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NAME

       transform - Tcl level transformations

SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  ?8.2?

       package require Trf  ?2.1.3?

       transform ?options...? ?data?

       callback operation data

DESCRIPTION

       The  command  transform  reflects  the  API  for  a stack channel transformation into the tcl level, thus
       enabling the writing of transformations in tcl.

       transform ?options...? ?data?

              -mode read|write
                     This option is accepted by the command if and only if it is used in  immediate  mode.   See
                     section IMMEDIATE versus ATTACHED for an explanation of the term.

                     The  argument  value  specifies  whether  to  run  the  read  or  the  write  part  of  the
                     transformation specified via option -command on the immediate data.

                     Beyond the argument values listed above all unique abbreviations are recognized too.

              -command cmd
                     This option has to be present and is always understood. Its argument is a  command  prefix.
                     This  command  prefix  will  be  called  by  internally  whenever  some  operation  of  the
                     transformation has to be executed. An empty cmd is not allowed.

                     The exact nature of the various possible calls and  their  expected  results  is  described
                     later, in section CALLBACK API.

              -attach channel
                     The   presence/absence   of   this  option  determines  the  main  operation  mode  of  the
                     transformation.

                     If present the transformation will be stacked onto the channel whose handle  was  given  to
                     the option and run in attached mode. More about this in section IMMEDIATE versus ATTACHED.

                     If the option is absent the transformation is used in immediate mode and the options listed
                     below are recognized. More about this in section IMMEDIATE versus ATTACHED.

              -in channel
                     This options is legal if and only if the transformation  is  used  in  immediate  mode.  It
                     provides the handle of the channel the data to transform has to be read from.

                     If  the transformation is in immediate mode and this option is absent the data to transform
                     is expected as the last argument to the transformation.

              -out channel
                     This options is legal if and only if the transformation  is  used  in  immediate  mode.  It
                     provides the handle of the channel the generated transformation result is written to.

                     If  the transformation is in immediate mode and this option is absent the generated data is
                     returned as the result of the command itself.

IMMEDIATE VERSUS ATTACHED

       The transformation distinguishes between two main ways of using it. These are the immediate and  attached
       operation modes.

       For  the  attached  mode  the  option  -attach  is  used to associate the transformation with an existing
       channel. During the execution of the command no transformation  is  performed,  instead  the  channel  is
       changed  in  such  a  way,  that  from  then  on  all  data written to or read from it passes through the
       transformation and is modified by it according to the definition above.  This attachment can  be  revoked
       by  executing  the  command  unstack  for  the chosen channel. This is the only way to do this at the Tcl
       level.

       In the second mode, which  can  be  detected  by  the  absence  of  option  -attach,  the  transformation
       immediately  takes  data  from either its commandline or a channel, transforms it, and returns the result
       either as result of the command, or writes it into a channel.  The mode  is  named  after  the  immediate
       nature of its execution.

       Where  the  data  is taken from, and delivered to, is governed by the presence and absence of the options
       -in and -out.  It should be noted that this ability to immediately read from and/or write to a channel is
       an historic artifact which was introduced at the beginning of Trf's life when Tcl version 7.6 was current
       as this and earlier versions have trouble to deal with  \0  characters  embedded  into  either  input  or
       output.

CALLBACK API

       Here we describe the API of the callback command implementing the actual transformation.

       callback operation data
              The  callback  is  always called with two arguments, first an operation code followed by data. The
              latter will be empty for some operations.

              The known operations are listed below, together with an explanation  of  the  arguments,  what  is
              expected of them, and how their results are handled.

              create/write
                     When called data is empty. The result of the call is ignored.

                     This  is  the  first operation executed for the write side of the transformation. It has to
                     initialize the internals of this part of the transformation and ready it for future calls.

              delete/write
                     When called data is empty. The result of the call is ignored.

                     This is the last operation executed for the write side of the  transformation.  It  has  to
                     shutdown  the  internals of this part of the transformation and release any resources which
                     were acquired over the lifetime of the transformation.

              write  The operation is called whenever data is written to the channel.

                     At the time of the call the argument data will contain the bytes to transform.  The  result
                     of  the call is taken as the result of the transformation and handed to the next stage down
                     in the stack of transformation associated with the channel.

                     This operation has to transform the contents of data, using whatever  data  was  left  over
                     from  the  last  call  of the operation. The transformation is allowed to buffer incomplete
                     data.

              flush/write
                     When called data is empty. The operation has  to  transform  any  incomplete  data  it  has
                     buffered internally on the write side. The result of the call is taken as the result of the
                     transformation and handed to the next stage down in the stack of transformation  associated
                     with the channel.

              clear/write
                     When called data is empty. The result of the call is ignored.

                     The  write  side of the transformation has to clear its internal buffers. This operation is
                     called when the user seeks on the channel, thus invalidating any incomplete transformation.

              create/read
                     When called data is empty. The result of the call is ignored.

                     This is the first operation executed for the read side of the  transformation.  It  has  to
                     initialize the internals of this part of the transformation and ready it for future calls.

              delete/read
                     When called data is empty. The result of the call is ignored.

                     This  is  the  last  operation executed for the write side of the transformation. It has to
                     shutdown the internals of this part of the transformation and release any  resources  which
                     were acquired over the lifetime of the transformation.

              read   The operation is called whenever data is read from the channel.

                     At  the  time of the call the argument data will contain the bytes to transform. The result
                     of the call is taken as the result of the transformation and posted to the next stage up in
                     the stack of transformation associated with the channel.

                     This  operation  has  to  transform the contents of data, using whatever data was left over
                     from the last call of the operation. The transformation is  allowed  to  buffer  incomplete
                     data.

              flush/read
                     When  called  data  is  empty.  The  operation  has to transform any incomplete data it has
                     buffered internally on the read side. The result of the call is taken as the result of  the
                     transformation  and  posted  to the next stage up in the stack of transformation associated
                     with the channel.

              clear/read
                     When called data is empty. The result of the call is ignored.

                     The read side of the transformation has to clear its internal buffers.  This  operation  is
                     called when the user seeks on the channel, thus invalidating any incomplete transformation.

              query/maxRead
                     When  called  data  is empty. The result of the call is interpreted as integer number. This
                     operation is used by the generic layer to determine if  the  transformation  establishes  a
                     limit   on  the  number  of  bytes  it  (the  generic  layer)  is  allowed  read  from  the
                     transformations lower in the stack. A negative result unsets any limit.

                     This has to be used if a transformation employs some kind of end-of-data marker. We  cannot
                     allow  the  generic layer to overshoot this marker because any data read after it cannot be
                     stuffed back into  the  core  buffers,  causing  the  I/O  system  to  loose  data  if  the
                     transformation  is  unstacked after it recognized the end of its data. This is a limitation
                     of the I/O system in the tcl core.

                     Returning a positive value will cause the I/O system to slow down, but also ensures that no
                     data is lost.

                     Two  examples for such transformations are the data decompressors for zip and bz2. They use
                     the C-level equivalent of this operation to prevent the overshooting.

SEE ALSO

       trf-intro

KEYWORDS

       general transform

       Copyright (c) 1996-2003, Andreas Kupries <andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net>