THE DESIGN OF THE MPS WRITEF FUNCTION design.mps.writef draft doc richard 1996-10-18 INTRODUCTION .intro: This document describes the WriteF function, which allows formatted output in a manner similar to ANSI C printf, but allows the MPM to operate in a freestanding environment (see design.mps.exec-env). .background: The documents design.mps.exec-env and design.mps.lib describe the design of the library interface and the reason that it exists. DESIGN .no-printf: There is no dependency on printf has been removed. The MPM only depends on fputc and fputs, via the Library Interface (design.mps.lib). This makes it much easier to deploy the MPS in a freestanding environment. This is achieved by implementing our own internal output routines in mpm.c. Our output requirements are few, so the code is short. The only output function which should be used in the rest of the MPM is WriteF, which is similar to fprintf: Res WriteF(mps_lib_FILE *stream, ...); WriteF expects a format string followed by zero or more items to insert into the output, followed by another format string, more items, etc., then a NULL format string, e.g. WriteF(stream, "Hello: $A\n", address, "Spong: $U ($S)\n", number, string, NULL); This makes Describe methods much easier to do, e.g.: WriteF(stream, "Buffer $P ($U) {\n", (WriteFP)buffer, (WriteFU)buffer->serial, " base $A init $A alloc $A limit $A\n", (WriteFA)buffer->base, (WriteFA)buffer->ap.init, (WriteFA)buffer->ap.alloc, (WriteFA)buffer->ap.limit, " Pool $P\n", (WriteFP)buffer->pool, " Seg $P\n", (WriteFP)buffer->seg, " rank $U\n", (WriteFU)buffer->rank, " alignment $W\n", (WriteFW)buffer->alignment, " grey $B\n", (WriteFB)buffer->grey, " shieldMode $B\n", (WriteFB)buffer->shieldMode, " p $P i $U\n", (WriteFP)buffer->p, (WriteFU)buffer->i, "} Buffer $P ($U)\n", (WriteFP)buffer, (WriteFU)buffer->serial, NULL); .types: For each format $X that WriteF supports, there is a type defined in impl.h.mpmtypes WriteFX which is the promoted version of that type. These are provided both to ensure promotion and to avoid any confusion about what type should be used in a cast. It is easy to check the casts against the formats to ensure that they correspond. .types.future: It is possibly that this type set or similar may be used in future in some generalisation of varargs in the MPS. .formats: The formats supported are as follows. code name type example rendering $A address Addr 9EF60010 $P pointer void * 9EF60100 $F function void *(*)() 9EF60100 (may be plaform-specific length and format) $S string char * hello $C character char x $W word ULongest 00109AE0 $U decimal ULongest 42 $B binary ULongest 00000000000000001011011110010001 $$ dollar - $ Note that WriteFC is an int, because that is the default promotion of a char (see .types). .snazzy: We should resist the temptation to make WriteF an incredible snazzy output engine. We only need it for Describe methods and assertion messages. At the moment it's a very simple bit of code -- let's keep it that way. .f: The F code is used for function pointers. They are currently printed as a hexadecimal string of the appropriate length for the platform, and may one day be extended to include function name lookup.
A. References
B. Document History
2002-06-07 | RB | Converted from MMInfo database design document. |
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