#include <vacall.h>
extern void* vacall_function;
void function (alist)
va_alist alist;
{
va_start_type(alist[, return_type]);
arg = va_arg_type(alist[, arg_type]);
va_return_type(alist[[, return_type], return_value]);
}
vacall_function = &function;
val = ((return_type (*) ()) vacall) (arg1,arg2,...);
varargs
(3) facility,
but also allows the return value to be specified at run
time.
Function calling conventions differ considerably on different machines, and vacall attempts to provide some degree of isolation from such architecture dependencies.
The function that can be called with any number and type
of arguments and which will return any type of return
value is vacall
. It will do some magic and call the function
stored in the variable vacall_function
. If you want
to make more than one use of vacall,
use the trampoline
(3)
facility to store &function
into vacall_function
just
before calling vacall
.
Within function, the following macros can be used to walk through the argument list and specify a return value:
va_start_type(alist[, return_type]);
starts the walk through the argument list and specifies the return type.
arg = va_arg_type(alist[, arg_type]);
fetches the next argument from the argument list.
va_return_type(alist[[, return_type], return_value]);
ends the walk through the argument list and specifies the return value.
The type in va_start_type
and va_return_type
shall be one
of void
, int
, uint
, long
,
ulong
, longlong
, ulonglong
,
double
, struct
, ptr
or
(for ANSI C calling conventions only)
char
, schar
, uchar
,
short
, ushort
, float
,
depending on the class of return_type.
The type specifiers in
va_start_type
and va_return_type
must be the same.
The return_type specifiers passed to
va_start_type
and va_return_type
must be the same.
The type in va_arg_type
shall be one of int
, uint
, long
,
ulong
, longlong
, ulonglong
,
double
, struct
, ptr
or (for ANSI C calling conventions only)
char
, schar
, uchar
,
short
, ushort
, float
,
depending on the class of arg_type.
In va_start_struct(alist, return_type, splittable);
the
splittable flag specifies whether the struct return_type can
be returned in registers such that every struct field fits
entirely in a single register. This needs to be specified
for structs of size 2*sizeof(long). For structs of size
<= sizeof(long), splittable is ignored and assumed to be 1.
For structs of size > 2*sizeof(long), splittable is
ignored and assumed to be 0. There are some handy macros
for this:
For a struct with three slotsva_word_splittable_1 (type1)
va_word_splittable_2 (type1, type2)
va_word_splittable_3 (type1, type2, type3)
va_word_splittable_4 (type1, type2, type3, type4)
struct { type1 id1; type2 id2; type3 id3; }
you can specify splittable as
va_word_splittable_3 (type1, type2, type3)
.
char
, schar
, uchar
,
short
, ushort
, float
.
As prescribed by the default
K&R C expression promotions, they have to use int
instead
of char
, schar
, uchar
,
short
, ushort
and double
instead of
float
.
va_start_longlong()
,
va_start_ulonglong()
, va_return_longlong()
,
va_return_ulonglong()
, va_arg_longlong()
and
va_arg_ulonglong()
work only if the C compiler has a working
long long
64-bit integer type.
va_start_struct()
and
va_struct()
must only contain (signed or unsigned) int,
long, long long or pointer fields. Struct types containing
(signed or unsigned) char, short, float, double or other
structs are not supported.
execl
(3) on top
of execv
(2) using varargs
(3),
#include <varargs.h>
#define MAXARGS 100
/* execl is called by execl(file, arg1, arg2, ..., (char *)0); */
int execl (va_alist)
va_dcl
{
va_list ap;
char* file;
char* args[MAXARGS];
int argno = 0;
va_start (ap);
file = va_arg(ap, char*);
while ((args[argno] = va_arg(ap, char*)) != (char *)0)
argno++;
va_end (ap);
return execv(file, args);
}
looks like this using vacall
(3):
#include <vacall.h>
#define MAXARGS 100
/* execl is called by vacall(file, arg1, arg2, ..., (char *)0); */
void execl (ap)
va_alist ap;
{
char* file;
char* args[MAXARGS];
int argno = 0;
int retval;
va_start_int (ap);
file = va_arg_ptr(ap, char*);
while ((args[argno] = va_arg_ptr(ap, char*)) != (char *)0)
argno++;
retval = execv(file, args);
va_return_int (ap, retval);
}
vacall_function = &execl;
See also
varargs
(3), trampoline
(3), callback
(3).
Bugs
The current implementations have been tested on a selection
of common cases but there are probably still many
bugs.
There are typically built-in limits on the size of the argument-list, which may also include the size of any structure arguments.
The decision whether a struct is to be returned in registers or in memory
considers only the struct's size and alignment. This is inaccurate: for
example, gcc on m68k-next returns
struct { char a,b,c; }
in registers and
struct { char a[3]; }
in memory, although both types have the same size and the same alignment.
<vacall.h>
cannot be included when <varargs.h>
or
<stdarg.h>
is included. (Name clash for va_alist
.)
The argument list can only be walked once.
The use of the global variable vacall_function
is not
reentrant. This is fixed in the callback
(3) package.
Porting
Knowledge about argument passing conventions can be found
in the gcc source, file
gcc-2.6.3/config/cpu/cpu.h,
section "Stack layout; function entry, exit and calling."
The implementation of varargs for gcc can be found in the gcc source, files gcc-2.6.3/ginclude/va*.h.
gcc's __builtin_saveregs()
function is defined in the gcc
source, file gcc-2.6.3/libgcc2.c.
Author
Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>
Acknowledgements
Many ideas and a lot of code were cribbed from the gcc
source.
Last modified: 14 January 2001.