
As explained in reference 1, TDF may be regarded as an abstract target machine which can be used to facilitate the separation of target independent and target dependent code which characterises portable programs. An important aspect of this separation is the Application Programming Interface, or API, of the program. Just as, for a conventional machine, the API needs to be implemented on that machine before the program can be ported to it, so for that program to be ported to the abstract TDF machine, an "abstract implementation" of the API needs to be provided.
But of course, an "abstract implementation" is precisely what is provided by the API specification - it is an abstraction of all the possible API implementations. Therefore the TDF representation of an API must reflect the API specification. As a consequence, compiling a program to the abstract TDF machine is to check it against the API specification rather than, as with compiling to a conventional machine, against at best a particular implementation of that API.
In this document we address the problem of how to translate a standard
API specification into its TDF representation, by describing a tool,
tspec, which has been developed for this purpose.
The low level form which is used to represent APIs to the C to TDF
producer is the #pragma token syntax described in reference
3. However this is not a suitable form in which to describe API specifications.
The #pragma token syntax is necessarily complex, and
can only be checked through extensive testing using the producer.
Instead an alternative form, close to C, has been developed for this
purpose. API specifications in this form are transformed by tspec
into the corresponding #pragma token statements, while
it applies various internal checks to the API description.
Another reason for introducing tspec is that the #pragma
token syntax is currently limited in some areas. For example,
at present it has very limited support for expressing constancy of
expressions. By allowing the tspec syntax to express
this information, the API description will contain all the information
which may be needed in future upgrades to the #pragma token
syntax. Thus describing an API using tspec is hopefully
a one off process, whereas describing it directly to the #pragma
token syntax could require periodic reworkings. Improvements
in the #pragma token syntax will be reflected in the
translations produced by future versions of tspec.
The tspec syntax is not designed to be a formal specification
language. Instead it is a pragmatic attempt to capture the common
specification idioms of standard API specifications. A glance at these
specifications shows that they are predominantly C based, but with
an added layer of abstraction - instead of saying that t
is a specific C type, they say, there exists a type t,
and so on. The tspec syntax is designed to reflect this.
Let us begin by examining the various levels of specification with
which tspec is concerned. At the lowest level it is concerned
with objects - the types, expressions, constants etc. which comprise
the API - and indeed most of this document is concerned with how tspec
describes these objects. At the highest level, tspec
is concerned with APIs. We could just describe an API as being a set
of objects, however this is to ignore the internal structure of APIs.
At the most obvious level the objects in an API are spread over a
number of different system headers. For example, in ANSI, the objects
concerned with file input and output are grouped in stdio.h,
whereas those concerned with string manipulation are in string.h.
But a further level of refinement is also required. For example, ANSI
specifies that the type size_t is defined in both stdio.h
and string.h. Therefore tspec needs
to be able to represent subsets of headers in order to express this
intersection relation.
To conclude, tspec distinguishes four levels of specification
- APIs (which are sets of headers), headers (which are sets of objects),
subsets of headers, and objects. It identifies APIs by an identifying
name chosen by the person performing the API description. The (purely
arbitrary) convention is for short, lower case names, for example:
ansi refers to ANSI C (X3.159),
posix refers to POSIX 1003.1,
xpg3 refers to X/Open Portability Guide 3.
In this document, headers are identified by the API they belong to
and the header name. Thus ansi:stdio.h refers to the
stdio.h header of the ANSI API. Finally subsets of headers
are identified by the header and the subset name. If, for example,
the stdio.h header of ANSI has a subset named file,
then this is referred to as ansi:stdio.h:file.
The tspec representation of an API is arranged as a directory
with the same name as the API, containing a number of files, one for
each API header. For example, the ANSI API is represented by a directory
ansi containing files ansi/stdio.h, ansi/string.h
etc. In addition each API directory contains a master file
(for ANSI it would be called ansi/MASTER) which lists
all the headers comprising that API.
When tspec needs to find an API directory it does so
by searching along its input directory path. This is a colon separated
list of directories to be searched. This may be specified in a number
of ways. A default search list is built into tspec, however
this may be overridden by the system variable TSPEC_INPUT.
Directories may be added to the start of the path using the -Idir
command-line option (see section 2.5 for a
complete list of options). The current working directory is always
added to the start of the path.
tspec actually outputs two sets of output files, the
include output files, containing the #pragma token directives
corresponding to the input API, and the source output files, which
provide a rig for TDF library building (see section
6.4). These output files and directories are built up under two
standard output directories - the include output directory, incl_dir
say, and the source output directory, src_dir say. tspec
has default values for these directories built in, but these may be
overridden in a number of ways. Firstly, if the system variable TSPEC_OUTPUT
is defined to be dir, say, then incl_dir is
dir/include and src_dir is dir/src
. Secondly, incl_dir and src_dir can be set independently
using the system variables TSPEC_INCL_OUTPUT and TSPEC_SRC_OUTPUT
respectively. Finally, they may also be set using the -Odir
and -Sdir command-line options respectively.
As an example of the mapping from input files to output files, the
header ansi:stdio.h is mapped to the include output file
incl_dir/ansi.api/stdio.h and the source output
file src_dir/ansi.api/stdio.c. The header subset
ansi:stdio.h:file is mapped to its own pair of output
files, incl_dir/shared/ansi.api/file.h and src_dir
/ansi.api/file.c.
The default output file names can be overridden by means of the INCLNAME
and SOURCENAME file properties described in
section 5.4.
By default, tspec only creates an output file if the
date stamps on all the input files it depends on indicate that it
needs updating. In effect, tspec creates an internal
makefile from the dependencies it deduces. This behaviour can be overridden
by means of the -f command-line option, which forces all output
files to be created.
In addition, tspec only creates the source output file
if it is needed for TDF library building. If the corresponding include
output file does not contain any token specifications then the source
output file is suppressed (see section 6.4).
tspec will optionally add a copyright message to the
start of each include output file. This message is copied from a file
which may be specified either using the TSPEC_COPYRIGHT
system variable, or by the -Cfile command-line option.
There are three main forms for invoking tspec on the
command-line, depending on whether it is desired to process an entire
API, a single header from that API, or only a subset of that header.
These are given respectively as:
tspec [options] api tspec [options] api header tspec [options] api header subset
The valid options include:
tspec to only check the
input files and not to generate any output files.
tspec only to run its
preprocessor phase, writing the result to the standard output.
tspec to create all output
files regardless of date stamps.
tspec to print an index
of all the objects in the input files (see section
6.3).
tspec that its
input has already been preprocessed (i.e. it is the output of a previous
-e option).
tspec to only produce
output for implemented objects, and not used objects (see section
3.2).
tspec to check all the
headers in an API separately rather than, as with the -c option,
all at once.
tspec to generate unique
token names for the specified objects (see section
4.1.1).
tspec to enter verbose
mode, in which it reports on the output files it creates. If two -v
options are given then tspec enters very verbose mode,
in which it gives more information on its activities.
tspec to print its current
version number (this document refers to version 2.0).
In addition tspec has a local input mode for translating
single headers which are not part of an API into the corresponding
#pragma token statements. The form:
tspec [options] -l fileprocesses the input file
file, writing the include output
file to the standard output.
The basic form of the tspec description of an API has
already been explained in section 2.2 - it is
a directory containing a set of files corresponding to the headers
in that API. Each file basically consists of a list of the objects
declared in that header. Each object specification is part of a tspec
construct. These constructs are identified by keywords. These keywords
always begin with + to avoid conflict with C identifiers.
Comments may be inserted at any point. These are prefixed by #
and run to the end of the line.
In addition to the basic object specification constructs, tspec
also has constructs for imposing structure on the API description.
It is these constructs that we consider first.
A list of tspec constructs within a header can be grouped
into a named subset by enclosing them within:
+SUBSET "name" := {
....
} ;
where name is the subset name. These named subsets can
be nested, but are still regarded as subsets of the parent header.
Subsets are intended to give a layer of resolution beyond that of the entire header (see section 2.1). Each subset is mapped onto a separate pair of output files, so unwary use of subsets is discouraged.
tspec has two import constructs which allow one API,
or header, or subset of a header to be included in another. The first
construct is used to indicate that the given set of objects is also
declared in the including header, and takes one of the forms:
+IMPLEMENT "api" ; +IMPLEMENT "api", "header" ; +IMPLEMENT "api", "header", "subset" ;The second construct is used to indicate that the objects are only used in the including header, and take one of the forms:
+USE "api" ; +USE "api", "header" ; +USE "api", "header", "subset" ;For example,
posix:stdio.h is an extension of ansi:stdio.h
, so, rather than duplicate all the object specifications from
the latter in the former, it is easier and clearer to use the construct:
+IMPLEMENT "ansi", "stdio.h" ;and just add the extra objects specified by POSIX. Note that this makes the relationship between the APIs
ansi and posix
absolutely explicit. tspec is as much concerned with
the relationships between APIs as their actual contents.
Objects which are specified as being declared in more than one header
of an API should also be treated using +IMPLEMENT. For
example, the type size_t is declared in a number of ansi
headers, namely stddef.h, stdio.h,
string.h and time.h. This can be handled
by declaring size_t as part of a named subset of, say,
ansi:stddef.h:
+SUBSET "size_t" := {
+TYPE (unsigned) size_t ;
} ;
and including this in each of the other headers:
+IMPLEMENT "ansi", "stddef.h", "size_t" ;
Another use of +IMPLEMENT is in the MASTER
file used to list the headers in an API (see section
2.2). This basically consists of a list of +IMPLEMENT
commands, one per header. For example, with ansi it consists
of:
+IMPLEMENT "ansi", "assert.h" ; +IMPLEMENT "ansi", "ctype.h" ; .... +IMPLEMENT "ansi", "time.h" ;
To illustrate +USE, posix:sys/stat.h uses
some types from posix:sys/types.h but does not define
them. To avoid the user having to include both headers it makes sense
for the description to include the latter in the former (provided
there are no namespace restrictions imposed by the API). This would
be done using the construct:
+USE "posix", "sys/types.h" ;
On the command-line tspec is given one set of objects,
be it an API, a header, or a subset of a header. This causes it to
read that set, which may contain +IMPLEMENT or +USE
commands. It then reads the sets indicated by these commands, which
again may contain +IMPLEMENT or +USE commands,
and so on. It is possible for this process to lead to infinite cycles,
but in this case tspec raises an error and aborts. In
the legal case, the collection of sets read by tspec
is the closure of the set given on the command-line under +IMPLEMENT
and +USE. Some of these sets will be implemented
- that it to say, connected to the top level by a chain of +IMPLEMENT
commands - others will merely be used. By default tspec
produces output for all these sets, but specifying the -r command-line
option restricts it to the implemented sets.
For further information on the +IMPLEMENT and +USE
commands see section 6.1.
The main body of any tspec description of an API consists
of a list of object specifications. Most of this section is concerned
with the various tspec constructs for specifying objects
of various kinds, however we start with a few remarks on object names.
All objects specified using tspec actually have two names.
The first is the internal name by which it is identified within the
program, the second is the external name by which the TDF construct
(actually a token) representing this object is referred to for the
purposes of TDF linking. The internal names are normal C identifiers
and obey the normal C namespace rules (indeed one of the roles of
tspec is to keep track of these namespaces). The external
token name is constructed by tspec from the internal
name.
tspec has two strategies for making up these token names.
The first, which is default, is to use the internal name as the external
name (there is an exception to this simple rule, namely field selectors
- see section 4.9). The second, which is preferred
for standard APIs, is to construct a "unique name" from
the API name, the header and the internal name. For example, under
the first strategy, the external name of the type FILE
specified in ansi:stdio.h would be FILE,
whereas under the second it would be ansi.stdio.FILE.
The unique name strategy may be specified by passing the -u
command-line option to tspec (see section
2.5) or by setting the UNIQUE property to 1 (see
section 5.4).
Both strategies involve flattening the several C namespaces into the
single TDF token namespace, which can lead to clashes. For example,
in posix:sys/stat.h both a structure, struct stat,
and a procedure, stat, are specified. In C the two uses
of stat are in different namespaces and so present no
difficulty, however they are mapped onto the same name in the TDF
token namespace. To work round such difficulties, tspec
allows an alternative external form to be specified. When the object
is specified the form:
iname | enamemay be used to specify the internal name
iname and the
external name ename.
For example, in the stat case above we could distinguish
between the two uses as follows:
+TYPE struct stat | struct_stat ; +FUNC int stat ( const char *, struct stat * ) ;With simple token names the token corresponding to the structure would be called
struct_stat, whereas that corresponding to
the procedure would still be stat. With unique token
names the names would be posix.stat.struct_stat and posix.stat.stat
respectively.
Very occasionally it may be necessary to precisely specify an external token name. This can be done using the form:
iname | "ename"which makes the object
iname have external name ename
regardless of the naming strategy used.
Basically the legal identifiers in tspec (for both internal
and external names) are the same as those in C - strings of upper
and lower case letters, decimal digits or underscores, which do not
begin with a decimal digit. However there is a second class of local
identifiers - those consisting of a tilde followed by any number of
letters, digits or underscores - which are intended to indicate objects
which are local to the API description and should not be visible to
any application using the API. For example, to express the specification
that t is a pointer type, we could say that there is
a locally named type to which t is a pointer:
+TYPE ~t ; +TYPEDEF ~t *t ;
Finally it is possible to cheat the tspec namespaces.
It may actually be legal to have two objects of the same name in an
API - they may lie in different branches of a conditional compilation,
or not be allowed to coexist. To allow for this, tspec
allows version numbers, consisting of a decimal pointer plus a number
of digits, to be appended to an identifier name when it is first introduced.
These version numbers are purely to tell tspec that this
version of the object is different from a previous version with a
different version number (or indeed without any version number). If
more than one version of an object is specified then which version
is retrieved by tspec in any look-up operation is undefined.
The simplest form of object to specify is a procedure. This is done by means of:
+FUNC prototype ;where
prototype is the full C prototype of the procedure
being declared. For example, ansi:string.h contains:
+FUNC char *strcpy ( char *, const char * ) ; +FUNC int strcmp ( const char *, const char * ) ; +FUNC size_t strlen ( const char * ) ;
Strictly speaking, +FUNC means that the procedure may
be implemented by a macro, but that there is an underlying library
function with the same effect. The exception is for procedures which
take a variable number of arguments, such as:
+FUNC int fprintf ( FILE *, const char *, ... ) ;which cannot be implemented by macros. Occasionally it may be necessary to specify that a procedure is only a library function, and cannot be implemented by a macro. In this case the form:
+FUNC (extern) prototype ;should be used. Thus:
+FUNC (extern) char *strcpy ( char *, const char * ) ;would mean that
strcpy was only a library function and
not a macro.
Increasingly standard APIs are using prototypes to express their procedures.
However it still may be necessary on occasion to specify procedures
declared using old style declarations. In most cases these can be
easily transcribed into prototype declarations, however things are
not always that simple. For example, xpg3:stdlib.h declares
malloc by the old style declaration:
void *malloc ( sz ) size_t sz ;which is in general different from the prototype:
void *malloc ( size_t ) ;In the first case the argument is passed as the integral promotion of
size_t, whereas in the second it is passed as a size_t
. In general we only know that size_t is an unsigned
integral type, so we cannot assert that it is its own integral promotion.
One possible solution would be to use the C to TDF producer's weak
prototypes (see reference 3). The form:
+FUNC (weak) void *malloc ( size_t ) ;means that
malloc is a library function returning void
* which is declared using an old style declaration with a single
argument of type size_t. (For an alternative approach
see section 4.8.)
Expressions correspond to constants, identities and variables. They are specified by:
+EXP type exp1, ..., expn ;where
type is the base type of the expressions expi
as in a normal C declaration list. For example, in ansi:stdio.h:
+EXP FILE *stdin, *stdout, *stderr ;specifies three expressions of type
FILE *.
By default all expressions are rvalues, that is, values which cannot
be assigned to. If an lvalue (assignable) expression is required its
type should be qualified using the keyword lvalue. This
is an extension to the C type syntax which is used in a similar fashion
to const. For example, ansi:errno.h says
that errno is an assignable lvalue of type int.
This is expressed as follows:
+EXP lvalue int errno ;On the other hand,
posix:errno.h states that errno
is an external value of type int. As with procedures
the (extern) qualifier may be used to express this as:
+EXP (extern) int errno ;Note that this automatically means that
errno is an lvalue,
so the lvalue qualifier is optional in this case.
If all the expressions are guaranteed to be literal constants then one of the equivalent forms:
+EXP (const) type exp1, ..., expn ; +CONST type exp1, ..., expn ;should be used. For example, in
ansi:errno.h we have:
+CONST int EDOM, ERANGE ;
The +MACRO construct is similar in form to the +FUNC
construct, except that it means that only a macro exists, and no underlying
library function. For example, in xpg3:ctype.h we have:
+MACRO int _toupper ( int ) ; +MACRO int _tolower ( int ) ;since these are explicitly stated to be macros and not functions. Of course the
(extern) qualifier cannot be used with
+MACRO.
One thing which macros can do which functions cannot is to return
assignable values or to assign to their arguments. Thus it is legitimate
for +MACRO constructs to have their return type or argument
types qualified by lvalue, whereas this is not allowed
for +FUNC constructs. For example, in svid3:curses.h,
a macro getyx is specified which takes a pointer to a
window and two integer variables and assigns the cursor position of
the window to those variables. This may be expressed by:
+MACRO void getyx ( WINDOW *win, lvalue int y, lvalue int x ) ;
The +STATEMENT construct is very similar to the +MACRO
construct except that, instead of being a C expression, it is a C
statement (i.e. something ending in a semicolon). As such it does
not have a return type and so takes one of the forms:
+STATEMENT stmt ; +STATEMENT stmt ( arg1, ..., argn ) ;depending on whether or not it takes any arguments. (A
+MACRO
without any arguments is an +EXP, so the no argument
form does not exist for +MACRO.) As with +MACRO,
the argument types argi can be qualified using lvalue.
It is possible to insert macro definitions directly into tspec
using the +DEFINE construct. This has two forms depending
on whether the macro has arguments:
+DEFINE name %% text %% ; +DEFINE name ( arg1, ..., argn ) %% text %% ;These translate directly into:
#define name text #define name( arg1, ..., argn ) text
The macro definition, text, consists of any string of
characters delimited by double percents. If text is a
simple number or a single identifier then the double percents may
be omitted. Thus in ansi:stddef.h we have:
+DEFINE NULL 0 ;
New types may be specified using the +TYPE construct.
This has the form:
+TYPE type1, ..., typen ;where each
typei has one of the forms:
name for a general type (about which we know nothing
more),
(struct) name for a structure type,
(union) name for a union type,
struct name for a structure tag,
union name for a union tag,
(int) name for an integral type,
(signed) name for a signed integral type,
(unsigned) name for an unsigned integral type,
(float) name for a floating type,
(arith) name for an arithmetic (integral or floating)
type,
(scalar) name for a scalar (arithmetic or pointer)
type.
To make clear the distinction between structure types and structure tags, if we have in C:
typedef struct tag { int x, y ; } type ;
then type is a structure type and tag is
a structure tag.
For example, in ansi we have:
+TYPE FILE ; +TYPE struct lconv ; +TYPE (struct) div_t ; +TYPE (signed) ptrdiff_t ; +TYPE (unsigned) size_t ; +TYPE (arith) time_t ; +TYPE (int) wchar_t ;
It is also possible to define new types in terms of existing types.
This is done using the +TYPEDEF construct, which is identical
in form to the C typedef construct. This construct can
be used to define pointer, procedure and array types, but not compound
structure and union types. For these see section
4.9
below.
For example, in xpg3:search.h we have:
+TYPE struct entry ; +TYPEDEF struct entry ENTRY ;
There are a couple of special forms. To understand the first, note
that C uses void function returns for two purposes. Firstly
to indicate that the function does not return a value, and secondly
to indicate that the function does not return at all (exit
is an example of this second usage). In TDF terms, in the first case
the function returns TOP, in the second it returns BOTTOM
. tspec allows types to be introduced which have
the second meaning. For example, we could have:
+TYPEDEF ~special ( "bottom" ) ~bottom ; +FUNC ~bottom exit ( int ) ;meaning that the local type
~bottom is the BOTTOM
form of void. The procedure exit, which
never returns, can then be declared to return ~bottom
rather than void. Other such special types may be added
in future.
The second special form:
+TYPEDEF ~promote ( x ) y ;means that
y is an integral type which is the integral
promotion of x. x must have previously been
declared as an integral type. This gives an alternative approach to
the old style procedure declaration problem described in
section 4.2. Recall that:
void *malloc ( sz ) size_t sz ;means that
malloc has one argument which is passed as
the integral promotion of size_t. This could be expressed
as follows:
+TYPEDEF ~promote ( size_t ) ~size_t ; +FUNC void *malloc ( ~size_t ) ;introducing a local type to stand for the integral promotion of
size_t
.
Having specified a structure or union type, or a structure or union
tag, we may wish to specify certain fields of this structure or union.
This is done using the +FIELD construct. This takes the
form:
+FIELD type {
ftype field1, ..., fieldn ;
....
} ;
where type is the structure or union type and field1,
..., fieldn are field selectors derived from the base
type ftype as in a normal C structure definition. type
may have one of the forms:
(struct) name for a structure type,
(union) name for a union type,
struct name for a structure tag,
union name for a union tag,
name for a previously declared structure or union
type.
Except in the final case (where it is not clear if type
is a structure or a union), it is not necessary to have previously
introduced type using a +TYPE construct
- this declaration is implicit in the +FIELD construct.
For example, in ansi:time.h we have:
+FIELD struct tm {
int tm_sec ;
int tm_min ;
int tm_hour ;
int tm_mday ;
int tm_mon ;
int tm_year ;
int tm_wday ;
int tm_yday ;
int tm_isdst ;
} ;
meaning that there exists a structure with tag tm with
various fields of type int. Any implementation must have
these corresponding fields, but they need not be in the given order,
nor do they have to comprise the whole structure.
As was mentioned above (in 4.1.1), field selectors
form a special case when tspec is making up external
token names. For example, in the case above, the token name for the
tm_sec field is either tm.tm_sec or ansi.time.tm.tm_sec
, depending on whether or not unique token names are used.
It is possible to have several +FIELD constructs referring
to the same structure or union. For example, posix:dirent.h
declares a structure with tag dirent and one field, d_name
, of this structure. xpg3:dirent.h extends this
by adding another field, d_ino.
There is a second form of the +FIELD construct which
has more in common with the +TYPEDEF construct. The form:
+FIELD type := {
ftype field1, ..., fieldn ;
....
} ;
means that the type type is defined to be exactly the
given structure or union type, with precisely the given fields in
the given order.
In the example given in section 4.9, posix:dirent.h
specifies that the d_name field of struct dirent
is a fixed sized array of characters, but that the size of this array
is implementation dependent. We therefore have to introduce a value
to stand for the size of this array using the +NAT construct.
This has the form:
+NAT nat1, ..., natn ;where
nat1, ..., natn are the array sizes
to be declared. The example thus becomes:
+NAT ~dirent_d_name_size ;
+FIELD struct dirent {
char d_name [ ~dirent_d_name_size ] ;
} ;
Note the use of a local variable to stand for a value, namely the
array size, which is invisible to the user (see
section 4.1.2).
As another example, in ansi:setjmp.h we know that jmp_buf
is an array type. We therefore introduce objects to stand
for the type which it is an array of and for the size of the array,
and define jmp_buf by a +TYPEDEF command:
+NAT ~jmp_buf_size ; +TYPE ~jmp_buf_elt ; +TYPEDEF ~jmp_buf_elt jmp_buf [ ~jmp_buf_size ] ;Again, local variables have been used for the introduced objects.
Currently tspec only has limited support for enumeration
types. A +ENUM construct is translated directly into
a C definition of an enumeration type. The +ENUM construct
has the form:
+ENUM etype := {
entry,
....
} ;
where etype is the enumeration type being defined - either
a type name or enum etag for some enumeration tag etag
- and each entry has one of the forms:
name name = numberas in a C enumeration type. For example, in
xpg3:search.h
we have:
+ENUM ACTION := { FIND, ENTER } ;
As was mentioned in section 1, the #pragma
token syntax is highly complex, and the token descriptions
output by tspec form only a small subset of those possible.
It is possible to directly access the full #pragma token
syntax from tspec using the construct:
+TOKEN name %% text %% ;where the token
name is defined by the sequence of characters
text, which is delimited by double percents. This is
turned into the token description:
#pragma token text name #
No checks are applied to text. A more sophisticated mechanism
for defining complex tokens may be introduced in a later version of
tspec.
For example, in ansi:stdarg.h a token va_arg
is defined which takes a variable of type va_list and
a type t and returns a value of type t.
This is given by:
+TOKEN va_arg %% PROC ( EXP lvalue : va_list : e, TYPE t ) EXP rvalue : t : %% ;See reference 3 for more details on the token syntax.
Although most tspec constructs are concerned either with
specifying new objects or imposing structure upon various sets of
objects, there are a few which do not fall into these categories.
It is possible to introduce conditional compilation into the API description by means of the constructs:
+IF %% text %% +IFDEF %% text %% +IFNDEF %% text %% +ELSE +ENDIFwhich are translated into:
#if text #ifdef text #ifndef text #else /* text */ #endif /* text */respectively. If
text is just a simple number or a single
identifier the double percent delimiters may be excluded.
A couple of special +IFDEF (and also +IFNDEF)
forms are available which are useful on occasion. These are:
+IFDEF ~building_libs +IFDEF ~protect ( "api", "header" )The macros in these constructs expand respectively to
__BUILDING_LIBS
which, by convention is defined if and only if TDF library
building is taking place (see section 6.4),
and the protection macro tspec makes up to protect the
file
api:header against multiple inclusion (see
section 6.2).
It is sometimes desirable to include text in the specification file which will be copied directly into one of the output files - for example, sections of C. This can be done by enclosing the text for copying into the include output file in double percents:
%% text %%and text for copying into the source output file in triple percents:
%%% text %%%
In fact more percents may be used. An even number always indicates
text for the include output file, and an odd number the source output
file. Note that any # characters in text
are copied as normal, and not treated as comments. This also applies
to the other cases where percent delimiters are used.
A special case of quoted text are C style comments:
/* text */which are copied directly into the include output file.
Various properties of individual sets of objects or global properties can be set using file properties. These take the form:
$property = number ;for numeric (or boolean) properties, and:
$property = "string" ;for string properties.
The valid property names are as follows:
APINAME is a string property which may be used to
override the API name of the current set of objects.
FILE is a string property which is used by the tspec
preprocessor to indicate the current input file name.
FILENAME is a string property which may be used to
override the header name of the current set of objects.
INCLNAME is a string property which may be used to
set the name of the include output file in place of the default name
given in section 2.3. Setting the property to
the empty string suppresses the output of this file.
INTERFACE is a numeric property which may be set
to force the creation of the source output file and cleared to suppress
it.
LINE is a numeric property which is used by the tspec
preprocessor to indicate the current input file line number.
METHOD is a string property which may be used to
specify alternative construction methods for TDF library building
(see section 6.4).
PREFIX is a string property which may be used as
a prefix to unique token names in place of the API and header names
(see section 4.1.1).
PROTECT is a string property which may be used to
set the macro used by tspec to protect the include output
file against multiple inclusions (see section 6.2).
Setting the property to the empty string suppresses this macro.
SOURCENAME is a string property which may be used
to set the name of the source output file in place of the default
name given in section 2.3. Setting the property
to the empty string suppresses the output of this file.
SUBSETNAME is a string property which may be used
to override the subset name of the current set of objects.
UNIQUE is a numeric property which may be used to
switch the unique token name flag on and off (see section
4.1.1). For standard APIs it is recommended that this property
is set to 1 in the API MASTER file.
VERBOSE is a numeric property which may be used to
set the level of the verbose option (see section
2.5).
VERSION is a string property which may be used to
assign a version number or other identification to a tspec
description. This information is reproduced in the corresponding include
output file.
In this section we round up a few miscellaneous topics.
The +IMPLEMENT and +USE commands described
in section 3.2 are capable of further refinement.
Normally each such command is translated into a corresponding inclusion
command in both the include and source output files. Occasionally
this is not desirable - in particular the inclusion in the source
output file can cause problems during TDF library building. For this
reason the
tspec syntax has been extended to allow for fine control
of the output corresponding to +IMPLEMENT and +USE
commands. This takes the forms:
+IMPLEMENT "api" (key) ; +IMPLEMENT "api", "header" (key) ; +IMPLEMENT "api", "header", "subset" (key) ;with corresponding forms for
+USE. key specifies
which output files the inclusion commands should appear in. It can
be:
??, indicating neither output file,
!?, indicating the include output file only,
?!, indicating the source output file only,
!!, indicating both output files (this is the same
as the normal form).
The second refinement comes from the fact that APIs fall into two
categories - the base APIs, such as ansi, posix
and xpg3, and the extension APIs, such as x11,
the X Windows API. The latter can be used to extend the former, so
that we can form ansi plus x11, posix
plus x11, and so on. Base APIs may be distinguished in
tspec by including the command:
+BASE_API ;in their
MASTER file. Occasionally, in an extension API,
we may wish to include a version of a header from the base API, but,
because this base API is not fixed, not be able to use a simple +USE
command. Instead the special form:
+USE ( "api" ), "header" ;is provided for this purpose (this is the only permitted form). It indicates that
tspec should use the api
version of header for checking purposes, but allow the
inclusion of the version from the base API in normal use.
Each include output file is surrounded by a construct of the form:
#ifndef MACRO #define MACRO .... #endif /* MACRO */to protect it against multiple inclusions. Normally
tspec
will generate the macro name, MACRO, but it can be set
using the PROTECT file property (see
section 5.4). Setting PROTECT
to the empty string suppresses the protection construct altogether.
(Also see
section 5.1.)
If it is invoked with the -i command-line option, instead of
creating its output file, tspec prints an index of all
the objects it has read to the standard output. This information includes
the external token name associated with the object, whether the object
is implemented or used, and where in the API description it is defined.
It also includes a brief description of the object. It is intended
that these indexes should be usable as quick reference guides to the
underlying APIs.
As was explained in reference 1, the #pragma token headers
output by tspec are used for two purposes - checking
applications against the API during normal compilation and checking
implementations against the API during TDF library building. This
dual use does necessitate some extra work for tspec.
It is not always possible to use exactly the same code in the two
cases (usually because the C rules on, for example, structure definitions
get in the way during library building). tspec uses a
standard macro, __BUILDING_LIBS, to distinguish between
the two cases. It is assumed to be defined if and only if library
building is taking place. tspec descriptions can access
this macro directly using ~building_libs (see
section 5.1).
The actual library building process consists of compiling the #pragma
token descriptions of the objects comprising the API along
with the implementation of that API from the system headers (or wherever).
This creates the local token definitions for this API, which may be
stored in a token library. To facilitate this process tspec
creates the source output files for each implemented header api:header
containing something like:
#pragma implement interface <../api/header> #include <header>together with a makefile to compile all these programs to token definitions and to combine these token definitions into a token library. In fact two makefiles are created in the source output directory (see section 2.3). The first is called
M_api
and is designed for stand-alone library construction. The second is
called
Makefile and is designed for use with the library building
script MAKE_LIBS provided with tspec.
There are other methods whereby the source output file may be changed
into a set of token definitions. For example, in c:sys.h
the METHOD file property (see section
5.4) is set to TDP, causing the tdp
program to be invoked to produce the definitions for the basic C tokens
for the system. As another example consider:
$METHOD = "TNC" ; +MACRO double fl_abs ( double ) ; %%% ( make_tokdef fl_abs ( exp x ) exp ( floating_abs impossible x ) ) %%%
The include output file will specify a token fl_abs which
takes a double and returns a double. The
TNC method tells MAKE_LIBS that the source
output file, which will just contain the quoted text:
( make_tokdef fl_abs ( exp x ) exp ( floating_abs impossible x ) )is an input file for the TDF notation compiler,
tnc (see
reference 2). Thus we have defined a token which directly accesses
the TDF floating_abs construct.
This document describes tspec version 2.0. tspec
2.0 contains significant changes from previous releases. For convenience
the main changes which are visible to the tspec user
are listed here:
+SUBSET construct and extending
the
+IMPLEMENT and +USE constructs, as well
as the command-line options. The previous method of dealing with such
subsets - namely shared headers - is now obsolete and its use is discouraged.
.api has been added to the output directories
(see section 2.3) to avoid possible confusion
with other include file directories.
~ as local
variables is new (see section 4.1.2).
+STATEMENT and +DEFINE constructs
(see section 4.5 and section
4.6) are new.
(extern), (weak) and (const)
qualifiers for +FUNC and +EXP (see
section 4.2 and section 4.3)
are new.
(signed) and (unsigned) qualifiers
for +TYPE (see section 4.7) are new.
~special type constructor (see
section 4.8) is new.
~abstract type constructor has been abandoned.
+BASE_API command described in
section 6.1 is new.
"TDF and Portability", DRA, 1993.
"The TDF Notation Compiler", DRA, 1993.
"The C to TDF Producer", DRA, 1993.
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