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117 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
117 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
-*-text-*-
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This file is intended to contain information for those interested in
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working on the guile bits of GnuCash.
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I've recently added some GUI functions callable from scheme. This is
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generally pretty straightforward, and you can look in the code to see
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how I did it, but there are a few bits you have to be careful about.
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One of the main sources of useful information is "info guile-ref".
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This contains the documentation for all the guile C-side functions
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like SCM_CAR(), scm_append(), etc. that manipulate opaque SCM objects
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from the guile side.
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Given that and a reasonable understanding of GTK/GNOME, you should be
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able to follow what I've done.
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Introduction To Scheme and guile(rgmerk)
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--------------------------------
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Please skip this if you already know what Scheme is and why it's
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so cool . . .
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Scheme is a dialect of LISP (List Programming), one of the earliest
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programming languages. It makes so many things easy it's just not
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funny. It can be a little confusing for people raised on C and Java,
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but any time taken to learn it is made up for with easier-to-write,
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easier-to-debug, more reusable, and more robust code.
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Guile is an implementation of standard Scheme which is easily
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embeddable in C, making multi-language development relatively
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straightforward. You can easily access data and procedures from
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either end. Guile supports a superset of R4RS (the Scheme standard).
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For initial experimentation, you can use Guile as an interactive Scheme
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shell to play around with the system.
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SLIB is a a library for Scheme implementations (including guile)
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that implements a large collection of useful data structures
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and algorithms.
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FIXME: Starting gnucash as a guile shell. ..
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While the Guile documentation (in info format) explains
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Guile specifics, it doesn't have much information about Scheme,
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the language. The Internet Scheme Repository:
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http://www.cs.indiana.edu/scheme-repository/home.html
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has quite a useful collection of information, including
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FAQs, online copies of the Scheme standard (which is actually
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quite readable and useful), and pointers to web tutorials
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and other resources.
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g-wrap
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------
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Note: gwrap has been replaced by swig and dropped completely in
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SVN-trunk on 2006-10-20 and for gnucash-2.2.0.
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(Old info: g-wrap is the tool used to automate the wrapping of C
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functions to make them callable from the guile code. g-wrap is
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now maintained by Rob Browning and is available from
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ftp://ftp.gnucash.org/pub/g-wrap )
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Garbage collection:
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-------------------
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One issue to keep in mind is that of garbage collection. You cannot
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pass a scheme side item to the C side (through a SCM) and then store
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that object off somewhere on the C side such that it lives longer than
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all of it's guile side references. If you do, you're likely to get a
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crash. The problem is that guile's garbage collector only knows to
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save guile items that still have guile side pointers, or that are
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found somewhere on the current C side stack. If you store a SCM item
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off in a C data structure (say a callback pointer), and then return to
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the guile side and drop the guile-side reference to the item, guile
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may garbage collect it before it's used by the C side.
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For example, this psudeo-code is a problem:
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void gnc_some_function(SCM scm_thunk) {
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gnc_set_push_button_callback(some_button, scm_thunk);
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}
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(define (unsafe-guile-function)
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(let ((my-callback (lambda () (display "Hello\n"))))
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(gnc:some-function my-callback)))
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The problem here is that if you call unsafe-guile-function, it
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registers the pointer to the anonymous lambda created in the let
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construct with the button on the C-side and then returns. As soon as
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it returns, guile has no more references to the anonymous lambda, and
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it's not on the C stack, so guile thinks it's OK to garbage collect
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the function even though the C side has a pointer to it and may still
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use it.
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The moral of this story is that if you need to have the C side ferret
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away a scheme item for later, you must also keep at least one
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reference to that item on the guile side until the C side is finished
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with it. I believe that the guile people have recently come up with a
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nice general solution to this problem, but until that's generally
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available, there are a number of ways you can solve this.
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If nothing else, you can just create a global hash on the guile side,
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place the object in question in the hash table, and then have the
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C-side delete that item from the hash when it's finished with it.
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Guile Interrupts:
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-----------------
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Another issue that I'm not quite sure of myself yet is that of
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interrupts. Guile has the ability to protect certain segments of code
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with SCM_DEFER_INTS/SCM_ALLOW_INTS, but at the moment I'm not sure
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when this is required. If anyone gets the chance to check this out
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before I do, then please edit this file and put your findings here.
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