* [Caml-list] Shared object generation patch. @ 2001-10-06 2:11 malc 2001-10-08 2:25 ` [Caml-list] Shared object generation patch feedback Jeff Henrikson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread From: malc @ 2001-10-06 2:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: caml-list Hello, At http://algol.prosalg.no/~malc/scaml you will find a patch against OCaml 3.02 and some information suitable for producing shared objects on i386 ELF systems. -- mailto:malc@pulsesoft.com ------------------- Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs FAQ: http://caml.inria.fr/FAQ/ To unsubscribe, mail caml-list-request@inria.fr Archives: http://caml.inria.fr ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* [Caml-list] Shared object generation patch feedback 2001-10-06 2:11 [Caml-list] Shared object generation patch malc @ 2001-10-08 2:25 ` Jeff Henrikson 2001-10-08 9:18 ` malc 0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread From: Jeff Henrikson @ 2001-10-08 2:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: malc; +Cc: caml-list > At http://algol.prosalg.no/~malc/scaml you will find a patch against > OCaml 3.02 and some information suitable for producing shared objects > on i386 ELF systems. Nice! It compiled right out of the box, no unexpected difficulties. Is there a way to get a asm runtime in a shared lib? (Either for the purposes of having small executables or for calling from non-caml) I am having a hard time understanding how this works due to the fact that I don't understand the ocaml calling/symbol naming convention. I've been reading some assembly intermediary files and nm dumps, but I am still confused and am wondering if there's some general documentation somewhere. Here's an example of something that confuses me. I make a file testlib.ml: > open Printf;; > > let rec print_int_list x = > match x with > [] -> () > | hd::tl -> printf "%d " hd; (print_int_list tl);; > > let rec mymap f l = > match l with > [] -> [] > | hd::tl -> (f hd)::(mymap f tl);; and I nm testlib.so and get > 000010c0 T Testlib_code_begin > 0000118a T Testlib_code_end > 000023f4 D Testlib_data_begin > 00002424 D Testlib_data_end > 00001170 T Testlib_entry > 00002428 D Testlib_frametable > 00001100 T Testlib_mymap_53 > 000010c0 T Testlib_print_int_list_49 So I wonder: 1) where do the numbers 53 and 49 come from, and do I care? For example, if they are arbitrary (as I surmise) and socked away in testlib.so.cmxa, then don't I get screwed if I try to build an program linked against testlib.so.cmxa and then decide that I want to change the implementation of testlib? If so, is there a way to define a symbol table just from an mli? (A .so.cmi file or something?) This command only produces a .cmi: ocamlopt -shared -o foo.so foo.mli 2) what do the other entry points mean, eg Testlib_entry, and do I care? Great work if this actually is heading down the path to real system deployment with ocaml! Jeff Henrikson ------------------- Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs FAQ: http://caml.inria.fr/FAQ/ To unsubscribe, mail caml-list-request@inria.fr Archives: http://caml.inria.fr ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Shared object generation patch feedback 2001-10-08 2:25 ` [Caml-list] Shared object generation patch feedback Jeff Henrikson @ 2001-10-08 9:18 ` malc 0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread From: malc @ 2001-10-08 9:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jeff Henrikson; +Cc: caml-list On Sun, 7 Oct 2001, Jeff Henrikson wrote: > > At http://algol.prosalg.no/~malc/scaml you will find a patch against > > OCaml 3.02 and some information suitable for producing shared objects > > on i386 ELF systems. > > Nice! It compiled right out of the box, no unexpected difficulties. > > Is there a way to get a asm runtime in a shared lib? (Either for the purposes of having small executables or for calling from > non-caml) Yes. (ocamlopt -shared ... -ccopt "-L`ocamlc -where` -lasmrun -u caml_main") > > I am having a hard time understanding how this works due to the fact that I don't understand the ocaml calling/symbol naming > convention. I've been reading some assembly intermediary files and nm dumps, but I am still confused and am wondering if there's > some general documentation somewhere. > > Here's an example of something that confuses me. I make a file testlib.ml: > > > open Printf;; > > > > let rec print_int_list x = > > match x with > > [] -> () > > | hd::tl -> printf "%d " hd; (print_int_list tl);; > > > > let rec mymap f l = > > match l with > > [] -> [] > > | hd::tl -> (f hd)::(mymap f tl);; > > and I nm testlib.so and get > > > 000010c0 T Testlib_code_begin > > 0000118a T Testlib_code_end > > 000023f4 D Testlib_data_begin > > 00002424 D Testlib_data_end > > 00001170 T Testlib_entry > > 00002428 D Testlib_frametable > > 00001100 T Testlib_mymap_53 > > 000010c0 T Testlib_print_int_list_49 > > So I wonder: > > 1) where do the numbers 53 and 49 come from, and do I care? For example, if they are arbitrary (as I surmise) and socked away in > testlib.so.cmxa, then don't I get screwed if I try to build an program linked against testlib.so.cmxa and then decide that I want > to change the implementation of testlib? If so, is there a way to define a symbol table just from an mli? (A .so.cmi file or > something?) This command only produces a .cmi: OCaml add those suffixes for variety of reasons, something must be done about it (on the linking stage), if people want -shared to take off. > > ocamlopt -shared -o foo.so foo.mli Naturally. There is nothing to compile, leave alone link here :) > > 2) what do the other entry points mean, eg Testlib_entry, and do I care? Those are module toplevel forms. _frametable, _code[data]_begin[end] are used by GC, equality comparisions, marshaling etc. > > Great work if this actually is heading down the path to real system deployment with ocaml! There is still a lot to be done, to make it really useful. But thanks for encouragment, i needed it. > > > Jeff Henrikson -- mailto:malc@pulsesoft.com ------------------- Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs FAQ: http://caml.inria.fr/FAQ/ To unsubscribe, mail caml-list-request@inria.fr Archives: http://caml.inria.fr ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
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