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calldll is part of the standard macPython distribution.
49 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext
49 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext
Preliminary notes/documentation for the calldll module, version 0.2.
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====================================================================
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Calldll allows you to call random C functions from python without writing any
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C code. It is mainly meant to call MacOS toolbox routines for which no Python
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wrapper module is available. It is also incomplete, in that only a few argument
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types are currently supported. Please let me know which other argument types
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you need, and/or whether you have any ideas on a general "escape" allowing people
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to pass anything.
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The module exports three functions:
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- symtable = getlibrary(libraryname)
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Get a reference to import library libraryname. "InterfaceLib" is the most commonly
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used one, containing most toolbox routines. The symbol table can be used
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to lookup routines to be passed to newcall: "symtable.WaitNextEvent" will
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return the address of routine WaitNextEvent. and so will "symtable['WaitNextEvent']".
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The symtable is a mapping, so you can use keys() and len(...) to inspect it.
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- symtable = getdiskfragment(file)
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Load the specified file (given by fsspec or filename) and return a reference to
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its symboltable.
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- callable = newcall(routine, returntype, [argtype, ...])
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Return a callable object. You specify the C routine to be called (as explained above),
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the type of the return value and the argument types. The resulting object can
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be called from Python code in the normal way, and typechecking on arguments is
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performed (but, of course, if you specify incorrect argument types in this call
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you may well crash your machine). Printing a callable will give you a description
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of the (C-) calling sequence.
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The C return value can be one of 'None', 'Byte', 'Short', 'Long', 'Pstring' (a pascal
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string returned by address, copied to a Python string), 'Cobject' (a wrapper around a void
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pointer), 'Handle' (a new handle, returned as a Res.Resource object) or 'OSErr' (which raises
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MacOS.Error if non-zero).
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Arguments can be any of 'InByte', 'InShort', 'InLong', 'InString' (a python string, with the
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address of the data passed to the C routine, so be careful!), 'InPstring' (a python string copied
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to a Str255 and passed by address), 'InCobject', 'InHandle', 'OutByte' (storage is allocated for
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a single byte, the address passed to C and the resulting value returned to Python), 'OutShort',
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'OutLong', 'OutPstring' (again: storage pre-allocated and the address passed to C), 'OutCobject'
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(storage for a void * is allocated, this void ** is passed to C and the resulting void * is
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encapsulated in the Cobject returned) or 'OutHandle' (ditto, which means that this is usually *not*
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what you use, you normally use 'InHandle' because most toolbox calls expect you to preallocate
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the handle).
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All values to be returned (from the return value and the Out arguments) are collected. If there
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aren't any None is returned, if there is one value this value is returned, if there are multiple
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values a tuple is returned.
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There is test code in testcalldll.py, and a minimal example in samplecalldll.py.
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