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EasyXS

This library is a toolbox that assists with creation & maintenance of Perl XS code.

Usage

  1. Make this repository a git submodule of your own XS module.

  2. Replace the standard XS includes (EXTERN.h, perl.h, and XSUB.h) with just #include "easyxs/easyxs.h".

… and that’s it! You now have a suite of tools that’ll make writing XS easier and safer.

Rationale

Perl’s C API makes lots of things possible without making them easy (or safe).

This library attempts to provide shims around that API that make it easy and safe (or, at least, safe-er!) to write XS code … maybe even fun! :-)

Library Components

Initialization

init.h includes the standard boilerplate code you normally stick at the top of a *.xs file. It also includes a fix for the torrent of warnings that clang 12 throws in pre-5.36 perls. easyxs.h brings this in, but you can also #include "easyxs/init.h" on its own.

init.h also includes a fairly up-to-date (as of this writing!) ppport.h.

Calling Perl

void exs_call_sv_void(SV* callback, SV** args)

Like the Perl API’s call_sv() but simplifies argument-passing. args points to a NULL-terminated array of SV*s. (It may itself also be NULL.)

The callback is called in void context, so nothing is returned.

IMPORTANT CAVEATS:

  • This does not trap exceptions. Ensure either that the callback won’t throw, or that no corruption will happen in the event of an exception.

  • This mortalizes each args member. That means Perl will reduce each of those SVs’ reference counts at some point “soon” after. This is often desirable, but not always; to counteract it, do SvREFCNT_inc() around whichever arguments you want to be unaffected by the mortalization. (They’ll still be mortalized, but the eventual reference-count reduction will just have zero net effect.)

SV* exs_call_sv_scalar(SV* callback, SV** args)

Like exs_call_sv_void() but calls the callback in scalar context. The result is returned.

SV* exs_call_sv_scalar_trapped(SV* callback, SV** args, SV** error_svp)

Like exs_call_sv_scalar() but traps exceptions. If one happens, NULL is returned, and *error_svp will contain the error SV. (This SV is a copy of Perl’s $@ and so must be freed.)

void exs_call_sv_void_trapped(SV* callback, SV** args, SV** error_svp)

Like exs_call_sv_scalar_trapped() but calls the Perl callback in void context and doesn’t return anything.

void exs_call_method_void(SV* object, const char* methname, SV** args)

Like exs_call_sv_void() but for calling object methods. See the Perl API’s call_method() for more details.

SV* exs_call_method_scalar(SV* object, const char* methname, SV** args)

Like exs_call_method_void() but calls the method in scalar context. The result is returned.

SV** exs_call_sv_list(SV* callback, SV** args)

Like exs_call_sv_scalar but calls the callback in list context.

The return is a pointer to a NUL-terminated array of SV*s. The pointer will be freed automatically, but the SVs are non-mortals with reference count 1, so you’ll need to dispose of those however is best for you.

SV** exs_call_sv_list_trapped(SV* callback, SV** args, SV** error_svp)

Like both exs_call_sv_list and exs_call_sv_scalar_trapped. If the callback throws, this behaves as exs_call_sv_scalar_trapped does; otherwise, this behaves as exs_call_sv_list does.

SV “Typing”

Perl scalars are supposed to be “untyped”, at least insofar as strings/numbers. When conversing with other languages, though, or serializing it’s usually helpful to break things down in greater detail.

EasyXS defines an exs_sv_type macro that takes an SV as argument and returns a member of enum exs_sv_type_e (typedef’d as just exs_sv_type_e; see easyxs_scalar.h for values). The logic is compatible with the serialization logic formulated during Perl 5.36’s development cycle.

SV/Number Conversion

UV* exs_SvUV(SV* sv)

Like SvUV, but if the SV’s content can’t be a UV (e.g., the IV is negative, or the string has non-numeric characters) an exception is thrown.

SV/String Conversion

char* exs_SvPVbyte_nolen(SV* sv)

Like the Perl API’s SvPVbyte_nolen, but if there are any NULs in the string then an exception is thrown.

char* exs_SvPVutf8_nolen(SV* sv)

Like exs_SvPVbyte_nolen() but returns the code points as UTF-8 rather than Latin-1/bytes.

Struct References

It’s common in XS code to need to persist a C struct via a Perl variable, then free that struct once the Perl variable is garbage-collected. Perl’s sv_setref_pv and similar APIs present one way to do this: store a pointer to the struct in an SV, then pass around a blessed (Perl) reference to that SV, freeing the struct when the referent SV gets DESTROYed.

EasyXS’s “struct references” are a slight simplification of this workflow: use the referent SV’s PV to store the struct itself. Thus, Perl cleans up the struct for you, and there’s no need for a DESTROY to free your struct. (You may, of course, still need a DESTROY to free blocks to which your struct refers.)

exs_new_structref(type, classname)

Creates a new structref for the given (C) type and (Perl) classname.

exs_structref_ptr(svrv)

Returns a pointer to svrv’s contained struct.

Debugging

exs_debug_sv_summary(SV* sv)

Writes a visual representation of the SV’s contents to Perl_debug_log. NO trailing newline is written.

exs_debug_showstack(const char *pattern, ...)

Writes a visual representation of Perl’s argument stack to Perl_debug_log.

Usage Notes

If you use GitHub Actions or similar, ensure that you grab the submodule as part of your workflow’s checkout. If you use GitHub’s own checkout workflow, that’s:

- with:
    submodules: true  # (or `recursive`)

Alternatively, run git submodule init && git submodule update during the workflow’s repository setup.

License & Copyright

Copyright 2022 by Gasper Software Consulting. All rights reserved.

This library is released under the terms of the MIT License.

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A library to simplify creation of Perl XS code

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