Provided by: libffcall-dev_2.4-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       callback - closures with variable arguments as first-class C functions

SYNOPSIS

       #include <callback.h>

       void function (void* data, va_alist alist)
       {
         va_start_type(alist[, return_type]);
         arg = va_arg_type(alist[, arg_type]);
         va_return_type(alist[[, return_type], return_value]);
       }

       callback = alloc_callback(&function, data);

       free_callback(callback);

       is_callback(callback)
       callback_address(callback)
       callback_data(callback)

DESCRIPTION

       These functions implement closures with variable arguments as first-class C functions.

       Closures as first-class C functions means that they fit into a function pointer and can be
       called exactly like any other C function. Moreover,  they  can  be  called  with  variable
       arguments and can return variable return values.

       callback  =  alloc_callback(&function,  data)  allocates  a  callback.  When callback gets
       called, it arranges to call function, passing  data  as  first  argument  and,  as  second
       argument, the entire sequence of arguments passed to callback.

       Function  calling  conventions  differ  considerably  on different machines, therefore the
       arguments are accessed and the result value is stored through the same macros as  used  by
       the vacall package, see below.

       The  callbacks  are  functions  with  indefinite extent: callback is only deallocated when
       free_callback(callback) is called.

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

           callback_address(callback) returns &function,

           callback_data(callback) returns data.

VACALL MACROS

       Within function, the following macros can be used to walk through the  argument  list  and
       specify a return value:

       va_start_type(alist[, return_type]);
              starts the walk through the argument list and specifies the return type.

       arg = va_arg_type(alist[, arg_type]);
              fetches the next argument from the argument list.

       va_return_type(alist[[, return_type], return_value]);
              ends the walk through the argument list and specifies the return value.

       The type in va_start_type and va_return_type shall be one of void, int, uint, long, ulong,
       longlong, ulonglong, double, struct, ptr or (for ANSI C calling  conventions  only)  char,
       schar, uchar, short, ushort, float, depending on the class of return_type.

       The type specifiers in va_start_type and va_return_type must be the same.  The return_type
       specifiers passed to va_start_type and va_return_type must be the same.

       The type in va_arg_type shall be one of  int,  uint,  long,  ulong,  longlong,  ulonglong,
       double,  struct,  ptr  or (for ANSI C calling conventions only) char, schar, uchar, short,
       ushort, float, depending on the class of arg_type.

       In va_start_struct(alist, return_type, splittable); the splittable flag specifies  whether
       the  struct  return_type  can  be  returned in registers such that every struct field fits
       entirely  in  a  single  register.  This  needs  to  be  specified  for  structs  of  size
       2*sizeof(long).  For structs of size <= sizeof(long), splittable is ignored and assumed to
       be 1. For structs of size > 2*sizeof(long), splittable is ignored and  assumed  to  be  0.
       There are some handy macros for this:
       va_word_splittable_1 (type1)
       va_word_splittable_2 (type1, type2)
       va_word_splittable_3 (type1, type2, type3)
       va_word_splittable_4 (type1, type2, type3, type4)
       For a struct with three slots
       struct { type1 id1; type2 id2; type3 id3; }
       you can specify splittable as va_word_splittable_3 (type1, type2, type3) .

NOTES

       Functions  which  want  to  emulate  Kernighan & Ritchie style functions (i.e., in ANSI C,
       functions without a typed argument list) cannot use the type values  char,  schar,  uchar,
       short, ushort, float.  As prescribed by the default K&R C expression promotions, they have
       to use int instead of char, schar, uchar, short, ushort and double instead of float.

       The    macros     va_start_longlong(),     va_start_ulonglong(),     va_return_longlong(),
       va_return_ulonglong(),  va_arg_longlong()  and  va_arg_ulonglong()  work  only  if  the  C
       compiler has a working long long 64-bit integer type.

       The struct types used in va_start_struct() and va_struct() must only  contain  (signed  or
       unsigned)  int,  long,  long  long  or pointer fields.  Struct types containing (signed or
       unsigned) char, short, float, double or other structs are not supported.

SEE ALSO

       vacall(3), trampoline(3).

BUGS

       The current implementations have been tested on a selection of common cases but there  are
       probably still many bugs.

       There  are  typically  built-in  limits  on  the size of the argument-list, which may also
       include the size of any structure arguments.

       The decision whether a struct is to be returned in registers or in memory  considers  only
       the struct's size and alignment. This is inaccurate: for example, gcc on m68k-next returns
       struct { char a,b,c; } in registers and struct { char a[3]; }  in  memory,  although  both
       types have the same size and the same alignment.

       The argument list can only be walked once.

NON-BUGS

       All  information  is  passed  in  CPU  registers  and  the  stack. The callback package is
       therefore multithread-safe.

PORTING

       Porting callback consists in first  porting  the  vacall  and  trampoline  packages,  then
       choosing  a CPU register for passing the closure from trampoline to vacall.  This register
       is normally the register  designated  by  STATIC_CHAIN_REGNUM  in  the  gcc  source,  file
       gcc-2.7.2/config/cpu/cpu.h.

AUTHOR

       Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       Many ideas were cribbed from the gcc source.

                                          1 January 2017                              CALLBACK(3)