Tcl_CreateTrace(3tcl) Tcl Library Procedures Tcl_CreateTrace(3tcl) ______________________________________________________________________________ NAME Tcl_CreateTrace, Tcl_CreateObjTrace, Tcl_DeleteTrace - arrange for com- mand execution to be traced SYNOPSIS #include <tcl.h> Tcl_Trace Tcl_CreateTrace(interp, level, proc, clientData) Tcl_Trace Tcl_CreateObjTrace(interp, level, flags, objProc, clientData, deleteProc) Tcl_DeleteTrace(interp, trace) ARGUMENTS Tcl_Interp *interp (in) Interpreter con- taining command to be traced or un- traced. int level (in) Only commands at or below this nesting level will be traced unless 0 is specified. 1 means top-level commands only, 2 means top- level commands or those that are in- voked as immediate consequences of ex- ecuting top-level commands (procedure bodies, bracketed commands, etc.) and so on. A value of 0 means that com- mands at any level are traced. int flags (in) Flags governing the trace execution. See below for de- tails. Tcl_CmdObjTraceProc *objProc (in) Procedure to call for each command that is executed. See below for de- tails of the call- ing sequence. Tcl_CmdTraceProc *proc (in) Procedure to call for each command that is executed. See below for de- tails on the call- ing sequence. ClientData clientData (in) Arbitrary one-word value to pass to objProc or proc. Tcl_CmdObjTraceDeleteProc *deleteProc (in) Procedure to call when the trace is deleted. See below for details of the calling sequence. A NULL pointer is permissible and re- sults in no call- back when the trace is deleted. Tcl_Trace trace (in) Token for trace to be removed (return value from previous call to Tcl_Create- Trace). ______________________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION Tcl_CreateObjTrace arranges for command tracing. After it is called, objProc will be invoked before the Tcl interpreter calls any command procedure when evaluating commands in interp. The return value from Tcl_CreateObjTrace is a token for the trace, which may be passed to Tcl_DeleteTrace to remove the trace. There may be many traces in ef- fect simultaneously for the same interpreter. objProc should have arguments and result that match the type, Tcl_Cm- dObjTraceProc: typedef int Tcl_CmdObjTraceProc( ClientData clientData, Tcl_Interp* interp, int level, const char *command, Tcl_Command commandToken, int objc, Tcl_Obj *const objv[]); The clientData and interp parameters are copies of the corresponding arguments given to Tcl_CreateTrace. ClientData typically points to an application-specific data structure that describes what to do when ob- jProc is invoked. The level parameter gives the nesting level of the command (1 for top-level commands passed to Tcl_Eval by the applica- tion, 2 for the next-level commands passed to Tcl_Eval as part of pars- ing or interpreting level-1 commands, and so on). The command parameter points to a string containing the text of the command, before any argu- ment substitution. The commandToken parameter is a Tcl command token that identifies the command to be invoked. The token may be passed to Tcl_GetCommandName, Tcl_GetCommandInfoFromToken, or Tcl_SetCommandIn- foFromToken to manipulate the definition of the command. The objc and objv parameters designate the final parameter count and parameter vec- tor that will be passed to the command, and have had all substitutions performed. The objProc callback is expected to return a standard Tcl status return code. If this code is TCL_OK (the normal case), then the Tcl inter- preter will invoke the command. Any other return code is treated as if the command returned that status, and the command is not invoked. The objProc callback must not modify objv in any way. It is, however, permissible to change the command by calling Tcl_SetCommandTokenInfo prior to returning. Any such change takes effect immediately, and the command is invoked with the new information. Tracing will only occur for commands at nesting level less than or equal to the level parameter (i.e. the level parameter to objProc will always be less than or equal to the level parameter to Tcl_Create- Trace). Tracing has a significant effect on runtime performance because it causes the bytecode compiler to refrain from generating in-line code for Tcl commands such as if and while in order that they may be traced. If traces for the built-in commands are not required, the flags parame- ter may be set to the constant value TCL_ALLOW_INLINE_COMPILATION. In this case, traces on built-in commands may or may not result in trace callbacks, depending on the state of the interpreter, but run-time per- formance will be improved significantly. (This functionality is desir- able, for example, when using Tcl_CreateObjTrace to implement an execu- tion time profiler.) Calls to objProc will be made by the Tcl parser immediately before it calls the command procedure for the command (cmdProc). This occurs af- ter argument parsing and substitution, so tracing for substituted com- mands occurs before tracing of the commands containing the substitu- tions. If there is a syntax error in a command, or if there is no com- mand procedure associated with a command name, then no tracing will oc- cur for that command. If a string passed to Tcl_Eval contains multiple commands (bracketed, or on different lines) then multiple calls to ob- jProc will occur, one for each command. Tcl_DeleteTrace removes a trace, so that no future calls will be made to the procedure associated with the trace. After Tcl_DeleteTrace re- turns, the caller should never again use the trace token. When Tcl_DeleteTrace is called, the interpreter invokes the deleteProc that was passed as a parameter to Tcl_CreateObjTrace. The deleteProc must match the type, Tcl_CmdObjTraceDeleteProc: typedef void Tcl_CmdObjTraceDeleteProc( ClientData clientData); The clientData parameter will be the same as the clientData parameter that was originally passed to Tcl_CreateObjTrace. Tcl_CreateTrace is an alternative interface for command tracing, not recommended for new applications. It is provided for backward compati- bility with code that was developed for older versions of the Tcl in- terpreter. It is similar to Tcl_CreateObjTrace, except that its proc parameter should have arguments and result that match the type Tcl_Cmd- TraceProc: typedef void Tcl_CmdTraceProc( ClientData clientData, Tcl_Interp *interp, int level, char *command, Tcl_CmdProc *cmdProc, ClientData cmdClientData, int argc, const char *argv[]); The parameters to the proc callback are similar to those of the objProc callback above. The commandToken is replaced with cmdProc, a pointer to the (string-based) command procedure that will be invoked; and cmd- ClientData, the client data that will be passed to the procedure. The objc parameter is replaced with an argv parameter, that gives the argu- ments to the command as character strings. Proc must not modify the command or argv strings. If a trace created with Tcl_CreateTrace is in effect, inline compila- tion of Tcl commands such as if and while is always disabled. There is no notification when a trace created with Tcl_CreateTrace is deleted. There is no way to be notified when the trace created by Tcl_Create- Trace is deleted. There is no way for the proc associated with a call to Tcl_CreateTrace to abort execution of command. KEYWORDS command, create, delete, interpreter, trace Tcl Tcl_CreateTrace(3tcl)
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