| '\" |
| '\" Copyright (c) 1989-1993 The Regents of the University of California. |
| '\" Copyright (c) 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc. |
| '\" |
| '\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution |
| '\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. |
| '\" |
| '\" RCS: @(#) $Id: TraceVar.3,v 1.8 2002/08/05 03:24:39 dgp Exp $ |
| '\" |
| '\" The definitions below are for supplemental macros used in Tcl/Tk |
| '\" manual entries. |
| '\" |
| '\" .AP type name in/out ?indent? |
| '\" Start paragraph describing an argument to a library procedure. |
| '\" type is type of argument (int, etc.), in/out is either "in", "out", |
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| '\" needed; use .AS below instead) |
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| '\" .AS ?type? ?name? |
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| '\" name are examples of largest possible arguments that will be passed |
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| '\" .VS ?version? ?br? |
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| '\" of man pages. The first argument is ignored and used for recording |
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| '\" |
| '\" .OP cmdName dbName dbClass |
| '\" Start of description of a specific option. cmdName gives the |
| '\" option's name as specified in the class command, dbName gives |
| '\" the option's name in the option database, and dbClass gives |
| '\" the option's class in the option database. |
| '\" |
| '\" .UL arg1 arg2 |
| '\" Print arg1 underlined, then print arg2 normally. |
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| '\" RCS: @(#) $Id: man.macros,v 1.4 2000/08/25 06:18:32 ericm Exp $ |
| '\" |
| '\" # Set up traps and other miscellaneous stuff for Tcl/Tk man pages. |
| .if t .wh -1.3i ^B |
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| .ie !"\\$4"" .TP \\$4 |
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| .el \h'-1.5n'\L'|\\n(^yu-1v'\h'\\n(^lu+3n'\L'\\n(^tu+1v-\\n(^yu'\h'|0u'\c |
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| \kx\h'-\\nxu'\h'|\\n(^lu+3n'\ky\L'-\\n(^xu'\v'\\n(^xu'\h'|0u'\c |
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| .SH "STANDARD OPTIONS" |
| .LP |
| .nf |
| .ta 5.5c 11c |
| .ft B |
| .. |
| '\" # SE - end of list of standard options |
| .de SE |
| .fi |
| .ft R |
| .LP |
| See the \\fBoptions\\fR manual entry for details on the standard options. |
| .. |
| '\" # OP - start of full description for a single option |
| .de OP |
| .LP |
| .nf |
| .ta 4c |
| Command-Line Name: \\fB\\$1\\fR |
| Database Name: \\fB\\$2\\fR |
| Database Class: \\fB\\$3\\fR |
| .fi |
| .IP |
| .. |
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| .. |
| .de UL |
| \\$1\l'|0\(ul'\\$2 |
| .. |
| .TH Tcl_TraceVar 3 7.4 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures" |
| .BS |
| .SH NAME |
| Tcl_TraceVar, Tcl_TraceVar2, Tcl_UntraceVar, Tcl_UntraceVar2, Tcl_VarTraceInfo, Tcl_VarTraceInfo2 \- monitor accesses to a variable |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .nf |
| \fB#include <tcl.h>\fR |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_TraceVar(\fIinterp, varName, flags, proc, clientData\fB)\fR |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_TraceVar2(\fIinterp, name1, name2, flags, proc, clientData\fB)\fR |
| .sp |
| \fBTcl_UntraceVar(\fIinterp, varName, flags, proc, clientData\fB)\fR |
| .sp |
| \fBTcl_UntraceVar2(\fIinterp, name1, name2, flags, proc, clientData\fB)\fR |
| .sp |
| ClientData |
| \fBTcl_VarTraceInfo(\fIinterp, varName, flags, proc, prevClientData\fB)\fR |
| .sp |
| ClientData |
| \fBTcl_VarTraceInfo2(\fIinterp, name1, name2, flags, proc, prevClientData\fB)\fR |
| .SH ARGUMENTS |
| .AS Tcl_VarTraceProc prevClientData |
| .AP Tcl_Interp *interp in |
| Interpreter containing variable. |
| .AP "CONST char" *varName in |
| Name of variable. May refer to a scalar variable, to |
| an array variable with no index, or to an array variable |
| with a parenthesized index. |
| .AP int flags in |
| OR-ed combination of the values TCL_TRACE_READS, TCL_TRACE_WRITES, |
| TCL_TRACE_UNSETS, TCL_TRACE_ARRAY, TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY, TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY, |
| TCL_TRACE_RESULT_DYNAMIC and TCL_TRACE_RESULT_OBJECT. |
| Not all flags are used by all |
| procedures. See below for more information. |
| .AP Tcl_VarTraceProc *proc in |
| Procedure to invoke whenever one of the traced operations occurs. |
| .AP ClientData clientData in |
| Arbitrary one-word value to pass to \fIproc\fR. |
| .AP "CONST char" *name1 in |
| Name of scalar or array variable (without array index). |
| .AP "CONST char" *name2 in |
| For a trace on an element of an array, gives the index of the |
| element. For traces on scalar variables or on whole arrays, |
| is NULL. |
| .AP ClientData prevClientData in |
| If non-NULL, gives last value returned by \fBTcl_VarTraceInfo\fR or |
| \fBTcl_VarTraceInfo2\fR, so this call will return information about |
| next trace. If NULL, this call will return information about first |
| trace. |
| .BE |
| |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_TraceVar\fR allows a C procedure to monitor and control |
| access to a Tcl variable, so that the C procedure is invoked |
| whenever the variable is read or written or unset. |
| If the trace is created successfully then \fBTcl_TraceVar\fR returns |
| TCL_OK. If an error occurred (e.g. \fIvarName\fR specifies an element |
| of an array, but the actual variable isn't an array) then TCL_ERROR |
| is returned and an error message is left in the interpreter's result. |
| .PP |
| The \fIflags\fR argument to \fBTcl_TraceVar\fR indicates when the |
| trace procedure is to be invoked and provides information |
| for setting up the trace. It consists of an OR-ed combination |
| of any of the following values: |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_GLOBAL_ONLY\fR |
| Normally, the variable will be looked up at the current level of |
| procedure call; if this bit is set then the variable will be looked |
| up at global level, ignoring any active procedures. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY\fR |
| Normally, the variable will be looked up at the current level of |
| procedure call; if this bit is set then the variable will be looked |
| up in the current namespace, ignoring any active procedures. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TRACE_READS\fR |
| Invoke \fIproc\fR whenever an attempt is made to read the variable. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TRACE_WRITES\fR |
| Invoke \fIproc\fR whenever an attempt is made to modify the variable. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TRACE_UNSETS\fR |
| Invoke \fIproc\fR whenever the variable is unset. |
| A variable may be unset either explicitly by an \fBunset\fR command, |
| or implicitly when a procedure returns (its local variables are |
| automatically unset) or when the interpreter is deleted (all |
| variables are automatically unset). |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TRACE_ARRAY\fR |
| Invoke \fIproc\fR whenever the array command is invoked. |
| This gives the trace procedure a chance to update the array before |
| array names or array get is called. Note that this is called |
| before an array set, but that will trigger write traces. |
| .VS 8.4 |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TRACE_RESULT_DYNAMIC\fR |
| The result of invoking the \fIproc\fR is a dynamically allocated |
| string that will be released by the Tcl library via a call to |
| \fBckfree\fR. Must not be specified at the same time as |
| TCL_TRACE_RESULT_OBJECT. |
| .TP |
| \fBTCL_TRACE_RESULT_OBJECT\fR |
| The result of invoking the \fIproc\fR is a Tcl_Obj* (cast to a char*) |
| with a reference count of at least one. The ownership of that |
| reference will be transferred to the Tcl core for release (when the |
| core has finished with it) via a call to \fBTcl_DecrRefCount\fR. Must |
| not be specified at the same time as TCL_TRACE_RESULT_DYNAMIC. |
| .VE 8.4 |
| .PP |
| Whenever one of the specified operations occurs on the variable, |
| \fIproc\fR will be invoked. |
| It should have arguments and result that match the type |
| \fBTcl_VarTraceProc\fR: |
| .CS |
| typedef char *Tcl_VarTraceProc( |
| ClientData \fIclientData\fR, |
| Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR, |
| char *\fIname1\fR, |
| char *\fIname2\fR, |
| int \fIflags\fR); |
| .CE |
| The \fIclientData\fR and \fIinterp\fR parameters will |
| have the same values as those passed to \fBTcl_TraceVar\fR when the |
| trace was created. |
| \fIClientData\fR typically points to an application-specific |
| data structure that describes what to do when \fIproc\fR |
| is invoked. |
| \fIName1\fR and \fIname2\fR give the name of the traced variable |
| in the normal two-part form (see the description of \fBTcl_TraceVar2\fR |
| below for details). |
| \fIFlags\fR is an OR-ed combination of bits providing several |
| pieces of information. |
| One of the bits TCL_TRACE_READS, TCL_TRACE_WRITES, TCL_TRACE_ARRAY, |
| or TCL_TRACE_UNSETS |
| will be set in \fIflags\fR to indicate which operation is being performed |
| on the variable. |
| The bit TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY will be set whenever the variable being |
| accessed is a global one not accessible from the current level of |
| procedure call: the trace procedure will need to pass this flag |
| back to variable-related procedures like \fBTcl_GetVar\fR if it |
| attempts to access the variable. |
| The bit TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY will be set whenever the variable being |
| accessed is a namespace one not accessible from the current level of |
| procedure call: the trace procedure will need to pass this flag |
| back to variable-related procedures like \fBTcl_GetVar\fR if it |
| attempts to access the variable. |
| The bit TCL_TRACE_DESTROYED will be set in \fIflags\fR if the trace is |
| about to be destroyed; this information may be useful to \fIproc\fR |
| so that it can clean up its own internal data structures (see |
| the section TCL_TRACE_DESTROYED below for more details). |
| Lastly, the bit TCL_INTERP_DESTROYED will be set if the entire |
| interpreter is being destroyed. |
| When this bit is set, \fIproc\fR must be especially careful in |
| the things it does (see the section TCL_INTERP_DESTROYED below). |
| The trace procedure's return value should normally be NULL; see |
| ERROR RETURNS below for information on other possibilities. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_UntraceVar\fR may be used to remove a trace. |
| If the variable specified by \fIinterp\fR, \fIvarName\fR, and \fIflags\fR |
| has a trace set with \fIflags\fR, \fIproc\fR, and |
| \fIclientData\fR, then the corresponding trace is removed. |
| If no such trace exists, then the call to \fBTcl_UntraceVar\fR |
| has no effect. |
| The same bits are valid for \fIflags\fR as for calls to \fBTcl_TraceVar\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_VarTraceInfo\fR may be used to retrieve information about |
| traces set on a given variable. |
| The return value from \fBTcl_VarTraceInfo\fR is the \fIclientData\fR |
| associated with a particular trace. |
| The trace must be on the variable specified by the \fIinterp\fR, |
| \fIvarName\fR, and \fIflags\fR arguments (only the TCL_GLOBAL_ONLY and |
| TCL_NAMESPACE_ONLY bits from \fIflags\fR is used; other bits are |
| ignored) and its trace procedure must the same as the \fIproc\fR |
| argument. |
| If the \fIprevClientData\fR argument is NULL then the return |
| value corresponds to the first (most recently created) matching |
| trace, or NULL if there are no matching traces. |
| If the \fIprevClientData\fR argument isn't NULL, then it should |
| be the return value from a previous call to \fBTcl_VarTraceInfo\fR. |
| In this case, the new return value will correspond to the next |
| matching trace after the one whose \fIclientData\fR matches |
| \fIprevClientData\fR, or NULL if no trace matches \fIprevClientData\fR |
| or if there are no more matching traces after it. |
| This mechanism makes it possible to step through all of the |
| traces for a given variable that have the same \fIproc\fR. |
| |
| .SH "TWO-PART NAMES" |
| .PP |
| The procedures \fBTcl_TraceVar2\fR, \fBTcl_UntraceVar2\fR, and |
| \fBTcl_VarTraceInfo2\fR are identical to \fBTcl_TraceVar\fR, |
| \fBTcl_UntraceVar\fR, and \fBTcl_VarTraceInfo\fR, respectively, |
| except that the name of the variable consists of two parts. |
| \fIName1\fR gives the name of a scalar variable or array, |
| and \fIname2\fR gives the name of an element within an array. |
| .VS 8.1 |
| When \fIname2\fR is NULL, |
| \fIname1\fR may contain both an array and an element name: |
| if the name contains an open parenthesis and ends with a |
| close parenthesis, then the value between the parentheses is |
| treated as an element name (which can have any string value) and |
| the characters before the first open |
| parenthesis are treated as the name of an array variable. |
| If \fIname2\fR is NULL and \fIname1\fR does not refer |
| to an array element |
| .VE |
| it means that either the variable is |
| a scalar or the trace is to be set on the entire array rather |
| than an individual element (see WHOLE-ARRAY TRACES below for |
| more information). |
| |
| |
| .SH "ACCESSING VARIABLES DURING TRACES" |
| .PP |
| During read, write, and array traces, the |
| trace procedure can read, write, or unset the traced |
| variable using \fBTcl_GetVar2\fR, \fBTcl_SetVar2\fR, and |
| other procedures. |
| While \fIproc\fR is executing, traces are temporarily disabled |
| for the variable, so that calls to \fBTcl_GetVar2\fR and |
| \fBTcl_SetVar2\fR will not cause \fIproc\fR or other trace procedures |
| to be invoked again. |
| Disabling only occurs for the variable whose trace procedure |
| is active; accesses to other variables will still be traced. |
| However, if a variable is unset during a read or write trace then unset |
| traces will be invoked. |
| .PP |
| During unset traces the variable has already been completely |
| expunged. |
| It is possible for the trace procedure to read or write the |
| variable, but this will be a new version of the variable. |
| Traces are not disabled during unset traces as they are for |
| read and write traces, but existing traces have been removed |
| from the variable before any trace procedures are invoked. |
| If new traces are set by unset trace procedures, these traces |
| will be invoked on accesses to the variable by the trace |
| procedures. |
| |
| .SH "CALLBACK TIMING" |
| .PP |
| When read tracing has been specified for a variable, the trace |
| procedure will be invoked whenever the variable's value is |
| read. This includes \fBset\fR Tcl commands, \fB$\fR-notation |
| in Tcl commands, and invocations of the \fBTcl_GetVar\fR |
| and \fBTcl_GetVar2\fR procedures. |
| \fIProc\fR is invoked just before the variable's value is |
| returned. |
| It may modify the value of the variable to affect what |
| is returned by the traced access. |
| If it unsets the variable then the access will return an error |
| just as if the variable never existed. |
| .PP |
| When write tracing has been specified for a variable, the |
| trace procedure will be invoked whenever the variable's value |
| is modified. This includes \fBset\fR commands, |
| commands that modify variables as side effects (such as |
| \fBcatch\fR and \fBscan\fR), and calls to the \fBTcl_SetVar\fR |
| and \fBTcl_SetVar2\fR procedures). |
| \fIProc\fR will be invoked after the variable's value has been |
| modified, but before the new value of the variable has been |
| returned. |
| It may modify the value of the variable to override the change |
| and to determine the value actually returned by the traced |
| access. |
| If it deletes the variable then the traced access will return |
| an empty string. |
| .PP |
| When array tracing has been specified, the trace procedure |
| will be invoked at the beginning of the array command implementation, |
| before any of the operations like get, set, or names have been invoked. |
| The trace procedure can modify the array elements with \fBTcl_SetVar\fR |
| and \fBTcl_SetVar2\fR. |
| .PP |
| When unset tracing has been specified, the trace procedure |
| will be invoked whenever the variable is destroyed. |
| The traces will be called after the variable has been |
| completely unset. |
| |
| .SH "WHOLE-ARRAY TRACES" |
| .PP |
| If a call to \fBTcl_TraceVar\fR or \fBTcl_TraceVar2\fR specifies |
| the name of an array variable without an index into the array, |
| then the trace will be set on the array as a whole. |
| This means that \fIproc\fR will be invoked whenever any |
| element of the array is accessed in the ways specified by |
| \fIflags\fR. |
| When an array is unset, a whole-array trace will be invoked |
| just once, with \fIname1\fR equal to the name of the array |
| and \fIname2\fR NULL; it will not be invoked once for each |
| element. |
| |
| .SH "MULTIPLE TRACES" |
| .PP |
| It is possible for multiple traces to exist on the same variable. |
| When this happens, all of the trace procedures will be invoked on each |
| access, in order from most-recently-created to least-recently-created. |
| When there exist whole-array traces for an array as well as |
| traces on individual elements, the whole-array traces are invoked |
| before the individual-element traces. |
| If a read or write trace unsets the variable then all of the unset |
| traces will be invoked but the remainder of the read and write traces |
| will be skipped. |
| |
| .SH "ERROR RETURNS" |
| .PP |
| Under normal conditions trace procedures should return NULL, indicating |
| successful completion. |
| If \fIproc\fR returns a non-NULL value it signifies that an |
| error occurred. |
| The return value must be a pointer to a static character string |
| containing an error message, |
| .VS 8.4 |
| unless (\fIexactly\fR one of) the TCL_TRACE_RESULT_DYNAMIC and |
| TCL_TRACE_RESULT_OBJECT flags is set, which specify that the result is |
| either a dynamic string (to be released with \fBckfree\fR) or a |
| Tcl_Obj* (cast to char* and to be released with |
| \fBTcl_DecrRefCount\fR) containing the error message. |
| .VE 8.4 |
| If a trace procedure returns an error, no further traces are |
| invoked for the access and the traced access aborts with the |
| given message. |
| Trace procedures can use this facility to make variables |
| read-only, for example (but note that the value of the variable |
| will already have been modified before the trace procedure is |
| called, so the trace procedure will have to restore the correct |
| value). |
| .PP |
| The return value from \fIproc\fR is only used during read and |
| write tracing. |
| During unset traces, the return value is ignored and all relevant |
| trace procedures will always be invoked. |
| |
| .SH "RESTRICTIONS" |
| .PP |
| A trace procedure can be called at any time, even when there |
| is a partially-formed result in the interpreter's result area. If |
| the trace procedure does anything that could damage this result (such |
| as calling \fBTcl_Eval\fR) then it must save the original values of |
| the interpreter's \fBresult\fR and \fBfreeProc\fR fields and restore |
| them before it returns. |
| |
| .SH "UNDEFINED VARIABLES" |
| .PP |
| It is legal to set a trace on an undefined variable. |
| The variable will still appear to be undefined until the |
| first time its value is set. |
| If an undefined variable is traced and then unset, the unset will fail |
| with an error (``no such variable''), but the trace |
| procedure will still be invoked. |
| |
| .SH "TCL_TRACE_DESTROYED FLAG" |
| .PP |
| In an unset callback to \fIproc\fR, the TCL_TRACE_DESTROYED bit |
| is set in \fIflags\fR if the trace is being removed as part |
| of the deletion. |
| Traces on a variable are always removed whenever the variable |
| is deleted; the only time TCL_TRACE_DESTROYED isn't set is for |
| a whole-array trace invoked when only a single element of an |
| array is unset. |
| |
| .SH "TCL_INTERP_DESTROYED" |
| .PP |
| When an interpreter is destroyed, unset traces are called for |
| all of its variables. |
| The TCL_INTERP_DESTROYED bit will be set in the \fIflags\fR |
| argument passed to the trace procedures. |
| Trace procedures must be extremely careful in what they do if |
| the TCL_INTERP_DESTROYED bit is set. |
| It is not safe for the procedures to invoke any Tcl procedures |
| on the interpreter, since its state is partially deleted. |
| All that trace procedures should do under these circumstances is |
| to clean up and free their own internal data structures. |
| |
| .SH BUGS |
| .PP |
| Tcl doesn't do any error checking to prevent trace procedures |
| from misusing the interpreter during traces with TCL_INTERP_DESTROYED |
| set. |
| .PP |
| Array traces are not yet integrated with the Tcl "info exists" command, |
| nor is there Tcl-level access to array traces. |
| |
| .SH KEYWORDS |
| clientData, trace, variable |