Tcl_CreateChannel, Tcl_GetChannelInstanceData, Tcl_GetChannelType,
Tcl_GetChannelName, Tcl_GetChannelHandle, Tcl_GetChannelMode,
Tcl_GetChannelBufferSize, Tcl_SetChannelBufferSize, Tcl_NotifyChannel,
Tcl_BadChannelOption, Tcl_ChannelName, Tcl_ChannelVersion,
Tcl_ChannelBlockModeProc, Tcl_ChannelCloseProc, Tcl_ChannelClose2Proc,
Tcl_ChannelInputProc, Tcl_ChannelOutputProc, Tcl_ChannelSeekProc,
Tcl_ChannelWideSeekProc, Tcl_ChannelTruncateProc, Tcl_ChannelSetOptionProc,
Tcl_ChannelGetOptionProc, Tcl_ChannelWatchProc, Tcl_ChannelGetHandleProc,
Tcl_ChannelFlushProc, Tcl_ChannelHandlerProc, Tcl_ChannelThreadActionProc,
Tcl_IsChannelShared, Tcl_IsChannelRegistered, Tcl_CutChannel,
Tcl_SpliceChannel, Tcl_IsChannelExisting, Tcl_ClearChannelHandlers,
Tcl_GetChannelThread, Tcl_ChannelBuffered - procedures for creating and
manipulating channels
#include <tcl.h>
Tcl_Channel
Tcl_CreateChannel(typePtr, channelName, instanceData, mask)
ClientData
Tcl_GetChannelInstanceData(channel)
const Tcl_ChannelType *
Tcl_GetChannelType(channel)
const char *
Tcl_GetChannelName(channel)
int
Tcl_GetChannelHandle(channel, direction, handlePtr)
Tcl_ThreadId
Tcl_GetChannelThread(channel)
int
Tcl_GetChannelMode(channel)
int
Tcl_GetChannelBufferSize(channel)
Tcl_SetChannelBufferSize(channel, size)
Tcl_NotifyChannel(channel, mask)
int
Tcl_BadChannelOption(interp, optionName, optionList)
int
Tcl_IsChannelShared(channel)
int
Tcl_IsChannelRegistered(interp, channel)
int
Tcl_IsChannelExisting(channelName)
void
Tcl_CutChannel(channel)
void
Tcl_SpliceChannel(channel)
void
Tcl_ClearChannelHandlers(channel)
int
Tcl_ChannelBuffered(channel)
const char *
Tcl_ChannelName(typePtr)
Tcl_ChannelTypeVersion
Tcl_ChannelVersion(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverBlockModeProc *
Tcl_ChannelBlockModeProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverCloseProc *
Tcl_ChannelCloseProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverClose2Proc *
Tcl_ChannelClose2Proc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverInputProc *
Tcl_ChannelInputProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverOutputProc *
Tcl_ChannelOutputProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverSeekProc *
Tcl_ChannelSeekProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverWideSeekProc *
Tcl_ChannelWideSeekProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverThreadActionProc *
Tcl_ChannelThreadActionProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverTruncateProc *
Tcl_ChannelTruncateProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverSetOptionProc *
Tcl_ChannelSetOptionProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverGetOptionProc *
Tcl_ChannelGetOptionProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverWatchProc *
Tcl_ChannelWatchProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverGetHandleProc *
Tcl_ChannelGetHandleProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverFlushProc *
Tcl_ChannelFlushProc(typePtr)
Tcl_DriverHandlerProc *
Tcl_ChannelHandlerProc(typePtr)
- const Tcl_ChannelType *typePtr (in)
- Points to a structure containing the addresses of
procedures that can be called to perform I/O and other functions on the
channel.
- const char *channelName (in)
- The name of this channel, such as file3; must not be
in use by any other channel. Can be NULL, in which case the channel is
created without a name. If the created channel is assigned to one of the
standard channels ( stdin, stdout or stderr), the
assigned channel name will be the name of the standard channel.
- ClientData instanceData (in)
- Arbitrary one-word value to be associated with this
channel. This value is passed to procedures in typePtr when they
are invoked.
- int mask (in)
- OR-ed combination of TCL_READABLE and
TCL_WRITABLE to indicate whether a channel is readable and
writable.
- Tcl_Channel channel (in)
- The channel to operate on.
- int direction (in)
-
TCL_READABLE means the input handle is wanted;
TCL_WRITABLE means the output handle is wanted.
- ClientData *handlePtr (out)
- Points to the location where the desired OS-specific handle
should be stored.
- int size (in)
- The size, in bytes, of buffers to allocate in this
channel.
- int mask (in)
- An OR-ed combination of TCL_READABLE,
TCL_WRITABLE and TCL_EXCEPTION that indicates events that
have occurred on this channel.
- Tcl_Interp *interp (in)
- Current interpreter. (can be NULL)
- const char *optionName (in)
- Name of the invalid option.
- const char *optionList (in)
- Specific options list (space separated words, without
“-”) to append to the standard generic options list. Can be
NULL for generic options error message only.
Tcl uses a two-layered channel architecture. It provides a generic upper layer
to enable C and Tcl programs to perform input and output using the same APIs
for a variety of files, devices, sockets etc. The generic C APIs are described
in the manual entry for
Tcl_OpenFileChannel.
The lower layer provides type-specific channel drivers for each type of device
supported on each platform. This manual entry describes the C APIs used to
communicate between the generic layer and the type-specific channel drivers.
It also explains how new types of channels can be added by providing new
channel drivers.
Channel drivers consist of a number of components: First, each channel driver
provides a
Tcl_ChannelType structure containing pointers to functions
implementing the various operations used by the generic layer to communicate
with the channel driver. The
Tcl_ChannelType structure and the
functions referenced by it are described in the section
TCL_CHANNELTYPE, below.
Second, channel drivers usually provide a Tcl command to create instances of
that type of channel. For example, the Tcl
open command creates
channels that use the file and command channel drivers, and the Tcl
socket command creates channels that use TCP sockets for network
communication.
Third, a channel driver optionally provides a C function to open channel
instances of that type. For example,
Tcl_OpenFileChannel opens a
channel that uses the file channel driver, and
Tcl_OpenTcpClient opens
a channel that uses the TCP network protocol. These creation functions
typically use
Tcl_CreateChannel internally to open the channel.
To add a new type of channel you must implement a C API or a Tcl command that
opens a channel by invoking
Tcl_CreateChannel. When your driver calls
Tcl_CreateChannel it passes in a
Tcl_ChannelType structure
describing the driver's I/O procedures. The generic layer will then invoke the
functions referenced in that structure to perform operations on the channel.
Tcl_CreateChannel opens a new channel and associates the supplied
typePtr and
instanceData with it. The channel is opened in the
mode indicated by
mask. For a discussion of channel drivers, their
operations and the
Tcl_ChannelType structure, see the section
TCL_CHANNELTYPE, below.
Tcl_CreateChannel interacts with the code managing the standard channels.
Once a standard channel was initialized either through a call to
Tcl_GetStdChannel or a call to
Tcl_SetStdChannel closing this
standard channel will cause the next call to
Tcl_CreateChannel to make
the new channel the new standard channel too. See
Tcl_StandardChannels
for a general treatise about standard channels and the behavior of the Tcl
library with regard to them.
Tcl_GetChannelInstanceData returns the instance data associated with the
channel in
channel. This is the same as the
instanceData
argument in the call to
Tcl_CreateChannel that created this channel.
Tcl_GetChannelType returns a pointer to the
Tcl_ChannelType
structure used by the channel in the
channel argument. This is the same
as the
typePtr argument in the call to
Tcl_CreateChannel that
created this channel.
Tcl_GetChannelName returns a string containing the name associated with
the channel, or NULL if the
channelName argument to
Tcl_CreateChannel was NULL.
Tcl_GetChannelHandle places the OS-specific device handle associated with
channel for the given
direction in the location specified by
handlePtr and returns
TCL_OK. If the channel does not have a
device handle for the specified direction, then
TCL_ERROR is returned
instead. Different channel drivers will return different types of handle.
Refer to the manual entries for each driver to determine what type of handle
is returned.
Tcl_GetChannelThread returns the id of the thread currently managing the
specified
channel. This allows channel drivers to send their file
events to the correct event queue even for a multi-threaded core.
Tcl_GetChannelMode returns an OR-ed combination of
TCL_READABLE
and
TCL_WRITABLE, indicating whether the channel is open for input and
output.
Tcl_GetChannelBufferSize returns the size, in bytes, of buffers allocated
to store input or output in
channel. If the value was not set by a
previous call to
Tcl_SetChannelBufferSize, described below, then the
default value of 4096 is returned.
Tcl_SetChannelBufferSize sets the size, in bytes, of buffers that will be
allocated in subsequent operations on the channel to store input or output.
The
size argument should be between one and one million, allowing
buffers of one byte to one million bytes. If
size is outside this
range,
Tcl_SetChannelBufferSize sets the buffer size to 4096.
Tcl_NotifyChannel is called by a channel driver to indicate to the
generic layer that the events specified by
mask have occurred on the
channel. Channel drivers are responsible for invoking this function whenever
the channel handlers need to be called for the channel (or other pending tasks
like a write flush should be performed). See
WATCHPROC below for more
details.
Tcl_BadChannelOption is called from driver specific
setOptionProc
or
getOptionProc to generate a complete error message.
Tcl_ChannelBuffered returns the number of bytes of input currently
buffered in the internal buffer (push back area) of the channel itself. It
does not report about the data in the overall buffers for the stack of
channels the supplied channel is part of.
Tcl_IsChannelShared checks the refcount of the specified
channel
and returns whether the
channel was shared among multiple interpreters
(result == 1) or not (result == 0).
Tcl_IsChannelRegistered checks whether the specified
channel is
registered in the given
interpreter (result == 1) or not (result == 0).
Tcl_IsChannelExisting checks whether a channel with the specified name is
registered in the (thread)-global list of all channels (result == 1) or not
(result == 0).
Tcl_CutChannel removes the specified
channel from the
(thread)global list of all channels (of the current thread). Application to a
channel still registered in some interpreter is not allowed. Also notifies the
driver if the
Tcl_ChannelType version is
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_4
(or higher), and
Tcl_DriverThreadActionProc is defined for it.
Tcl_SpliceChannel adds the specified
channel to the (thread)global
list of all channels (of the current thread). Application to a channel
registered in some interpreter is not allowed. Also notifies the driver if the
Tcl_ChannelType version is
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_4 (or higher),
and
Tcl_DriverThreadActionProc is defined for it.
Tcl_ClearChannelHandlers removes all channel handlers and event scripts
associated with the specified
channel, thus shutting down all event
processing for this channel.
A channel driver provides a
Tcl_ChannelType structure that contains
pointers to functions that implement the various operations on a channel;
these operations are invoked as needed by the generic layer. The structure was
versioned starting in Tcl 8.3.2/8.4 to correct a problem with stacked channel
drivers. See the
OLD CHANNEL TYPES section below for details about the
old structure.
The
Tcl_ChannelType structure contains the following fields:
typedef struct Tcl_ChannelType {
const char * typeName;
Tcl_ChannelTypeVersion version;
Tcl_DriverCloseProc * closeProc;
Tcl_DriverInputProc * inputProc;
Tcl_DriverOutputProc * outputProc;
Tcl_DriverSeekProc * seekProc;
Tcl_DriverSetOptionProc * setOptionProc;
Tcl_DriverGetOptionProc * getOptionProc;
Tcl_DriverWatchProc * watchProc;
Tcl_DriverGetHandleProc * getHandleProc;
Tcl_DriverClose2Proc * close2Proc;
Tcl_DriverBlockModeProc * blockModeProc;
Tcl_DriverFlushProc * flushProc;
Tcl_DriverHandlerProc * handlerProc;
Tcl_DriverWideSeekProc * wideSeekProc;
Tcl_DriverThreadActionProc * threadActionProc;
Tcl_DriverTruncateProc * truncateProc;
} Tcl_ChannelType;
It is not necessary to provide implementations for all channel operations. Those
which are not necessary may be set to NULL in the struct:
blockModeProc,
seekProc,
setOptionProc,
getOptionProc,
getHandleProc, and
close2Proc, in addition
to
flushProc,
handlerProc,
threadActionProc, and
truncateProc. Other functions that cannot be implemented in a
meaningful way should return
EINVAL when called, to indicate that the
operations they represent are not available. Also note that
wideSeekProc can be NULL if
seekProc is.
The user should only use the above structure for
Tcl_ChannelType
instantiation. When referencing fields in a
Tcl_ChannelType structure,
the following functions should be used to obtain the values:
Tcl_ChannelName,
Tcl_ChannelVersion,
Tcl_ChannelBlockModeProc,
Tcl_ChannelCloseProc,
Tcl_ChannelClose2Proc,
Tcl_ChannelInputProc,
Tcl_ChannelOutputProc,
Tcl_ChannelSeekProc,
Tcl_ChannelWideSeekProc,
Tcl_ChannelThreadActionProc,
Tcl_ChannelTruncateProc,
Tcl_ChannelSetOptionProc,
Tcl_ChannelGetOptionProc,
Tcl_ChannelWatchProc,
Tcl_ChannelGetHandleProc,
Tcl_ChannelFlushProc, or
Tcl_ChannelHandlerProc.
The change to the structures was made in such a way that standard channel types
are binary compatible. However, channel types that use stacked channels (i.e.
TLS, Trf) have new versions to correspond to the above change since the
previous code for stacked channels had problems.
The
typeName field contains a null-terminated string that identifies the
type of the device implemented by this driver, e.g.
file or
socket.
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelName, which returns a pointer
to the string.
The
version field should be set to the version of the structure that you
require.
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_2 is the minimum recommended.
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_3 must be set to specify the
wideSeekProc
member.
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_4 must be set to specify the
threadActionProc member (includes
wideSeekProc).
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_5 must be set to specify the
truncateProc
members (includes
wideSeekProc and
threadActionProc). If it is
not set to any of these, then this
Tcl_ChannelType is assumed to have
the original structure. See
OLD CHANNEL TYPES for more details. While
Tcl will recognize and function with either structures, stacked channels must
be of at least
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_2 to function correctly.
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelVersion, which returns one of
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_5,
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_4,
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_3,
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_2 or
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_1.
The
blockModeProc field contains the address of a function called by the
generic layer to set blocking and nonblocking mode on the device.
BlockModeProc should match the following prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverBlockModeProc(
ClientData instanceData,
int mode);
The
instanceData is the same as the value passed to
Tcl_CreateChannel when this channel was created. The
mode
argument is either
TCL_MODE_BLOCKING or
TCL_MODE_NONBLOCKING to
set the device into blocking or nonblocking mode. The function should return
zero if the operation was successful, or a nonzero POSIX error code if the
operation failed.
If the operation is successful, the function can modify the supplied
instanceData to record that the channel entered blocking or nonblocking
mode and to implement the blocking or nonblocking behavior. For some device
types, the blocking and nonblocking behavior can be implemented by the
underlying operating system; for other device types, the behavior must be
emulated in the channel driver.
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelBlockModeProc, which returns
a pointer to the function.
A channel driver
not supplying a
blockModeProc has to be very,
very careful. It has to tell the generic layer exactly which blocking mode is
acceptable to it, and should this also document for the user so that the
blocking mode of the channel is not changed to an unacceptable value. Any
confusion here may lead the interpreter into a (spurious and difficult to
find) deadlock.
The
closeProc field contains the address of a function called by the
generic layer to clean up driver-related information when the channel is
closed.
CloseProc must match the following prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverCloseProc(
ClientData instanceData,
Tcl_Interp * interp);
The
instanceData argument is the same as the value provided to
Tcl_CreateChannel when the channel was created. The function should
release any storage maintained by the channel driver for this channel, and
close the input and output devices encapsulated by this channel. All queued
output will have been flushed to the device before this function is called,
and no further driver operations will be invoked on this instance after
calling the
closeProc. If the close operation is successful, the
procedure should return zero; otherwise it should return a nonzero POSIX error
code. In addition, if an error occurs and
interp is not NULL, the
procedure should store an error message in the interpreter's result.
Alternatively, channels that support closing the read and write sides
independently may set
closeProc to
TCL_CLOSE2PROC and set
close2Proc to the address of a function that matches the following
prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverClose2Proc(
ClientData instanceData,
Tcl_Interp * interp,
int flags);
The
close2Proc will be called with
flags set to an OR'ed
combination of
TCL_CLOSE_READ or
TCL_CLOSE_WRITE to indicate
that the driver should close the read and/or write side of the channel. The
channel driver may be invoked to perform additional operations on the channel
after
close2Proc is called to close one or both sides of the channel.
If
flags is
0 (zero), the driver should close the channel in the
manner described above for
closeProc. No further operations will be
invoked on this instance after
close2Proc is called with all flags
cleared. In all cases, the
close2Proc function should return zero if
the close operation was successful; otherwise it should return a nonzero POSIX
error code. In addition, if an error occurs and
interp is not NULL, the
procedure should store an error message in the interpreter's result.
The
closeProc and
close2Proc values can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelCloseProc or
Tcl_ChannelClose2Proc, which return a
pointer to the respective function.
The
inputProc field contains the address of a function called by the
generic layer to read data from the file or device and store it in an internal
buffer.
InputProc must match the following prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverInputProc(
ClientData instanceData,
char * buf,
int bufSize,
int * errorCodePtr);
InstanceData is the same as the value passed to
Tcl_CreateChannel
when the channel was created. The
buf argument points to an array of
bytes in which to store input from the device, and the
bufSize argument
indicates how many bytes are available at
buf.
The
errorCodePtr argument points to an integer variable provided by the
generic layer. If an error occurs, the function should set the variable to a
POSIX error code that identifies the error that occurred.
The function should read data from the input device encapsulated by the channel
and store it at
buf. On success, the function should return a
nonnegative integer indicating how many bytes were read from the input device
and stored at
buf. On error, the function should return -1. If an error
occurs after some data has been read from the device, that data is lost.
If
inputProc can determine that the input device has some data available
but less than requested by the
bufSize argument, the function should
only attempt to read as much data as is available and return without blocking.
If the input device has no data available whatsoever and the channel is in
nonblocking mode, the function should return an
EAGAIN error. If the
input device has no data available whatsoever and the channel is in blocking
mode, the function should block for the shortest possible time until at least
one byte of data can be read from the device; then, it should return as much
data as it can read without blocking.
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelInputProc, which returns a
pointer to the function.
The
outputProc field contains the address of a function called by the
generic layer to transfer data from an internal buffer to the output device.
OutputProc must match the following prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverOutputProc(
ClientData instanceData,
const char * buf,
int toWrite,
int * errorCodePtr);
InstanceData is the same as the value passed to
Tcl_CreateChannel
when the channel was created. The
buf argument contains an array of
bytes to be written to the device, and the
toWrite argument indicates
how many bytes are to be written from the
buf argument.
The
errorCodePtr argument points to an integer variable provided by the
generic layer. If an error occurs, the function should set this variable to a
POSIX error code that identifies the error.
The function should write the data at
buf to the output device
encapsulated by the channel. On success, the function should return a
nonnegative integer indicating how many bytes were written to the output
device. The return value is normally the same as
toWrite, but may be
less in some cases such as if the output operation is interrupted by a signal.
If an error occurs the function should return -1. In case of error, some data
may have been written to the device.
If the channel is nonblocking and the output device is unable to absorb any data
whatsoever, the function should return -1 with an
EAGAIN error without
writing any data.
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelOutputProc, which returns a
pointer to the function.
The
seekProc field contains the address of a function called by the
generic layer to move the access point at which subsequent input or output
operations will be applied.
SeekProc must match the following
prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverSeekProc(
ClientData instanceData,
long offset,
int seekMode,
int * errorCodePtr);
The
instanceData argument is the same as the value given to
Tcl_CreateChannel when this channel was created.
Offset and
seekMode have the same meaning as for the
Tcl_Seek procedure
(described in the manual entry for
Tcl_OpenFileChannel).
The
errorCodePtr argument points to an integer variable provided by the
generic layer for returning
errno values from the function. The
function should set this variable to a POSIX error code if an error occurs.
The function should store an
EINVAL error code if the channel type does
not implement seeking.
The return value is the new access point or -1 in case of error. If an error
occurred, the function should not move the access point.
If there is a non-NULL
seekProc field, the
wideSeekProc field may
contain the address of an alternative function to use which handles wide (i.e.
larger than 32-bit) offsets, so allowing seeks within files larger than 2GB.
The
wideSeekProc will be called in preference to the
seekProc,
but both must be defined if the
wideSeekProc is defined.
WideSeekProc must match the following prototype:
typedef Tcl_WideInt Tcl_DriverWideSeekProc(
ClientData instanceData,
Tcl_WideInt offset,
int seekMode,
int * errorCodePtr);
The arguments and return values mean the same thing as with
seekProc
above, except that the type of offsets and the return type are different.
The
seekProc value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelSeekProc,
which returns a pointer to the function, and similarly the
wideSeekProc
can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelWideSeekProc.
The
setOptionProc field contains the address of a function called by the
generic layer to set a channel type specific option on a channel.
setOptionProc must match the following prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverSetOptionProc(
ClientData instanceData,
Tcl_Interp * interp,
const char * optionName,
const char * newValue);
optionName is the name of an option to set, and
newValue is the
new value for that option, as a string. The
instanceData is the same as
the value given to
Tcl_CreateChannel when this channel was created. The
function should do whatever channel type specific action is required to
implement the new value of the option.
Some options are handled by the generic code and this function is never called
to set them, e.g.
-blockmode. Other options are specific to each
channel type and the
setOptionProc procedure of the channel driver will
get called to implement them. The
setOptionProc field can be NULL,
which indicates that this channel type supports no type specific options.
If the option value is successfully modified to the new value, the function
returns
TCL_OK. It should call
Tcl_BadChannelOption which itself
returns
TCL_ERROR if the
optionName is unrecognized. If
newValue specifies a value for the option that is not supported or if a
system call error occurs, the function should leave an error message in the
result of
interp if
interp is not NULL. The function should also
call
Tcl_SetErrno to store an appropriate POSIX error code.
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelSetOptionProc, which returns
a pointer to the function.
The
getOptionProc field contains the address of a function called by the
generic layer to get the value of a channel type specific option on a channel.
getOptionProc must match the following prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverGetOptionProc(
ClientData instanceData,
Tcl_Interp * interp,
const char * optionName,
Tcl_DString * optionValue);
OptionName is the name of an option supported by this type of channel. If
the option name is not NULL, the function stores its current value, as a
string, in the Tcl dynamic string
optionValue. If
optionName is
NULL, the function stores in
optionValue an alternating list of all
supported options and their current values. On success, the function returns
TCL_OK. It should call
Tcl_BadChannelOption which itself returns
TCL_ERROR if the
optionName is unrecognized. If a system call
error occurs, the function should leave an error message in the result of
interp if
interp is not NULL. The function should also call
Tcl_SetErrno to store an appropriate POSIX error code.
Some options are handled by the generic code and this function is never called
to retrieve their value, e.g.
-blockmode. Other options are specific to
each channel type and the
getOptionProc procedure of the channel driver
will get called to implement them. The
getOptionProc field can be NULL,
which indicates that this channel type supports no type specific options.
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelGetOptionProc, which returns
a pointer to the function.
The
watchProc field contains the address of a function called by the
generic layer to initialize the event notification mechanism to notice events
of interest on this channel.
WatchProc should match the following
prototype:
typedef void Tcl_DriverWatchProc(
ClientData instanceData,
int mask);
The
instanceData is the same as the value passed to
Tcl_CreateChannel when this channel was created. The
mask
argument is an OR-ed combination of
TCL_READABLE,
TCL_WRITABLE
and
TCL_EXCEPTION; it indicates events the caller is interested in
noticing on this channel.
The function should initialize device type specific mechanisms to notice when an
event of interest is present on the channel. When one or more of the
designated events occurs on the channel, the channel driver is responsible for
calling
Tcl_NotifyChannel to inform the generic channel module. The
driver should take care not to starve other channel drivers or sources of
callbacks by invoking Tcl_NotifyChannel too frequently. Fairness can be
insured by using the Tcl event queue to allow the channel event to be
scheduled in sequence with other events. See the description of
Tcl_QueueEvent for details on how to queue an event.
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelWatchProc, which returns a
pointer to the function.
The
getHandleProc field contains the address of a function called by the
generic layer to retrieve a device-specific handle from the channel.
GetHandleProc should match the following prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverGetHandleProc(
ClientData instanceData,
int direction,
ClientData * handlePtr);
InstanceData is the same as the value passed to
Tcl_CreateChannel
when this channel was created. The
direction argument is either
TCL_READABLE to retrieve the handle used for input, or
TCL_WRITABLE to retrieve the handle used for output.
If the channel implementation has device-specific handles, the function should
retrieve the appropriate handle associated with the channel, according the
direction argument. The handle should be stored in the location
referred to by
handlePtr, and
TCL_OK should be returned. If the
channel is not open for the specified direction, or if the channel
implementation does not use device handles, the function should return
TCL_ERROR.
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelGetHandleProc, which returns
a pointer to the function.
The
flushProc field is currently reserved for future use. It should be
set to NULL.
FlushProc should match the following prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverFlushProc(
ClientData instanceData);
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelFlushProc, which returns a
pointer to the function.
The
handlerProc field contains the address of a function called by the
generic layer to notify the channel that an event occurred. It should be
defined for stacked channel drivers that wish to be notified of events that
occur on the underlying (stacked) channel.
HandlerProc should match the
following prototype:
typedef int Tcl_DriverHandlerProc(
ClientData instanceData,
int interestMask);
InstanceData is the same as the value passed to
Tcl_CreateChannel
when this channel was created. The
interestMask is an OR-ed combination
of
TCL_READABLE or
TCL_WRITABLE; it indicates what type of event
occurred on this channel.
This value can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelHandlerProc, which returns a
pointer to the function.
The
threadActionProc field contains the address of the function called by
the generic layer when a channel is created, closed, or going to move to a
different thread, i.e. whenever thread-specific driver state might have to
initialized or updated. It can be NULL. The action
TCL_CHANNEL_THREAD_REMOVE is used to notify the driver that it should
update or remove any thread-specific data it might be maintaining for the
channel.
The action
TCL_CHANNEL_THREAD_INSERT is used to notify the driver that it
should update or initialize any thread-specific data it might be maintaining
using the calling thread as the associate. See
Tcl_CutChannel and
Tcl_SpliceChannel for more detail.
typedef void Tcl_DriverThreadActionProc(
ClientData instanceData,
int action);
InstanceData is the same as the value passed to
Tcl_CreateChannel
when this channel was created.
These values can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelThreadActionProc, which
returns a pointer to the function.
The
truncateProc field contains the address of the function called by the
generic layer when a channel is truncated to some length. It can be NULL.
typedef int Tcl_DriverTruncateProc(
ClientData instanceData,
Tcl_WideInt length);
InstanceData is the same as the value passed to
Tcl_CreateChannel
when this channel was created, and
length is the new length of the
underlying file, which should not be negative. The result should be 0 on
success or an errno code (suitable for use with
Tcl_SetErrno) on
failure.
These values can be retrieved with
Tcl_ChannelTruncateProc, which returns
a pointer to the function.
This procedure generates a “bad option” error message in an
(optional) interpreter. It is used by channel drivers when an invalid Set/Get
option is requested. Its purpose is to concatenate the generic options list to
the specific ones and factorize the generic options error message string.
It always returns
TCL_ERROR
An error message is generated in
interp's result value to indicate that a
command was invoked with a bad option. The message has the form
bad option "blah": should be one of
<...generic options...>+<...specific options...>
so you get for instance:
bad option "-blah": should be one of -blocking,
-buffering, -buffersize, -eofchar, -translation,
-peername, or -sockname
when called with
optionList equal to “peername sockname”
“blah” is the
optionName argument and “<specific
options>” is a space separated list of specific option words. The
function takes good care of inserting minus signs before each option, commas
after, and an “or” before the last option.
The original (8.3.1 and below)
Tcl_ChannelType structure contains the
following fields:
typedef struct Tcl_ChannelType {
const char * typeName;
Tcl_DriverBlockModeProc * blockModeProc;
Tcl_DriverCloseProc * closeProc;
Tcl_DriverInputProc * inputProc;
Tcl_DriverOutputProc * outputProc;
Tcl_DriverSeekProc * seekProc;
Tcl_DriverSetOptionProc * setOptionProc;
Tcl_DriverGetOptionProc * getOptionProc;
Tcl_DriverWatchProc * watchProc;
Tcl_DriverGetHandleProc * getHandleProc;
Tcl_DriverClose2Proc * close2Proc;
} Tcl_ChannelType;
It is still possible to create channel with the above structure. The internal
channel code will determine the version. It is imperative to use the new
Tcl_ChannelType structure if you are creating a stacked channel driver,
due to problems with the earlier stacked channel implementation (in 8.2.0 to
8.3.1).
Prior to 8.4.0 (i.e. during the later releases of 8.3 and early part of the 8.4
development cycle) the
Tcl_ChannelType structure contained the
following fields:
typedef struct Tcl_ChannelType {
const char * typeName;
Tcl_ChannelTypeVersion version;
Tcl_DriverCloseProc * closeProc;
Tcl_DriverInputProc * inputProc;
Tcl_DriverOutputProc * outputProc;
Tcl_DriverSeekProc * seekProc;
Tcl_DriverSetOptionProc * setOptionProc;
Tcl_DriverGetOptionProc * getOptionProc;
Tcl_DriverWatchProc * watchProc;
Tcl_DriverGetHandleProc * getHandleProc;
Tcl_DriverClose2Proc * close2Proc;
Tcl_DriverBlockModeProc * blockModeProc;
Tcl_DriverFlushProc * flushProc;
Tcl_DriverHandlerProc * handlerProc;
Tcl_DriverTruncateProc * truncateProc;
} Tcl_ChannelType;
When the above structure is registered as a channel type, the
version
field should always be
TCL_CHANNEL_VERSION_2.
Tcl_Close(3tcl),
Tcl_OpenFileChannel(3tcl),
Tcl_SetErrno(3tcl),
Tcl_QueueEvent(3tcl),
Tcl_StackChannel(3tcl),
Tcl_GetStdChannel(3tcl)
blocking, channel driver, channel registration, channel type, nonblocking