TRAMPOLINE_R manual page


Name

trampoline_r - closures as first-class C functions

Synopsis

#include <trampoline_r.h>
function = alloc_trampoline_r(address, data0, data1);
free_trampoline_r(function);
is_trampoline_r(function)
trampoline_r_address(function)
trampoline_r_data0(function)
trampoline_r_data1(function)

Description

These functions implement closures as first-class C functions. A closure consists of a regular C function and a piece of data which gets passed to the C function when the closure is called.

Closures as first-class C functions means that they fit into a function pointer and can be called exactly like any other C function. function = alloc_trampoline_r(address, data0, data1) allocates a closure. When function gets called, it stores in a special "lexical chain register" a pointer to a storage area containing data0 in its first word and data1 in its second word and calls the C function at address. The function at address is responsible for fetching data0 and data1 off the pointer. Note that the "lexical chain register" is a call-used register, i.e. is clobbered by function calls.

This is much like gcc's local functions, except that the GNU C local functions have dynamic extent (i.e. are deallocated when the creating function returns), while trampoline provides functions with indefinite extent: function is only deallocated when free_trampoline_r(function) is called.

is_trampoline_r(function) checks whether the C function function was produced by a call to alloc_trampoline_r. If this returns true, the arguments given to alloc_trampoline_r can be retrieved:

See also

trampoline(3), gcc(1), varargs(3)

Porting

The way gcc builds local functions is described in the gcc source, file gcc-2.6.3/config/cpu/cpu.h.

Author

Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>

Acknowledgements

Many ideas were cribbed from the gcc source.


TRAMPOLINE_R manual page
Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>

Last modified: 22 October 1997.