From: Xavier Leroy <xavier.leroy@inria.fr>
To: Mary Fernandez <mff@research.att.com>
Cc: caml-list@inria.fr, "Ricardo H. Medel" <rmedel@research.att.com>,
Kathleen S Fisher <kfisher@research.att.com>,
Robert E Gruber <gruber@research.att.com>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Two questions about using the CamlIDL
Date: Thu, 17 Jul 2003 22:27:40 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20030717222740.B12466@pauillac.inria.fr> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1058455592.1492.73.camel@squeak.research.att.com>; from mff@research.att.com on Thu, Jul 17, 2003 at 11:26:33AM -0400
> Our Caml application is unusual in that the Caml
> app calls C functions, which in turn may call
> Caml functions that return Caml objects to C,
> which in turn return those Caml objects back to the
> Caml app.
>
> 1. It is not clear how to use the CamlIDL type syntax
> to define the type of a Caml value that will be returned from C.
Here is a simplistic solution:
quote(c, "#include "camlobj.h")
typedef [mltype(string), c2ml(long_to_camlobj), ml2c(camlobj_to_long)]
long camlobj;
camlobj f(camlobj v);
where camlobj.h contains:
typedef long camlobj;
#define long_to_camlobj(c) (*(c))
#define camlobj_to_long(v,c) (*(c) = (v))
Basically, a "camlobj" is a long integer whose coercions to and from
the Caml "value" type are the identity function.
You didn't say what Caml type the Caml objects should have. I put
"string" here, but any closed type will do.
The problem with this solution is that the Caml values that transit
through the C code under the type "camlobj" are not known to the GC.
Hence, if a GC occurs (e.g. because your C functions call several Caml
functions in turn), the "camlobj" values will become wrong.
A way to avoid this is to wrap the Caml values in a malloced block that
is registered with the Caml GC:
quote(c, "#include <camlobj.h>)
typedef [mltype(string), c2ml(unpack_camlobj), ml2c(pack_camlobj)]
struct packed_camlobj * camlobj;
camlobj f(camlobj v);
where camlobj.h is
typedef struct packed_camlobj { value v; } * camlobj;
extern void pack_camlobj(value v, camlobj * c);
extern value unpack_camlobj(camlobj * c);
and camlobj.c contains
void pack_camlobj(value v, camlobj * c)
{
camlobj p = malloc(sizeof(struct packed_camlobj));
p->v = v;
register_global_root(&(p->v));
*c = p;
}
value unpack_camlobj(camlobj * c)
{
camlobj p = *c;
value v = p->v;
remove_global_root(&(p->v));
free(p);
return v;
}
Notice that unpack_camlobj removes the GC root and destroys the
block allocated by malloc(). This is adequate (I hope :-) if your C
code never stores a camlobj in a global data structure, but simply
passes them around. In more complex situations, you'd need to add a
reference count to the struct packed_camlobj and make sure that the C
code maintains this refcount properly.
> 2. Assuming we can specify the above type, the c_function
> that calls back into Caml will look something like this:
>
> CamlObj c_function() {
> CAMLparam0();
> CAMLlocal2(caml_obj, args);
>
> ... Usual set up to get pointer to Caml function
> and allocate space for args ...
>
> caml_obj = callbackN(*caml_function_closure, 0, args)
>
> CAMLreturn(caml_obj);
> }
>
> Because c_function will be called from the IDL stub functions,
> do we have to modify the stub functions to follow the same
> function-call protocol as above?
I'm not sure I completely understand your question. If you're asking
about GC registration of memory roots, I think the "packed_camlobj"
approach above addresses the issue in a way that does not need
modifying the stub functions nor the intermediate C functions themselves.
One last word: in cases of complex C/Caml interactions, as in your
example, it's often easier to work out the (GC) issues first by
writing by hand the stubs for a few functions. Using CamlIDL from the
beginning makes things even more obscure :-)
Hope this helps,
- Xavier Leroy
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2003-07-17 20:27 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2003-07-17 15:26 Mary Fernandez
2003-07-17 20:27 ` Xavier Leroy [this message]
2003-07-18 16:06 ` Mary Fernandez
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