- NAME
- Tcl_InitStubs — initialize the Tcl stubs mechanism
- SYNOPSIS
- #include <tcl.h>
- const char *
- Tcl_InitStubs(interp, version, exact)
- ARGUMENTS
- INTRODUCTION
- DESCRIPTION
- SEE ALSO
- KEYWORDS
Tcl_InitStubs — initialize the Tcl stubs mechanism
#include <tcl.h>
const char *
Tcl_InitStubs(interp, version, exact)
- Tcl_Interp *interp (in)
-
Tcl interpreter handle.
- const char *version (in)
-
A version string, indicating which minimal version of Tcl is accepted.
Normally just "9.0". Or "8.6-" if both 8.6 and 9.0 are accepted.
- int exact (in)
-
1 means that only the particular version specified by
version is accepted.
0 means that versions newer than version are also
accepted. If theversion ends with -,
higher major versions are accepted as well, otherwise
the major version must be the same as in version.
Other bits have no effect.
The Tcl stubs mechanism defines a way to dynamically bind
extensions to a particular Tcl implementation at run time.
This provides two significant benefits to Tcl users:
-
Extensions that use the stubs mechanism can be loaded into
multiple versions of Tcl without being recompiled or
relinked, as long as the major Tcl version is the same.
-
Extensions that use the stubs mechanism can be dynamically
loaded into statically-linked Tcl applications.
The stubs mechanism accomplishes this by exporting function tables
that define an interface to the Tcl API. The extension then accesses
the Tcl API through offsets into the function table, so there are no
direct references to any of the Tcl library's symbols. This
redirection is transparent to the extension, so an extension writer
can continue to use all public Tcl functions as documented.
The stubs mechanism requires no changes to applications incorporating
Tcl interpreters. Only developers creating C-based Tcl extensions
need to take steps to use the stubs mechanism with their extensions.
Enabling the stubs mechanism for an extension requires the following
steps:
-
Call Tcl_InitStubs in the extension before calling any other
Tcl functions.
-
Define the USE_TCL_STUBS symbol. Typically, you would include the
-DUSE_TCL_STUBS flag when compiling the extension.
-
Link the extension with the Tcl stubs library instead of the standard
Tcl library. For example, to use the Tcl 9.0 ABI on Unix platforms,
the library name is libtclstub.a; on Windows platforms, the
library name is tclstub.lib.
If the extension also requires the Tk API, it must also call
Tk_InitStubs to initialize the Tk stubs interface and link
with the Tk stubs libraries. See the Tk_InitStubs page for
more information.
Tcl_InitStubs attempts to initialize the stub table pointers
and ensure that the correct version of Tcl is loaded. In addition
to an interpreter handle, it accepts as arguments a version number
and a Boolean flag indicating whether the extension requires
an exact version match or not. If exact is 0, then versions
newer than version are also accepted. If theversion
ends with -, higher major versions are accepted as well,
otherwise the major version must be the same as in version.
1 means that only the specified version is accepted.
version can be any construct as described for package require
(PACKAGE manual page in the section REQUIREMENT).
Multiple requirement strings like with package require are not supported.
Tcl_InitStubs returns a string containing the actual version
of Tcl satisfying the request, or NULL if the Tcl version is not
accepted, does not support stubs, or any other error condition occurred.
Tk_InitStubs
package
stubs
Copyright © 1998-1999 Scriptics Corporation