Provided by: critcl_3.1.9-1build1_all bug

NAME

       critcl_introduction - Introduction To CriTcl

DESCRIPTION

       Welcome  to the C Runtime In Tcl, CriTcl for short, a system to build C extension packages for Tcl on the
       fly, from C code embedded within Tcl scripts, for all who wish to make their code go faster.

       CriTcl started life as an experiment by Jean-Claude Wippler and was a self-contained Tcl package to build
       C  code into a Tcl/Tk extension on the fly. It was somewhat inspired by Brian Ingerson's Inline for Perl,
       but is considerably more lightweight.

       It is for the last 5% to 10% when pure Tcl, which does go a long way, is not sufficient anymore. I.e. for

       [1]    when the last bits of performance are needed,

       [2]    access to 3rd party libraries,

       [3]    hiding critical pieces of your library or application, and

       [4]    simply needing features provided only by C.

       The following sections first reference a few related documents which may or may not  be  of  interest  to
       you,  depending on if you are just a plain user of the system, trying to get and build/install it, or are
       going deep into the internals for either edification or modification.

       This is followed by an introduction to the modes of operation supported by the system,  and  its  general
       architecture as seen by a user.

RELATED DOCUMENTS

       [1]    Critcl - License.

       [2]    Using Critcl

       [3]    Critcl - How To Get The Sources.

       [4]    Critcl - The Installer's Guide.

       [5]    Critcl - Application Package Reference

       [6]    Critcl - Package Reference

       [7]    Critcl - The Developer's Guide.

MODES OF OPERATION/USE

       CriTcl can be used in three different modes of operation, called

       [1]    Compile & Run, and

       [2]    Generate Package

       [3]    Generate TEA Package

       Of  these three Compile & Run came first and is the default when using the package directly. In that case
       the package collects the C fragments, builds them as needed, and caches the results for quick reuse  when
       the same code is used in the future again.

       The  second  mode,  Generate  Package,  was  introduced  to enable the creation of (prebuilt) deliverable
       packages which do not depend on the existence of a build system, i.e. C compiler, on the target  machine.
       This  was  originally  done  through  the  experimental  Critbind  tool, and is now handled by the CriTcl
       Application, also named critcl.

       Newly introduced with Critcl version 3  is  Generate  TEA  Package.  This  mode  constructs  a  directory
       hierarchy from the package which can later be built like a regular TEA package, i.e. using

                .../configure --prefix ...
                make all isntall

SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE

       The  system  consists  of  two  main layers, as seen in the figure below, plus a support layer containing
       general packages the system uses during operation.

       +----------------+
       |Applications    |
       | critcl         |
       | critcl::app    |
       +----------------+

       +----------------+
       |Core Packages   |
       | critcl         |
       | critcl::util   |
       +----------------+

       +----------------+
       |Support Packages|
       | stubs::*       |
       | md5, platform  |
       |  ...           |
       +----------------+

       [1]    At the top we have an application built on top of the core packages, providing command line access
              to the second and third usage modes, i.e. Generate Package and Generate TEA Package.

              critcl

              critcl::app

       [2]    Below  that  is the core package providing the essential functionality of the system, plus various
              utility packages which make common tasks more convenient.

              critcl

              critcl::util

       [3]    Lastly a layer of supporting packages, mostly external to critcl.

              md5    For this pure-Tcl package to be fast users should get one of several  possible  accelerator
                     packages:

                     [1]    tcllibc

                     [2]    Trf

                     [3]    md5c

              cmdline

              platform

              stubs::container

              stubs::reader

              stubs::writer

              stubs::gen

              stubs::gen::init

              stubs::gen::header

              stubs::gen::decl

              stubs::gen::macro

              stubs::gen::slot

              stubs::gen::lib

EXAMPLES

       The  sources  of Critcl, should you have gotten them, contain several larger examples show-casing various
       aspects of the system. These demonstration packages can all be found in the sub-directory "examples/"  of
       the sources.

       Lots of smaller examples can be found in the document Using CriTcl, an introduction to Critcl by way of a
       of examples. These focus more on specific critcl commands than the overall picture  shown  by  the  large
       examples mentioned in the previous paragraph.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 2.1

       [1]    Fixed  bug  where  critcl::tsources  interpreted relative paths as relative to the current working
              directory instead of relative to the ".critcl" file using the command, as all  other  commands  of
              this type do.

       [2]    Fixed  internals,  preventing  information  collected for multiple ".critcl" files to leak between
              them. Notably, critcl::tk is not a global configuration option anymore.

       [3]    Fixed the command critcl::license to be a null-operation in  mode  "compile  &  run",  instead  of
              throwing an error.

       [4]    Fixed  the critcl application's interference with the "compile & run" result cache in -pkg mode by
              having it use a wholly separate (and by default transient) directory for that mode.

       [5]    Fixed bug where changes to a ".critcl" file did not result in a rebuild for mode "compile &  run".
              All relevant API commands now ensure UUID changes.

       [6]    Fixed  bug  in  the backend handling of critcl::debug where the companion c-sources of a ".critcl"
              file were not compiled with debug options, although the ".critcl" file was.

       [7]    Fixed bug in critcl::debug which prevented recognition of mode "all" when it  was  not  the  first
              argument to the command.

       [8]    Fixed bug in "preload.c" preventing its compilation on non-windows platforms.

       [9]    Fixed  long-standing  bug  in the handling of namespace qualifiers in the command name argument of
              critcl::cproc and critcl::ccommand. It is now possible to specify a fully qualified  command  name
              without issues.

       [10]   Extended/reworked  critcl::tsources  to  be  the canonical way of declaring ".tcl" companion files
              even for mode "compile & run".

       [11]   Extended/reworked critcl::tsources to allow the use of a ".critcl" file as its own  Tcl  companion
              file.

       [12]   Extended  critcl::framework  to  internally  check  for  OS  X  build  target,  and  to ignore the
              declaration if its not.

       [13]   Extended critcl::failed to be callable more than once in a ".critcl" file. The first  call  forces
              the  build,  if it was not done already, to get the result. Further calls return the cached result
              of the first call.

       [14]   Extended the handling of environment variable CC in the code determining the compiler  to  use  to
              deal  with  (i.e.  remove)  paths  to the compiler, compiler file extensions, and compiler options
              specified after the compiler itself, leaving only the bare name of the compiler.

       [15]   Extended the code handling the search for preloaded libraries to  print  the  paths  it  searched,
              making debugging of a search failure easier.

       [16]   A  new command critcl::tcl can be used to declare the version of Tcl minimally needed to build and
              run the ".critcl" file and package. Defaults to 8.4 if not declared. Extended critcl to  have  the
              stubs and headers for all of Tcl 8.4, 8.5, and 8.6.

       [17]   A new command critcl::load forces the build and load of a ".critcl" file. This is the official way
              for overriding critcl's default lazy-build-&-load-on-demand scheme for mode "compile & run".

              Note that after using critcl::load / critcl::failed in a ".critcl" file it is not possible to  use
              critcl commands in that file anymore. Doing so will throw an error.

       [18]   Extended  the  generation  of  '#line'  pragmas  to use info frame (if available) to provide the C
              compiler with exact line numbers into the ".critcl" file for the reporting of warnings and errors.

       [19]   Extended critcl::check with logging to help with debugging build-time checks of  the  environment,
              plus an additional optional argument to provide labeling.

       [20]   Added  a new command critcl::checklink which not only tries to check the environment via compiling
              the code, but also its linkability.

       [21]   Added a new command critcl::msg for messaging, like command critcl::error is for error  reporting.
              Likewise  this is a hook a user of the package is allowed to override. The default implementation,
              used by mode compile & run does nothing. The implementation for mode generate package  prints  the
              message to stdout.

              Envisioned  use  is for the reporting of results determined by critcl::check and critcl::checklink
              during building, to help with debugging when something goes wrong with a check.

       [22]   Exposed the argument processing internals of critcl::proc for  use  by  advanced  users.  The  new
              commands are

              [1]    critcl::argnames

              [2]    critcl::argcnames

              [3]    critcl::argcsignature

              [4]    critcl::argvardecls

              [5]    critcl::argconversion

              Please see section Advanced Embedded C Code of the critcl package documentation for details.

       [23]   Extended  the  critcl  package  to  intercept  package provide and record the file -> package name
              mapping. Plus other internal changes now allow the use of namespaced  package  names  while  still
              using proper path names and init function.

       [24]   Dropped the unused commands critcl::optimize and critcl::include.

       [25]   Dropped -lib mode from the critcl application.

       [26]   Dropped remnants of support for Tcl 8.3 and before.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3

       [1]    The  command critcl::platform was deprecated in version 2.1, superceded by critcl::targetplatform,
              yet kept for compatibility. Now it has been removed.

       [2]    The command critcl::compiled was kept with in version 2.1 with semantics in contradiction to  its,
              for  compatibility.  This  contradiction  has  been removed, changing the visible semantics of the
              command to be in line with its name.

       [3]    The change to version 3 became necessary because of the two incompatible visible changes above.

       [4]    Extended the application package with code handling a new  option  -tea.  Specifying  this  option
              invokes a special mode where critcl generates a TEA package, i.e. wraps the input into a directory
              hierarchy and support files which provide it TEA-lookalike buildsystem.

              This new option, and -pkg, exclude each other. If both are specified the last  used  option  takes
              precedence.

              The generated package directory hierarchy is mostly self-contained, but not fully. It requires not
              only a working installation of Tcl, but  also  working  installations  of  the  packages  md5  and
              cmdline.  Both  of  these are provided by the Tcllib bundle. Not required, but recommended to have
              installed are any of the packages which can accelerate md5's operation, i.e. cryptkit, tcllibc, or
              Trf.

       [5]    Extended  the  critcl package with a new command critcl::scan taking the path to a ".critcl" file,
              statically scanning it, and returning license, version, a list of its  companion  files,  list  of
              imported  APIs,  and  list  of  developer-specified custom configuration options. This data is the
              foundation for the TEA wrapping described above.

              Note that this is a static scan. While the other build modes can (must) execute the ".critcl" file
              and make platform-specific decisions regarding the assembled C code, companion files, etc. the TEA
              wrap mode is not in a position to make platform-specific decisions.  It  has  to  wrap  everything
              which might conceivably be needed when actually building. Hence the static scan.  This has however
              its own set of problems, namely the inability to figure out any dynamic construction of  companion
              file paths, at least on its own. Thus:

       [6]    Extended  the  API used by critcl-based packages with the command critcl::owns. While this command
              is ignored by the regular build modes the static scanner described above takes  its  arguments  as
              the  names  of  companion  files  which  have  to be wrapped into the TEA package and could not be
              figured  by  the  scanner  otherwise,  like  because  of  dynamic   paths   to   critcl::tsources,
              critcl::csources, getting sourced directly, or simply being adjunct datafiles.

       [7]    Extended  the API used by critcl-based packages with the command critcl::api for the management of
              stubs tables, be it their use, and/or declaration and export.

              Please see section Stubs Table Management of the critcl package documentation for details.

       [8]    Extended the API used by  critcl-based  packages  with  the  command  critcl::userconfig  for  the
              management   of   developer-specified  custom  configuration  options,  be  it  their  use  and/or
              declaration.

              Please see section Custom Build Configuration of the critcl package documentation for details.

       [9]    Extended  the  API  used  by  critcl-based  packages  with   the   commands   critcl::description,
              critcl::summary,  critcl::subject,  critcl::meta, and critcl::buildrequirement for the declaration
              of TEApot meta data for/about the package.

              Please see section Package Meta Data of the critcl package documentation for details.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.0.1

       [1]    Bugfixes all around. In detail:

       [2]    Fixed recording of Tcl version requirements. Keep package name and  version  together,  unbreaking
              generated meta data and generated package load command.

       [3]    Fixed the build scripts: When installing, or wrapping for TEA, generate any missing directories

       [4]    Modified the build scripts to properly exit the application when the window of their GUI is closed
              through the (X) button.

       [5]    Removed an 8.5-ism (open wb) which had slipped into the main build script.

       [6]    Modified the example build scripts  to  separate  the  output  for  the  different  examples  (and
              packages) by adding empty lines.

       [7]    stack::c example bugfix: Include API declarations for use in the companion files.

       [8]    Extended the documentation: Noted the need for a working installation of a C compiler.

       [9]    Extended  the  Windows  target definitions and code to handle the manifest files used by modern MS
              development environments. Note that  this  code  handles  both  possibilities,  environment  using
              manifests, and (old(er)) environments without.

       [10]   Extended  the  Windows  64bit  target  definitions and code to auto-detect the need for the helper
              library "bufferoverflowU.lib" and reconfigure the compile  and  link  commands  appropriately.  We
              assume  that  the  library  must  be linked when present. This should be no harm if the library is
              present, yet not needed. Just superfluous. We search for the library in the paths specified by the
              environment variable LIB.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.0.2

       [1]    Fixed  issue in compile-and-run mode where commands put into the auto_index are not found by Tcl's
              [unknown] command.

       [2]    Fixed an array key mismatch breaking usage of client  data  and  delete  function  for  procedure.
              Reported by Jos DeCoster, with patch.

       [3]    Implemented a command line option -L, an equivalent of option -I, just for library search paths.

       [4]    Fixed  github  issues  5 and 8. Working around a missing variable ::errorInfo. It should always be
              present, however there seem to be revisions of Tcl around which violate this assumption.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.0.3

       [1]    Fixed github issues 5 and 8, for the example build.tcl scripts. Working around a missing  variable
              ::errorInfo.  It  should always be present, however there seem to be revisions of Tcl around which
              violate this assumption.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.0.4

       [1]    Fixed generation of the package's initname when the incoming code is read from stdin  and  has  no
              proper path.

       [2]    Fixed  github  issue  11.  Now  using  /LIBPATH instead of -L on Windows (libinclude configuration
              setting).

       [3]    Extended critcl to handle -l:path format of -l options.  GNU ld 2.22+ handles  this  by  searching
              for  the path as is. Good when specifying static libraries, as plain -l looks for shared libraries
              in preference over static. critcl handles it now, as older GNU ld's do not understand it, nor  the
              various vendor-specific linkers.

       [4]    Fixed  github  issue  #12.  Critcl now determines the version of MSVC in use and uses it to switch
              between various link debug options. Simplified the handling of  bufferoverflowU.lib  also,  making
              use of the same mechanism and collapsing the two configurations sections we had back into one.

       [5]    Reworked the insertion of #line pragmas into the generated C code to avoid limitations on the line
              number argument imposed by various compilers, and be more accurate.

       [6]    Modified argument processing. Option -libdir now also implies -L for its argument.

       [7]    Extended handling of option -show (critcl::showconfig) to list the path of the configuration  file
              the data is coming from. Good for debugging configuration processing.

       [8]    Extended the build script with targets to regenerate the embedded documentation, and diagrams, and
              to generate a release.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.0.5

       [1]    Fixed bug in the new code for #line pragmas triggered  when  specifying  C  code  without  leading
              whitespace.

       [2]    Extended  the  documentation  to  have  manpages for the license, source retrieval, installer, and
              developer's guides.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.0.6

       [1]    Fixed github issue 10. The critcl application now  delivers  a  proper  exit  code  (1)  on  build
              failure, instead of always indicating success (status 0).

       [2]    Fixed  github  issue  13. Handling of bufferoverflowU.lib for release builds was inconsistent with
              handling for debug builds. It is now identically handled (conditional) by both cases.

       [3]    Documentation cleanup, mainly in the installation guide, and the README.md shown by github

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.0.7

       [1]    Fixed the code generated by critcl::c++command.  The emitted code handed a non-static string table
              to  Tcl_GetIndexFromObj,  in  violation  of the contract, which requires the table to have a fixed
              address. This was a memory smash waiting to happen. Thanks to Brian Griffin for  alrerting  us  to
              the general problem.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.1

       [1]    Added a new higher-level package critcl::iassoc.

              This  package  simplifies  the  creation  of  code  associating data with an interpreter via Tcl's
              Tcl_(Get|Set)AssocData() APIs. The user can concentrate  on  his  data  while  all  the  necessary
              boilerplate C code to support this is generated by the package.

              This  package  uses  several  of the new features which were added to the core critcl package, see
              below.

       [2]    Added the higher-level package critcl::class.

              This package simplifies the creation of C level objects with class and instance commands. The user
              can  write  a  class definition with class- and instance-variables and -methods similar to a TclOO
              class, with all the necessary boilerplate C code to support this generated by the package.

              This package uses several of the new features which were added to the  core  critcl  package,  see
              below.

       [3]    Extended the API for handling TEApot metadata. Added the command critcl::meta? to query the stored
              information. Main use currently envisioned is retrieval of the current package's name  by  utility
              commands, for use in constructed names. This particular information is always available due to the
              static scan of the package file on execution of the first critcl command.

              The new packages critcl::iassoc and critcl::class (see above) are users of this command.

       [4]    Extended the API with a command, critcl::name2c, exposing the process of  converting  a  Tcl  name
              into  base name, namespace, and C namespace. This enables higher-level code generators to generate
              the same type of C identifiers as critcl itself.

              The new package critcl::class (see above) is a user of this command.

       [5]    Extended the API with a command, critcl::source, executing critcl commands  found  in  a  separate
              file  in  the context of the current file. This enables easier management of larger bodies of code
              as it allows the user to split such up into easier to digest smaller chunks  without  causing  the
              generation of multiple packages.

       [6]    Related  to  the previous item, extended the API with commands to divert collection of generated C
              code into memory. This makes it easier to use the commands for embedded  C  code  in  higher-level
              code generators.

              See the section Advanced: Diversions for details of the provided commands.

              The new package critcl::class (see above) is a user of these facilities.

       [7]    Extended  the  API  with  commands  helping  developers  with  the  generation  of  proper C #line
              directives. This allows higher-level code generators to generate and insert their own  directives,
              ensuring that compile errors in their code are properly attributed.

              See the section Advanced: Location management for details of the provided commands.

              The new packages critcl::iassoc and critcl::class (see above) are users of these facilities.

       [8]    Extended the API with commands giving users the ability to define custom argument and result types
              for ::critcl::cproc.

              See the section Advanced: Extending cproc for details of the provided commands.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.1.1

       [1]    Bugfixes all around. In detail:

       [2]    Fixed the generation of wrong#args errors for critcl::cproc and derived code (critcl::class cproc-
              based methods). Use NULL if there are no arguments, and take the offset into account.

       [3]    Fixed  the  handling  of  package  names  by critcl::class. Forgot that they may contain namespace
              separators. Bumped to version 1.0.1.

       [4]    Extended a critcl::class generated error message in  instance  creation  for  clarity.  Bumped  to
              version 1.0.2.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.1.2

       [1]    Enhancement. In detail:

       [2]    Extended  critcl::cproc  to  be  able  to  handle  optional  arguments,  in a limited way. This is
              automatically available to critcl::class cproc-based methods as well.

       [3]    Bugfix in lassign emulation for Tcl 8.4.  Properly set  unused  variables  to  the  empty  string.
              Bumped version of emulation package lassign84 to 1.0.1.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.1.3

       [1]    Enhancement. In detail:

       [2]    Added  new  argument  type "pstring", for "Pascal String", a counted string, i.e. a combination of
              string pointer and string length.

       [3]    Added new methods critcl::argtypesupport and ::critcl::argsupport to  define  and  use  additional
              supporting  code  for  an  argument  type,  here  used  by "pstring" above to define the necessary
              structure.

       [4]    Semi-bugfixes in the packages critcl::class and critcl::iassoc.  Pragmas  for  the  AS  meta  data
              scanner  to ensure that the template files are made part of the package.  Versions bumped to 1.0.4
              and 1.0.1 respectively.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.1.4

       [1]    Bugfix in package critcl::class. Generate a dummy field in the class structure if the class has no
              class  variables.  Without this change the structure would be empty, and a number of compilers are
              not able to handle such a type.

       [2]    Fixed a typo which broke the win64 configuration.

       [3]    Fixed issue #16, a typo in the documentation of command critcl::class.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.1.5

       [1]    Fixed issue #19. Made the regular expression extracting the MSVC version number  more  general  to
              make  it  work  on german language systems. This may have to be revisited in the future, for other
              Windows locales.

       [2]    Fixed issue #20. Made option -tea work on windows, at least in a unix emulation  environment  like
              msys/mingw.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.1.6

       [1]    Fixed  issue  #21.  While the multi-definition of the stub-table pointer variables was ok with for
              all the C linkers seen so far C++ linkers did not like this at all. Reworked the  code  to  ensure
              that  this  set  of  variables  is  generated  only  once, in the wrapper around all the pieces to
              assemble.

       [2]    Fixed  issue  #22,  the  handling  of  the  command  identifier  arguments  of   critcl::ccommand,
              critcl::cproc,  and  critcl::cdata.  We  now properly allow any Tcl identifier and generate proper
              internal C identifiers from them.

              As part of this the signature of command critcl::name2c changed. The command now delivers  a  list
              of four values instead of three. The new value was added at the end.

              Further  adapted  the  implementation  of  package  critcl::class, a user of critcl::name2c.  This
              package is now at version 1.0.6 and requires critcl 3.1.6

              Lastly fixed the mis-handling of option -cname in critcl::ccommand, and critcl::cproc.

       [3]    Fixed issue #23.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.1.7

       [1]    Fixed issue #24. Extract and unconditionally display compiler warnings found  in  the  build  log.
              Prevents  users  from  missing  warnings  which,  while  not  causing the build to fail, may still
              indicate problems.

       [2]    New feature. Output hook. All  non-messaging  user  output  is  now  routed  through  the  command
              critcl::print, and users are allowed to override it when using the critcl application-as-package.

       [3]    New  feature, by Ashok P. Nadkarni. Platform configurations can inherit values from configurations
              defined before them.

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.1.8

       [1]    Fixed issue with package indices generated for Tcl 8.4.  Join the  list  of  commands  with  semi-
              colon, not newline.

       [2]    Fixed  issue  #26 which brought up use-cases I had forgotten to consider while fixing bug #21 (see
              critcl 3.1.6).

CHANGES FOR VERSION 3.1.9

       [1]    Fixed issue #27. Added missing platform definitions for various alternate linux and OS X targets.

       [2]    Fixed issue #28. Added missing -mXX flags for linking at the linux-{32,64}-* targets.

       [3]    Fixed issue #29. Replaced the use of raw "cheaders" information in the  processing  of  "cdefines"
              with the proper include directives derived from it.

       [4]    Fixed  the issue behind rejected pull request #30 by Andrew Shadura. Dynamically extract the stubs
              variable declarations from the Tcl header files and generate matching variable definitions for use
              in  the package code. The generated code will now be always consistent with the headers, even when
              critcl's own copy of them is replaced by system headers.

       [5]    Fixed issue #31. Accepted patch by Andrew Shadura, with changes (comments), for easier integration
              of critcl with OS package systems, replacing critcl's copies of Tcl headers with their own.

       [6]    Fixed  issue  #32.  Merged  pull  request  by  Andrew Shadura.  Various typos in documentation and
              comments.

       [7]    Fixed issue #33. Handle files starting with a dot better.

AUTHORS

       Jean Claude Wippler, Steve Landers, Andreas Kupries

BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

       This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and  other  problems.   Please
       report them at https://github.com/andreas-kupries/critcl/issues.  Ideas for enhancements you may have for
       either package, application, and/or the documentation are also very welcome and  should  be  reported  at
       https://github.com/andreas-kupries/critcl/issues as well.

KEYWORDS

       C  code,  Embedded  C  Code,  code  generator,  compile & run, compiler, dynamic code generation, dynamic
       compilation, generate package, linker, on demand compilation, on-the-fly compilation

CATEGORY

       Glueing/Embedded C code

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) Jean-Claude Wippler
       Copyright (c) Steve Landers
       Copyright (c) 2011-2013 Andreas Kupries