/* * tclBasic.c -- * * Contains the basic facilities for TCL command interpretation, * including interpreter creation and deletion, command creation * and deletion, and command/script execution. * * Copyright (c) 1987-1994 The Regents of the University of California. * Copyright (c) 1994-1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc. * Copyright (c) 1998-1999 by Scriptics Corporation. * Copyright (c) 2001, 2002 by Kevin B. Kenny. All rights reserved. * * See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution * of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. * * RCS: @(#) $Id: tclBasic.c,v 1.75.2.5 2003/07/18 23:35:38 dgp Exp $ */ #include "tclInt.h" #include "tclCompile.h" #ifndef TCL_GENERIC_ONLY # include "tclPort.h" #endif /* * Static procedures in this file: */ static char * CallCommandTraces _ANSI_ARGS_((Interp *iPtr, Command *cmdPtr, CONST char *oldName, CONST char* newName, int flags)); static void DeleteInterpProc _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp)); static void ProcessUnexpectedResult _ANSI_ARGS_(( Tcl_Interp *interp, int returnCode)); static int StringTraceProc _ANSI_ARGS_((ClientData clientData, Tcl_Interp* interp, int level, CONST char* command, Tcl_Command commandInfo, int objc, Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[])); static void StringTraceDeleteProc _ANSI_ARGS_((ClientData clientData)); extern TclStubs tclStubs; /* * The following structure defines the commands in the Tcl core. */ typedef struct { char *name; /* Name of object-based command. */ Tcl_CmdProc *proc; /* String-based procedure for command. */ Tcl_ObjCmdProc *objProc; /* Object-based procedure for command. */ CompileProc *compileProc; /* Procedure called to compile command. */ int isSafe; /* If non-zero, command will be present * in safe interpreter. Otherwise it will * be hidden. */ } CmdInfo; /* * The built-in commands, and the procedures that implement them: */ static CmdInfo builtInCmds[] = { /* * Commands in the generic core. Note that at least one of the proc or * objProc members should be non-NULL. This avoids infinitely recursive * calls between TclInvokeObjectCommand and TclInvokeStringCommand if a * command name is computed at runtime and results in the name of a * compiled command. */ {"append", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_AppendObjCmd, TclCompileAppendCmd, 1}, {"array", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ArrayObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"binary", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_BinaryObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"break", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_BreakObjCmd, TclCompileBreakCmd, 1}, {"case", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_CaseObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"catch", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_CatchObjCmd, TclCompileCatchCmd, 1}, {"clock", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ClockObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"concat", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ConcatObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"continue", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ContinueObjCmd, TclCompileContinueCmd, 1}, {"encoding", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_EncodingObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"error", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ErrorObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"eval", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_EvalObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"exit", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ExitObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"expr", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ExprObjCmd, TclCompileExprCmd, 1}, {"fcopy", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_FcopyObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"fileevent", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_FileEventObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"for", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ForObjCmd, TclCompileForCmd, 1}, {"foreach", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ForeachObjCmd, TclCompileForeachCmd, 1}, {"format", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_FormatObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"global", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_GlobalObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"if", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_IfObjCmd, TclCompileIfCmd, 1}, {"incr", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_IncrObjCmd, TclCompileIncrCmd, 1}, {"info", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_InfoObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"join", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_JoinObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"lappend", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LappendObjCmd, TclCompileLappendCmd, 1}, {"lindex", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LindexObjCmd, TclCompileLindexCmd, 1}, {"linsert", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LinsertObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"list", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ListObjCmd, TclCompileListCmd, 1}, {"llength", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LlengthObjCmd, TclCompileLlengthCmd, 1}, {"load", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LoadObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"lrange", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LrangeObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"lreplace", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LreplaceObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"lsearch", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LsearchObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"lset", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LsetObjCmd, TclCompileLsetCmd, 1}, {"lsort", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LsortObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"namespace", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_NamespaceObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"package", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_PackageObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"proc", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ProcObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"regexp", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_RegexpObjCmd, TclCompileRegexpCmd, 1}, {"regsub", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_RegsubObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"rename", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_RenameObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"return", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ReturnObjCmd, TclCompileReturnCmd, 1}, {"scan", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ScanObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"set", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_SetObjCmd, TclCompileSetCmd, 1}, {"split", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_SplitObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"string", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_StringObjCmd, TclCompileStringCmd, 1}, {"subst", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_SubstObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"switch", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_SwitchObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"trace", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_TraceObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"unset", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_UnsetObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"uplevel", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_UplevelObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"upvar", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_UpvarObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"variable", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_VariableObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"while", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_WhileObjCmd, TclCompileWhileCmd, 1}, /* * Commands in the UNIX core: */ #ifndef TCL_GENERIC_ONLY {"after", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_AfterObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"cd", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_CdObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"close", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_CloseObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"eof", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_EofObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"fblocked", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_FblockedObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"fconfigure", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_FconfigureObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"file", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_FileObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"flush", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_FlushObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"gets", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_GetsObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"glob", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_GlobObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"open", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_OpenObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"pid", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_PidObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"puts", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_PutsObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"pwd", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_PwdObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"read", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ReadObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"seek", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_SeekObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"socket", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_SocketObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"tell", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_TellObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"time", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_TimeObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"update", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_UpdateObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"vwait", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_VwaitObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, #ifdef MAC_TCL {"beep", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_BeepObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"echo", Tcl_EchoCmd, (Tcl_ObjCmdProc *) NULL, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"ls", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_LsObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"resource", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ResourceObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 1}, {"source", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_MacSourceObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, #else {"exec", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_ExecObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, {"source", (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, Tcl_SourceObjCmd, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0}, #endif /* MAC_TCL */ #endif /* TCL_GENERIC_ONLY */ {NULL, (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL, (Tcl_ObjCmdProc *) NULL, (CompileProc *) NULL, 0} }; /* * The following structure holds the client data for string-based * trace procs */ typedef struct StringTraceData { ClientData clientData; /* Client data from Tcl_CreateTrace */ Tcl_CmdTraceProc* proc; /* Trace procedure from Tcl_CreateTrace */ } StringTraceData; /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_CreateInterp -- * * Create a new TCL command interpreter. * * Results: * The return value is a token for the interpreter, which may be * used in calls to procedures like Tcl_CreateCmd, Tcl_Eval, or * Tcl_DeleteInterp. * * Side effects: * The command interpreter is initialized with the built-in commands * and with the variables documented in tclvars(n). * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Interp * Tcl_CreateInterp() { Interp *iPtr; Tcl_Interp *interp; Command *cmdPtr; BuiltinFunc *builtinFuncPtr; MathFunc *mathFuncPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; CmdInfo *cmdInfoPtr; int i; union { char c[sizeof(short)]; short s; } order; #ifdef TCL_COMPILE_STATS ByteCodeStats *statsPtr; #endif /* TCL_COMPILE_STATS */ TclInitSubsystems(NULL); /* * Panic if someone updated the CallFrame structure without * also updating the Tcl_CallFrame structure (or vice versa). */ if (sizeof(Tcl_CallFrame) != sizeof(CallFrame)) { /*NOTREACHED*/ panic("Tcl_CallFrame and CallFrame are not the same size"); } /* * Initialize support for namespaces and create the global namespace * (whose name is ""; an alias is "::"). This also initializes the * Tcl object type table and other object management code. */ iPtr = (Interp *) ckalloc(sizeof(Interp)); interp = (Tcl_Interp *) iPtr; iPtr->result = iPtr->resultSpace; iPtr->freeProc = NULL; iPtr->errorLine = 0; iPtr->objResultPtr = Tcl_NewObj(); Tcl_IncrRefCount(iPtr->objResultPtr); iPtr->handle = TclHandleCreate(iPtr); iPtr->globalNsPtr = NULL; iPtr->hiddenCmdTablePtr = NULL; iPtr->interpInfo = NULL; Tcl_InitHashTable(&iPtr->mathFuncTable, TCL_STRING_KEYS); iPtr->numLevels = 0; iPtr->maxNestingDepth = MAX_NESTING_DEPTH; iPtr->framePtr = NULL; iPtr->varFramePtr = NULL; iPtr->activeVarTracePtr = NULL; iPtr->returnCode = TCL_OK; iPtr->errorInfo = NULL; iPtr->errorCode = NULL; iPtr->appendResult = NULL; iPtr->appendAvl = 0; iPtr->appendUsed = 0; Tcl_InitHashTable(&iPtr->packageTable, TCL_STRING_KEYS); iPtr->packageUnknown = NULL; iPtr->cmdCount = 0; iPtr->termOffset = 0; TclInitLiteralTable(&(iPtr->literalTable)); iPtr->compileEpoch = 0; iPtr->compiledProcPtr = NULL; iPtr->resolverPtr = NULL; iPtr->evalFlags = 0; iPtr->scriptFile = NULL; iPtr->flags = 0; iPtr->tracePtr = NULL; iPtr->tracesForbiddingInline = 0; iPtr->activeCmdTracePtr = NULL; iPtr->activeInterpTracePtr = NULL; iPtr->assocData = (Tcl_HashTable *) NULL; iPtr->execEnvPtr = NULL; /* set after namespaces initialized */ iPtr->emptyObjPtr = Tcl_NewObj(); /* another empty object */ Tcl_IncrRefCount(iPtr->emptyObjPtr); iPtr->resultSpace[0] = 0; iPtr->globalNsPtr = NULL; /* force creation of global ns below */ iPtr->globalNsPtr = (Namespace *) Tcl_CreateNamespace(interp, "", (ClientData) NULL, (Tcl_NamespaceDeleteProc *) NULL); if (iPtr->globalNsPtr == NULL) { panic("Tcl_CreateInterp: can't create global namespace"); } /* * Initialize support for code compilation and execution. We call * TclCreateExecEnv after initializing namespaces since it tries to * reference a Tcl variable (it links to the Tcl "tcl_traceExec" * variable). */ iPtr->execEnvPtr = TclCreateExecEnv(interp); /* * Initialize the compilation and execution statistics kept for this * interpreter. */ #ifdef TCL_COMPILE_STATS statsPtr = &(iPtr->stats); statsPtr->numExecutions = 0; statsPtr->numCompilations = 0; statsPtr->numByteCodesFreed = 0; (VOID *) memset(statsPtr->instructionCount, 0, sizeof(statsPtr->instructionCount)); statsPtr->totalSrcBytes = 0.0; statsPtr->totalByteCodeBytes = 0.0; statsPtr->currentSrcBytes = 0.0; statsPtr->currentByteCodeBytes = 0.0; (VOID *) memset(statsPtr->srcCount, 0, sizeof(statsPtr->srcCount)); (VOID *) memset(statsPtr->byteCodeCount, 0, sizeof(statsPtr->byteCodeCount)); (VOID *) memset(statsPtr->lifetimeCount, 0, sizeof(statsPtr->lifetimeCount)); statsPtr->currentInstBytes = 0.0; statsPtr->currentLitBytes = 0.0; statsPtr->currentExceptBytes = 0.0; statsPtr->currentAuxBytes = 0.0; statsPtr->currentCmdMapBytes = 0.0; statsPtr->numLiteralsCreated = 0; statsPtr->totalLitStringBytes = 0.0; statsPtr->currentLitStringBytes = 0.0; (VOID *) memset(statsPtr->literalCount, 0, sizeof(statsPtr->literalCount)); #endif /* TCL_COMPILE_STATS */ /* * Initialise the stub table pointer. */ iPtr->stubTable = &tclStubs; /* * Create the core commands. Do it here, rather than calling * Tcl_CreateCommand, because it's faster (there's no need to check for * a pre-existing command by the same name). If a command has a * Tcl_CmdProc but no Tcl_ObjCmdProc, set the Tcl_ObjCmdProc to * TclInvokeStringCommand. This is an object-based wrapper procedure * that extracts strings, calls the string procedure, and creates an * object for the result. Similarly, if a command has a Tcl_ObjCmdProc * but no Tcl_CmdProc, set the Tcl_CmdProc to TclInvokeObjectCommand. */ for (cmdInfoPtr = builtInCmds; cmdInfoPtr->name != NULL; cmdInfoPtr++) { int new; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; if ((cmdInfoPtr->proc == (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL) && (cmdInfoPtr->objProc == (Tcl_ObjCmdProc *) NULL) && (cmdInfoPtr->compileProc == (CompileProc *) NULL)) { panic("Tcl_CreateInterp: builtin command with NULL string and object command procs and a NULL compile proc\n"); } hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(&iPtr->globalNsPtr->cmdTable, cmdInfoPtr->name, &new); if (new) { cmdPtr = (Command *) ckalloc(sizeof(Command)); cmdPtr->hPtr = hPtr; cmdPtr->nsPtr = iPtr->globalNsPtr; cmdPtr->refCount = 1; cmdPtr->cmdEpoch = 0; cmdPtr->compileProc = cmdInfoPtr->compileProc; if (cmdInfoPtr->proc == (Tcl_CmdProc *) NULL) { cmdPtr->proc = TclInvokeObjectCommand; cmdPtr->clientData = (ClientData) cmdPtr; } else { cmdPtr->proc = cmdInfoPtr->proc; cmdPtr->clientData = (ClientData) NULL; } if (cmdInfoPtr->objProc == (Tcl_ObjCmdProc *) NULL) { cmdPtr->objProc = TclInvokeStringCommand; cmdPtr->objClientData = (ClientData) cmdPtr; } else { cmdPtr->objProc = cmdInfoPtr->objProc; cmdPtr->objClientData = (ClientData) NULL; } cmdPtr->deleteProc = NULL; cmdPtr->deleteData = (ClientData) NULL; cmdPtr->flags = 0; cmdPtr->importRefPtr = NULL; cmdPtr->tracePtr = NULL; Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, cmdPtr); } } /* * Register the builtin math functions. */ i = 0; for (builtinFuncPtr = tclBuiltinFuncTable; builtinFuncPtr->name != NULL; builtinFuncPtr++) { Tcl_CreateMathFunc((Tcl_Interp *) iPtr, builtinFuncPtr->name, builtinFuncPtr->numArgs, builtinFuncPtr->argTypes, (Tcl_MathProc *) NULL, (ClientData) 0); hPtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(&iPtr->mathFuncTable, builtinFuncPtr->name); if (hPtr == NULL) { panic("Tcl_CreateInterp: Tcl_CreateMathFunc incorrectly registered '%s'", builtinFuncPtr->name); return NULL; } mathFuncPtr = (MathFunc *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); mathFuncPtr->builtinFuncIndex = i; i++; } iPtr->flags |= EXPR_INITIALIZED; /* * Do Multiple/Safe Interps Tcl init stuff */ TclInterpInit(interp); /* * We used to create the "errorInfo" and "errorCode" global vars at this * point because so much of the Tcl implementation assumes they already * exist. This is not quite enough, however, since they can be unset * at any time. * * There are 2 choices: * + Check every place where a GetVar of those is used * and the NULL result is not checked (like in tclLoad.c) * + Make SetVar,... NULL friendly * We choose the second option because : * + It is easy and low cost to check for NULL pointer before * calling strlen() * + It can be helpfull to other people using those API * + Passing a NULL value to those closest 'meaning' is empty string * (specially with the new objects where 0 bytes strings are ok) * So the following init is commented out: -- dl * * (void) Tcl_SetVar2((Tcl_Interp *)iPtr, "errorInfo", (char *) NULL, * "", TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); * (void) Tcl_SetVar2((Tcl_Interp *)iPtr, "errorCode", (char *) NULL, * "NONE", TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); */ #ifndef TCL_GENERIC_ONLY TclSetupEnv(interp); #endif /* * Compute the byte order of this machine. */ order.s = 1; Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "byteOrder", ((order.c[0] == 1) ? "littleEndian" : "bigEndian"), TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); Tcl_SetVar2Ex(interp, "tcl_platform", "wordSize", Tcl_NewLongObj((long) sizeof(long)), TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); /* * Set up other variables such as tcl_version and tcl_library */ Tcl_SetVar(interp, "tcl_patchLevel", TCL_PATCH_LEVEL, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); Tcl_SetVar(interp, "tcl_version", TCL_VERSION, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); Tcl_TraceVar2(interp, "tcl_precision", (char *) NULL, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY|TCL_TRACE_READS|TCL_TRACE_WRITES|TCL_TRACE_UNSETS, TclPrecTraceProc, (ClientData) NULL); TclpSetVariables(interp); #ifdef TCL_THREADS /* * The existence of the "threaded" element of the tcl_platform array indicates * that this particular Tcl shell has been compiled with threads turned on. * Using "info exists tcl_platform(threaded)" a Tcl script can introspect on the * interpreter level of thread safety. */ Tcl_SetVar2(interp, "tcl_platform", "threaded", "1", TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); #endif /* * Register Tcl's version number. */ Tcl_PkgProvideEx(interp, "Tcl", TCL_VERSION, (ClientData) &tclStubs); #ifdef Tcl_InitStubs #undef Tcl_InitStubs #endif Tcl_InitStubs(interp, TCL_VERSION, 1); return interp; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclHideUnsafeCommands -- * * Hides base commands that are not marked as safe from this * interpreter. * * Results: * TCL_OK if it succeeds, TCL_ERROR else. * * Side effects: * Hides functionality in an interpreter. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclHideUnsafeCommands(interp) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Hide commands in this interpreter. */ { register CmdInfo *cmdInfoPtr; if (interp == (Tcl_Interp *) NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } for (cmdInfoPtr = builtInCmds; cmdInfoPtr->name != NULL; cmdInfoPtr++) { if (!cmdInfoPtr->isSafe) { Tcl_HideCommand(interp, cmdInfoPtr->name, cmdInfoPtr->name); } } return TCL_OK; } /* *-------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_CallWhenDeleted -- * * Arrange for a procedure to be called before a given * interpreter is deleted. The procedure is called as soon * as Tcl_DeleteInterp is called; if Tcl_CallWhenDeleted is * called on an interpreter that has already been deleted, * the procedure will be called when the last Tcl_Release is * done on the interpreter. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * When Tcl_DeleteInterp is invoked to delete interp, * proc will be invoked. See the manual entry for * details. * *-------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_CallWhenDeleted(interp, proc, clientData) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to watch. */ Tcl_InterpDeleteProc *proc; /* Procedure to call when interpreter * is about to be deleted. */ ClientData clientData; /* One-word value to pass to proc. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; static int assocDataCounter = 0; #ifdef TCL_THREADS static Tcl_Mutex assocMutex; #endif int new; char buffer[32 + TCL_INTEGER_SPACE]; AssocData *dPtr = (AssocData *) ckalloc(sizeof(AssocData)); Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; Tcl_MutexLock(&assocMutex); sprintf(buffer, "Assoc Data Key #%d", assocDataCounter); assocDataCounter++; Tcl_MutexUnlock(&assocMutex); if (iPtr->assocData == (Tcl_HashTable *) NULL) { iPtr->assocData = (Tcl_HashTable *) ckalloc(sizeof(Tcl_HashTable)); Tcl_InitHashTable(iPtr->assocData, TCL_STRING_KEYS); } hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(iPtr->assocData, buffer, &new); dPtr->proc = proc; dPtr->clientData = clientData; Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, dPtr); } /* *-------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_DontCallWhenDeleted -- * * Cancel the arrangement for a procedure to be called when * a given interpreter is deleted. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * If proc and clientData were previously registered as a * callback via Tcl_CallWhenDeleted, they are unregistered. * If they weren't previously registered then nothing * happens. * *-------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_DontCallWhenDeleted(interp, proc, clientData) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to watch. */ Tcl_InterpDeleteProc *proc; /* Procedure to call when interpreter * is about to be deleted. */ ClientData clientData; /* One-word value to pass to proc. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_HashTable *hTablePtr; Tcl_HashSearch hSearch; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; AssocData *dPtr; hTablePtr = iPtr->assocData; if (hTablePtr == (Tcl_HashTable *) NULL) { return; } for (hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(hTablePtr, &hSearch); hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&hSearch)) { dPtr = (AssocData *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); if ((dPtr->proc == proc) && (dPtr->clientData == clientData)) { ckfree((char *) dPtr); Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(hPtr); return; } } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_SetAssocData -- * * Creates a named association between user-specified data, a delete * function and this interpreter. If the association already exists * the data is overwritten with the new data. The delete function will * be invoked when the interpreter is deleted. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Sets the associated data, creates the association if needed. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_SetAssocData(interp, name, proc, clientData) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to associate with. */ CONST char *name; /* Name for association. */ Tcl_InterpDeleteProc *proc; /* Proc to call when interpreter is * about to be deleted. */ ClientData clientData; /* One-word value to pass to proc. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; AssocData *dPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; int new; if (iPtr->assocData == (Tcl_HashTable *) NULL) { iPtr->assocData = (Tcl_HashTable *) ckalloc(sizeof(Tcl_HashTable)); Tcl_InitHashTable(iPtr->assocData, TCL_STRING_KEYS); } hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(iPtr->assocData, name, &new); if (new == 0) { dPtr = (AssocData *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); } else { dPtr = (AssocData *) ckalloc(sizeof(AssocData)); } dPtr->proc = proc; dPtr->clientData = clientData; Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, dPtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_DeleteAssocData -- * * Deletes a named association of user-specified data with * the specified interpreter. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Deletes the association. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_DeleteAssocData(interp, name) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to associate with. */ CONST char *name; /* Name of association. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; AssocData *dPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; if (iPtr->assocData == (Tcl_HashTable *) NULL) { return; } hPtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(iPtr->assocData, name); if (hPtr == (Tcl_HashEntry *) NULL) { return; } dPtr = (AssocData *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); if (dPtr->proc != NULL) { (dPtr->proc) (dPtr->clientData, interp); } ckfree((char *) dPtr); Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(hPtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetAssocData -- * * Returns the client data associated with this name in the * specified interpreter. * * Results: * The client data in the AssocData record denoted by the named * association, or NULL. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ ClientData Tcl_GetAssocData(interp, name, procPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter associated with. */ CONST char *name; /* Name of association. */ Tcl_InterpDeleteProc **procPtr; /* Pointer to place to store address * of current deletion callback. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; AssocData *dPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; if (iPtr->assocData == (Tcl_HashTable *) NULL) { return (ClientData) NULL; } hPtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(iPtr->assocData, name); if (hPtr == (Tcl_HashEntry *) NULL) { return (ClientData) NULL; } dPtr = (AssocData *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); if (procPtr != (Tcl_InterpDeleteProc **) NULL) { *procPtr = dPtr->proc; } return dPtr->clientData; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_InterpDeleted -- * * Returns nonzero if the interpreter has been deleted with a call * to Tcl_DeleteInterp. * * Results: * Nonzero if the interpreter is deleted, zero otherwise. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_InterpDeleted(interp) Tcl_Interp *interp; { return (((Interp *) interp)->flags & DELETED) ? 1 : 0; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_DeleteInterp -- * * Ensures that the interpreter will be deleted eventually. If there * are no Tcl_Preserve calls in effect for this interpreter, it is * deleted immediately, otherwise the interpreter is deleted when * the last Tcl_Preserve is matched by a call to Tcl_Release. In either * case, the procedure runs the currently registered deletion callbacks. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * The interpreter is marked as deleted. The caller may still use it * safely if there are calls to Tcl_Preserve in effect for the * interpreter, but further calls to Tcl_Eval etc in this interpreter * will fail. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_DeleteInterp(interp) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Token for command interpreter (returned * by a previous call to Tcl_CreateInterp). */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; /* * If the interpreter has already been marked deleted, just punt. */ if (iPtr->flags & DELETED) { return; } /* * Mark the interpreter as deleted. No further evals will be allowed. */ iPtr->flags |= DELETED; /* * Ensure that the interpreter is eventually deleted. */ Tcl_EventuallyFree((ClientData) interp, (Tcl_FreeProc *) DeleteInterpProc); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * DeleteInterpProc -- * * Helper procedure to delete an interpreter. This procedure is * called when the last call to Tcl_Preserve on this interpreter * is matched by a call to Tcl_Release. The procedure cleans up * all resources used in the interpreter and calls all currently * registered interpreter deletion callbacks. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Whatever the interpreter deletion callbacks do. Frees resources * used by the interpreter. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void DeleteInterpProc(interp) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to delete. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; Tcl_HashSearch search; Tcl_HashTable *hTablePtr; ResolverScheme *resPtr, *nextResPtr; /* * Punt if there is an error in the Tcl_Release/Tcl_Preserve matchup. */ if (iPtr->numLevels > 0) { panic("DeleteInterpProc called with active evals"); } /* * The interpreter should already be marked deleted; otherwise how * did we get here? */ if (!(iPtr->flags & DELETED)) { panic("DeleteInterpProc called on interpreter not marked deleted"); } TclHandleFree(iPtr->handle); /* * Dismantle everything in the global namespace except for the * "errorInfo" and "errorCode" variables. These remain until the * namespace is actually destroyed, in case any errors occur. * * Dismantle the namespace here, before we clear the assocData. If any * background errors occur here, they will be deleted below. */ TclTeardownNamespace(iPtr->globalNsPtr); /* * Delete all the hidden commands. */ hTablePtr = iPtr->hiddenCmdTablePtr; if (hTablePtr != NULL) { /* * Non-pernicious deletion. The deletion callbacks will not be * allowed to create any new hidden or non-hidden commands. * Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken() will remove the entry from the * hiddenCmdTablePtr. */ hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(hTablePtr, &search); for ( ; hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&search)) { Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken(interp, (Tcl_Command) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr)); } Tcl_DeleteHashTable(hTablePtr); ckfree((char *) hTablePtr); } /* * Tear down the math function table. */ for (hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(&iPtr->mathFuncTable, &search); hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&search)) { ckfree((char *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr)); } Tcl_DeleteHashTable(&iPtr->mathFuncTable); /* * Invoke deletion callbacks; note that a callback can create new * callbacks, so we iterate. */ while (iPtr->assocData != (Tcl_HashTable *) NULL) { AssocData *dPtr; hTablePtr = iPtr->assocData; iPtr->assocData = (Tcl_HashTable *) NULL; for (hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(hTablePtr, &search); hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(hTablePtr, &search)) { dPtr = (AssocData *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(hPtr); if (dPtr->proc != NULL) { (*dPtr->proc)(dPtr->clientData, interp); } ckfree((char *) dPtr); } Tcl_DeleteHashTable(hTablePtr); ckfree((char *) hTablePtr); } /* * Finish deleting the global namespace. */ Tcl_DeleteNamespace((Tcl_Namespace *) iPtr->globalNsPtr); /* * Free up the result *after* deleting variables, since variable * deletion could have transferred ownership of the result string * to Tcl. */ Tcl_FreeResult(interp); interp->result = NULL; Tcl_DecrRefCount(iPtr->objResultPtr); iPtr->objResultPtr = NULL; if (iPtr->errorInfo != NULL) { ckfree(iPtr->errorInfo); iPtr->errorInfo = NULL; } if (iPtr->errorCode != NULL) { ckfree(iPtr->errorCode); iPtr->errorCode = NULL; } if (iPtr->appendResult != NULL) { ckfree(iPtr->appendResult); iPtr->appendResult = NULL; } TclFreePackageInfo(iPtr); while (iPtr->tracePtr != NULL) { Tcl_DeleteTrace((Tcl_Interp*) iPtr, (Tcl_Trace) iPtr->tracePtr); } if (iPtr->execEnvPtr != NULL) { TclDeleteExecEnv(iPtr->execEnvPtr); } Tcl_DecrRefCount(iPtr->emptyObjPtr); iPtr->emptyObjPtr = NULL; resPtr = iPtr->resolverPtr; while (resPtr) { nextResPtr = resPtr->nextPtr; ckfree(resPtr->name); ckfree((char *) resPtr); resPtr = nextResPtr; } /* * Free up literal objects created for scripts compiled by the * interpreter. */ TclDeleteLiteralTable(interp, &(iPtr->literalTable)); ckfree((char *) iPtr); } /* *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_HideCommand -- * * Makes a command hidden so that it cannot be invoked from within * an interpreter, only from within an ancestor. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result; also leaves a message in the interp's result * if an error occurs. * * Side effects: * Removes a command from the command table and create an entry * into the hidden command table under the specified token name. * *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_HideCommand(interp, cmdName, hiddenCmdToken) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to hide command. */ CONST char *cmdName; /* Name of command to hide. */ CONST char *hiddenCmdToken; /* Token name of the to-be-hidden command. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_Command cmd; Command *cmdPtr; Tcl_HashTable *hiddenCmdTablePtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; int new; if (iPtr->flags & DELETED) { /* * The interpreter is being deleted. Do not create any new * structures, because it is not safe to modify the interpreter. */ return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Disallow hiding of commands that are currently in a namespace or * renaming (as part of hiding) into a namespace. * * (because the current implementation with a single global table * and the needed uniqueness of names cause problems with namespaces) * * we don't need to check for "::" in cmdName because the real check is * on the nsPtr below. * * hiddenCmdToken is just a string which is not interpreted in any way. * It may contain :: but the string is not interpreted as a namespace * qualifier command name. Thus, hiding foo::bar to foo::bar and then * trying to expose or invoke ::foo::bar will NOT work; but if the * application always uses the same strings it will get consistent * behaviour. * * But as we currently limit ourselves to the global namespace only * for the source, in order to avoid potential confusion, * lets prevent "::" in the token too. --dl */ if (strstr(hiddenCmdToken, "::") != NULL) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "cannot use namespace qualifiers in hidden command", " token (rename)", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Find the command to hide. An error is returned if cmdName can't * be found. Look up the command only from the global namespace. * Full path of the command must be given if using namespaces. */ cmd = Tcl_FindCommand(interp, cmdName, (Tcl_Namespace *) NULL, /*flags*/ TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG | TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); if (cmd == (Tcl_Command) NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } cmdPtr = (Command *) cmd; /* * Check that the command is really in global namespace */ if ( cmdPtr->nsPtr != iPtr->globalNsPtr ) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "can only hide global namespace commands", " (use rename then hide)", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Initialize the hidden command table if necessary. */ hiddenCmdTablePtr = iPtr->hiddenCmdTablePtr; if (hiddenCmdTablePtr == NULL) { hiddenCmdTablePtr = (Tcl_HashTable *) ckalloc((unsigned) sizeof(Tcl_HashTable)); Tcl_InitHashTable(hiddenCmdTablePtr, TCL_STRING_KEYS); iPtr->hiddenCmdTablePtr = hiddenCmdTablePtr; } /* * It is an error to move an exposed command to a hidden command with * hiddenCmdToken if a hidden command with the name hiddenCmdToken already * exists. */ hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(hiddenCmdTablePtr, hiddenCmdToken, &new); if (!new) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "hidden command named \"", hiddenCmdToken, "\" already exists", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Nb : This code is currently 'like' a rename to a specialy set apart * name table. Changes here and in TclRenameCommand must * be kept in synch untill the common parts are actually * factorized out. */ /* * Remove the hash entry for the command from the interpreter command * table. This is like deleting the command, so bump its command epoch; * this invalidates any cached references that point to the command. */ if (cmdPtr->hPtr != NULL) { Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(cmdPtr->hPtr); cmdPtr->hPtr = (Tcl_HashEntry *) NULL; cmdPtr->cmdEpoch++; } /* * Now link the hash table entry with the command structure. * We ensured above that the nsPtr was right. */ cmdPtr->hPtr = hPtr; Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, (ClientData) cmdPtr); /* * If the command being hidden has a compile procedure, increment the * interpreter's compileEpoch to invalidate its compiled code. This * makes sure that we don't later try to execute old code compiled with * command-specific (i.e., inline) bytecodes for the now-hidden * command. This field is checked in Tcl_EvalObj and ObjInterpProc, * and code whose compilation epoch doesn't match is recompiled. */ if (cmdPtr->compileProc != NULL) { iPtr->compileEpoch++; } return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_ExposeCommand -- * * Makes a previously hidden command callable from inside the * interpreter instead of only by its ancestors. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result. If an error occurs, a message is left * in the interp's result. * * Side effects: * Moves commands from one hash table to another. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_ExposeCommand(interp, hiddenCmdToken, cmdName) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to make command * callable. */ CONST char *hiddenCmdToken; /* Name of hidden command. */ CONST char *cmdName; /* Name of to-be-exposed command. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Command *cmdPtr; Namespace *nsPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; Tcl_HashTable *hiddenCmdTablePtr; int new; if (iPtr->flags & DELETED) { /* * The interpreter is being deleted. Do not create any new * structures, because it is not safe to modify the interpreter. */ return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Check that we have a regular name for the command * (that the user is not trying to do an expose and a rename * (to another namespace) at the same time) */ if (strstr(cmdName, "::") != NULL) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "can not expose to a namespace ", "(use expose to toplevel, then rename)", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Get the command from the hidden command table: */ hPtr = NULL; hiddenCmdTablePtr = iPtr->hiddenCmdTablePtr; if (hiddenCmdTablePtr != NULL) { hPtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(hiddenCmdTablePtr, hiddenCmdToken); } if (hPtr == (Tcl_HashEntry *) NULL) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "unknown hidden command \"", hiddenCmdToken, "\"", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } cmdPtr = (Command *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); /* * Check that we have a true global namespace * command (enforced by Tcl_HideCommand() but let's double * check. (If it was not, we would not really know how to * handle it). */ if ( cmdPtr->nsPtr != iPtr->globalNsPtr ) { /* * This case is theoritically impossible, * we might rather panic() than 'nicely' erroring out ? */ Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "trying to expose a non global command name space command", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } /* This is the global table */ nsPtr = cmdPtr->nsPtr; /* * It is an error to overwrite an existing exposed command as a result * of exposing a previously hidden command. */ hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(&nsPtr->cmdTable, cmdName, &new); if (!new) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "exposed command \"", cmdName, "\" already exists", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Remove the hash entry for the command from the interpreter hidden * command table. */ if (cmdPtr->hPtr != NULL) { Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(cmdPtr->hPtr); cmdPtr->hPtr = NULL; } /* * Now link the hash table entry with the command structure. * This is like creating a new command, so deal with any shadowing * of commands in the global namespace. */ cmdPtr->hPtr = hPtr; Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, (ClientData) cmdPtr); /* * Not needed as we are only in the global namespace * (but would be needed again if we supported namespace command hiding) * * TclResetShadowedCmdRefs(interp, cmdPtr); */ /* * If the command being exposed has a compile procedure, increment * interpreter's compileEpoch to invalidate its compiled code. This * makes sure that we don't later try to execute old code compiled * assuming the command is hidden. This field is checked in Tcl_EvalObj * and ObjInterpProc, and code whose compilation epoch doesn't match is * recompiled. */ if (cmdPtr->compileProc != NULL) { iPtr->compileEpoch++; } return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_CreateCommand -- * * Define a new command in a command table. * * Results: * The return value is a token for the command, which can * be used in future calls to Tcl_GetCommandName. * * Side effects: * If a command named cmdName already exists for interp, it is deleted. * In the future, when cmdName is seen as the name of a command by * Tcl_Eval, proc will be called. To support the bytecode interpreter, * the command is created with a wrapper Tcl_ObjCmdProc * (TclInvokeStringCommand) that eventially calls proc. When the * command is deleted from the table, deleteProc will be called. * See the manual entry for details on the calling sequence. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Command Tcl_CreateCommand(interp, cmdName, proc, clientData, deleteProc) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Token for command interpreter returned by * a previous call to Tcl_CreateInterp. */ CONST char *cmdName; /* Name of command. If it contains namespace * qualifiers, the new command is put in the * specified namespace; otherwise it is put * in the global namespace. */ Tcl_CmdProc *proc; /* Procedure to associate with cmdName. */ ClientData clientData; /* Arbitrary value passed to string proc. */ Tcl_CmdDeleteProc *deleteProc; /* If not NULL, gives a procedure to call * when this command is deleted. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; ImportRef *oldRefPtr = NULL; Namespace *nsPtr, *dummy1, *dummy2; Command *cmdPtr, *refCmdPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; CONST char *tail; int new; ImportedCmdData *dataPtr; if (iPtr->flags & DELETED) { /* * The interpreter is being deleted. Don't create any new * commands; it's not safe to muck with the interpreter anymore. */ return (Tcl_Command) NULL; } /* * Determine where the command should reside. If its name contains * namespace qualifiers, we put it in the specified namespace; * otherwise, we always put it in the global namespace. */ if (strstr(cmdName, "::") != NULL) { TclGetNamespaceForQualName(interp, cmdName, (Namespace *) NULL, CREATE_NS_IF_UNKNOWN, &nsPtr, &dummy1, &dummy2, &tail); if ((nsPtr == NULL) || (tail == NULL)) { return (Tcl_Command) NULL; } } else { nsPtr = iPtr->globalNsPtr; tail = cmdName; } hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(&nsPtr->cmdTable, tail, &new); if (!new) { /* * Command already exists. Delete the old one. * Be careful to preserve any existing import links so we can * restore them down below. That way, you can redefine a * command and its import status will remain intact. */ cmdPtr = (Command *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); oldRefPtr = cmdPtr->importRefPtr; cmdPtr->importRefPtr = NULL; Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken(interp, (Tcl_Command) cmdPtr); hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(&nsPtr->cmdTable, tail, &new); if (!new) { /* * If the deletion callback recreated the command, just throw * away the new command (if we try to delete it again, we * could get stuck in an infinite loop). */ ckfree((char*) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr)); } } cmdPtr = (Command *) ckalloc(sizeof(Command)); Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, cmdPtr); cmdPtr->hPtr = hPtr; cmdPtr->nsPtr = nsPtr; cmdPtr->refCount = 1; cmdPtr->cmdEpoch = 0; cmdPtr->compileProc = (CompileProc *) NULL; cmdPtr->objProc = TclInvokeStringCommand; cmdPtr->objClientData = (ClientData) cmdPtr; cmdPtr->proc = proc; cmdPtr->clientData = clientData; cmdPtr->deleteProc = deleteProc; cmdPtr->deleteData = clientData; cmdPtr->flags = 0; cmdPtr->importRefPtr = NULL; cmdPtr->tracePtr = NULL; /* * Plug in any existing import references found above. Be sure * to update all of these references to point to the new command. */ if (oldRefPtr != NULL) { cmdPtr->importRefPtr = oldRefPtr; while (oldRefPtr != NULL) { refCmdPtr = oldRefPtr->importedCmdPtr; dataPtr = (ImportedCmdData*)refCmdPtr->objClientData; dataPtr->realCmdPtr = cmdPtr; oldRefPtr = oldRefPtr->nextPtr; } } /* * We just created a command, so in its namespace and all of its parent * namespaces, it may shadow global commands with the same name. If any * shadowed commands are found, invalidate all cached command references * in the affected namespaces. */ TclResetShadowedCmdRefs(interp, cmdPtr); return (Tcl_Command) cmdPtr; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_CreateObjCommand -- * * Define a new object-based command in a command table. * * Results: * The return value is a token for the command, which can * be used in future calls to Tcl_GetCommandName. * * Side effects: * If no command named "cmdName" already exists for interp, one is * created. Otherwise, if a command does exist, then if the * object-based Tcl_ObjCmdProc is TclInvokeStringCommand, we assume * Tcl_CreateCommand was called previously for the same command and * just set its Tcl_ObjCmdProc to the argument "proc"; otherwise, we * delete the old command. * * In the future, during bytecode evaluation when "cmdName" is seen as * the name of a command by Tcl_EvalObj or Tcl_Eval, the object-based * Tcl_ObjCmdProc proc will be called. When the command is deleted from * the table, deleteProc will be called. See the manual entry for * details on the calling sequence. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Command Tcl_CreateObjCommand(interp, cmdName, proc, clientData, deleteProc) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Token for command interpreter (returned * by previous call to Tcl_CreateInterp). */ CONST char *cmdName; /* Name of command. If it contains namespace * qualifiers, the new command is put in the * specified namespace; otherwise it is put * in the global namespace. */ Tcl_ObjCmdProc *proc; /* Object-based procedure to associate with * name. */ ClientData clientData; /* Arbitrary value to pass to object * procedure. */ Tcl_CmdDeleteProc *deleteProc; /* If not NULL, gives a procedure to call * when this command is deleted. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; ImportRef *oldRefPtr = NULL; Namespace *nsPtr, *dummy1, *dummy2; Command *cmdPtr, *refCmdPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; CONST char *tail; int new; ImportedCmdData *dataPtr; if (iPtr->flags & DELETED) { /* * The interpreter is being deleted. Don't create any new * commands; it's not safe to muck with the interpreter anymore. */ return (Tcl_Command) NULL; } /* * Determine where the command should reside. If its name contains * namespace qualifiers, we put it in the specified namespace; * otherwise, we always put it in the global namespace. */ if (strstr(cmdName, "::") != NULL) { TclGetNamespaceForQualName(interp, cmdName, (Namespace *) NULL, CREATE_NS_IF_UNKNOWN, &nsPtr, &dummy1, &dummy2, &tail); if ((nsPtr == NULL) || (tail == NULL)) { return (Tcl_Command) NULL; } } else { nsPtr = iPtr->globalNsPtr; tail = cmdName; } hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(&nsPtr->cmdTable, tail, &new); if (!new) { cmdPtr = (Command *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); /* * Command already exists. If its object-based Tcl_ObjCmdProc is * TclInvokeStringCommand, we just set its Tcl_ObjCmdProc to the * argument "proc". Otherwise, we delete the old command. */ if (cmdPtr->objProc == TclInvokeStringCommand) { cmdPtr->objProc = proc; cmdPtr->objClientData = clientData; cmdPtr->deleteProc = deleteProc; cmdPtr->deleteData = clientData; return (Tcl_Command) cmdPtr; } /* * Otherwise, we delete the old command. Be careful to preserve * any existing import links so we can restore them down below. * That way, you can redefine a command and its import status * will remain intact. */ oldRefPtr = cmdPtr->importRefPtr; cmdPtr->importRefPtr = NULL; Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken(interp, (Tcl_Command) cmdPtr); hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(&nsPtr->cmdTable, tail, &new); if (!new) { /* * If the deletion callback recreated the command, just throw * away the new command (if we try to delete it again, we * could get stuck in an infinite loop). */ ckfree((char *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr)); } } cmdPtr = (Command *) ckalloc(sizeof(Command)); Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, cmdPtr); cmdPtr->hPtr = hPtr; cmdPtr->nsPtr = nsPtr; cmdPtr->refCount = 1; cmdPtr->cmdEpoch = 0; cmdPtr->compileProc = (CompileProc *) NULL; cmdPtr->objProc = proc; cmdPtr->objClientData = clientData; cmdPtr->proc = TclInvokeObjectCommand; cmdPtr->clientData = (ClientData) cmdPtr; cmdPtr->deleteProc = deleteProc; cmdPtr->deleteData = clientData; cmdPtr->flags = 0; cmdPtr->importRefPtr = NULL; cmdPtr->tracePtr = NULL; /* * Plug in any existing import references found above. Be sure * to update all of these references to point to the new command. */ if (oldRefPtr != NULL) { cmdPtr->importRefPtr = oldRefPtr; while (oldRefPtr != NULL) { refCmdPtr = oldRefPtr->importedCmdPtr; dataPtr = (ImportedCmdData*)refCmdPtr->objClientData; dataPtr->realCmdPtr = cmdPtr; oldRefPtr = oldRefPtr->nextPtr; } } /* * We just created a command, so in its namespace and all of its parent * namespaces, it may shadow global commands with the same name. If any * shadowed commands are found, invalidate all cached command references * in the affected namespaces. */ TclResetShadowedCmdRefs(interp, cmdPtr); return (Tcl_Command) cmdPtr; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclInvokeStringCommand -- * * "Wrapper" Tcl_ObjCmdProc used to call an existing string-based * Tcl_CmdProc if no object-based procedure exists for a command. A * pointer to this procedure is stored as the Tcl_ObjCmdProc in a * Command structure. It simply turns around and calls the string * Tcl_CmdProc in the Command structure. * * Results: * A standard Tcl object result value. * * Side effects: * Besides those side effects of the called Tcl_CmdProc, * TclInvokeStringCommand allocates and frees storage. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclInvokeStringCommand(clientData, interp, objc, objv) ClientData clientData; /* Points to command's Command structure. */ Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ register int objc; /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects. */ { register Command *cmdPtr = (Command *) clientData; register int i; int result; /* * This procedure generates an argv array for the string arguments. It * starts out with stack-allocated space but uses dynamically-allocated * storage if needed. */ #define NUM_ARGS 20 CONST char *(argStorage[NUM_ARGS]); CONST char **argv = argStorage; /* * Create the string argument array "argv". Make sure argv is large * enough to hold the objc arguments plus 1 extra for the zero * end-of-argv word. */ if ((objc + 1) > NUM_ARGS) { argv = (CONST char **) ckalloc((unsigned)(objc + 1) * sizeof(char *)); } for (i = 0; i < objc; i++) { argv[i] = Tcl_GetString(objv[i]); } argv[objc] = 0; /* * Invoke the command's string-based Tcl_CmdProc. */ result = (*cmdPtr->proc)(cmdPtr->clientData, interp, objc, argv); /* * Free the argv array if malloc'ed storage was used. */ if (argv != argStorage) { ckfree((char *) argv); } return result; #undef NUM_ARGS } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclInvokeObjectCommand -- * * "Wrapper" Tcl_CmdProc used to call an existing object-based * Tcl_ObjCmdProc if no string-based procedure exists for a command. * A pointer to this procedure is stored as the Tcl_CmdProc in a * Command structure. It simply turns around and calls the object * Tcl_ObjCmdProc in the Command structure. * * Results: * A standard Tcl string result value. * * Side effects: * Besides those side effects of the called Tcl_CmdProc, * TclInvokeStringCommand allocates and frees storage. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclInvokeObjectCommand(clientData, interp, argc, argv) ClientData clientData; /* Points to command's Command structure. */ Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ int argc; /* Number of arguments. */ register CONST char **argv; /* Argument strings. */ { Command *cmdPtr = (Command *) clientData; register Tcl_Obj *objPtr; register int i; int length, result; /* * This procedure generates an objv array for object arguments that hold * the argv strings. It starts out with stack-allocated space but uses * dynamically-allocated storage if needed. */ #define NUM_ARGS 20 Tcl_Obj *(argStorage[NUM_ARGS]); register Tcl_Obj **objv = argStorage; /* * Create the object argument array "objv". Make sure objv is large * enough to hold the objc arguments plus 1 extra for the zero * end-of-objv word. */ if (argc > NUM_ARGS) { objv = (Tcl_Obj **) ckalloc((unsigned)(argc * sizeof(Tcl_Obj *))); } for (i = 0; i < argc; i++) { length = strlen(argv[i]); TclNewObj(objPtr); TclInitStringRep(objPtr, argv[i], length); Tcl_IncrRefCount(objPtr); objv[i] = objPtr; } /* * Invoke the command's object-based Tcl_ObjCmdProc. */ result = (*cmdPtr->objProc)(cmdPtr->objClientData, interp, argc, objv); /* * Move the interpreter's object result to the string result, * then reset the object result. */ Tcl_SetResult(interp, TclGetString(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp)), TCL_VOLATILE); /* * Decrement the ref counts for the argument objects created above, * then free the objv array if malloc'ed storage was used. */ for (i = 0; i < argc; i++) { objPtr = objv[i]; Tcl_DecrRefCount(objPtr); } if (objv != argStorage) { ckfree((char *) objv); } return result; #undef NUM_ARGS } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclRenameCommand -- * * Called to give an existing Tcl command a different name. Both the * old command name and the new command name can have "::" namespace * qualifiers. If the new command has a different namespace context, * the command will be moved to that namespace and will execute in * the context of that new namespace. * * If the new command name is NULL or the null string, the command is * deleted. * * Results: * Returns TCL_OK if successful, and TCL_ERROR if anything goes wrong. * * Side effects: * If anything goes wrong, an error message is returned in the * interpreter's result object. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclRenameCommand(interp, oldName, newName) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ char *oldName; /* Existing command name. */ char *newName; /* New command name. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; CONST char *newTail; Namespace *cmdNsPtr, *newNsPtr, *dummy1, *dummy2; Tcl_Command cmd; Command *cmdPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr, *oldHPtr; int new, result; Tcl_Obj* oldFullName; Tcl_DString newFullName; /* * Find the existing command. An error is returned if cmdName can't * be found. */ cmd = Tcl_FindCommand(interp, oldName, (Tcl_Namespace *) NULL, /*flags*/ 0); cmdPtr = (Command *) cmd; if (cmdPtr == NULL) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "can't ", ((newName == NULL)||(*newName == '\0'))? "delete":"rename", " \"", oldName, "\": command doesn't exist", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } cmdNsPtr = cmdPtr->nsPtr; oldFullName = Tcl_NewObj(); Tcl_IncrRefCount( oldFullName ); Tcl_GetCommandFullName( interp, cmd, oldFullName ); /* * If the new command name is NULL or empty, delete the command. Do this * with Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken, since we already have the command. */ if ((newName == NULL) || (*newName == '\0')) { Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken(interp, cmd); result = TCL_OK; goto done; } /* * Make sure that the destination command does not already exist. * The rename operation is like creating a command, so we should * automatically create the containing namespaces just like * Tcl_CreateCommand would. */ TclGetNamespaceForQualName(interp, newName, (Namespace *) NULL, CREATE_NS_IF_UNKNOWN, &newNsPtr, &dummy1, &dummy2, &newTail); if ((newNsPtr == NULL) || (newTail == NULL)) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "can't rename to \"", newName, "\": bad command name", (char *) NULL); result = TCL_ERROR; goto done; } if (Tcl_FindHashEntry(&newNsPtr->cmdTable, newTail) != NULL) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "can't rename to \"", newName, "\": command already exists", (char *) NULL); result = TCL_ERROR; goto done; } /* * Warning: any changes done in the code here are likely * to be needed in Tcl_HideCommand() code too. * (until the common parts are extracted out) --dl */ /* * Put the command in the new namespace so we can check for an alias * loop. Since we are adding a new command to a namespace, we must * handle any shadowing of the global commands that this might create. */ oldHPtr = cmdPtr->hPtr; hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(&newNsPtr->cmdTable, newTail, &new); Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, (ClientData) cmdPtr); cmdPtr->hPtr = hPtr; cmdPtr->nsPtr = newNsPtr; TclResetShadowedCmdRefs(interp, cmdPtr); /* * Now check for an alias loop. If we detect one, put everything back * the way it was and report the error. */ result = TclPreventAliasLoop(interp, interp, (Tcl_Command) cmdPtr); if (result != TCL_OK) { Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(cmdPtr->hPtr); cmdPtr->hPtr = oldHPtr; cmdPtr->nsPtr = cmdNsPtr; goto done; } /* * Script for rename traces can delete the command "oldName". * Therefore increment the reference count for cmdPtr so that * it's Command structure is freed only towards the end of this * function by calling TclCleanupCommand. * * The trace procedure needs to get a fully qualified name for * old and new commands [Tcl bug #651271], or else there's no way * for the trace procedure to get the namespace from which the old * command is being renamed! */ Tcl_DStringInit( &newFullName ); Tcl_DStringAppend( &newFullName, newNsPtr->fullName, -1 ); if ( newNsPtr != iPtr->globalNsPtr ) { Tcl_DStringAppend( &newFullName, "::", 2 ); } Tcl_DStringAppend( &newFullName, newTail, -1 ); cmdPtr->refCount++; CallCommandTraces( iPtr, cmdPtr, Tcl_GetString( oldFullName ), Tcl_DStringValue( &newFullName ), TCL_TRACE_RENAME); Tcl_DStringFree( &newFullName ); /* * The new command name is okay, so remove the command from its * current namespace. This is like deleting the command, so bump * the cmdEpoch to invalidate any cached references to the command. */ Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(oldHPtr); cmdPtr->cmdEpoch++; /* * If the command being renamed has a compile procedure, increment the * interpreter's compileEpoch to invalidate its compiled code. This * makes sure that we don't later try to execute old code compiled for * the now-renamed command. */ if (cmdPtr->compileProc != NULL) { iPtr->compileEpoch++; } /* * Now free the Command structure, if the "oldName" command has * been deleted by invocation of rename traces. */ TclCleanupCommand(cmdPtr); result = TCL_OK; done: TclDecrRefCount( oldFullName ); return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_SetCommandInfo -- * * Modifies various information about a Tcl command. Note that * this procedure will not change a command's namespace; use * Tcl_RenameCommand to do that. Also, the isNativeObjectProc * member of *infoPtr is ignored. * * Results: * If cmdName exists in interp, then the information at *infoPtr * is stored with the command in place of the current information * and 1 is returned. If the command doesn't exist then 0 is * returned. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_SetCommandInfo(interp, cmdName, infoPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to look * for command. */ CONST char *cmdName; /* Name of desired command. */ CONST Tcl_CmdInfo *infoPtr; /* Where to find information * to store in the command. */ { Tcl_Command cmd; cmd = Tcl_FindCommand(interp, cmdName, (Tcl_Namespace *) NULL, /*flags*/ 0); return Tcl_SetCommandInfoFromToken( cmd, infoPtr ); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_SetCommandInfoFromToken -- * * Modifies various information about a Tcl command. Note that * this procedure will not change a command's namespace; use * Tcl_RenameCommand to do that. Also, the isNativeObjectProc * member of *infoPtr is ignored. * * Results: * If cmdName exists in interp, then the information at *infoPtr * is stored with the command in place of the current information * and 1 is returned. If the command doesn't exist then 0 is * returned. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_SetCommandInfoFromToken( cmd, infoPtr ) Tcl_Command cmd; CONST Tcl_CmdInfo* infoPtr; { Command* cmdPtr; /* Internal representation of the command */ if (cmd == (Tcl_Command) NULL) { return 0; } /* * The isNativeObjectProc and nsPtr members of *infoPtr are ignored. */ cmdPtr = (Command *) cmd; cmdPtr->proc = infoPtr->proc; cmdPtr->clientData = infoPtr->clientData; if (infoPtr->objProc == (Tcl_ObjCmdProc *) NULL) { cmdPtr->objProc = TclInvokeStringCommand; cmdPtr->objClientData = (ClientData) cmdPtr; } else { cmdPtr->objProc = infoPtr->objProc; cmdPtr->objClientData = infoPtr->objClientData; } cmdPtr->deleteProc = infoPtr->deleteProc; cmdPtr->deleteData = infoPtr->deleteData; return 1; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetCommandInfo -- * * Returns various information about a Tcl command. * * Results: * If cmdName exists in interp, then *infoPtr is modified to * hold information about cmdName and 1 is returned. If the * command doesn't exist then 0 is returned and *infoPtr isn't * modified. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_GetCommandInfo(interp, cmdName, infoPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to look * for command. */ CONST char *cmdName; /* Name of desired command. */ Tcl_CmdInfo *infoPtr; /* Where to store information about * command. */ { Tcl_Command cmd; cmd = Tcl_FindCommand(interp, cmdName, (Tcl_Namespace *) NULL, /*flags*/ 0); return Tcl_GetCommandInfoFromToken( cmd, infoPtr ); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetCommandInfoFromToken -- * * Returns various information about a Tcl command. * * Results: * Copies information from the command identified by 'cmd' into * a caller-supplied structure and returns 1. If the 'cmd' is * NULL, leaves the structure untouched and returns 0. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_GetCommandInfoFromToken( cmd, infoPtr ) Tcl_Command cmd; Tcl_CmdInfo* infoPtr; { Command* cmdPtr; /* Internal representation of the command */ if ( cmd == (Tcl_Command) NULL ) { return 0; } /* * Set isNativeObjectProc 1 if objProc was registered by a call to * Tcl_CreateObjCommand. Otherwise set it to 0. */ cmdPtr = (Command *) cmd; infoPtr->isNativeObjectProc = (cmdPtr->objProc != TclInvokeStringCommand); infoPtr->objProc = cmdPtr->objProc; infoPtr->objClientData = cmdPtr->objClientData; infoPtr->proc = cmdPtr->proc; infoPtr->clientData = cmdPtr->clientData; infoPtr->deleteProc = cmdPtr->deleteProc; infoPtr->deleteData = cmdPtr->deleteData; infoPtr->namespacePtr = (Tcl_Namespace *) cmdPtr->nsPtr; return 1; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetCommandName -- * * Given a token returned by Tcl_CreateCommand, this procedure * returns the current name of the command (which may have changed * due to renaming). * * Results: * The return value is the name of the given command. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ CONST char * Tcl_GetCommandName(interp, command) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter containing the command. */ Tcl_Command command; /* Token for command returned by a previous * call to Tcl_CreateCommand. The command * must not have been deleted. */ { Command *cmdPtr = (Command *) command; if ((cmdPtr == NULL) || (cmdPtr->hPtr == NULL)) { /* * This should only happen if command was "created" after the * interpreter began to be deleted, so there isn't really any * command. Just return an empty string. */ return ""; } return Tcl_GetHashKey(cmdPtr->hPtr->tablePtr, cmdPtr->hPtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetCommandFullName -- * * Given a token returned by, e.g., Tcl_CreateCommand or * Tcl_FindCommand, this procedure appends to an object the command's * full name, qualified by a sequence of parent namespace names. The * command's fully-qualified name may have changed due to renaming. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * The command's fully-qualified name is appended to the string * representation of objPtr. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_GetCommandFullName(interp, command, objPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter containing the command. */ Tcl_Command command; /* Token for command returned by a previous * call to Tcl_CreateCommand. The command * must not have been deleted. */ Tcl_Obj *objPtr; /* Points to the object onto which the * command's full name is appended. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; register Command *cmdPtr = (Command *) command; char *name; /* * Add the full name of the containing namespace, followed by the "::" * separator, and the command name. */ if (cmdPtr != NULL) { if (cmdPtr->nsPtr != NULL) { Tcl_AppendToObj(objPtr, cmdPtr->nsPtr->fullName, -1); if (cmdPtr->nsPtr != iPtr->globalNsPtr) { Tcl_AppendToObj(objPtr, "::", 2); } } if (cmdPtr->hPtr != NULL) { name = Tcl_GetHashKey(cmdPtr->hPtr->tablePtr, cmdPtr->hPtr); Tcl_AppendToObj(objPtr, name, -1); } } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_DeleteCommand -- * * Remove the given command from the given interpreter. * * Results: * 0 is returned if the command was deleted successfully. * -1 is returned if there didn't exist a command by that name. * * Side effects: * cmdName will no longer be recognized as a valid command for * interp. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_DeleteCommand(interp, cmdName) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Token for command interpreter (returned * by a previous Tcl_CreateInterp call). */ CONST char *cmdName; /* Name of command to remove. */ { Tcl_Command cmd; /* * Find the desired command and delete it. */ cmd = Tcl_FindCommand(interp, cmdName, (Tcl_Namespace *) NULL, /*flags*/ 0); if (cmd == (Tcl_Command) NULL) { return -1; } return Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken(interp, cmd); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken -- * * Removes the given command from the given interpreter. This procedure * resembles Tcl_DeleteCommand, but takes a Tcl_Command token instead * of a command name for efficiency. * * Results: * 0 is returned if the command was deleted successfully. * -1 is returned if there didn't exist a command by that name. * * Side effects: * The command specified by "cmd" will no longer be recognized as a * valid command for "interp". * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken(interp, cmd) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Token for command interpreter returned by * a previous call to Tcl_CreateInterp. */ Tcl_Command cmd; /* Token for command to delete. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Command *cmdPtr = (Command *) cmd; ImportRef *refPtr, *nextRefPtr; Tcl_Command importCmd; /* * The code here is tricky. We can't delete the hash table entry * before invoking the deletion callback because there are cases * where the deletion callback needs to invoke the command (e.g. * object systems such as OTcl). However, this means that the * callback could try to delete or rename the command. The deleted * flag allows us to detect these cases and skip nested deletes. */ if (cmdPtr->flags & CMD_IS_DELETED) { /* * Another deletion is already in progress. Remove the hash * table entry now, but don't invoke a callback or free the * command structure. */ Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(cmdPtr->hPtr); cmdPtr->hPtr = NULL; return 0; } /* * We must delete this command, even though both traces and * delete procs may try to avoid this (renaming the command etc). * Also traces and delete procs may try to delete the command * themsevles. This flag declares that a delete is in progress * and that recursive deletes should be ignored. */ cmdPtr->flags |= CMD_IS_DELETED; /* * Call trace procedures for the command being deleted. Then delete * its traces. */ if (cmdPtr->tracePtr != NULL) { CommandTrace *tracePtr; CallCommandTraces(iPtr,cmdPtr,NULL,NULL,TCL_TRACE_DELETE); /* Now delete these traces */ tracePtr = cmdPtr->tracePtr; while (tracePtr != NULL) { CommandTrace *nextPtr = tracePtr->nextPtr; if ((--tracePtr->refCount) <= 0) { ckfree((char*)tracePtr); } tracePtr = nextPtr; } cmdPtr->tracePtr = NULL; } /* * If the command being deleted has a compile procedure, increment the * interpreter's compileEpoch to invalidate its compiled code. This * makes sure that we don't later try to execute old code compiled with * command-specific (i.e., inline) bytecodes for the now-deleted * command. This field is checked in Tcl_EvalObj and ObjInterpProc, and * code whose compilation epoch doesn't match is recompiled. */ if (cmdPtr->compileProc != NULL) { iPtr->compileEpoch++; } if (cmdPtr->deleteProc != NULL) { /* * Delete the command's client data. If this was an imported command * created when a command was imported into a namespace, this client * data will be a pointer to a ImportedCmdData structure describing * the "real" command that this imported command refers to. */ /* * If you are getting a crash during the call to deleteProc and * cmdPtr->deleteProc is a pointer to the function free(), the * most likely cause is that your extension allocated memory * for the clientData argument to Tcl_CreateObjCommand() with * the ckalloc() macro and you are now trying to deallocate * this memory with free() instead of ckfree(). You should * pass a pointer to your own method that calls ckfree(). */ (*cmdPtr->deleteProc)(cmdPtr->deleteData); } /* * Bump the command epoch counter. This will invalidate all cached * references that point to this command. */ cmdPtr->cmdEpoch++; /* * If this command was imported into other namespaces, then imported * commands were created that refer back to this command. Delete these * imported commands now. */ for (refPtr = cmdPtr->importRefPtr; refPtr != NULL; refPtr = nextRefPtr) { nextRefPtr = refPtr->nextPtr; importCmd = (Tcl_Command) refPtr->importedCmdPtr; Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken(interp, importCmd); } /* * Don't use hPtr to delete the hash entry here, because it's * possible that the deletion callback renamed the command. * Instead, use cmdPtr->hptr, and make sure that no-one else * has already deleted the hash entry. */ if (cmdPtr->hPtr != NULL) { Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(cmdPtr->hPtr); } /* * Mark the Command structure as no longer valid. This allows * TclExecuteByteCode to recognize when a Command has logically been * deleted and a pointer to this Command structure cached in a CmdName * object is invalid. TclExecuteByteCode will look up the command again * in the interpreter's command hashtable. */ cmdPtr->objProc = NULL; /* * Now free the Command structure, unless there is another reference to * it from a CmdName Tcl object in some ByteCode code sequence. In that * case, delay the cleanup until all references are either discarded * (when a ByteCode is freed) or replaced by a new reference (when a * cached CmdName Command reference is found to be invalid and * TclExecuteByteCode looks up the command in the command hashtable). */ TclCleanupCommand(cmdPtr); return 0; } static char * CallCommandTraces(iPtr, cmdPtr, oldName, newName, flags) Interp *iPtr; /* Interpreter containing command. */ Command *cmdPtr; /* Command whose traces are to be * invoked. */ CONST char *oldName; /* Command's old name, or NULL if we * must get the name from cmdPtr */ CONST char *newName; /* Command's new name, or NULL if * the command is not being renamed */ int flags; /* Flags passed to trace procedures: * indicates what's happening to command, * plus other stuff like TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, and * TCL_INTERP_DESTROYED. */ { register CommandTrace *tracePtr; ActiveCommandTrace active; char *result; Tcl_Obj *oldNamePtr = NULL; if (cmdPtr->flags & CMD_TRACE_ACTIVE) { /* * While a rename trace is active, we will not process any more * rename traces; while a delete trace is active we will never * reach here -- because Tcl_DeleteCommandFromToken checks for the * condition (cmdPtr->flags & CMD_IS_DELETED) and returns immediately * when a command deletion is in progress. For all other traces, * delete traces will not be invoked but a call to TraceCommandProc * will ensure that tracePtr->clientData is freed whenever the * command "oldName" is deleted. */ if (cmdPtr->flags & TCL_TRACE_RENAME) { flags &= ~TCL_TRACE_RENAME; } if (flags == 0) { return NULL; } } cmdPtr->flags |= CMD_TRACE_ACTIVE; cmdPtr->refCount++; result = NULL; active.nextPtr = iPtr->activeCmdTracePtr; iPtr->activeCmdTracePtr = &active; if (flags & TCL_TRACE_DELETE) { flags |= TCL_TRACE_DESTROYED; } active.cmdPtr = cmdPtr; Tcl_Preserve((ClientData) iPtr); for (tracePtr = cmdPtr->tracePtr; tracePtr != NULL; tracePtr = active.nextTracePtr) { active.nextTracePtr = tracePtr->nextPtr; if (!(tracePtr->flags & flags)) { continue; } cmdPtr->flags |= tracePtr->flags; if (oldName == NULL) { TclNewObj(oldNamePtr); Tcl_IncrRefCount(oldNamePtr); Tcl_GetCommandFullName((Tcl_Interp *) iPtr, (Tcl_Command) cmdPtr, oldNamePtr); oldName = TclGetString(oldNamePtr); } tracePtr->refCount++; (*tracePtr->traceProc)(tracePtr->clientData, (Tcl_Interp *) iPtr, oldName, newName, flags); cmdPtr->flags &= ~tracePtr->flags; if ((--tracePtr->refCount) <= 0) { ckfree((char*)tracePtr); } } /* * If a new object was created to hold the full oldName, * free it now. */ if (oldNamePtr != NULL) { TclDecrRefCount(oldNamePtr); } /* * Restore the variable's flags, remove the record of our active * traces, and then return. */ cmdPtr->flags &= ~CMD_TRACE_ACTIVE; cmdPtr->refCount--; iPtr->activeCmdTracePtr = active.nextPtr; Tcl_Release((ClientData) iPtr); return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclCleanupCommand -- * * This procedure frees up a Command structure unless it is still * referenced from an interpreter's command hashtable or from a CmdName * Tcl object representing the name of a command in a ByteCode * instruction sequence. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Memory gets freed unless a reference to the Command structure still * exists. In that case the cleanup is delayed until the command is * deleted or when the last ByteCode referring to it is freed. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclCleanupCommand(cmdPtr) register Command *cmdPtr; /* Points to the Command structure to * be freed. */ { cmdPtr->refCount--; if (cmdPtr->refCount <= 0) { ckfree((char *) cmdPtr); } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_CreateMathFunc -- * * Creates a new math function for expressions in a given * interpreter. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * The function defined by "name" is created or redefined. If the * function already exists then its definition is replaced; this * includes the builtin functions. Redefining a builtin function forces * all existing code to be invalidated since that code may be compiled * using an instruction specific to the replaced function. In addition, * redefioning a non-builtin function will force existing code to be * invalidated if the number of arguments has changed. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_CreateMathFunc(interp, name, numArgs, argTypes, proc, clientData) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which function is * to be available. */ CONST char *name; /* Name of function (e.g. "sin"). */ int numArgs; /* Nnumber of arguments required by * function. */ Tcl_ValueType *argTypes; /* Array of types acceptable for * each argument. */ Tcl_MathProc *proc; /* Procedure that implements the * math function. */ ClientData clientData; /* Additional value to pass to the * function. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; MathFunc *mathFuncPtr; int new, i; hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(&iPtr->mathFuncTable, name, &new); if (new) { Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, ckalloc(sizeof(MathFunc))); } mathFuncPtr = (MathFunc *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); if (!new) { if (mathFuncPtr->builtinFuncIndex >= 0) { /* * We are redefining a builtin math function. Invalidate the * interpreter's existing code by incrementing its * compileEpoch member. This field is checked in Tcl_EvalObj * and ObjInterpProc, and code whose compilation epoch doesn't * match is recompiled. Newly compiled code will no longer * treat the function as builtin. */ iPtr->compileEpoch++; } else { /* * A non-builtin function is being redefined. We must invalidate * existing code if the number of arguments has changed. This * is because existing code was compiled assuming that number. */ if (numArgs != mathFuncPtr->numArgs) { iPtr->compileEpoch++; } } } mathFuncPtr->builtinFuncIndex = -1; /* can't be a builtin function */ if (numArgs > MAX_MATH_ARGS) { numArgs = MAX_MATH_ARGS; } mathFuncPtr->numArgs = numArgs; for (i = 0; i < numArgs; i++) { mathFuncPtr->argTypes[i] = argTypes[i]; } mathFuncPtr->proc = proc; mathFuncPtr->clientData = clientData; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetMathFuncInfo -- * * Discovers how a particular math function was created in a given * interpreter. * * Results: * TCL_OK if it succeeds, TCL_ERROR else (leaving an error message * in the interpreter result if that happens.) * * Side effects: * If this function succeeds, the variables pointed to by the * numArgsPtr and argTypePtr arguments will be updated to detail the * arguments allowed by the function. The variable pointed to by the * procPtr argument will be set to NULL if the function is a builtin * function, and will be set to the address of the C function used to * implement the math function otherwise (in which case the variable * pointed to by the clientDataPtr argument will also be updated.) * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_GetMathFuncInfo(interp, name, numArgsPtr, argTypesPtr, procPtr, clientDataPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; CONST char *name; int *numArgsPtr; Tcl_ValueType **argTypesPtr; Tcl_MathProc **procPtr; ClientData *clientDataPtr; { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; MathFunc *mathFuncPtr; Tcl_ValueType *argTypes; int i,numArgs; hPtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(&iPtr->mathFuncTable, name); if (hPtr == NULL) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "math function \"", name, "\" not known in this interpreter", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } mathFuncPtr = (MathFunc *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); *numArgsPtr = numArgs = mathFuncPtr->numArgs; if (numArgs == 0) { /* Avoid doing zero-sized allocs... */ numArgs = 1; } *argTypesPtr = argTypes = (Tcl_ValueType *)ckalloc(numArgs * sizeof(Tcl_ValueType)); for (i = 0; i < mathFuncPtr->numArgs; i++) { argTypes[i] = mathFuncPtr->argTypes[i]; } if (mathFuncPtr->builtinFuncIndex == -1) { *procPtr = (Tcl_MathProc *) NULL; } else { *procPtr = mathFuncPtr->proc; *clientDataPtr = mathFuncPtr->clientData; } return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_ListMathFuncs -- * * Produces a list of all the math functions defined in a given * interpreter. * * Results: * A pointer to a Tcl_Obj structure with a reference count of zero, * or NULL in the case of an error (in which case a suitable error * message will be left in the interpreter result.) * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * Tcl_ListMathFuncs(interp, pattern) Tcl_Interp *interp; CONST char *pattern; { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_Obj *resultList = Tcl_NewObj(); register Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; Tcl_HashSearch hSearch; CONST char *name; for (hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(&iPtr->mathFuncTable, &hSearch); hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&hSearch)) { name = Tcl_GetHashKey(&iPtr->mathFuncTable, hPtr); if ((pattern == NULL || Tcl_StringMatch(name, pattern)) && /* I don't expect this to fail, but... */ Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(interp, resultList, Tcl_NewStringObj(name,-1)) != TCL_OK) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(resultList); return NULL; } } return resultList; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclInterpReady -- * * Check if an interpreter is ready to eval commands or scripts, * i.e., if it was not deleted and if the nesting level is not * too high. * * Results: * The return value is TCL_OK if it the interpreter is ready, * TCL_ERROR otherwise. * * Side effects: * The interpreters object and string results are cleared. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclInterpReady(interp) Tcl_Interp *interp; { register Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; /* * Reset both the interpreter's string and object results and clear * out any previous error information. */ Tcl_ResetResult(interp); /* * If the interpreter has been deleted, return an error. */ if (iPtr->flags & DELETED) { Tcl_ResetResult(interp); Tcl_AppendToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "attempt to call eval in deleted interpreter", -1); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "CORE", "IDELETE", "attempt to call eval in deleted interpreter", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Check depth of nested calls to Tcl_Eval: if this gets too large, * it's probably because of an infinite loop somewhere. */ if (((iPtr->numLevels) > iPtr->maxNestingDepth) || (TclpCheckStackSpace() == 0)) { Tcl_AppendToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "too many nested evaluations (infinite loop?)", -1); return TCL_ERROR; } return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclEvalObjvInternal -- * * This procedure evaluates a Tcl command that has already been * parsed into words, with one Tcl_Obj holding each word. The caller * is responsible for managing the iPtr->numLevels. * * Results: * The return value is a standard Tcl completion code such as * TCL_OK or TCL_ERROR. A result or error message is left in * interp's result. If an error occurs, this procedure does * NOT add any information to the errorInfo variable. * * Side effects: * Depends on the command. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclEvalObjvInternal(interp, objc, objv, command, length, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to evaluate the * command. Also used for error * reporting. */ int objc; /* Number of words in command. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* An array of pointers to objects that are * the words that make up the command. */ CONST char *command; /* Points to the beginning of the string * representation of the command; this * is used for traces. If the string * representation of the command is * unknown, an empty string should be * supplied. If it is NULL, no traces will * be called. */ int length; /* Number of bytes in command; if -1, all * characters up to the first null byte are * used. */ int flags; /* Collection of OR-ed bits that control * the evaluation of the script. Only * TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL and TCL_EVAL_INVOKE are * currently supported. */ { Command *cmdPtr; Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_Obj **newObjv; int i; CallFrame *savedVarFramePtr; /* Saves old copy of iPtr->varFramePtr * in case TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL was set. */ int code = TCL_OK; int traceCode = TCL_OK; int checkTraces = 1; if (TclInterpReady(interp) == TCL_ERROR) { return TCL_ERROR; } if (objc == 0) { return TCL_OK; } /* * If any execution traces rename or delete the current command, * we may need (at most) two passes here. */ while (1) { /* * Find the procedure to execute this command. If there isn't one, * then see if there is a command "unknown". If so, create a new * word array with "unknown" as the first word and the original * command words as arguments. Then call ourselves recursively * to execute it. * * If caller requests, or if we're resolving the target end of * an interpeter alias (TCL_EVAL_INVOKE), be sure to do command * name resolution in the global namespace. */ savedVarFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; if (flags & (TCL_EVAL_INVOKE | TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL)) { iPtr->varFramePtr = NULL; } cmdPtr = (Command *) Tcl_GetCommandFromObj(interp, objv[0]); iPtr->varFramePtr = savedVarFramePtr; if (cmdPtr == NULL) { newObjv = (Tcl_Obj **) ckalloc((unsigned) ((objc + 1) * sizeof (Tcl_Obj *))); for (i = objc-1; i >= 0; i--) { newObjv[i+1] = objv[i]; } newObjv[0] = Tcl_NewStringObj("::unknown", -1); Tcl_IncrRefCount(newObjv[0]); cmdPtr = (Command *) Tcl_GetCommandFromObj(interp, newObjv[0]); if (cmdPtr == NULL) { Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "invalid command name \"", Tcl_GetString(objv[0]), "\"", (char *) NULL); code = TCL_ERROR; } else { iPtr->numLevels++; code = TclEvalObjvInternal(interp, objc+1, newObjv, command, length, 0); iPtr->numLevels--; } Tcl_DecrRefCount(newObjv[0]); ckfree((char *) newObjv); goto done; } /* * Call trace procedures if needed. */ if ((checkTraces) && (command != NULL)) { int cmdEpoch = cmdPtr->cmdEpoch; cmdPtr->refCount++; /* * If the first set of traces modifies/deletes the command or * any existing traces, then the set checkTraces to 0 and * go through this while loop one more time. */ if (iPtr->tracePtr != NULL && traceCode == TCL_OK) { traceCode = TclCheckInterpTraces(interp, command, length, cmdPtr, code, TCL_TRACE_ENTER_EXEC, objc, objv); } if ((cmdPtr->flags & CMD_HAS_EXEC_TRACES) && (traceCode == TCL_OK)) { traceCode = TclCheckExecutionTraces(interp, command, length, cmdPtr, code, TCL_TRACE_ENTER_EXEC, objc, objv); } cmdPtr->refCount--; if (cmdEpoch != cmdPtr->cmdEpoch) { /* The command has been modified in some way */ checkTraces = 0; continue; } } break; } /* * Finally, invoke the command's Tcl_ObjCmdProc. */ cmdPtr->refCount++; iPtr->cmdCount++; if ( code == TCL_OK && traceCode == TCL_OK) { savedVarFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; if (flags & TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL) { iPtr->varFramePtr = NULL; } code = (*cmdPtr->objProc)(cmdPtr->objClientData, interp, objc, objv); iPtr->varFramePtr = savedVarFramePtr; } if (Tcl_AsyncReady()) { code = Tcl_AsyncInvoke(interp, code); } /* * Call 'leave' command traces */ if (!(cmdPtr->flags & CMD_IS_DELETED)) { if ((cmdPtr->flags & CMD_HAS_EXEC_TRACES) && (traceCode == TCL_OK)) { traceCode = TclCheckExecutionTraces (interp, command, length, cmdPtr, code, TCL_TRACE_LEAVE_EXEC, objc, objv); } if (iPtr->tracePtr != NULL && traceCode == TCL_OK) { traceCode = TclCheckInterpTraces(interp, command, length, cmdPtr, code, TCL_TRACE_LEAVE_EXEC, objc, objv); } } TclCleanupCommand(cmdPtr); /* * If one of the trace invocation resulted in error, then * change the result code accordingly. Note, that the * interp->result should already be set correctly by the * call to TraceExecutionProc. */ if (traceCode != TCL_OK) { code = traceCode; } /* * If the interpreter has a non-empty string result, the result * object is either empty or stale because some procedure set * interp->result directly. If so, move the string result to the * result object, then reset the string result. */ if (*(iPtr->result) != 0) { (void) Tcl_GetObjResult(interp); } done: return code; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_EvalObjv -- * * This procedure evaluates a Tcl command that has already been * parsed into words, with one Tcl_Obj holding each word. * * Results: * The return value is a standard Tcl completion code such as * TCL_OK or TCL_ERROR. A result or error message is left in * interp's result. * * Side effects: * Depends on the command. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_EvalObjv(interp, objc, objv, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to evaluate the * command. Also used for error * reporting. */ int objc; /* Number of words in command. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* An array of pointers to objects that are * the words that make up the command. */ int flags; /* Collection of OR-ed bits that control * the evaluation of the script. Only * TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL and TCL_EVAL_INVOKE * are currently supported. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *)interp; Trace *tracePtr; Tcl_DString cmdBuf; char *cmdString = ""; /* A command string is only necessary for * command traces or error logs; it will be * generated to replace this default value if * necessary. */ int cmdLen = 0; /* a non-zero value indicates that a command * string was generated. */ int code = TCL_OK; int i; int allowExceptions = (iPtr->evalFlags & TCL_ALLOW_EXCEPTIONS); for (tracePtr = iPtr->tracePtr; tracePtr; tracePtr = tracePtr->nextPtr) { if ((tracePtr->level == 0) || (iPtr->numLevels <= tracePtr->level)) { /* * The command may be needed for an execution trace. Generate a * command string. */ Tcl_DStringInit(&cmdBuf); for (i = 0; i < objc; i++) { Tcl_DStringAppendElement(&cmdBuf, Tcl_GetString(objv[i])); } cmdString = Tcl_DStringValue(&cmdBuf); cmdLen = Tcl_DStringLength(&cmdBuf); break; } } iPtr->numLevels++; code = TclEvalObjvInternal(interp, objc, objv, cmdString, cmdLen, flags); iPtr->numLevels--; /* * If we are again at the top level, process any unusual * return code returned by the evaluated code. */ if (iPtr->numLevels == 0) { if (code == TCL_RETURN) { code = TclUpdateReturnInfo(iPtr); } if ((code != TCL_OK) && (code != TCL_ERROR) && !allowExceptions) { ProcessUnexpectedResult(interp, code); code = TCL_ERROR; } } if ((code == TCL_ERROR) && !(flags & TCL_EVAL_INVOKE)) { /* * If there was an error, a command string will be needed for the * error log: generate it now if it was not done previously. */ if (cmdLen == 0) { Tcl_DStringInit(&cmdBuf); for (i = 0; i < objc; i++) { Tcl_DStringAppendElement(&cmdBuf, Tcl_GetString(objv[i])); } cmdString = Tcl_DStringValue(&cmdBuf); cmdLen = Tcl_DStringLength(&cmdBuf); } Tcl_LogCommandInfo(interp, cmdString, cmdString, cmdLen); } if (cmdLen != 0) { Tcl_DStringFree(&cmdBuf); } return code; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_LogCommandInfo -- * * This procedure is invoked after an error occurs in an interpreter. * It adds information to the "errorInfo" variable to describe the * command that was being executed when the error occurred. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Information about the command is added to errorInfo and the * line number stored internally in the interpreter is set. If this * is the first call to this procedure or Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo since * an error occurred, then old information in errorInfo is * deleted. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_LogCommandInfo(interp, script, command, length) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to log information. */ CONST char *script; /* First character in script containing * command (must be <= command). */ CONST char *command; /* First character in command that * generated the error. */ int length; /* Number of bytes in command (-1 means * use all bytes up to first null byte). */ { char buffer[200]; register CONST char *p; char *ellipsis = ""; Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; if (iPtr->flags & ERR_ALREADY_LOGGED) { /* * Someone else has already logged error information for this * command; we shouldn't add anything more. */ return; } /* * Compute the line number where the error occurred. */ iPtr->errorLine = 1; for (p = script; p != command; p++) { if (*p == '\n') { iPtr->errorLine++; } } /* * Create an error message to add to errorInfo, including up to a * maximum number of characters of the command. */ if (length < 0) { length = strlen(command); } if (length > 150) { length = 150; ellipsis = "..."; } while ( (command[length] & 0xC0) == 0x80 ) { /* * Back up truncation point so that we don't truncate in the * middle of a multi-byte character (in UTF-8) */ length--; ellipsis = "..."; } if (!(iPtr->flags & ERR_IN_PROGRESS)) { sprintf(buffer, "\n while executing\n\"%.*s%s\"", length, command, ellipsis); } else { sprintf(buffer, "\n invoked from within\n\"%.*s%s\"", length, command, ellipsis); } Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo(interp, buffer, -1); iPtr->flags &= ~ERR_ALREADY_LOGGED; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_EvalTokensStandard -- * * Given an array of tokens parsed from a Tcl command (e.g., the * tokens that make up a word or the index for an array variable) * this procedure evaluates the tokens and concatenates their * values to form a single result value. * * Results: * The return value is a standard Tcl completion code such as * TCL_OK or TCL_ERROR. A result or error message is left in * interp's result. * * Side effects: * Depends on the array of tokens being evaled. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_EvalTokensStandard(interp, tokenPtr, count) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to lookup * variables, execute nested commands, * and report errors. */ Tcl_Token *tokenPtr; /* Pointer to first in an array of tokens * to evaluate and concatenate. */ int count; /* Number of tokens to consider at tokenPtr. * Must be at least 1. */ { Tcl_Obj *resultPtr, *indexPtr, *valuePtr; char buffer[TCL_UTF_MAX]; #ifdef TCL_MEM_DEBUG # define MAX_VAR_CHARS 5 #else # define MAX_VAR_CHARS 30 #endif char nameBuffer[MAX_VAR_CHARS+1]; char *varName, *index; CONST char *p = NULL; /* Initialized to avoid compiler warning. */ int length, code; /* * The only tricky thing about this procedure is that it attempts to * avoid object creation and string copying whenever possible. For * example, if the value is just a nested command, then use the * command's result object directly. */ code = TCL_OK; resultPtr = NULL; Tcl_ResetResult(interp); for ( ; count > 0; count--, tokenPtr++) { valuePtr = NULL; /* * The switch statement below computes the next value to be * concat to the result, as either a range of text or an * object. */ switch (tokenPtr->type) { case TCL_TOKEN_TEXT: p = tokenPtr->start; length = tokenPtr->size; break; case TCL_TOKEN_BS: length = Tcl_UtfBackslash(tokenPtr->start, (int *) NULL, buffer); p = buffer; break; case TCL_TOKEN_COMMAND: code = Tcl_EvalEx(interp, tokenPtr->start+1, tokenPtr->size-2, 0); if (code != TCL_OK) { goto done; } valuePtr = Tcl_GetObjResult(interp); break; case TCL_TOKEN_VARIABLE: if (tokenPtr->numComponents == 1) { indexPtr = NULL; index = NULL; } else { code = Tcl_EvalTokensStandard(interp, tokenPtr+2, tokenPtr->numComponents - 1); if (code != TCL_OK) { goto done; } indexPtr = Tcl_GetObjResult(interp); Tcl_IncrRefCount(indexPtr); index = Tcl_GetString(indexPtr); } /* * We have to make a copy of the variable name in order * to have a null-terminated string. We can't make a * temporary modification to the script to null-terminate * the name, because a trace callback might potentially * reuse the script and be affected by the null character. */ if (tokenPtr[1].size <= MAX_VAR_CHARS) { varName = nameBuffer; } else { varName = ckalloc((unsigned) (tokenPtr[1].size + 1)); } strncpy(varName, tokenPtr[1].start, (size_t) tokenPtr[1].size); varName[tokenPtr[1].size] = 0; valuePtr = Tcl_GetVar2Ex(interp, varName, index, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG); if (varName != nameBuffer) { ckfree(varName); } if (indexPtr != NULL) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(indexPtr); } if (valuePtr == NULL) { code = TCL_ERROR; goto done; } count -= tokenPtr->numComponents; tokenPtr += tokenPtr->numComponents; break; default: panic("unexpected token type in Tcl_EvalTokensStandard"); } /* * If valuePtr isn't NULL, the next piece of text comes from that * object; otherwise, take length bytes starting at p. */ if (resultPtr == NULL) { if (valuePtr != NULL) { resultPtr = valuePtr; } else { resultPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(p, length); } Tcl_IncrRefCount(resultPtr); } else { if (Tcl_IsShared(resultPtr)) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(resultPtr); resultPtr = Tcl_DuplicateObj(resultPtr); Tcl_IncrRefCount(resultPtr); } if (valuePtr != NULL) { p = Tcl_GetStringFromObj(valuePtr, &length); } Tcl_AppendToObj(resultPtr, p, length); } } if (resultPtr != NULL) { Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, resultPtr); } else { code = TCL_ERROR; } done: if (resultPtr != NULL) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(resultPtr); } return code; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_EvalTokens -- * * Given an array of tokens parsed from a Tcl command (e.g., the * tokens that make up a word or the index for an array variable) * this procedure evaluates the tokens and concatenates their * values to form a single result value. * * Results: * The return value is a pointer to a newly allocated Tcl_Obj * containing the value of the array of tokens. The reference * count of the returned object has been incremented. If an error * occurs in evaluating the tokens then a NULL value is returned * and an error message is left in interp's result. * * Side effects: * A new object is allocated to hold the result. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * This uses a non-standard return convention; its use is now deprecated. * It is a wrapper for the new function Tcl_EvalTokensStandard, and is not * used in the core any longer. It is only kept for backward compatibility. */ Tcl_Obj * Tcl_EvalTokens(interp, tokenPtr, count) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to lookup * variables, execute nested commands, * and report errors. */ Tcl_Token *tokenPtr; /* Pointer to first in an array of tokens * to evaluate and concatenate. */ int count; /* Number of tokens to consider at tokenPtr. * Must be at least 1. */ { int code; Tcl_Obj *resPtr; code = Tcl_EvalTokensStandard(interp, tokenPtr, count); if (code == TCL_OK) { resPtr = Tcl_GetObjResult(interp); Tcl_IncrRefCount(resPtr); Tcl_ResetResult(interp); return resPtr; } else { return NULL; } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_EvalEx -- * * This procedure evaluates a Tcl script without using the compiler * or byte-code interpreter. It just parses the script, creates * values for each word of each command, then calls EvalObjv * to execute each command. * * Results: * The return value is a standard Tcl completion code such as * TCL_OK or TCL_ERROR. A result or error message is left in * interp's result. * * Side effects: * Depends on the script. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_EvalEx(interp, script, numBytes, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to evaluate the * script. Also used for error reporting. */ CONST char *script; /* First character of script to evaluate. */ int numBytes; /* Number of bytes in script. If < 0, the * script consists of all bytes up to the * first null character. */ int flags; /* Collection of OR-ed bits that control * the evaluation of the script. Only * TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL is currently * supported. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; CONST char *p, *next; Tcl_Parse parse; #define NUM_STATIC_OBJS 20 Tcl_Obj *staticObjArray[NUM_STATIC_OBJS], **objv; Tcl_Token *tokenPtr; int i, code, commandLength, bytesLeft, nested; CallFrame *savedVarFramePtr; /* Saves old copy of iPtr->varFramePtr * in case TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL was set. */ int allowExceptions = (iPtr->evalFlags & TCL_ALLOW_EXCEPTIONS); /* * The variables below keep track of how much state has been * allocated while evaluating the script, so that it can be freed * properly if an error occurs. */ int gotParse = 0, objectsUsed = 0; if (numBytes < 0) { numBytes = strlen(script); } Tcl_ResetResult(interp); savedVarFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; if (flags & TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL) { iPtr->varFramePtr = NULL; } /* * Each iteration through the following loop parses the next * command from the script and then executes it. */ objv = staticObjArray; p = script; bytesLeft = numBytes; if (iPtr->evalFlags & TCL_BRACKET_TERM) { nested = 1; } else { nested = 0; } iPtr->evalFlags = 0; do { if (Tcl_ParseCommand(interp, p, bytesLeft, nested, &parse) != TCL_OK) { code = TCL_ERROR; goto error; } gotParse = 1; if (nested && parse.term == (script + numBytes)) { /* * A nested script can only terminate in ']'. If * the parsing got terminated at the end of the script, * there was no closing ']'. Report the syntax error. */ code = TCL_ERROR; goto error; } if (parse.numWords > 0) { /* * Generate an array of objects for the words of the command. */ if (parse.numWords <= NUM_STATIC_OBJS) { objv = staticObjArray; } else { objv = (Tcl_Obj **) ckalloc((unsigned) (parse.numWords * sizeof (Tcl_Obj *))); } for (objectsUsed = 0, tokenPtr = parse.tokenPtr; objectsUsed < parse.numWords; objectsUsed++, tokenPtr += (tokenPtr->numComponents + 1)) { code = Tcl_EvalTokensStandard(interp, tokenPtr+1, tokenPtr->numComponents); if (code == TCL_OK) { objv[objectsUsed] = Tcl_GetObjResult(interp); Tcl_IncrRefCount(objv[objectsUsed]); } else { goto error; } } /* * Execute the command and free the objects for its words. */ iPtr->numLevels++; code = TclEvalObjvInternal(interp, objectsUsed, objv, parse.commandStart, parse.commandSize, 0); iPtr->numLevels--; if (code != TCL_OK) { if (iPtr->numLevels == 0) { if (code == TCL_RETURN) { code = TclUpdateReturnInfo(iPtr); } if ((code != TCL_OK) && (code != TCL_ERROR) && !allowExceptions) { ProcessUnexpectedResult(interp, code); code = TCL_ERROR; } } goto error; } for (i = 0; i < objectsUsed; i++) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(objv[i]); } objectsUsed = 0; if (objv != staticObjArray) { ckfree((char *) objv); objv = staticObjArray; } } /* * Advance to the next command in the script. */ next = parse.commandStart + parse.commandSize; bytesLeft -= next - p; p = next; Tcl_FreeParse(&parse); gotParse = 0; if (nested && (*parse.term == ']')) { /* * We get here in the special case where the TCL_BRACKET_TERM * flag was set in the interpreter and the latest parsed command * was terminated by the matching close-bracket we seek. * Return immediately. */ iPtr->termOffset = (p - 1) - script; iPtr->varFramePtr = savedVarFramePtr; return TCL_OK; } } while (bytesLeft > 0); iPtr->termOffset = p - script; iPtr->varFramePtr = savedVarFramePtr; return TCL_OK; error: /* * Generate various pieces of error information, such as the line * number where the error occurred and information to add to the * errorInfo variable. Then free resources that had been allocated * to the command. */ if ((code == TCL_ERROR) && !(iPtr->flags & ERR_ALREADY_LOGGED)) { commandLength = parse.commandSize; if (parse.term == parse.commandStart + commandLength - 1) { /* * The terminator character (such as ; or ]) of the command where * the error occurred is the last character in the parsed command. * Reduce the length by one so that the error message doesn't * include the terminator character. */ commandLength -= 1; } Tcl_LogCommandInfo(interp, script, parse.commandStart, commandLength); } for (i = 0; i < objectsUsed; i++) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(objv[i]); } if (gotParse) { Tcl_FreeParse(&parse); } if (objv != staticObjArray) { ckfree((char *) objv); } iPtr->varFramePtr = savedVarFramePtr; /* * All that's left to do before returning is to set iPtr->termOffset * to point past the end of the script we just evaluated. */ next = parse.commandStart + parse.commandSize; bytesLeft -= next - p; p = next; if (!nested) { iPtr->termOffset = p - script; return code; } /* * When we are nested (the TCL_BRACKET_TERM flag was set in the * interpreter), we must find the matching close-bracket to * end the script we are evaluating. * * When our return code is TCL_CONTINUE or TCL_RETURN, we want * to correctly set iPtr->termOffset to point to that matching * close-bracket so our caller can move to the part of the * string beyond the script we were asked to evaluate. * So we try to parse past the rest of the commands. */ next = NULL; while (bytesLeft && (*parse.term != ']')) { if (TCL_OK != Tcl_ParseCommand(NULL, p, bytesLeft, 1, &parse)) { /* * Syntax error. Set the termOffset to the beginning of * the last command parsed. */ if (next == NULL) { iPtr->termOffset = (parse.commandStart - 1) - script; } else { iPtr->termOffset = (next - 1) - script; } return code; } next = parse.commandStart + parse.commandSize; bytesLeft -= next - p; p = next; next = parse.commandStart; Tcl_FreeParse(&parse); } if (bytesLeft) { /* * parse.term points to the close-bracket. */ iPtr->termOffset = parse.term - script; } else if (parse.term == script + numBytes) { /* * There was no close-bracket. Syntax error. */ iPtr->termOffset = parse.term - script; Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_NewStringObj("missing close-bracket", -1)); return TCL_ERROR; } else if (*parse.term != ']') { /* * There was no close-bracket. Syntax error. */ iPtr->termOffset = (parse.term + 1) - script; Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_NewStringObj("missing close-bracket", -1)); return TCL_ERROR; } else { /* * parse.term points to the close-bracket. */ iPtr->termOffset = parse.term - script; } return code; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_Eval -- * * Execute a Tcl command in a string. This procedure executes the * script directly, rather than compiling it to bytecodes. Before * the arrival of the bytecode compiler in Tcl 8.0 Tcl_Eval was * the main procedure used for executing Tcl commands, but nowadays * it isn't used much. * * Results: * The return value is one of the return codes defined in tcl.h * (such as TCL_OK), and interp's result contains a value * to supplement the return code. The value of the result * will persist only until the next call to Tcl_Eval or Tcl_EvalObj: * you must copy it or lose it! * * Side effects: * Can be almost arbitrary, depending on the commands in the script. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_Eval(interp, string) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Token for command interpreter (returned * by previous call to Tcl_CreateInterp). */ CONST char *string; /* Pointer to TCL command to execute. */ { int code = Tcl_EvalEx(interp, string, -1, 0); /* * For backwards compatibility with old C code that predates the * object system in Tcl 8.0, we have to mirror the object result * back into the string result (some callers may expect it there). */ Tcl_SetResult(interp, TclGetString(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp)), TCL_VOLATILE); return code; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_EvalObj, Tcl_GlobalEvalObj -- * * These functions are deprecated but we keep them around for backwards * compatibility reasons. * * Results: * See the functions they call. * * Side effects: * See the functions they call. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #undef Tcl_EvalObj int Tcl_EvalObj(interp, objPtr) Tcl_Interp * interp; Tcl_Obj * objPtr; { return Tcl_EvalObjEx(interp, objPtr, 0); } #undef Tcl_GlobalEvalObj int Tcl_GlobalEvalObj(interp, objPtr) Tcl_Interp * interp; Tcl_Obj * objPtr; { return Tcl_EvalObjEx(interp, objPtr, TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_EvalObjEx -- * * Execute Tcl commands stored in a Tcl object. These commands are * compiled into bytecodes if necessary, unless TCL_EVAL_DIRECT * is specified. * * Results: * The return value is one of the return codes defined in tcl.h * (such as TCL_OK), and the interpreter's result contains a value * to supplement the return code. * * Side effects: * The object is converted, if necessary, to a ByteCode object that * holds the bytecode instructions for the commands. Executing the * commands will almost certainly have side effects that depend * on those commands. * * Just as in Tcl_Eval, interp->termOffset is set to the offset of the * last character executed in the objPtr's string. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_EvalObjEx(interp, objPtr, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Token for command interpreter * (returned by a previous call to * Tcl_CreateInterp). */ register Tcl_Obj *objPtr; /* Pointer to object containing * commands to execute. */ int flags; /* Collection of OR-ed bits that * control the evaluation of the * script. Supported values are * TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL and * TCL_EVAL_DIRECT. */ { register Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; char *script; int numSrcBytes; int result; CallFrame *savedVarFramePtr; /* Saves old copy of iPtr->varFramePtr * in case TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL was set. */ int allowExceptions = (iPtr->evalFlags & TCL_ALLOW_EXCEPTIONS); Tcl_IncrRefCount(objPtr); if ((iPtr->flags & USE_EVAL_DIRECT) || (flags & TCL_EVAL_DIRECT)) { /* * We're not supposed to use the compiler or byte-code interpreter. * Let Tcl_EvalEx evaluate the command directly (and probably * more slowly). * * Pure List Optimization (no string representation). In this * case, we can safely use Tcl_EvalObjv instead and get an * appreciable improvement in execution speed. This is because it * allows us to avoid a setFromAny step that would just pack * everything into a string and back out again. * * USE_EVAL_DIRECT is a special flag used for testing purpose only * (ensure we go into the TCL_EVAL_DIRECT path, avoiding opt) */ if (!(iPtr->flags & USE_EVAL_DIRECT) && (objPtr->typePtr == &tclListType) && /* is a list... */ (objPtr->bytes == NULL) /* ...without a string rep */) { register List *listRepPtr = (List *) objPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1; result = Tcl_EvalObjv(interp, listRepPtr->elemCount, listRepPtr->elements, flags); } else { script = Tcl_GetStringFromObj(objPtr, &numSrcBytes); result = Tcl_EvalEx(interp, script, numSrcBytes, flags); } } else { /* * Let the compiler/engine subsystem do the evaluation. */ savedVarFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; if (flags & TCL_EVAL_GLOBAL) { iPtr->varFramePtr = NULL; } result = TclCompEvalObj(interp, objPtr); /* * If we are again at the top level, process any unusual * return code returned by the evaluated code. */ if (iPtr->numLevels == 0) { if (result == TCL_RETURN) { result = TclUpdateReturnInfo(iPtr); } if ((result != TCL_OK) && (result != TCL_ERROR) && !allowExceptions) { ProcessUnexpectedResult(interp, result); result = TCL_ERROR; /* * If an error was created here, record information about * what was being executed when the error occurred. */ if (!(iPtr->flags & ERR_ALREADY_LOGGED)) { script = Tcl_GetStringFromObj(objPtr, &numSrcBytes); Tcl_LogCommandInfo(interp, script, script, numSrcBytes); iPtr->flags &= ~ERR_ALREADY_LOGGED; } } } iPtr->evalFlags = 0; iPtr->varFramePtr = savedVarFramePtr; } TclDecrRefCount(objPtr); return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * ProcessUnexpectedResult -- * * Procedure called by Tcl_EvalObj to set the interpreter's result * value to an appropriate error message when the code it evaluates * returns an unexpected result code (not TCL_OK and not TCL_ERROR) to * the topmost evaluation level. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * The interpreter result is set to an error message appropriate to * the result code. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void ProcessUnexpectedResult(interp, returnCode) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* The interpreter in which the unexpected * result code was returned. */ int returnCode; /* The unexpected result code. */ { Tcl_ResetResult(interp); if (returnCode == TCL_BREAK) { Tcl_AppendToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "invoked \"break\" outside of a loop", -1); } else if (returnCode == TCL_CONTINUE) { Tcl_AppendToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "invoked \"continue\" outside of a loop", -1); } else { char buf[30 + TCL_INTEGER_SPACE]; sprintf(buf, "command returned bad code: %d", returnCode); Tcl_SetResult(interp, buf, TCL_VOLATILE); } } /* *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_ExprLong, Tcl_ExprDouble, Tcl_ExprBoolean -- * * Procedures to evaluate an expression and return its value in a * particular form. * * Results: * Each of the procedures below returns a standard Tcl result. If an * error occurs then an error message is left in the interp's result. * Otherwise the value of the expression, in the appropriate form, * is stored at *ptr. If the expression had a result that was * incompatible with the desired form then an error is returned. * * Side effects: * None. * *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_ExprLong(interp, string, ptr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Context in which to evaluate the * expression. */ CONST char *string; /* Expression to evaluate. */ long *ptr; /* Where to store result. */ { register Tcl_Obj *exprPtr; Tcl_Obj *resultPtr; int length = strlen(string); int result = TCL_OK; if (length > 0) { exprPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(string, length); Tcl_IncrRefCount(exprPtr); result = Tcl_ExprObj(interp, exprPtr, &resultPtr); if (result == TCL_OK) { /* * Store an integer based on the expression result. */ if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclIntType) { *ptr = resultPtr->internalRep.longValue; } else if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclDoubleType) { *ptr = (long) resultPtr->internalRep.doubleValue; } else { Tcl_SetResult(interp, "expression didn't have numeric value", TCL_STATIC); result = TCL_ERROR; } Tcl_DecrRefCount(resultPtr); /* discard the result object */ } else { /* * Move the interpreter's object result to the string result, * then reset the object result. */ Tcl_SetResult(interp, TclGetString(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp)), TCL_VOLATILE); } Tcl_DecrRefCount(exprPtr); /* discard the expression object */ } else { /* * An empty string. Just set the result integer to 0. */ *ptr = 0; } return result; } int Tcl_ExprDouble(interp, string, ptr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Context in which to evaluate the * expression. */ CONST char *string; /* Expression to evaluate. */ double *ptr; /* Where to store result. */ { register Tcl_Obj *exprPtr; Tcl_Obj *resultPtr; int length = strlen(string); int result = TCL_OK; if (length > 0) { exprPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(string, length); Tcl_IncrRefCount(exprPtr); result = Tcl_ExprObj(interp, exprPtr, &resultPtr); if (result == TCL_OK) { /* * Store a double based on the expression result. */ if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclIntType) { *ptr = (double) resultPtr->internalRep.longValue; } else if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclDoubleType) { *ptr = resultPtr->internalRep.doubleValue; } else { Tcl_SetResult(interp, "expression didn't have numeric value", TCL_STATIC); result = TCL_ERROR; } Tcl_DecrRefCount(resultPtr); /* discard the result object */ } else { /* * Move the interpreter's object result to the string result, * then reset the object result. */ Tcl_SetResult(interp, TclGetString(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp)), TCL_VOLATILE); } Tcl_DecrRefCount(exprPtr); /* discard the expression object */ } else { /* * An empty string. Just set the result double to 0.0. */ *ptr = 0.0; } return result; } int Tcl_ExprBoolean(interp, string, ptr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Context in which to evaluate the * expression. */ CONST char *string; /* Expression to evaluate. */ int *ptr; /* Where to store 0/1 result. */ { register Tcl_Obj *exprPtr; Tcl_Obj *resultPtr; int length = strlen(string); int result = TCL_OK; if (length > 0) { exprPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(string, length); Tcl_IncrRefCount(exprPtr); result = Tcl_ExprObj(interp, exprPtr, &resultPtr); if (result == TCL_OK) { /* * Store a boolean based on the expression result. */ if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclIntType) { *ptr = (resultPtr->internalRep.longValue != 0); } else if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclDoubleType) { *ptr = (resultPtr->internalRep.doubleValue != 0.0); } else { result = Tcl_GetBooleanFromObj(interp, resultPtr, ptr); } Tcl_DecrRefCount(resultPtr); /* discard the result object */ } if (result != TCL_OK) { /* * Move the interpreter's object result to the string result, * then reset the object result. */ Tcl_SetResult(interp, TclGetString(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp)), TCL_VOLATILE); } Tcl_DecrRefCount(exprPtr); /* discard the expression object */ } else { /* * An empty string. Just set the result boolean to 0 (false). */ *ptr = 0; } return result; } /* *-------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_ExprLongObj, Tcl_ExprDoubleObj, Tcl_ExprBooleanObj -- * * Procedures to evaluate an expression in an object and return its * value in a particular form. * * Results: * Each of the procedures below returns a standard Tcl result * object. If an error occurs then an error message is left in the * interpreter's result. Otherwise the value of the expression, in the * appropriate form, is stored at *ptr. If the expression had a result * that was incompatible with the desired form then an error is * returned. * * Side effects: * None. * *-------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_ExprLongObj(interp, objPtr, ptr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Context in which to evaluate the * expression. */ register Tcl_Obj *objPtr; /* Expression to evaluate. */ long *ptr; /* Where to store long result. */ { Tcl_Obj *resultPtr; int result; result = Tcl_ExprObj(interp, objPtr, &resultPtr); if (result == TCL_OK) { if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclIntType) { *ptr = resultPtr->internalRep.longValue; } else if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclDoubleType) { *ptr = (long) resultPtr->internalRep.doubleValue; } else { result = Tcl_GetLongFromObj(interp, resultPtr, ptr); if (result != TCL_OK) { return result; } } Tcl_DecrRefCount(resultPtr); /* discard the result object */ } return result; } int Tcl_ExprDoubleObj(interp, objPtr, ptr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Context in which to evaluate the * expression. */ register Tcl_Obj *objPtr; /* Expression to evaluate. */ double *ptr; /* Where to store double result. */ { Tcl_Obj *resultPtr; int result; result = Tcl_ExprObj(interp, objPtr, &resultPtr); if (result == TCL_OK) { if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclIntType) { *ptr = (double) resultPtr->internalRep.longValue; } else if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclDoubleType) { *ptr = resultPtr->internalRep.doubleValue; } else { result = Tcl_GetDoubleFromObj(interp, resultPtr, ptr); if (result != TCL_OK) { return result; } } Tcl_DecrRefCount(resultPtr); /* discard the result object */ } return result; } int Tcl_ExprBooleanObj(interp, objPtr, ptr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Context in which to evaluate the * expression. */ register Tcl_Obj *objPtr; /* Expression to evaluate. */ int *ptr; /* Where to store 0/1 result. */ { Tcl_Obj *resultPtr; int result; result = Tcl_ExprObj(interp, objPtr, &resultPtr); if (result == TCL_OK) { if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclIntType) { *ptr = (resultPtr->internalRep.longValue != 0); } else if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclDoubleType) { *ptr = (resultPtr->internalRep.doubleValue != 0.0); } else { result = Tcl_GetBooleanFromObj(interp, resultPtr, ptr); } Tcl_DecrRefCount(resultPtr); /* discard the result object */ } return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclInvoke -- * * Invokes a Tcl command, given an argv/argc, from either the * exposed or the hidden sets of commands in the given interpreter. * NOTE: The command is invoked in the current stack frame of * the interpreter, thus it can modify local variables. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result. * * Side effects: * Whatever the command does. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclInvoke(interp, argc, argv, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Where to invoke the command. */ int argc; /* Count of args. */ register CONST char **argv; /* The arg strings; argv[0] is the name of * the command to invoke. */ int flags; /* Combination of flags controlling the * call: TCL_INVOKE_HIDDEN and * TCL_INVOKE_NO_UNKNOWN. */ { register Tcl_Obj *objPtr; register int i; int length, result; /* * This procedure generates an objv array for object arguments that hold * the argv strings. It starts out with stack-allocated space but uses * dynamically-allocated storage if needed. */ #define NUM_ARGS 20 Tcl_Obj *(objStorage[NUM_ARGS]); register Tcl_Obj **objv = objStorage; /* * Create the object argument array "objv". Make sure objv is large * enough to hold the objc arguments plus 1 extra for the zero * end-of-objv word. */ if ((argc + 1) > NUM_ARGS) { objv = (Tcl_Obj **) ckalloc((unsigned)(argc + 1) * sizeof(Tcl_Obj *)); } for (i = 0; i < argc; i++) { length = strlen(argv[i]); objv[i] = Tcl_NewStringObj(argv[i], length); Tcl_IncrRefCount(objv[i]); } objv[argc] = 0; /* * Use TclObjInterpProc to actually invoke the command. */ result = TclObjInvoke(interp, argc, objv, flags); /* * Move the interpreter's object result to the string result, * then reset the object result. */ Tcl_SetResult(interp, TclGetString(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp)), TCL_VOLATILE); /* * Decrement the ref counts on the objv elements since we are done * with them. */ for (i = 0; i < argc; i++) { objPtr = objv[i]; Tcl_DecrRefCount(objPtr); } /* * Free the objv array if malloc'ed storage was used. */ if (objv != objStorage) { ckfree((char *) objv); } return result; #undef NUM_ARGS } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclGlobalInvoke -- * * Invokes a Tcl command, given an argv/argc, from either the * exposed or hidden sets of commands in the given interpreter. * NOTE: The command is invoked in the global stack frame of * the interpreter, thus it cannot see any current state on * the stack for that interpreter. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result. * * Side effects: * Whatever the command does. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclGlobalInvoke(interp, argc, argv, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Where to invoke the command. */ int argc; /* Count of args. */ register CONST char **argv; /* The arg strings; argv[0] is the name of * the command to invoke. */ int flags; /* Combination of flags controlling the * call: TCL_INVOKE_HIDDEN and * TCL_INVOKE_NO_UNKNOWN. */ { register Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; int result; CallFrame *savedVarFramePtr; savedVarFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; iPtr->varFramePtr = NULL; result = TclInvoke(interp, argc, argv, flags); iPtr->varFramePtr = savedVarFramePtr; return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclObjInvokeGlobal -- * * Object version: Invokes a Tcl command, given an objv/objc, from * either the exposed or hidden set of commands in the given * interpreter. * NOTE: The command is invoked in the global stack frame of the * interpreter, thus it cannot see any current state on the * stack of that interpreter. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result. * * Side effects: * Whatever the command does. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclObjInvokeGlobal(interp, objc, objv, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which command is to be * invoked. */ int objc; /* Count of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects; objv[0] points to the * name of the command to invoke. */ int flags; /* Combination of flags controlling the * call: TCL_INVOKE_HIDDEN, * TCL_INVOKE_NO_UNKNOWN, or * TCL_INVOKE_NO_TRACEBACK. */ { register Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; int result; CallFrame *savedVarFramePtr; savedVarFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; iPtr->varFramePtr = NULL; result = TclObjInvoke(interp, objc, objv, flags); iPtr->varFramePtr = savedVarFramePtr; return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclObjInvoke -- * * Invokes a Tcl command, given an objv/objc, from either the * exposed or the hidden sets of commands in the given interpreter. * * Results: * A standard Tcl object result. * * Side effects: * Whatever the command does. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclObjInvoke(interp, objc, objv, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which command is to be * invoked. */ int objc; /* Count of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects; objv[0] points to the * name of the command to invoke. */ int flags; /* Combination of flags controlling the * call: TCL_INVOKE_HIDDEN, * TCL_INVOKE_NO_UNKNOWN, or * TCL_INVOKE_NO_TRACEBACK. */ { register Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_HashTable *hTblPtr; /* Table of hidden commands. */ char *cmdName; /* Name of the command from objv[0]. */ register Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; Tcl_Command cmd; Command *cmdPtr; int localObjc; /* Used to invoke "unknown" if the */ Tcl_Obj **localObjv = NULL; /* command is not found. */ register int i; int result; if (interp == (Tcl_Interp *) NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } if ((objc < 1) || (objv == (Tcl_Obj **) NULL)) { Tcl_AppendToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "illegal argument vector", -1); return TCL_ERROR; } cmdName = Tcl_GetString(objv[0]); if (flags & TCL_INVOKE_HIDDEN) { /* * We never invoke "unknown" for hidden commands. */ hPtr = NULL; hTblPtr = ((Interp *) interp)->hiddenCmdTablePtr; if (hTblPtr != NULL) { hPtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(hTblPtr, cmdName); } if (hPtr == NULL) { Tcl_ResetResult(interp); Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "invalid hidden command name \"", cmdName, "\"", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } cmdPtr = (Command *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); } else { cmdPtr = NULL; cmd = Tcl_FindCommand(interp, cmdName, (Tcl_Namespace *) NULL, /*flags*/ TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); if (cmd != (Tcl_Command) NULL) { cmdPtr = (Command *) cmd; } if (cmdPtr == NULL) { if (!(flags & TCL_INVOKE_NO_UNKNOWN)) { cmd = Tcl_FindCommand(interp, "unknown", (Tcl_Namespace *) NULL, /*flags*/ TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); if (cmd != (Tcl_Command) NULL) { cmdPtr = (Command *) cmd; } if (cmdPtr != NULL) { localObjc = (objc + 1); localObjv = (Tcl_Obj **) ckalloc((unsigned) (sizeof(Tcl_Obj *) * localObjc)); localObjv[0] = Tcl_NewStringObj("unknown", -1); Tcl_IncrRefCount(localObjv[0]); for (i = 0; i < objc; i++) { localObjv[i+1] = objv[i]; } objc = localObjc; objv = localObjv; } } /* * Check again if we found the command. If not, "unknown" is * not present and we cannot help, or the caller said not to * call "unknown" (they specified TCL_INVOKE_NO_UNKNOWN). */ if (cmdPtr == NULL) { Tcl_ResetResult(interp); Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "invalid command name \"", cmdName, "\"", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } } } /* * Invoke the command procedure. First reset the interpreter's string * and object results to their default empty values since they could * have gotten changed by earlier invocations. */ Tcl_ResetResult(interp); iPtr->cmdCount++; result = (*cmdPtr->objProc)(cmdPtr->objClientData, interp, objc, objv); /* * If an error occurred, record information about what was being * executed when the error occurred. */ if ((result == TCL_ERROR) && ((flags & TCL_INVOKE_NO_TRACEBACK) == 0) && ((iPtr->flags & ERR_ALREADY_LOGGED) == 0)) { Tcl_Obj *msg; if (!(iPtr->flags & ERR_IN_PROGRESS)) { msg = Tcl_NewStringObj("\n while invoking\n\"", -1); } else { msg = Tcl_NewStringObj("\n invoked from within\n\"", -1); } Tcl_IncrRefCount(msg); for (i = 0; i < objc; i++) { CONST char *bytes; int length; Tcl_AppendObjToObj(msg, objv[i]); bytes = Tcl_GetStringFromObj(msg, &length); if (length > 100) { /* * Back up truncation point so that we don't truncate * in the middle of a multi-byte character. */ length = 100; while ( (bytes[length] & 0xC0) == 0x80 ) { length--; } Tcl_SetObjLength(msg, length); Tcl_AppendToObj(msg, "...", -1); break; } if (i != (objc - 1)) { Tcl_AppendToObj(msg, " ", -1); } } Tcl_AppendToObj(msg, "\"", -1); Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo(interp, Tcl_GetString(msg), -1); Tcl_DecrRefCount(msg); iPtr->flags &= ~ERR_ALREADY_LOGGED; } /* * Free any locally allocated storage used to call "unknown". */ if (localObjv != (Tcl_Obj **) NULL) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(localObjv[0]); ckfree((char *) localObjv); } return result; } /* *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_ExprString -- * * Evaluate an expression in a string and return its value in string * form. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result. If the result is TCL_OK, then the interp's * result is set to the string value of the expression. If the result * is TCL_ERROR, then the interp's result contains an error message. * * Side effects: * A Tcl object is allocated to hold a copy of the expression string. * This expression object is passed to Tcl_ExprObj and then * deallocated. * *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_ExprString(interp, string) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Context in which to evaluate the * expression. */ CONST char *string; /* Expression to evaluate. */ { register Tcl_Obj *exprPtr; Tcl_Obj *resultPtr; int length = strlen(string); char buf[TCL_DOUBLE_SPACE]; int result = TCL_OK; if (length > 0) { TclNewObj(exprPtr); TclInitStringRep(exprPtr, string, length); Tcl_IncrRefCount(exprPtr); result = Tcl_ExprObj(interp, exprPtr, &resultPtr); if (result == TCL_OK) { /* * Set the interpreter's string result from the result object. */ if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclIntType) { sprintf(buf, "%ld", resultPtr->internalRep.longValue); Tcl_SetResult(interp, buf, TCL_VOLATILE); } else if (resultPtr->typePtr == &tclDoubleType) { Tcl_PrintDouble((Tcl_Interp *) NULL, resultPtr->internalRep.doubleValue, buf); Tcl_SetResult(interp, buf, TCL_VOLATILE); } else { /* * Set interpreter's string result from the result object. */ Tcl_SetResult(interp, TclGetString(resultPtr), TCL_VOLATILE); } Tcl_DecrRefCount(resultPtr); /* discard the result object */ } else { /* * Move the interpreter's object result to the string result, * then reset the object result. */ Tcl_SetResult(interp, TclGetString(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp)), TCL_VOLATILE); } Tcl_DecrRefCount(exprPtr); /* discard the expression object */ } else { /* * An empty string. Just set the interpreter's result to 0. */ Tcl_SetResult(interp, "0", TCL_VOLATILE); } return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_CreateObjTrace -- * * Arrange for a procedure to be called to trace command execution. * * Results: * The return value is a token for the trace, which may be passed * to Tcl_DeleteTrace to eliminate the trace. * * Side effects: * From now on, proc will be called just before a command procedure * is called to execute a Tcl command. Calls to proc will have the * following form: * * void proc( ClientData clientData, * Tcl_Interp* interp, * int level, * CONST char* command, * Tcl_Command commandInfo, * int objc, * Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[] ); * * The 'clientData' and 'interp' arguments to 'proc' will be the * same as the arguments to Tcl_CreateObjTrace. The 'level' * argument gives the nesting depth of command interpretation within * the interpreter. The 'command' argument is the ASCII text of * the command being evaluated -- before any substitutions are * performed. The 'commandInfo' argument gives a handle to the * command procedure that will be evaluated. The 'objc' and 'objv' * parameters give the parameter vector that will be passed to the * command procedure. proc does not return a value. * * It is permissible for 'proc' to call Tcl_SetCommandTokenInfo * to change the command procedure or client data for the command * being evaluated, and these changes will take effect with the * current evaluation. * * The 'level' argument specifies the maximum nesting level of calls * to be traced. If the execution depth of the interpreter exceeds * 'level', the trace callback is not executed. * * The 'flags' argument is either zero or the value, * TCL_ALLOW_INLINE_COMPILATION. If the TCL_ALLOW_INLINE_COMPILATION * flag is not present, the bytecode compiler will not generate inline * code for Tcl's built-in commands. This behavior will have a significant * impact on performance, but will ensure that all command evaluations are * traced. If the TCL_ALLOW_INLINE_COMPILATION flag is present, the * bytecode compiler will have its normal behavior of compiling in-line * code for some of Tcl's built-in commands. In this case, the tracing * will be imprecise -- in-line code will not be traced -- but run-time * performance will be improved. The latter behavior is desired for * many applications such as profiling of run time. * * When the trace is deleted, the 'delProc' procedure will be invoked, * passing it the original client data. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Trace Tcl_CreateObjTrace( interp, level, flags, proc, clientData, delProc ) Tcl_Interp* interp; /* Tcl interpreter */ int level; /* Maximum nesting level */ int flags; /* Flags, see above */ Tcl_CmdObjTraceProc* proc; /* Trace callback */ ClientData clientData; /* Client data for the callback */ Tcl_CmdObjTraceDeleteProc* delProc; /* Procedure to call when trace is deleted */ { register Trace *tracePtr; register Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; /* Test if this trace allows inline compilation of commands */ if (!(flags & TCL_ALLOW_INLINE_COMPILATION)) { if (iPtr->tracesForbiddingInline == 0) { /* * When the first trace forbidding inline compilation is * created, invalidate existing compiled code for this * interpreter and arrange (by setting the * DONT_COMPILE_CMDS_INLINE flag) that when compiling new * code, no commands will be compiled inline (i.e., into * an inline sequence of instructions). We do this because * commands that were compiled inline will never result in * a command trace being called. */ iPtr->compileEpoch++; iPtr->flags |= DONT_COMPILE_CMDS_INLINE; } iPtr->tracesForbiddingInline++; } tracePtr = (Trace *) ckalloc(sizeof(Trace)); tracePtr->level = level; tracePtr->proc = proc; tracePtr->clientData = clientData; tracePtr->delProc = delProc; tracePtr->nextPtr = iPtr->tracePtr; tracePtr->flags = flags; iPtr->tracePtr = tracePtr; return (Tcl_Trace) tracePtr; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_CreateTrace -- * * Arrange for a procedure to be called to trace command execution. * * Results: * The return value is a token for the trace, which may be passed * to Tcl_DeleteTrace to eliminate the trace. * * Side effects: * From now on, proc will be called just before a command procedure * is called to execute a Tcl command. Calls to proc will have the * following form: * * void * proc(clientData, interp, level, command, cmdProc, cmdClientData, * argc, argv) * ClientData clientData; * Tcl_Interp *interp; * int level; * char *command; * int (*cmdProc)(); * ClientData cmdClientData; * int argc; * char **argv; * { * } * * The clientData and interp arguments to proc will be the same * as the corresponding arguments to this procedure. Level gives * the nesting level of command interpretation for this interpreter * (0 corresponds to top level). Command gives the ASCII text of * the raw command, cmdProc and cmdClientData give the procedure that * will be called to process the command and the ClientData value it * will receive, and argc and argv give the arguments to the * command, after any argument parsing and substitution. Proc * does not return a value. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Trace Tcl_CreateTrace(interp, level, proc, clientData) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to create trace. */ int level; /* Only call proc for commands at nesting * level<=argument level (1=>top level). */ Tcl_CmdTraceProc *proc; /* Procedure to call before executing each * command. */ ClientData clientData; /* Arbitrary value word to pass to proc. */ { StringTraceData* data; data = (StringTraceData*) ckalloc( sizeof( *data )); data->clientData = clientData; data->proc = proc; return Tcl_CreateObjTrace( interp, level, 0, StringTraceProc, (ClientData) data, StringTraceDeleteProc ); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * StringTraceProc -- * * Invoke a string-based trace procedure from an object-based * callback. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Whatever the string-based trace procedure does. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static int StringTraceProc( clientData, interp, level, command, commandInfo, objc, objv ) ClientData clientData; Tcl_Interp* interp; int level; CONST char* command; Tcl_Command commandInfo; int objc; Tcl_Obj *CONST *objv; { StringTraceData* data = (StringTraceData*) clientData; Command* cmdPtr = (Command*) commandInfo; CONST char** argv; /* Args to pass to string trace proc */ int i; /* * This is a bit messy because we have to emulate the old trace * interface, which uses strings for everything. */ argv = (CONST char **) ckalloc((unsigned) ( (objc + 1) * sizeof(CONST char *) )); for (i = 0; i < objc; i++) { argv[i] = Tcl_GetString(objv[i]); } argv[objc] = 0; /* * Invoke the command procedure. Note that we cast away const-ness * on two parameters for compatibility with legacy code; the code * MUST NOT modify either command or argv. */ ( data->proc )( data->clientData, interp, level, (char*) command, cmdPtr->proc, cmdPtr->clientData, objc, argv ); ckfree( (char*) argv ); return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * StringTraceDeleteProc -- * * Clean up memory when a string-based trace is deleted. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Allocated memory is returned to the system. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void StringTraceDeleteProc( clientData ) ClientData clientData; { ckfree( (char*) clientData ); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_DeleteTrace -- * * Remove a trace. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * From now on there will be no more calls to the procedure given * in trace. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_DeleteTrace(interp, trace) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter that contains trace. */ Tcl_Trace trace; /* Token for trace (returned previously by * Tcl_CreateTrace). */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Trace *tracePtr = (Trace *) trace; register Trace **tracePtr2 = &(iPtr->tracePtr); /* * Locate the trace entry in the interpreter's trace list, * and remove it from the list. */ while ((*tracePtr2) != NULL && (*tracePtr2) != tracePtr) { tracePtr2 = &((*tracePtr2)->nextPtr); } if (*tracePtr2 == NULL) { return; } (*tracePtr2) = (*tracePtr2)->nextPtr; /* * If the trace forbids bytecode compilation, change the interpreter's * state. If bytecode compilation is now permitted, flag the fact and * advance the compilation epoch so that procs will be recompiled to * take advantage of it. */ if (!(tracePtr->flags & TCL_ALLOW_INLINE_COMPILATION)) { iPtr->tracesForbiddingInline--; if (iPtr->tracesForbiddingInline == 0) { iPtr->flags &= ~DONT_COMPILE_CMDS_INLINE; iPtr->compileEpoch++; } } /* * Execute any delete callback. */ if (tracePtr->delProc != NULL) { (tracePtr->delProc)(tracePtr->clientData); } /* Delete the trace object */ Tcl_EventuallyFree((char*)tracePtr, TCL_DYNAMIC); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_AddErrorInfo -- * * Add information to the "errorInfo" variable that describes the * current error. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * The contents of message are added to the "errorInfo" variable. * If Tcl_Eval has been called since the current value of errorInfo * was set, errorInfo is cleared before adding the new message. * If we are just starting to log an error, errorInfo is initialized * from the error message in the interpreter's result. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_AddErrorInfo(interp, message) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to which error information * pertains. */ CONST char *message; /* Message to record. */ { Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo(interp, message, -1); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo -- * * Add information to the "errorInfo" variable that describes the * current error. This routine differs from Tcl_AddErrorInfo by * taking a byte pointer and length. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * "length" bytes from "message" are added to the "errorInfo" variable. * If "length" is negative, use bytes up to the first NULL byte. * If Tcl_EvalObj has been called since the current value of errorInfo * was set, errorInfo is cleared before adding the new message. * If we are just starting to log an error, errorInfo is initialized * from the error message in the interpreter's result. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo(interp, message, length) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to which error information * pertains. */ CONST char *message; /* Points to the first byte of an array of * bytes of the message. */ int length; /* The number of bytes in the message. * If < 0, then append all bytes up to a * NULL byte. */ { register Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_Obj *messagePtr; /* * If we are just starting to log an error, errorInfo is initialized * from the error message in the interpreter's result. */ if (!(iPtr->flags & ERR_IN_PROGRESS)) { /* just starting to log error */ iPtr->flags |= ERR_IN_PROGRESS; if (iPtr->result[0] == 0) { Tcl_ObjSetVar2(interp, iPtr->execEnvPtr->errorInfo, NULL, iPtr->objResultPtr, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); } else { /* use the string result */ Tcl_ObjSetVar2(interp, iPtr->execEnvPtr->errorInfo, NULL, Tcl_NewStringObj(interp->result, -1), TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); } /* * If the errorCode variable wasn't set by the code that generated * the error, set it to "NONE". */ if (!(iPtr->flags & ERROR_CODE_SET)) { Tcl_ObjSetVar2(interp, iPtr->execEnvPtr->errorCode, NULL, Tcl_NewStringObj("NONE", -1), TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY); } } /* * Now append "message" to the end of errorInfo. */ if (length != 0) { messagePtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(message, length); Tcl_IncrRefCount(messagePtr); Tcl_ObjSetVar2(interp, iPtr->execEnvPtr->errorInfo, NULL, messagePtr, (TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY | TCL_APPEND_VALUE)); Tcl_DecrRefCount(messagePtr); /* free msg object appended above */ } } /* *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_VarEvalVA -- * * Given a variable number of string arguments, concatenate them * all together and execute the result as a Tcl command. * * Results: * A standard Tcl return result. An error message or other result may * be left in the interp's result. * * Side effects: * Depends on what was done by the command. * *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_VarEvalVA (interp, argList) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to evaluate command. */ va_list argList; /* Variable argument list. */ { Tcl_DString buf; char *string; int result; /* * Copy the strings one after the other into a single larger * string. Use stack-allocated space for small commands, but if * the command gets too large than call ckalloc to create the * space. */ Tcl_DStringInit(&buf); while (1) { string = va_arg(argList, char *); if (string == NULL) { break; } Tcl_DStringAppend(&buf, string, -1); } result = Tcl_Eval(interp, Tcl_DStringValue(&buf)); Tcl_DStringFree(&buf); return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_VarEval -- * * Given a variable number of string arguments, concatenate them * all together and execute the result as a Tcl command. * * Results: * A standard Tcl return result. An error message or other * result may be left in interp->result. * * Side effects: * Depends on what was done by the command. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* VARARGS2 */ /* ARGSUSED */ int Tcl_VarEval TCL_VARARGS_DEF(Tcl_Interp *,arg1) { Tcl_Interp *interp; va_list argList; int result; interp = TCL_VARARGS_START(Tcl_Interp *,arg1,argList); result = Tcl_VarEvalVA(interp, argList); va_end(argList); return result; } /* *--------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GlobalEval -- * * Evaluate a command at global level in an interpreter. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result is returned, and the interp's result is * modified accordingly. * * Side effects: * The command string is executed in interp, and the execution * is carried out in the variable context of global level (no * procedures active), just as if an "uplevel #0" command were * being executed. * --------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_GlobalEval(interp, command) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to evaluate command. */ CONST char *command; /* Command to evaluate. */ { register Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; int result; CallFrame *savedVarFramePtr; savedVarFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; iPtr->varFramePtr = NULL; result = Tcl_Eval(interp, command); iPtr->varFramePtr = savedVarFramePtr; return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_SetRecursionLimit -- * * Set the maximum number of recursive calls that may be active * for an interpreter at once. * * Results: * The return value is the old limit on nesting for interp. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_SetRecursionLimit(interp, depth) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter whose nesting limit * is to be set. */ int depth; /* New value for maximimum depth. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; int old; old = iPtr->maxNestingDepth; if (depth > 0) { iPtr->maxNestingDepth = depth; } return old; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_AllowExceptions -- * * Sets a flag in an interpreter so that exceptions can occur * in the next call to Tcl_Eval without them being turned into * errors. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * The TCL_ALLOW_EXCEPTIONS flag gets set in the interpreter's * evalFlags structure. See the reference documentation for * more details. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_AllowExceptions(interp) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to set flag. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; iPtr->evalFlags |= TCL_ALLOW_EXCEPTIONS; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetVersion * * Get the Tcl major, minor, and patchlevel version numbers and * the release type. A patch is a release type TCL_FINAL_RELEASE * with a patchLevel > 0. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_GetVersion(majorV, minorV, patchLevelV, type) int *majorV; int *minorV; int *patchLevelV; int *type; { if (majorV != NULL) { *majorV = TCL_MAJOR_VERSION; } if (minorV != NULL) { *minorV = TCL_MINOR_VERSION; } if (patchLevelV != NULL) { *patchLevelV = TCL_RELEASE_SERIAL; } if (type != NULL) { *type = TCL_RELEASE_LEVEL; } }