1=head1 NAME 2 3perlembed - how to embed perl in your C program 4 5=head1 DESCRIPTION 6 7=head2 PREAMBLE 8 9Do you want to: 10 11=over 5 12 13=item B<Use C from Perl?> 14 15Read L<perlxstut>, L<perlxs>, L<h2xs>, L<perlguts>, and L<perlapi>. 16 17=item B<Use a Unix program from Perl?> 18 19Read about back-quotes and about C<system> and C<exec> in L<perlfunc>. 20 21=item B<Use Perl from Perl?> 22 23Read about L<perlfunc/do> and L<perlfunc/eval> and L<perlfunc/require> 24and L<perlfunc/use>. 25 26=item B<Use C from C?> 27 28Rethink your design. 29 30=item B<Use Perl from C?> 31 32Read on... 33 34=back 35 36=head2 ROADMAP 37 38=over 5 39 40=item * 41 42Compiling your C program 43 44=item * 45 46Adding a Perl interpreter to your C program 47 48=item * 49 50Calling a Perl subroutine from your C program 51 52=item * 53 54Evaluating a Perl statement from your C program 55 56=item * 57 58Performing Perl pattern matches and substitutions from your C program 59 60=item * 61 62Fiddling with the Perl stack from your C program 63 64=item * 65 66Maintaining a persistent interpreter 67 68=item * 69 70Maintaining multiple interpreter instances 71 72=item * 73 74Using Perl modules, which themselves use C libraries, from your C program 75 76=item * 77 78Embedding Perl under Win32 79 80=back 81 82=head2 Compiling your C program 83 84If you have trouble compiling the scripts in this documentation, 85you're not alone. The cardinal rule: COMPILE THE PROGRAMS IN EXACTLY 86THE SAME WAY THAT YOUR PERL WAS COMPILED. (Sorry for yelling.) 87 88Also, every C program that uses Perl must link in the I<perl library>. 89What's that, you ask? Perl is itself written in C; the perl library 90is the collection of compiled C programs that were used to create your 91perl executable (I</usr/bin/perl> or equivalent). (Corollary: you 92can't use Perl from your C program unless Perl has been compiled on 93your machine, or installed properly--that's why you shouldn't blithely 94copy Perl executables from machine to machine without also copying the 95I<lib> directory.) 96 97When you use Perl from C, your C program will--usually--allocate, 98"run", and deallocate a I<PerlInterpreter> object, which is defined by 99the perl library. 100 101If your copy of Perl is recent enough to contain this documentation 102(version 5.002 or later), then the perl library (and I<EXTERN.h> and 103I<perl.h>, which you'll also need) will reside in a directory 104that looks like this: 105 106 /usr/local/lib/perl5/your_architecture_here/CORE 107 108or perhaps just 109 110 /usr/local/lib/perl5/CORE 111 112or maybe something like 113 114 /usr/opt/perl5/CORE 115 116Execute this statement for a hint about where to find CORE: 117 118 perl -MConfig -e 'print $Config{archlib}' 119 120Here's how you'd compile the example in the next section, 121L<Adding a Perl interpreter to your C program>, on my Linux box: 122 123 % gcc -O2 -Dbool=char -DHAS_BOOL -I/usr/local/include 124 -I/usr/local/lib/perl5/i586-linux/5.003/CORE 125 -L/usr/local/lib/perl5/i586-linux/5.003/CORE 126 -o interp interp.c -lperl -lm 127 128(That's all one line.) On my DEC Alpha running old 5.003_05, the 129incantation is a bit different: 130 131 % cc -O2 -Olimit 2900 -DSTANDARD_C -I/usr/local/include 132 -I/usr/local/lib/perl5/alpha-dec_osf/5.00305/CORE 133 -L/usr/local/lib/perl5/alpha-dec_osf/5.00305/CORE -L/usr/local/lib 134 -D__LANGUAGE_C__ -D_NO_PROTO -o interp interp.c -lperl -lm 135 136How can you figure out what to add? Assuming your Perl is post-5.001, 137execute a C<perl -V> command and pay special attention to the "cc" and 138"ccflags" information. 139 140You'll have to choose the appropriate compiler (I<cc>, I<gcc>, et al.) for 141your machine: C<perl -MConfig -e 'print $Config{cc}'> will tell you what 142to use. 143 144You'll also have to choose the appropriate library directory 145(I</usr/local/lib/...>) for your machine. If your compiler complains 146that certain functions are undefined, or that it can't locate 147I<-lperl>, then you need to change the path following the C<-L>. If it 148complains that it can't find I<EXTERN.h> and I<perl.h>, you need to 149change the path following the C<-I>. 150 151You may have to add extra libraries as well. Which ones? 152Perhaps those printed by 153 154 perl -MConfig -e 'print $Config{libs}' 155 156Provided your perl binary was properly configured and installed the 157B<ExtUtils::Embed> module will determine all of this information for 158you: 159 160 % cc -o interp interp.c `perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e ccopts -e ldopts` 161 162If the B<ExtUtils::Embed> module isn't part of your Perl distribution, 163you can retrieve it from 164http://www.perl.com/perl/CPAN/modules/by-module/ExtUtils/ 165(If this documentation came from your Perl distribution, then you're 166running 5.004 or better and you already have it.) 167 168The B<ExtUtils::Embed> kit on CPAN also contains all source code for 169the examples in this document, tests, additional examples and other 170information you may find useful. 171 172=head2 Adding a Perl interpreter to your C program 173 174In a sense, perl (the C program) is a good example of embedding Perl 175(the language), so I'll demonstrate embedding with I<miniperlmain.c>, 176included in the source distribution. Here's a bastardized, non-portable 177version of I<miniperlmain.c> containing the essentials of embedding: 178 179 #include <EXTERN.h> /* from the Perl distribution */ 180 #include <perl.h> /* from the Perl distribution */ 181 182 static PerlInterpreter *my_perl; /*** The Perl interpreter ***/ 183 184 int main(int argc, char **argv, char **env) 185 { 186 PERL_SYS_INIT3(&argc,&argv,&env); 187 my_perl = perl_alloc(); 188 perl_construct(my_perl); 189 PL_exit_flags |= PERL_EXIT_DESTRUCT_END; 190 perl_parse(my_perl, NULL, argc, argv, (char **)NULL); 191 perl_run(my_perl); 192 perl_destruct(my_perl); 193 perl_free(my_perl); 194 PERL_SYS_TERM(); 195 } 196 197Notice that we don't use the C<env> pointer. Normally handed to 198C<perl_parse> as its final argument, C<env> here is replaced by 199C<NULL>, which means that the current environment will be used. 200 201The macros PERL_SYS_INIT3() and PERL_SYS_TERM() provide system-specific 202tune up of the C runtime environment necessary to run Perl interpreters; 203they should only be called once regardless of how many interpreters you 204create or destroy. Call PERL_SYS_INIT3() before you create your first 205interpreter, and PERL_SYS_TERM() after you free your last interpreter. 206 207Since PERL_SYS_INIT3() may change C<env>, it may be more appropriate to 208provide C<env> as an argument to perl_parse(). 209 210Also notice that no matter what arguments you pass to perl_parse(), 211PERL_SYS_INIT3() must be invoked on the C main() argc, argv and env and 212only once. 213 214Now compile this program (I'll call it I<interp.c>) into an executable: 215 216 % cc -o interp interp.c `perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e ccopts -e ldopts` 217 218After a successful compilation, you'll be able to use I<interp> just 219like perl itself: 220 221 % interp 222 print "Pretty Good Perl \n"; 223 print "10890 - 9801 is ", 10890 - 9801; 224 <CTRL-D> 225 Pretty Good Perl 226 10890 - 9801 is 1089 227 228or 229 230 % interp -e 'printf("%x", 3735928559)' 231 deadbeef 232 233You can also read and execute Perl statements from a file while in the 234midst of your C program, by placing the filename in I<argv[1]> before 235calling I<perl_run>. 236 237=head2 Calling a Perl subroutine from your C program 238 239To call individual Perl subroutines, you can use any of the B<call_*> 240functions documented in L<perlcall>. 241In this example we'll use C<call_argv>. 242 243That's shown below, in a program I'll call I<showtime.c>. 244 245 #include <EXTERN.h> 246 #include <perl.h> 247 248 static PerlInterpreter *my_perl; 249 250 int main(int argc, char **argv, char **env) 251 { 252 char *args[] = { NULL }; 253 PERL_SYS_INIT3(&argc,&argv,&env); 254 my_perl = perl_alloc(); 255 perl_construct(my_perl); 256 257 perl_parse(my_perl, NULL, argc, argv, NULL); 258 PL_exit_flags |= PERL_EXIT_DESTRUCT_END; 259 260 /*** skipping perl_run() ***/ 261 262 call_argv("showtime", G_DISCARD | G_NOARGS, args); 263 264 perl_destruct(my_perl); 265 perl_free(my_perl); 266 PERL_SYS_TERM(); 267 } 268 269where I<showtime> is a Perl subroutine that takes no arguments (that's the 270I<G_NOARGS>) and for which I'll ignore the return value (that's the 271I<G_DISCARD>). Those flags, and others, are discussed in L<perlcall>. 272 273I'll define the I<showtime> subroutine in a file called I<showtime.pl>: 274 275 print "I shan't be printed."; 276 277 sub showtime { 278 print time; 279 } 280 281Simple enough. Now compile and run: 282 283 % cc -o showtime showtime.c \ 284 `perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e ccopts -e ldopts` 285 % showtime showtime.pl 286 818284590 287 288yielding the number of seconds that elapsed between January 1, 1970 289(the beginning of the Unix epoch), and the moment I began writing this 290sentence. 291 292In this particular case we don't have to call I<perl_run>, as we set 293the PL_exit_flag PERL_EXIT_DESTRUCT_END which executes END blocks in 294perl_destruct. 295 296If you want to pass arguments to the Perl subroutine, you can add 297strings to the C<NULL>-terminated C<args> list passed to 298I<call_argv>. For other data types, or to examine return values, 299you'll need to manipulate the Perl stack. That's demonstrated in 300L<Fiddling with the Perl stack from your C program>. 301 302=head2 Evaluating a Perl statement from your C program 303 304Perl provides two API functions to evaluate pieces of Perl code. 305These are L<perlapi/eval_sv> and L<perlapi/eval_pv>. 306 307Arguably, these are the only routines you'll ever need to execute 308snippets of Perl code from within your C program. Your code can be as 309long as you wish; it can contain multiple statements; it can employ 310L<perlfunc/use>, L<perlfunc/require>, and L<perlfunc/do> to 311include external Perl files. 312 313I<eval_pv> lets us evaluate individual Perl strings, and then 314extract variables for coercion into C types. The following program, 315I<string.c>, executes three Perl strings, extracting an C<int> from 316the first, a C<float> from the second, and a C<char *> from the third. 317 318 #include <EXTERN.h> 319 #include <perl.h> 320 321 static PerlInterpreter *my_perl; 322 323 main (int argc, char **argv, char **env) 324 { 325 char *embedding[] = { "", "-e", "0" }; 326 327 PERL_SYS_INIT3(&argc,&argv,&env); 328 my_perl = perl_alloc(); 329 perl_construct( my_perl ); 330 331 perl_parse(my_perl, NULL, 3, embedding, NULL); 332 PL_exit_flags |= PERL_EXIT_DESTRUCT_END; 333 perl_run(my_perl); 334 335 /** Treat $a as an integer **/ 336 eval_pv("$a = 3; $a **= 2", TRUE); 337 printf("a = %d\n", SvIV(get_sv("a", 0))); 338 339 /** Treat $a as a float **/ 340 eval_pv("$a = 3.14; $a **= 2", TRUE); 341 printf("a = %f\n", SvNV(get_sv("a", 0))); 342 343 /** Treat $a as a string **/ 344 eval_pv( 345 "$a = 'rekcaH lreP rehtonA tsuJ'; $a = reverse($a);", TRUE); 346 printf("a = %s\n", SvPV_nolen(get_sv("a", 0))); 347 348 perl_destruct(my_perl); 349 perl_free(my_perl); 350 PERL_SYS_TERM(); 351 } 352 353All of those strange functions with I<sv> in their names help convert Perl 354scalars to C types. They're described in L<perlguts> and L<perlapi>. 355 356If you compile and run I<string.c>, you'll see the results of using 357I<SvIV()> to create an C<int>, I<SvNV()> to create a C<float>, and 358I<SvPV()> to create a string: 359 360 a = 9 361 a = 9.859600 362 a = Just Another Perl Hacker 363 364In the example above, we've created a global variable to temporarily 365store the computed value of our eval'ed expression. It is also 366possible and in most cases a better strategy to fetch the return value 367from I<eval_pv()> instead. Example: 368 369 ... 370 SV *val = eval_pv("reverse 'rekcaH lreP rehtonA tsuJ'", TRUE); 371 printf("%s\n", SvPV_nolen(val)); 372 ... 373 374This way, we avoid namespace pollution by not creating global 375variables and we've simplified our code as well. 376 377=head2 Performing Perl pattern matches and substitutions from your C program 378 379The I<eval_sv()> function lets us evaluate strings of Perl code, so we can 380define some functions that use it to "specialize" in matches and 381substitutions: I<match()>, I<substitute()>, and I<matches()>. 382 383 I32 match(SV *string, char *pattern); 384 385Given a string and a pattern (e.g., C<m/clasp/> or C</\b\w*\b/>, which 386in your C program might appear as "/\\b\\w*\\b/"), match() 387returns 1 if the string matches the pattern and 0 otherwise. 388 389 int substitute(SV **string, char *pattern); 390 391Given a pointer to an C<SV> and an C<=~> operation (e.g., 392C<s/bob/robert/g> or C<tr[A-Z][a-z]>), substitute() modifies the string 393within the C<SV> as according to the operation, returning the number of 394substitutions made. 395 396 SSize_t matches(SV *string, char *pattern, AV **matches); 397 398Given an C<SV>, a pattern, and a pointer to an empty C<AV>, 399matches() evaluates C<$string =~ $pattern> in a list context, and 400fills in I<matches> with the array elements, returning the number of matches 401found. 402 403Here's a sample program, I<match.c>, that uses all three (long lines have 404been wrapped here): 405 406 #include <EXTERN.h> 407 #include <perl.h> 408 409 static PerlInterpreter *my_perl; 410 411 /** my_eval_sv(code, error_check) 412 ** kinda like eval_sv(), 413 ** but we pop the return value off the stack 414 **/ 415 SV* my_eval_sv(SV *sv, I32 croak_on_error) 416 { 417 dSP; 418 SV* retval; 419 420 421 PUSHMARK(SP); 422 eval_sv(sv, G_SCALAR); 423 424 SPAGAIN; 425 retval = POPs; 426 PUTBACK; 427 428 if (croak_on_error && SvTRUE(ERRSV)) 429 croak(SvPVx_nolen(ERRSV)); 430 431 return retval; 432 } 433 434 /** match(string, pattern) 435 ** 436 ** Used for matches in a scalar context. 437 ** 438 ** Returns 1 if the match was successful; 0 otherwise. 439 **/ 440 441 I32 match(SV *string, char *pattern) 442 { 443 SV *command = newSV(0), *retval; 444 445 sv_setpvf(command, "my $string = '%s'; $string =~ %s", 446 SvPV_nolen(string), pattern); 447 448 retval = my_eval_sv(command, TRUE); 449 SvREFCNT_dec(command); 450 451 return SvIV(retval); 452 } 453 454 /** substitute(string, pattern) 455 ** 456 ** Used for =~ operations that 457 ** modify their left-hand side (s/// and tr///) 458 ** 459 ** Returns the number of successful matches, and 460 ** modifies the input string if there were any. 461 **/ 462 463 I32 substitute(SV **string, char *pattern) 464 { 465 SV *command = newSV(0), *retval; 466 467 sv_setpvf(command, "$string = '%s'; ($string =~ %s)", 468 SvPV_nolen(*string), pattern); 469 470 retval = my_eval_sv(command, TRUE); 471 SvREFCNT_dec(command); 472 473 *string = get_sv("string", 0); 474 return SvIV(retval); 475 } 476 477 /** matches(string, pattern, matches) 478 ** 479 ** Used for matches in a list context. 480 ** 481 ** Returns the number of matches, 482 ** and fills in **matches with the matching substrings 483 **/ 484 485 SSize_t matches(SV *string, char *pattern, AV **match_list) 486 { 487 SV *command = newSV(0); 488 SSize_t num_matches; 489 490 sv_setpvf(command, "my $string = '%s'; @array = ($string =~ %s)", 491 SvPV_nolen(string), pattern); 492 493 my_eval_sv(command, TRUE); 494 SvREFCNT_dec(command); 495 496 *match_list = get_av("array", 0); 497 num_matches = av_top_index(*match_list) + 1; 498 499 return num_matches; 500 } 501 502 main (int argc, char **argv, char **env) 503 { 504 char *embedding[] = { "", "-e", "0" }; 505 AV *match_list; 506 I32 num_matches, i; 507 SV *text; 508 509 PERL_SYS_INIT3(&argc,&argv,&env); 510 my_perl = perl_alloc(); 511 perl_construct(my_perl); 512 perl_parse(my_perl, NULL, 3, embedding, NULL); 513 PL_exit_flags |= PERL_EXIT_DESTRUCT_END; 514 515 text = newSV(0); 516 sv_setpv(text, "When he is at a convenience store and the " 517 "bill comes to some amount like 76 cents, Maynard is " 518 "aware that there is something he *should* do, something " 519 "that will enable him to get back a quarter, but he has " 520 "no idea *what*. He fumbles through his red squeezey " 521 "changepurse and gives the boy three extra pennies with " 522 "his dollar, hoping that he might luck into the correct " 523 "amount. The boy gives him back two of his own pennies " 524 "and then the big shiny quarter that is his prize. " 525 "-RICHH"); 526 527 if (match(text, "m/quarter/")) /** Does text contain 'quarter'? **/ 528 printf("match: Text contains the word 'quarter'.\n\n"); 529 else 530 printf("match: Text doesn't contain the word 'quarter'.\n\n"); 531 532 if (match(text, "m/eighth/")) /** Does text contain 'eighth'? **/ 533 printf("match: Text contains the word 'eighth'.\n\n"); 534 else 535 printf("match: Text doesn't contain the word 'eighth'.\n\n"); 536 537 /** Match all occurrences of /wi../ **/ 538 num_matches = matches(text, "m/(wi..)/g", &match_list); 539 printf("matches: m/(wi..)/g found %d matches...\n", num_matches); 540 541 for (i = 0; i < num_matches; i++) 542 printf("match: %s\n", 543 SvPV_nolen(*av_fetch(match_list, i, FALSE))); 544 printf("\n"); 545 546 /** Remove all vowels from text **/ 547 num_matches = substitute(&text, "s/[aeiou]//gi"); 548 if (num_matches) { 549 printf("substitute: s/[aeiou]//gi...%lu substitutions made.\n", 550 (unsigned long)num_matches); 551 printf("Now text is: %s\n\n", SvPV_nolen(text)); 552 } 553 554 /** Attempt a substitution **/ 555 if (!substitute(&text, "s/Perl/C/")) { 556 printf("substitute: s/Perl/C...No substitution made.\n\n"); 557 } 558 559 SvREFCNT_dec(text); 560 PL_perl_destruct_level = 1; 561 perl_destruct(my_perl); 562 perl_free(my_perl); 563 PERL_SYS_TERM(); 564 } 565 566which produces the output (again, long lines have been wrapped here) 567 568 match: Text contains the word 'quarter'. 569 570 match: Text doesn't contain the word 'eighth'. 571 572 matches: m/(wi..)/g found 2 matches... 573 match: will 574 match: with 575 576 substitute: s/[aeiou]//gi...139 substitutions made. 577 Now text is: Whn h s t cnvnnc str nd th bll cms t sm mnt lk 76 cnts, 578 Mynrd s wr tht thr s smthng h *shld* d, smthng tht wll nbl hm t gt 579 bck qrtr, bt h hs n d *wht*. H fmbls thrgh hs rd sqzy chngprs nd 580 gvs th by thr xtr pnns wth hs dllr, hpng tht h mght lck nt th crrct 581 mnt. Th by gvs hm bck tw f hs wn pnns nd thn th bg shny qrtr tht s 582 hs prz. -RCHH 583 584 substitute: s/Perl/C...No substitution made. 585 586=head2 Fiddling with the Perl stack from your C program 587 588When trying to explain stacks, most computer science textbooks mumble 589something about spring-loaded columns of cafeteria plates: the last 590thing you pushed on the stack is the first thing you pop off. That'll 591do for our purposes: your C program will push some arguments onto "the Perl 592stack", shut its eyes while some magic happens, and then pop the 593results--the return value of your Perl subroutine--off the stack. 594 595First you'll need to know how to convert between C types and Perl 596types, with newSViv() and sv_setnv() and newAV() and all their 597friends. They're described in L<perlguts> and L<perlapi>. 598 599Then you'll need to know how to manipulate the Perl stack. That's 600described in L<perlcall>. 601 602Once you've understood those, embedding Perl in C is easy. 603 604Because C has no builtin function for integer exponentiation, let's 605make Perl's ** operator available to it (this is less useful than it 606sounds, because Perl implements ** with C's I<pow()> function). First 607I'll create a stub exponentiation function in I<power.pl>: 608 609 sub expo { 610 my ($a, $b) = @_; 611 return $a ** $b; 612 } 613 614Now I'll create a C program, I<power.c>, with a function 615I<PerlPower()> that contains all the perlguts necessary to push the 616two arguments into I<expo()> and to pop the return value out. Take a 617deep breath... 618 619 #include <EXTERN.h> 620 #include <perl.h> 621 622 static PerlInterpreter *my_perl; 623 624 static void 625 PerlPower(int a, int b) 626 { 627 dSP; /* initialize stack pointer */ 628 ENTER; /* everything created after here */ 629 SAVETMPS; /* ...is a temporary variable. */ 630 PUSHMARK(SP); /* remember the stack pointer */ 631 XPUSHs(sv_2mortal(newSViv(a))); /* push the base onto the stack */ 632 XPUSHs(sv_2mortal(newSViv(b))); /* push the exponent onto stack */ 633 PUTBACK; /* make local stack pointer global */ 634 call_pv("expo", G_SCALAR); /* call the function */ 635 SPAGAIN; /* refresh stack pointer */ 636 /* pop the return value from stack */ 637 printf ("%d to the %dth power is %d.\n", a, b, POPi); 638 PUTBACK; 639 FREETMPS; /* free that return value */ 640 LEAVE; /* ...and the XPUSHed "mortal" args.*/ 641 } 642 643 int main (int argc, char **argv, char **env) 644 { 645 char *my_argv[] = { "", "power.pl" }; 646 647 PERL_SYS_INIT3(&argc,&argv,&env); 648 my_perl = perl_alloc(); 649 perl_construct( my_perl ); 650 651 perl_parse(my_perl, NULL, 2, my_argv, (char **)NULL); 652 PL_exit_flags |= PERL_EXIT_DESTRUCT_END; 653 perl_run(my_perl); 654 655 PerlPower(3, 4); /*** Compute 3 ** 4 ***/ 656 657 perl_destruct(my_perl); 658 perl_free(my_perl); 659 PERL_SYS_TERM(); 660 } 661 662 663 664Compile and run: 665 666 % cc -o power power.c `perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e ccopts -e ldopts` 667 668 % power 669 3 to the 4th power is 81. 670 671=head2 Maintaining a persistent interpreter 672 673When developing interactive and/or potentially long-running 674applications, it's a good idea to maintain a persistent interpreter 675rather than allocating and constructing a new interpreter multiple 676times. The major reason is speed: since Perl will only be loaded into 677memory once. 678 679However, you have to be more cautious with namespace and variable 680scoping when using a persistent interpreter. In previous examples 681we've been using global variables in the default package C<main>. We 682knew exactly what code would be run, and assumed we could avoid 683variable collisions and outrageous symbol table growth. 684 685Let's say your application is a server that will occasionally run Perl 686code from some arbitrary file. Your server has no way of knowing what 687code it's going to run. Very dangerous. 688 689If the file is pulled in by C<perl_parse()>, compiled into a newly 690constructed interpreter, and subsequently cleaned out with 691C<perl_destruct()> afterwards, you're shielded from most namespace 692troubles. 693 694One way to avoid namespace collisions in this scenario is to translate 695the filename into a guaranteed-unique package name, and then compile 696the code into that package using L<perlfunc/eval>. In the example 697below, each file will only be compiled once. Or, the application 698might choose to clean out the symbol table associated with the file 699after it's no longer needed. Using L<perlapi/call_argv>, We'll 700call the subroutine C<Embed::Persistent::eval_file> which lives in the 701file C<persistent.pl> and pass the filename and boolean cleanup/cache 702flag as arguments. 703 704Note that the process will continue to grow for each file that it 705uses. In addition, there might be C<AUTOLOAD>ed subroutines and other 706conditions that cause Perl's symbol table to grow. You might want to 707add some logic that keeps track of the process size, or restarts 708itself after a certain number of requests, to ensure that memory 709consumption is minimized. You'll also want to scope your variables 710with L<perlfunc/my> whenever possible. 711 712 713 package Embed::Persistent; 714 #persistent.pl 715 716 use strict; 717 our %Cache; 718 use Symbol qw(delete_package); 719 720 sub valid_package_name { 721 my($string) = @_; 722 $string =~ s/([^A-Za-z0-9\/])/sprintf("_%2x",unpack("C",$1))/eg; 723 # second pass only for words starting with a digit 724 $string =~ s|/(\d)|sprintf("/_%2x",unpack("C",$1))|eg; 725 726 # Dress it up as a real package name 727 $string =~ s|/|::|g; 728 return "Embed" . $string; 729 } 730 731 sub eval_file { 732 my($filename, $delete) = @_; 733 my $package = valid_package_name($filename); 734 my $mtime = -M $filename; 735 if(defined $Cache{$package}{mtime} 736 && 737 $Cache{$package}{mtime} <= $mtime) 738 { 739 # we have compiled this subroutine already, 740 # it has not been updated on disk, nothing left to do 741 print STDERR "already compiled $package->handler\n"; 742 } 743 else { 744 local *FH; 745 open FH, $filename or die "open '$filename' $!"; 746 local($/) = undef; 747 my $sub = <FH>; 748 close FH; 749 750 #wrap the code into a subroutine inside our unique package 751 my $eval = qq{package $package; sub handler { $sub; }}; 752 { 753 # hide our variables within this block 754 my($filename,$mtime,$package,$sub); 755 eval $eval; 756 } 757 die $@ if $@; 758 759 #cache it unless we're cleaning out each time 760 $Cache{$package}{mtime} = $mtime unless $delete; 761 } 762 763 eval {$package->handler;}; 764 die $@ if $@; 765 766 delete_package($package) if $delete; 767 768 #take a look if you want 769 #print Devel::Symdump->rnew($package)->as_string, $/; 770 } 771 772 1; 773 774 __END__ 775 776 /* persistent.c */ 777 #include <EXTERN.h> 778 #include <perl.h> 779 780 /* 1 = clean out filename's symbol table after each request, 781 0 = don't 782 */ 783 #ifndef DO_CLEAN 784 #define DO_CLEAN 0 785 #endif 786 787 #define BUFFER_SIZE 1024 788 789 static PerlInterpreter *my_perl = NULL; 790 791 int 792 main(int argc, char **argv, char **env) 793 { 794 char *embedding[] = { "", "persistent.pl" }; 795 char *args[] = { "", DO_CLEAN, NULL }; 796 char filename[BUFFER_SIZE]; 797 int exitstatus = 0; 798 799 PERL_SYS_INIT3(&argc,&argv,&env); 800 if((my_perl = perl_alloc()) == NULL) { 801 fprintf(stderr, "no memory!"); 802 exit(1); 803 } 804 perl_construct(my_perl); 805 806 PL_origalen = 1; /* don't let $0 assignment update the 807 proctitle or embedding[0] */ 808 exitstatus = perl_parse(my_perl, NULL, 2, embedding, NULL); 809 PL_exit_flags |= PERL_EXIT_DESTRUCT_END; 810 if(!exitstatus) { 811 exitstatus = perl_run(my_perl); 812 813 while(printf("Enter file name: ") && 814 fgets(filename, BUFFER_SIZE, stdin)) { 815 816 filename[strlen(filename)-1] = '\0'; /* strip \n */ 817 /* call the subroutine, 818 passing it the filename as an argument */ 819 args[0] = filename; 820 call_argv("Embed::Persistent::eval_file", 821 G_DISCARD | G_EVAL, args); 822 823 /* check $@ */ 824 if(SvTRUE(ERRSV)) 825 fprintf(stderr, "eval error: %s\n", SvPV_nolen(ERRSV)); 826 } 827 } 828 829 PL_perl_destruct_level = 0; 830 perl_destruct(my_perl); 831 perl_free(my_perl); 832 PERL_SYS_TERM(); 833 exit(exitstatus); 834 } 835 836Now compile: 837 838 % cc -o persistent persistent.c \ 839 `perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e ccopts -e ldopts` 840 841Here's an example script file: 842 843 #test.pl 844 my $string = "hello"; 845 foo($string); 846 847 sub foo { 848 print "foo says: @_\n"; 849 } 850 851Now run: 852 853 % persistent 854 Enter file name: test.pl 855 foo says: hello 856 Enter file name: test.pl 857 already compiled Embed::test_2epl->handler 858 foo says: hello 859 Enter file name: ^C 860 861=head2 Execution of END blocks 862 863Traditionally END blocks have been executed at the end of the perl_run. 864This causes problems for applications that never call perl_run. Since 865perl 5.7.2 you can specify C<PL_exit_flags |= PERL_EXIT_DESTRUCT_END> 866to get the new behaviour. This also enables the running of END blocks if 867the perl_parse fails and C<perl_destruct> will return the exit value. 868 869=head2 $0 assignments 870 871When a perl script assigns a value to $0 then the perl runtime will 872try to make this value show up as the program name reported by "ps" by 873updating the memory pointed to by the argv passed to perl_parse() and 874also calling API functions like setproctitle() where available. This 875behaviour might not be appropriate when embedding perl and can be 876disabled by assigning the value C<1> to the variable C<PL_origalen> 877before perl_parse() is called. 878 879The F<persistent.c> example above is for instance likely to segfault 880when $0 is assigned to if the C<PL_origalen = 1;> assignment is 881removed. This because perl will try to write to the read only memory 882of the C<embedding[]> strings. 883 884=head2 Maintaining multiple interpreter instances 885 886Some rare applications will need to create more than one interpreter 887during a session. Such an application might sporadically decide to 888release any resources associated with the interpreter. 889 890The program must take care to ensure that this takes place I<before> 891the next interpreter is constructed. By default, when perl is not 892built with any special options, the global variable 893C<PL_perl_destruct_level> is set to C<0>, since extra cleaning isn't 894usually needed when a program only ever creates a single interpreter 895in its entire lifetime. 896 897Setting C<PL_perl_destruct_level> to C<1> makes everything squeaky clean: 898 899 while(1) { 900 ... 901 /* reset global variables here with PL_perl_destruct_level = 1 */ 902 PL_perl_destruct_level = 1; 903 perl_construct(my_perl); 904 ... 905 /* clean and reset _everything_ during perl_destruct */ 906 PL_perl_destruct_level = 1; 907 perl_destruct(my_perl); 908 perl_free(my_perl); 909 ... 910 /* let's go do it again! */ 911 } 912 913When I<perl_destruct()> is called, the interpreter's syntax parse tree 914and symbol tables are cleaned up, and global variables are reset. The 915second assignment to C<PL_perl_destruct_level> is needed because 916perl_construct resets it to C<0>. 917 918Now suppose we have more than one interpreter instance running at the 919same time. This is feasible, but only if you used the Configure option 920C<-Dusemultiplicity> or the options C<-Dusethreads -Duseithreads> when 921building perl. By default, enabling one of these Configure options 922sets the per-interpreter global variable C<PL_perl_destruct_level> to 923C<1>, so that thorough cleaning is automatic and interpreter variables 924are initialized correctly. Even if you don't intend to run two or 925more interpreters at the same time, but to run them sequentially, like 926in the above example, it is recommended to build perl with the 927C<-Dusemultiplicity> option otherwise some interpreter variables may 928not be initialized correctly between consecutive runs and your 929application may crash. 930 931See also L<perlxs/Thread-aware system interfaces>. 932 933Using C<-Dusethreads -Duseithreads> rather than C<-Dusemultiplicity> 934is more appropriate if you intend to run multiple interpreters 935concurrently in different threads, because it enables support for 936linking in the thread libraries of your system with the interpreter. 937 938Let's give it a try: 939 940 941 #include <EXTERN.h> 942 #include <perl.h> 943 944 /* we're going to embed two interpreters */ 945 946 #define SAY_HELLO "-e", "print qq(Hi, I'm $^X\n)" 947 948 int main(int argc, char **argv, char **env) 949 { 950 PerlInterpreter *one_perl, *two_perl; 951 char *one_args[] = { "one_perl", SAY_HELLO }; 952 char *two_args[] = { "two_perl", SAY_HELLO }; 953 954 PERL_SYS_INIT3(&argc,&argv,&env); 955 one_perl = perl_alloc(); 956 two_perl = perl_alloc(); 957 958 PERL_SET_CONTEXT(one_perl); 959 perl_construct(one_perl); 960 PERL_SET_CONTEXT(two_perl); 961 perl_construct(two_perl); 962 963 PERL_SET_CONTEXT(one_perl); 964 perl_parse(one_perl, NULL, 3, one_args, (char **)NULL); 965 PERL_SET_CONTEXT(two_perl); 966 perl_parse(two_perl, NULL, 3, two_args, (char **)NULL); 967 968 PERL_SET_CONTEXT(one_perl); 969 perl_run(one_perl); 970 PERL_SET_CONTEXT(two_perl); 971 perl_run(two_perl); 972 973 PERL_SET_CONTEXT(one_perl); 974 perl_destruct(one_perl); 975 PERL_SET_CONTEXT(two_perl); 976 perl_destruct(two_perl); 977 978 PERL_SET_CONTEXT(one_perl); 979 perl_free(one_perl); 980 PERL_SET_CONTEXT(two_perl); 981 perl_free(two_perl); 982 PERL_SYS_TERM(); 983 } 984 985Note the calls to PERL_SET_CONTEXT(). These are necessary to initialize 986the global state that tracks which interpreter is the "current" one on 987the particular process or thread that may be running it. It should 988always be used if you have more than one interpreter and are making 989perl API calls on both interpreters in an interleaved fashion. 990 991PERL_SET_CONTEXT(interp) should also be called whenever C<interp> is 992used by a thread that did not create it (using either perl_alloc(), or 993the more esoteric perl_clone()). 994 995Compile as usual: 996 997 % cc -o multiplicity multiplicity.c \ 998 `perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e ccopts -e ldopts` 999 1000Run it, Run it: 1001 1002 % multiplicity 1003 Hi, I'm one_perl 1004 Hi, I'm two_perl 1005 1006=head2 Using Perl modules, which themselves use C libraries, from your C 1007program 1008 1009If you've played with the examples above and tried to embed a script 1010that I<use()>s a Perl module (such as I<Socket>) which itself uses a C or C++ 1011library, this probably happened: 1012 1013 1014 Can't load module Socket, dynamic loading not available in this perl. 1015 (You may need to build a new perl executable which either supports 1016 dynamic loading or has the Socket module statically linked into it.) 1017 1018 1019What's wrong? 1020 1021Your interpreter doesn't know how to communicate with these extensions 1022on its own. A little glue will help. Up until now you've been 1023calling I<perl_parse()>, handing it NULL for the second argument: 1024 1025 perl_parse(my_perl, NULL, argc, my_argv, NULL); 1026 1027That's where the glue code can be inserted to create the initial contact 1028between Perl and linked C/C++ routines. Let's take a look some pieces of 1029I<perlmain.c> to see how Perl does this: 1030 1031 static void xs_init (pTHX); 1032 1033 EXTERN_C void boot_DynaLoader (pTHX_ CV* cv); 1034 EXTERN_C void boot_Socket (pTHX_ CV* cv); 1035 1036 1037 EXTERN_C void 1038 xs_init(pTHX) 1039 { 1040 char *file = __FILE__; 1041 /* DynaLoader is a special case */ 1042 newXS("DynaLoader::boot_DynaLoader", boot_DynaLoader, file); 1043 newXS("Socket::bootstrap", boot_Socket, file); 1044 } 1045 1046Simply put: for each extension linked with your Perl executable 1047(determined during its initial configuration on your 1048computer or when adding a new extension), 1049a Perl subroutine is created to incorporate the extension's 1050routines. Normally, that subroutine is named 1051I<Module::bootstrap()> and is invoked when you say I<use Module>. In 1052turn, this hooks into an XSUB, I<boot_Module>, which creates a Perl 1053counterpart for each of the extension's XSUBs. Don't worry about this 1054part; leave that to the I<xsubpp> and extension authors. If your 1055extension is dynamically loaded, DynaLoader creates I<Module::bootstrap()> 1056for you on the fly. In fact, if you have a working DynaLoader then there 1057is rarely any need to link in any other extensions statically. 1058 1059 1060Once you have this code, slap it into the second argument of I<perl_parse()>: 1061 1062 1063 perl_parse(my_perl, xs_init, argc, my_argv, NULL); 1064 1065 1066Then compile: 1067 1068 % cc -o interp interp.c `perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e ccopts -e ldopts` 1069 1070 % interp 1071 use Socket; 1072 use SomeDynamicallyLoadedModule; 1073 1074 print "Now I can use extensions!\n"' 1075 1076B<ExtUtils::Embed> can also automate writing the I<xs_init> glue code. 1077 1078 % perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e xsinit -- -o perlxsi.c 1079 % cc -c perlxsi.c `perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e ccopts` 1080 % cc -c interp.c `perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e ccopts` 1081 % cc -o interp perlxsi.o interp.o `perl -MExtUtils::Embed -e ldopts` 1082 1083Consult L<perlxs>, L<perlguts>, and L<perlapi> for more details. 1084 1085=head2 Using embedded Perl with POSIX locales 1086 1087(See L<perllocale> for information about these.) 1088When a Perl interpreter normally starts up, it tells the system it wants 1089to use the system's default locale. This is often, but not necessarily, 1090the "C" or "POSIX" locale. Absent a S<C<"use locale">> within the perl 1091code, this mostly has no effect (but see L<perllocale/Not within the 1092scope of any "use locale" variant>). Also, there is not a problem if the 1093locale you want to use in your embedded Perl is the same as the system 1094default. However, this doesn't work if you have set up and want to use 1095a locale that isn't the system default one. Starting in Perl v5.20, you 1096can tell the embedded Perl interpreter that the locale is already 1097properly set up, and to skip doing its own normal initialization. It 1098skips if the environment variable C<PERL_SKIP_LOCALE_INIT> is set (even 1099if set to 0 or C<"">). A Perl that has this capability will define the 1100C pre-processor symbol C<HAS_SKIP_LOCALE_INIT>. This allows code that 1101has to work with multiple Perl versions to do some sort of work-around 1102when confronted with an earlier Perl. 1103 1104=head1 Hiding Perl_ 1105 1106If you completely hide the short forms of the Perl public API, 1107add -DPERL_NO_SHORT_NAMES to the compilation flags. This means that 1108for example instead of writing 1109 1110 warn("%d bottles of beer on the wall", bottlecount); 1111 1112you will have to write the explicit full form 1113 1114 Perl_warn(aTHX_ "%d bottles of beer on the wall", bottlecount); 1115 1116(See L<perlguts/"Background and PERL_IMPLICIT_CONTEXT"> for the explanation 1117of the C<aTHX_>. ) Hiding the short forms is very useful for avoiding 1118all sorts of nasty (C preprocessor or otherwise) conflicts with other 1119software packages (Perl defines about 2400 APIs with these short names, 1120take or leave few hundred, so there certainly is room for conflict.) 1121 1122=head1 MORAL 1123 1124You can sometimes I<write faster code> in C, but 1125you can always I<write code faster> in Perl. Because you can use 1126each from the other, combine them as you wish. 1127 1128 1129=head1 AUTHOR 1130 1131Jon Orwant <F<orwant@media.mit.edu>> and Doug MacEachern 1132<F<dougm@covalent.net>>, with small contributions from Tim Bunce, Tom 1133Christiansen, Guy Decoux, Hallvard Furuseth, Dov Grobgeld, and Ilya 1134Zakharevich. 1135 1136Doug MacEachern has an article on embedding in Volume 1, Issue 4 of 1137The Perl Journal ( http://www.tpj.com/ ). Doug is also the developer of the 1138most widely-used Perl embedding: the mod_perl system 1139(perl.apache.org), which embeds Perl in the Apache web server. 1140Oracle, Binary Evolution, ActiveState, and Ben Sugars's nsapi_perl 1141have used this model for Oracle, Netscape and Internet Information 1142Server Perl plugins. 1143 1144=head1 COPYRIGHT 1145 1146Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 Doug MacEachern and Jon Orwant. All 1147Rights Reserved. 1148 1149This document may be distributed under the same terms as Perl itself. 1150