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123 lines
6.6 KiB
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123 lines
6.6 KiB
Plaintext
Python and MPW
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==============
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There is conditional code in Python for MPW. This has been used with
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different compilers at various points in time. Right now it is being
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used to turn the entire interpreter into a shared library on 68K Macs,
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so we can build "applets" (see below). I have used MPW 3.2 and the OpenDoc
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development environment from an OpenDoc CD released in 1984. This
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contains the Symantec C compiler for MPW (version 7.0.4), the
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Universal Headers (version 2.0a1), and early versions of CFM-68K (version 1.0a1)
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(the Code Fragment Manager ported back to the 68K Mac) and
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MixedModeInit (version 1.0d12), which are required to use shared libraries.
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I've created a Makefile that does everything, plus a three-line Build
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script that calls Make and runs its output. The Makefile assumes that
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it lives in a 1-deep subdirectory of the root, so e.g. the Python
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Include directory can be referenced through "::Include". All object
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files are collected in the subsubdirectory Objcode.
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I use these feature test macros:
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MPW for all MPW compilers (e.g. long double in <math.h>)
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__SC__ for things specific to the Symantec C compiler
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(e.g. doesn't like static forward)
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__CFM68K__ for things specific to CFM-68K
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(e.g. it requires the use of #pragma lib_export on|off)
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HAVE_UNIVERSAL_HEADERS for things not yet in Think's headers (e.g. UPPs)
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GENERATINGCFM for both PPC and 68K Code Fragment Manager
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MPW is defined in config.h (if it finds that applec is defined);
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HAVE_UNIVERSAL_HEADERS is defined in macglue.h depending on whether it
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thinks we are using Universal Headers. The others are defined by the
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compiler or by the system headers.
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Compiler switches were a nightmare until I found I had to use -b.
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This wasn't mentioned in the CFM-68K docs that came on the OpenDoc
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CD-ROM. Apparently it is only needed for large projects...
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Warning: Mixing Think C and MPW
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===============================
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(XXX Need to check what convention SC uses -- I hope it uses Think's.)
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If you are mixing Think C and MPW, you may experience weird errors in
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previously correct modules. These disappear when you throw away the
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module's .pyc file. The errors usually have to do with string
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literals containing '\n' or '\r'. The reason is an incompatibility
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between their handling of '\n' and '\r' -- in MPW C, '\n' actually is
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ASCII CR while '\r' is ASCII LF, which is the reverse situation from
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any other ASCII based C implementation. This behaviour is inherited
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by Python compiled with MPW C. This is normally not a problem, but
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*binary* files written by one system will be mis-interpreted by the
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other, and this is what happens to the .pyc files. There is no easy
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way to fix this in the source. (This is a real shame, since the
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format of .pyc files was carefully designed to be independent of byte
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order and integer size -- deviations in the ASCII character codes were
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never anticipated.)
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Building "Applets" for the Mac
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==============================
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An "applet" is a tiny application that's written in a scripting language
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but behaves like a real application. The behavior is much like that of
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executable scripts in Unix -- but the implementation is entirely different.
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The applet's file can be small because it doesn't contain the actual
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interpreter for the scripting language -- this has to be installed in the
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Extensions folder (usually) before the applet will work. The applet file
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itself only contains a tiny bootstrap program and the script itself --
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possibly "compiled" or otherwise encoded to save on parsing time and space,
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and to make it harder to reverse engineer the script (some people care about
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this).
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In Python's case, the Python interpreter, without its main program, is built
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as a shared library that is dropped in the Extensions folder. Some more
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shared libraries must also be present -- these form the C run-time system.
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[[XXX perhaps we should link these in statically with the Python library,
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for simpler distribution???]] On the 68K Mac, two more extensions are needed:
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CFM-68K (the Code Fragment Manager) and MixedModeInit. These provide
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functionality that's built in the Power Mac's OS. It seems that System 7.1.1
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or higher is also required.
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The applet file contains a small main program program, plus a 'PYC ' resource
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named __main__ which contains the "compiled" version of the script. A 'PYC '
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resource contains exactly the same data as a ".pyc" file. (The advantage of
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storing compiled modules as resources instead of files is that many modules
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can be stored in a single file.) The applet's main
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program initializes most of the toolbox managers (it uses the same sequence
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as stdwin or the Think C console I/O library), then initializes Python,
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then loads the resource and decodes it into a Python code object, and finally
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passes the code object to the Python interpreter for execution. [[XXX Actually,
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the applet's main program could be moved entirely to the shared library --
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there's nothing in it that's dependent on the applet's configuration.
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The applet itself could then be reduced to main() { applet_main(); } ]]
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[[XXX I tried this but it only save 512 bytes on a total of 10K -- the rest
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is boilerplate that the linker always seems to create. Wonder how this is on
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the Power Mac...]]
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A big restriction for applets is that they have no standard input and their
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standard output and error streams are diverted to files called "stdout" and
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"stderr". This means that in order to interact with the user, or even just
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to provide some feedback while they're grinding along, they must make use of
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Mac toolbox calls to create windows, etc. I plan to provide a library that at
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least has the output functionality of the Think C Console I/O library or
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CodeWarrior's SIOX.
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The current procedure to create an applet is not as simple as it could be.
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I have written a Python script (which itself can be -- and has been -- made
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into an applet!) which asks for a Python source file (input) and an existing
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applet file (output). It adds a 'PYC ' resource to the applet named __main__,
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which contains the compiled code of the script (it compiles on the fly,
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so you don't need to have a .pyc file for the script).
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Although this seems fairly simple, the practical complication is that you need
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to copy the applet template first -- if you specify the template as the output,
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you will overwrite the template! [[XXX I guess a simplification could be made
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by using the convention that the applet built from a script has the same name
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as the script but with ".py" stripped; the applet-making script could then
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search for the template in a few common locations (e.g. the Python module
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search path) and copy it, reducing the user interaction to just indicating the
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Python source file to be converted into an applet.]]
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