21. Plinth¶
The plinth is a program module that provides the MPS with the support it needs from the execution environment. The MPS uses the plinth instead of (say) the Standard C Library because:
The MPS is designed to be portable to systems that have only a conforming freestanding implementation of the C language: that is, systems which potentially lack some of the facilities of the Standard C Library, such as standard I/O. The plinth provides a way to map MPS requirements to the facilities provided on the platform, whatever they are.
The plinth gives the client program complete control of interaction between the MPS and the user, including assertions and telemetry.
The plinth may be provided by the client program; however, a sample implementation of the plinth using ANSI Standard C Library facilities is included with the MPS, and this is good enough for most applications.
There are many reasons why you might want to write your own plinth. You may be targeting a freestanding environment such as an embedded system. You might need to write the telemetry stream to a system logging facility, or transmit it over a serial port or network connection. Or you might need to direct debugging output to a convenient window in the user interface.
The plinth is divided into two parts:
The I/O module enables the MPS to write binary messages to an output stream.
The Library module provides miscellaneous functionality that would be available via the Standard C Library on a hosted platform, including functions for reporting errors and accessing a processor clock.
-
CONFIG_PLINTH_NONE
¶ If this preprocessor constant is defined, exclude the ANSI plinth (
mpsioan.c
andmpsliban.c
) from the MPS. For example:cc -DCONFIG_PLINTH_NONE -c mps.c (Unix/OS X) cl /Gs /DCONFIG_PLINTH_NONE /c mps.c (Windows)
Having excluded the ANSI plinth, you must of course supply your own.
21.1. I/O module¶
#include "mpsio.h"
-
mps_io_t
¶ The type of the internal state of the I/O module.
This is an alias for a pointer to the incomplete structure
mps_io_s
, which the plinth may define if it needs to. Alternatively, it may leave the structure type undefined and simply cast its own pointer to and frommps_io_t
.Note
In the ANSI I/O module,
mpsioan.c
, this is an alias forFILE*
.
-
mps_res_t
mps_io_create
(mps_io_t *io_o)¶ A plinth function for setting up the I/O module.
io_o
points to a location which the plinth may update with a pointer to its internal state, if any.Returns
MPS_RES_OK
if successful.The MPS calls this function to set up the I/O module, for example if there are events in the telemetry stream that need to be output.
A typical plinth will use it to open a file for writing, or to connect to the system logging interface.
Note
In the ANSI I/O module,
mpsioan.c
, this callsfopen()
on the file named by the environment variableMPS_TELEMETRY_FILENAME
.
-
void
mps_io_destroy
(mps_io_t io)¶ A plinth function for tearing down the I/O module.
io
is the value that the plinth wrote toio_o
when the MPS calledmps_io_create()
. If the plinth wrote no value, this parameter is undefined.After calling this function, the MPS guarantees not to use the value
io
again.Note
In the ANSI I/O module,
mpsioan.c
, this callsfclose()
.
-
mps_res_t
mps_io_write
(mps_io_t io, void *buf, size_t size)¶ A plinth function for writing data via the I/O module.
io
is the value that the plinth wrote toio_o
when the MPS calledmps_io_create()
. If the plinth wrote no value, this parameter is undefined.buf
points to the data to write.size
is the size of the data in bytes (1).Returns
MPS_RES_OK
if successful.Note
In the ANSI I/O module,
mpsioan.c
, this callsfwrite()
.
-
mps_res_t
mps_io_flush
(mps_io_t io)¶ A plinth function for flushing the I/O module.
io
is the value that the plinth wrote toio_o
when the MPS calledmps_io_create()
. If the plinth wrote no value, this parameter is undefined.Returns
MPS_RES_OK
if successful.The MPS calls this function when it is done with the telemetry stream, or when the client program calls
mps_telemetry_flush()
. This function should ensure that the buffers of data passed to the latest calls tomps_io_write()
are properly recorded, should the client program terminate (uncontrollably as a result of a bug, for example) or some interactive tool require access to the event data.Note
In the ANSI I/O module,
mpsioan.c
, this callsfflush()
.
21.2. Library module¶
#include "mpslib.h"
-
mps_clock_t
mps_clock
(void)¶ Return the time since some epoch, in units given by
mps_clocks_per_sec()
.Note
The ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, callsclock
.The MPS calls this function to make scheduling decisions (see Scheduling of collections), and to calibrate the time stamps on events in the telemetry stream. If your platform has a low-resolution
clock()
, and there are higher-resolution clocks readily available, then using one of those will improve MPS scheduling decisions and the quality of telemetry output. For instance, withgetrusage()
:#include <sys/resource.h> mps_clock_t mps_clock(void) { struct rusage s; int res = getrusage(RUSAGE_SELF, &s); if (res != 0) { /* handle error */ } return ((mps_clock_t)s.ru_utime.tv_sec) * 1000000 + s.ru_utime.tv_usec; }
-
mps_clock_t
mps_clocks_per_sec
(void)¶ Return the number of clock units per second, as returned by
mps_clock()
.Note
The ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, returnsCLOCKS_PER_SEC
.
-
void
mps_lib_assert_fail
(const char *message)¶ Report an assertion failure.
message
is a NUL-terminated string describing the assertion failure.Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this reports the failure usingfprintf(stderr, "...%s...", message)
and, in the cool variety, terminates the program by callingabort()
. You can change this behaviour withmps_lib_assert_fail_install()
. For a discussion of the default behaviour, see Assertion handling.
-
extern mps_lib_assert_fail_t
mps_lib_assert_fail_install
(mps_lib_assert_fail_t handler)¶ This function customises the behaviour of the default assertion handler in the ANSI Library module. It is not otherwise required by the MPS and you need not implement it if you are providing an alternative plinth.
If you’re using the ANSI Library module, you can use this function to change the behaviour of the MPS when an assertion fails. For example, you could terminate the program in the hot variety too. (The MPS test programs do exactly that.)
handler
is the assertion handler to install.Returns the previously installed handler.
-
typedef void
(*mps_lib_assert_fail_t)
(const char *, unsigned, const char *)¶ The type of assertion handlers passed to and returned by
mps_lib_assert_fail_install()
.
-
mps_lib_FILE
¶ The type of output streams provided by the plinth.
Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this is an alias forFILE*
.
-
int
mps_lib_fputc
(int c, mps_lib_FILE *stream)¶ Write a character to an output stream.
c
is the character.stream
is the stream.Return the character written if successful, or
mps_lib_get_EOF()
if not.This function is intended to have the same semantics as the
fputc()
function of the ANSI C Standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990 §7.11.7.3).Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this is a simple wrapper aroundfputc()
.
-
int
mps_lib_fputs
(const char *s, mps_lib_FILE *stream)¶ Write a string to an output stream.
s
is the NUL-terminated string.stream
is the stream.This function is intended to have the same semantics as the
fputs()
function of the ANSI C Standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990 §7.11.7.4).Return a non-negative integer if successful, or
mps_lib_get_EOF()
if not.Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this is a simple wrapper aroundfputs()
.
-
int
mps_lib_get_EOF
(void)¶ Return the value that is returned from
mps_lib_fputc()
andmps_lib_fputs()
to indicate failure.Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this returnsEOF
.
-
mps_lib_FILE *
mps_lib_get_stderr
(void)¶ Returns an output stream suitable for reporting errors.
Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this returnsstderr
.Note
The MPS does not use this at present, but it may be required in future.
-
mps_lib_FILE *
mps_lib_get_stdout
(void)¶ Returns an output stream suitable for reporting informative output.
Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this returnsstdout
.Note
The MPS does not use this at present, but it may be required in future.
-
int
mps_lib_memcmp
(const void *s1, const void *s2, size_t n)¶ A plinth function similar to the standard C function
memcmp()
.s1
ands2
point to blocks of memory to be compared.n
is the size of the blocks.Returns an integer that is greater than, equal to, or less than zero, accordingly as the block pointed to by
s1
is greater than, equal to, or less than the block pointed to bys2
.This function is intended to have the same semantics as the
memcmp()
function of the ANSI C Standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990 §7.11.4.1).Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this is a simple wrapper aroundmemcmp()
.
-
void *
mps_lib_memcpy
(void *dest, const void *source, size_t n)¶ A plinth function similar to the standard C function
memcpy()
.dest
points to the destination.source
points to the source.n
is the number of bytes to copy fromsource
todest
.Returns
dest
.This function is intended to have the same semantics as the
memcpy()
function of the ANSI C Standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990 §7.11.2.1).The MPS never passes overlapping blocks to
mps_lib_memcpy()
.Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this is a simple wrapper aroundmemcpy()
.
-
void *
mps_lib_memset
(void *s, int c, size_t n)¶ A plinth function similar to the standard C function
memset()
.s
points to the block to fill with the bytec
.c
is the byte to fill with (when converted tounsigned char
).n
is the size of the block.Returns
s
.This function is intended to have the same semantics as the
memset()
function of the ANSI C Standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990 §7.11.6.1).Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this is a simple wrapper aroundmemset()
.Note
The MPS does not use this at present, but it may be required in future.
-
unsigned long
mps_lib_telemetry_control
()¶ A plinth function to supply a default value for the telemetry filter from the environment. See
mps_telemetry_control()
for more information on the significant of the value.Returns the default value of the telemetry filter, as derived from the environment. It is recommended that the environment be consulted for a symbol analogous to
MPS_TELEMETRY_CONTROL
, subject to local restrictions.In the absence of environmental data, a default of zero is recommended.
Note
In the ANSI Library module,
mpsliban.c
, this reads the environment variableMPS_TELEMETRY_CONTROL
.