/* * tclVar.c -- * * This file contains routines that implement Tcl variables * (both scalars and arrays). * * The implementation of arrays is modelled after an initial * implementation by Mark Diekhans and Karl Lehenbauer. * * 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 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: tclVar.c,v 1.92 2004/09/29 22:17:28 dkf Exp $ */ #ifdef STDC_HEADERS #include #else typedef int ptrdiff_t; #endif #include "tclInt.h" /* * The strings below are used to indicate what went wrong when a * variable access is denied. */ static CONST char *noSuchVar = "no such variable"; static CONST char *isArray = "variable is array"; static CONST char *needArray = "variable isn't array"; static CONST char *noSuchElement = "no such element in array"; static CONST char *danglingElement = "upvar refers to element in deleted array"; static CONST char *danglingVar = "upvar refers to variable in deleted namespace"; static CONST char *badNamespace = "parent namespace doesn't exist"; static CONST char *missingName = "missing variable name"; static CONST char *isArrayElement = "name refers to an element in an array"; /* * Forward references to procedures defined later in this file: */ static void DeleteSearches _ANSI_ARGS_((Var *arrayVarPtr)); static void DeleteArray _ANSI_ARGS_((Interp *iPtr, CONST char *arrayName, Var *varPtr, int flags)); static int ObjMakeUpvar _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp, CallFrame *framePtr, Tcl_Obj *otherP1Ptr, CONST char *otherP2, CONST int otherFlags, CONST char *myName, int myFlags, int index)); static Var * NewVar _ANSI_ARGS_((void)); static ArraySearch * ParseSearchId _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp, CONST Var *varPtr, CONST char *varName, Tcl_Obj *handleObj)); static int SetArraySearchObj _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp, Tcl_Obj *objPtr)); /* * Functions defined in this file that may be exported in the future * for use by the bytecode compiler and engine or to the public interface. */ Var * TclLookupSimpleVar _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp, CONST char *varName, int flags, CONST int create, CONST char **errMsgPtr, int *indexPtr)); int TclObjUnsetVar2 _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp, Tcl_Obj *part1Ptr, CONST char *part2, int flags)); static Tcl_DupInternalRepProc DupLocalVarName; static Tcl_FreeInternalRepProc FreeParsedVarName; static Tcl_DupInternalRepProc DupParsedVarName; static Tcl_UpdateStringProc UpdateParsedVarName; static Tcl_UpdateStringProc PanicOnUpdateVarName; static Tcl_SetFromAnyProc PanicOnSetVarName; /* * Types of Tcl_Objs used to cache variable lookups. * * * localVarName - INTERNALREP DEFINITION: * longValue = index into locals table * * nsVarName - INTERNALREP DEFINITION: * twoPtrValue.ptr1: pointer to the namespace containing the * reference * twoPtrValue.ptr2: pointer to the corresponding Var * * parsedVarName - INTERNALREP DEFINITION: * twoPtrValue.ptr1 = pointer to the array name Tcl_Obj, * or NULL if it is a scalar variable * twoPtrValue.ptr2 = pointer to the element name string * (owned by this Tcl_Obj), or NULL if * it is a scalar variable */ Tcl_ObjType tclLocalVarNameType = { "localVarName", NULL, DupLocalVarName, PanicOnUpdateVarName, PanicOnSetVarName }; /* * Caching of namespace variables disabled: no simple way was found to * avoid interfering with the resolver's idea of variable existence. * A cached varName may keep a variable's name in the namespace's hash * table, which is the resolver's criterion for existence (see test * namespace-17.10). */ #define ENABLE_NS_VARNAME_CACHING 0 #if ENABLE_NS_VARNAME_CACHING static Tcl_FreeInternalRepProc FreeNsVarName; static Tcl_DupInternalRepProc DupNsVarName; Tcl_ObjType tclNsVarNameType = { "namespaceVarName", FreeNsVarName, DupNsVarName, PanicOnUpdateVarName, PanicOnSetVarName }; #endif Tcl_ObjType tclParsedVarNameType = { "parsedVarName", FreeParsedVarName, DupParsedVarName, UpdateParsedVarName, PanicOnSetVarName }; /* * Type of Tcl_Objs used to speed up array searches. * * INTERNALREP DEFINITION: * twoPtrValue.ptr1 = searchIdNumber as offset from (char*)NULL * twoPtrValue.ptr2 = variableNameStartInString as offset from (char*)NULL * * Note that the value stored in ptr2 is the offset into the string of * the start of the variable name and not the address of the variable * name itself, as this can be safely copied. */ Tcl_ObjType tclArraySearchType = { "array search", NULL, NULL, NULL, SetArraySearchObj }; /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclLookupVar -- * * This procedure is used to locate a variable given its name(s). It * has been mostly superseded by TclObjLookupVar, it is now only used * by the string-based interfaces. It is kept in tcl8.4 mainly because * it is in the internal stubs table, so that some extension may be * calling it. * * Results: * The return value is a pointer to the variable structure indicated by * part1 and part2, or NULL if the variable couldn't be found. If the * variable is found, *arrayPtrPtr is filled in with the address of the * variable structure for the array that contains the variable (or NULL * if the variable is a scalar). If the variable can't be found and * either createPart1 or createPart2 are 1, a new as-yet-undefined * (VAR_UNDEFINED) variable structure is created, entered into a hash * table, and returned. * * If the variable isn't found and creation wasn't specified, or some * other error occurs, NULL is returned and an error message is left in * the interp's result if TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG is set in flags. * * Note: it's possible for the variable returned to be VAR_UNDEFINED * even if createPart1 or createPart2 are 1 (these only cause the hash * table entry or array to be created). For example, the variable might * be a global that has been unset but is still referenced by a * procedure, or a variable that has been unset but it only being kept * in existence (if VAR_UNDEFINED) by a trace. * * Side effects: * New hashtable entries may be created if createPart1 or createPart2 * are 1. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Var * TclLookupVar(interp, part1, part2, flags, msg, createPart1, createPart2, arrayPtrPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to use for lookup. */ CONST char *part1; /* If part2 isn't NULL, this is the name of * an array. Otherwise, this * is a full variable name that could * include a parenthesized array element. */ CONST char *part2; /* Name of element within array, or NULL. */ int flags; /* Only TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, * and TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG bits matter. */ CONST char *msg; /* Verb to use in error messages, e.g. * "read" or "set". Only needed if * TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG is set in flags. */ int createPart1; /* If 1, create hash table entry for part 1 * of name, if it doesn't already exist. If * 0, return error if it doesn't exist. */ int createPart2; /* If 1, create hash table entry for part 2 * of name, if it doesn't already exist. If * 0, return error if it doesn't exist. */ Var **arrayPtrPtr; /* If the name refers to an element of an * array, *arrayPtrPtr gets filled in with * address of array variable. Otherwise * this is set to NULL. */ { Var *varPtr; CONST char *elName; /* Name of array element or NULL; may be * same as part2, or may be openParen+1. */ int openParen, closeParen; /* If this procedure parses a name into * array and index, these are the offsets to * the parens around the index. Otherwise * they are -1. */ register CONST char *p; CONST char *errMsg = NULL; int index; #define VAR_NAME_BUF_SIZE 26 char buffer[VAR_NAME_BUF_SIZE]; char *newVarName = buffer; varPtr = NULL; *arrayPtrPtr = NULL; openParen = closeParen = -1; /* * Parse part1 into array name and index. * Always check if part1 is an array element name and allow it only if * part2 is not given. * (if one does not care about creating array elements that can't be used * from tcl, and prefer slightly better performance, one can put * the following in an if (part2 == NULL) { ... } block and remove * the part2's test and error reporting or move that code in array set) */ elName = part2; for (p = part1; *p ; p++) { if (*p == '(') { openParen = p - part1; do { p++; } while (*p != '\0'); p--; if (*p == ')') { if (part2 != NULL) { if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, msg, needArray); } return NULL; } closeParen = p - part1; } else { openParen = -1; } break; } } if (openParen != -1) { if (closeParen >= VAR_NAME_BUF_SIZE) { newVarName = ckalloc((unsigned int) (closeParen+1)); } memcpy(newVarName, part1, (unsigned int) closeParen); newVarName[openParen] = '\0'; newVarName[closeParen] = '\0'; part1 = newVarName; elName = newVarName + openParen + 1; } varPtr = TclLookupSimpleVar(interp, part1, flags, createPart1, &errMsg, &index); if (varPtr == NULL) { if ((errMsg != NULL) && (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG)) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, elName, msg, errMsg); } } else { while (TclIsVarLink(varPtr)) { varPtr = varPtr->value.linkPtr; } if (elName != NULL) { *arrayPtrPtr = varPtr; varPtr = TclLookupArrayElement(interp, part1, elName, flags, msg, createPart1, createPart2, varPtr); } } if (newVarName != buffer) { ckfree(newVarName); } return varPtr; #undef VAR_NAME_BUF_SIZE } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclObjLookupVar -- * * This procedure is used by virtually all of the variable code to * locate a variable given its name(s). The parsing into array/element * components and (if possible) the lookup results are cached in * part1Ptr, which is converted to one of the varNameTypes. * * Results: * The return value is a pointer to the variable structure indicated by * part1Ptr and part2, or NULL if the variable couldn't be found. If * the variable is found, *arrayPtrPtr is filled with the address of the * variable structure for the array that contains the variable (or NULL * if the variable is a scalar). If the variable can't be found and * either createPart1 or createPart2 are 1, a new as-yet-undefined * (VAR_UNDEFINED) variable structure is created, entered into a hash * table, and returned. * * If the variable isn't found and creation wasn't specified, or some * other error occurs, NULL is returned and an error message is left in * the interp's result if TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG is set in flags. * * Note: it's possible for the variable returned to be VAR_UNDEFINED * even if createPart1 or createPart2 are 1 (these only cause the hash * table entry or array to be created). For example, the variable might * be a global that has been unset but is still referenced by a * procedure, or a variable that has been unset but it only being kept * in existence (if VAR_UNDEFINED) by a trace. * * Side effects: * New hashtable entries may be created if createPart1 or createPart2 * are 1. * The object part1Ptr is converted to one of tclLocalVarNameType, * tclNsVarNameType or tclParsedVarNameType and caches as much of the * lookup as it can. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Var * TclObjLookupVar(interp, part1Ptr, part2, flags, msg, createPart1, createPart2, arrayPtrPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to use for lookup. */ register Tcl_Obj *part1Ptr; /* If part2 isn't NULL, this is the name * of an array. Otherwise, this is a full * variable name that could include a parenthesized * array element. */ CONST char *part2; /* Name of element within array, or NULL. */ int flags; /* Only TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, * and TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG bits matter. */ CONST char *msg; /* Verb to use in error messages, e.g. * "read" or "set". Only needed if * TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG is set in flags. */ CONST int createPart1; /* If 1, create hash table entry for part 1 * of name, if it doesn't already exist. If * 0, return error if it doesn't exist. */ CONST int createPart2; /* If 1, create hash table entry for part 2 * of name, if it doesn't already exist. If * 0, return error if it doesn't exist. */ Var **arrayPtrPtr; /* If the name refers to an element of an * array, *arrayPtrPtr gets filled in with * address of array variable. Otherwise * this is set to NULL. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; register Var *varPtr; /* Points to the variable's in-frame Var * structure. */ char *part1; int index, len1, len2; int parsed = 0; Tcl_Obj *objPtr; Tcl_ObjType *typePtr = part1Ptr->typePtr; CONST char *errMsg = NULL; CallFrame *varFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; Namespace *nsPtr; /* * If part1Ptr is a tclParsedVarNameType, separate it into the * pre-parsed parts. */ *arrayPtrPtr = NULL; if (typePtr == &tclParsedVarNameType) { if (part1Ptr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1 != NULL) { if (part2 != NULL) { /* * ERROR: part1Ptr is already an array element, cannot * specify a part2. */ if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { part1 = TclGetString(part1Ptr); TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, msg, needArray); } return NULL; } part2 = (char *) part1Ptr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2; part1Ptr = (Tcl_Obj *) part1Ptr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1; typePtr = part1Ptr->typePtr; } parsed = 1; } part1 = Tcl_GetStringFromObj(part1Ptr, &len1); nsPtr = ((varFramePtr == NULL)? iPtr->globalNsPtr : varFramePtr->nsPtr); if (nsPtr->varResProc != NULL || iPtr->resolverPtr != NULL) { goto doParse; } if (typePtr == &tclLocalVarNameType) { int localIndex = (int) part1Ptr->internalRep.longValue; if ((varFramePtr != NULL) && varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame && !(flags & (TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY | TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY)) && (localIndex < varFramePtr->numCompiledLocals)) { /* * use the cached index if the names coincide. */ varPtr = &(varFramePtr->compiledLocals[localIndex]); if ((varPtr->name != NULL) && (strcmp(part1, varPtr->name) == 0)) { goto donePart1; } } goto doneParsing; #if ENABLE_NS_VARNAME_CACHING } else if (typePtr == &tclNsVarNameType) { Namespace *cachedNsPtr; int useGlobal, useReference; varPtr = (Var *) part1Ptr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2; cachedNsPtr = (Namespace *) part1Ptr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1; useGlobal = (cachedNsPtr == iPtr->globalNsPtr) && ((flags & TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY) || ((*part1 == ':') && (*(part1+1) == ':')) || (varFramePtr == NULL) || (!varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame && (nsPtr == iPtr->globalNsPtr))); useReference = useGlobal || ((cachedNsPtr == nsPtr) && ((flags & TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY) || (varFramePtr && !varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame && !(flags & TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY) /* careful: an undefined ns variable could * be hiding a valid global reference. */ && !(varPtr->flags & VAR_UNDEFINED)))); if (useReference && (varPtr->hPtr != NULL)) { /* * A straight global or namespace reference, use it. It isn't * so simple to deal with 'implicit' namespace references, i.e., * those where the reference could be to either a namespace * or a global variable. Those we lookup again. * * If (varPtr->hPtr == NULL), this might be a reference to a * variable in a deleted namespace, kept alive by e.g. part1Ptr. * We could conceivably be so unlucky that a new namespace was * created at the same address as the deleted one, so to be * safe we test for a valid hPtr. */ goto donePart1; } goto doneParsing; #endif } doParse: if (!parsed && (*(part1 + len1 - 1) == ')')) { /* * part1Ptr is possibly an unparsed array element. */ register int i; char *newPart2; len2 = -1; for (i = 0; i < len1; i++) { if (*(part1 + i) == '(') { if (part2 != NULL) { if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, msg, needArray); } } /* * part1Ptr points to an array element; first copy * the element name to a new string part2. */ part2 = part1 + i + 1; len2 = len1 - i - 2; len1 = i; newPart2 = ckalloc((unsigned int) (len2+1)); memcpy(newPart2, part2, (unsigned int) len2); *(newPart2+len2) = '\0'; part2 = newPart2; /* * Free the internal rep of the original part1Ptr, now * renamed objPtr, and set it to tclParsedVarNameType. */ objPtr = part1Ptr; TclFreeIntRep(objPtr); objPtr->typePtr = &tclParsedVarNameType; /* * Define a new string object to hold the new part1Ptr, i.e., * the array name. Set the internal rep of objPtr, reset * typePtr and part1 to contain the references to the * array name. */ part1Ptr = Tcl_NewStringObj(part1, len1); Tcl_IncrRefCount(part1Ptr); objPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1 = (VOID *) part1Ptr; objPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2 = (VOID *) part2; typePtr = part1Ptr->typePtr; part1 = TclGetString(part1Ptr); break; } } } doneParsing: /* * part1Ptr is not an array element; look it up, and convert * it to one of the cached types if possible. */ TclFreeIntRep(part1Ptr); part1Ptr->typePtr = NULL; varPtr = TclLookupSimpleVar(interp, part1, flags, createPart1, &errMsg, &index); if (varPtr == NULL) { if ((errMsg != NULL) && (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG)) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, msg, errMsg); } return NULL; } /* * Cache the newly found variable if possible. */ if (index >= 0) { /* * An indexed local variable. */ Proc *procPtr = ((Interp *) interp)->varFramePtr->procPtr; part1Ptr->typePtr = &tclLocalVarNameType; procPtr->refCount++; part1Ptr->internalRep.longValue = (long) index; #if ENABLE_NS_VARNAME_CACHING } else if (index > -3) { /* * A cacheable namespace or global variable. */ Namespace *nsPtr; nsPtr = ((index == -1)? iPtr->globalNsPtr : varFramePtr->nsPtr); varPtr->refCount++; part1Ptr->typePtr = &tclNsVarNameType; part1Ptr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1 = (VOID *) nsPtr; part1Ptr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2 = (VOID *) varPtr; #endif } else { /* * At least mark part1Ptr as already parsed. */ part1Ptr->typePtr = &tclParsedVarNameType; part1Ptr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1 = NULL; part1Ptr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2 = NULL; } donePart1: #if 0 if (varPtr == NULL) { if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { part1 = TclGetString(part1Ptr); TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, msg, "Cached variable reference is NULL."); } return NULL; } #endif while (TclIsVarLink(varPtr)) { varPtr = varPtr->value.linkPtr; } if (part2 != NULL) { /* * Array element sought: look it up. */ part1 = TclGetString(part1Ptr); *arrayPtrPtr = varPtr; varPtr = TclLookupArrayElement(interp, part1, part2, flags, msg, createPart1, createPart2, varPtr); } return varPtr; } /* * This flag bit should not interfere with TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, * or TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG; it signals that the variable lookup is performed for * upvar (or similar) purposes, with slightly different rules: * - Bug #696893 - variable is either proc-local or in the current * namespace; never follow the second (global) resolution path * - Bug #631741 - do not use special namespace or interp resolvers * * It should also not collide with the (deprecated) TCL_PARSE_PART1 flag * (Bug #835020) */ #define LOOKUP_FOR_UPVAR 0x40000 /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclLookupSimpleVar -- * * This procedure is used by to locate a simple variable (i.e., not * an array element) given its name. * * Results: * The return value is a pointer to the variable structure indicated by * varName, or NULL if the variable couldn't be found. If the variable * can't be found and create is 1, a new as-yet-undefined (VAR_UNDEFINED) * variable structure is created, entered into a hash table, and returned. * * If the current CallFrame corresponds to a proc and the variable found is * one of the compiledLocals, its index is placed in *indexPtr. Otherwise, * *indexPtr will be set to (according to the needs of TclObjLookupVar): * -1 a global reference * -2 a reference to a namespace variable * -3 a non-cachable reference, i.e., one of: * . non-indexed local var * . a reference of unknown origin; * . resolution by a namespace or interp resolver * * If the variable isn't found and creation wasn't specified, or some * other error occurs, NULL is returned and the corresponding error * message is left in *errMsgPtr. * * Note: it's possible for the variable returned to be VAR_UNDEFINED * even if create is 1 (this only causes the hash table entry to be * created). For example, the variable might be a global that has been * unset but is still referenced by a procedure, or a variable that has * been unset but it only being kept in existence (if VAR_UNDEFINED) by * a trace. * * Side effects: * A new hashtable entry may be created if create is 1. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Var * TclLookupSimpleVar(interp, varName, flags, create, errMsgPtr, indexPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to use for lookup. */ CONST char *varName; /* This is a simple variable name that could * representa scalar or an array. */ int flags; /* Only TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, * LOOKUP_FOR_UPVAR and TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG bits * matter. */ CONST int create; /* If 1, create hash table entry for varname, * if it doesn't already exist. If 0, return * error if it doesn't exist. */ CONST char **errMsgPtr; int *indexPtr; { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; CallFrame *varFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; /* Points to the procedure call frame whose * variables are currently in use. Same as * the current procedure's frame, if any, * unless an "uplevel" is executing. */ Tcl_HashTable *tablePtr; /* Points to the hashtable, if any, in which * to look up the variable. */ Tcl_Var var; /* Used to search for global names. */ Var *varPtr; /* Points to the Var structure returned for * the variable. */ Namespace *varNsPtr, *cxtNsPtr, *dummy1Ptr, *dummy2Ptr; ResolverScheme *resPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; int new, i, result; varPtr = NULL; varNsPtr = NULL; /* set non-NULL if a nonlocal variable */ *indexPtr = -3; if ((flags & TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY) || iPtr->varFramePtr == NULL) { cxtNsPtr = iPtr->globalNsPtr; } else { cxtNsPtr = iPtr->varFramePtr->nsPtr; } /* * If this namespace has a variable resolver, then give it first * crack at the variable resolution. It may return a Tcl_Var * value, it may signal to continue onward, or it may signal * an error. */ if ((cxtNsPtr->varResProc != NULL || iPtr->resolverPtr != NULL) && !(flags & LOOKUP_FOR_UPVAR)) { resPtr = iPtr->resolverPtr; if (cxtNsPtr->varResProc) { result = (*cxtNsPtr->varResProc)(interp, varName, (Tcl_Namespace *) cxtNsPtr, flags, &var); } else { result = TCL_CONTINUE; } while (result == TCL_CONTINUE && resPtr) { if (resPtr->varResProc) { result = (*resPtr->varResProc)(interp, varName, (Tcl_Namespace *) cxtNsPtr, flags, &var); } resPtr = resPtr->nextPtr; } if (result == TCL_OK) { varPtr = (Var *) var; return varPtr; } else if (result != TCL_CONTINUE) { return NULL; } } /* * Look up varName. Look it up as either a namespace variable or as a * local variable in a procedure call frame (varFramePtr). * Interpret varName as a namespace variable if: * 1) so requested by a TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY or TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY flag, * 2) there is no active frame (we're at the global :: scope), * 3) the active frame was pushed to define the namespace context * for a "namespace eval" or "namespace inscope" command, * 4) the name has namespace qualifiers ("::"s). * Otherwise, if varName is a local variable, search first in the * frame's array of compiler-allocated local variables, then in its * hashtable for runtime-created local variables. * * If create and the variable isn't found, create the variable and, * if necessary, create varFramePtr's local var hashtable. */ if (((flags & (TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY | TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY)) != 0) || (varFramePtr == NULL) || !varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame || (strstr(varName, "::") != NULL)) { CONST char *tail; int lookGlobal; lookGlobal = (flags & TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY) || (cxtNsPtr == iPtr->globalNsPtr) || ((*varName == ':') && (*(varName+1) == ':')); if (lookGlobal) { *indexPtr = -1; flags = (flags | TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY) & ~(TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY|LOOKUP_FOR_UPVAR); } else { if (flags & LOOKUP_FOR_UPVAR) { flags = (flags | TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY) & ~LOOKUP_FOR_UPVAR; } if (flags & TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY) { *indexPtr = -2; } } /* * Don't pass TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG, we may yet create the variable, * or otherwise generate our own error! */ var = Tcl_FindNamespaceVar(interp, varName, (Tcl_Namespace *) cxtNsPtr, flags & ~TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG); if (var != (Tcl_Var) NULL) { varPtr = (Var *) var; } if (varPtr == NULL) { if (create) { /* var wasn't found so create it */ TclGetNamespaceForQualName(interp, varName, cxtNsPtr, flags, &varNsPtr, &dummy1Ptr, &dummy2Ptr, &tail); if (varNsPtr == NULL) { *errMsgPtr = badNamespace; return NULL; } if (tail == NULL) { *errMsgPtr = missingName; return NULL; } hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(&varNsPtr->varTable, tail, &new); varPtr = NewVar(); Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, varPtr); varPtr->hPtr = hPtr; varPtr->nsPtr = varNsPtr; if (lookGlobal) { /* * The variable was created starting from the global * namespace: a global reference is returned even if * it wasn't explicitly requested. */ *indexPtr = -1; } else { *indexPtr = -2; } } else { /* var wasn't found and not to create it */ *errMsgPtr = noSuchVar; return NULL; } } } else { /* local var: look in frame varFramePtr */ Proc *procPtr = varFramePtr->procPtr; int localCt = procPtr->numCompiledLocals; CompiledLocal *localPtr = procPtr->firstLocalPtr; Var *localVarPtr = varFramePtr->compiledLocals; int varNameLen = strlen(varName); for (i = 0; i < localCt; i++) { if (!TclIsVarTemporary(localPtr)) { register char *localName = localVarPtr->name; if ((varName[0] == localName[0]) && (varNameLen == localPtr->nameLength) && (strcmp(varName, localName) == 0)) { *indexPtr = i; return localVarPtr; } } localVarPtr++; localPtr = localPtr->nextPtr; } tablePtr = varFramePtr->varTablePtr; if (create) { if (tablePtr == NULL) { tablePtr = (Tcl_HashTable *) ckalloc(sizeof(Tcl_HashTable)); Tcl_InitHashTable(tablePtr, TCL_STRING_KEYS); varFramePtr->varTablePtr = tablePtr; } hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(tablePtr, varName, &new); if (new) { varPtr = NewVar(); Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, varPtr); varPtr->hPtr = hPtr; varPtr->nsPtr = NULL; /* a local variable */ } else { varPtr = (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); } } else { hPtr = NULL; if (tablePtr != NULL) { hPtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(tablePtr, varName); } if (hPtr == NULL) { *errMsgPtr = noSuchVar; return NULL; } varPtr = (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); } } return varPtr; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclLookupArrayElement -- * * This procedure is used to locate a variable which is in an array's * hashtable given a pointer to the array's Var structure and the * element's name. * * Results: * The return value is a pointer to the variable structure , or NULL if * the variable couldn't be found. * * If arrayPtr points to a variable that isn't an array and createPart1 * is 1, the corresponding variable will be converted to an array. * Otherwise, NULL is returned and an error message is left in * the interp's result if TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG is set in flags. * * If the variable is not found and createPart2 is 1, the variable is * created. Otherwise, NULL is returned and an error message is left in * the interp's result if TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG is set in flags. * * Note: it's possible for the variable returned to be VAR_UNDEFINED * even if createPart1 or createPart2 are 1 (these only cause the hash * table entry or array to be created). For example, the variable might * be a global that has been unset but is still referenced by a * procedure, or a variable that has been unset but it only being kept * in existence (if VAR_UNDEFINED) by a trace. * * Side effects: * The variable at arrayPtr may be converted to be an array if * createPart1 is 1. A new hashtable entry may be created if createPart2 * is 1. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Var * TclLookupArrayElement(interp, arrayName, elName, flags, msg, createArray, createElem, arrayPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter to use for lookup. */ CONST char *arrayName; /* This is the name of the array. */ CONST char *elName; /* Name of element within array. */ CONST int flags; /* Only TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG bit matters. */ CONST char *msg; /* Verb to use in error messages, e.g. * "read" or "set". Only needed if * TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG is set in flags. */ CONST int createArray; /* If 1, transform arrayName to be an array * if it isn't one yet and the transformation * is possible. If 0, return error if it * isn't already an array. */ CONST int createElem; /* If 1, create hash table entry for the * element, if it doesn't already exist. If * 0, return error if it doesn't exist. */ Var *arrayPtr; /* Pointer to the array's Var structure. */ { Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; int new; Var *varPtr; /* * We're dealing with an array element. Make sure the variable is an * array and look up the element (create the element if desired). */ if (TclIsVarUndefined(arrayPtr) && !TclIsVarArrayElement(arrayPtr)) { if (!createArray) { if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, arrayName, elName, msg, noSuchVar); } return NULL; } /* * Make sure we are not resurrecting a namespace variable from a * deleted namespace! */ if ((arrayPtr->flags & VAR_IN_HASHTABLE) && (arrayPtr->hPtr == NULL)) { if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, arrayName, elName, msg, danglingVar); } return NULL; } TclSetVarArray(arrayPtr); TclClearVarUndefined(arrayPtr); arrayPtr->value.tablePtr = (Tcl_HashTable *) ckalloc(sizeof(Tcl_HashTable)); Tcl_InitHashTable(arrayPtr->value.tablePtr, TCL_STRING_KEYS); } else if (!TclIsVarArray(arrayPtr)) { if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, arrayName, elName, msg, needArray); } return NULL; } if (createElem) { hPtr = Tcl_CreateHashEntry(arrayPtr->value.tablePtr, elName, &new); if (new) { if (arrayPtr->searchPtr != NULL) { DeleteSearches(arrayPtr); } varPtr = NewVar(); Tcl_SetHashValue(hPtr, varPtr); varPtr->hPtr = hPtr; varPtr->nsPtr = arrayPtr->nsPtr; TclSetVarArrayElement(varPtr); } } else { hPtr = Tcl_FindHashEntry(arrayPtr->value.tablePtr, elName); if (hPtr == NULL) { if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, arrayName, elName, msg, noSuchElement); } return NULL; } } return (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetVar -- * * Return the value of a Tcl variable as a string. * * Results: * The return value points to the current value of varName as a string. * If the variable is not defined or can't be read because of a clash * in array usage then a NULL pointer is returned and an error message * is left in the interp's result if the TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set. * Note: the return value is only valid up until the next change to the * variable; if you depend on the value lasting longer than that, then * make yourself a private copy. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ CONST char * Tcl_GetVar(interp, varName, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which varName is * to be looked up. */ CONST char *varName; /* Name of a variable in interp. */ int flags; /* OR-ed combination of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY or TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG * bits. */ { return Tcl_GetVar2(interp, varName, (char *) NULL, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetVar2 -- * * Return the value of a Tcl variable as a string, given a two-part * name consisting of array name and element within array. * * Results: * The return value points to the current value of the variable given * by part1 and part2 as a string. If the specified variable doesn't * exist, or if there is a clash in array usage, then NULL is returned * and a message will be left in the interp's result if the * TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set. Note: the return value is only valid * up until the next change to the variable; if you depend on the value * lasting longer than that, then make yourself a private copy. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ CONST char * Tcl_GetVar2(interp, part1, part2, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be looked up. */ CONST char *part1; /* Name of an array (if part2 is non-NULL) * or the name of a variable. */ CONST char *part2; /* If non-NULL, gives the name of an element * in the array part1. */ int flags; /* OR-ed combination of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY and TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG * bits. */ { Tcl_Obj *objPtr; objPtr = Tcl_GetVar2Ex(interp, part1, part2, flags); if (objPtr == NULL) { return NULL; } return TclGetString(objPtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetVar2Ex -- * * Return the value of a Tcl variable as a Tcl object, given a * two-part name consisting of array name and element within array. * * Results: * The return value points to the current object value of the variable * given by part1Ptr and part2Ptr. If the specified variable doesn't * exist, or if there is a clash in array usage, then NULL is returned * and a message will be left in the interpreter's result if the * TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set. * * Side effects: * The ref count for the returned object is _not_ incremented to * reflect the returned reference; if you want to keep a reference to * the object you must increment its ref count yourself. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * Tcl_GetVar2Ex(interp, part1, part2, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be looked up. */ CONST char *part1; /* Name of an array (if part2 is non-NULL) * or the name of a variable. */ CONST char *part2; /* If non-NULL, gives the name of an element * in the array part1. */ int flags; /* OR-ed combination of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * and TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG bits. */ { Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; /* * We need a special flag check to see if we want to create part 1, * because commands like lappend require read traces to trigger for * previously non-existent values. */ varPtr = TclLookupVar(interp, part1, part2, flags, "read", /*createPart1*/ (flags & TCL_TRACE_READS), /*createPart2*/ 1, &arrayPtr); if (varPtr == NULL) { return NULL; } return TclPtrGetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_ObjGetVar2 -- * * Return the value of a Tcl variable as a Tcl object, given a * two-part name consisting of array name and element within array. * * Results: * The return value points to the current object value of the variable * given by part1Ptr and part2Ptr. If the specified variable doesn't * exist, or if there is a clash in array usage, then NULL is returned * and a message will be left in the interpreter's result if the * TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set. * * Side effects: * The ref count for the returned object is _not_ incremented to * reflect the returned reference; if you want to keep a reference to * the object you must increment its ref count yourself. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * Tcl_ObjGetVar2(interp, part1Ptr, part2Ptr, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be looked up. */ register Tcl_Obj *part1Ptr; /* Points to an object holding the name of * an array (if part2 is non-NULL) or the * name of a variable. */ register Tcl_Obj *part2Ptr; /* If non-null, points to an object holding * the name of an element in the array * part1Ptr. */ int flags; /* OR-ed combination of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY and * TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG bits. */ { Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; char *part1, *part2; part1 = Tcl_GetString(part1Ptr); part2 = ((part2Ptr == NULL) ? NULL : Tcl_GetString(part2Ptr)); /* * We need a special flag check to see if we want to create part 1, * because commands like lappend require read traces to trigger for * previously non-existent values. */ varPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, part1Ptr, part2, flags, "read", /*createPart1*/ (flags & TCL_TRACE_READS), /*createPart2*/ 1, &arrayPtr); if (varPtr == NULL) { return NULL; } return TclPtrGetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclPtrGetVar -- * * Return the value of a Tcl variable as a Tcl object, given the * pointers to the variable's (and possibly containing array's) * VAR structure. * * Results: * The return value points to the current object value of the variable * given by varPtr. If the specified variable doesn't exist, or if there * is a clash in array usage, then NULL is returned and a message will be * left in the interpreter's result if the TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set. * * Side effects: * The ref count for the returned object is _not_ incremented to * reflect the returned reference; if you want to keep a reference to * the object you must increment its ref count yourself. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * TclPtrGetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be looked up. */ register Var *varPtr; /* The variable to be read.*/ Var *arrayPtr; /* NULL for scalar variables, pointer to * the containing array otherwise. */ CONST char *part1; /* Name of an array (if part2 is non-NULL) * or the name of a variable. */ CONST char *part2; /* If non-NULL, gives the name of an element * in the array part1. */ CONST int flags; /* OR-ed combination of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * and TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG bits. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; CONST char *msg; /* * Invoke any traces that have been set for the variable. */ if ((varPtr->tracePtr != NULL) || ((arrayPtr != NULL) && (arrayPtr->tracePtr != NULL))) { if (TCL_ERROR == TclCallVarTraces(iPtr, arrayPtr, varPtr, part1, part2, (flags & (TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY|TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY)) | TCL_TRACE_READS, (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG))) { goto errorReturn; } } /* * Return the element if it's an existing scalar variable. */ if (TclIsVarScalar(varPtr) && !TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)) { return varPtr->value.objPtr; } if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { if (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr) && (arrayPtr != NULL) && !TclIsVarUndefined(arrayPtr)) { msg = noSuchElement; } else if (TclIsVarArray(varPtr)) { msg = isArray; } else { msg = noSuchVar; } TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, "read", msg); } /* * An error. If the variable doesn't exist anymore and no-one's using * it, then free up the relevant structures and hash table entries. */ errorReturn: if (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)) { TclCleanupVar(varPtr, arrayPtr); } return NULL; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_SetObjCmd -- * * This procedure is invoked to process the "set" Tcl command. * See the user documentation for details on what it does. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result value. * * Side effects: * A variable's value may be changed. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* ARGSUSED */ int Tcl_SetObjCmd(dummy, interp, objc, objv) ClientData dummy; /* Not used. */ register Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ int objc; /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects. */ { Tcl_Obj *varValueObj; if (objc == 2) { varValueObj = Tcl_ObjGetVar2(interp, objv[1], NULL, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG); if (varValueObj == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, varValueObj); return TCL_OK; } else if (objc == 3) { varValueObj = Tcl_ObjSetVar2(interp, objv[1], NULL, objv[2], TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG); if (varValueObj == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, varValueObj); return TCL_OK; } else { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "varName ?newValue?"); return TCL_ERROR; } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_SetVar -- * * Change the value of a variable. * * Results: * Returns a pointer to the malloc'ed string which is the character * representation of the variable's new value. The caller must not * modify this string. If the write operation was disallowed then NULL * is returned; if the TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set, then an * explanatory message will be left in the interp's result. Note that the * returned string may not be the same as newValue; this is because * variable traces may modify the variable's value. * * Side effects: * If varName is defined as a local or global variable in interp, * its value is changed to newValue. If varName isn't currently * defined, then a new global variable by that name is created. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ CONST char * Tcl_SetVar(interp, varName, newValue, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which varName is * to be looked up. */ CONST char *varName; /* Name of a variable in interp. */ CONST char *newValue; /* New value for varName. */ int flags; /* Various flags that tell how to set value: * any of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, TCL_APPEND_VALUE, * TCL_LIST_ELEMENT, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG. */ { return Tcl_SetVar2(interp, varName, (char *) NULL, newValue, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_SetVar2 -- * * Given a two-part variable name, which may refer either to a * scalar variable or an element of an array, change the value * of the variable. If the named scalar or array or element * doesn't exist then create one. * * Results: * Returns a pointer to the malloc'ed string which is the character * representation of the variable's new value. The caller must not * modify this string. If the write operation was disallowed because an * array was expected but not found (or vice versa), then NULL is * returned; if the TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set, then an explanatory * message will be left in the interp's result. Note that the returned * string may not be the same as newValue; this is because variable * traces may modify the variable's value. * * Side effects: * The value of the given variable is set. If either the array * or the entry didn't exist then a new one is created. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ CONST char * Tcl_SetVar2(interp, part1, part2, newValue, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be looked up. */ CONST char *part1; /* If part2 is NULL, this is name of scalar * variable. Otherwise it is the name of * an array. */ CONST char *part2; /* Name of an element within an array, or * NULL. */ CONST char *newValue; /* New value for variable. */ int flags; /* Various flags that tell how to set value: * any of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, TCL_APPEND_VALUE, * TCL_LIST_ELEMENT, or TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG */ { register Tcl_Obj *valuePtr; Tcl_Obj *varValuePtr; /* * Create an object holding the variable's new value and use * Tcl_SetVar2Ex to actually set the variable. */ valuePtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(newValue, -1); Tcl_IncrRefCount(valuePtr); varValuePtr = Tcl_SetVar2Ex(interp, part1, part2, valuePtr, flags); Tcl_DecrRefCount(valuePtr); /* done with the object */ if (varValuePtr == NULL) { return NULL; } return TclGetString(varValuePtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_SetVar2Ex -- * * Given a two-part variable name, which may refer either to a scalar * variable or an element of an array, change the value of the variable * to a new Tcl object value. If the named scalar or array or element * doesn't exist then create one. * * Results: * Returns a pointer to the Tcl_Obj holding the new value of the * variable. If the write operation was disallowed because an array was * expected but not found (or vice versa), then NULL is returned; if * the TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set, then an explanatory message will * be left in the interpreter's result. Note that the returned object * may not be the same one referenced by newValuePtr; this is because * variable traces may modify the variable's value. * * Side effects: * The value of the given variable is set. If either the array or the * entry didn't exist then a new variable is created. * * The reference count is decremented for any old value of the variable * and incremented for its new value. If the new value for the variable * is not the same one referenced by newValuePtr (perhaps as a result * of a variable trace), then newValuePtr's ref count is left unchanged * by Tcl_SetVar2Ex. newValuePtr's ref count is also left unchanged if * we are appending it as a string value: that is, if "flags" includes * TCL_APPEND_VALUE but not TCL_LIST_ELEMENT. * * The reference count for the returned object is _not_ incremented: if * you want to keep a reference to the object you must increment its * ref count yourself. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * Tcl_SetVar2Ex(interp, part1, part2, newValuePtr, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be found. */ CONST char *part1; /* Name of an array (if part2 is non-NULL) * or the name of a variable. */ CONST char *part2; /* If non-NULL, gives the name of an element * in the array part1. */ Tcl_Obj *newValuePtr; /* New value for variable. */ int flags; /* Various flags that tell how to set value: * any of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, TCL_APPEND_VALUE, * TCL_LIST_ELEMENT or TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG. */ { Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; varPtr = TclLookupVar(interp, part1, part2, flags, "set", /*createPart1*/ 1, /*createPart2*/ 1, &arrayPtr); if (varPtr == NULL) { return NULL; } return TclPtrSetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, newValuePtr, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_ObjSetVar2 -- * * This function is the same as Tcl_SetVar2Ex above, except the * variable names are passed in Tcl object instead of strings. * * Results: * Returns a pointer to the Tcl_Obj holding the new value of the * variable. If the write operation was disallowed because an array was * expected but not found (or vice versa), then NULL is returned; if * the TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set, then an explanatory message will * be left in the interpreter's result. Note that the returned object * may not be the same one referenced by newValuePtr; this is because * variable traces may modify the variable's value. * * Side effects: * The value of the given variable is set. If either the array or the * entry didn't exist then a new variable is created. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * Tcl_ObjSetVar2(interp, part1Ptr, part2Ptr, newValuePtr, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be found. */ register Tcl_Obj *part1Ptr; /* Points to an object holding the name of * an array (if part2 is non-NULL) or the * name of a variable. */ register Tcl_Obj *part2Ptr; /* If non-null, points to an object holding * the name of an element in the array * part1Ptr. */ Tcl_Obj *newValuePtr; /* New value for variable. */ int flags; /* Various flags that tell how to set value: * any of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, TCL_APPEND_VALUE, * TCL_LIST_ELEMENT, or TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG. */ { Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; char *part1, *part2; part1 = TclGetString(part1Ptr); part2 = ((part2Ptr == NULL) ? NULL : Tcl_GetString(part2Ptr)); varPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, part1Ptr, part2, flags, "set", /*createPart1*/ 1, /*createPart2*/ 1, &arrayPtr); if (varPtr == NULL) { return NULL; } return TclPtrSetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, newValuePtr, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclPtrSetVar -- * * This function is the same as Tcl_SetVar2Ex above, except that * it requires pointers to the variable's Var structs in addition * to the variable names. * * Results: * Returns a pointer to the Tcl_Obj holding the new value of the * variable. If the write operation was disallowed because an array was * expected but not found (or vice versa), then NULL is returned; if * the TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set, then an explanatory message will * be left in the interpreter's result. Note that the returned object * may not be the same one referenced by newValuePtr; this is because * variable traces may modify the variable's value. * * Side effects: * The value of the given variable is set. If either the array or the * entry didn't exist then a new variable is created. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * TclPtrSetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, newValuePtr, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be looked up. */ register Var *varPtr; Var *arrayPtr; CONST char *part1; /* Name of an array (if part2 is non-NULL) * or the name of a variable. */ CONST char *part2; /* If non-NULL, gives the name of an element * in the array part1. */ Tcl_Obj *newValuePtr; /* New value for variable. */ CONST int flags; /* OR-ed combination of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * and TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG bits. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Tcl_Obj *oldValuePtr; Tcl_Obj *resultPtr = NULL; int result; /* * If the variable is in a hashtable and its hPtr field is NULL, then we * may have an upvar to an array element where the array was deleted * or an upvar to a namespace variable whose namespace was deleted. * Generate an error (allowing the variable to be reset would screw up * our storage allocation and is meaningless anyway). */ if ((varPtr->flags & VAR_IN_HASHTABLE) && (varPtr->hPtr == NULL)) { if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { if (TclIsVarArrayElement(varPtr)) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, "set", danglingElement); } else { TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, "set", danglingVar); } } return NULL; } /* * It's an error to try to set an array variable itself. */ if (TclIsVarArray(varPtr) && !TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)) { if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, "set", isArray); } return NULL; } /* * Invoke any read traces that have been set for the variable if it * is requested; this is only done in the core when lappending. */ if ((flags & TCL_TRACE_READS) && ((varPtr->tracePtr != NULL) || ((arrayPtr != NULL) && (arrayPtr->tracePtr != NULL)))) { if (TCL_ERROR == TclCallVarTraces(iPtr, arrayPtr, varPtr, part1, part2, TCL_TRACE_READS, (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG))) { return NULL; } } /* * Set the variable's new value. If appending, append the new value to * the variable, either as a list element or as a string. Also, if * appending, then if the variable's old value is unshared we can modify * it directly, otherwise we must create a new copy to modify: this is * "copy on write". */ if (flags & TCL_LIST_ELEMENT && !(flags & TCL_APPEND_VALUE)) { TclSetVarUndefined(varPtr); } oldValuePtr = varPtr->value.objPtr; if (flags & (TCL_APPEND_VALUE|TCL_LIST_ELEMENT)) { if (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr) && (oldValuePtr != NULL)) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(oldValuePtr); /* discard old value */ varPtr->value.objPtr = NULL; oldValuePtr = NULL; } if (flags & TCL_LIST_ELEMENT) { /* append list element */ if (oldValuePtr == NULL) { TclNewObj(oldValuePtr); varPtr->value.objPtr = oldValuePtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(oldValuePtr); /* since var is referenced */ } else if (Tcl_IsShared(oldValuePtr)) { varPtr->value.objPtr = Tcl_DuplicateObj(oldValuePtr); Tcl_DecrRefCount(oldValuePtr); oldValuePtr = varPtr->value.objPtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(oldValuePtr); /* since var is referenced */ } result = Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(interp, oldValuePtr, newValuePtr); if (result != TCL_OK) { return NULL; } } else { /* append string */ /* * We append newValuePtr's bytes but don't change its ref count. */ if (oldValuePtr == NULL) { varPtr->value.objPtr = newValuePtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(newValuePtr); } else { if (Tcl_IsShared(oldValuePtr)) { /* append to copy */ varPtr->value.objPtr = Tcl_DuplicateObj(oldValuePtr); TclDecrRefCount(oldValuePtr); oldValuePtr = varPtr->value.objPtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(oldValuePtr); /* since var is ref */ } Tcl_AppendObjToObj(oldValuePtr, newValuePtr); } } } else if (newValuePtr != oldValuePtr) { /* * In this case we are replacing the value, so we don't need to * do more than swap the objects. */ varPtr->value.objPtr = newValuePtr; Tcl_IncrRefCount(newValuePtr); /* var is another ref */ if (oldValuePtr != NULL) { TclDecrRefCount(oldValuePtr); /* discard old value */ } } TclSetVarScalar(varPtr); TclClearVarUndefined(varPtr); if (arrayPtr != NULL) { TclClearVarUndefined(arrayPtr); } /* * Invoke any write traces for the variable. */ if ((varPtr->tracePtr != NULL) || ((arrayPtr != NULL) && (arrayPtr->tracePtr != NULL))) { if (TCL_ERROR == TclCallVarTraces(iPtr, arrayPtr, varPtr, part1, part2, (flags & (TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY|TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY)) | TCL_TRACE_WRITES, (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG))) { goto cleanup; } } /* * Return the variable's value unless the variable was changed in some * gross way by a trace (e.g. it was unset and then recreated as an * array). */ if (TclIsVarScalar(varPtr) && !TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)) { return varPtr->value.objPtr; } /* * A trace changed the value in some gross way. Return an empty string * object. */ resultPtr = iPtr->emptyObjPtr; /* * If the variable doesn't exist anymore and no-one's using it, then * free up the relevant structures and hash table entries. */ cleanup: if (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)) { TclCleanupVar(varPtr, arrayPtr); } return resultPtr; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclIncrVar2 -- * * Given a two-part variable name, which may refer either to a scalar * variable or an element of an array, increment the Tcl object value * of the variable by a specified amount. * * Results: * Returns a pointer to the Tcl_Obj holding the new value of the * variable. If the specified variable doesn't exist, or there is a * clash in array usage, or an error occurs while executing variable * traces, then NULL is returned and a message will be left in * the interpreter's result. * * Side effects: * The value of the given variable is incremented by the specified * amount. If either the array or the entry didn't exist then a new * variable is created. The ref count for the returned object is _not_ * incremented to reflect the returned reference; if you want to keep a * reference to the object you must increment its ref count yourself. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * TclIncrVar2(interp, part1Ptr, part2Ptr, incrAmount, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be found. */ Tcl_Obj *part1Ptr; /* Points to an object holding the name of * an array (if part2 is non-NULL) or the * name of a variable. */ Tcl_Obj *part2Ptr; /* If non-null, points to an object holding * the name of an element in the array * part1Ptr. */ long incrAmount; /* Amount to be added to variable. */ int flags; /* Various flags that tell how to incr value: * any of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, TCL_APPEND_VALUE, * TCL_LIST_ELEMENT, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG. */ { Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; char *part1, *part2; part1 = TclGetString(part1Ptr); part2 = ((part2Ptr == NULL)? NULL : TclGetString(part2Ptr)); varPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, part1Ptr, part2, flags, "read", 0, 1, &arrayPtr); if (varPtr == NULL) { Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo(interp, "\n (reading value of variable to increment)", -1); return NULL; } return TclPtrIncrVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, incrAmount, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclPtrIncrVar -- * * Given the pointers to a variable and possible containing array, * increment the Tcl object value of the variable by a specified * amount. * * Results: * Returns a pointer to the Tcl_Obj holding the new value of the * variable. If the specified variable doesn't exist, or there is a * clash in array usage, or an error occurs while executing variable * traces, then NULL is returned and a message will be left in * the interpreter's result. * * Side effects: * The value of the given variable is incremented by the specified * amount. If either the array or the entry didn't exist then a new * variable is created. The ref count for the returned object is _not_ * incremented to reflect the returned reference; if you want to keep a * reference to the object you must increment its ref count yourself. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * TclPtrIncrVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, incrAmount, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be found. */ Var *varPtr; Var *arrayPtr; CONST char *part1; /* Points to an object holding the name of * an array (if part2 is non-NULL) or the * name of a variable. */ CONST char *part2; /* If non-null, points to an object holding * the name of an element in the array * part1Ptr. */ CONST long incrAmount; /* Amount to be added to variable. */ CONST int flags; /* Various flags that tell how to incr value: * any of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, TCL_APPEND_VALUE, * TCL_LIST_ELEMENT, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG. */ { register Tcl_Obj *varValuePtr; int createdNewObj; /* Set 1 if var's value object is shared * so we must increment a copy (i.e. copy * on write). */ long i; varValuePtr = TclPtrGetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, flags); if (varValuePtr == NULL) { Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo(interp, "\n (reading value of variable to increment)", -1); return NULL; } /* * Increment the variable's value. If the object is unshared we can * modify it directly, otherwise we must create a new copy to modify: * this is "copy on write". Then free the variable's old string * representation, if any, since it will no longer be valid. */ createdNewObj = 0; if (Tcl_IsShared(varValuePtr)) { varValuePtr = Tcl_DuplicateObj(varValuePtr); createdNewObj = 1; } if (varValuePtr->typePtr == &tclWideIntType) { Tcl_WideInt wide; TclGetWide(wide,varValuePtr); Tcl_SetWideIntObj(varValuePtr, wide + Tcl_LongAsWide(incrAmount)); } else if (varValuePtr->typePtr == &tclIntType) { i = varValuePtr->internalRep.longValue; Tcl_SetIntObj(varValuePtr, i + incrAmount); } else { /* * Not an integer or wide internal-rep... */ Tcl_WideInt wide; if (Tcl_GetWideIntFromObj(interp, varValuePtr, &wide) != TCL_OK) { if (createdNewObj) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(varValuePtr); /* free unneeded copy */ } return NULL; } if (wide <= Tcl_LongAsWide(LONG_MAX) && wide >= Tcl_LongAsWide(LONG_MIN)) { Tcl_SetLongObj(varValuePtr, Tcl_WideAsLong(wide) + incrAmount); } else { Tcl_SetWideIntObj(varValuePtr, wide + Tcl_LongAsWide(incrAmount)); } } /* * Store the variable's new value and run any write traces. */ return TclPtrSetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, varValuePtr, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclIncrWideVar2 -- * * Given a two-part variable name, which may refer either to a scalar * variable or an element of an array, increment the Tcl object value * of the variable by a specified amount. * * Results: * Returns a pointer to the Tcl_Obj holding the new value of the * variable. If the specified variable doesn't exist, or there is a * clash in array usage, or an error occurs while executing variable * traces, then NULL is returned and a message will be left in * the interpreter's result. * * Side effects: * The value of the given variable is incremented by the specified * amount. If either the array or the entry didn't exist then a new * variable is created. The ref count for the returned object is _not_ * incremented to reflect the returned reference; if you want to keep a * reference to the object you must increment its ref count yourself. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * TclIncrWideVar2(interp, part1Ptr, part2Ptr, incrAmount, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be found. */ Tcl_Obj *part1Ptr; /* Points to an object holding the name of * an array (if part2 is non-NULL) or the * name of a variable. */ Tcl_Obj *part2Ptr; /* If non-null, points to an object holding * the name of an element in the array * part1Ptr. */ Tcl_WideInt incrAmount; /* Amount to be added to variable. */ int flags; /* Various flags that tell how to incr value: * any of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, TCL_APPEND_VALUE, * TCL_LIST_ELEMENT, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG. */ { Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; char *part1, *part2; part1 = TclGetString(part1Ptr); part2 = ((part2Ptr == NULL)? NULL : TclGetString(part2Ptr)); varPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, part1Ptr, part2, flags, "read", 0, 1, &arrayPtr); if (varPtr == NULL) { Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo(interp, "\n (reading value of variable to increment)", -1); return NULL; } return TclPtrIncrWideVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, incrAmount, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclPtrIncrWideVar -- * * Given the pointers to a variable and possible containing array, * increment the Tcl object value of the variable by a specified * amount. * * Results: * Returns a pointer to the Tcl_Obj holding the new value of the * variable. If the specified variable doesn't exist, or there is a * clash in array usage, or an error occurs while executing variable * traces, then NULL is returned and a message will be left in * the interpreter's result. * * Side effects: * The value of the given variable is incremented by the specified * amount. If either the array or the entry didn't exist then a new * variable is created. The ref count for the returned object is _not_ * incremented to reflect the returned reference; if you want to keep a * reference to the object you must increment its ref count yourself. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ Tcl_Obj * TclPtrIncrWideVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, incrAmount, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which variable is * to be found. */ Var *varPtr; Var *arrayPtr; CONST char *part1; /* Points to an object holding the name of * an array (if part2 is non-NULL) or the * name of a variable. */ CONST char *part2; /* If non-null, points to an object holding * the name of an element in the array * part1Ptr. */ CONST Tcl_WideInt incrAmount; /* Amount to be added to variable. */ CONST int flags; /* Various flags that tell how to incr value: * any of TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, TCL_APPEND_VALUE, * TCL_LIST_ELEMENT, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG. */ { register Tcl_Obj *varValuePtr; int createdNewObj; /* Set 1 if var's value object is shared * so we must increment a copy (i.e. copy * on write). */ Tcl_WideInt wide; varValuePtr = TclPtrGetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, flags); if (varValuePtr == NULL) { Tcl_AddObjErrorInfo(interp, "\n (reading value of variable to increment)", -1); return NULL; } /* * Increment the variable's value. If the object is unshared we can * modify it directly, otherwise we must create a new copy to modify: * this is "copy on write". Then free the variable's old string * representation, if any, since it will no longer be valid. */ createdNewObj = 0; if (Tcl_IsShared(varValuePtr)) { varValuePtr = Tcl_DuplicateObj(varValuePtr); createdNewObj = 1; } if (varValuePtr->typePtr == &tclWideIntType) { TclGetWide(wide, varValuePtr); Tcl_SetWideIntObj(varValuePtr, wide + incrAmount); } else if (varValuePtr->typePtr == &tclIntType) { long i = varValuePtr->internalRep.longValue; Tcl_SetWideIntObj(varValuePtr, Tcl_LongAsWide(i) + incrAmount); } else { /* * Not an integer or wide internal-rep... */ if (Tcl_GetWideIntFromObj(interp, varValuePtr, &wide) != TCL_OK) { if (createdNewObj) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(varValuePtr); /* free unneeded copy */ } return NULL; } Tcl_SetWideIntObj(varValuePtr, wide + incrAmount); } /* * Store the variable's new value and run any write traces. */ return TclPtrSetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, part2, varValuePtr, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_UnsetVar -- * * Delete a variable, so that it may not be accessed anymore. * * Results: * Returns TCL_OK if the variable was successfully deleted, TCL_ERROR * if the variable can't be unset. In the event of an error, * if the TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set then an error message * is left in the interp's result. * * Side effects: * If varName is defined as a local or global variable in interp, * it is deleted. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_UnsetVar(interp, varName, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which varName is * to be looked up. */ CONST char *varName; /* Name of a variable in interp. May be * either a scalar name or an array name * or an element in an array. */ int flags; /* OR-ed combination of any of * TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY or * TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG. */ { return Tcl_UnsetVar2(interp, varName, (char *) NULL, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_UnsetVar2 -- * * Delete a variable, given a 2-part name. * * Results: * Returns TCL_OK if the variable was successfully deleted, TCL_ERROR * if the variable can't be unset. In the event of an error, * if the TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set then an error message * is left in the interp's result. * * Side effects: * If part1 and part2 indicate a local or global variable in interp, * it is deleted. If part1 is an array name and part2 is NULL, then * the whole array is deleted. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_UnsetVar2(interp, part1, part2, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which varName is * to be looked up. */ CONST char *part1; /* Name of variable or array. */ CONST char *part2; /* Name of element within array or NULL. */ int flags; /* OR-ed combination of any of * TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, * TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG. */ { int result; Tcl_Obj *part1Ptr; part1Ptr = Tcl_NewStringObj(part1, -1); Tcl_IncrRefCount(part1Ptr); result = TclObjUnsetVar2(interp, part1Ptr, part2, flags); TclDecrRefCount(part1Ptr); return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclObjUnsetVar2 -- * * Delete a variable, given a 2-object name. * * Results: * Returns TCL_OK if the variable was successfully deleted, TCL_ERROR * if the variable can't be unset. In the event of an error, * if the TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG flag is set then an error message * is left in the interp's result. * * Side effects: * If part1ptr and part2Ptr indicate a local or global variable in interp, * it is deleted. If part1Ptr is an array name and part2Ptr is NULL, then * the whole array is deleted. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclObjUnsetVar2(interp, part1Ptr, part2, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which varName is * to be looked up. */ Tcl_Obj *part1Ptr; /* Name of variable or array. */ CONST char *part2; /* Name of element within array or NULL. */ int flags; /* OR-ed combination of any of * TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, * TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG. */ { Var dummyVar; Var *varPtr, *dummyVarPtr; Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Var *arrayPtr; ActiveVarTrace *activePtr; Tcl_Obj *objPtr; int result; char *part1; part1 = TclGetString(part1Ptr); varPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, part1Ptr, part2, flags, "unset", /*createPart1*/ 0, /*createPart2*/ 0, &arrayPtr); if (varPtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } result = (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)? TCL_ERROR : TCL_OK); if ((arrayPtr != NULL) && (arrayPtr->searchPtr != NULL)) { DeleteSearches(arrayPtr); } /* * The code below is tricky, because of the possibility that * a trace procedure might try to access a variable being * deleted. To handle this situation gracefully, do things * in three steps: * 1. Copy the contents of the variable to a dummy variable * structure, and mark the original Var structure as undefined. * 2. Invoke traces and clean up the variable, using the dummy copy. * 3. If at the end of this the original variable is still * undefined and has no outstanding references, then delete * it (but it could have gotten recreated by a trace). */ dummyVar = *varPtr; TclSetVarUndefined(varPtr); TclSetVarScalar(varPtr); varPtr->value.objPtr = NULL; /* dummyVar points to any value object */ varPtr->tracePtr = NULL; varPtr->searchPtr = NULL; /* * Keep the variable alive until we're done with it. We used to * increase/decrease the refCount for each operation, making it * hard to find [Bug 735335] - caused by unsetting the variable * whose value was the variable's name. */ varPtr->refCount++; /* * Call trace procedures for the variable being deleted. Then delete * its traces. Be sure to abort any other traces for the variable * that are still pending. Special tricks: * 1. We need to increment varPtr's refCount around this: TclCallVarTraces * will use dummyVar so it won't increment varPtr's refCount itself. * 2. Turn off the VAR_TRACE_ACTIVE flag in dummyVar: we want to * call unset traces even if other traces are pending. */ if ((dummyVar.tracePtr != NULL) || ((arrayPtr != NULL) && (arrayPtr->tracePtr != NULL))) { dummyVar.flags &= ~VAR_TRACE_ACTIVE; TclCallVarTraces(iPtr, arrayPtr, &dummyVar, part1, part2, (flags & (TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY|TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY)) | TCL_TRACE_UNSETS, /* leaveErrMsg */ 0); while (dummyVar.tracePtr != NULL) { VarTrace *tracePtr = dummyVar.tracePtr; dummyVar.tracePtr = tracePtr->nextPtr; Tcl_EventuallyFree((ClientData) tracePtr, TCL_DYNAMIC); } for (activePtr = iPtr->activeVarTracePtr; activePtr != NULL; activePtr = activePtr->nextPtr) { if (activePtr->varPtr == varPtr) { activePtr->nextTracePtr = NULL; } } } /* * If the variable is an array, delete all of its elements. This must be * done after calling the traces on the array, above (that's the way * traces are defined). If it is a scalar, "discard" its object * (decrement the ref count of its object, if any). */ dummyVarPtr = &dummyVar; if (TclIsVarArray(dummyVarPtr) && !TclIsVarUndefined(dummyVarPtr)) { /* * Deleting the elements of the array may cause traces to be fired * on those elements. Before deleting them, bump the reference count * of the array, so that if those trace procs make a global or upvar * link to the array, the array is not deleted when the call stack * gets popped (we will delete the array ourselves later in this * function). * * Bumping the count can lead to the odd situation that elements of the * array are being deleted when the array still exists, but since the * array is about to be removed anyway, that shouldn't really matter. */ DeleteArray(iPtr, part1, dummyVarPtr, (flags & (TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY|TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY)) | TCL_TRACE_UNSETS); /* Decr ref count */ } if (TclIsVarScalar(dummyVarPtr) && (dummyVarPtr->value.objPtr != NULL)) { objPtr = dummyVarPtr->value.objPtr; TclDecrRefCount(objPtr); dummyVarPtr->value.objPtr = NULL; } /* * If the variable was a namespace variable, decrement its reference count. */ if (varPtr->flags & VAR_NAMESPACE_VAR) { varPtr->flags &= ~VAR_NAMESPACE_VAR; varPtr->refCount--; } /* * It's an error to unset an undefined variable. */ if (result != TCL_OK) { if (flags & TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, "unset", ((arrayPtr == NULL) ? noSuchVar : noSuchElement)); } } #if ENABLE_NS_VARNAME_CACHING /* * Try to avoid keeping the Var struct allocated due to a tclNsVarNameType * keeping a reference. This removes some additional exteriorisations of * [Bug 736729], but may be a good thing independently of the bug. */ if (part1Ptr->typePtr == &tclNsVarNameType) { TclFreeIntRep(part1Ptr); part1Ptr->typePtr = NULL; } #endif /* * Finally, if the variable is truly not in use then free up its Var * structure and remove it from its hash table, if any. The ref count of * its value object, if any, was decremented above. */ varPtr->refCount--; TclCleanupVar(varPtr, arrayPtr); return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_UnsetObjCmd -- * * This object-based procedure is invoked to process the "unset" 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. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* ARGSUSED */ int Tcl_UnsetObjCmd(dummy, interp, objc, objv) ClientData dummy; /* Not used. */ Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ int objc; /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects. */ { register int i, flags = TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG; register char *name; if (objc < 1) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "?-nocomplain? ?--? ?varName varName ...?"); return TCL_ERROR; } else if (objc == 1) { /* * Do nothing if no arguments supplied, so as to match * command documentation. */ return TCL_OK; } /* * Simple, restrictive argument parsing. The only options are -- * and -nocomplain (which must come first and be given exactly to * be an option). */ i = 1; name = TclGetString(objv[i]); if (name[0] == '-') { if (strcmp("-nocomplain", name) == 0) { i++; if (i == objc) { return TCL_OK; } flags = 0; name = TclGetString(objv[i]); } if (strcmp("--", name) == 0) { i++; } } for (; i < objc; i++) { if ((TclObjUnsetVar2(interp, objv[i], NULL, flags) != TCL_OK) && (flags == TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG)) { return TCL_ERROR; } } return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_AppendObjCmd -- * * This object-based procedure is invoked to process the "append" * Tcl command. See the user documentation for details on what it does. * * Results: * A standard Tcl object result value. * * Side effects: * A variable's value may be changed. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* ARGSUSED */ int Tcl_AppendObjCmd(dummy, interp, objc, objv) ClientData dummy; /* Not used. */ Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ int objc; /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects. */ { Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; char *part1; register Tcl_Obj *varValuePtr = NULL; /* Initialized to avoid compiler * warning. */ int i; if (objc < 2) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "varName ?value value ...?"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (objc == 2) { varValuePtr = Tcl_ObjGetVar2(interp, objv[1], NULL, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG); if (varValuePtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } } else { varPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, objv[1], NULL, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG, "set", /*createPart1*/ 1, /*createPart2*/ 1, &arrayPtr); part1 = TclGetString(objv[1]); if (varPtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } for (i = 2; i < objc; i++) { /* * Note that we do not need to increase the refCount of * the Var pointers: should a trace delete the variable, * the return value of TclPtrSetVar will be NULL, and we * will not access the variable again. */ varValuePtr = TclPtrSetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, NULL, objv[i], (TCL_APPEND_VALUE | TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG)); if (varValuePtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } } } Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, varValuePtr); return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_LappendObjCmd -- * * This object-based procedure is invoked to process the "lappend" * Tcl command. See the user documentation for details on what it does. * * Results: * A standard Tcl object result value. * * Side effects: * A variable's value may be changed. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* ARGSUSED */ int Tcl_LappendObjCmd(dummy, interp, objc, objv) ClientData dummy; /* Not used. */ Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ int objc; /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects. */ { Tcl_Obj *varValuePtr, *newValuePtr; register List *listRepPtr; register Tcl_Obj **elemPtrs; int numElems, numRequired, createdNewObj, createVar, i, j; Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; char *part1; if (objc < 2) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "varName ?value value ...?"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (objc == 2) { newValuePtr = Tcl_ObjGetVar2(interp, objv[1], (Tcl_Obj *) NULL, 0); if (newValuePtr == NULL) { /* * The variable doesn't exist yet. Just create it with an empty * initial value. */ varValuePtr = Tcl_NewObj(); newValuePtr = Tcl_ObjSetVar2(interp, objv[1], NULL, varValuePtr, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG); if (newValuePtr == NULL) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(varValuePtr); /* free unneeded object */ return TCL_ERROR; } } } else { /* * We have arguments to append. We used to call Tcl_SetVar2 to * append each argument one at a time to ensure that traces were run * for each append step. We now append the arguments all at once * because it's faster. Note that a read trace and a write trace for * the variable will now each only be called once. Also, if the * variable's old value is unshared we modify it directly, otherwise * we create a new copy to modify: this is "copy on write". */ createdNewObj = 0; createVar = 1; /* * Use the TCL_TRACE_READS flag to ensure that if we have an * array with no elements set yet, but with a read trace on it, * we will create the variable and get read traces triggered. * Note that you have to protect the variable pointers around * the TclPtrGetVar call to insure that they remain valid * even if the variable was undefined and unused. */ varPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, objv[1], NULL, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG, "set", /*createPart1*/ 1, /*createPart2*/ 1, &arrayPtr); if (varPtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } varPtr->refCount++; if (arrayPtr != NULL) { arrayPtr->refCount++; } part1 = TclGetString(objv[1]); varValuePtr = TclPtrGetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, NULL, (TCL_TRACE_READS | TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG)); varPtr->refCount--; if (arrayPtr != NULL) { arrayPtr->refCount--; } if (varValuePtr == NULL) { /* * We couldn't read the old value: either the var doesn't yet * exist or it's an array element. If it's new, we will try to * create it with Tcl_ObjSetVar2 below. */ createVar = (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)); varValuePtr = Tcl_NewObj(); createdNewObj = 1; } else if (Tcl_IsShared(varValuePtr)) { varValuePtr = Tcl_DuplicateObj(varValuePtr); createdNewObj = 1; } /* * Convert the variable's old value to a list object if necessary. */ if (varValuePtr->typePtr != &tclListType) { int result = tclListType.setFromAnyProc(interp, varValuePtr); if (result != TCL_OK) { if (createdNewObj) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(varValuePtr); /* free unneeded obj. */ } return result; } } listRepPtr = (List *) varValuePtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1; elemPtrs = listRepPtr->elements; numElems = listRepPtr->elemCount; /* * If there is no room in the current array of element pointers, * allocate a new, larger array and copy the pointers to it. */ numRequired = numElems + (objc-2); if (numRequired > listRepPtr->maxElemCount) { int newMax = (2 * numRequired); Tcl_Obj **newElemPtrs = (Tcl_Obj **) ckalloc((unsigned) (newMax * sizeof(Tcl_Obj *))); memcpy((VOID *) newElemPtrs, (VOID *) elemPtrs, (size_t) (numElems * sizeof(Tcl_Obj *))); listRepPtr->maxElemCount = newMax; listRepPtr->elements = newElemPtrs; ckfree((char *) elemPtrs); elemPtrs = newElemPtrs; } /* * Insert the new elements at the end of the list. */ for (i = 2, j = numElems; i < objc; i++, j++) { elemPtrs[j] = objv[i]; Tcl_IncrRefCount(objv[i]); } listRepPtr->elemCount = numRequired; /* * Invalidate and free any old string representation since it no * longer reflects the list's internal representation. */ Tcl_InvalidateStringRep(varValuePtr); /* * Now store the list object back into the variable. If there is an * error setting the new value, decrement its ref count if it * was new and we didn't create the variable. */ newValuePtr = TclPtrSetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, part1, NULL, varValuePtr, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG); if (newValuePtr == NULL) { if (createdNewObj && !createVar) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(varValuePtr); /* free unneeded obj */ } return TCL_ERROR; } } /* * Set the interpreter's object result to refer to the variable's value * object. */ Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, newValuePtr); return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_ArrayObjCmd -- * * This object-based procedure is invoked to process the "array" Tcl * command. See the user documentation for details on what it does. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result object. * * Side effects: * See the user documentation. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* ARGSUSED */ int Tcl_ArrayObjCmd(dummy, interp, objc, objv) ClientData dummy; /* Not used. */ Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ int objc; /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects. */ { /* * The list of constants below should match the arrayOptions string array * below. */ enum {ARRAY_ANYMORE, ARRAY_DONESEARCH, ARRAY_EXISTS, ARRAY_GET, ARRAY_NAMES, ARRAY_NEXTELEMENT, ARRAY_SET, ARRAY_SIZE, ARRAY_STARTSEARCH, ARRAY_STATISTICS, ARRAY_UNSET}; static CONST char *arrayOptions[] = { "anymore", "donesearch", "exists", "get", "names", "nextelement", "set", "size", "startsearch", "statistics", "unset", (char *) NULL }; Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; Tcl_Obj *resultPtr, *varNamePtr; int notArray; char *varName; int index, result; if (objc < 3) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "option arrayName ?arg ...?"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (Tcl_GetIndexFromObj(interp, objv[1], arrayOptions, "option", 0, &index) != TCL_OK) { return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Locate the array variable */ varNamePtr = objv[2]; varName = TclGetString(varNamePtr); varPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, varNamePtr, NULL, /*flags*/ 0, /*msg*/ 0, /*createPart1*/ 0, /*createPart2*/ 0, &arrayPtr); /* * Special array trace used to keep the env array in sync for * array names, array get, etc. */ if (varPtr != NULL && varPtr->tracePtr != NULL && (TclIsVarArray(varPtr) || TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr))) { if (TCL_ERROR == TclCallVarTraces(iPtr, arrayPtr, varPtr, varName, NULL, (TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG|TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY|TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY| TCL_TRACE_ARRAY), /* leaveErrMsg */ 1)) { return TCL_ERROR; } } /* * Verify that it is indeed an array variable. This test comes after * the traces - the variable may actually become an array as an effect * of said traces. */ notArray = 0; if ((varPtr == NULL) || !TclIsVarArray(varPtr) || TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)) { notArray = 1; } /* * We have to wait to get the resultPtr until here because * TclCallVarTraces can affect the result. */ resultPtr = Tcl_GetObjResult(interp); switch (index) { case ARRAY_ANYMORE: { ArraySearch *searchPtr; if (objc != 4) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 2, objv, "arrayName searchId"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (notArray) { goto error; } searchPtr = ParseSearchId(interp, varPtr, varName, objv[3]); if (searchPtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } while (1) { Var *varPtr2; if (searchPtr->nextEntry != NULL) { varPtr2 = (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(searchPtr->nextEntry); if (!TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr2)) { break; } } searchPtr->nextEntry = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&searchPtr->search); if (searchPtr->nextEntry == NULL) { Tcl_SetIntObj(resultPtr, 0); return TCL_OK; } } Tcl_SetIntObj(resultPtr, 1); break; } case ARRAY_DONESEARCH: { ArraySearch *searchPtr, *prevPtr; if (objc != 4) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 2, objv, "arrayName searchId"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (notArray) { goto error; } searchPtr = ParseSearchId(interp, varPtr, varName, objv[3]); if (searchPtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } if (varPtr->searchPtr == searchPtr) { varPtr->searchPtr = searchPtr->nextPtr; } else { for (prevPtr = varPtr->searchPtr; ; prevPtr = prevPtr->nextPtr) { if (prevPtr->nextPtr == searchPtr) { prevPtr->nextPtr = searchPtr->nextPtr; break; } } } ckfree((char *) searchPtr); break; } case ARRAY_EXISTS: { if (objc != 3) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 2, objv, "arrayName"); return TCL_ERROR; } Tcl_SetIntObj(resultPtr, !notArray); break; } case ARRAY_GET: { Tcl_HashSearch search; Var *varPtr2; char *pattern = NULL; char *name; Tcl_Obj *namePtr, *valuePtr, *nameLstPtr, *tmpResPtr, **namePtrPtr; int i, count; if ((objc != 3) && (objc != 4)) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 2, objv, "arrayName ?pattern?"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (notArray) { return TCL_OK; } if (objc == 4) { pattern = TclGetString(objv[3]); } /* * Store the array names in a new object. */ nameLstPtr = Tcl_NewObj(); Tcl_IncrRefCount(nameLstPtr); for (hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(varPtr->value.tablePtr, &search); hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&search)) { varPtr2 = (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); if (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr2)) { continue; } name = Tcl_GetHashKey(varPtr->value.tablePtr, hPtr); if ((objc == 4) && !Tcl_StringMatch(name, pattern)) { continue; /* element name doesn't match pattern */ } namePtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(name, -1); result = Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(interp, nameLstPtr, namePtr); if (result != TCL_OK) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(namePtr); /* free unneeded name obj */ Tcl_DecrRefCount(nameLstPtr); return result; } } /* * Make sure the Var structure of the array is not removed by * a trace while we're working. */ varPtr->refCount++; /* * Get the array values corresponding to each element name */ tmpResPtr = Tcl_NewObj(); result = Tcl_ListObjGetElements(interp, nameLstPtr, &count, &namePtrPtr); if (result != TCL_OK) { goto errorInArrayGet; } for (i = 0; i < count; i++) { namePtr = *namePtrPtr++; valuePtr = Tcl_ObjGetVar2(interp, objv[2], namePtr, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG); if (valuePtr == NULL) { /* * Some trace played a trick on us; we need to diagnose to * adapt our behaviour: was the array element unset, or did * the modification modify the complete array? */ if (TclIsVarArray(varPtr) && !TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)) { /* * The array itself looks OK, the variable was * undefined: forget it. */ continue; } else { result = TCL_ERROR; goto errorInArrayGet; } } result = Tcl_DictObjPut(interp, tmpResPtr, namePtr, valuePtr); if (result != TCL_OK) { goto errorInArrayGet; } } varPtr->refCount--; Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, tmpResPtr); Tcl_DecrRefCount(nameLstPtr); break; errorInArrayGet: varPtr->refCount--; Tcl_DecrRefCount(nameLstPtr); Tcl_DecrRefCount(tmpResPtr); /* free unneeded temp result obj */ return result; } case ARRAY_NAMES: { Tcl_HashSearch search; Var *varPtr2; char *pattern = NULL; char *name; Tcl_Obj *namePtr; int mode, matched = 0; static CONST char *options[] = { "-exact", "-glob", "-regexp", (char *) NULL }; enum options { OPT_EXACT, OPT_GLOB, OPT_REGEXP }; mode = OPT_GLOB; if ((objc < 3) || (objc > 5)) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 2, objv, "arrayName ?mode? ?pattern?"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (notArray) { return TCL_OK; } if (objc == 4) { pattern = Tcl_GetString(objv[3]); } else if (objc == 5) { pattern = Tcl_GetString(objv[4]); if (Tcl_GetIndexFromObj(interp, objv[3], options, "option", 0, &mode) != TCL_OK) { return TCL_ERROR; } } for (hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(varPtr->value.tablePtr, &search); hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&search)) { varPtr2 = (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); if (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr2)) { continue; } name = Tcl_GetHashKey(varPtr->value.tablePtr, hPtr); if (objc > 3) { switch ((enum options) mode) { case OPT_EXACT: matched = (strcmp(name, pattern) == 0); break; case OPT_GLOB: matched = Tcl_StringMatch(name, pattern); break; case OPT_REGEXP: matched = Tcl_RegExpMatch(interp, name, pattern); if (matched < 0) { return TCL_ERROR; } break; } if (matched == 0) { continue; } } namePtr = Tcl_NewStringObj(name, -1); result = Tcl_ListObjAppendElement(interp, resultPtr, namePtr); if (result != TCL_OK) { Tcl_DecrRefCount(namePtr); /* free unneeded name obj */ return result; } } break; } case ARRAY_NEXTELEMENT: { ArraySearch *searchPtr; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; if (objc != 4) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 2, objv, "arrayName searchId"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (notArray) { goto error; } searchPtr = ParseSearchId(interp, varPtr, varName, objv[3]); if (searchPtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } while (1) { Var *varPtr2; hPtr = searchPtr->nextEntry; if (hPtr == NULL) { hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&searchPtr->search); if (hPtr == NULL) { return TCL_OK; } } else { searchPtr->nextEntry = NULL; } varPtr2 = (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); if (!TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr2)) { break; } } Tcl_SetStringObj(resultPtr, Tcl_GetHashKey(varPtr->value.tablePtr, hPtr), -1); break; } case ARRAY_SET: { if (objc != 4) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 2, objv, "arrayName list"); return TCL_ERROR; } return TclArraySet(interp, objv[2], objv[3]); } case ARRAY_SIZE: { Tcl_HashSearch search; Var *varPtr2; int size; if (objc != 3) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 2, objv, "arrayName"); return TCL_ERROR; } size = 0; if (!notArray) { for (hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(varPtr->value.tablePtr, &search); hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&search)) { varPtr2 = (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); if (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr2)) { continue; } size++; } } Tcl_SetIntObj(resultPtr, size); break; } case ARRAY_STARTSEARCH: { ArraySearch *searchPtr; if (objc != 3) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 2, objv, "arrayName"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (notArray) { goto error; } searchPtr = (ArraySearch *) ckalloc(sizeof(ArraySearch)); if (varPtr->searchPtr == NULL) { searchPtr->id = 1; Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(resultPtr, "s-1-", varName, (char *) NULL); } else { char string[TCL_INTEGER_SPACE]; searchPtr->id = varPtr->searchPtr->id + 1; TclFormatInt(string, searchPtr->id); Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(resultPtr, "s-", string, "-", varName, (char *) NULL); } searchPtr->varPtr = varPtr; searchPtr->nextEntry = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(varPtr->value.tablePtr, &searchPtr->search); searchPtr->nextPtr = varPtr->searchPtr; varPtr->searchPtr = searchPtr; break; } case ARRAY_STATISTICS: { CONST char *stats; if (notArray) { goto error; } stats = Tcl_HashStats(varPtr->value.tablePtr); if (stats != NULL) { Tcl_SetStringObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), stats, -1); ckfree((void *)stats); } else { Tcl_SetResult(interp, "error reading array statistics", TCL_STATIC); return TCL_ERROR; } break; } case ARRAY_UNSET: { Tcl_HashSearch search; Var *varPtr2; char *pattern = NULL; char *name; if ((objc != 3) && (objc != 4)) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 2, objv, "arrayName ?pattern?"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (notArray) { return TCL_OK; } if (objc == 3) { /* * When no pattern is given, just unset the whole array */ if (TclObjUnsetVar2(interp, varNamePtr, NULL, 0) != TCL_OK) { return TCL_ERROR; } } else { pattern = Tcl_GetString(objv[3]); for (hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(varPtr->value.tablePtr, &search); hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&search)) { varPtr2 = (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); if (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr2)) { continue; } name = Tcl_GetHashKey(varPtr->value.tablePtr, hPtr); if (Tcl_StringMatch(name, pattern) && (TclObjUnsetVar2(interp, varNamePtr, name, 0) != TCL_OK)) { return TCL_ERROR; } } } break; } } return TCL_OK; error: Tcl_AppendStringsToObj(resultPtr, "\"", varName, "\" isn't an array", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclArraySet -- * * Set the elements of an array. If there are no elements to * set, create an empty array. This routine is used by the * Tcl_ArrayObjCmd and by the TclSetupEnv routine. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result object. * * Side effects: * A variable will be created if one does not already exist. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int TclArraySet(interp, arrayNameObj, arrayElemObj) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ Tcl_Obj *arrayNameObj; /* The array name. */ Tcl_Obj *arrayElemObj; /* The array elements list or dict. If * this is NULL, create an empty array. */ { Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; Tcl_Obj **elemPtrs; int result, elemLen, i, nameLen; char *varName, *p; varName = Tcl_GetStringFromObj(arrayNameObj, &nameLen); p = varName + nameLen - 1; if (*p == ')') { while (--p >= varName) { if (*p == '(') { TclVarErrMsg(interp, varName, NULL, "set", needArray); return TCL_ERROR; } } } varPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, arrayNameObj, NULL, /*flags*/ TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG, /*msg*/ "set", /*createPart1*/ 1, /*createPart2*/ 0, &arrayPtr); if (varPtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } if (arrayElemObj == NULL) { goto ensureArray; } /* * Install the contents of the dictionary or list into the array. */ if (arrayElemObj->typePtr == &tclDictType) { Tcl_Obj *keyPtr, *valuePtr; Tcl_DictSearch search; int done; if (Tcl_DictObjSize(interp, arrayElemObj, &done) != TCL_OK) { return TCL_ERROR; } if (done == 0) { /* * Empty, so we'll just force the array to be properly * existing instead. */ goto ensureArray; } /* * Don't need to look at result of Tcl_DictObjFirst as we've * just successfully used a dictionary operation on the same * object. */ for (Tcl_DictObjFirst(interp, arrayElemObj, &search, &keyPtr, &valuePtr, &done) ; !done ; Tcl_DictObjNext(&search, &keyPtr, &valuePtr, &done)) { /* * At this point, it would be nice if the key was directly * usable by the array. This isn't the case though. */ char *part2 = TclGetString(keyPtr); Var *elemVarPtr = TclLookupArrayElement(interp, varName, part2, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG, "set", 1, 1, varPtr); if ((elemVarPtr == NULL) || (TclPtrSetVar(interp, elemVarPtr, varPtr, varName, part2, valuePtr, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) == NULL)) { Tcl_DictObjDone(&search); return TCL_ERROR; } } return TCL_OK; } else { /* * Not a dictionary, so assume (and convert to, for * backward-compatability reasons) a list. */ result = Tcl_ListObjGetElements(interp, arrayElemObj, &elemLen, &elemPtrs); if (result != TCL_OK) { return result; } if (elemLen & 1) { Tcl_ResetResult(interp); Tcl_AppendToObj(Tcl_GetObjResult(interp), "list must have an even number of elements", -1); return TCL_ERROR; } if (elemLen == 0) { goto ensureArray; } /* * We needn't worry about traces invalidating arrayPtr: should * that be the case, TclPtrSetVar will return NULL so that we * break out of the loop and return an error. */ for (i = 0; i < elemLen; i += 2) { char *part2 = TclGetString(elemPtrs[i]); Var *elemVarPtr = TclLookupArrayElement(interp, varName, part2, TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG, "set", 1, 1, varPtr); if ((elemVarPtr == NULL) || (TclPtrSetVar(interp, elemVarPtr, varPtr, varName, part2, elemPtrs[i+1], TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG) == NULL)) { result = TCL_ERROR; break; } } return result; } /* * The list is empty make sure we have an array, or create * one if necessary. */ ensureArray: if (varPtr != NULL) { if (!TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr) && TclIsVarArray(varPtr)) { /* * Already an array, done. */ return TCL_OK; } if (TclIsVarArrayElement(varPtr) || !TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)) { /* * Either an array element, or a scalar: lose! */ TclVarErrMsg(interp, varName, (char *)NULL, "array set", needArray); return TCL_ERROR; } } TclSetVarArray(varPtr); TclClearVarUndefined(varPtr); varPtr->value.tablePtr = (Tcl_HashTable *) ckalloc(sizeof(Tcl_HashTable)); Tcl_InitHashTable(varPtr->value.tablePtr, TCL_STRING_KEYS); return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * ObjMakeUpvar -- * * This procedure does all of the work of the "global" and "upvar" * commands. * * Results: * A standard Tcl completion code. If an error occurs then an * error message is left in iPtr->result. * * Side effects: * The variable given by myName is linked to the variable in framePtr * given by otherP1 and otherP2, so that references to myName are * redirected to the other variable like a symbolic link. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static int ObjMakeUpvar(interp, framePtr, otherP1Ptr, otherP2, otherFlags, myName, myFlags, index) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter containing variables. Used * for error messages, too. */ CallFrame *framePtr; /* Call frame containing "other" variable. * NULL means use global :: context. */ Tcl_Obj *otherP1Ptr; CONST char *otherP2; /* Two-part name of variable in framePtr. */ CONST int otherFlags; /* 0, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY or TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY: * indicates scope of "other" variable. */ CONST char *myName; /* Name of variable which will refer to * otherP1/otherP2. Must be a scalar. */ int myFlags; /* 0, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY or TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY: * indicates scope of myName. */ int index; /* If the variable to be linked is an indexed * scalar, this is its index. Otherwise, -1. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; Var *otherPtr, *varPtr, *arrayPtr; CallFrame *varFramePtr; CONST char *errMsg; CONST char *p; /* * Find "other" in "framePtr". If not looking up other in just the * current namespace, temporarily replace the current var frame * pointer in the interpreter in order to use TclObjLookupVar. */ varFramePtr = iPtr->varFramePtr; if (!(otherFlags & TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY)) { iPtr->varFramePtr = framePtr; } otherPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, otherP1Ptr, otherP2, (otherFlags | TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG), "access", /*createPart1*/ 1, /*createPart2*/ 1, &arrayPtr); if (!(otherFlags & TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY)) { iPtr->varFramePtr = varFramePtr; } if (otherPtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } if (index >= 0) { if (!varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame) { Tcl_Panic("ObjMakeUpvar called with an index outside from a proc.\n"); } varPtr = &(varFramePtr->compiledLocals[index]); } else { /* * Check that we are not trying to create a namespace var linked to * a local variable in a procedure. If we allowed this, the local * variable in the shorter-lived procedure frame could go away * leaving the namespace var's reference invalid. */ if (((otherP2 ? arrayPtr->nsPtr : otherPtr->nsPtr) == NULL) && ((myFlags & (TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY | TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY)) || (varFramePtr == NULL) || !varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame || (strstr(myName, "::") != NULL))) { Tcl_AppendResult((Tcl_Interp *) iPtr, "bad variable name \"", myName, "\": upvar won't create namespace variable that ", "refers to procedure variable", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Do not permit the new variable to look like an array reference, * as it will not be reachable in that case [Bug 600812, TIP 184]. * The "definition" of what "looks like an array reference" is * consistent (and must remain consistent) with the code in * TclObjLookupVar(). */ p = strstr(myName, "("); if (p != NULL) { p += strlen(p)-1; if (*p == ')') { /* * myName looks like an array reference. */ Tcl_AppendResult((Tcl_Interp *) iPtr, "bad variable name \"", myName, "\": upvar won't create a scalar variable that ", "looks like an array element", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } } /* * Lookup and eventually create the new variable. Set the flag bit * LOOKUP_FOR_UPVAR to indicate the special resolution rules for * upvar purposes: * - Bug #696893 - variable is either proc-local or in the current * namespace; never follow the second (global) resolution path * - Bug #631741 - do not use special namespace or interp resolvers */ varPtr = TclLookupSimpleVar(interp, myName, (myFlags | LOOKUP_FOR_UPVAR), /* create */ 1, &errMsg, &index); if (varPtr == NULL) { TclVarErrMsg(interp, myName, NULL, "create", errMsg); return TCL_ERROR; } } if (varPtr == otherPtr) { Tcl_SetResult((Tcl_Interp *) iPtr, "can't upvar from variable to itself", TCL_STATIC); return TCL_ERROR; } if (varPtr->tracePtr != NULL) { Tcl_AppendResult((Tcl_Interp *) iPtr, "variable \"", myName, "\" has traces: can't use for upvar", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } else if (!TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr)) { /* * The variable already existed. Make sure this variable "varPtr" * isn't the same as "otherPtr" (avoid circular links). Also, if * it's not an upvar then it's an error. If it is an upvar, then * just disconnect it from the thing it currently refers to. */ if (TclIsVarLink(varPtr)) { Var *linkPtr = varPtr->value.linkPtr; if (linkPtr == otherPtr) { return TCL_OK; } linkPtr->refCount--; if (TclIsVarUndefined(linkPtr)) { TclCleanupVar(linkPtr, (Var *) NULL); } } else { Tcl_AppendResult((Tcl_Interp *) iPtr, "variable \"", myName, "\" already exists", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } } TclSetVarLink(varPtr); TclClearVarUndefined(varPtr); varPtr->value.linkPtr = otherPtr; otherPtr->refCount++; return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_UpVar -- * * This procedure links one variable to another, just like * the "upvar" command. * * Results: * A standard Tcl completion code. If an error occurs then * an error message is left in the interp's result. * * Side effects: * The variable in frameName whose name is given by varName becomes * accessible under the name localName, so that references to * localName are redirected to the other variable like a symbolic * link. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_UpVar(interp, frameName, varName, localName, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Command interpreter in which varName is * to be looked up. */ CONST char *frameName; /* Name of the frame containing the source * variable, such as "1" or "#0". */ CONST char *varName; /* Name of a variable in interp to link to. * May be either a scalar name or an * element in an array. */ CONST char *localName; /* Name of link variable. */ int flags; /* 0, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY or TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY: * indicates scope of localName. */ { return Tcl_UpVar2(interp, frameName, varName, NULL, localName, flags); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_UpVar2 -- * * This procedure links one variable to another, just like * the "upvar" command. * * Results: * A standard Tcl completion code. If an error occurs then * an error message is left in the interp's result. * * Side effects: * The variable in frameName whose name is given by part1 and * part2 becomes accessible under the name localName, so that * references to localName are redirected to the other variable * like a symbolic link. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_UpVar2(interp, frameName, part1, part2, localName, flags) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter containing variables. Used * for error messages too. */ CONST char *frameName; /* Name of the frame containing the source * variable, such as "1" or "#0". */ CONST char *part1; CONST char *part2; /* Two parts of source variable name to * link to. */ CONST char *localName; /* Name of link variable. */ int flags; /* 0, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY or TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY: * indicates scope of localName. */ { int result; CallFrame *framePtr; Tcl_Obj *part1Ptr; if (TclGetFrame(interp, frameName, &framePtr) == -1) { return TCL_ERROR; } part1Ptr = Tcl_NewStringObj(part1, -1); Tcl_IncrRefCount(part1Ptr); result = ObjMakeUpvar(interp, framePtr, part1Ptr, part2, 0, localName, flags, -1); TclDecrRefCount(part1Ptr); return result; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GetVariableFullName -- * * Given a Tcl_Var token returned by Tcl_FindNamespaceVar, this * procedure appends to an object the namespace variable's full * name, qualified by a sequence of parent namespace names. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * The variable's fully-qualified name is appended to the string * representation of objPtr. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void Tcl_GetVariableFullName(interp, variable, objPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter containing the variable. */ Tcl_Var variable; /* Token for the variable returned by a * previous call to Tcl_FindNamespaceVar. */ Tcl_Obj *objPtr; /* Points to the object onto which the * variable's full name is appended. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; register Var *varPtr = (Var *) variable; char *name; /* * Add the full name of the containing namespace (if any), followed by * the "::" separator, then the variable name. */ if (varPtr != NULL) { if (!TclIsVarArrayElement(varPtr)) { if (varPtr->nsPtr != NULL) { Tcl_AppendToObj(objPtr, varPtr->nsPtr->fullName, -1); if (varPtr->nsPtr != iPtr->globalNsPtr) { Tcl_AppendToObj(objPtr, "::", 2); } } if (varPtr->name != NULL) { Tcl_AppendToObj(objPtr, varPtr->name, -1); } else if (varPtr->hPtr != NULL) { name = Tcl_GetHashKey(varPtr->hPtr->tablePtr, varPtr->hPtr); Tcl_AppendToObj(objPtr, name, -1); } } } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_GlobalObjCmd -- * * This object-based procedure is invoked to process the "global" 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. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_GlobalObjCmd(dummy, interp, objc, objv) ClientData dummy; /* Not used. */ Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ int objc; /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; register Tcl_Obj *objPtr; char *varName; register char *tail; int result, i; if (objc < 2) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "varName ?varName ...?"); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * If we are not executing inside a Tcl procedure, just return. */ if ((iPtr->varFramePtr == NULL) || !iPtr->varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame) { return TCL_OK; } for (i = 1; i < objc; i++) { /* * Make a local variable linked to its counterpart in the global :: * namespace. */ objPtr = objv[i]; varName = TclGetString(objPtr); /* * The variable name might have a scope qualifier, but the name for * the local "link" variable must be the simple name at the tail. */ for (tail = varName; *tail != '\0'; tail++) { /* empty body */ } while ((tail > varName) && ((*tail != ':') || (*(tail-1) != ':'))) { tail--; } if ((*tail == ':') && (tail > varName)) { tail++; } /* * Link to the variable "varName" in the global :: namespace. */ result = ObjMakeUpvar(interp, (CallFrame *) NULL, objPtr, NULL, /*otherFlags*/ TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, /*myName*/ tail, /*myFlags*/ 0, -1); if (result != TCL_OK) { return result; } } return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_VariableObjCmd -- * * Invoked to implement the "variable" command that creates one or more * global variables. Handles the following syntax: * * variable ?name value...? name ?value? * * One or more variables can be created. The variables are initialized * with the specified values. The value for the last variable is * optional. * * If the variable does not exist, it is created and given the optional * value. If it already exists, it is simply set to the optional * value. Normally, "name" is an unqualified name, so it is created in * the current namespace. If it includes namespace qualifiers, it can * be created in another namespace. * * If the variable command is executed inside a Tcl procedure, it * creates a local variable linked to the newly-created namespace * variable. * * Results: * Returns TCL_OK if the variable is found or created. Returns * TCL_ERROR if anything goes wrong. * * Side effects: * If anything goes wrong, this procedure returns an error message * as the result in the interpreter's result object. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ int Tcl_VariableObjCmd(dummy, interp, objc, objv) ClientData dummy; /* Not used. */ Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ int objc; /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects. */ { Interp *iPtr = (Interp *) interp; char *varName, *tail, *cp; Var *varPtr, *arrayPtr; Tcl_Obj *varValuePtr; int i, result; Tcl_Obj *varNamePtr; if (objc < 2) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "?name value...? name ?value?"); return TCL_ERROR; } for (i = 1; i < objc; i = i+2) { /* * Look up each variable in the current namespace context, creating * it if necessary. */ varNamePtr = objv[i]; varName = TclGetString(varNamePtr); varPtr = TclObjLookupVar(interp, varNamePtr, NULL, (TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY | TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG), "define", /*createPart1*/ 1, /*createPart2*/ 0, &arrayPtr); if (arrayPtr != NULL) { /* * Variable cannot be an element in an array. If arrayPtr is * non-null, it is, so throw up an error and return. */ TclVarErrMsg(interp, varName, NULL, "define", isArrayElement); return TCL_ERROR; } if (varPtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Mark the variable as a namespace variable and increment its * reference count so that it will persist until its namespace is * destroyed or until the variable is unset. */ if (!(varPtr->flags & VAR_NAMESPACE_VAR)) { varPtr->flags |= VAR_NAMESPACE_VAR; varPtr->refCount++; } /* * If a value was specified, set the variable to that value. * Otherwise, if the variable is new, leave it undefined. * (If the variable already exists and no value was specified, * leave its value unchanged; just create the local link if * we're in a Tcl procedure). */ if (i+1 < objc) { /* a value was specified */ varValuePtr = TclPtrSetVar(interp, varPtr, arrayPtr, varName, NULL, objv[i+1], (TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY | TCL_LEAVE_ERR_MSG)); if (varValuePtr == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } } /* * If we are executing inside a Tcl procedure, create a local * variable linked to the new namespace variable "varName". */ if ((iPtr->varFramePtr != NULL) && iPtr->varFramePtr->isProcCallFrame) { /* * varName might have a scope qualifier, but the name for the * local "link" variable must be the simple name at the tail. * * Locate tail in one pass: drop any prefix after two *or more* * consecutive ":" characters). */ for (tail = cp = varName; *cp != '\0'; ) { if (*cp++ == ':') { while (*cp == ':') { tail = ++cp; } } } /* * Create a local link "tail" to the variable "varName" in the * current namespace. */ result = ObjMakeUpvar(interp, (CallFrame *) NULL, /*otherP1*/ varNamePtr, /*otherP2*/ NULL, /*otherFlags*/ TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, /*myName*/ tail, /*myFlags*/ 0, -1); if (result != TCL_OK) { return result; } } } return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Tcl_UpvarObjCmd -- * * This object-based procedure is invoked to process the "upvar" * 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. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* ARGSUSED */ int Tcl_UpvarObjCmd(dummy, interp, objc, objv) ClientData dummy; /* Not used. */ Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Current interpreter. */ int objc; /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[]; /* Argument objects. */ { CallFrame *framePtr; char *frameSpec, *localName; int result; if (objc < 3) { upvarSyntax: Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, "?level? otherVar localVar ?otherVar localVar ...?"); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * Find the call frame containing each of the "other variables" to be * linked to. */ frameSpec = TclGetString(objv[1]); result = TclGetFrame(interp, frameSpec, &framePtr); if (result == -1) { return TCL_ERROR; } objc -= result+1; if ((objc & 1) != 0) { goto upvarSyntax; } objv += result+1; /* * Iterate over each (other variable, local variable) pair. * Divide the other variable name into two parts, then call * MakeUpvar to do all the work of linking it to the local variable. */ for ( ; objc > 0; objc -= 2, objv += 2) { localName = TclGetString(objv[1]); result = ObjMakeUpvar(interp, framePtr, /* othervarName */ objv[0], NULL, 0, /* myVarName */ localName, /*flags*/ 0, -1); if (result != TCL_OK) { return TCL_ERROR; } } return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * NewVar -- * * Create a new heap-allocated variable that will eventually be * entered into a hashtable. * * Results: * The return value is a pointer to the new variable structure. It is * marked as a scalar variable (and not a link or array variable). Its * value initially is NULL. The variable is not part of any hash table * yet. Since it will be in a hashtable and not in a call frame, its * name field is set NULL. It is initially marked as undefined. * * Side effects: * Storage gets allocated. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static Var * NewVar() { register Var *varPtr; varPtr = (Var *) ckalloc(sizeof(Var)); varPtr->value.objPtr = NULL; varPtr->name = NULL; varPtr->nsPtr = NULL; varPtr->hPtr = NULL; varPtr->refCount = 0; varPtr->tracePtr = NULL; varPtr->searchPtr = NULL; varPtr->flags = (VAR_SCALAR | VAR_UNDEFINED | VAR_IN_HASHTABLE); return varPtr; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * SetArraySearchObj -- * * This function converts the given tcl object into one that * has the "array search" internal type. * * Results: * TCL_OK if the conversion succeeded, and TCL_ERROR if it failed * (when an error message will be placed in the interpreter's * result.) * * Side effects: * Updates the internal type and representation of the object to * make this an array-search object. See the tclArraySearchType * declaration above for details of the internal representation. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static int SetArraySearchObj(interp, objPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; Tcl_Obj *objPtr; { char *string; char *end; int id; size_t offset; /* * Get the string representation. Make it up-to-date if necessary. */ string = Tcl_GetString(objPtr); /* * Parse the id into the three parts separated by dashes. */ if ((string[0] != 's') || (string[1] != '-')) { syntax: Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "illegal search identifier \"", string, "\"", (char *) NULL); return TCL_ERROR; } id = strtoul(string+2, &end, 10); if ((end == (string+2)) || (*end != '-')) { goto syntax; } /* * Can't perform value check in this context, so place reference * to place in string to use for the check in the object instead. */ end++; offset = end - string; TclFreeIntRep(objPtr); objPtr->typePtr = &tclArraySearchType; objPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1 = (VOID *)(((char *)NULL)+id); objPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2 = (VOID *)(((char *)NULL)+offset); return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * ParseSearchId -- * * This procedure translates from a tcl object to a pointer to an * active array search (if there is one that matches the string). * * Results: * The return value is a pointer to the array search indicated * by string, or NULL if there isn't one. If NULL is returned, * the interp's result contains an error message. * * Side effects: * The tcl object might have its internal type and representation * modified. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static ArraySearch * ParseSearchId(interp, varPtr, varName, handleObj) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter containing variable. */ CONST Var *varPtr; /* Array variable search is for. */ CONST char *varName; /* Name of array variable that search is * supposed to be for. */ Tcl_Obj *handleObj; /* Object containing id of search. Must have * form "search-num-var" where "num" is a * decimal number and "var" is a variable * name. */ { register char *string; register size_t offset; int id; ArraySearch *searchPtr; /* * Parse the id. */ if (Tcl_ConvertToType(interp, handleObj, &tclArraySearchType) != TCL_OK) { return NULL; } /* * Cast is safe, since always came from an int in the first place. */ id = (int)(((char*)handleObj->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1) - ((char*)NULL)); string = Tcl_GetString(handleObj); offset = (((char*)handleObj->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2) - ((char*)NULL)); /* * This test cannot be placed inside the Tcl_Obj machinery, since * it is dependent on the variable context. */ if (strcmp(string+offset, varName) != 0) { Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "search identifier \"", string, "\" isn't for variable \"", varName, "\"", (char *) NULL); return NULL; } /* * Search through the list of active searches on the interpreter * to see if the desired one exists. * * Note that we cannot store the searchPtr directly in the Tcl_Obj * as that would run into trouble when DeleteSearches() was called * so we must scan this list every time. */ for (searchPtr = varPtr->searchPtr; searchPtr != NULL; searchPtr = searchPtr->nextPtr) { if (searchPtr->id == id) { return searchPtr; } } Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "couldn't find search \"", string, "\"", (char *) NULL); return NULL; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * DeleteSearches -- * * This procedure is called to free up all of the searches * associated with an array variable. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Memory is released to the storage allocator. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void DeleteSearches(arrayVarPtr) register Var *arrayVarPtr; /* Variable whose searches are * to be deleted. */ { ArraySearch *searchPtr; while (arrayVarPtr->searchPtr != NULL) { searchPtr = arrayVarPtr->searchPtr; arrayVarPtr->searchPtr = searchPtr->nextPtr; ckfree((char *) searchPtr); } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclDeleteVars -- * * This procedure is called to recycle all the storage space * associated with a table of variables. For this procedure * to work correctly, it must not be possible for any of the * variables in the table to be accessed from Tcl commands * (e.g. from trace procedures). * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Variables are deleted and trace procedures are invoked, if * any are declared. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclDeleteVars(iPtr, tablePtr) Interp *iPtr; /* Interpreter to which variables belong. */ Tcl_HashTable *tablePtr; /* Hash table containing variables to * delete. */ { Tcl_Interp *interp = (Tcl_Interp *) iPtr; Tcl_HashSearch search; Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; register Var *varPtr; Var *linkPtr; int flags; ActiveVarTrace *activePtr; Tcl_Obj *objPtr; Namespace *currNsPtr = (Namespace *) Tcl_GetCurrentNamespace(interp); /* * Determine what flags to pass to the trace callback procedures. */ flags = TCL_TRACE_UNSETS; if (tablePtr == &iPtr->globalNsPtr->varTable) { flags |= TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY; } else if (tablePtr == &currNsPtr->varTable) { flags |= TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY; } if (Tcl_InterpDeleted(interp)) { flags |= TCL_INTERP_DESTROYED; } for (hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(tablePtr, &search); hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&search)) { varPtr = (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); /* * For global/upvar variables referenced in procedures, decrement * the reference count on the variable referred to, and free * the referenced variable if it's no longer needed. Don't delete * the hash entry for the other variable if it's in the same table * as us: this will happen automatically later on. */ if (TclIsVarLink(varPtr)) { linkPtr = varPtr->value.linkPtr; linkPtr->refCount--; if ((linkPtr->refCount == 0) && TclIsVarUndefined(linkPtr) && (linkPtr->tracePtr == NULL) && (linkPtr->flags & VAR_IN_HASHTABLE)) { if (linkPtr->hPtr == NULL) { ckfree((char *) linkPtr); } else if (linkPtr->hPtr->tablePtr != tablePtr) { Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(linkPtr->hPtr); ckfree((char *) linkPtr); } } } /* * Invoke traces on the variable that is being deleted, then * free up the variable's space (no need to free the hash * entry here, unless we're dealing with a global variable: * the hash entries will be deleted automatically when the * whole table is deleted). Note that we give TclCallVarTraces * the variable's fully-qualified name so that any called * trace procedures can refer to these variables being * deleted. */ if (varPtr->tracePtr != NULL) { objPtr = Tcl_NewObj(); Tcl_IncrRefCount(objPtr); /* until done with traces */ Tcl_GetVariableFullName(interp, (Tcl_Var) varPtr, objPtr); TclCallVarTraces(iPtr, (Var *) NULL, varPtr, Tcl_GetString(objPtr), NULL, flags, /* leaveErrMsg */ 0); Tcl_DecrRefCount(objPtr); /* free no longer needed obj */ while (varPtr->tracePtr != NULL) { VarTrace *tracePtr = varPtr->tracePtr; varPtr->tracePtr = tracePtr->nextPtr; Tcl_EventuallyFree((ClientData) tracePtr, TCL_DYNAMIC); } for (activePtr = iPtr->activeVarTracePtr; activePtr != NULL; activePtr = activePtr->nextPtr) { if (activePtr->varPtr == varPtr) { activePtr->nextTracePtr = NULL; } } } if (TclIsVarArray(varPtr)) { DeleteArray(iPtr, Tcl_GetHashKey(tablePtr, hPtr), varPtr, flags); varPtr->value.tablePtr = NULL; } if (TclIsVarScalar(varPtr) && (varPtr->value.objPtr != NULL)) { objPtr = varPtr->value.objPtr; TclDecrRefCount(objPtr); varPtr->value.objPtr = NULL; } varPtr->hPtr = NULL; varPtr->tracePtr = NULL; TclSetVarUndefined(varPtr); TclSetVarScalar(varPtr); /* * If the variable was a namespace variable, decrement its * reference count. We are in the process of destroying its * namespace so that namespace will no longer "refer" to the * variable. */ if (varPtr->flags & VAR_NAMESPACE_VAR) { varPtr->flags &= ~VAR_NAMESPACE_VAR; varPtr->refCount--; } /* * Recycle the variable's memory space if there aren't any upvar's * pointing to it. If there are upvars to this variable, then the * variable will get freed when the last upvar goes away. */ if (varPtr->refCount == 0) { ckfree((char *) varPtr); /* this Var must be VAR_IN_HASHTABLE */ } } Tcl_DeleteHashTable(tablePtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclDeleteCompiledLocalVars -- * * This procedure is called to recycle storage space associated with * the compiler-allocated array of local variables in a procedure call * frame. This procedure resembles TclDeleteVars above except that each * variable is stored in a call frame and not a hash table. For this * procedure to work correctly, it must not be possible for any of the * variable in the table to be accessed from Tcl commands (e.g. from * trace procedures). * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * Variables are deleted and trace procedures are invoked, if * any are declared. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclDeleteCompiledLocalVars(iPtr, framePtr) Interp *iPtr; /* Interpreter to which variables belong. */ CallFrame *framePtr; /* Procedure call frame containing * compiler-assigned local variables to * delete. */ { register Var *varPtr; int flags; /* Flags passed to trace procedures. */ Var *linkPtr; ActiveVarTrace *activePtr; int numLocals, i; flags = TCL_TRACE_UNSETS; numLocals = framePtr->numCompiledLocals; varPtr = framePtr->compiledLocals; for (i = 0; i < numLocals; i++) { /* * For global/upvar variables referenced in procedures, decrement * the reference count on the variable referred to, and free * the referenced variable if it's no longer needed. Don't delete * the hash entry for the other variable if it's in the same table * as us: this will happen automatically later on. */ if (TclIsVarLink(varPtr)) { linkPtr = varPtr->value.linkPtr; linkPtr->refCount--; if ((linkPtr->refCount == 0) && TclIsVarUndefined(linkPtr) && (linkPtr->tracePtr == NULL) && (linkPtr->flags & VAR_IN_HASHTABLE)) { if (linkPtr->hPtr == NULL) { ckfree((char *) linkPtr); } else { Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(linkPtr->hPtr); ckfree((char *) linkPtr); } } } /* * Invoke traces on the variable that is being deleted. Then delete * the variable's trace records. */ if (varPtr->tracePtr != NULL) { TclCallVarTraces(iPtr, (Var *) NULL, varPtr, varPtr->name, NULL, flags, /* leaveErrMsg */ 0); while (varPtr->tracePtr != NULL) { VarTrace *tracePtr = varPtr->tracePtr; varPtr->tracePtr = tracePtr->nextPtr; Tcl_EventuallyFree((ClientData) tracePtr, TCL_DYNAMIC); } for (activePtr = iPtr->activeVarTracePtr; activePtr != NULL; activePtr = activePtr->nextPtr) { if (activePtr->varPtr == varPtr) { activePtr->nextTracePtr = NULL; } } } /* * Now if the variable is an array, delete its element hash table. * Otherwise, if it's a scalar variable, decrement the ref count * of its value. */ if (TclIsVarArray(varPtr) && (varPtr->value.tablePtr != NULL)) { DeleteArray(iPtr, varPtr->name, varPtr, flags); } if (TclIsVarScalar(varPtr) && (varPtr->value.objPtr != NULL)) { TclDecrRefCount(varPtr->value.objPtr); varPtr->value.objPtr = NULL; } varPtr->hPtr = NULL; varPtr->tracePtr = NULL; TclSetVarUndefined(varPtr); TclSetVarScalar(varPtr); varPtr++; } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * DeleteArray -- * * This procedure is called to free up everything in an array * variable. It's the caller's responsibility to make sure * that the array is no longer accessible before this procedure * is called. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * All storage associated with varPtr's array elements is deleted * (including the array's hash table). Deletion trace procedures for * array elements are invoked, then deleted. Any pending traces for * array elements are also deleted. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static void DeleteArray(iPtr, arrayName, varPtr, flags) Interp *iPtr; /* Interpreter containing array. */ CONST char *arrayName; /* Name of array (used for trace * callbacks). */ Var *varPtr; /* Pointer to variable structure. */ int flags; /* Flags to pass to TclCallVarTraces: * TCL_TRACE_UNSETS and sometimes * TCL_INTERP_DESTROYED, * TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, or * TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY. */ { Tcl_HashSearch search; register Tcl_HashEntry *hPtr; register Var *elPtr; ActiveVarTrace *activePtr; Tcl_Obj *objPtr; DeleteSearches(varPtr); for (hPtr = Tcl_FirstHashEntry(varPtr->value.tablePtr, &search); hPtr != NULL; hPtr = Tcl_NextHashEntry(&search)) { elPtr = (Var *) Tcl_GetHashValue(hPtr); if (TclIsVarScalar(elPtr) && (elPtr->value.objPtr != NULL)) { objPtr = elPtr->value.objPtr; TclDecrRefCount(objPtr); elPtr->value.objPtr = NULL; } elPtr->hPtr = NULL; if (elPtr->tracePtr != NULL) { elPtr->flags &= ~VAR_TRACE_ACTIVE; TclCallVarTraces(iPtr, (Var *) NULL, elPtr, arrayName, Tcl_GetHashKey(varPtr->value.tablePtr, hPtr), flags, /* leaveErrMsg */ 0); while (elPtr->tracePtr != NULL) { VarTrace *tracePtr = elPtr->tracePtr; elPtr->tracePtr = tracePtr->nextPtr; Tcl_EventuallyFree((ClientData) tracePtr,TCL_DYNAMIC); } for (activePtr = iPtr->activeVarTracePtr; activePtr != NULL; activePtr = activePtr->nextPtr) { if (activePtr->varPtr == elPtr) { activePtr->nextTracePtr = NULL; } } } TclSetVarUndefined(elPtr); TclSetVarScalar(elPtr); /* * Even though array elements are not supposed to be namespace * variables, some combinations of [upvar] and [variable] may * create such beasts - see [Bug 604239]. This is necessary to * avoid leaking the corresponding Var struct, and is otherwise * harmless. */ if (elPtr->flags & VAR_NAMESPACE_VAR) { elPtr->flags &= ~VAR_NAMESPACE_VAR; elPtr->refCount--; } if (elPtr->refCount == 0) { ckfree((char *) elPtr); /* element Vars are VAR_IN_HASHTABLE */ } } Tcl_DeleteHashTable(varPtr->value.tablePtr); ckfree((char *) varPtr->value.tablePtr); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclCleanupVar -- * * This procedure is called when it looks like it may be OK to free up * a variable's storage. If the variable is in a hashtable, its Var * structure and hash table entry will be freed along with those of its * containing array, if any. This procedure is called, for example, * when a trace on a variable deletes a variable. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * If the variable (or its containing array) really is dead and in a * hashtable, then its Var structure, and possibly its hash table * entry, is freed up. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclCleanupVar(varPtr, arrayPtr) Var *varPtr; /* Pointer to variable that may be a * candidate for being expunged. */ Var *arrayPtr; /* Array that contains the variable, or * NULL if this variable isn't an array * element. */ { if (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr) && (varPtr->refCount == 0) && (varPtr->tracePtr == NULL) && (varPtr->flags & VAR_IN_HASHTABLE)) { if (varPtr->hPtr != NULL) { Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(varPtr->hPtr); } ckfree((char *) varPtr); } if (arrayPtr != NULL) { if (TclIsVarUndefined(arrayPtr) && (arrayPtr->refCount == 0) && (arrayPtr->tracePtr == NULL) && (arrayPtr->flags & VAR_IN_HASHTABLE)) { if (arrayPtr->hPtr != NULL) { Tcl_DeleteHashEntry(arrayPtr->hPtr); } ckfree((char *) arrayPtr); } } } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * TclVarErrMsg -- * * Generate a reasonable error message describing why a variable * operation failed. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * The interp's result is set to hold a message identifying the * variable given by part1 and part2 and describing why the * variable operation failed. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ void TclVarErrMsg(interp, part1, part2, operation, reason) Tcl_Interp *interp; /* Interpreter in which to record message. */ CONST char *part1; CONST char *part2; /* Variable's two-part name. */ CONST char *operation; /* String describing operation that failed, * e.g. "read", "set", or "unset". */ CONST char *reason; /* String describing why operation failed. */ { Tcl_ResetResult(interp); Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "can't ", operation, " \"", part1, (char *) NULL); if (part2 != NULL) { Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "(", part2, ")", (char *) NULL); } Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "\": ", reason, (char *) NULL); } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Internal functions for variable name object types -- * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ /* * Panic functions that should never be called in normal * operation. */ static void PanicOnUpdateVarName(objPtr) Tcl_Obj *objPtr; { Tcl_Panic("ERROR: updateStringProc of type %s should not be called.", objPtr->typePtr->name); } static int PanicOnSetVarName(interp, objPtr) Tcl_Interp *interp; Tcl_Obj *objPtr; { Tcl_Panic("ERROR: setFromAnyProc of type %s should not be called.", objPtr->typePtr->name); return TCL_ERROR; } /* * localVarName - * * INTERNALREP DEFINITION: * longValue = index into locals table */ static void DupLocalVarName(srcPtr, dupPtr) Tcl_Obj *srcPtr; Tcl_Obj *dupPtr; { dupPtr->internalRep.longValue = srcPtr->internalRep.longValue; dupPtr->typePtr = &tclLocalVarNameType; } #if ENABLE_NS_VARNAME_CACHING /* * nsVarName - * * INTERNALREP DEFINITION: * twoPtrValue.ptr1: pointer to the namespace containing the * reference. * twoPtrValue.ptr2: pointer to the corresponding Var */ static void FreeNsVarName(objPtr) Tcl_Obj *objPtr; { register Var *varPtr = (Var *) objPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2; varPtr->refCount--; if (TclIsVarUndefined(varPtr) && (varPtr->refCount == 0)) { TclCleanupVar(varPtr, NULL); } } static void DupNsVarName(srcPtr, dupPtr) Tcl_Obj *srcPtr; Tcl_Obj *dupPtr; { Namespace *nsPtr = (Namespace *) srcPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1; register Var *varPtr = (Var *) srcPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2; dupPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1 = (VOID *) nsPtr; dupPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2 = (VOID *) varPtr; varPtr->refCount++; dupPtr->typePtr = &tclNsVarNameType; } #endif /* * parsedVarName - * * INTERNALREP DEFINITION: * twoPtrValue.ptr1 = pointer to the array name Tcl_Obj * (NULL if scalar) * twoPtrValue.ptr2 = pointer to the element name string * (owned by this Tcl_Obj), or NULL if * it is a scalar variable */ static void FreeParsedVarName(objPtr) Tcl_Obj *objPtr; { register Tcl_Obj *arrayPtr = (Tcl_Obj *) objPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1; register char *elem = (char *) objPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2; if (arrayPtr != NULL) { TclDecrRefCount(arrayPtr); ckfree(elem); } } static void DupParsedVarName(srcPtr, dupPtr) Tcl_Obj *srcPtr; Tcl_Obj *dupPtr; { register Tcl_Obj *arrayPtr = (Tcl_Obj *) srcPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1; register char *elem = (char *) srcPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2; char *elemCopy; unsigned int elemLen; if (arrayPtr != NULL) { Tcl_IncrRefCount(arrayPtr); elemLen = strlen(elem); elemCopy = ckalloc(elemLen+1); memcpy(elemCopy, elem, elemLen); *(elemCopy + elemLen) = '\0'; elem = elemCopy; } dupPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1 = (VOID *) arrayPtr; dupPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2 = (VOID *) elem; dupPtr->typePtr = &tclParsedVarNameType; } static void UpdateParsedVarName(objPtr) Tcl_Obj *objPtr; { Tcl_Obj *arrayPtr = (Tcl_Obj *) objPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr1; char *part2 = (char *) objPtr->internalRep.twoPtrValue.ptr2; char *part1, *p; int len1, len2, totalLen; if (arrayPtr == NULL) { /* * This is a parsed scalar name: what is it * doing here? */ Tcl_Panic("ERROR: scalar parsedVarName without a string rep.\n"); } part1 = Tcl_GetStringFromObj(arrayPtr, &len1); len2 = strlen(part2); totalLen = len1 + len2 + 2; p = ckalloc((unsigned int) totalLen + 1); objPtr->bytes = p; objPtr->length = totalLen; memcpy(p, part1, (unsigned int) len1); p += len1; *p++ = '('; memcpy(p, part2, (unsigned int) len2); p += len2; *p++ = ')'; *p = '\0'; }