X-Git-Url: http://git.megacz.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=GHC%2FPtr.lhs;h=391f9250dd99bbe78f34c09c97f9bdaf7151af79;hb=26d2805a6e58822d246cf9601fb226b0861e7f65;hp=7f43745b67b398175ef278ac77940c7cfbbc186f;hpb=c37cf4507dd8093addd6ef6a91fd7046f2f1f2fb;p=haskell-directory.git diff --git a/GHC/Ptr.lhs b/GHC/Ptr.lhs index 7f43745..391f925 100644 --- a/GHC/Ptr.lhs +++ b/GHC/Ptr.lhs @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ \begin{code} -{-# OPTIONS -fno-implicit-prelude #-} +{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-implicit-prelude #-} ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- | -- Module : GHC.Ptr @@ -14,9 +14,16 @@ -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- +-- #hide module GHC.Ptr where import GHC.Base +import GHC.Show +import GHC.Num +import GHC.List ( length, replicate ) +import Numeric ( showHex ) + +#include "MachDeps.h" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- Data pointers. @@ -26,9 +33,11 @@ data Ptr a = Ptr Addr# deriving (Eq, Ord) -- array of objects, which may be marshalled to or from Haskell values -- of type @a@. -- --- The type @a@ will normally be an instance of class +-- The type @a@ will often be an instance of class -- 'Foreign.Storable.Storable' which provides the marshalling operations. - +-- However this is not essential, and you can provide your own operations +-- to access the pointer. For example you might write small foreign +-- functions to get or set the fields of a C @struct@. -- |The constant 'nullPtr' contains a distinguished value of 'Ptr' -- that is not associated with a valid memory location. @@ -64,31 +73,92 @@ minusPtr (Ptr a1) (Ptr a2) = I# (minusAddr# a1 a2) -- Function pointers for the default calling convention. data FunPtr a = FunPtr Addr# deriving (Eq, Ord) --- ^ A value of type @'FunPtr' a@ is a pointer to a piece of code. It --- may be the pointer to a C function or to a Haskell function created --- using @foreign export dynamic@. A @foreign export --- dynamic@ should normally be declared to produce a --- 'FunPtr' of the correct type. For example: +-- ^ A value of type @'FunPtr' a@ is a pointer to a function callable +-- from foreign code. The type @a@ will normally be a /foreign type/, +-- a function type with zero or more arguments where +-- +-- * the argument types are /marshallable foreign types/, +-- i.e. 'Char', 'Int', 'Prelude.Double', 'Prelude.Float', +-- 'Bool', 'Data.Int.Int8', 'Data.Int.Int16', 'Data.Int.Int32', +-- 'Data.Int.Int64', 'Data.Word.Word8', 'Data.Word.Word16', +-- 'Data.Word.Word32', 'Data.Word.Word64', @'Ptr' a@, @'FunPtr' a@, +-- @'Foreign.StablePtr.StablePtr' a@ or a renaming of any of these +-- using @newtype@. +-- +-- * the return type is either a marshallable foreign type or has the form +-- @'Prelude.IO' t@ where @t@ is a marshallable foreign type or @()@. +-- +-- A value of type @'FunPtr' a@ may be a pointer to a foreign function, +-- either returned by another foreign function or imported with a +-- a static address import like +-- +-- > foreign import ccall "stdlib.h &free" +-- > p_free :: FunPtr (Ptr a -> IO ()) +-- +-- or a pointer to a Haskell function created using a /wrapper/ stub +-- declared to produce a 'FunPtr' of the correct type. For example: -- -- > type Compare = Int -> Int -> Bool --- > foreign export dynamic mkCompare :: Compare -> IO (FunPtr Compare) +-- > foreign import ccall "wrapper" +-- > mkCompare :: Compare -> IO (FunPtr Compare) +-- +-- Calls to wrapper stubs like @mkCompare@ allocate storage, which +-- should be released with 'Foreign.Ptr.freeHaskellFunPtr' when no +-- longer required. +-- +-- To convert 'FunPtr' values to corresponding Haskell functions, one +-- can define a /dynamic/ stub for the specific foreign type, e.g. +-- +-- > type IntFunction = CInt -> IO () +-- > foreign import ccall "dynamic" +-- > mkFun :: FunPtr IntFunction -> IntFunction -- |The constant 'nullFunPtr' contains a --- distinguished value of 'Ptr' that is not --- associated with a valid memory location +-- distinguished value of 'FunPtr' that is not +-- associated with a valid memory location. nullFunPtr :: FunPtr a nullFunPtr = FunPtr nullAddr# --- |Casts a 'FunPtr' to a 'FunPtr' of a different type +-- |Casts a 'FunPtr' to a 'FunPtr' of a different type. castFunPtr :: FunPtr a -> FunPtr b castFunPtr (FunPtr addr) = FunPtr addr --- |Casts a 'FunPtr' to a 'Ptr' +-- |Casts a 'FunPtr' to a 'Ptr'. +-- +-- /Note:/ this is valid only on architectures where data and function +-- pointers range over the same set of addresses, and should only be used +-- for bindings to external libraries whose interface already relies on +-- this assumption. castFunPtrToPtr :: FunPtr a -> Ptr b castFunPtrToPtr (FunPtr addr) = Ptr addr --- |Casts a 'Ptr' to a 'FunPtr' +-- |Casts a 'Ptr' to a 'FunPtr'. +-- +-- /Note:/ this is valid only on architectures where data and function +-- pointers range over the same set of addresses, and should only be used +-- for bindings to external libraries whose interface already relies on +-- this assumption. castPtrToFunPtr :: Ptr a -> FunPtr b castPtrToFunPtr (Ptr addr) = FunPtr addr + + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ +-- Show instances for Ptr and FunPtr +-- I have absolutely no idea why the WORD_SIZE_IN_BITS stuff is here + +#if (WORD_SIZE_IN_BITS == 32 || WORD_SIZE_IN_BITS == 64) +instance Show (Ptr a) where + showsPrec p (Ptr a) rs = pad_out (showHex (word2Integer(int2Word#(addr2Int# a))) "") rs + where + -- want 0s prefixed to pad it out to a fixed length. + pad_out ls rs = + '0':'x':(replicate (2*SIZEOF_HSPTR - length ls) '0') ++ ls ++ rs + -- word2Integer :: Word# -> Integer (stolen from Word.lhs) + word2Integer w = case word2Integer# w of + (# s, d #) -> J# s d + +instance Show (FunPtr a) where + showsPrec p = showsPrec p . castFunPtrToPtr +#endif \end{code}