World: r3wp
[!REBOL3 Extensions] REBOL 3 Extensions discussions
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Maxim 28-Jan-2010 [553x6] | so you'd say: define "mystruct {int index, int count} myfunc: declare "libname.myfunc (int data, struct *mystruct)" myfunc 12 1024 |
oops! myfunc 1000 [12 1024] | |
or even easier ;-) include cstub.h myfunc 1000 [12 1024] | |
oops again... include %cstub.h | |
note, I've got the whole C language mapped into PARSE ... its just the emitter which is giving me headaches... because of REBOL's backtracking, you may end-up declaring/defining things several times, until the right match is found. so I'm in the process of rewriting the rules differently which is quite complex ATM. | |
pekr, read Ladislav's DLL document a bit, and yess, it provides usefull information ... gotcha's mainly which point out a few things, not to forget when defining the struct! dialect and other details. | |
Janko 29-Jan-2010 [559] | I would also be very happy if there was /library in R3. I think many of use really don't want to write and compile c code (especially for multiple platforms) unless it's really really necesarry (thats why we use rebol). Max I don't work in R3 for now, but if you make /library I will port the libharu pdf binding to R3. |
Pekr 29-Jan-2010 [560] | Amen :-) |
Janko 29-Jan-2010 [561] | and although you say library is limited is is *good enough* for many things. |
Pekr 29-Jan-2010 [562] | once again - why not have best of both worlds? Carl stated, that Extensions might be internalised (packed into main distro). So - let's use default interfacing method - Extensions. And let's make /library extension. Should work no? If it would allow many ppl to wrap thing here or there, and even if it will not be so powerfull as full fledged extensions, why not to have it, right? |
Janko 29-Jan-2010 [563] | ( as it was demonstrated by many comunity members with many bindings, and I could also make a pdf binding that is already used for serrious stuff, and works on linux and windows without me ever touching the hairy low level stuff) |
Pekr 29-Jan-2010 [564x3] | OK, I am donating 100 USD to the developer, who brings /library interfacing method to R3. But - it shold be developed in cooperations, so that it is acceptable for many ppl. |
... and if it will a bit more powerfull, than R2 version, even better (referring to Ladislav's proposed enhancements) | |
The thing is, if we can come up with corrent architecture. R3 plans on handle! type, as well as custom datatypes (not sure it is needed), but surely is R3 not planning to use routine! and struct! ones (IMO) | |
Janko 29-Jan-2010 [567] | I am without money currently so I donate 50 USD but happily for same thing that Pekr |
Pekr 29-Jan-2010 [568x2] | license - BSD or MIT - simply for devs being able to use it freely ... |
OK, so we have got 150 USD ... who's next? :-) | |
TomBon 29-Jan-2010 [570x2] | me, I am in with 100 usd |
and another 100 usd if nested structs and clean pointer handling are included | |
Pekr 29-Jan-2010 [572] | ok, thats 250 + 100 USD, upon above defined conditions :-) |
Will 29-Jan-2010 [573] | I'm in with 100USD for the os x version of /library if that is usefull for porting Che |
Andreas 29-Jan-2010 [574] | that will be difficult, as we don't even have an osx hostkit right now :) |
BrianH 29-Jan-2010 [575x2] | It's not difficult to start; that's just a matter of doing the research on dynamic library loading and mocking up some code. And once extensions (not the host kit) are available on OS X, then the code can be tweaked and compiled. |
You can start by going through R3 chat and helping Carl with his difficulties with porting the host kit and extensions to OS X. | |
Andreas 29-Jan-2010 [577x2] | That's exactly what I did |
See rebdev message #6332, from 39 days ago | |
BrianH 29-Jan-2010 [579] | Cool. |
Andreas 29-Jan-2010 [580x3] | The extensions are not the problem, they will work on OSX just as they work on Linux. |
And in rebdev message #6257 I explain how to get extensions working on Linux. | |
(45 days ago) | |
BrianH 29-Jan-2010 [583] | Good. So once we resume work on such things (we're working on bug fixes and tickets now) the information will be there. Thanks. |
Andreas 29-Jan-2010 [584] | Besides that I have 10 more patches lined up, which I held back to not overwhelm anybody. |
BrianH 29-Jan-2010 [585x2] | Um, Carl is *right now* working on integrating community patches into a new host kit. Don't hold back. |
Community = mostly Maxim, but you could tip the balance if you post your patches. | |
Andreas 29-Jan-2010 [587] | As I said, I posted two already, did not get any feedback so far. |
BrianH 29-Jan-2010 [588] | Because we have been working on other things, mostly R2 and the web site (and R3 mezzanines in my case). |
Andreas 29-Jan-2010 [589] | Mostly a matter of process, though. No idea if Carl is fine with dumping patches onto R3 chat. |
BrianH 29-Jan-2010 [590x2] | He is OK with that. |
If they are mezzanine fixes, you don't have to wait for Carl. You can submit them directly, or post them for comment there or here if they apply to functions that someone else is in charge of (like LOAD or the module system). | |
Andreas 29-Jan-2010 [592] | The only mezz fix I had for now, is in rebdev #6258 |
BrianH 29-Jan-2010 [593] | I saw that one, but it doesn't seem to be the right approach. Two reasons: - .so and .dynlib aren't dynamicly linked library formats on Windows, .dll isn't on Linux, etc. - It kind of defeats the purpose of extensions: making all of that platform-specific stuff go away. Don't get me wrong, the current behavior also has the second problem. Extensions are imported like modules, and so the code that is asking for them has to specify the filename to load them. However, *that* code is supposed to be cross-platform, so putting a platform-specific filename in their Needs list is inappropriate. What do you think of using a generic filename extension like .rx for extensions, then having LOAD translate to the native filename? Or on platforms that don't require a specific filename extension for their dynamic library loader (like Windows), you could use the .rx extension directly. |
Andreas 29-Jan-2010 [594x4] | Sounds good |
I'd keep on using .dll on windows, though | |
And I'd also keep the platform specific extensions in system/options/file-types | |
Why keep the extensions stored as .dll?: I'd prefer not hiding the fact that a rebol extension is really a proper dynamic library | |
BrianH 29-Jan-2010 [598] | Windows is the one that needs to use the .rx extension the most, and the one that we definitely can use it. And system/options/file-types has to have the extension we are trying to LOAD, not what it might be translated to. |
Andreas 29-Jan-2010 [599] | Why does Windows need .rx the most? |
BrianH 29-Jan-2010 [600] | It's not hiding. Most of the executable file types on Windows are really DLLs, including .dll, .exe, .ocx, .vbx, ... |
Andreas 29-Jan-2010 [601] | Is there any harm in allowing .rx alongside with .dll .so and .dylib? |
BrianH 29-Jan-2010 [602] | We need it on Windows so we can make a .rx wrapper for a .dll third-party library. |
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