/* * tclProc.c -- * * This file contains routines that implement Tcl procedures, including * the "proc" and "uplevel" commands. * * Copyright © 1987-1993 The Regents of the University of California. * Copyright © 1994-1998 Sun Microsystems, Inc. * Copyright © 2004-2006 Miguel Sofer * Copyright © 2007 Daniel A. Steffen * * See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution of * this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. */ #include "tclInt.h" #include "tclCompile.h" #include /* * Variables that are part of the [apply] command implementation and which * have to be passed to the other side of the NRE call. */ typedef struct { Command cmd; ExtraFrameInfo efi; } ApplyExtraData; /* * Prototypes for static functions in this file */ static void DupLambdaInternalRep(Tcl_Obj *objPtr, Tcl_Obj *copyPtr); static void FreeLambdaInternalRep(Tcl_Obj *objPtr); static int InitArgsAndLocals(Tcl_Interp *interp, int skip); static void InitResolvedLocals(Tcl_Interp *interp, ByteCode *codePtr, Var *defPtr, Namespace *nsPtr); static void InitLocalCache(Proc *procPtr); static void ProcBodyDup(Tcl_Obj *srcPtr, Tcl_Obj *dupPtr); static void ProcBodyFree(Tcl_Obj *objPtr); static int ProcWrongNumArgs(Tcl_Interp *interp, int skip); static void MakeProcError(Tcl_Interp *interp, Tcl_Obj *procNameObj); static void MakeLambdaError(Tcl_Interp *interp, Tcl_Obj *procNameObj); static int SetLambdaFromAny(Tcl_Interp *interp, Tcl_Obj *objPtr); static Tcl_NRPostProc ApplyNR2; static Tcl_NRPostProc InterpProcNR2; static Tcl_NRPostProc Uplevel_Callback; /* * The ProcBodyObjType type */ const Tcl_ObjType tclProcBodyType = { "procbody", /* name for this type */ ProcBodyFree, /* FreeInternalRep function */ ProcBodyDup, /* DupInternalRep function */ NULL, /* UpdateString function; Tcl_GetString and * Tcl_GetStringFromObj should panic * instead. */ NULL /* SetFromAny function; Tcl_ConvertToType * should panic instead. */ }; #define ProcSetInternalRep(objPtr, procPtr) \ do { \ Tcl_ObjInternalRep ir; \ (procPtr)->refCount++; \ ir.twoPtrValue.ptr1 = (procPtr); \ ir.twoPtrValue.ptr2 = NULL; \ Tcl_StoreInternalRep((objPtr), &tclProcBodyType, &ir); \ } while (0) #define ProcGetInternalRep(objPtr, procPtr) \ do { \ const Tcl_ObjInternalRep *irPtr; \ irPtr = TclFetchInternalRep((objPtr), &tclProcBodyType); \ (procPtr) = irPtr ? (Proc *)irPtr->twoPtrValue.ptr1 : NULL; \ } while (0) /* * The [upvar]/[uplevel] level reference type. Uses the longValue field * to remember the integer value of a parsed # format. * * Uses the default behaviour throughout, and never disposes of the string * rep; it's just a cache type. */ static const Tcl_ObjType levelReferenceType = { "levelReference", NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL }; /* * The type of lambdas. Note that every lambda will *always* have a string * representation. * * Internally, ptr1 is a pointer to a Proc instance that is not bound to a * command name, and ptr2 is a pointer to the namespace that the Proc instance * will execute within. IF YOU CHANGE THIS, CHECK IN tclDisassemble.c TOO. */ static const Tcl_ObjType lambdaType = { "lambdaExpr", /* name */ FreeLambdaInternalRep, /* freeIntRepProc */ DupLambdaInternalRep, /* dupIntRepProc */ NULL, /* updateStringProc */ SetLambdaFromAny /* setFromAnyProc */ }; #define LambdaSetInternalRep(objPtr, procPtr, nsObjPtr) \ do { \ Tcl_ObjInternalRep ir; \ ir.twoPtrValue.ptr1 = (procPtr); \ ir.twoPtrValue.ptr2 = (nsObjPtr); \ Tcl_IncrRefCount((nsObjPtr)); \ Tcl_StoreInternalRep((objPtr), &lambdaType, &ir); \ } while (0) #define LambdaGetInternalRep(objPtr, procPtr, nsObjPtr) \ do { \ const Tcl_ObjInternalRep *irPtr; \ irPtr = TclFetchInternalRep((objPtr), &lambdaType); \ (procPtr) = irPtr ? (Proc *)irPtr->twoPtrValue.ptr1 : NULL; \ (nsObjPtr) = irPtr ? (Tcl_Obj *)irPtr->twoPtrValue.ptr2 : NULL; \ } while (0) /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_ProcObjCmd -- * * This object-based function is invoked to process the "proc" Tcl * command. See the user documentation for details on what it does. * * Results: * A standard Tcl object result value. * * Side effects: * A new procedure gets created. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_ProcObjCmd( TCL_UNUSED(ClientData), Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Current interpreter. */ int objc, /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *const objv[]) /* Argument objects. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Proc *procPtr; const char *procName; const char *simpleName, *procArgs, *procBody; Namespace *nsPtr, *altNsPtr, *cxtNsPtr; Tcl_Command cmd; if (objc != 4) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "name args body"); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Determine the namespace where the procedure should reside. Unless the * command name includes namespace qualifiers, this will be the current * namespace. */ procName = TclGetString(objv[1]); TclGetNamespaceForQualName(interp, procName, NULL, 0, &nsPtr, &altNsPtr, &cxtNsPtr, &simpleName); if (nsPtr == NULL) { Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "can't create procedure \"%s\": unknown namespace", procName)); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "VALUE", "COMMAND", NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } if (simpleName == NULL) { Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "can't create procedure \"%s\": bad procedure name", procName)); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "VALUE", "COMMAND", NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Create the data structure to represent the procedure. */ if (TclCreateProc(interp, /*ignored nsPtr*/ NULL, simpleName, objv[2], objv[3], &procPtr) != TCL_OK) { Tcl_AddErrorInfo(interp, "\n (creating proc \""); Tcl_AddErrorInfo(interp, simpleName); Tcl_AddErrorInfo(interp, "\")"); return TCL_ERROR; } cmd = TclNRCreateCommandInNs(interp, simpleName, (Tcl_Namespace *) nsPtr, TclObjInterpProc, TclNRInterpProc, procPtr, TclProcDeleteProc); /* * Now initialize the new procedure's cmdPtr field. This will be used * later when the procedure is called to determine what namespace the * procedure will run in. This will be different than the current * namespace if the proc was renamed into a different namespace. */ procPtr->cmdPtr = (Command *) cmd; /* * TIP #280: Remember the line the procedure body is starting on. In a * bytecode context we ask the engine to provide us with the necessary * information. This is for the initialization of the byte code compiler * when the body is used for the first time. * * This code is nearly identical to the #280 code in SetLambdaFromAny, see * this file. The differences are the different index of the body in the * line array of the context, and the lambda code requires some special * processing. Find a way to factor the common elements into a single * function. */ if (iPtr->cmdFramePtr) { CmdFrame *contextPtr = (CmdFrame *)TclStackAlloc(interp, sizeof(CmdFrame)); *contextPtr = *iPtr->cmdFramePtr; if (contextPtr->type == TCL_LOCATION_BC) { /* * Retrieve source information from the bytecode, if possible. If * the information is retrieved successfully, context.type will be * TCL_LOCATION_SOURCE and the reference held by * context.data.eval.path will be counted. */ TclGetSrcInfoForPc(contextPtr); } else if (contextPtr->type == TCL_LOCATION_SOURCE) { /* * The copy into 'context' up above has created another reference * to 'context.data.eval.path'; account for it. */ Tcl_IncrRefCount(contextPtr->data.eval.path); } if (contextPtr->type == TCL_LOCATION_SOURCE) { /* * We can account for source location within a proc only if the * proc body was not created by substitution. */ if (contextPtr->line && (contextPtr->nline >= 4) && (contextPtr->line[3] >= 0)) { int isNew; Tcl_HashEntry *hePtr; CmdFrame *cfPtr = (CmdFrame *)ckalloc(sizeof(CmdFrame)); cfPtr->level = -1; cfPtr->type = contextPtr->type; cfPtr->line = (int *)ckalloc(sizeof(int)); cfPtr->line[0] = contextPtr->line[3]; cfPtr->nline = 1; cfPtr->framePtr = NULL; cfPtr->nextPtr = NULL; cfPtr->data.eval.path = contextPtr->data.eval.path; Tcl_IncrRefCount(cfPtr->data.eval.path); cfPtr->cmd = NULL; cfPtr->len = 0; hePtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(iPtr->linePBodyPtr, procPtr, &isNew); if (!isNew) { /* * Get the old command frame and release it. See also * TclProcCleanupProc in this file. Currently it seems as * if only the procbodytest::proc command of the testsuite * is able to trigger this situation. */ CmdFrame *cfOldPtr = (CmdFrame *)Tcl_GetHashValue(hePtr); if (cfOldPtr->type == TCL_LOCATION_SOURCE) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(cfOldPtr->data.eval.path); cfOldPtr->data.eval.path = NULL; } ckfree(cfOldPtr->line); cfOldPtr->line = NULL; ckfree(cfOldPtr); } Tcl_SetHashValue(hePtr, cfPtr); } /* * 'contextPtr' is going out of scope; account for the reference * that it's holding to the path name. */ Tcl_DecrRefCount(contextPtr->data.eval.path); contextPtr->data.eval.path = NULL; } TclStackFree(interp, contextPtr); } /* * Optimize for no-op procs: if the body is not precompiled (like a TclPro * procbody), and the argument list is just "args" and the body is empty, * define a compileProc to compile a no-op. * * Notes: * - cannot be done for any argument list without having different * compiled/not-compiled behaviour in the "wrong argument #" case, or * making this code much more complicated. In any case, it doesn't * seem to make a lot of sense to verify the number of arguments we * are about to ignore ... * - could be enhanced to handle also non-empty bodies that contain only * comments; however, parsing the body will slow down the compilation * of all procs whose argument list is just _args_ */ if (TclHasInternalRep(objv[3], &tclProcBodyType)) { goto done; } procArgs = TclGetString(objv[2]); while (*procArgs == ' ') { procArgs++; } if ((procArgs[0] == 'a') && (strncmp(procArgs, "args", 4) == 0)) { int numBytes; procArgs +=4; while (*procArgs != '\0') { if (*procArgs != ' ') { goto done; } procArgs++; } /* * The argument list is just "args"; check the body */ procBody = TclGetStringFromObj(objv[3], &numBytes); if (TclParseAllWhiteSpace(procBody, numBytes) < numBytes) { goto done; } /* * The body is just spaces: link the compileProc */ ((Command *) cmd)->compileProc = TclCompileNoOp; } done: return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclCreateProc -- * * Creates the data associated with a Tcl procedure definition. This * function knows how to handle two types of body objects: strings and * procbody. Strings are the traditional (and common) value for bodies, * procbody are values created by extensions that have loaded a * previously compiled script. * * Results: * Returns TCL_OK on success, along with a pointer to a Tcl procedure * definition in procPtrPtr where the cmdPtr field is not initialised. * This definition should be freed by calling TclProcCleanupProc() when * it is no longer needed. Returns TCL_ERROR if anything goes wrong. * * Side effects: * If anything goes wrong, this function returns an error message in the * interpreter. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclCreateProc( Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Interpreter containing proc. */ TCL_UNUSED(Namespace *) /*nsPtr*/, const char *procName, /* Unqualified name of this proc. */ Tcl_Obj *argsPtr, /* Description of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *bodyPtr, /* Command body. */ Proc **procPtrPtr) /* Returns: pointer to proc data. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Proc *procPtr = NULL; int i, result, numArgs; CompiledLocal *localPtr = NULL; Tcl_Obj **argArray; int precompiled = 0; ProcGetInternalRep(bodyPtr, procPtr); if (procPtr != NULL) { /* * Because the body is a TclProProcBody, the actual body is already * compiled, and it is not shared with anyone else, so it's OK not to * unshare it (as a matter of fact, it is bad to unshare it, because * there may be no source code). * * We don't create and initialize a Proc structure for the procedure; * rather, we use what is in the body object. We increment the ref * count of the Proc struct since the command (soon to be created) * will be holding a reference to it. */ procPtr->iPtr = iPtr; procPtr->refCount++; precompiled = 1; } else { /* * If the procedure's body object is shared because its string value * is identical to, e.g., the body of another procedure, we must * create a private copy for this procedure to use. Such sharing of * procedure bodies is rare but can cause problems. A procedure body * is compiled in a context that includes the number of "slots" * allocated by the compiler for local variables. There is a local * variable slot for each formal parameter (the * "procPtr->numCompiledLocals = numArgs" assignment below). This * means that the same code can not be shared by two procedures that * have a different number of arguments, even if their bodies are * identical. Note that we don't use Tcl_DuplicateObj since we would * not want any bytecode internal representation. */ if (Tcl_IsShared(bodyPtr)) { const char *bytes; int length; Tcl_Obj *sharedBodyPtr = bodyPtr; bytes = TclGetStringFromObj(bodyPtr, &length); bodyPtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(bytes, length); /* * TIP #280. * Ensure that the continuation line data for the original body is * not lost and applies to the new body as well. */ TclContinuationsCopy(bodyPtr, sharedBodyPtr); } /* * Create and initialize a Proc structure for the procedure. We * increment the ref count of the procedure's body object since there * will be a reference to it in the Proc structure. */ Tcl_IncrRefCount(bodyPtr); procPtr = (Proc *)ckalloc(sizeof(Proc)); procPtr->iPtr = iPtr; procPtr->refCount = 1; procPtr->bodyPtr = bodyPtr; procPtr->numArgs = 0; /* Actual argument count is set below. */ procPtr->numCompiledLocals = 0; procPtr->firstLocalPtr = NULL; procPtr->lastLocalPtr = NULL; } /* * Break up the argument list into argument specifiers, then process each * argument specifier. If the body is precompiled, processing is limited * to checking that the parsed argument is consistent with the one stored * in the Proc. */ result = Tcl_ListObjGetElements(interp , argsPtr ,&numArgs ,&argArray); if (result != TCL_OK) { goto procError; } if (precompiled) { if (numArgs > procPtr->numArgs) { Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "procedure \"%s\": arg list contains %d entries, " "precompiled header expects %d", procName, numArgs, procPtr->numArgs)); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "OPERATION", "PROC", "BYTECODELIES", NULL); goto procError; } localPtr = procPtr->firstLocalPtr; } else { procPtr->numArgs = numArgs; procPtr->numCompiledLocals = numArgs; } for (i = 0; i < numArgs; i++) { const char *argname, *argnamei, *argnamelast; int fieldCount, nameLength; Tcl_Obj **fieldValues; /* * Now divide the specifier up into name and default. */ result = Tcl_ListObjGetElements(interp, argArray[i], &fieldCount, &fieldValues); if (result != TCL_OK) { goto procError; } if (fieldCount > 2) { Tcl_Obj *errorObj = Tcl_NewStringObj( "too many fields in argument specifier \"", -1); Tcl_AppendObjToObj(errorObj, argArray[i]); Tcl_AppendToObj(errorObj, "\"", -1); Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, errorObj); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "OPERATION", "PROC", "FORMALARGUMENTFORMAT", NULL); goto procError; } if ((fieldCount == 0) || (fieldValues[0]->length == 0)) { Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_NewStringObj( "argument with no name", -1)); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "OPERATION", "PROC", "FORMALARGUMENTFORMAT", NULL); goto procError; } argname = Tcl_GetStringFromObj(fieldValues[0], &nameLength); /* * Check that the formal parameter name is a scalar. */ argnamei = argname; argnamelast = (nameLength > 0) ? (argname + nameLength - 1) : argname; while (argnamei < argnamelast) { if (*argnamei == '(') { if (*argnamelast == ')') { /* We have an array element. */ Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "formal parameter \"%s\" is an array element", Tcl_GetString(fieldValues[0]))); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "OPERATION", "PROC", "FORMALARGUMENTFORMAT", NULL); goto procError; } } else if (*argnamei == ':' && *(argnamei+1) == ':') { Tcl_Obj *errorObj = Tcl_NewStringObj( "formal parameter \"", -1); Tcl_AppendObjToObj(errorObj, fieldValues[0]); Tcl_AppendToObj(errorObj, "\" is not a simple name", -1); Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, errorObj); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "OPERATION", "PROC", "FORMALARGUMENTFORMAT", NULL); goto procError; } argnamei++; } if (precompiled) { /* * Compare the parsed argument with the stored one. Note that the * only flag value that makes sense at this point is VAR_ARGUMENT * (its value was kept the same as pre VarReform to simplify * tbcload's processing of older byetcodes). * * The only other flag vlaue that is important to retrieve from * precompiled procs is VAR_TEMPORARY (also unchanged). It is * needed later when retrieving the variable names. */ if ((localPtr->nameLength != nameLength) || (memcmp(localPtr->name, argname, nameLength) != 0) || (localPtr->frameIndex != i) || !(localPtr->flags & VAR_ARGUMENT) || (localPtr->defValuePtr == NULL && fieldCount == 2) || (localPtr->defValuePtr != NULL && fieldCount != 2)) { Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "procedure \"%s\": formal parameter %d is " "inconsistent with precompiled body", procName, i)); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "OPERATION", "PROC", "BYTECODELIES", NULL); goto procError; } /* * Compare the default value if any. */ if (localPtr->defValuePtr != NULL) { const char *tmpPtr = TclGetString(localPtr->defValuePtr); size_t tmpLength = localPtr->defValuePtr->length; const char *value = TclGetString(fieldValues[1]); size_t valueLength = fieldValues[1]->length; if ((valueLength != tmpLength) || memcmp(value, tmpPtr, tmpLength) != 0 ) { Tcl_Obj *errorObj = Tcl_ObjPrintf( "procedure \"%s\": formal parameter \"", procName); Tcl_AppendObjToObj(errorObj, fieldValues[0]); Tcl_AppendToObj(errorObj, "\" has " "default value inconsistent with precompiled body", -1); Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, errorObj); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "OPERATION", "PROC", "BYTECODELIES", NULL); goto procError; } } if ((i == numArgs - 1) && (localPtr->nameLength == 4) && (localPtr->name[0] == 'a') && (strcmp(localPtr->name, "args") == 0)) { localPtr->flags |= VAR_IS_ARGS; } localPtr = localPtr->nextPtr; } else { /* * Allocate an entry in the runtime procedure frame's array of * local variables for the argument. */ localPtr = (CompiledLocal *)ckalloc( offsetof(CompiledLocal, name) + fieldValues[0]->length + 1); if (procPtr->firstLocalPtr == NULL) { procPtr->firstLocalPtr = procPtr->lastLocalPtr = localPtr; } else { procPtr->lastLocalPtr->nextPtr = localPtr; procPtr->lastLocalPtr = localPtr; } localPtr->nextPtr = NULL; localPtr->nameLength = nameLength; localPtr->frameIndex = i; localPtr->flags = VAR_ARGUMENT; localPtr->resolveInfo = NULL; if (fieldCount == 2) { localPtr->defValuePtr = fieldValues[1]; Tcl_IncrRefCount(localPtr->defValuePtr); } else { localPtr->defValuePtr = NULL; } memcpy(localPtr->name, argname, fieldValues[0]->length + 1); if ((i == numArgs - 1) && (localPtr->nameLength == 4) && (localPtr->name[0] == 'a') && (memcmp(localPtr->name, "args", 4) == 0)) { localPtr->flags |= VAR_IS_ARGS; } } } *procPtrPtr = procPtr; return TCL_OK; procError: if (precompiled) { procPtr->refCount--; } else { Tcl_DecrRefCount(bodyPtr); while (procPtr->firstLocalPtr != NULL) { localPtr = procPtr->firstLocalPtr; procPtr->firstLocalPtr = localPtr->nextPtr; if (localPtr->defValuePtr != NULL) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(localPtr->defValuePtr); } ckfree(localPtr); } ckfree(procPtr); } return TCL_ERROR; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclGetFrame -- * * Given a description of a procedure frame, such as the first argument * to an "uplevel" or "upvar" command, locate the call frame for the * appropriate level of procedure. * * Results: * The return value is -1 if an error occurred in finding the frame (in * this case an error message is left in the interp's result). 1 is * returned if string was either a number or a number preceded by "#" and * it specified a valid frame. 0 is returned if string isn't one of the * two things above (in this case, the lookup acts as if string were * "1"). The variable pointed to by framePtrPtr is filled in with the * address of the desired frame (unless an error occurs, in which case it * isn't modified). * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclGetFrame( Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Interpreter in which to find frame. */ const char *name, /* String describing frame. */ CallFrame **framePtrPtr) /* Store pointer to frame here (or NULL if * global frame indicated). */ { int result; Tcl_Obj obj; obj.bytes = (char *) name; obj.length = strlen(name); obj.typePtr = NULL; result = TclObjGetFrame(interp, &obj, framePtrPtr); TclFreeInternalRep(&obj); return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclObjGetFrame -- * * Given a description of a procedure frame, such as the first argument * to an "uplevel" or "upvar" command, locate the call frame for the * appropriate level of procedure. * * Results: * The return value is -1 if an error occurred in finding the frame (in * this case an error message is left in the interp's result). 1 is * returned if objPtr was either an int or an int preceded by "#" and * it specified a valid frame. 0 is returned if objPtr isn't one of the * two things above (in this case, the lookup acts as if objPtr were * "1"). The variable pointed to by framePtrPtr is filled in with the * address of the desired frame (unless an error occurs, in which case it * isn't modified). * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclObjGetFrame( Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Interpreter in which to find frame. */ Tcl_Obj *objPtr, /* Object describing frame. */ CallFrame **framePtrPtr) /* Store pointer to frame here (or NULL if * global frame indicated). */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; int curLevel, level, result; const Tcl_ObjInternalRep *irPtr; const char *name = NULL; Tcl_WideInt w; /* * Parse object to figure out which level number to go to. */ result = 0; curLevel = iPtr->varFramePtr->level; /* * Check for integer first, since that has potential to spare us * a generation of a stringrep. */ if (objPtr == NULL) { /* Do nothing */ } else if (TCL_OK == Tcl_GetIntFromObj(NULL, objPtr, &level)) { Tcl_GetWideIntFromObj(NULL, objPtr, &w); if (w < 0 || w > INT_MAX || curLevel > w + INT_MAX) { result = -1; } else { level = curLevel - level; result = 1; } } else if ((irPtr = TclFetchInternalRep(objPtr, &levelReferenceType))) { level = irPtr->wideValue; result = 1; } else { name = TclGetString(objPtr); if (name[0] == '#') { if (TCL_OK == Tcl_GetInt(NULL, name+1, &level)) { if (level < 0 || (level > 0 && name[1] == '-')) { result = -1; } else { Tcl_ObjInternalRep ir; ir.wideValue = level; Tcl_StoreInternalRep(objPtr, &levelReferenceType, &ir); result = 1; } } else { result = -1; } } else if (TclGetWideBitsFromObj(NULL, objPtr, &w) == TCL_OK) { /* * If this were an integer, we'd have succeeded already. * Docs say we have to treat this as a 'bad level' error. */ result = -1; } } if (result != -1) { /* if relative current level */ if (result == 0) { if (!curLevel) { /* we are in top-level, so simply generate bad level */ name = "1"; goto badLevel; } level = curLevel - 1; } if (level >= 0) { CallFrame *framePtr; for (framePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; framePtr != NULL; framePtr = framePtr->callerVarPtr) { if (framePtr->level == level) { *framePtrPtr = framePtr; return result; } } } } badLevel: if (name == NULL) { name = objPtr ? TclGetString(objPtr) : "1" ; } Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf("bad level \"%s\"", name)); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "LOOKUP", "LEVEL", name, NULL); return -1; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_UplevelObjCmd -- * * This object function is invoked to process the "uplevel" Tcl command. * See the user documentation for details on what it does. * * Results: * A standard Tcl object result value. * * Side effects: * See the user documentation. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static int Uplevel_Callback( ClientData data[], Tcl_Interp *interp, int result) { CallFrame *savedVarFramePtr = (CallFrame *)data[0]; if (result == TCL_ERROR) { Tcl_AppendObjToErrorInfo(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "\n (\"uplevel\" body line %d)", Tcl_GetErrorLine(interp))); } /* * Restore the variable frame, and return. */ ((Interp *)interp)->varFramePtr = savedVarFramePtr; return result; } int Tcl_UplevelObjCmd( ClientData clientData, Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Current interpreter. */ int objc, /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *const objv[]) /* Argument objects. */ { return Tcl_NRCallObjProc(interp, TclNRUplevelObjCmd, clientData, objc, objv); } int TclNRUplevelObjCmd( TCL_UNUSED(ClientData), Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Current interpreter. */ int objc, /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *const objv[]) /* Argument objects. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; CmdFrame *invoker = NULL; int word = 0; int result; CallFrame *savedVarFramePtr, *framePtr; Tcl_Obj *objPtr; if (objc < 2) { /* to do * simplify things by interpreting the argument as a command when there * is only one argument. This requires a TIP since currently a single * argument is interpreted as a level indicator if possible. */ uplevelSyntax: Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "?level? command ?arg ...?"); return TCL_ERROR; } else if (!TclHasStringRep(objv[1]) && objc == 2) { int status ,llength; status = Tcl_ListObjLength(interp, objv[1], &llength); if (status == TCL_OK && llength > 1) { /* the first argument can't interpreted as a level. Avoid * generating a string representation of the script. */ result = TclGetFrame(interp, "1", &framePtr); if (result == -1) { return TCL_ERROR; } objc -= 1; objv += 1; goto havelevel; } } /* * Find the level to use for executing the command. */ result = TclObjGetFrame(interp, objv[1], &framePtr); if (result == -1) { return TCL_ERROR; } objc -= result + 1; if (objc == 0) { goto uplevelSyntax; } objv += result + 1; havelevel: /* * Modify the interpreter state to execute in the given frame. */ savedVarFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; iPtr->varFramePtr = framePtr; /* * Execute the residual arguments as a command. */ if (objc == 1) { /* * TIP #280. Make actual argument location available to eval'd script */ TclArgumentGet(interp, objv[0], &invoker, &word); objPtr = objv[0]; } else { /* * More than one argument: concatenate them together with spaces * between, then evaluate the result. Tcl_EvalObjEx will delete the * object when it decrements its refcount after eval'ing it. */ objPtr = Tcl_ConcatObj(objc, objv); } TclNRAddCallback(interp, Uplevel_Callback, savedVarFramePtr, NULL, NULL, NULL); return TclNREvalObjEx(interp, objPtr, 0, invoker, word); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclFindProc -- * * Given the name of a procedure, return a pointer to the record * describing the procedure. The procedure will be looked up using the * usual rules: first in the current namespace and then in the global * namespace. * * Results: * NULL is returned if the name doesn't correspond to any procedure. * Otherwise, the return value is a pointer to the procedure's record. If * the name is found but refers to an imported command that points to a * "real" procedure defined in another namespace, a pointer to that * "real" procedure's structure is returned. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Proc * TclFindProc( Interp *iPtr, /* Interpreter in which to look. */ const char *procName) /* Name of desired procedure. */ { Tcl_Command cmd; Command *cmdPtr; cmd = Tcl_FindCommand((Tcl_Interp *) iPtr, procName, NULL, /*flags*/ 0); if (cmd == (Tcl_Command) NULL) { return NULL; } cmdPtr = (Command *) cmd; return TclIsProc(cmdPtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclIsProc -- * * Tells whether a command is a Tcl procedure or not. * * Results: * If the given command is actually a Tcl procedure, the return value is * the address of the record describing the procedure. Otherwise the * return value is 0. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Proc * TclIsProc( Command *cmdPtr) /* Command to test. */ { Tcl_Command origCmd = TclGetOriginalCommand((Tcl_Command) cmdPtr); if (origCmd != NULL) { cmdPtr = (Command *) origCmd; } if (cmdPtr->deleteProc == TclProcDeleteProc) { return (Proc *)cmdPtr->objClientData; } return NULL; } static int ProcWrongNumArgs( Tcl_Interp *interp, int skip) { CallFrame *framePtr = ((Interp *)interp)->varFramePtr; Proc *procPtr = framePtr->procPtr; int localCt = procPtr->numCompiledLocals, numArgs, i; Tcl_Obj **desiredObjs; const char *final = NULL; /* * Build up desired argument list for Tcl_WrongNumArgs */ numArgs = framePtr->procPtr->numArgs; desiredObjs = (Tcl_Obj **)TclStackAlloc(interp, sizeof(Tcl_Obj *) * (numArgs+1)); if (framePtr->isProcCallFrame & FRAME_IS_LAMBDA) { desiredObjs[0] = Tcl_NewStringObj("lambdaExpr", -1); } else { #ifdef AVOID_HACKS_FOR_ITCL desiredObjs[0] = framePtr->objv[skip-1]; #else desiredObjs[0] = Tcl_NewListObj(1, framePtr->objv + skip - 1); #endif /* AVOID_HACKS_FOR_ITCL */ } Tcl_IncrRefCount(desiredObjs[0]); if (localCt > 0) { Var *defPtr = (Var *) (&framePtr->localCachePtr->varName0 + localCt); for (i=1 ; i<=numArgs ; i++, defPtr++) { Tcl_Obj *argObj; Tcl_Obj *namePtr = localName(framePtr, i-1); if (defPtr->value.objPtr != NULL) { TclNewObj(argObj); Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(argObj, "?", TclGetString(namePtr), "?", NULL); } else if (defPtr->flags & VAR_IS_ARGS) { numArgs--; final = "?arg ...?"; break; } else { argObj = namePtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(namePtr); } desiredObjs[i] = argObj; } } Tcl_ResetResult(interp); Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, numArgs+1, desiredObjs, final); for (i=0 ; i<=numArgs ; i++) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(desiredObjs[i]); } TclStackFree(interp, desiredObjs); return TCL_ERROR; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclInitCompiledLocals -- * * This routine is invoked in order to initialize the compiled locals * table for a new call frame. * * DEPRECATED: functionality has been inlined elsewhere; this function * remains to insure binary compatibility with Itcl. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * May invoke various name resolvers in order to determine which * variables are being referenced at runtime. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclInitCompiledLocals( Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Current interpreter. */ CallFrame *framePtr, /* Call frame to initialize. */ Namespace *nsPtr) /* Pointer to current namespace. */ { Var *varPtr = framePtr->compiledLocals; Tcl_Obj *bodyPtr; ByteCode *codePtr; bodyPtr = framePtr->procPtr->bodyPtr; ByteCodeGetInternalRep(bodyPtr, &tclByteCodeType, codePtr); if (codePtr == NULL) { Tcl_Panic("body object for proc attached to frame is not a byte code type"); } if (framePtr->numCompiledLocals) { if (!codePtr->localCachePtr) { InitLocalCache(framePtr->procPtr) ; } framePtr->localCachePtr = codePtr->localCachePtr; framePtr->localCachePtr->refCount++; } InitResolvedLocals(interp, codePtr, varPtr, nsPtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * InitResolvedLocals -- * * This routine is invoked in order to initialize the compiled locals * table for a new call frame. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * May invoke various name resolvers in order to determine which * variables are being referenced at runtime. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void InitResolvedLocals( Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Current interpreter. */ ByteCode *codePtr, Var *varPtr, Namespace *nsPtr) /* Pointer to current namespace. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; int haveResolvers = (nsPtr->compiledVarResProc || iPtr->resolverPtr); CompiledLocal *firstLocalPtr, *localPtr; int varNum; Tcl_ResolvedVarInfo *resVarInfo; /* * Find the localPtr corresponding to varPtr */ varNum = varPtr - iPtr->framePtr->compiledLocals; localPtr = iPtr->framePtr->procPtr->firstLocalPtr; while (varNum--) { localPtr = localPtr->nextPtr; } if (!(haveResolvers && (codePtr->flags & TCL_BYTECODE_RESOLVE_VARS))) { goto doInitResolvedLocals; } /* * This is the first run after a recompile, or else the resolver epoch * has changed: update the resolver cache. */ firstLocalPtr = localPtr; for (; localPtr != NULL; localPtr = localPtr->nextPtr) { if (localPtr->resolveInfo) { if (localPtr->resolveInfo->deleteProc) { localPtr->resolveInfo->deleteProc(localPtr->resolveInfo); } else { ckfree(localPtr->resolveInfo); } localPtr->resolveInfo = NULL; } localPtr->flags &= ~VAR_RESOLVED; if (haveResolvers && !(localPtr->flags & (VAR_ARGUMENT|VAR_TEMPORARY))) { ResolverScheme *resPtr = iPtr->resolverPtr; Tcl_ResolvedVarInfo *vinfo; int result; if (nsPtr->compiledVarResProc) { result = nsPtr->compiledVarResProc(nsPtr->interp, localPtr->name, localPtr->nameLength, (Tcl_Namespace *) nsPtr, &vinfo); } else { result = TCL_CONTINUE; } while ((result == TCL_CONTINUE) && resPtr) { if (resPtr->compiledVarResProc) { result = resPtr->compiledVarResProc(nsPtr->interp, localPtr->name, localPtr->nameLength, (Tcl_Namespace *) nsPtr, &vinfo); } resPtr = resPtr->nextPtr; } if (result == TCL_OK) { localPtr->resolveInfo = vinfo; localPtr->flags |= VAR_RESOLVED; } } } localPtr = firstLocalPtr; codePtr->flags &= ~TCL_BYTECODE_RESOLVE_VARS; /* * Initialize the array of local variables stored in the call frame. Some * variables may have special resolution rules. In that case, we call * their "resolver" procs to get our hands on the variable, and we make * the compiled local a link to the real variable. */ doInitResolvedLocals: for (; localPtr != NULL; varPtr++, localPtr = localPtr->nextPtr) { varPtr->flags = 0; varPtr->value.objPtr = NULL; /* * Now invoke the resolvers to determine the exact variables that * should be used. */ resVarInfo = localPtr->resolveInfo; if (resVarInfo && resVarInfo->fetchProc) { Var *resolvedVarPtr = (Var *) resVarInfo->fetchProc(interp, resVarInfo); if (resolvedVarPtr) { if (TclIsVarInHash(resolvedVarPtr)) { VarHashRefCount(resolvedVarPtr)++; } varPtr->flags = VAR_LINK; varPtr->value.linkPtr = resolvedVarPtr; } } } } void TclFreeLocalCache( Tcl_Interp *interp, LocalCache *localCachePtr) { int i; Tcl_Obj **namePtrPtr = &localCachePtr->varName0; for (i = 0; i < localCachePtr->numVars; i++, namePtrPtr++) { Tcl_Obj *objPtr = *namePtrPtr; if (objPtr) { /* TclReleaseLiteral calls Tcl_DecrRefCount for us */ TclReleaseLiteral(interp, objPtr); } } ckfree(localCachePtr); } static void InitLocalCache( Proc *procPtr) { Interp *iPtr = procPtr->iPtr; ByteCode *codePtr; int localCt = procPtr->numCompiledLocals; int numArgs = procPtr->numArgs, i = 0; Tcl_Obj **namePtr; Var *varPtr; LocalCache *localCachePtr; CompiledLocal *localPtr; int isNew; ByteCodeGetInternalRep(procPtr->bodyPtr, &tclByteCodeType, codePtr); /* * Cache the names and initial values of local variables; store the * cache in both the framePtr for this execution and in the codePtr * for future calls. */ localCachePtr = (LocalCache *)ckalloc(offsetof(LocalCache, varName0) + localCt * sizeof(Tcl_Obj *) + numArgs * sizeof(Var)); namePtr = &localCachePtr->varName0; varPtr = (Var *) (namePtr + localCt); localPtr = procPtr->firstLocalPtr; while (localPtr) { if (TclIsVarTemporary(localPtr)) { *namePtr = NULL; } else { *namePtr = TclCreateLiteral(iPtr, localPtr->name, localPtr->nameLength, /* hash */ (unsigned int) -1, &isNew, /* nsPtr */ NULL, 0, NULL); Tcl_IncrRefCount(*namePtr); } if (i < numArgs) { varPtr->flags = (localPtr->flags & VAR_IS_ARGS); varPtr->value.objPtr = localPtr->defValuePtr; varPtr++; i++; } namePtr++; localPtr = localPtr->nextPtr; } codePtr->localCachePtr = localCachePtr; localCachePtr->refCount = 1; localCachePtr->numVars = localCt; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * InitArgsAndLocals -- * * This routine is invoked in order to initialize the arguments and other * compiled locals table for a new call frame. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result. * * Side effects: * Allocates memory on the stack for the compiled local variables, the * caller is responsible for freeing them. Initialises all variables. May * invoke various name resolvers in order to determine which variables * are being referenced at runtime. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static int InitArgsAndLocals( Tcl_Interp *interp,/* Interpreter in which procedure was * invoked. */ int skip) /* Number of initial arguments to be skipped, * i.e., words in the "command name". */ { CallFrame *framePtr = ((Interp *)interp)->varFramePtr; Proc *procPtr = framePtr->procPtr; ByteCode *codePtr; Var *varPtr, *defPtr; int localCt = procPtr->numCompiledLocals, numArgs, argCt, i, imax; Tcl_Obj *const *argObjs; ByteCodeGetInternalRep(procPtr->bodyPtr, &tclByteCodeType, codePtr); /* * Make sure that the local cache of variable names and initial values has * been initialised properly . */ if (localCt) { if (!codePtr->localCachePtr) { InitLocalCache(procPtr) ; } framePtr->localCachePtr = codePtr->localCachePtr; framePtr->localCachePtr->refCount++; defPtr = (Var *) (&framePtr->localCachePtr->varName0 + localCt); } else { defPtr = NULL; } /* * Create the "compiledLocals" array. Make sure it is large enough to hold * all the procedure's compiled local variables, including its formal * parameters. */ varPtr = (Var *)TclStackAlloc(interp, localCt * sizeof(Var)); framePtr->compiledLocals = varPtr; framePtr->numCompiledLocals = localCt; /* * Match and assign the call's actual parameters to the procedure's formal * arguments. The formal arguments are described by the first numArgs * entries in both the Proc structure's local variable list and the call * frame's local variable array. */ numArgs = procPtr->numArgs; argCt = framePtr->objc - skip; /* Set it to the number of args to the * procedure. */ argObjs = framePtr->objv + skip; if (numArgs == 0) { if (argCt) { goto incorrectArgs; } else { goto correctArgs; } } imax = ((argCt < numArgs-1) ? argCt : numArgs-1); for (i = 0; i < imax; i++, varPtr++, defPtr ? defPtr++ : defPtr) { /* * "Normal" arguments; last formal is special, depends on it being * 'args'. */ Tcl_Obj *objPtr = argObjs[i]; varPtr->flags = 0; varPtr->value.objPtr = objPtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(objPtr); /* Local var is a reference. */ } for (; i < numArgs-1; i++, varPtr++, defPtr ? defPtr++ : defPtr) { /* * This loop is entered if argCt < (numArgs-1). Set default values; * last formal is special. */ Tcl_Obj *objPtr = defPtr ? defPtr->value.objPtr : NULL; if (!objPtr) { goto incorrectArgs; } varPtr->flags = 0; varPtr->value.objPtr = objPtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(objPtr); /* Local var reference. */ } /* * When we get here, the last formal argument remains to be defined: * defPtr and varPtr point to the last argument to be initialized. */ varPtr->flags = 0; if (defPtr && defPtr->flags & VAR_IS_ARGS) { Tcl_Obj *listPtr = Tcl_NewListObj(argCt-i, argObjs+i); varPtr->value.objPtr = listPtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(listPtr); /* Local var is a reference. */ } else if (argCt == numArgs) { Tcl_Obj *objPtr = argObjs[i]; varPtr->value.objPtr = objPtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(objPtr); /* Local var is a reference. */ } else if ((argCt < numArgs) && defPtr && defPtr->value.objPtr) { Tcl_Obj *objPtr = defPtr->value.objPtr; varPtr->value.objPtr = objPtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(objPtr); /* Local var is a reference. */ } else { goto incorrectArgs; } varPtr++; /* * Initialise and resolve the remaining compiledLocals. In the absence of * resolvers, they are undefined local vars: (flags=0, value=NULL). */ correctArgs: if (numArgs < localCt) { if (!framePtr->nsPtr->compiledVarResProc && !((Interp *)interp)->resolverPtr) { memset(varPtr, 0, (localCt - numArgs)*sizeof(Var)); } else { InitResolvedLocals(interp, codePtr, varPtr, framePtr->nsPtr); } } return TCL_OK; /* * Initialise all compiled locals to avoid problems at DeleteLocalVars. */ incorrectArgs: if ((skip != 1) && TclInitRewriteEnsemble(interp, skip-1, 0, framePtr->objv)) { TclNRAddCallback(interp, TclClearRootEnsemble, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL); } memset(varPtr, 0, ((framePtr->compiledLocals + localCt)-varPtr) * sizeof(Var)); return ProcWrongNumArgs(interp, skip); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclPushProcCallFrame -- * * Compiles a proc body if necessary, then pushes a CallFrame suitable * for executing it. * * Results: * A standard Tcl object result value. * * Side effects: * The proc's body may be recompiled. A CallFrame is pushed, it will have * to be popped by the caller. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclPushProcCallFrame( ClientData clientData, /* Record describing procedure to be * interpreted. */ Tcl_Interp *interp,/* Interpreter in which procedure was * invoked. */ int objc, /* Count of number of arguments to this * procedure. */ Tcl_Obj *const objv[], /* Argument value objects. */ int isLambda) /* 1 if this is a call by ApplyObjCmd: it * needs special rules for error msg */ { Proc *procPtr = (Proc *)clientData; Namespace *nsPtr = procPtr->cmdPtr->nsPtr; CallFrame *framePtr, **framePtrPtr; int result; ByteCode *codePtr; /* * If necessary (i.e. if we haven't got a suitable compilation already * cached) compile the procedure's body. The compiler will allocate frame * slots for the procedure's non-argument local variables. Note that * compiling the body might increase procPtr->numCompiledLocals if new * local variables are found while compiling. */ ByteCodeGetInternalRep(procPtr->bodyPtr, &tclByteCodeType, codePtr); if (codePtr != NULL) { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; /* * When we've got bytecode, this is the check for validity. That is, * the bytecode must be for the right interpreter (no cross-leaks!), * the code must be from the current epoch (so subcommand compilation * is up-to-date), the namespace must match (so variable handling * is right) and the resolverEpoch must match (so that new shadowed * commands and/or resolver changes are considered). */ if (((Interp *) *codePtr->interpHandle != iPtr) || (codePtr->compileEpoch != iPtr->compileEpoch) || (codePtr->nsPtr != nsPtr) || (codePtr->nsEpoch != nsPtr->resolverEpoch)) { goto doCompilation; } } else { doCompilation: result = TclProcCompileProc(interp, procPtr, procPtr->bodyPtr, nsPtr, (isLambda ? "body of lambda term" : "body of proc"), TclGetString(objv[isLambda])); if (result != TCL_OK) { return result; } } /* * Set up and push a new call frame for the new procedure invocation. * This call frame will execute in the proc's namespace, which might be * different than the current namespace. The proc's namespace is that of * its command, which can change if the command is renamed from one * namespace to another. */ framePtrPtr = &framePtr; (void) TclPushStackFrame(interp, (Tcl_CallFrame **) framePtrPtr, (Tcl_Namespace *) nsPtr, (isLambda? (FRAME_IS_PROC|FRAME_IS_LAMBDA) : FRAME_IS_PROC)); framePtr->objc = objc; framePtr->objv = objv; framePtr->procPtr = procPtr; return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclObjInterpProc -- * * When a Tcl procedure gets invoked during bytecode evaluation, this * object-based routine gets invoked to interpret the procedure. * * Results: * A standard Tcl object result value. * * Side effects: * Depends on the commands in the procedure. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclObjInterpProc( ClientData clientData, /* Record describing procedure to be * interpreted. */ Tcl_Interp *interp,/* Interpreter in which procedure was * invoked. */ int objc, /* Count of number of arguments to this * procedure. */ Tcl_Obj *const objv[]) /* Argument value objects. */ { /* * Not used much in the core; external interface for iTcl */ return Tcl_NRCallObjProc(interp, TclNRInterpProc, clientData, objc, objv); } int TclNRInterpProc( ClientData clientData, /* Record describing procedure to be * interpreted. */ Tcl_Interp *interp,/* Interpreter in which procedure was * invoked. */ int objc, /* Count of number of arguments to this * procedure. */ Tcl_Obj *const objv[]) /* Argument value objects. */ { int result = TclPushProcCallFrame(clientData, interp, objc, objv, /*isLambda*/ 0); if (result != TCL_OK) { return TCL_ERROR; } return TclNRInterpProcCore(interp, objv[0], 1, &MakeProcError); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclNRInterpProcCore -- * * When a Tcl procedure, lambda term or anything else that works like a * procedure gets invoked during bytecode evaluation, this object-based * routine gets invoked to interpret the body. * * Results: * A standard Tcl object result value. * * Side effects: * Nearly anything; depends on the commands in the procedure body. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclNRInterpProcCore( Tcl_Interp *interp,/* Interpreter in which procedure was * invoked. */ Tcl_Obj *procNameObj, /* Procedure name for error reporting. */ int skip, /* Number of initial arguments to be skipped, * i.e., words in the "command name". */ ProcErrorProc *errorProc) /* How to convert results from the script into * results of the overall procedure. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Proc *procPtr = iPtr->varFramePtr->procPtr; int result; CallFrame *freePtr; ByteCode *codePtr; result = InitArgsAndLocals(interp, skip); if (result != TCL_OK) { freePtr = iPtr->framePtr; Tcl_PopCallFrame(interp); /* Pop but do not free. */ TclStackFree(interp, freePtr->compiledLocals); /* Free compiledLocals. */ TclStackFree(interp, freePtr); /* Free CallFrame. */ return TCL_ERROR; } #if defined(TCL_COMPILE_DEBUG) if (tclTraceExec >= 1) { CallFrame *framePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; int i; if (framePtr->isProcCallFrame & FRAME_IS_LAMBDA) { fprintf(stdout, "Calling lambda "); } else { fprintf(stdout, "Calling proc "); } for (i = 0; i < framePtr->objc; i++) { TclPrintObject(stdout, framePtr->objv[i], 15); fprintf(stdout, " "); } fprintf(stdout, "\n"); fflush(stdout); } #endif /*TCL_COMPILE_DEBUG*/ #ifdef USE_DTRACE if (TCL_DTRACE_PROC_ARGS_ENABLED()) { int l = iPtr->varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame & FRAME_IS_LAMBDA ? 1 : 0; const char *a[10]; int i; for (i = 0 ; i < 10 ; i++) { a[i] = (l < iPtr->varFramePtr->objc ? TclGetString(iPtr->varFramePtr->objv[l]) : NULL); l++; } TCL_DTRACE_PROC_ARGS(a[0], a[1], a[2], a[3], a[4], a[5], a[6], a[7], a[8], a[9]); } if (TCL_DTRACE_PROC_INFO_ENABLED() && iPtr->cmdFramePtr) { Tcl_Obj *info = TclInfoFrame(interp, iPtr->cmdFramePtr); const char *a[6]; int i[2]; TclDTraceInfo(info, a, i); TCL_DTRACE_PROC_INFO(a[0], a[1], a[2], a[3], i[0], i[1], a[4], a[5]); TclDecrRefCount(info); } if (TCL_DTRACE_PROC_ENTRY_ENABLED()) { int l = iPtr->varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame & FRAME_IS_LAMBDA ? 1 : 0; TCL_DTRACE_PROC_ENTRY(l < iPtr->varFramePtr->objc ? TclGetString(iPtr->varFramePtr->objv[l]) : NULL, iPtr->varFramePtr->objc - l - 1, (Tcl_Obj **)(iPtr->varFramePtr->objv + l + 1)); } if (TCL_DTRACE_PROC_ENTRY_ENABLED()) { int l = iPtr->varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame & FRAME_IS_LAMBDA ? 1 : 0; TCL_DTRACE_PROC_ENTRY(l < iPtr->varFramePtr->objc ? TclGetString(iPtr->varFramePtr->objv[l]) : NULL, iPtr->varFramePtr->objc - l - 1, (Tcl_Obj **)(iPtr->varFramePtr->objv + l + 1)); } #endif /* USE_DTRACE */ /* * Invoke the commands in the procedure's body. */ procPtr->refCount++; ByteCodeGetInternalRep(procPtr->bodyPtr, &tclByteCodeType, codePtr); TclNRAddCallback(interp, InterpProcNR2, procNameObj, errorProc, NULL, NULL); return TclNRExecuteByteCode(interp, codePtr); } static int InterpProcNR2( ClientData data[], Tcl_Interp *interp, int result) { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Proc *procPtr = iPtr->varFramePtr->procPtr; CallFrame *freePtr; Tcl_Obj *procNameObj = (Tcl_Obj *)data[0]; ProcErrorProc *errorProc = (ProcErrorProc *)data[1]; if (TCL_DTRACE_PROC_RETURN_ENABLED()) { int l = iPtr->varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame & FRAME_IS_LAMBDA ? 1 : 0; TCL_DTRACE_PROC_RETURN(l < iPtr->varFramePtr->objc ? TclGetString(iPtr->varFramePtr->objv[l]) : NULL, result); } if (procPtr->refCount-- <= 1) { TclProcCleanupProc(procPtr); } /* * Free the stack-allocated compiled locals and CallFrame. It is important * to pop the call frame without freeing it first: the compiledLocals * cannot be freed before the frame is popped, as the local variables must * be deleted. But the compiledLocals must be freed first, as they were * allocated later on the stack. */ if (result != TCL_OK) { goto process; } done: if (TCL_DTRACE_PROC_RESULT_ENABLED()) { int l = iPtr->varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame & FRAME_IS_LAMBDA ? 1 : 0; Tcl_Obj *r = Tcl_GetObjResult(interp); TCL_DTRACE_PROC_RESULT(l < iPtr->varFramePtr->objc ? TclGetString(iPtr->varFramePtr->objv[l]) : NULL, result, TclGetString(r), r); } freePtr = iPtr->framePtr; Tcl_PopCallFrame(interp); /* Pop but do not free. */ TclStackFree(interp, freePtr->compiledLocals); /* Free compiledLocals. */ TclStackFree(interp, freePtr); /* Free CallFrame. */ return result; /* * Process any non-TCL_OK result code. */ process: switch (result) { case TCL_RETURN: /* * If it is a 'return', do the TIP#90 processing now. */ result = TclUpdateReturnInfo((Interp *) interp); break; case TCL_CONTINUE: case TCL_BREAK: /* * It's an error to get to this point from a 'break' or 'continue', so * transform to an error now. */ Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "invoked \"%s\" outside of a loop", ((result == TCL_BREAK) ? "break" : "continue"))); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "RESULT", "UNEXPECTED", NULL); result = TCL_ERROR; /* FALLTHRU */ case TCL_ERROR: /* * Now it _must_ be an error, so we need to log it as such. This means * filling out the error trace. Luckily, we just hand this off to the * function handed to us as an argument. */ errorProc(interp, procNameObj); } goto done; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclProcCompileProc -- * * Called just before a procedure is executed to compile the body to byte * codes. If the type of the body is not "byte code" or if the compile * conditions have changed (namespace context, epoch counters, etc.) then * the body is recompiled. Otherwise, this function does nothing. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * May change the internal representation of the body object to compiled * code. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclProcCompileProc( Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Interpreter containing procedure. */ Proc *procPtr, /* Data associated with procedure. */ Tcl_Obj *bodyPtr, /* Body of proc. (Usually procPtr->bodyPtr, * but could be any code fragment compiled in * the context of this procedure.) */ Namespace *nsPtr, /* Namespace containing procedure. */ const char *description, /* string describing this body of code. */ const char *procName) /* Name of this procedure. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_CallFrame *framePtr; ByteCode *codePtr; ByteCodeGetInternalRep(bodyPtr, &tclByteCodeType, codePtr); /* * If necessary, compile the procedure's body. The compiler will allocate * frame slots for the procedure's non-argument local variables. If the * ByteCode already exists, make sure it hasn't been invalidated by * someone redefining a core command (this might make the compiled code * wrong). Also, if the code was compiled in/for a different interpreter, * we recompile it. Note that compiling the body might increase * procPtr->numCompiledLocals if new local variables are found while * compiling. * * Precompiled procedure bodies, however, are immutable and therefore they * are not recompiled, even if things have changed. */ if (codePtr != NULL) { if (((Interp *) *codePtr->interpHandle == iPtr) && (codePtr->compileEpoch == iPtr->compileEpoch) && (codePtr->nsPtr == nsPtr) && (codePtr->nsEpoch == nsPtr->resolverEpoch)) { return TCL_OK; } if (codePtr->flags & TCL_BYTECODE_PRECOMPILED) { if ((Interp *) *codePtr->interpHandle != iPtr) { Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_NewStringObj( "a precompiled script jumped interps", -1)); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "OPERATION", "PROC", "CROSSINTERPBYTECODE", NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } codePtr->compileEpoch = iPtr->compileEpoch; codePtr->nsPtr = nsPtr; } else { Tcl_StoreInternalRep(bodyPtr, &tclByteCodeType, NULL); codePtr = NULL; } } if (codePtr == NULL) { Tcl_HashEntry *hePtr; #ifdef TCL_COMPILE_DEBUG if (tclTraceCompile >= 1) { /* * Display a line summarizing the top level command we are about * to compile. */ Tcl_Obj *message; TclNewLiteralStringObj(message, "Compiling "); Tcl_IncrRefCount(message); Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(message, description, " \"", NULL); Tcl_AppendLimitedToObj(message, procName, -1, 50, NULL); fprintf(stdout, "%s\"\n", TclGetString(message)); Tcl_DecrRefCount(message); } #else (void)description; (void)procName; #endif /* * Plug the current procPtr into the interpreter and coerce the code * body to byte codes. The interpreter needs to know which proc it's * compiling so that it can access its list of compiled locals. * * TRICKY NOTE: Be careful to push a call frame with the proper * namespace context, so that the byte codes are compiled in the * appropriate class context. */ iPtr->compiledProcPtr = procPtr; if (procPtr->numCompiledLocals > procPtr->numArgs) { CompiledLocal *clPtr = procPtr->firstLocalPtr; CompiledLocal *lastPtr = NULL; int i, numArgs = procPtr->numArgs; for (i = 0; i < numArgs; i++) { lastPtr = clPtr; clPtr = clPtr->nextPtr; } if (lastPtr) { lastPtr->nextPtr = NULL; } else { procPtr->firstLocalPtr = NULL; } procPtr->lastLocalPtr = lastPtr; while (clPtr) { CompiledLocal *toFree = clPtr; clPtr = clPtr->nextPtr; if (toFree->resolveInfo) { if (toFree->resolveInfo->deleteProc) { toFree->resolveInfo->deleteProc(toFree->resolveInfo); } else { ckfree(toFree->resolveInfo); } } ckfree(toFree); } procPtr->numCompiledLocals = procPtr->numArgs; } (void) TclPushStackFrame(interp, &framePtr, (Tcl_Namespace *) nsPtr, /* isProcCallFrame */ 0); /* * TIP #280: We get the invoking context from the cmdFrame which * was saved by 'Tcl_ProcObjCmd' (using linePBodyPtr). */ hePtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(iPtr->linePBodyPtr, (char *) procPtr); /* * Constructed saved frame has body as word 0. See Tcl_ProcObjCmd. */ iPtr->invokeWord = 0; iPtr->invokeCmdFramePtr = hePtr ? (CmdFrame *)Tcl_GetHashValue(hePtr) : NULL; TclSetByteCodeFromAny(interp, bodyPtr, NULL, NULL); iPtr->invokeCmdFramePtr = NULL; TclPopStackFrame(interp); } else if (codePtr->nsEpoch != nsPtr->resolverEpoch) { /* * The resolver epoch has changed, but we only need to invalidate the * resolver cache. */ codePtr->nsEpoch = nsPtr->resolverEpoch; codePtr->flags |= TCL_BYTECODE_RESOLVE_VARS; } return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * MakeProcError -- * * Function called by TclObjInterpProc to create the stack information * upon an error from a procedure. * * Results: * The interpreter's error info trace is set to a value that supplements * the error code. * * Side effects: * none. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void MakeProcError( Tcl_Interp *interp, /* The interpreter in which the procedure was * called. */ Tcl_Obj *procNameObj) /* Name of the procedure. Used for error * messages and trace information. */ { int overflow, limit = 60, nameLen; const char *procName = TclGetStringFromObj(procNameObj, &nameLen); overflow = (nameLen > limit); Tcl_AppendObjToErrorInfo(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "\n (procedure \"%.*s%s\" line %d)", (overflow ? limit : nameLen), procName, (overflow ? "..." : ""), Tcl_GetErrorLine(interp))); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclProcDeleteProc -- * * This function is invoked just before a command procedure is removed * from an interpreter. Its job is to release all the resources allocated * to the procedure. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Memory gets freed, unless the procedure is actively being executed. * In this case the cleanup is delayed until the last call to the current * procedure completes. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclProcDeleteProc( ClientData clientData) /* Procedure to be deleted. */ { Proc *procPtr = (Proc *)clientData; if (procPtr->refCount-- <= 1) { TclProcCleanupProc(procPtr); } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclProcCleanupProc -- * * This function does all the real work of freeing up a Proc structure. * It's called only when the structure's reference count becomes zero. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Memory gets freed. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclProcCleanupProc( Proc *procPtr) /* Procedure to be deleted. */ { CompiledLocal *localPtr; Tcl_Obj *bodyPtr = procPtr->bodyPtr; Tcl_Obj *defPtr; Tcl_ResolvedVarInfo *resVarInfo; Tcl_HashEntry *hePtr = NULL; CmdFrame *cfPtr = NULL; Interp *iPtr = procPtr->iPtr; if (bodyPtr != NULL) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(bodyPtr); } for (localPtr = procPtr->firstLocalPtr; localPtr != NULL; ) { CompiledLocal *nextPtr = localPtr->nextPtr; resVarInfo = localPtr->resolveInfo; if (resVarInfo) { if (resVarInfo->deleteProc) { resVarInfo->deleteProc(resVarInfo); } else { ckfree(resVarInfo); } } if (localPtr->defValuePtr != NULL) { defPtr = localPtr->defValuePtr; Tcl_DecrRefCount(defPtr); } ckfree(localPtr); localPtr = nextPtr; } ckfree(procPtr); /* * TIP #280: Release the location data associated with this Proc * structure, if any. The interpreter may not exist (For example for * procbody structures created by tbcload. */ if (iPtr == NULL) { return; } hePtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(iPtr->linePBodyPtr, (char *) procPtr); if (!hePtr) { return; } cfPtr = (CmdFrame *)Tcl_GetHashValue(hePtr); if (cfPtr) { if (cfPtr->type == TCL_LOCATION_SOURCE) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(cfPtr->data.eval.path); cfPtr->data.eval.path = NULL; } ckfree(cfPtr->line); cfPtr->line = NULL; ckfree(cfPtr); } Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(hePtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclUpdateReturnInfo -- * * This function is called when procedures return, and at other points * where the TCL_RETURN code is used. It examines the returnLevel and * returnCode to determine the real return status. * * Results: * The return value is the true completion code to use for the procedure * or script, instead of TCL_RETURN. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclUpdateReturnInfo( Interp *iPtr) /* Interpreter for which TCL_RETURN exception * is being processed. */ { int code = TCL_RETURN; iPtr->returnLevel--; if (iPtr->returnLevel < 0) { Tcl_Panic("TclUpdateReturnInfo: negative return level"); } if (iPtr->returnLevel == 0) { /* * Now we've reached the level to return the requested -code. * Since iPtr->returnLevel and iPtr->returnCode have completed * their task, we now reset them to default values so that any * bare "return TCL_RETURN" that may follow will work [Bug 2152286]. */ code = iPtr->returnCode; iPtr->returnLevel = 1; iPtr->returnCode = TCL_OK; if (code == TCL_ERROR) { iPtr->flags |= ERR_LEGACY_COPY; } } return code; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclGetObjInterpProc -- * * Returns a pointer to the TclObjInterpProc function; this is different * from the value obtained from the TclObjInterpProc reference on systems * like Windows where import and export versions of a function exported * by a DLL exist. * * Results: * Returns the internal address of the TclObjInterpProc function. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ TclObjCmdProcType TclGetObjInterpProc(void) { return (TclObjCmdProcType) TclObjInterpProc; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclNewProcBodyObj -- * * Creates a new object, of type "procbody", whose internal * representation is the given Proc struct. The newly created object's * reference count is 0. * * Results: * Returns a pointer to a newly allocated Tcl_Obj, NULL on error. * * Side effects: * The reference count in the ByteCode attached to the Proc is bumped up * by one, since the internal rep stores a pointer to it. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * TclNewProcBodyObj( Proc *procPtr) /* the Proc struct to store as the internal * representation. */ { Tcl_Obj *objPtr; if (!procPtr) { return NULL; } TclNewObj(objPtr); if (objPtr) { ProcSetInternalRep(objPtr, procPtr); } return objPtr; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * ProcBodyDup -- * * Tcl_ObjType's Dup function for the proc body object. Bumps the * reference count on the Proc stored in the internal representation. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Sets up the object in dupPtr to be a duplicate of the one in srcPtr. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void ProcBodyDup( Tcl_Obj *srcPtr, /* Object to copy. */ Tcl_Obj *dupPtr) /* Target object for the duplication. */ { Proc *procPtr; ProcGetInternalRep(srcPtr, procPtr); ProcSetInternalRep(dupPtr, procPtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * ProcBodyFree -- * * Tcl_ObjType's Free function for the proc body object. The reference * count on its Proc struct is decreased by 1; if the count reaches 0, * the proc is freed. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * If the reference count on the Proc struct reaches 0, the struct is * freed. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void ProcBodyFree( Tcl_Obj *objPtr) /* The object to clean up. */ { Proc *procPtr; ProcGetInternalRep(objPtr, procPtr); if (procPtr->refCount-- <= 1) { TclProcCleanupProc(procPtr); } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * DupLambdaInternalRep, FreeLambdaInternalRep, SetLambdaFromAny -- * * How to manage the internal representations of lambda term objects. * Syntactically they look like a two- or three-element list, where the * first element is the formal arguments, the second is the the body, and * the (optional) third is the namespace to execute the lambda term * within (the global namespace is assumed if it is absent). * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void DupLambdaInternalRep( Tcl_Obj *srcPtr, /* Object with internal rep to copy. */ Tcl_Obj *copyPtr) /* Object with internal rep to set. */ { Proc *procPtr; Tcl_Obj *nsObjPtr; LambdaGetInternalRep(srcPtr, procPtr, nsObjPtr); assert(procPtr != NULL); procPtr->refCount++; LambdaSetInternalRep(copyPtr, procPtr, nsObjPtr); } static void FreeLambdaInternalRep( Tcl_Obj *objPtr) /* CmdName object with internal representation * to free. */ { Proc *procPtr; Tcl_Obj *nsObjPtr; LambdaGetInternalRep(objPtr, procPtr, nsObjPtr); assert(procPtr != NULL); if (procPtr->refCount-- <= 1) { TclProcCleanupProc(procPtr); } TclDecrRefCount(nsObjPtr); } static int SetLambdaFromAny( Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Used for error reporting if not NULL. */ Tcl_Obj *objPtr) /* The object to convert. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; const char *name; Tcl_Obj *argsPtr, *bodyPtr, *nsObjPtr, **objv; int isNew, objc, result; CmdFrame *cfPtr = NULL; Proc *procPtr; if (interp == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Convert objPtr to list type first; if it cannot be converted, or if its * length is not 2, then it cannot be converted to lambdaType. */ result = TclListObjGetElements(NULL, objPtr, &objc, &objv); if ((result != TCL_OK) || ((objc != 2) && (objc != 3))) { Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "can't interpret \"%s\" as a lambda expression", Tcl_GetString(objPtr))); Tcl_SetErrorCode(interp, "TCL", "VALUE", "LAMBDA", NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } argsPtr = objv[0]; bodyPtr = objv[1]; /* * Create and initialize the Proc struct. The cmdPtr field is set to NULL * to signal that this is an anonymous function. */ name = TclGetString(objPtr); if (TclCreateProc(interp, /*ignored nsPtr*/ NULL, name, argsPtr, bodyPtr, &procPtr) != TCL_OK) { Tcl_AppendObjToErrorInfo(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "\n (parsing lambda expression \"%s\")", name)); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * CAREFUL: TclCreateProc returns refCount==1! [Bug 1578454] * procPtr->refCount = 1; */ procPtr->cmdPtr = NULL; /* * TIP #280: Remember the line the apply body is starting on. In a Byte * code context we ask the engine to provide us with the necessary * information. This is for the initialization of the byte code compiler * when the body is used for the first time. * * NOTE: The body is the second word in the 'objPtr'. Its location, * accessible through 'context.line[1]' (see below) is therefore only the * first approximation of the actual line the body is on. We have to use * the string rep of the 'objPtr' to determine the exact line. This is * available already through 'name'. Use 'TclListLines', see 'switch' * (tclCmdMZ.c). * * This code is nearly identical to the #280 code in Tcl_ProcObjCmd, see * this file. The differences are the different index of the body in the * line array of the context, and the special processing mentioned in the * previous paragraph to track into the list. Find a way to factor the * common elements into a single function. */ if (iPtr->cmdFramePtr) { CmdFrame *contextPtr = (CmdFrame *)TclStackAlloc(interp, sizeof(CmdFrame)); *contextPtr = *iPtr->cmdFramePtr; if (contextPtr->type == TCL_LOCATION_BC) { /* * Retrieve the source context from the bytecode. This call * accounts for the reference to the source file, if any, held in * 'context.data.eval.path'. */ TclGetSrcInfoForPc(contextPtr); } else if (contextPtr->type == TCL_LOCATION_SOURCE) { /* * We created a new reference to the source file path name when we * created 'context' above. Account for the reference. */ Tcl_IncrRefCount(contextPtr->data.eval.path); } if (contextPtr->type == TCL_LOCATION_SOURCE) { /* * We can record source location within a lambda only if the body * was not created by substitution. */ if (contextPtr->line && (contextPtr->nline >= 2) && (contextPtr->line[1] >= 0)) { int buf[2]; /* * Move from approximation (line of list cmd word) to actual * location (line of 2nd list element). */ cfPtr = (CmdFrame *)ckalloc(sizeof(CmdFrame)); TclListLines(objPtr, contextPtr->line[1], 2, buf, NULL); cfPtr->level = -1; cfPtr->type = contextPtr->type; cfPtr->line = (int *)ckalloc(sizeof(int)); cfPtr->line[0] = buf[1]; cfPtr->nline = 1; cfPtr->framePtr = NULL; cfPtr->nextPtr = NULL; cfPtr->data.eval.path = contextPtr->data.eval.path; Tcl_IncrRefCount(cfPtr->data.eval.path); cfPtr->cmd = NULL; cfPtr->len = 0; } /* * 'contextPtr' is going out of scope. Release the reference that * it's holding to the source file path */ Tcl_DecrRefCount(contextPtr->data.eval.path); } TclStackFree(interp, contextPtr); } Tcl_SetHashValue(Tcl_CreateHashEntry(iPtr->linePBodyPtr, procPtr, &isNew), cfPtr); /* * Set the namespace for this lambda: given by objv[2] understood as a * global reference, or else global per default. */ if (objc == 2) { TclNewLiteralStringObj(nsObjPtr, "::"); } else { const char *nsName = TclGetString(objv[2]); if ((*nsName != ':') || (*(nsName+1) != ':')) { TclNewLiteralStringObj(nsObjPtr, "::"); Tcl_AppendObjToObj(nsObjPtr, objv[2]); } else { nsObjPtr = objv[2]; } } /* * Free the list internalrep of objPtr - this will free argsPtr, but * bodyPtr retains a reference from the Proc structure. Then finish the * conversion to lambdaType. */ LambdaSetInternalRep(objPtr, procPtr, nsObjPtr); return TCL_OK; } Proc * TclGetLambdaFromObj( Tcl_Interp *interp, Tcl_Obj *objPtr, Tcl_Obj **nsObjPtrPtr) { Proc *procPtr; Tcl_Obj *nsObjPtr; LambdaGetInternalRep(objPtr, procPtr, nsObjPtr); if (procPtr == NULL) { if (SetLambdaFromAny(interp, objPtr) != TCL_OK) { return NULL; } LambdaGetInternalRep(objPtr, procPtr, nsObjPtr); } assert(procPtr != NULL); if (procPtr->iPtr != (Interp *)interp) { return NULL; } *nsObjPtrPtr = nsObjPtr; return procPtr; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_ApplyObjCmd -- * * This object-based function is invoked to process the "apply" Tcl * command. See the user documentation for details on what it does. * * Results: * A standard Tcl object result value. * * Side effects: * Depends on the content of the lambda term (i.e., objv[1]). * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_ApplyObjCmd( ClientData clientData, Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Current interpreter. */ int objc, /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *const objv[]) /* Argument objects. */ { return Tcl_NRCallObjProc(interp, TclNRApplyObjCmd, clientData, objc, objv); } int TclNRApplyObjCmd( TCL_UNUSED(ClientData), Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Current interpreter. */ int objc, /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *const objv[]) /* Argument objects. */ { Proc *procPtr = NULL; Tcl_Obj *lambdaPtr, *nsObjPtr; int result; Tcl_Namespace *nsPtr; ApplyExtraData *extraPtr; if (objc < 2) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "lambdaExpr ?arg ...?"); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Set lambdaPtr, convert it to tclLambdaType in the current interp if * necessary. */ lambdaPtr = objv[1]; procPtr = TclGetLambdaFromObj(interp, lambdaPtr, &nsObjPtr); if (procPtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Push a call frame for the lambda namespace. * Note that TclObjInterpProc() will pop it. */ result = TclGetNamespaceFromObj(interp, nsObjPtr, &nsPtr); if (result != TCL_OK) { return TCL_ERROR; } extraPtr = (ApplyExtraData *)TclStackAlloc(interp, sizeof(ApplyExtraData)); memset(&extraPtr->cmd, 0, sizeof(Command)); procPtr->cmdPtr = &extraPtr->cmd; extraPtr->cmd.nsPtr = (Namespace *) nsPtr; /* * TIP#280 (semi-)HACK! * * Using cmd.clientData to tell [info frame] how to render the lambdaPtr. * The InfoFrameCmd will detect this case by testing cmd.hPtr for NULL. * This condition holds here because of the memset() above, and nowhere * else (in the core). Regular commands always have a valid hPtr, and * lambda's never. */ extraPtr->efi.length = 1; extraPtr->efi.fields[0].name = "lambda"; extraPtr->efi.fields[0].proc = NULL; extraPtr->efi.fields[0].clientData = lambdaPtr; extraPtr->cmd.clientData = &extraPtr->efi; result = TclPushProcCallFrame(procPtr, interp, objc, objv, 1); if (result == TCL_OK) { TclNRAddCallback(interp, ApplyNR2, extraPtr, NULL, NULL, NULL); result = TclNRInterpProcCore(interp, objv[1], 2, &MakeLambdaError); } return result; } static int ApplyNR2( ClientData data[], Tcl_Interp *interp, int result) { ApplyExtraData *extraPtr = (ApplyExtraData *)data[0]; TclStackFree(interp, extraPtr); return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * MakeLambdaError -- * * Function called by TclObjInterpProc to create the stack information * upon an error from a lambda term. * * Results: * The interpreter's error info trace is set to a value that supplements * the error code. * * Side effects: * none. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void MakeLambdaError( Tcl_Interp *interp, /* The interpreter in which the procedure was * called. */ Tcl_Obj *procNameObj) /* Name of the procedure. Used for error * messages and trace information. */ { int overflow, limit = 60, nameLen; const char *procName = TclGetStringFromObj(procNameObj, &nameLen); overflow = (nameLen > limit); Tcl_AppendObjToErrorInfo(interp, Tcl_ObjPrintf( "\n (lambda term \"%.*s%s\" line %d)", (overflow ? limit : nameLen), procName, (overflow ? "..." : ""), Tcl_GetErrorLine(interp))); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclGetCmdFrameForProcedure -- * * How to get the CmdFrame information for a procedure. * * Results: * A pointer to the CmdFrame (only guaranteed to be valid until the next * Tcl command is processed or the interpreter's state is otherwise * modified) or a NULL if the information is not available. * * Side effects: * none. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ CmdFrame * TclGetCmdFrameForProcedure( Proc *procPtr) /* The procedure whose cmd-frame is to be * looked up. */ { Tcl_HashEntry *hePtr; if (procPtr == NULL || procPtr->iPtr == NULL) { return NULL; } hePtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(procPtr->iPtr->linePBodyPtr, procPtr); if (hePtr == NULL) { return NULL; } return (CmdFrame *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hePtr); } /* * Local Variables: * mode: c * c-basic-offset: 4 * fill-column: 78 * End: */