freebsd_amp_hwpstate/contrib/tcl/generic/tclCompile.h

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1997-07-25 19:27:55 +00:00
/*
* tclCompile.h --
*
* Copyright (c) 1996-1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
*
* See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution
* of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
*
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* SCCS: @(#) tclCompile.h 1.37 97/08/07 19:11:50
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*/
#ifndef _TCLCOMPILATION
#define _TCLCOMPILATION 1
#ifndef _TCLINT
#include "tclInt.h"
#endif /* _TCLINT */
/*
*------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Variables related to compilation. These are used in tclCompile.c,
* tclExecute.c, tclBasic.c, and their clients.
*------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/*
* Variable that denotes the command name Tcl object type. Objects of this
* type cache the Command pointer that results from looking up command names
* in the command hashtable.
*/
extern Tcl_ObjType tclCmdNameType;
/*
* Variable that controls whether compilation tracing is enabled and, if so,
* what level of tracing is desired:
* 0: no compilation tracing
* 1: summarize compilation of top level cmds and proc bodies
* 2: display all instructions of each ByteCode compiled
* This variable is linked to the Tcl variable "tcl_traceCompile".
*/
extern int tclTraceCompile;
/*
* Variable that controls whether execution tracing is enabled and, if so,
* what level of tracing is desired:
* 0: no execution tracing
* 1: trace invocations of Tcl procs only
* 2: trace invocations of all (not compiled away) commands
* 3: display each instruction executed
* This variable is linked to the Tcl variable "tcl_traceExec".
*/
extern int tclTraceExec;
/*
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* The number of bytecode compilations and various other compilation-related
* statistics. The tclByteCodeCount and tclSourceCount arrays are used to
* hold the count of ByteCodes and sources whose sizes fall into various
* binary decades; e.g., tclByteCodeCount[5] is a count of the ByteCodes
* with size larger than 2**4 and less than or equal to 2**5.
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*/
#ifdef TCL_COMPILE_STATS
extern long tclNumCompilations;
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extern double tclTotalSourceBytes;
extern double tclTotalCodeBytes;
extern double tclTotalInstBytes;
extern double tclTotalObjBytes;
extern double tclTotalExceptBytes;
extern double tclTotalAuxBytes;
extern double tclTotalCmdMapBytes;
extern double tclCurrentSourceBytes;
extern double tclCurrentCodeBytes;
extern int tclSourceCount[32];
extern int tclByteCodeCount[32];
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#endif /* TCL_COMPILE_STATS */
/*
*------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Data structures related to compilation.
*------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/*
* The structure used to implement Tcl "exceptions" (exceptional returns):
* for example, those generated in loops by the break and continue commands,
* and those generated by scripts and caught by the catch command. This
* ExceptionRange structure describes a range of code (e.g., a loop body),
* the kind of exceptions (e.g., a break or continue) that might occur, and
* the PC offsets to jump to if a matching exception does occur. Exception
* ranges can nest so this structure includes a nesting level that is used
* at runtime to find the closest exception range surrounding a PC. For
* example, when a break command is executed, the ExceptionRange structure
* for the most deeply nested loop, if any, is found and used. These
* structures are also generated for the "next" subcommands of for loops
* since a break there terminates the for command. This means a for command
* actually generates two LoopInfo structures.
*/
typedef enum {
LOOP_EXCEPTION_RANGE, /* Code range is part of a loop command.
* break and continue "exceptions" cause
* jumps to appropriate PC offsets. */
CATCH_EXCEPTION_RANGE /* Code range is controlled by a catch
* command. Errors in the range cause a
* jump to a particular PC offset. */
} ExceptionRangeType;
typedef struct ExceptionRange {
ExceptionRangeType type; /* The kind of ExceptionRange. */
int nestingLevel; /* Static depth of the exception range.
* Used to find the most deeply-nested
* range surrounding a PC at runtime. */
int codeOffset; /* Offset of the first instruction byte of
* the code range. */
int numCodeBytes; /* Number of bytes in the code range. */
int breakOffset; /* If a LOOP_EXCEPTION_RANGE, the target
* PC offset for a break command in the
* range. */
int continueOffset; /* If a LOOP_EXCEPTION_RANGE and not -1,
* the target PC offset for a continue
* command in the code range. Otherwise,
* ignore this range when processing a
* continue command. */
int catchOffset; /* If a CATCH_EXCEPTION_RANGE, the target PC
* offset for an "exception" in range. */
} ExceptionRange;
/*
* Structure used to map between instruction pc and source locations. It
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* defines for each compiled Tcl command its code's starting offset and
* its source's starting offset and length. Note that the code offset
* increases monotonically: that is, the table is sorted in code offset
* order. The source offset is not monotonic.
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*/
typedef struct CmdLocation {
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int codeOffset; /* Offset of first byte of command code. */
int numCodeBytes; /* Number of bytes for command's code. */
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int srcOffset; /* Offset of first char of the command. */
int numSrcChars; /* Number of command source chars. */
} CmdLocation;
/*
* CompileProcs need the ability to record information during compilation
* that can be used by bytecode instructions during execution. The AuxData
* structure provides this "auxiliary data" mechanism. An arbitrary number
* of these structures can be stored in the ByteCode record (during
* compilation they are stored in a CompileEnv structure). Each AuxData
* record holds one word of client-specified data (often a pointer) and is
* given an index that instructions can later use to look up the structure
* and its data.
*
* The following definitions declare the types of procedures that are called
* to duplicate or free this auxiliary data when the containing ByteCode
* objects are duplicated and freed. Pointers to these procedures are kept
* in the AuxData structure.
*/
typedef ClientData (AuxDataDupProc) _ANSI_ARGS_((ClientData clientData));
typedef void (AuxDataFreeProc) _ANSI_ARGS_((ClientData clientData));
/*
* The definition of the AuxData structure that holds information created
* during compilation by CompileProcs and used by instructions during
* execution.
*/
typedef struct AuxData {
ClientData clientData; /* The compilation data itself. */
AuxDataDupProc *dupProc; /* Callback procedure to invoke when the
* aux data is duplicated (e.g., when the
* ByteCode structure containing the aux
* data is duplicated). NULL means just
* copy the source clientData bits; no
* proc need be called. */
AuxDataFreeProc *freeProc; /* Callback procedure to invoke when the
* aux data is freed. NULL means no
* proc need be called. */
} AuxData;
/*
* Structure defining the compilation environment. After compilation, fields
* describing bytecode instructions are copied out into the more compact
* ByteCode structure defined below.
*/
#define COMPILEENV_INIT_CODE_BYTES 250
#define COMPILEENV_INIT_NUM_OBJECTS 40
#define COMPILEENV_INIT_EXCEPT_RANGES 5
#define COMPILEENV_INIT_CMD_MAP_SIZE 40
#define COMPILEENV_INIT_AUX_DATA_SIZE 5
typedef struct CompileEnv {
Interp *iPtr; /* Interpreter containing the code being
* compiled. Commands and their compile
* procs are specific to an interpreter so
* the code emitted will depend on the
* interpreter. */
char *source; /* The source string being compiled by
* SetByteCodeFromAny. This pointer is not
* owned by the CompileEnv and must not be
* freed or changed by it. */
Proc *procPtr; /* If a procedure is being compiled, a
* pointer to its Proc structure; otherwise
* NULL. Used to compile local variables.
* Set from information provided by
* ObjInterpProc in tclProc.c. */
int numCommands; /* Number of commands compiled. */
int excRangeDepth; /* Current exception range nesting level;
* -1 if not in any range currently. */
int maxExcRangeDepth; /* Max nesting level of exception ranges;
* -1 if no ranges have been compiled. */
int maxStackDepth; /* Maximum number of stack elements needed
* to execute the code. Set by compilation
* procedures before returning. */
Tcl_HashTable objTable; /* Contains all Tcl objects referenced by
* the compiled code. Indexed by the string
* representations of the objects. Used to
* avoid creating duplicate objects. */
int pushSimpleWords; /* Set 1 by callers of compilation routines
* if they should emit instructions to push
* "simple" command words (those that are
* just a sequence of characters). If 0, the
* callers are responsible for compiling
* simple words. */
int wordIsSimple; /* Set 1 by compilation procedures before
* returning if the previous command word
* was just a sequence of characters,
* otherwise 0. Used to help determine the
* command being compiled. */
int numSimpleWordChars; /* If wordIsSimple is 1 then the number of
* characters in the simple word, else 0. */
int exprIsJustVarRef; /* Set 1 if the expression last compiled by
* TclCompileExpr consisted of just a
* variable reference as in the expression
* of "if $b then...". Otherwise 0. Used
* to implement expr's 2 level substitution
* semantics properly. */
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int exprIsComparison; /* Set 1 if the top-level operator in the
* expression last compiled is a comparison.
* Otherwise 0. If 1, since the operands
* might be strings, the expr is compiled
* out-of-line to implement expr's 2 level
* substitution semantics properly. */
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int termOffset; /* Offset of character just after the last
* one compiled. Set by compilation
* procedures before returning. */
unsigned char *codeStart; /* Points to the first byte of the code. */
unsigned char *codeNext; /* Points to next code array byte to use. */
unsigned char *codeEnd; /* Points just after the last allocated
* code array byte. */
int mallocedCodeArray; /* Set 1 if code array was expanded
* and codeStart points into the heap.*/
Tcl_Obj **objArrayPtr; /* Points to start of object array. */
int objArrayNext; /* Index of next free object array entry. */
int objArrayEnd; /* Index just after last obj array entry. */
int mallocedObjArray; /* 1 if object array was expanded and
* objArray points into the heap, else 0. */
ExceptionRange *excRangeArrayPtr;
/* Points to start of the ExceptionRange
* array. */
int excRangeArrayNext; /* Next free ExceptionRange array index.
* excRangeArrayNext is the number of ranges
* and (excRangeArrayNext-1) is the index of
* the current range's array entry. */
int excRangeArrayEnd; /* Index after the last ExceptionRange
* array entry. */
int mallocedExcRangeArray; /* 1 if ExceptionRange array was expanded
* and excRangeArrayPtr points in heap,
* else 0. */
CmdLocation *cmdMapPtr; /* Points to start of CmdLocation array.
* numCommands is the index of the next
* entry to use; (numCommands-1) is the
* entry index for the last command. */
int cmdMapEnd; /* Index after last CmdLocation entry. */
int mallocedCmdMap; /* 1 if command map array was expanded and
* cmdMapPtr points in the heap, else 0. */
AuxData *auxDataArrayPtr; /* Points to auxiliary data array start. */
int auxDataArrayNext; /* Next free compile aux data array index.
* auxDataArrayNext is the number of aux
* data items and (auxDataArrayNext-1) is
* index of current aux data array entry. */
int auxDataArrayEnd; /* Index after last aux data array entry. */
int mallocedAuxDataArray; /* 1 if aux data array was expanded and
* auxDataArrayPtr points in heap else 0. */
unsigned char staticCodeSpace[COMPILEENV_INIT_CODE_BYTES];
/* Initial storage for code. */
Tcl_Obj *staticObjArraySpace[COMPILEENV_INIT_NUM_OBJECTS];
/* Initial storage for object array. */
ExceptionRange staticExcRangeArraySpace[COMPILEENV_INIT_EXCEPT_RANGES];
/* Initial ExceptionRange array storage. */
CmdLocation staticCmdMapSpace[COMPILEENV_INIT_CMD_MAP_SIZE];
/* Initial storage for cmd location map. */
AuxData staticAuxDataArraySpace[COMPILEENV_INIT_AUX_DATA_SIZE];
/* Initial storage for aux data array. */
} CompileEnv;
/*
* The structure defining the bytecode instructions resulting from compiling
* a Tcl script. Note that this structure is variable length: a single heap
* object is allocated to hold the ByteCode structure immediately followed
* by the code bytes, the object array, the ExceptionRange array, the
* CmdLocation map, and the compilation AuxData array.
*/
typedef struct ByteCode {
Interp *iPtr; /* Interpreter containing the code being
* compiled. Commands and their compile
* procs are specific to an interpreter so
* the code emitted will depend on the
* interpreter. */
int compileEpoch; /* Value of iPtr->compileEpoch when this
* ByteCode was compiled. Used to invalidate
* code when, e.g., commands with compile
* procs are redefined. */
int refCount; /* Reference count: set 1 when created
* plus 1 for each execution of the code
* currently active. This structure can be
* freed when refCount becomes zero. */
char *source; /* The source string from which this
* ByteCode was compiled. Note that this
* pointer is not owned by the ByteCode and
* must not be freed or modified by it. */
Proc *procPtr; /* If the ByteCode was compiled from a
* procedure body, this is a pointer to its
* Proc structure; otherwise NULL. This
* pointer is also not owned by the ByteCode
* and must not be freed by it. Used for
* debugging. */
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size_t totalSize; /* Total number of bytes required for this
* ByteCode structure including the storage
* for Tcl objects in its object array. */
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int numCommands; /* Number of commands compiled. */
int numSrcChars; /* Number of source chars compiled. */
int numCodeBytes; /* Number of code bytes. */
int numObjects; /* Number of Tcl objects in object array. */
int numExcRanges; /* Number of ExceptionRange array elems. */
int numAuxDataItems; /* Number of AuxData items. */
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int numCmdLocBytes; /* Number of bytes needed for encoded
* command location information. */
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int maxExcRangeDepth; /* Maximum nesting level of ExceptionRanges;
* -1 if no ranges were compiled. */
int maxStackDepth; /* Maximum number of stack elements needed
* to execute the code. */
unsigned char *codeStart; /* Points to the first byte of the code.
* This is just after the final ByteCode
* member cmdMapPtr. */
Tcl_Obj **objArrayPtr; /* Points to the start of the object array.
* This is just after the last code byte. */
ExceptionRange *excRangeArrayPtr;
/* Points to the start of the ExceptionRange
* array. This is just after the last
* object in the object array. */
AuxData *auxDataArrayPtr; /* Points to the start of the auxiliary data
* array. This is just after the last entry
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* in the ExceptionRange array. */
unsigned char *codeDeltaStart;
/* Points to the first of a sequence of
* bytes that encode the change in the
* starting offset of each command's code.
* If -127<=delta<=127, it is encoded as 1
* byte, otherwise 0xFF (128) appears and
* the delta is encoded by the next 4 bytes.
* Code deltas are always positive. This
* sequence is just after the last entry in
* the AuxData array. */
unsigned char *codeLengthStart;
/* Points to the first of a sequence of
* bytes that encode the length of each
* command's code. The encoding is the same
* as for code deltas. Code lengths are
* always positive. This sequence is just
* after the last entry in the code delta
* sequence. */
unsigned char *srcDeltaStart;
/* Points to the first of a sequence of
* bytes that encode the change in the
* starting offset of each command's source.
* The encoding is the same as for code
* deltas. Source deltas can be negative.
* This sequence is just after the last byte
* in the code length sequence. */
unsigned char *srcLengthStart;
/* Points to the first of a sequence of
* bytes that encode the length of each
* command's source. The encoding is the
* same as for code deltas. Source lengths
* are always positive. This sequence is
* just after the last byte in the source
* delta sequence. */
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} ByteCode;
/*
* Opcodes for the Tcl bytecode instructions. These opcodes must correspond
* to the entries in the table of instruction descriptions in tclCompile.c.
* Also, the order and number of the expression opcodes (e.g., INST_LOR)
* must match the entries in the array operatorStrings in tclExecute.c.
*/
/* Opcodes 0 to 9 */
#define INST_DONE 0
#define INST_PUSH1 (INST_DONE + 1)
#define INST_PUSH4 (INST_DONE + 2)
#define INST_POP (INST_DONE + 3)
#define INST_DUP (INST_DONE + 4)
#define INST_CONCAT1 (INST_DONE + 5)
#define INST_INVOKE_STK1 (INST_DONE + 6)
#define INST_INVOKE_STK4 (INST_DONE + 7)
#define INST_EVAL_STK (INST_DONE + 8)
#define INST_EXPR_STK (INST_DONE + 9)
/* Opcodes 10 to 23 */
#define INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 (INST_EXPR_STK + 1)
#define INST_LOAD_SCALAR4 (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 1)
#define INST_LOAD_SCALAR_STK (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 2)
#define INST_LOAD_ARRAY1 (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 3)
#define INST_LOAD_ARRAY4 (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 4)
#define INST_LOAD_ARRAY_STK (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 5)
#define INST_LOAD_STK (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 6)
#define INST_STORE_SCALAR1 (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 7)
#define INST_STORE_SCALAR4 (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 8)
#define INST_STORE_SCALAR_STK (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 9)
#define INST_STORE_ARRAY1 (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 10)
#define INST_STORE_ARRAY4 (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 11)
#define INST_STORE_ARRAY_STK (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 12)
#define INST_STORE_STK (INST_LOAD_SCALAR1 + 13)
/* Opcodes 24 to 33 */
#define INST_INCR_SCALAR1 (INST_STORE_STK + 1)
#define INST_INCR_SCALAR_STK (INST_INCR_SCALAR1 + 1)
#define INST_INCR_ARRAY1 (INST_INCR_SCALAR1 + 2)
#define INST_INCR_ARRAY_STK (INST_INCR_SCALAR1 + 3)
#define INST_INCR_STK (INST_INCR_SCALAR1 + 4)
#define INST_INCR_SCALAR1_IMM (INST_INCR_SCALAR1 + 5)
#define INST_INCR_SCALAR_STK_IMM (INST_INCR_SCALAR1 + 6)
#define INST_INCR_ARRAY1_IMM (INST_INCR_SCALAR1 + 7)
#define INST_INCR_ARRAY_STK_IMM (INST_INCR_SCALAR1 + 8)
#define INST_INCR_STK_IMM (INST_INCR_SCALAR1 + 9)
/* Opcodes 34 to 39 */
#define INST_JUMP1 (INST_INCR_STK_IMM + 1)
#define INST_JUMP4 (INST_JUMP1 + 1)
#define INST_JUMP_TRUE1 (INST_JUMP1 + 2)
#define INST_JUMP_TRUE4 (INST_JUMP1 + 3)
#define INST_JUMP_FALSE1 (INST_JUMP1 + 4)
#define INST_JUMP_FALSE4 (INST_JUMP1 + 5)
/* Opcodes 40 to 64 */
#define INST_LOR (INST_JUMP_FALSE4 + 1)
#define INST_LAND (INST_LOR + 1)
#define INST_BITOR (INST_LOR + 2)
#define INST_BITXOR (INST_LOR + 3)
#define INST_BITAND (INST_LOR + 4)
#define INST_EQ (INST_LOR + 5)
#define INST_NEQ (INST_LOR + 6)
#define INST_LT (INST_LOR + 7)
#define INST_GT (INST_LOR + 8)
#define INST_LE (INST_LOR + 9)
#define INST_GE (INST_LOR + 10)
#define INST_LSHIFT (INST_LOR + 11)
#define INST_RSHIFT (INST_LOR + 12)
#define INST_ADD (INST_LOR + 13)
#define INST_SUB (INST_LOR + 14)
#define INST_MULT (INST_LOR + 15)
#define INST_DIV (INST_LOR + 16)
#define INST_MOD (INST_LOR + 17)
#define INST_UPLUS (INST_LOR + 18)
#define INST_UMINUS (INST_LOR + 19)
#define INST_BITNOT (INST_LOR + 20)
#define INST_LNOT (INST_LOR + 21)
#define INST_CALL_BUILTIN_FUNC1 (INST_LOR + 22)
#define INST_CALL_FUNC1 (INST_LOR + 23)
#define INST_TRY_CVT_TO_NUMERIC (INST_LOR + 24)
/* Opcodes 65 to 66 */
#define INST_BREAK (INST_TRY_CVT_TO_NUMERIC + 1)
#define INST_CONTINUE (INST_BREAK + 1)
/* Opcodes 67 to 68 */
#define INST_FOREACH_START4 (INST_CONTINUE + 1)
#define INST_FOREACH_STEP4 (INST_FOREACH_START4 + 1)
/* Opcodes 69 to 72 */
#define INST_BEGIN_CATCH4 (INST_FOREACH_STEP4 + 1)
#define INST_END_CATCH (INST_BEGIN_CATCH4 + 1)
#define INST_PUSH_RESULT (INST_BEGIN_CATCH4 + 2)
#define INST_PUSH_RETURN_CODE (INST_BEGIN_CATCH4 + 3)
/* The last opcode */
#define LAST_INST_OPCODE INST_PUSH_RETURN_CODE
/*
* Table describing the Tcl bytecode instructions: their name (for
* displaying code), total number of code bytes required (including
* operand bytes), and a description of the type of each operand.
* These operand types include signed and unsigned integers of length
* one and four bytes. The unsigned integers are used for indexes or
* for, e.g., the count of objects to push in a "push" instruction.
*/
#define MAX_INSTRUCTION_OPERANDS 2
typedef enum InstOperandType {
OPERAND_NONE,
OPERAND_INT1, /* One byte signed integer. */
OPERAND_INT4, /* Four byte signed integer. */
OPERAND_UINT1, /* One byte unsigned integer. */
OPERAND_UINT4 /* Four byte unsigned integer. */
} InstOperandType;
typedef struct InstructionDesc {
char *name; /* Name of instruction. */
int numBytes; /* Total number of bytes for instruction. */
int numOperands; /* Number of operands. */
InstOperandType opTypes[MAX_INSTRUCTION_OPERANDS];
/* The type of each operand. */
} InstructionDesc;
extern InstructionDesc instructionTable[];
/*
* Definitions of the values of the INST_CALL_BUILTIN_FUNC instruction's
* operand byte. Each value denotes a builtin Tcl math function. These
* values must correspond to the entries in the builtinFuncTable array
* below and to the values stored in the tclInt.h MathFunc structure's
* builtinFuncIndex field.
*/
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_ACOS 0
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_ASIN 1
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_ATAN 2
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_ATAN2 3
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_CEIL 4
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_COS 5
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_COSH 6
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_EXP 7
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_FLOOR 8
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_FMOD 9
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_HYPOT 10
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_LOG 11
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_LOG10 12
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_POW 13
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_SIN 14
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_SINH 15
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_SQRT 16
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_TAN 17
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_TANH 18
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_ABS 19
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_DOUBLE 20
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_INT 21
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_RAND 22
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_ROUND 23
#define BUILTIN_FUNC_SRAND 24
#define LAST_BUILTIN_FUNC BUILTIN_FUNC_SRAND
/*
* Table describing the built-in math functions. Entries in this table are
* indexed by the values of the INST_CALL_BUILTIN_FUNC instruction's
* operand byte.
*/
typedef int (CallBuiltinFuncProc) _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp,
ExecEnv *eePtr, ClientData clientData));
typedef struct {
char *name; /* Name of function. */
int numArgs; /* Number of arguments for function. */
Tcl_ValueType argTypes[MAX_MATH_ARGS];
/* Acceptable types for each argument. */
CallBuiltinFuncProc *proc; /* Procedure implementing this function. */
ClientData clientData; /* Additional argument to pass to the
* function when invoking it. */
} BuiltinFunc;
extern BuiltinFunc builtinFuncTable[];
/*
* The structure used to hold information about the start and end of each
* argument word in a command.
*/
#define ARGINFO_INIT_ENTRIES 5
typedef struct ArgInfo {
int numArgs; /* Number of argument words in command. */
char **startArray; /* Array of pointers to the first character
* of each argument word. */
char **endArray; /* Array of pointers to the last character
* of each argument word. */
int allocArgs; /* Number of array entries currently
* allocated. */
int mallocedArrays; /* 1 if the arrays were expanded and
* wordStartArray/wordEndArray point into
* the heap, else 0. */
char *staticStartSpace[ARGINFO_INIT_ENTRIES];
/* Initial storage for word start array. */
char *staticEndSpace[ARGINFO_INIT_ENTRIES];
/* Initial storage for word end array. */
} ArgInfo;
/*
* Compilation of some Tcl constructs such as if commands and the logical or
* (||) and logical and (&&) operators in expressions requires the
* generation of forward jumps. Since the PC target of these jumps isn't
* known when the jumps are emitted, we record the offset of each jump in an
* array of JumpFixup structures. There is one array for each sequence of
* jumps to one target PC. When we learn the target PC, we update the jumps
* with the correct distance. Also, if the distance is too great (> 127
* bytes), we replace the single-byte jump with a four byte jump
* instruction, move the instructions after the jump down, and update the
* code offsets for any commands between the jump and the target.
*/
typedef enum {
TCL_UNCONDITIONAL_JUMP,
TCL_TRUE_JUMP,
TCL_FALSE_JUMP
} TclJumpType;
typedef struct JumpFixup {
TclJumpType jumpType; /* Indicates the kind of jump. */
int codeOffset; /* Offset of the first byte of the one-byte
* forward jump's code. */
int cmdIndex; /* Index of the first command after the one
* for which the jump was emitted. Used to
* update the code offsets for subsequent
* commands if the two-byte jump at jumpPc
* must be replaced with a five-byte one. */
int excRangeIndex; /* Index of the first range entry in the
* ExceptionRange array after the current
* one. This field is used to adjust the
* code offsets in subsequent ExceptionRange
* records when a jump is grown from 2 bytes
* to 5 bytes. */
} JumpFixup;
#define JUMPFIXUP_INIT_ENTRIES 10
typedef struct JumpFixupArray {
JumpFixup *fixup; /* Points to start of jump fixup array. */
int next; /* Index of next free array entry. */
int end; /* Index of last usable entry in array. */
int mallocedArray; /* 1 if array was expanded and fixups points
* into the heap, else 0. */
JumpFixup staticFixupSpace[JUMPFIXUP_INIT_ENTRIES];
/* Initial storage for jump fixup array. */
} JumpFixupArray;
/*
* The structure describing one variable list of a foreach command. Note
* that only foreach commands inside procedure bodies are compiled inline so
* a ForeachVarList structure always describes local variables. Furthermore,
* only scalar variables are supported for inline-compiled foreach loops.
*/
typedef struct ForeachVarList {
int numVars; /* The number of variables in the list. */
int varIndexes[1]; /* An array of the indexes ("slot numbers")
* for each variable in the procedure's
* array of local variables. Only scalar
* variables are supported. The actual
* size of this field will be large enough
* to numVars indexes. THIS MUST BE THE
* LAST FIELD IN THE STRUCTURE! */
} ForeachVarList;
/*
* Structure used to hold information about a foreach command that is needed
* during program execution. These structures are stored in CompileEnv and
* ByteCode structures as auxiliary data.
*/
typedef struct ForeachInfo {
int numLists; /* The number of both the variable and value
* lists of the foreach command. */
int firstListTmp; /* The slot number of the first temporary
* variable holding the lists themselves. */
int loopIterNumTmp; /* The slot number of the temp var holding
* the count of times the loop body has been
* executed. This is used to determine which
* list element to assign each loop var. */
ForeachVarList *varLists[1];/* An array of pointers to ForeachVarList
* structures describing each var list. The
* actual size of this field will be large
* enough to numVars indexes. THIS MUST BE
* THE LAST FIELD IN THE STRUCTURE! */
} ForeachInfo;
/*
* Structure containing a cached pointer to a command that is the result
* of resolving the command's name in some namespace. It is the internal
* representation for a cmdName object. It contains the pointer along
* with some information that is used to check the pointer's validity.
*/
typedef struct ResolvedCmdName {
Command *cmdPtr; /* A cached Command pointer. */
Namespace *refNsPtr; /* Points to the namespace containing the
* reference (not the namespace that
* contains the referenced command). */
long refNsId; /* refNsPtr's unique namespace id. Used to
* verify that refNsPtr is still valid
* (e.g., it's possible that the cmd's
* containing namespace was deleted and a
* new one created at the same address). */
int refNsCmdEpoch; /* Value of the referencing namespace's
* cmdRefEpoch when the pointer was cached.
* Before using the cached pointer, we check
* if the namespace's epoch was incremented;
* if so, this cached pointer is invalid. */
int cmdEpoch; /* Value of the command's cmdEpoch when this
* pointer was cached. Before using the
* cached pointer, we check if the cmd's
* epoch was incremented; if so, the cmd was
* renamed, deleted, hidden, or exposed, and
* so the pointer is invalid. */
int refCount; /* Reference count: 1 for each cmdName
* object that has a pointer to this
* ResolvedCmdName structure as its internal
* rep. This structure can be freed when
* refCount becomes zero. */
} ResolvedCmdName;
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------
* Procedures shared among Tcl bytecode compilation and execution
* modules but not used outside:
*----------------------------------------------------------------
*/
EXTERN void TclCleanupByteCode _ANSI_ARGS_((ByteCode *codePtr));
EXTERN int TclCompileExpr _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp,
char *string, char *lastChar, int flags,
CompileEnv *envPtr));
EXTERN int TclCompileQuotes _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp,
char *string, char *lastChar, int termChar,
int flags, CompileEnv *envPtr));
EXTERN int TclCompileString _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp,
char *string, char *lastChar, int flags,
CompileEnv *envPtr));
EXTERN int TclCompileDollarVar _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp,
char *string, char *lastChar, int flags,
CompileEnv *envPtr));
EXTERN int TclCreateAuxData _ANSI_ARGS_((
ClientData clientData, AuxDataDupProc *dupProc,
AuxDataFreeProc *freeProc, CompileEnv *envPtr));
EXTERN ExecEnv * TclCreateExecEnv _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp));
EXTERN void TclDeleteExecEnv _ANSI_ARGS_((ExecEnv *eePtr));
EXTERN void TclEmitForwardJump _ANSI_ARGS_((CompileEnv *envPtr,
TclJumpType jumpType, JumpFixup *jumpFixupPtr));
EXTERN ExceptionRange * TclGetExceptionRangeForPc _ANSI_ARGS_((
unsigned char *pc, int catchOnly,
ByteCode* codePtr));
EXTERN int TclExecuteByteCode _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp,
ByteCode *codePtr));
EXTERN void TclExpandCodeArray _ANSI_ARGS_((
CompileEnv *envPtr));
EXTERN void TclExpandJumpFixupArray _ANSI_ARGS_((
JumpFixupArray *fixupArrayPtr));
EXTERN int TclFixupForwardJump _ANSI_ARGS_((
CompileEnv *envPtr, JumpFixup *jumpFixupPtr,
int jumpDist, int distThreshold));
EXTERN void TclFreeCompileEnv _ANSI_ARGS_((CompileEnv *envPtr));
EXTERN void TclFreeJumpFixupArray _ANSI_ARGS_((
JumpFixupArray *fixupArrayPtr));
EXTERN void TclInitByteCodeObj _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Obj *objPtr,
CompileEnv *envPtr));
EXTERN void TclInitCompileEnv _ANSI_ARGS_((Tcl_Interp *interp,
CompileEnv *envPtr, char *string));
EXTERN void TclInitJumpFixupArray _ANSI_ARGS_((
JumpFixupArray *fixupArrayPtr));
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#ifdef TCL_COMPILE_STATS
EXTERN int TclLog2 _ANSI_ARGS_((int value));
#endif /*TCL_COMPILE_STATS*/
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EXTERN int TclObjIndexForString _ANSI_ARGS_((char *start,
int length, int allocStrRep, int inHeap,
CompileEnv *envPtr));
EXTERN int TclPrintInstruction _ANSI_ARGS_((ByteCode* codePtr,
unsigned char *pc));
EXTERN void TclPrintSource _ANSI_ARGS_((FILE *outFile,
char *string, int maxChars));
/*
*----------------------------------------------------------------
* Macros used by Tcl bytecode compilation and execution modules
* inside the Tcl core but not used outside.
*----------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/*
* Macros to ensure there is enough room in a CompileEnv's code array.
* The ANSI C "prototypes" for these macros are:
*
* EXTERN void TclEnsureCodeSpace1 _ANSI_ARGS_((CompileEnv *envPtr));
* EXTERN void TclEnsureCodeSpace _ANSI_ARGS_((int nBytes,
* CompileEnv *envPtr));
*/
#define TclEnsureCodeSpace1(envPtr) \
if ((envPtr)->codeNext == (envPtr)->codeEnd) \
TclExpandCodeArray(envPtr)
#define TclEnsureCodeSpace(nBytes, envPtr) \
if (((envPtr)->codeNext + nBytes) > (envPtr)->codeEnd) \
TclExpandCodeArray(envPtr)
/*
* Macro to emit an opcode byte into a CompileEnv's code array.
* The ANSI C "prototype" for this macro is:
*
* EXTERN void TclEmitOpcode _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char op,
* CompileEnv *envPtr));
*/
#define TclEmitOpcode(op, envPtr) \
TclEnsureCodeSpace1(envPtr); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = (unsigned char) (op)
/*
* Macros to emit a (signed or unsigned) int operand. The two variants
* depend on the number of bytes needed for the int. Four byte integers
* are stored in "big-endian" order with the high order byte stored at
* the lowest address. The ANSI C "prototypes" for these macros are:
*
* EXTERN void TclEmitInt1 _ANSI_ARGS_((int i, CompileEnv *envPtr));
* EXTERN void TclEmitInt4 _ANSI_ARGS_((int i, CompileEnv *envPtr));
*/
#define TclEmitInt1(i, envPtr) \
TclEnsureCodeSpace(1, (envPtr)); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = (unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i))
#define TclEmitInt4(i, envPtr) \
TclEnsureCodeSpace(4, (envPtr)); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = \
(unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) >> 24); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = \
(unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) >> 16); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = \
(unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) >> 8); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = \
(unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) )
/*
* Macros to emit an instruction with signed or unsigned int operands.
* The ANSI C "prototypes" for these macros are:
*
* EXTERN void TclEmitInstInt1 _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char op, int i,
* CompileEnv *envPtr));
* EXTERN void TclEmitInstInt4 _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char op, int i,
* CompileEnv *envPtr));
* EXTERN void TclEmitInstUInt1 _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char op,
* unsigned int i, CompileEnv *envPtr));
* EXTERN void TclEmitInstUInt4 _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char op,
* unsigned int i, CompileEnv *envPtr));
*/
#define TclEmitInstInt1(op, i, envPtr) \
TclEnsureCodeSpace(2, (envPtr)); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = (unsigned char) (op); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = (unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i))
#define TclEmitInstInt4(op, i, envPtr) \
TclEnsureCodeSpace(5, (envPtr)); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = (unsigned char) (op); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = \
(unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) >> 24); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = \
(unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) >> 16); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = \
(unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) >> 8); \
*(envPtr)->codeNext++ = \
(unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) )
#define TclEmitInstUInt1(op, i, envPtr) \
TclEmitInstInt1((op), (i), (envPtr))
#define TclEmitInstUInt4(op, i, envPtr) \
TclEmitInstInt4((op), (i), (envPtr))
/*
* Macro to push a Tcl object onto the Tcl evaluation stack. It emits the
* object's one or four byte array index into the CompileEnv's code
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* array. These support, respectively, a maximum of 256 (2**8) and 2**32
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* objects in a CompileEnv. The ANSI C "prototype" for this macro is:
*
* EXTERN void TclEmitPush _ANSI_ARGS_((int objIndex, CompileEnv *envPtr));
*/
#define TclEmitPush(objIndex, envPtr) \
if ((objIndex) <= 255) { \
TclEmitInstUInt1(INST_PUSH1, (objIndex), (envPtr)); \
} else { \
TclEmitInstUInt4(INST_PUSH4, (objIndex), (envPtr)); \
}
/*
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* Macros to update a (signed or unsigned) integer starting at a pointer.
* The two variants depend on the number of bytes. The ANSI C "prototypes"
* for these macros are:
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*
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* EXTERN void TclStoreInt1AtPtr _ANSI_ARGS_((int i, unsigned char *p));
* EXTERN void TclStoreInt4AtPtr _ANSI_ARGS_((int i, unsigned char *p));
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*/
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#define TclStoreInt1AtPtr(i, p) \
*(p) = (unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i))
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#define TclStoreInt4AtPtr(i, p) \
*(p) = (unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) >> 24); \
*(p+1) = (unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) >> 16); \
*(p+2) = (unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) >> 8); \
*(p+3) = (unsigned char) ((unsigned int) (i) )
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/*
* Macros to update instructions at a particular pc with a new op code
* and a (signed or unsigned) int operand. The ANSI C "prototypes" for
* these macros are:
*
* EXTERN void TclUpdateInstInt1AtPc _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char op, int i,
* unsigned char *pc));
* EXTERN void TclUpdateInstInt4AtPc _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char op, int i,
* unsigned char *pc));
*/
#define TclUpdateInstInt1AtPc(op, i, pc) \
*(pc) = (unsigned char) (op); \
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TclStoreInt1AtPtr((i), ((pc)+1))
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#define TclUpdateInstInt4AtPc(op, i, pc) \
*(pc) = (unsigned char) (op); \
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TclStoreInt4AtPtr((i), ((pc)+1))
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/*
* Macros to get a signed integer (GET_INT{1,2}) or an unsigned int
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* (GET_UINT{1,2}) from a pointer. There are two variants for each
* return type that depend on the number of bytes fetched.
* The ANSI C "prototypes" for these macros are:
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*
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* EXTERN int TclGetInt1AtPtr _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char *p));
* EXTERN int TclGetInt4AtPtr _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char *p));
* EXTERN unsigned int TclGetUInt1AtPtr _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char *p));
* EXTERN unsigned int TclGetUInt4AtPtr _ANSI_ARGS_((unsigned char *p));
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*/
/*
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* The TclGetInt1AtPtr macro is tricky because we want to do sign
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* extension on the 1-byte value. Unfortunately the "char" type isn't
* signed on all platforms so sign-extension doesn't always happen
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* automatically. Sometimes we can explicitly declare the pointer to be
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* signed, but other times we have to explicitly sign-extend the value
* in software.
*/
#ifndef __CHAR_UNSIGNED__
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# define TclGetInt1AtPtr(p) ((int) *((char *) p))
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#else
# ifdef HAVE_SIGNED_CHAR
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# define TclGetInt1AtPtr(p) ((int) *((signed char *) p))
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# else
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# define TclGetInt1AtPtr(p) (((int) *((char *) p)) \
| ((*(p) & 0200) ? (-256) : 0))
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# endif
#endif
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#define TclGetInt4AtPtr(p) (((int) TclGetInt1AtPtr(p) << 24) | \
(*((p)+1) << 16) | \
(*((p)+2) << 8) | \
(*((p)+3)))
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#define TclGetUInt1AtPtr(p) ((unsigned int) *(p))
#define TclGetUInt4AtPtr(p) ((unsigned int) (*(p) << 24) | \
(*((p)+1) << 16) | \
(*((p)+2) << 8) | \
(*((p)+3)))
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/*
* Macros used to compute the minimum and maximum of two integers.
* The ANSI C "prototypes" for these macros are:
*
* EXTERN int TclMin _ANSI_ARGS_((int i, int j));
* EXTERN int TclMax _ANSI_ARGS_((int i, int j));
*/
#define TclMin(i, j) ((((int) i) < ((int) j))? (i) : (j))
#define TclMax(i, j) ((((int) i) > ((int) j))? (i) : (j))
/*
* Macro used to compute the offset of the current instruction in the
* bytecode instruction stream. The ANSI C "prototypes" for this macro is:
*
* EXTERN int TclCurrCodeOffset _ANSI_ARGS_((void));
*/
#define TclCurrCodeOffset() ((envPtr)->codeNext - (envPtr)->codeStart)
/*
* Upper bound for legal jump distances. Checked during compilation if
* debugging.
*/
#define MAX_JUMP_DIST 5000
#endif /* _TCLCOMPILATION */