diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/gettingstarted/developers/infrastructure.md')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/gettingstarted/developers/infrastructure.md | 128 |
1 files changed, 120 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/docs/gettingstarted/developers/infrastructure.md b/docs/gettingstarted/developers/infrastructure.md index 9dde9829906..95465f0a1e2 100644 --- a/docs/gettingstarted/developers/infrastructure.md +++ b/docs/gettingstarted/developers/infrastructure.md @@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ macro! It's smart about NULL pointers.\] Typically, the user header is not present. User headers allow for other data structures to be built atop vppinfra vectors. Users may specify the alignment for first data element of a vector via the \[vec\]()\*\_aligned -macros. +macros. Vector elements can be any C type e.g. (int, double, struct bar). This is also true for data types built atop vectors (e.g. heap, pool, etc.). @@ -138,8 +138,8 @@ schemes may be used: ```c vec_add1 (result, 0) - or - result = format (result, "<whatever>%c", 0); + or + result = format (result, "<whatever>%c", 0); ``` Remember to vec\_free() the result if appropriate. Be careful not to @@ -161,8 +161,8 @@ format specification. For example: format\_junk() can invoke other user-format functions if desired. The programmer shoulders responsibility for argument type-checking. It is -typical for user format functions to blow up if the va\_arg(va, -type) macros don't match the caller's idea of reality. +typical for user format functions to blow up spectaculary if the +va\_arg(va, type) macros don't match the caller's idea of reality. Unformat -------- @@ -185,20 +185,132 @@ follows: Then loop parsing individual elements: ```c - while (unformat_check_input (&input) != UNFORMAT_END_OF_INPUT) + while (unformat_check_input (&input) != UNFORMAT_END_OF_INPUT) { if (unformat (&input, "value1 %d", &value1)) ;/* unformat sets value1 */ else if (unformat (&input, "value2 %d", &value2) ;/* unformat sets value2 */ else - return clib_error_return (0, "unknown input '%U'", + return clib_error_return (0, "unknown input '%U'", format_unformat_error, input); } ``` As with format, unformat implements a user-unformat function capability -via a "%U" user unformat function scheme. +via a "%U" user unformat function scheme. Generally, one can trivially +transform "format (s, "foo %d", foo) -> "unformat (input, "foo %d", &foo)". + +Unformat implements a couple of handy non-scanf-like format specifiers: + +```c + unformat (input, "enable %=", &enable, 1 /* defaults to 1 */); + unformat (input, "bitzero %|", &mask, (1<<0)); + unformat (input, "bitone %|", &mask, (1<<1)); + <etc> +``` + +The phrase "enable %=" means "set the supplied variable to the default +value" if unformat parses the "enable" keyword all by itself. If +unformat parses "enable 123" set the supplied variable to 123. + +We could clean up a number of hand-rolled "verbose" + "verbose %d" +argument parsing codes using "%=". + +The phrase "bitzero %|" means "set the specified bit in the supplied +bitmask" if unformat parses "bitzero". Although it looks like it could +be fairly handy, it's very lightly used in the code base. + +### How to parse a single input line + +Debug CLI command functions MUST NOT accidentally consume input +belonging to other debug CLI commands. Otherwise, it's impossible to +script a set of debug CLI commands which "work fine" when issued one +at a time. + +This bit of code is NOT correct: + +```c + /* Eats script input NOT beloging to it, and chokes! */ + while (unformat_check_input (input) != UNFORMAT_END_OF_INPUT) + { + if (unformat (input, ...)) + ; + else if (unformat (input, ...)) + ; + else + return clib_error_return (0, "parse error: '%U'", + format_unformat_error, input); + } + } +``` + +When executed as part of a script, such a function will return "parse +error: '<next-command-text>'" every time, unless it happens to be the +last command in the script. + +Instead, use "unformat_line_input" to consume the rest of a line's +worth of input - everything past the path specified in the +VLIB_CLI_COMMAND declaration. + +For example, unformat_line_input with "my_command" set up as shown +below and user input "my path is clear" will produce an +unformat_input_t that contains "is clear". + +```c + VLIB_CLI_COMMAND (...) = { + .path = "my path", + }; +``` + +Here's a bit of code which shows the required mechanics, in full: + +```c + static clib_error_t * + my_command_fn (vlib_main_t * vm, + unformat_input_t * input, + vlib_cli_command_t * cmd) + { + unformat_input_t _line_input, *line_input = &_line_input; + u32 this, that; + clib_error_t *error = 0; + + if (!unformat_user (input, unformat_line_input, line_input)) + return 0; + + /* + * Here, UNFORMAT_END_OF_INPUT is at the end of the line we consumed, + * not at the end of the script... + */ + while (unformat_check_input (line_input) != UNFORMAT_END_OF_INPUT) + { + if (unformat (line_input, "this %u", &this)) + ; + else if (unformat (line_input, "that %u", &that)) + ; + else + { + error = clib_error_return (0, "parse error: '%U'", + format_unformat_error, line_input); + goto done; + } + } + + <do something based on "this" and "that", etc> + + done: + unformat_free (line_input); + return error; + } + /* *INDENT-OFF* */ + VLIB_CLI_COMMAND (my_command, static) = { + .path = "my path", + .function = my_command_fn", + }; + /* *INDENT-ON* */ + +``` + Vppinfra errors and warnings ---------------------------- |