Perl 5 version 22.4 documentation

perlxstypemap

NAME

perlxstypemap - Perl XS C/Perl type mapping

DESCRIPTION

The more you think about interfacing between two languages, the more you'll realize that the majority of programmer effort has to go into converting between the data structures that are native to either of the languages involved. This trumps other matter such as differing calling conventions because the problem space is so much greater. There are simply more ways to shove data into memory than there are ways to implement a function call.

Perl XS' attempt at a solution to this is the concept of typemaps. At an abstract level, a Perl XS typemap is nothing but a recipe for converting from a certain Perl data structure to a certain C data structure and vice versa. Since there can be C types that are sufficiently similar to one another to warrant converting with the same logic, XS typemaps are represented by a unique identifier, henceforth called an XS type in this document. You can then tell the XS compiler that multiple C types are to be mapped with the same XS typemap.

In your XS code, when you define an argument with a C type or when you are using a CODE: and an OUTPUT: section together with a C return type of your XSUB, it'll be the typemapping mechanism that makes this easy.

Anatomy of a typemap

In more practical terms, the typemap is a collection of code fragments which are used by the xsubpp compiler to map C function parameters and values to Perl values. The typemap file may consist of three sections labelled TYPEMAP , INPUT , and OUTPUT . An unlabelled initial section is assumed to be a TYPEMAP section. The INPUT section tells the compiler how to translate Perl values into variables of certain C types. The OUTPUT section tells the compiler how to translate the values from certain C types into values Perl can understand. The TYPEMAP section tells the compiler which of the INPUT and OUTPUT code fragments should be used to map a given C type to a Perl value. The section labels TYPEMAP , INPUT , or OUTPUT must begin in the first column on a line by themselves, and must be in uppercase.

Each type of section can appear an arbitrary number of times and does not have to appear at all. For example, a typemap may commonly lack INPUT and OUTPUT sections if all it needs to do is associate additional C types with core XS types like T_PTROBJ. Lines that start with a hash # are considered comments and ignored in the TYPEMAP section, but are considered significant in INPUT and OUTPUT . Blank lines are generally ignored.

Traditionally, typemaps needed to be written to a separate file, conventionally called typemap in a CPAN distribution. With ExtUtils::ParseXS (the XS compiler) version 3.12 or better which comes with perl 5.16, typemaps can also be embedded directly into XS code using a HERE-doc like syntax:

  1. TYPEMAP: <<HERE
  2. ...
  3. HERE

where HERE can be replaced by other identifiers like with normal Perl HERE-docs. All details below about the typemap textual format remain valid.

The TYPEMAP section should contain one pair of C type and XS type per line as follows. An example from the core typemap file:

  1. TYPEMAP
  2. # all variants of char* is handled by the T_PV typemap
  3. char * T_PV
  4. const char * T_PV
  5. unsigned char * T_PV
  6. ...

The INPUT and OUTPUT sections have identical formats, that is, each unindented line starts a new in- or output map respectively. A new in- or output map must start with the name of the XS type to map on a line by itself, followed by the code that implements it indented on the following lines. Example:

  1. INPUT
  2. T_PV
  3. $var = ($type)SvPV_nolen($arg)
  4. T_PTR
  5. $var = INT2PTR($type,SvIV($arg))

We'll get to the meaning of those Perlish-looking variables in a little bit.

Finally, here's an example of the full typemap file for mapping C strings of the char * type to Perl scalars/strings:

  1. TYPEMAP
  2. char * T_PV
  3. INPUT
  4. T_PV
  5. $var = ($type)SvPV_nolen($arg)
  6. OUTPUT
  7. T_PV
  8. sv_setpv((SV*)$arg, $var);

Here's a more complicated example: suppose that you wanted struct netconfig to be blessed into the class Net::Config . One way to do this is to use underscores (_) to separate package names, as follows:

  1. typedef struct netconfig * Net_Config;

And then provide a typemap entry T_PTROBJ_SPECIAL that maps underscores to double-colons (::), and declare Net_Config to be of that type:

  1. TYPEMAP
  2. Net_Config T_PTROBJ_SPECIAL
  3. INPUT
  4. T_PTROBJ_SPECIAL
  5. if (sv_derived_from($arg, \"${(my $ntt=$ntype)=~s/_/::/g;\$ntt}\")){
  6. IV tmp = SvIV((SV*)SvRV($arg));
  7. $var = INT2PTR($type, tmp);
  8. }
  9. else
  10. croak(\"$var is not of type ${(my $ntt=$ntype)=~s/_/::/g;\$ntt}\")
  11. OUTPUT
  12. T_PTROBJ_SPECIAL
  13. sv_setref_pv($arg, \"${(my $ntt=$ntype)=~s/_/::/g;\$ntt}\",
  14. (void*)$var);

The INPUT and OUTPUT sections substitute underscores for double-colons on the fly, giving the desired effect. This example demonstrates some of the power and versatility of the typemap facility.

The INT2PTR macro (defined in perl.h) casts an integer to a pointer of a given type, taking care of the possible different size of integers and pointers. There are also PTR2IV , PTR2UV , PTR2NV macros, to map the other way, which may be useful in OUTPUT sections.

The Role of the typemap File in Your Distribution

The default typemap in the lib/ExtUtils directory of the Perl source contains many useful types which can be used by Perl extensions. Some extensions define additional typemaps which they keep in their own directory. These additional typemaps may reference INPUT and OUTPUT maps in the main typemap. The xsubpp compiler will allow the extension's own typemap to override any mappings which are in the default typemap. Instead of using an additional typemap file, typemaps may be embedded verbatim in XS with a heredoc-like syntax. See the documentation on the TYPEMAP: XS keyword.

For CPAN distributions, you can assume that the XS types defined by the perl core are already available. Additionally, the core typemap has default XS types for a large number of C types. For example, if you simply return a char * from your XSUB, the core typemap will have this C type associated with the T_PV XS type. That means your C string will be copied into the PV (pointer value) slot of a new scalar that will be returned from your XSUB to Perl.

If you're developing a CPAN distribution using XS, you may add your own file called typemap to the distribution. That file may contain typemaps that either map types that are specific to your code or that override the core typemap file's mappings for common C types.

Sharing typemaps Between CPAN Distributions

Starting with ExtUtils::ParseXS version 3.13_01 (comes with perl 5.16 and better), it is rather easy to share typemap code between multiple CPAN distributions. The general idea is to share it as a module that offers a certain API and have the dependent modules declare that as a built-time requirement and import the typemap into the XS. An example of such a typemap-sharing module on CPAN is ExtUtils::Typemaps::Basic . Two steps to getting that module's typemaps available in your code:

  • Declare ExtUtils::Typemaps::Basic as a build-time dependency in Makefile.PL (use BUILD_REQUIRES ), or in your Build.PL (use build_requires ).

  • Include the following line in the XS section of your XS file: (don't break the line)

    1. INCLUDE_COMMAND: $^X -MExtUtils::Typemaps::Cmd
    2. -e "print embeddable_typemap(q{Basic})"

Writing typemap Entries

Each INPUT or OUTPUT typemap entry is a double-quoted Perl string that will be evaluated in the presence of certain variables to get the final C code for mapping a certain C type.

This means that you can embed Perl code in your typemap (C) code using constructs such as ${ perl code that evaluates to scalar reference here } . A common use case is to generate error messages that refer to the true function name even when using the ALIAS XS feature:

  1. ${ $ALIAS ? \q[GvNAME(CvGV(cv))] : \qq[\"$pname\"] }

For many typemap examples, refer to the core typemap file that can be found in the perl source tree at lib/ExtUtils/typemap.

The Perl variables that are available for interpolation into typemaps are the following:

  • $var - the name of the input or output variable, eg. RETVAL for return values.

  • $type - the raw C type of the parameter, any : replaced with _ . e.g. for a type of Foo::Bar , $type is Foo__Bar

  • $ntype - the supplied type with * replaced with Ptr . e.g. for a type of Foo* , $ntype is FooPtr

  • $arg - the stack entry, that the parameter is input from or output to, e.g. ST(0)

  • $argoff - the argument stack offset of the argument. ie. 0 for the first argument, etc.

  • $pname - the full name of the XSUB, with including the PACKAGE name, with any PREFIX stripped. This is the non-ALIAS name.

  • $Package - the package specified by the most recent PACKAGE keyword.

  • $ALIAS - non-zero if the current XSUB has any aliases declared with ALIAS .

Full Listing of Core Typemaps

Each C type is represented by an entry in the typemap file that is responsible for converting perl variables (SV, AV, HV, CV, etc.) to and from that type. The following sections list all XS types that come with perl by default.

  • T_SV

    This simply passes the C representation of the Perl variable (an SV*) in and out of the XS layer. This can be used if the C code wants to deal directly with the Perl variable.

  • T_SVREF

    Used to pass in and return a reference to an SV.

    Note that this typemap does not decrement the reference count when returning the reference to an SV*. See also: T_SVREF_REFCOUNT_FIXED

  • T_SVREF_FIXED

    Used to pass in and return a reference to an SV. This is a fixed variant of T_SVREF that decrements the refcount appropriately when returning a reference to an SV*. Introduced in perl 5.15.4.

  • T_AVREF

    From the perl level this is a reference to a perl array. From the C level this is a pointer to an AV.

    Note that this typemap does not decrement the reference count when returning an AV*. See also: T_AVREF_REFCOUNT_FIXED

  • T_AVREF_REFCOUNT_FIXED

    From the perl level this is a reference to a perl array. From the C level this is a pointer to an AV. This is a fixed variant of T_AVREF that decrements the refcount appropriately when returning an AV*. Introduced in perl 5.15.4.

  • T_HVREF

    From the perl level this is a reference to a perl hash. From the C level this is a pointer to an HV.

    Note that this typemap does not decrement the reference count when returning an HV*. See also: T_HVREF_REFCOUNT_FIXED

  • T_HVREF_REFCOUNT_FIXED

    From the perl level this is a reference to a perl hash. From the C level this is a pointer to an HV. This is a fixed variant of T_HVREF that decrements the refcount appropriately when returning an HV*. Introduced in perl 5.15.4.

  • T_CVREF

    From the perl level this is a reference to a perl subroutine (e.g. $sub = sub { 1 };). From the C level this is a pointer to a CV.

    Note that this typemap does not decrement the reference count when returning an HV*. See also: T_HVREF_REFCOUNT_FIXED

  • T_CVREF_REFCOUNT_FIXED

    From the perl level this is a reference to a perl subroutine (e.g. $sub = sub { 1 };). From the C level this is a pointer to a CV.

    This is a fixed variant of T_HVREF that decrements the refcount appropriately when returning an HV*. Introduced in perl 5.15.4.

  • T_SYSRET

    The T_SYSRET typemap is used to process return values from system calls. It is only meaningful when passing values from C to perl (there is no concept of passing a system return value from Perl to C).

    System calls return -1 on error (setting ERRNO with the reason) and (usually) 0 on success. If the return value is -1 this typemap returns undef. If the return value is not -1, this typemap translates a 0 (perl false) to "0 but true" (which is perl true) or returns the value itself, to indicate that the command succeeded.

    The POSIX module makes extensive use of this type.

  • T_UV

    An unsigned integer.

  • T_IV

    A signed integer. This is cast to the required integer type when passed to C and converted to an IV when passed back to Perl.

  • T_INT

    A signed integer. This typemap converts the Perl value to a native integer type (the int type on the current platform). When returning the value to perl it is processed in the same way as for T_IV.

    Its behaviour is identical to using an int type in XS with T_IV.

  • T_ENUM

    An enum value. Used to transfer an enum component from C. There is no reason to pass an enum value to C since it is stored as an IV inside perl.

  • T_BOOL

    A boolean type. This can be used to pass true and false values to and from C.

  • T_U_INT

    This is for unsigned integers. It is equivalent to using T_UV but explicitly casts the variable to type unsigned int . The default type for unsigned int is T_UV.

  • T_SHORT

    Short integers. This is equivalent to T_IV but explicitly casts the return to type short . The default typemap for short is T_IV.

  • T_U_SHORT

    Unsigned short integers. This is equivalent to T_UV but explicitly casts the return to type unsigned short . The default typemap for unsigned short is T_UV.

    T_U_SHORT is used for type U16 in the standard typemap.

  • T_LONG

    Long integers. This is equivalent to T_IV but explicitly casts the return to type long . The default typemap for long is T_IV.

  • T_U_LONG

    Unsigned long integers. This is equivalent to T_UV but explicitly casts the return to type unsigned long . The default typemap for unsigned long is T_UV.

    T_U_LONG is used for type U32 in the standard typemap.

  • T_CHAR

    Single 8-bit characters.

  • T_U_CHAR

    An unsigned byte.

  • T_FLOAT

    A floating point number. This typemap guarantees to return a variable cast to a float .

  • T_NV

    A Perl floating point number. Similar to T_IV and T_UV in that the return type is cast to the requested numeric type rather than to a specific type.

  • T_DOUBLE

    A double precision floating point number. This typemap guarantees to return a variable cast to a double .

  • T_PV

    A string (char *).

  • T_PTR

    A memory address (pointer). Typically associated with a void * type.

  • T_PTRREF

    Similar to T_PTR except that the pointer is stored in a scalar and the reference to that scalar is returned to the caller. This can be used to hide the actual pointer value from the programmer since it is usually not required directly from within perl.

    The typemap checks that a scalar reference is passed from perl to XS.

  • T_PTROBJ

    Similar to T_PTRREF except that the reference is blessed into a class. This allows the pointer to be used as an object. Most commonly used to deal with C structs. The typemap checks that the perl object passed into the XS routine is of the correct class (or part of a subclass).

    The pointer is blessed into a class that is derived from the name of type of the pointer but with all '*' in the name replaced with 'Ptr'.

    For DESTROY XSUBs only, a T_PTROBJ is optimized to a T_PTRREF. This means the class check is skipped.

  • T_REF_IV_REF

    NOT YET

  • T_REF_IV_PTR

    Similar to T_PTROBJ in that the pointer is blessed into a scalar object. The difference is that when the object is passed back into XS it must be of the correct type (inheritance is not supported) while T_PTROBJ supports inheritance.

    The pointer is blessed into a class that is derived from the name of type of the pointer but with all '*' in the name replaced with 'Ptr'.

    For DESTROY XSUBs only, a T_REF_IV_PTR is optimized to a T_PTRREF. This means the class check is skipped.

  • T_PTRDESC

    NOT YET

  • T_REFREF

    Similar to T_PTRREF, except the pointer stored in the referenced scalar is dereferenced and copied to the output variable. This means that T_REFREF is to T_PTRREF as T_OPAQUE is to T_OPAQUEPTR. All clear?

    Only the INPUT part of this is implemented (Perl to XSUB) and there are no known users in core or on CPAN.

  • T_REFOBJ

    Like T_REFREF, except it does strict type checking (inheritance is not supported).

    For DESTROY XSUBs only, a T_REFOBJ is optimized to a T_REFREF. This means the class check is skipped.

  • T_OPAQUEPTR

    This can be used to store bytes in the string component of the SV. Here the representation of the data is irrelevant to perl and the bytes themselves are just stored in the SV. It is assumed that the C variable is a pointer (the bytes are copied from that memory location). If the pointer is pointing to something that is represented by 8 bytes then those 8 bytes are stored in the SV (and length() will report a value of 8). This entry is similar to T_OPAQUE.

    In principle the unpack() command can be used to convert the bytes back to a number (if the underlying type is known to be a number).

    This entry can be used to store a C structure (the number of bytes to be copied is calculated using the C sizeof function) and can be used as an alternative to T_PTRREF without having to worry about a memory leak (since Perl will clean up the SV).

  • T_OPAQUE

    This can be used to store data from non-pointer types in the string part of an SV. It is similar to T_OPAQUEPTR except that the typemap retrieves the pointer directly rather than assuming it is being supplied. For example, if an integer is imported into Perl using T_OPAQUE rather than T_IV the underlying bytes representing the integer will be stored in the SV but the actual integer value will not be available. i.e. The data is opaque to perl.

    The data may be retrieved using the unpack function if the underlying type of the byte stream is known.

    T_OPAQUE supports input and output of simple types. T_OPAQUEPTR can be used to pass these bytes back into C if a pointer is acceptable.

  • Implicit array

    xsubpp supports a special syntax for returning packed C arrays to perl. If the XS return type is given as

    1. array(type, nelem)

    xsubpp will copy the contents of nelem * sizeof(type) bytes from RETVAL to an SV and push it onto the stack. This is only really useful if the number of items to be returned is known at compile time and you don't mind having a string of bytes in your SV. Use T_ARRAY to push a variable number of arguments onto the return stack (they won't be packed as a single string though).

    This is similar to using T_OPAQUEPTR but can be used to process more than one element.

  • T_PACKED

    Calls user-supplied functions for conversion. For OUTPUT (XSUB to Perl), a function named XS_pack_$ntype is called with the output Perl scalar and the C variable to convert from. $ntype is the normalized C type that is to be mapped to Perl. Normalized means that all * are replaced by the string Ptr . The return value of the function is ignored.

    Conversely for INPUT (Perl to XSUB) mapping, the function named XS_unpack_$ntype is called with the input Perl scalar as argument and the return value is cast to the mapped C type and assigned to the output C variable.

    An example conversion function for a typemapped struct foo_t * might be:

    1. static void
    2. XS_pack_foo_tPtr(SV *out, foo_t *in)
    3. {
    4. dTHX; /* alas, signature does not include pTHX_ */
    5. HV* hash = newHV();
    6. hv_stores(hash, "int_member", newSViv(in->int_member));
    7. hv_stores(hash, "float_member", newSVnv(in->float_member));
    8. /* ... */
    9. /* mortalize as thy stack is not refcounted */
    10. sv_setsv(out, sv_2mortal(newRV_noinc((SV*)hash)));
    11. }

    The conversion from Perl to C is left as an exercise to the reader, but the prototype would be:

    1. static foo_t *
    2. XS_unpack_foo_tPtr(SV *in);

    Instead of an actual C function that has to fetch the thread context using dTHX , you can define macros of the same name and avoid the overhead. Also, keep in mind to possibly free the memory allocated by XS_unpack_foo_tPtr .

  • T_PACKEDARRAY

    T_PACKEDARRAY is similar to T_PACKED. In fact, the INPUT (Perl to XSUB) typemap is identical, but the OUTPUT typemap passes an additional argument to the XS_pack_$ntype function. This third parameter indicates the number of elements in the output so that the function can handle C arrays sanely. The variable needs to be declared by the user and must have the name count_$ntype where $ntype is the normalized C type name as explained above. The signature of the function would be for the example above and foo_t ** :

    1. static void
    2. XS_pack_foo_tPtrPtr(SV *out, foo_t *in, UV count_foo_tPtrPtr);

    The type of the third parameter is arbitrary as far as the typemap is concerned. It just has to be in line with the declared variable.

    Of course, unless you know the number of elements in the sometype ** C array, within your XSUB, the return value from foo_t ** XS_unpack_foo_tPtrPtr(...) will be hard to decipher. Since the details are all up to the XS author (the typemap user), there are several solutions, none of which particularly elegant. The most commonly seen solution has been to allocate memory for N+1 pointers and assign NULL to the (N+1)th to facilitate iteration.

    Alternatively, using a customized typemap for your purposes in the first place is probably preferable.

  • T_DATAUNIT

    NOT YET

  • T_CALLBACK

    NOT YET

  • T_ARRAY

    This is used to convert the perl argument list to a C array and for pushing the contents of a C array onto the perl argument stack.

    The usual calling signature is

    1. @out = array_func( @in );

    Any number of arguments can occur in the list before the array but the input and output arrays must be the last elements in the list.

    When used to pass a perl list to C the XS writer must provide a function (named after the array type but with 'Ptr' substituted for '*') to allocate the memory required to hold the list. A pointer should be returned. It is up to the XS writer to free the memory on exit from the function. The variable ix_$var is set to the number of elements in the new array.

    When returning a C array to Perl the XS writer must provide an integer variable called size_$var containing the number of elements in the array. This is used to determine how many elements should be pushed onto the return argument stack. This is not required on input since Perl knows how many arguments are on the stack when the routine is called. Ordinarily this variable would be called size_RETVAL .

    Additionally, the type of each element is determined from the type of the array. If the array uses type intArray * xsubpp will automatically work out that it contains variables of type int and use that typemap entry to perform the copy of each element. All pointer '*' and 'Array' tags are removed from the name to determine the subtype.

  • T_STDIO

    This is used for passing perl filehandles to and from C using FILE * structures.

  • T_INOUT

    This is used for passing perl filehandles to and from C using PerlIO * structures. The file handle can used for reading and writing. This corresponds to the +< mode, see also T_IN and T_OUT.

    See perliol for more information on the Perl IO abstraction layer. Perl must have been built with -Duseperlio .

    There is no check to assert that the filehandle passed from Perl to C was created with the right open() mode.

    Hint: The perlxstut tutorial covers the T_INOUT, T_IN, and T_OUT XS types nicely.

  • T_IN

    Same as T_INOUT, but the filehandle that is returned from C to Perl can only be used for reading (mode <).

  • T_OUT

    Same as T_INOUT, but the filehandle that is returned from C to Perl is set to use the open mode +>.