/* * pkgooa.c -- * * This file contains a simple Tcl package "pkgooa" that is intended for * testing the Tcl dynamic loading facilities. * * Copyright (c) 1995 Sun Microsystems, Inc. * * See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution of * this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. */ #undef STATIC_BUILD #include "tclOO.h" #include /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Pkgooa_StubsOKObjCmd -- * * This procedure is invoked to process the "pkgooa_stubsok" Tcl command. * It gives 1 if stubs are used correctly, 0 if stubs are not OK. * * Results: * A standard Tcl result. * * Side effects: * See the user documentation. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ static int Pkgooa_StubsOKObjCmd( ClientData dummy, /* Not used. */ Tcl_Interp *interp, /* Current interpreter. */ int objc, /* Number of arguments. */ Tcl_Obj *const objv[]) /* Argument objects. */ { if (objc != 1) { Tcl_WrongNumArgs(interp, 1, objv, ""); return TCL_ERROR; } Tcl_SetObjResult(interp, Tcl_NewIntObj( Tcl_CopyObjectInstance == tclOOStubsPtr->tcl_CopyObjectInstance)); return TCL_OK; } /* *---------------------------------------------------------------------- * * Pkgooa_Init -- * * This is a package initialization procedure, which is called by Tcl * when this package is to be added to an interpreter. * * Results: * None. * * Side effects: * None. * *---------------------------------------------------------------------- */ extern void *tclOOIntStubsPtr; static TclOOStubs stubsCopy = { TCL_STUB_MAGIC, NULL, /* It doesn't really matter what implementation of * Tcl_CopyObjectInstance is put in the "pseudo" * stub table, since the test-case never actually * calls this function. All that matters is that it's * a function with a different memory address than * the real Tcl_CopyObjectInstance function in Tcl. */ (Tcl_Object (*) (Tcl_Interp *, Tcl_Object, const char *, const char *t)) Pkgooa_StubsOKObjCmd /* More entries could be here, but those are not used * needed for this test-case. So, being NULL is OK. */ }; extern DLLEXPORT int Pkgooa_Init( Tcl_Interp *interp) /* Interpreter in which the package is to be * made available. */ { int code; if (Tcl_InitStubs(interp, "9.0", 0) == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } if (tclStubsPtr == NULL) { Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "Tcl stubs are not inialized, " "did you compile using -DUSE_TCL_STUBS? "); return TCL_ERROR; } if (Tcl_OOInitStubs(interp) == NULL) { return TCL_ERROR; } if (tclOOStubsPtr == NULL) { Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "TclOO stubs are not inialized"); return TCL_ERROR; } if (tclOOIntStubsPtr == NULL) { Tcl_AppendResult(interp, "TclOO internal stubs are not inialized"); return TCL_ERROR; } /* Test case for Bug [f51efe99a7]. * * Let tclOOStubsPtr point to an alternate stub table * (with only a single function, that's enough for * this test). This way, the function "pkgooa_stubsok" * can check whether the TclOO function calls really * use the stub table, or only pretend to. * * On platforms without backlinking (Windows, Cygwin, * AIX), this code doesn't even compile without using * stubs, but on UNIX ELF systems, the problem is * less visible. */ tclOOStubsPtr = &stubsCopy; code = Tcl_PkgProvide(interp, "Pkgooa", "1.0"); if (code != TCL_OK) { return code; } Tcl_CreateObjCommand(interp, "pkgooa_stubsok", Pkgooa_StubsOKObjCmd, NULL, NULL); return TCL_OK; }