts $f $index nonewline + close $f + cd $oldDir + } msg] + if {$error} { + set code $errorCode + set info $errorInfo + catch {close $f} + cd $oldDir + error $msg $info $code + } +} + +# Create a safe interpreter that can be used to parse Tcl source files +# generate a tclIndex file for autoloading. This interp contains +# commands for things that need index entries. Each time a command +# is executed, it writes an entry out to the index file. + +namespace eval auto_mkindex_parser { + variable parser "" ;# parser used to build index + variable index "" ;# maintains index as it is built + variable scriptFile "" ;# name of file being processed + variable contextStack "" ;# stack of namespace scopes + variable imports "" ;# keeps track of all imported cmds + variable initCommands "" ;# list of commands that create aliases + + proc init {} { + variable parser + variable initCommands + + if {![interp issafe]} { + set parser [interp create -safe] + $parser hide info + $parser hide rename + $parser hide proc + $parser hide namespace + $parser hide eval + $parser hide puts + $parser invokehidden namespace delete :: + $parser invokehidden proc unknown {args} {} + + # We'll need access to the "namespace" command within the + # interp. Put it back, but move it out of the way. + + $parser expose namespace + $parser invokehidden rename namespace _%@namespace + $parser expose eval + $parser invokehidden rename eval _%@eval + + # Install all the registered psuedo-command implementations + + foreach cmd $initCommands { + eval $cmd + } + } + } + proc cleanup {} { + variable parser + interp delete $parser + unset parser + } +} + +# auto_mkindex_parser::mkindex -- +# +# Used by the "auto_mkindex" command to create a "tclIndex" file for +# the given Tcl source file. Executes the commands in the file, and +# handles things like the "proc" command by adding an entry for the +# index file. Returns a string that represents the index file. +# +# Arguments: +# file Name of Tcl source file to be indexed. + +proc auto_mkindex_parser::mkindex {file} { + variable parser + variable index + variable scriptFile + variable contextStack + variable imports + + set scriptFile $file + + set fid [open $file] + set contents [read $fid] + close $fid + + # There is one problem with sourcing files into the safe + # interpreter: references like "$x" will fail since code is not + # really being executed and variables do not really exist. + # Be careful to escape all naked "$" before evaluating. + + regsub -all {([^\$])\$([^\$])} $contents {\1\\$\2} contents + + set index "" + set contextStack "" + set imports "" + + $parser eval $contents + + foreach name $imports { + catch {$parser eval [list _%@namespace forget $name]} + } + return $index +} + +# auto_mkindex_parser::hook command +# +# Registers a Tcl command to evaluate when initializing the +# slave interpreter used by the mkindex parser. +# The command is evaluated in the master interpreter, and can +# use the variable auto_mkindex_parser::parser to get to the slave + +proc auto_mkindex_parser::hook {cmd} { + variable initCommands + + lappend initCommands $cmd +} + +# auto_mkindex_parser::slavehook command +# +# Registers a Tcl command to evaluate when initializing the +# slave interpreter used by the mkindex parser. +# The command is evaluated in the slave interpreter. + +proc auto_mkindex_parser::slavehook {cmd} { + variable initCommands + + # The $parser variable is defined to be the name of the + # slave interpreter when this command is used later. + + lappend initCommands "\$parser eval [list $cmd]" +} + +# auto_mkindex_parser::command -- +# +# Registers a new command with the "auto_mkindex_parser" interpreter +# that parses Tcl files. These commands are fake versions of things +# like the "proc" command. When you execute them, they simply write +# out an entry to a "tclIndex" file for auto-loading. +# +# This procedure allows extensions to register their own commands +# with the auto_mkindex facility. For example, a package like +# [incr Tcl] might register a "class" command so that class definitions +# could be added to a "tclIndex" file for auto-loading. +# +# Arguments: +# name Name of command recognized in Tcl files. +# arglist Argument list for command. +# body Implementation of command to handle indexing. + +proc auto_mkindex_parser::command {name arglist body} { + hook [list auto_mkindex_parser::commandInit $name $arglist $body] +} + +# auto_mkindex_parser::commandInit -- +# +# This does the actual work set up by auto_mkindex_parser::command +# This is called when the interpreter used by the parser is created. +# +# Arguments: +# name Name of command recognized in Tcl files. +# arglist Argument list for command. +# body Implementation of command to handle indexing. + +proc auto_mkindex_parser::commandInit {name arglist body} { + variable parser + + set ns [namespace qualifiers $name] + set tail [namespace tail $name] + if {$ns == ""} { + set fakeName "[namespace current]::_%@fake_$tail" + } else { + set fakeName "_%@fake_$name" + regsub -all {::} $fakeName "_" fakeName + set fakeName "[namespace current]::$fakeName" + } + proc $fakeName $arglist $body + + # YUK! Tcl won't let us alias fully qualified command names, + # so we can't handle names like "::itcl::class". Instead, + # we have to build procs with the fully qualified names, and + # have the procs point to the aliases. + + if {[regexp {::} $name]} { + set exportCmd [list _%@namespace export [namespace tail $name]] + $parser eval [list _%@namespace eval $ns $exportCmd] + + # The following proc definition does not work if you + # want to tolerate space or something else diabolical + # in the procedure name, (i.e., space in $alias) + # The following does not work: + # "_%@eval {$alias} \$args" + # because $alias gets concat'ed to $args. + # The following does not work because $cmd is somehow undefined + # "set cmd {$alias} \; _%@eval {\$cmd} \$args" + # A gold star to someone that can make test + # autoMkindex-3.3 work properly + + set alias [namespace tail $fakeName] + $parser invokehidden proc $name {args} "_%@eval {$alias} \$args" + $parser alias $alias $fakeName + } else { + $parser alias $name $fakeName + } + return +} + +# auto_mkindex_parser::fullname -- +# Used by commands like "proc" within the auto_mkindex parser. +# Returns the qualified namespace name for the "name" argument. +# If the "name" does not start with "::", elements are added from +# the current namespace stack to produce a qualified name. Then, +# the name is examined to see whether or not it should really be +# qualified. If the name has more than the leading "::", it is +# returned as a fully qualified name. Otherwise, it is returned +# as a simple name. That way, the Tcl autoloader will recognize +# it properly. +# +# Arguments: +# name - Name that is being added to index. + +proc auto_mkindex_parser::fullname {name} { + variable contextStack + + if {![string match ::* $name]} { + foreach ns $contextStack { + set name "${ns}::$name" + if {[string match ::* $name]} { + break + } + } + } + + if {[namespace qualifiers $name] == ""} { + return [namespace tail $name] + } elseif {![string match ::* $name]} { + return "::$name" + } + return $name +} + +# Register all of the procedures for the auto_mkindex parser that +# will build the "tclIndex" file. + +# AUTO MKINDEX: proc name arglist body +# Adds an entry to the auto index list for the given procedure name. + +auto_mkindex_parser::command proc {name args} { + variable index + variable scriptFile + append index [list set auto_index([fullname $name])] \ + " \[list source \[file join \$dir [list $scriptFile]\]\]\n" +} + +# Conditionally add support for Tcl byte code files. There are some +# tricky details here. First, we need to get the tbcload library +# initialized in the current interpreter. We cannot load tbcload into the +# slave until we have done so because it needs access to the tcl_patchLevel +# variable. Second, because the package index file may defer loading the +# library until we invoke a command, we need to explicitly invoke auto_load +# to force it to be loaded. This should be a noop if the package has +# already been loaded + +auto_mkindex_parser::hook { + if {![catch {package require tbcload}]} { + if {[info commands tbcload::bcproc] == ""} { + auto_load tbcload::bcproc + } + load {} tbcload $auto_mkindex_parser::parser + + # AUTO MKINDEX: tbcload::bcproc name arglist body + # Adds an entry to the auto index list for the given pre-compiled + # procedure name. + + auto_mkindex_parser::commandInit tbcload::bcproc {name args} { + variable index + variable scriptFile + append index [list set auto_index([fullname $name])] \ + " \[list source \[file join \$dir [list $scriptFile]\]\]\n" + } + } +} + +# AUTO MKINDEX: namespace eval name command ?arg arg...? +# Adds the namespace name onto the context stack and evaluates the +# associated body of commands. +# +# AUTO MKINDEX: namespace import ?-force? pattern ?pattern...? +# Performs the "import" action in the parser interpreter. This is +# important for any commands contained in a namespace that affect +# the index. For example, a script may say "itcl::class ...", +# or it may import "itcl::*" and then say "class ...". This +# procedure does the import operation, but keeps track of imported +# patterns so we can remove the imports later. + +auto_mkindex_parser::command namespace {op args} { + switch -- $op { + eval { + variable parser + variable contextStack + + set name [lindex $args 0] + set args [lrange $args 1 end] + + set contextStack [linsert $contextStack 0 $name] + $parser eval [list _%@namespace eval $name] $args + set contextStack [lrange $contextStack 1 end] + } + import { + variable parser + variable imports + foreach pattern $args { + if {$pattern != "-force"} { + lappend imports $pattern + } + } + catch {$parser eval "_%@namespace import $args"} + } + } +} + +return |