- Documentation
- Reference manual
- Foreign Language Interface
- Overview of the Interface
- Linking Foreign Modules
- Interface Data Types
- The Foreign Include File
- Argument Passing and Control
- Atoms and functors
- Analysing Terms via the Foreign Interface
- Constructing Terms
- Unifying data
- Convenient functions to generate Prolog exceptions
- BLOBS: Using atoms to store arbitrary binary data
- Exchanging GMP numbers
- Calling Prolog from C
- Discarding Data
- Foreign Code and Modules
- Prolog exceptions in foreign code
- Catching Signals (Software Interrupts)
- Miscellaneous
- Errors and warnings
- Environment Control from Foreign Code
- Querying Prolog
- Registering Foreign Predicates
- Foreign Code Hooks
- Storing foreign data
- Embedding SWI-Prolog in other applications
- Linking embedded applications using swipl-ld
- The Prolog `home' directory
- Example of Using the Foreign Interface
- Notes on Using Foreign Code
- Foreign Language Interface
- Packages
- Reference manual
11.4 The Foreign Include File
11.4.1 Argument Passing and Control
If Prolog encounters a foreign predicate at run time it will call a
function specified in the predicate definition of the foreign predicate.
The arguments 1, ... , <arity> pass the
Prolog arguments to the goal as Prolog terms. Foreign functions should
be declared of type
foreign_t
. Deterministic foreign functions have two
alternatives to return control back to Prolog:
- (return) foreign_t PL_succeed()
- Succeed deterministically. PL_succeed is defined as
return
.TRUE
- (return) foreign_t PL_fail()
- Fail and start Prolog backtracking. PL_fail is defined as
return
.FALSE
11.4.1.1 Non-deterministic Foreign Predicates
By default foreign predicates are deterministic. Using the
PL_FA_NONDETERMINISTIC
attribute (see PL_register_foreign())
it is possible to register a predicate as a non-deterministic predicate.
Writing non-deterministic foreign predicates is slightly more
complicated as the foreign function needs context information for
generating the next solution. Note that the same foreign function should
be prepared to be simultaneously active in more than one goal. Suppose
the natural_number_below_n/2 is a non-deterministic foreign predicate,
backtracking over all natural numbers lower than the first argument. Now
consider the following predicate:
quotient_below_n(Q, N) :- natural_number_below_n(N, N1), natural_number_below_n(N, N2), Q =:= N1 / N2, !.
In this predicate the function natural_number_below_n/2 simultaneously generates solutions for both its invocations.
Non-deterministic foreign functions should be prepared to handle three different calls from Prolog:
- Initial call (
PL_FIRST_CALL
)
Prolog has just created a frame for the foreign function and asks it to produce the first answer. - Redo call (
PL_REDO
)
The previous invocation of the foreign function associated with the current goal indicated it was possible to backtrack. The foreign function should produce the next solution. - Terminate call (
PL_PRUNED
)
The choice point left by the foreign function has been destroyed by a cut. The foreign function is given the opportunity to clean the environment.
Both the context information and the type of call is provided by an
argument of type control_t
appended to the argument list
for deterministic foreign functions. The macro PL_foreign_control()
extracts the type of call from the control argument. The foreign
function can pass a context handle using the PL_retry*()
macros and extract the handle from the extra argument using the
PL_foreign_context*()
macro.
- (return) foreign_t PL_retry(intptr_t value)
- The foreign function succeeds while leaving a choice point. On
backtracking over this goal the foreign function will be called again,
but the control argument now indicates it is a `Redo' call and the macro PL_foreign_context()
returns the handle passed via
PL_retry().
This handle is a signed value two bits smaller than a pointer, i.e., 30
or 62 bits (two bits are used for status indication). Defined as
return _PL_retry(n)
. See also PL_succeed(). - (return) foreign_t PL_retry_address(void *)
- As PL_retry(),
but ensures an address as returned by malloc() is correctly recovered by PL_foreign_context_address().
Defined as
return _PL_retry_address(n)
. See also PL_succeed(). - int PL_foreign_control(control_t)
- Extracts the type of call from the control argument. The return values
are described above. Note that the function should be prepared to handle
the
PL_PRUNED
case and should be aware that the other arguments are not valid in this case. - intptr_t PL_foreign_context(control_t)
- Extracts the context from the context argument. If the call type is
PL_FIRST_CALL
the context value is 0L. Otherwise it is the value returned by the last PL_retry() associated with this goal (both if the call type isPL_REDO
orPL_PRUNED
). - void * PL_foreign_context_address(control_t)
- Extracts an address as passed in by PL_retry_address().
- predicate_t PL_foreign_context_predicate(control_t)
-
Fetch the Prolog predicate that is executing this function. Note that if the predicate is imported, the returned predicate refers to the final definition rather than the imported predicate, i.e., the module reported by PL_predicate_info() is the module in which the predicate is defined rather than the module where it was called. See also PL_predicate_info().
Note: If a non-deterministic foreign function returns using PL_succeed()
or PL_fail(),
Prolog assumes the foreign function has cleaned its environment. No
call with control argument PL_PRUNED
will follow.
The code of figure 6 shows a skeleton for a non-deterministic foreign predicate definition.
typedef struct /* define a context structure */ { ... } context; foreign_t my_function(term_t a0, term_t a1, control_t handle) { struct context * ctxt; switch( PL_foreign_control(handle) ) { case PL_FIRST_CALL: ctxt = malloc(sizeof(struct context)); ... PL_retry_address(ctxt); case PL_REDO: ctxt = PL_foreign_context_address(handle); ... PL_retry_address(ctxt); case PL_PRUNED: ctxt = PL_foreign_context_address(handle); ... free(ctxt); PL_succeed; } }
11.4.2 Atoms and functors
The following functions provide for communication using atoms and functors.
- atom_t PL_new_atom(const char *)
- Return an atom handle for the given C-string. This function always
succeeds. The returned handle is valid as long as the atom is referenced
(see section
11.4.2.1). The following atoms are provided as macros, giving access
to the empty list symbol and the name of the list constructor. Prior to
version 7,
ATOM_nil
is the same asPL_new_atom("[]")
andATOM_dot
is the same asPL_new_atom(".")
. This is no long the case in SWI-Prolog version 7.- atom_t ATOM_nil(ATOM_nil)
- tomic constant that represents the empty list. It is adviced to use PL_get_nil(), PL_put_nil() or PL_unify_nil() where applicable.
- atom_t ATOM_dot(ATOM_dot)
- tomic constant that represents the name of the list constructor. The
list constructor itself is created using
PL_new_functor(ATOM_dot,2)
. It is adviced to use PL_get_list(), PL_put_list() or PL_unify_list() where applicable.
- atom_t PL_new_atom_mbchars(int rep, size_t len, const char *s)
- This function generalizes PL_new_atom()
and PL_new_atom_nchars()
while allowing for multiple encodings. The rep argument is
one of
REP_ISO_LATIN_1
,REP_UTF8
orREP_MB
. If len is(size_t)-1
, it is computed from s using strlen(). - const char* PL_atom_chars(atom_t atom)
- Return a C-string for the text represented by the given atom. The
returned text will not be changed by Prolog. It is not allowed to modify
the contents, not even `temporary' as the string may reside in read-only
memory. The returned string becomes invalid if the atom is garbage
collected (see section
11.4.2.1). Foreign functions that require the text from an atom
passed in a
term_t
normally use PL_get_atom_chars() or PL_get_atom_nchars(). - functor_t PL_new_functor(atom_t name, int arity)
- Returns a functor identifier, a handle for the name/arity pair. The returned handle is valid for the entire Prolog session.
- atom_t PL_functor_name(functor_t f)
- Return an atom representing the name of the given functor.
- size_t PL_functor_arity(functor_t f)
- Return the arity of the given functor.
11.4.2.1 Atoms and atom garbage collection
With the introduction of atom garbage collection in version 3.3.0, atoms no longer live as long as the process. Instead, their lifetime is guaranteed only as long as they are referenced. In the single-threaded version, atom garbage collections are only invoked at the call-port. In the multithreaded version (see chapter 9), they appear asynchronously, except for the invoking thread.
For dealing with atom garbage collection, two additional functions are provided:
- void PL_register_atom(atom_t atom)
- Increment the reference count of the atom by one. PL_new_atom() performs this automatically, returning an atom with a reference count of at least one.170Otherwise asynchronous atom garbage collection might destroy the atom before it is used.
- void PL_unregister_atom(atom_t atom)
- Decrement the reference count of the atom. If the reference count drops below zero, an assertion error is raised.
Please note that the following two calls are different with respect to atom garbage collection:
PL_unify_atom_chars(t, "text"); PL_unify_atom(t, PL_new_atom("text"));
The latter increments the reference count of the atom text
,
which effectively ensures the atom will never be collected. It is
advised to use the *_chars() or *_nchars() functions whenever
applicable.
11.4.3 Analysing Terms via the Foreign Interface
Each argument of a foreign function (except for the control argument)
is of type term_t
, an opaque handle to a Prolog term. Three
groups of functions are available for the analysis of terms. The first
just validates the type, like the Prolog predicates var/1, atom/1,
etc., and are called PL_is_*()
. The second group attempts
to translate the argument into a C primitive type. These predicates take
a term_t
and a pointer to the appropriate C type and return TRUE
or
FALSE
depending on successful or unsuccessful translation.
If the translation fails, the pointed-to data is never modified.
11.4.3.1 Testing the type of a term
- int PL_term_type(term_t)
- Obtain the type of a term, which should be a term returned by one of the
other interface predicates or passed as an argument. The function
returns the type of the Prolog term. The type identifiers are listed
below. Note that the extraction functions
PL_get_*()
also validate the type and thus the two sections below are equivalent.if ( PL_is_atom(t) ) { char *s; PL_get_atom_chars(t, &s); ...; } or char *s; if ( PL_get_atom_chars(t, &s) ) { ...; }
Version 7 added
PL_NIL
,PL_BLOB
,PL_LIST_PAIR
andPL_DICT
. Older versions classifyPL_NIL
andPL_BLOB
asPL_ATOM
,PL_LIST_PAIR
asPL_TERM
and do not have dicts.PL_VARIABLE
A variable or attributed variable PL_ATOM
A Prolog atom PL_NIL
The constant []
PL_BLOB
A blob (see section 11.4.7.2) PL_STRING
A string (see section 5.2) PL_INTEGER
A integer PL_FLOAT
A floating point number PL_TERM
A compound term PL_LIST_PAIR
A list cell ( [H|T]
)PL_DICT
A dict (see section 5.4))
The functions PL_is_<type> are an alternative to PL_term_type().
The test PL_is_variable(term)
is equivalent to
PL_term_type(term)
== PL_VARIABLE
, but the first is considerably faster. On the
other hand, using a switch over PL_term_type()
is faster and more readable then using an if-then-else using the
functions below. All these functions return either TRUE
or FALSE
.
- int PL_is_variable(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is a variable.
- int PL_is_ground(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is a ground term. See also ground/1. This function is cycle-safe.
- int PL_is_atom(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is an atom.
- int PL_is_string(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is a string.
- int PL_is_integer(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is an integer.
- int PL_is_float(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is a float.
- int PL_is_callable(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is a callable term. See callable/1 for details.
- int PL_is_compound(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is a compound term.
- int PL_is_functor(term_t, functor_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is compound and its functor is functor. This test is equivalent to PL_get_functor(), followed by testing the functor, but easier to write and faster.
- int PL_is_list(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is a compound term using the list constructor or the list terminator. See also PL_is_pair() and PL_skip_list().
- int PL_is_pair(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is a compound term using the list constructor. See also PL_is_list() and PL_skip_list().
- int PL_is_atomic(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is atomic (not variable or compound).
- int PL_is_number(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is an integer or float.
- int PL_is_acyclic(term_t)
- Returns non-zero if term is acyclic (i.e. a finite tree).
11.4.3.2 Reading data from a term
The functions PL_get_*()
read information from a Prolog
term. Most of them take two arguments. The first is the input term and
the second is a pointer to the output value or a term reference.
- int PL_get_atom(term_t +t, atom_t *a)
- If t is an atom, store the unique atom identifier over a. See also PL_atom_chars() and PL_new_atom(). If there is no need to access the data (characters) of an atom, it is advised to manipulate atoms using their handle. As the atom is referenced by t, it will live at least as long as t does. If longer live-time is required, the atom should be locked using PL_register_atom().
- int PL_get_atom_chars(term_t +t, char **s)
- If t is an atom, store a pointer to a 0-terminated C-string in s. It is explicitly not allowed to modify the contents of this string. Some built-in atoms may have the string allocated in read-only memory, so `temporary manipulation' can cause an error.
- int PL_get_string_chars(term_t +t, char **s, size_t *len)
- If t is a string object, store a pointer to a 0-terminated C-string in s and the length of the string in len. Note that this pointer is invalidated by backtracking, garbage collection and stack-shifts, so generally the only save operations are to pass it immediately to a C function that doesn't involve Prolog.
- int PL_get_chars(term_t +t, char **s, unsigned flags)
- Convert the argument term t to a 0-terminated C-string. flags
is a bitwise disjunction from two groups of constants. The first
specifies which term types should be converted and the second how the
argument is stored. Below is a specification of these constants.
BUF_RING
implies, if the data is not static (as from an atom), that the data is copied to the next buffer from a ring of 16 buffers. This is a convenient way of converting multiple arguments passed to a foreign predicate to C-strings. If BUF_MALLOC is used, the data must be freed using PL_free() when no longer needed.With the introduction of wide characters (see section 2.19.1), not all atoms can be converted into a
char*
. This function fails if t is of the wrong type, but also if the text cannot be represented. See theREP_*
flags below for details.- CVT_ATOM
- Convert if term is an atom.
- CVT_STRING
- Convert if term is a string.
- CVT_LIST
- Convert if term is a list of of character codes.
- CVT_INTEGER
- Convert if term is an integer.
- CVT_FLOAT
- Convert if term is a float. The characters returned are the same as write/1 would write for the floating point number.
- CVT_NUMBER
- Convert if term is an integer or float.
- CVT_ATOMIC
- Convert if term is atomic.
- CVT_VARIABLE
- Convert variable to print-name
- CVT_WRITE
- Convert any term that is not converted by any of the other flags using
write/1.
If no
BUF_*
is provided,BUF_RING
is implied. - CVT_WRITE_CANONICAL
- As
CVT_WRITE
, but using write_canonical/2. - CVT_WRITEQ
- As
CVT_WRITE
, but using writeq/2. - CVT_ALL
- Convert if term is any of the above, except for
CVT_VARIABLE
andCVT_WRITE*
. - CVT_EXCEPTION
- If conversion fails due to a type error, raise a Prolog type error exception in addition to failure
- BUF_DISCARDABLE
- Data must copied immediately
- BUF_RING
- Data is stored in a ring of buffers
- BUF_MALLOC
- Data is copied to a new buffer returned by PL_malloc(3). When no longer needed the user must call PL_free() on the data.
- REP_ISO_LATIN_1
- Text is in ISO Latin-1 encoding and the call fails if text cannot be represented. This flag has the value 0 and is thus the default.
- REP_UTF8
- Convert the text to a UTF-8 string. This works for all text.
- REP_MB
- Convert to default locale-defined 8-bit string. Success depends on the locale. Conversion is done using the wcrtomb() C library function.
- int PL_get_list_chars(+term_t l, char **s, unsigned flags)
- Same as
PL_get_chars(l, s, CVT_LIST|flags)
, provided flags contains none of theCVT_*
flags. - int PL_get_integer(+term_t t, int *i)
- If t is a Prolog integer, assign its value over i. On 32-bit machines, this is the same as PL_get_long(), but avoids a warning from the compiler. See also PL_get_long().
- int PL_get_long(term_t +t, long *i)
- If t is a Prolog integer that can be represented as a long,
assign its value over i. If t is an integer that
cannot be represented by a C long, this function returns
FALSE
. If t is a floating point number that can be represented as a long, this function succeeds as well. See also PL_get_int64(). - int PL_get_int64(term_t +t, int64_t *i)
- If t is a Prolog integer or float that can be represented as
a
int64_t
, assign its value over i. - int PL_get_intptr(term_t +t, intptr_t *i)
- Get an integer that is at least as wide as a pointer. On most platforms this is the same as PL_get_long(), but on Win64 pointers are 8 bytes and longs only 4. Unlike PL_get_pointer(), the value is not modified.
- int PL_get_bool(term_t +t, int *val)
- If t has the value
true
orfalse
, set val to the C constantTRUE
orFALSE
and return success, otherwise return failure. - int PL_get_pointer(term_t +t, void **ptr)
- In the current system, pointers are represented by Prolog integers, but need some manipulation to make sure they do not get truncated due to the limited Prolog integer range. PL_put_pointer() and PL_get_pointer() guarantee pointers in the range of malloc() are handled without truncating.
- int PL_get_float(term_t +t, double *f)
- If t is a float or integer, its value is assigned over f.
- int PL_get_functor(term_t +t, functor_t *f)
- If t is compound or an atom, the Prolog representation of the name-arity pair will be assigned over f. See also PL_get_name_arity() and PL_is_functor().
- int PL_get_name_arity(term_t +t, atom_t *name, size_t *arity)
- If t is compound or an atom, the functor name will be assigned over name and the arity over arity. See also PL_get_functor() and PL_is_functor(). See section 11.3.2.1.
- int PL_get_compound_name_arity(term_t +t, atom_t *name, size_t *arity)
- If t is compound term, the functor name will be assigned over name and the arity over arity. This is the same as PL_get_name_arity(), but this function fails if t is an atom.
- int PL_get_module(term_t +t, module_t *module)
- If t is an atom, the system will look up or create the corresponding module and assign an opaque pointer to it over module.
- int PL_get_arg(size_t index, term_t +t, term_t -a)
- If t is compound and index is between 1 and arity (inclusive), assign a with a term reference to the argument.
- int _PL_get_arg(size_t index, term_t +t, term_t -a)
- Same as PL_get_arg(), but no checking is performed, neither whether t is actually a term nor whether index is a valid argument index.
11.4.3.3 Exchanging text using length and string
All internal text representation in SWI-Prolog is represented using
char *
plus length and allow for 0-bytes in them.
The foreign library supports this by implementing a *_nchars() function
for each applicable *_chars() function. Below we briefly present the
signatures of these functions. For full documentation consult the
*_chars() function.
- int PL_get_atom_nchars(term_t t, size_t *len, char **s)
- See PL_get_atom_chars().
- int PL_get_list_nchars(term_t t, size_t *len, char **s)
- See PL_get_list_chars().
- int PL_get_nchars(term_t t, size_t *len, char **s, unsigned int flags)
- See PL_get_chars().
- int PL_put_atom_nchars(term_t t, size_t len, const char *s)
- See PL_put_atom_chars().
- int PL_put_string_nchars(term_t t, size_t len, const char *s)
- See PL_put_string_chars().
- int PL_put_list_ncodes(term_t t, size_t len, const char *s)
- See PL_put_list_codes().
- int PL_put_list_nchars(term_t t, size_t len, const char *s)
- See PL_put_list_chars().
- int PL_unify_atom_nchars(term_t t, size_t len, const char *s)
- See PL_unify_atom_chars().
- int PL_unify_string_nchars(term_t t, size_t len, const char *s)
- See PL_unify_string_chars().
- int PL_unify_list_ncodes(term_t t, size_t len, const char *s)
- See PL_unify_codes().
- int PL_unify_list_nchars(term_t t, size_t len, const char *s)
- See PL_unify_list_chars().
In addition, the following functions are available for creating and inspecting atoms:
- atom_t PL_new_atom_nchars(size_t len, const char *s)
- Create a new atom as PL_new_atom(),
but using the given length and characters. If len is
(size_t)-1
, it is computed from s using strlen(). - const char * PL_atom_nchars(atom_t a, size_t *len)
- Extract the text and length of an atom.
11.4.3.4 Wide-character versions
Support for exchange of wide-character strings is still under
consideration. The functions dealing with 8-bit character strings return
failure when operating on a wide-character atom or Prolog string object.
The functions below can extract and unify both 8-bit and wide atoms and
string objects. Wide character strings are represented as C arrays of
objects of the type pl_wchar_t
, which is guaranteed to be
the same as wchar_t
on platforms supporting this type. For
example, on MS-Windows, this represents 16-bit UCS2 characters, while
using the GNU C library (glibc) this represents 32-bit UCS4 characters.
- atom_t PL_new_atom_wchars(size_t len, const pl_wchar_t *s)
- Create atom from wide-character string as PL_new_atom_nchars()
does for ISO-Latin-1 strings. If s only contains ISO-Latin-1
characters a normal byte-array atom is created. If len is
(size_t)-1
, it is computed from s using wcslen(). - pl_wchar_t* PL_atom_wchars(atom_t atom, int *len)
- Extract characters from a wide-character atom. Succeeds on any atom marked as `text'. If the underlying atom is a wide-character atom, the returned pointer is a pointer into the atom structure. If it is an ISO-Latin-1 character, the returned pointer comes from Prolog's `buffer ring' (see PL_get_chars()).
- int PL_get_wchars(term_t t, size_t *len, pl_wchar_t **s, unsigned flags)
- Wide-character version of PL_get_chars(). The flags argument is the same as for PL_get_chars().
- int PL_unify_wchars(term_t t, int type, size_t len, const pl_wchar_t *s)
- Unify t with a textual representation of the C wide-character
array s. The type argument defines the Prolog
representation and is one of
PL_ATOM
,PL_STRING
,PL_CODE_LIST
orPL_CHAR_LIST
. - int PL_unify_wchars_diff(term_t +t, term_t -tail, int type, size_t len, const pl_wchar_t *s)
- Difference list version of PL_unify_wchars(),
only supporting the types
PL_CODE_LIST
andPL_CHAR_LIST
. It serves two purposes. It allows for returning very long lists from data read from a stream without the need for a resizing buffer in C. Also, the use of difference lists is often practical for further processing in Prolog. Examples can be found inpackages/clib/readutil.c
from the source distribution.
11.4.3.5 Reading a list
The functions from this section are intended to read a Prolog list from C. Suppose we expect a list of atoms; the following code will print the atoms, each on a line:
foreign_t pl_write_atoms(term_t l) { term_t head = PL_new_term_ref(); /* the elements */ term_t list = PL_copy_term_ref(l); /* copy (we modify list) */ while( PL_get_list(list, head, list) ) { char *s; if ( PL_get_atom_chars(head, &s) ) Sprintf("%s\n", s); else PL_fail; } return PL_get_nil(list); /* test end for [] */ }
Note that as of version 7, lists have a new representation unless the option --traditional is used. see section 5.1.
- int PL_get_list(term_t +l, term_t -h, term_t -t)
- If l is a list and not the empty list, assign a term reference to the head to h and to the tail to t.
- int PL_get_head(term_t +l, term_t -h)
- If l is a list and not the empty list, assign a term reference to the head to h.
- int PL_get_tail(term_t +l, term_t -t)
- If l is a list and not the empty list, assign a term reference to the tail to t.
- int PL_get_nil(term_t +l)
- Succeeds if l represents the list termination constant.
- int PL_skip_list(term_t +list, term_t -tail, size_t *len)
- This is a multi-purpose function to deal with lists. It allows for
finding the length of a list, checking whether something is a list, etc.
The reference tail is set to point to the end of the list,
len is filled with the number of list-cells skipped, and the
return value indicates the status of the list:
- PL_LIST
- The list is a `proper' list: one that ends in the list terminator constant and tail is filled with the terminator constant.
- PL_PARTIAL_LIST
- The list is a `partial' list: one that ends in a variable and tail is a reference to this variable.
- PL_CYCLIC_TERM
- The list is cyclic (e.g. X = [a|X]). tail points to an arbitrary cell of the list and len is at most twice the cycle length of the list.
- PL_NOT_A_LIST
- The term list is not a list at all. tail is bound to the non-list term and len is set to the number of list-cells skipped.
It is allowed to pass 0 for tail and
NULL
for len.
11.4.3.6 An example: defining write/1 in C
Figure 7 shows a simplified definition of write/1 to illustrate the described functions. This simplified version does not deal with operators. It is called display/1, because it mimics closely the behaviour of this Edinburgh predicate.
foreign_t pl_display(term_t t) { functor_t functor; int arity, len, n; char *s; switch( PL_term_type(t) ) { case PL_VARIABLE: case PL_ATOM: case PL_INTEGER: case PL_FLOAT: PL_get_chars(t, &s, CVT_ALL); Sprintf("%s", s); break; case PL_STRING: PL_get_string_chars(t, &s, &len); Sprintf("\"%s\"", s); break; case PL_TERM: { term_t a = PL_new_term_ref(); PL_get_name_arity(t, &name, &arity); Sprintf("%s(", PL_atom_chars(name)); for(n=1; n<=arity; n++) { PL_get_arg(n, t, a); if ( n > 1 ) Sprintf(", "); pl_display(a); } Sprintf(")"); break; default: PL_fail; /* should not happen */ } } PL_succeed; }
11.4.4 Constructing Terms
Terms can be constructed using functions from the PL_put_*()
and
PL_cons_*()
families. This approach builds the term
`inside-out', starting at the leaves and subsequently creating compound
terms. Alternatively, terms may be created `top-down', first creating a
compound holding only variables and subsequently unifying the arguments.
This section discusses functions for the first approach. This approach
is generally used for creating arguments for PL_call()
and
PL_open_query().
- void PL_put_variable(term_t -t)
- Put a fresh variable in the term, resetting the term reference to its initial state.171Older versions created a variable on the global stack.
- void PL_put_atom(term_t -t, atom_t a)
- Put an atom in the term reference from a handle. See also PL_new_atom() and PL_atom_chars().
- void PL_put_bool(term_t -t, int val)
- Put one of the atoms
true
orfalse
in the term reference See also PL_put_atom(), PL_unify_bool() and PL_get_bool(). - int PL_put_chars(term_t -t, int flags, size_t len, const char *chars)
- New function to deal with setting a term from a
char*
with various encodings. The flags argument is a bitwise or specifying the Prolog target type and the encoding of chars. A Prolog type is one ofPL_ATOM
,PL_STRING
,PL_CODE_LIST
orPL_CHAR_LIST
. A representation is one ofREP_ISO_LATIN_1
,REP_UTF8
orREP_MB
. See PL_get_chars() for a definition of the representation types. If len is-1
chars must be zero-terminated and the length is computed from chars using strlen(). - int PL_put_atom_chars(term_t -t, const char *chars)
- Put an atom in the term reference constructed from the zero-terminated string. The string itself will never be referenced by Prolog after this function.
- int PL_put_string_chars(term_t -t, const char *chars)
- Put a zero-terminated string in the term reference. The data will be copied. See also PL_put_string_nchars().
- int PL_put_string_nchars(term_t -t, size_t len, const char *chars)
-
Put a string, represented by a length/start pointer pair in the term reference. The data will be copied. This interface can deal with 0-bytes in the string. See also section 11.4.20.
- int PL_put_list_chars(term_t -t, const char *chars)
- Put a list of ASCII values in the term reference.
- int PL_put_integer(term_t -t, long i)
- Put a Prolog integer in the term reference.
- int PL_put_int64(term_t -t, int64_t i)
- Put a Prolog integer in the term reference.
- int PL_put_pointer(term_t -t, void *ptr)
- Put a Prolog integer in the term reference. Provided ptr is in the `malloc()-area', PL_get_pointer() will get the pointer back.
- int PL_put_float(term_t -t, double f)
- Put a floating-point value in the term reference.
- int PL_put_functor(term_t -t, functor_t functor)
- Create a new compound term from functor and bind t
to this term. All arguments of the term will be variables. To create a
term with instantiated arguments, either instantiate the arguments using
the
PL_unify_*()
functions or use PL_cons_functor(). - int PL_put_list(term_t -l)
- As PL_put_functor(),
using the list-cell functor. Note that on classical Prolog systems or in
SWI-Prolog using the option
--traditional, this is
, while on SWI-Prolog version 7 this is.
/2
.[|]
/2 - int PL_put_nil(term_t -l)
- Put the list terminator constant in l. Always returns
TRUE
. Note that in classical Prolog systems or in SWI-Prolog using the option --traditional, this is the same asPL_put_atom_chars("[]")
. See section 5.1. - void PL_put_term(term_t -t1, term_t +t2)
- Make t1 point to the same term as t2.
- int PL_cons_functor(term_t -h, functor_t f, ...)
- Create a term whose arguments are filled from a variable argument list
holding the same number of
term_t
objects as the arity of the functor. To create the termanimal(gnu, 50)
, use:{ term_t a1 = PL_new_term_ref(); term_t a2 = PL_new_term_ref(); term_t t = PL_new_term_ref(); functor_t animal2; /* animal2 is a constant that may be bound to a global variable and re-used */ animal2 = PL_new_functor(PL_new_atom("animal"), 2); PL_put_atom_chars(a1, "gnu"); PL_put_integer(a2, 50); PL_cons_functor(t, animal2, a1, a2); }
After this sequence, the term references a1 and a2 may be used for other purposes.
- int PL_cons_functor_v(term_t -h, functor_t f, term_t a0)
- Create a compound term like PL_cons_functor(), but a0 is an array of term references as returned by PL_new_term_refs(). The length of this array should match the number of arguments required by the functor.
- int PL_cons_list(term_t -l, term_t +h, term_t +t)
- Create a list (cons-) cell in l from the head h
and tail t. The code below creates a list of atoms from a
char **
. The list is built tail-to-head. ThePL_unify_*()
functions can be used to build a list head-to-tail.void put_list(term_t l, int n, char **words) { term_t a = PL_new_term_ref(); PL_put_nil(l); while( --n >= 0 ) { PL_put_atom_chars(a, words[n]); PL_cons_list(l, a, l); } }
Note that l can be redefined within a
PL_cons_list
call as shown here because operationally its old value is consumed before its new value is set.
11.4.5 Unifying data
The functions of this section unify terms with other terms
or translated C data structures. Except for PL_unify(),
these functions are specific to SWI-Prolog. They have been introduced
because they shorten the code for returning data to Prolog and at the
same time make this more efficient by avoiding the need to allocate
temporary term references and reduce the number of calls to the Prolog
API. Consider the case where we want a foreign function to return the
host name of the machine Prolog is running on. Using the PL_get_*()
and PL_put_*()
functions, the code becomes:
foreign_t pl_hostname(term_t name) { char buf[100]; if ( gethostname(buf, sizeof(buf)) ) { term_t tmp = PL_new_term_ref(); PL_put_atom_chars(tmp, buf); return PL_unify(name, tmp); } PL_fail; }
Using PL_unify_atom_chars(), this becomes:
foreign_t pl_hostname(term_t name) { char buf[100]; if ( gethostname(buf, sizeof(buf)) ) return PL_unify_atom_chars(name, buf); PL_fail; }
Note that unification functions that perform multiple bindings may leave part of the bindings in case of failure. See PL_unify() for details.
- int PL_unify(term_t ?t1, term_t ?t2)
- Unify two Prolog terms and return
TRUE
on success.Care is needed if PL_unify() returns
FAIL
and the foreign function does not immediately return to Prolog withFAIL
. Unification may perform multiple changes to either t1 or t2. A failing unification may have created bindings before failure is detected. Already created bindings are not undone. For example, calling PL_unify() ona(X, a)
anda(c,b)
binds X toc
and fails when trying to unifya
tob
. If control remains in C or even if we want to return success to Prolog, we must undo such bindings. This is achieved using PL_open_foreign_frame() and PL_rewind_foreign_frame(), as shown in the snippet below.{ fid_t fid = PL_open_foreign_frame(); ... if ( !PL_unify(t1, t2) ) PL_rewind_foreign_frame(fid); ... PL_close_foreign_frame(fid); }
In addition, PL_unify() may have failed on an exception, typically a resource (stack) overflow. This can be tested using PL_exception(), passing 0 (zero) for the query-id argument. Foreign functions that encounter an exception must return
FAIL
to Prolog as soon as possible or call PL_clear_exception() if they wish to ignore the exception. - int PL_unify_atom(term_t ?t, atom_t a)
- Unify t with the atom a and return non-zero on success.
- int PL_unify_bool(term_t ?t, int a)
- Unify t with either
true
orfalse
. - int PL_unify_chars(term_t ?t, int flags, size_t len, const char *chars)
- New function to deal with unification of
char*
with various encodings to a Prolog representation. The flags argument is a bitwise or specifying the Prolog target type and the encoding of chars. A Prolog type is one ofPL_ATOM
,PL_STRING
,PL_CODE_LIST
orPL_CHAR_LIST
. A representation is one ofREP_ISO_LATIN_1
,REP_UTF8
orREP_MB
. See PL_get_chars() for a definition of the representation types. If len is-1
chars must be zero-terminated and the length is computed from chars using strlen().If flags includes
PL_DIFF_LIST
and type is one ofPL_CODE_LIST
orPL_CHAR_LIST
, the text is converted to a difference list. The tail of the difference list is t+1. - int PL_unify_atom_chars(term_t ?t, const char *chars)
- Unify t with an atom created from chars and return non-zero on success.
- int PL_unify_list_chars(term_t ?t, const char *chars)
- Unify t with a list of ASCII characters constructed from chars.
- void PL_unify_string_chars(term_t ?t, const char *chars)
- Unify t with a Prolog string object created from the zero-terminated string chars. The data will be copied. See also PL_unify_string_nchars().
- int PL_unify_integer(term_t ?t, intptr_t n)
- Unify t with a Prolog integer from n.
- int PL_unify_int64(term_t ?t, int64_t n)
- Unify t with a Prolog integer from n.
- int PL_unify_uint64(term_t ?t, uint64_t n)
- Unify t with a Prolog integer from n. Note that
unbounded integer support is required if n does not fit in a signed
int64_t
. If unbounded integers are not supported arepresentation_error
is raised. - int PL_unify_float(term_t ?t, double f)
- Unify t with a Prolog float from f.
- int PL_unify_pointer(term_t ?t, void *ptr)
- Unify t with a Prolog integer describing the pointer. See also PL_put_pointer() and PL_get_pointer().
- int PL_unify_functor(term_t ?t, functor_t f)
- If t is a compound term with the given functor, just succeed. If it is unbound, create a term and bind the variable, else fail. Note that this function does not create a term if the argument is already instantiated. If f is a functor with arity 0, t is unified with an atom. See also PL_unify_compound().
- int PL_unify_compound(term_t ?t, functor_t f)
- If t is a compound term with the given functor, just succeed. If it is unbound, create a term and bind the variable, else fail. Note that this function does not create a term if the argument is already instantiated. If f is a functor with arity 0, t is unified with compound without arguments. See also PL_unify_functor().
- int PL_unify_list(term_t ?l, term_t -h, term_t -t)
- Unify l with a list-cell (
./2
). If successful, write a reference to the head of the list into h and a reference to the tail of the list into t. This reference may be used for subsequent calls to this function. Suppose we want to return a list of atoms from achar **
. We could use the example described by PL_put_list(), followed by a call to PL_unify(), or we can use the code below. If the predicate argument is unbound, the difference is minimal (the code based on PL_put_list() is probably slightly faster). If the argument is bound, the code below may fail before reaching the end of the word list, but even if the unification succeeds, this code avoids a duplicate (garbage) list and a deep unification.foreign_t pl_get_environ(term_t env) { term_t l = PL_copy_term_ref(env); term_t a = PL_new_term_ref(); extern char **environ; char **e; for(e = environ; *e; e++) { if ( !PL_unify_list(l, a, l) || !PL_unify_atom_chars(a, *e) ) PL_fail; } return PL_unify_nil(l); }
- int PL_unify_nil(term_t ?l)
- Unify l with the atom
[]
. - int PL_unify_arg(int index, term_t ?t, term_t ?a)
- Unifies the index-th argument (1-based) of t with a.
- int PL_unify_term(term_t ?t, ...)
- Unify t with a (normally) compound term. The remaining
arguments are a sequence of a type identifier followed by the required
arguments. This predicate is an extension to the Quintus and SICStus
foreign interface from which the SWI-Prolog foreign interface has been
derived, but has proved to be a powerful and comfortable way to create
compound terms from C. Due to the vararg packing/unpacking and the
required type-switching this interface is slightly slower than using the
primitives. Please note that some bad C compilers have fairly low limits
on the number of arguments that may be passed to a function.
Special attention is required when passing numbers. C `promotes' any integral smaller than
int
toint
. That is, the typeschar
,short
andint
are all passed asint
. In addition, on most 32-bit platformsint
andlong
are the same. Up to version 4.0.5, onlyPL_INTEGER
could be specified, which was taken from the stack aslong
. Such code fails when passing small integral types on machines whereint
is smaller thanlong
. It is advised to usePL_SHORT
,PL_INT
orPL_LONG
as appropriate. Similarly, C compilers promotefloat
todouble
and thereforePL_FLOAT
andPL_DOUBLE
are synonyms.The type identifiers are:
PL_VARIABLE
none- No op. Used in arguments of
PL_FUNCTOR
. PL_BOOL
int- Unify the argument with
true
orfalse
. PL_ATOM
atom_t- Unify the argument with an atom, as in PL_unify_atom().
PL_CHARS
const char *- Unify the argument with an atom constructed from the C
char *
, as in PL_unify_atom_chars(). PL_NCHARS
size_t, const char *- Unify the argument with an atom constructed from length and
char*
as in PL_unify_atom_nchars(). PL_UTF8_CHARS
const char *- Create an atom from a UTF-8 string.
PL_UTF8_STRING
const char *- Create a packed string object from a UTF-8 string.
PL_MBCHARS
const char *- Create an atom from a multi-byte string in the current locale.
PL_MBCODES
const char *- Create a list of character codes from a multi-byte string in the current locale.
PL_MBSTRING
const char *- Create a packed string object from a multi-byte string in the current locale.
PL_NWCHARS
size_t, const wchar_t *- Create an atom from a length and a wide character pointer.
PL_NWCODES
size_t, const wchar_t *- Create a list of character codes from a length and a wide character pointer.
PL_NWSTRING
size_t, const wchar_t *- Create a packed string object from a length and a wide character pointer.
PL_SHORT
short- Unify the argument with an integer, as in PL_unify_integer().
As
short
is promoted toint
,PL_SHORT
is a synonym forPL_INT
. PL_INTEGER
long- Unify the argument with an integer, as in PL_unify_integer().
PL_INT
int- Unify the argument with an integer, as in PL_unify_integer().
PL_LONG
long- Unify the argument with an integer, as in PL_unify_integer().
PL_INT64
int64_t- Unify the argument with a 64-bit integer, as in PL_unify_int64().
PL_INTPTR
intptr_t- Unify the argument with an integer with the same width as a pointer. On
most machines this is the same as
PL_LONG
. but on 64-bit MS-Windows pointers are 64 bits while longs are only 32 bits. PL_DOUBLE
double- Unify the argument with a float, as in PL_unify_float(). Note that, as the argument is passed using the C vararg conventions, a float must be casted to a double explicitly.
PL_FLOAT
double- Unify the argument with a float, as in PL_unify_float().
PL_POINTER
void *- Unify the argument with a pointer, as in PL_unify_pointer().
PL_STRING
const char *- Unify the argument with a string object, as in PL_unify_string_chars().
PL_TERM
term_t- Unify a subterm. Note this may be the return value of a PL_new_term_ref() call to get access to a variable.
PL_FUNCTOR
functor_t, ...- Unify the argument with a compound term. This specification should be followed by exactly as many specifications as the number of arguments of the compound term.
PL_FUNCTOR_CHARS
const char *name, int arity, ...- Create a functor from the given name and arity and then behave as
PL_FUNCTOR
. PL_LIST
int length, ...- Create a list of the indicated length. The remaining arguments contain the elements of the list.
For example, to unify an argument with the term
language(dutch)
, the following skeleton may be used:static functor_t FUNCTOR_language1; static void init_constants() { FUNCTOR_language1 = PL_new_functor(PL_new_atom("language"),1); } foreign_t pl_get_lang(term_t r) { return PL_unify_term(r, PL_FUNCTOR, FUNCTOR_language1, PL_CHARS, "dutch"); } install_t install() { PL_register_foreign("get_lang", 1, pl_get_lang, 0); init_constants(); }
- int PL_chars_to_term(const char *chars, term_t -t)
- Parse the string chars and put the resulting Prolog term into
t. chars may or may not be closed using a Prolog
full-stop (i.e., a dot followed by a blank). Returns
FALSE
if a syntax error was encountered andTRUE
after successful completion. In addition to returningFALSE
, the exception-term is returned in t on a syntax error. See also term_to_atom/2.The following example builds a goal term from a string and calls it.
int call_chars(const char *goal) { fid_t fid = PL_open_foreign_frame(); term_t g = PL_new_term_ref(); BOOL rval; if ( PL_chars_to_term(goal, g) ) rval = PL_call(goal, NULL); else rval = FALSE; PL_discard_foreign_frame(fid); return rval; } ... call_chars("consult(load)"); ...
- int PL_wchars_to_term(const pl_wchar_t *chars, term_t -t)
- Wide character version of PL_chars_to_term().
- char * PL_quote(int chr, const char *string)
- Return a quoted version of string. If chr is
'\''
, the result is a quoted atom. If chr is'"'
, the result is a string. The result string is stored in the same ring of buffers as described with theBUF_RING
argument of PL_get_chars();In the current implementation, the string is surrounded by chr and any occurrence of chr is doubled. In the future the behaviour will depend on the character_escapes Prolog flag.
11.4.6 Convenient functions to generate Prolog exceptions
The typical implementation of a foreign predicate first uses the PL_get_*() functions to extract C data types from the Prolog terms. Failure of any of these functions is normally because the Prolog term is of the wrong type. The *_ex() family of functions are wrappers around (mostly) the PL_get_*() functions, such that we can write code in the style below and get proper exceptions if an argument is uninstantiated or of the wrong type.
/** set_size(+Name:atom, +Width:int, +Height:int) is det. static foreign_t set_size(term_t name, term_t width, term_t height) { char *n; int w, h; if ( !PL_get_chars(name, &n, CVT_ATOM|CVT_EXCEPTION) || !PL_get_integer_ex(with, &w) || !PL_get_integer_ex(height, &h) ) return FALSE; ... }
- int PL_get_atom_ex(term_t t, atom_t *a)
- As PL_get_atom(), but raises a type or instantiation error if t is not an atom.
- int PL_get_integer_ex(term_t t, int *i)
- As PL_get_integer(),
but raises a type or instantiation error if
t is not an integer, or a representation error if the Prolog
integer does not fit in a C
int
. - int PL_get_long_ex(term_t t, long *i)
- As PL_get_long(),
but raises a type or instantiation error if
t is not an atom, or a representation error if the Prolog
integer does not fit in a C
long
. - int PL_get_int64_ex(term_t t, int64_t *i)
- As PL_get_int64(),
but raises a type or instantiation error if
t is not an atom, or a representation error if the Prolog
integer does not fit in a C
int64_t
. - int PL_get_intptr_ex(term_t t, intptr_t *i)
- As PL_get_intptr(),
but raises a type or instantiation error if
t is not an atom, or a representation error if the Prolog
integer does not fit in a C
intptr_t
. - int PL_get_size_ex(term_t t, size_t *i)
- As PL_get_size(), but raises a type or instantiation error if
t is not an atom, or a representation error if the Prolog
integer does not fit in a C
size_t
. - int PL_get_bool_ex(term_t t, int *i)
- As PL_get_bool(), but raises a type or instantiation error if t is not an boolean.
- int PL_get_float_ex(term_t t, double *f)
- As PL_get_float(), but raises a type or instantiation error if t is not a float.
- int PL_get_char_ex(term_t t, int *p, int eof)
- Get a character code from t, where t is either an
integer or an atom with length one. If eof is
TRUE
and t is -1, p is filled with -1. Raises an appropriate error if the conversion is not possible. - int PL_get_pointer_ex(term_t t, void **addrp)
- As PL_get_pointer(), but raises a type or instantiation error if t is not a pointer.
- int PL_get_list_ex(term_t l, term_t h, term_t t)
- As PL_get_list(), but raises a type or instantiation error if t is not a list.
- int PL_get_nil_ex(term_t l)
- As PL_get_nil(), but raises a type or instantiation error if t is not the empty list.
- int PL_unify_list_ex(term_t l, term_t h, term_t t)
- As PL_unify_list(), but raises a type error if t is not a variable, list-cell or the empty list.
- int PL_unify_nil_ex(term_t l)
- As PL_unify_nil(), but raises a type error if t is not a variable, list-cell or the empty list.
- int PL_unify_bool_ex(term_t t, int val)
- As PL_unify_bool(), but raises a type error if t is not a variable or a boolean.
The second family of functions in this section simplifies the
generation of ISO compatible error terms. Any foreign function that
calls this function must return to Prolog with the return code of the
error function or the constant FALSE
. If available, these
error functions add the name of the calling predicate to the error
context. See also PL_raise_exception().
- int PL_instantiation_error(term_t culprit)
- Raise
instantiation_error
. Culprit is ignored, but should be bound to the term that is insufficiently instantiated. See instantiation_error/1. - int PL_uninstantiation_error(term_t culprit)
- Raise
uninstantiation_error(culprit)
. This should be called if an argument that must be unbound at entry is bound to culprit. This error is typically raised for a pure output arguments such as a newly created stream handle (e.g., the third argument of open/3). - int PL_representation_error(const char *resource)
- Raise
representation_error(resource)
. See representation_error/1. - int PL_type_error(const char *expected, term_t culprit)
- Raise
type_error(expected, culprit)
. See type_error/2. - int PL_domain_error(const char *expected, term_t culprit)
- Raise
domain_error(expected, culprit)
. See domain_error/2. - int PL_existence_error(const char *type, term_t culprit)
- Raise
existence_error(type, culprit)
. See type_error/2. - int PL_permission_error(const char *operation, const char *type, term_t culprit)
- Raise
permission_error(operation, type, culprit)
. See permission_error/3. - int PL_resource_error(const char *resource)
- Raise
resource_error(resource)
. See resource_error/1. - int PL_syntax_error(const char *message, IOSTREAM *in)
- Raise
syntax_error(message)
. If arg is notNULL
, add information about the current position of the input stream.
11.4.7 BLOBS: Using atoms to store arbitrary binary data
SWI-Prolog atoms as well as strings can represent arbitrary binary data of arbitrary length. This facility is attractive for storing foreign data such as images in an atom. An atom is a unique handle to this data and the atom garbage collector is able to destroy atoms that are no longer referenced by the Prolog engine. This property of atoms makes them attractive as a handle to foreign resources, such as Java atoms, Microsoft's COM objects, etc., providing safe combined garbage collection.
To exploit these features safely and in an organised manner, the SWI-Prolog foreign interface allows for creating `atoms' with additional type information. The type is represented by a structure holding C function pointers that tell Prolog how to handle releasing the atom, writing it, sorting it, etc. Two atoms created with different types can represent the same sequence of bytes. Atoms are first ordered on the rank number of the type and then on the result of the compare() function. Rank numbers are assigned when the type is registered.
11.4.7.1 Defining a BLOB type
The type PL_blob_t
represents a structure with the
layout displayed below. The structure contains additional fields at the
... for internal bookkeeping as well as future extensions.
typedef struct PL_blob_t { uintptr_t magic; /* PL_BLOB_MAGIC */ uintptr_t flags; /* Bitwise or of PL_BLOB_* */ char * name; /* name of the type */ int (*release)(atom_t a); int (*compare)(atom_t a, atom_t b); int (*write)(IOSTREAM *s, atom_t a, int flags); void (*acquire)(atom_t a); ... } PL_blob_t;
For each type, exactly one such structure should be allocated. Its
first field must be initialised to PL_BLOB_MAGIC
. The
flags is a bitwise or of the following constants:
- PL_BLOB_TEXT
- If specified the blob is assumed to contain text and is considered a normal Prolog atom.
- PL_BLOB_UNIQUE
- If specified the system ensures that the blob-handle is a unique reference for a blob with the given type, length and content. If this flag is not specified, each lookup creates a new blob.
- PL_BLOB_NOCOPY
- By default the content of the blob is copied. Using this flag the blob
references the external data directly. The user must ensure the provided
pointer is valid as long as the atom lives. If
PL_BLOB_UNIQUE
is also specified, uniqueness is determined by comparing the pointer rather than the data pointed at.
The name field represents the type name as available to
Prolog. See also current_blob/2.
The other fields are function pointers that must be initialised to
proper functions or NULL
to get the default behaviour of
built-in atoms. Below are the defined member functions:
- void acquire(atom_t a)
- Called if a new blob of this type is created through PL_put_blob() or PL_unify_blob(). This callback may be used together with the release hook to deal with reference-counted external objects.
- int release(atom_t a)
- The blob (atom) a is about to be released. This function can
retrieve the data of the blob using PL_blob_data().
If it returns
FALSE
the atom garbage collector will not reclaim the atom. - int compare(atom_t a, atom_t b)
- Compare the blobs a and b, both of which are of the type associated to this blob type. Return values are, as memcmp(), < 0 if a is less than b, = 0 if both are equal, and > 0 otherwise.
- int write(IOSTREAM *s, atom_t a, int flags)
- Write the content of the blob a to the stream s
respecting the flags. The flags are a bitwise
or of zero or more of the
PL_WRT_*
flags defined inSWI-Prolog.h
. This prototype is available if the undocumentedSWI-Stream.h
is included beforeSWI-Prolog.h
.If this function is not provided, write/1 emits the content of the blob for blobs of type
PL_BLOB_TEXT
or a string of the format<#
hex data>
for binary blobs.
If a blob type is registered from a loadable object (shared object or DLL) the blob type must be deregistered before the object may be released.
- int PL_unregister_blob_type(PL_blob_t *type)
- Unlink the blob type from the registered type and transform the type of
possible living blobs to
unregistered
, avoiding further reference to the type structure, functions referred by it, as well as the data. This function returnsTRUE
if no blobs of this type existed andFALSE
otherwise. PL_unregister_blob_type() is intended for the uninstall() hook of foreign modules, avoiding further references to the module.
11.4.7.2 Accessing blobs
The blob access functions are similar to the atom accessing functions. Blobs being atoms, the atom functions operate on blobs and vice versa. For clarity and possible future compatibility issues, however, it is not advised to rely on this.
- int PL_is_blob(term_t t, PL_blob_t **type)
- Succeeds if t refers to a blob, in which case type is filled with the type of the blob.
- int PL_unify_blob(term_t t, void *blob, size_t len, PL_blob_t *type)
- Unify t to a new blob constructed from the given data and associated to the given type. See also PL_unify_atom_nchars().
- int PL_put_blob(term_t t, void *blob, size_t len, PL_blob_t *type)
- Store the described blob in t. The return value indicates
whether a new blob was allocated (
FALSE
) or the blob is a reference to an existing blob (TRUE
). Reporting new/existing can be used to deal with external objects having their own reference counts. If the return isTRUE
this reference count must be incremented, and it must be decremented on blob destruction callback. See also PL_put_atom_nchars(). - int PL_get_blob(term_t t, void **blob, size_t *len, PL_blob_t **type)
- If t holds a blob or atom, get the data and type and return
TRUE
. Otherwise returnFALSE
. Each result pointer may beNULL
, in which case the requested information is ignored. - void * PL_blob_data(atom_t a, size_t *len, PL_blob_t **type)
- Get the data and type associated to a blob. This function is mainly used from the callback functions described in section 11.4.7.1.
11.4.8 Exchanging GMP numbers
If SWI-Prolog is linked with the GNU Multiple Precision Arithmetic
Library (GMP, used by default), the foreign interface provides functions
for exchanging numeric values to GMP types. To access these functions
the header <gmp.h>
must be included before
<SWI-Prolog.h>
. Foreign code using GMP linked to
SWI-Prolog asks for some considerations.
- SWI-Prolog normally rebinds the GMP allocation functions using
mp_set_memory_functions(). This means SWI-Prolog must be initialised
before the foreign code touches any GMP function. You can call
\cfuncref{PL_action}{PL_GMP_SET_ALLOC_FUNCTIONS, TRUE}
to force Prolog's GMP initialization without doing the rest of the Prolog initialization. If you do not want Prolog rebinding the GMP allocation, call\cfuncref{PL_action}{PL_GMP_SET_ALLOC_FUNCTIONS, FALSE}
before initializing Prolog. - On Windows, each DLL has its own memory pool. To make exchange of GMP numbers between Prolog and foreign code possible you must either let Prolog rebind the allocation functions (default) or you must recompile SWI-Prolog to link to a DLL version of the GMP library.
Here is an example exploiting the function mpz_nextprime():
#include <gmp.h> #include <SWI-Prolog.h> static foreign_t next_prime(term_t n, term_t prime) { mpz_t mpz; int rc; mpz_init(mpz); if ( PL_get_mpz(n, mpz) ) { mpz_nextprime(mpz, mpz); rc = PL_unify_mpz(prime, mpz); } else rc = FALSE; mpz_clear(mpz); return rc; } install_t install() { PL_register_foreign("next_prime", 2, next_prime, 0); }
- int PL_get_mpz(term_t t, mpz_t mpz)
- If t represents an integer, mpz is filled with the
value and the function returns
TRUE
. Otherwise mpz is untouched and the function returnsFALSE
. Note that mpz must have been initialised before calling this function and must be cleared using mpz_clear() to reclaim any storage associated with it. - int PL_get_mpq(term_t t, mpq_t mpq)
- If t is an integer or rational number (term
rdiv/2
), mpq is filled with the normalised rational number and the function returnsTRUE
. Otherwise mpq is untouched and the function returnsFALSE
. Note that mpq must have been initialised before calling this function and must be cleared using mpq_clear() to reclaim any storage associated with it. - int PL_unify_mpz(term_t t, mpz_t mpz)
- Unify t with the integer value represented by mpz
and return
TRUE
on success. The mpz argument is not changed. - int PL_unify_mpq(term_t t, mpq_t mpq)
- Unify t with a rational number represented by mpq
and return
TRUE
on success. Note that t is unified with an integer if the denominator is 1. The mpq argument is not changed.
11.4.9 Calling Prolog from C
The Prolog engine can be called from C. There are two interfaces for this. For the first, a term is created that could be used as an argument to call/1, and then PL_call() is used to call Prolog. This system is simple, but does not allow to inspect the different answers to a non-deterministic goal and is relatively slow as the runtime system needs to find the predicate. The other interface is based on PL_open_query(), PL_next_solution() and PL_cut_query() or PL_close_query(). This mechanism is more powerful, but also more complicated to use.
11.4.9.1 Predicate references
This section discusses the functions used to communicate about
predicates. Though a Prolog predicate may be defined or not, redefined,
etc., a Prolog predicate has a handle that is neither destroyed nor
moved. This handle is known by the type predicate_t
.
- predicate_t PL_pred(functor_t f, module_t m)
- Return a handle to a predicate for the specified name/arity in the given
module. This function always succeeds, creating a handle for an
undefined predicate if no handle was available. If the module argument
m is
NULL
, the current context module is used. - predicate_t PL_predicate(const char *name, int arity, const char* module)
- Same as PL_pred(), but provides a more convenient interface to the C programmer.
- void PL_predicate_info(predicate_t p, atom_t *n, size_t *a, module_t *m)
- Return information on the predicate p. The name is stored
over
n, the arity over a, while m receives
the definition module. Note that the latter need not be the same as
specified with
PL_predicate().
If the predicate is imported into the module given to
PL_predicate(),
this function will return the module where the predicate is defined. Any
of the arguments n, a and m can be
NULL
.
11.4.9.2 Initiating a query from C
This section discusses the functions for creating and manipulating queries from C. Note that a foreign context can have at most one active query. This implies that it is allowed to make strictly nested calls between C and Prolog (Prolog calls C, calls Prolog, calls C, etc.), but it is not allowed to open multiple queries and start generating solutions for each of them by calling PL_next_solution(). Be sure to call PL_cut_query() or PL_close_query() on any query you opened before opening the next or returning control back to Prolog.
- qid_t PL_open_query(module_t ctx, int flags, predicate_t p, term_t +t0)
-
Opens a query and returns an identifier for it. ctx is the context module of the goal. When
NULL
, the context module of the calling context will be used, oruser
if there is no calling context (as may happen in embedded systems). Note that the context module only matters for meta-predicates. See meta_predicate/1, context_module/1 and module_transparent/1. The p argument specifies the predicate, and should be the result of a call to PL_pred() or PL_predicate(). Note that it is allowed to store this handle as global data and reuse it for future queries. The term reference t0 is the first of a vector of term references as returned by PL_new_term_refs(n).The flags arguments provides some additional options concerning debugging and exception handling. It is a bitwise or of the following values:
PL_Q_NORMAL
- Normal operation. The debugger inherits its settings from the
environment. If an exception occurs that is not handled in Prolog, a
message is printed and the tracer is started to debug the error.172Do
not pass the integer 0 for normal operation, as this is interpreted as
PL_Q_NODEBUG
for backward compatibility reasons. PL_Q_NODEBUG
- Switch off the debugger while executing the goal. This option is used by many calls to hook-predicates to avoid tracing the hooks. An example is print/1 calling portray/1 from foreign code.
PL_Q_CATCH_EXCEPTION
- If an exception is raised while executing the goal, do not report it, but make it available for PL_exception().
PL_Q_PASS_EXCEPTION
- As
PL_Q_CATCH_EXCEPTION
, but do not invalidate the exception-term while calling PL_close_query(). This option is experimental. PL_Q_ALLOW_YIELD
- Support the
I_YIELD
instruction for engine-based coroutining. See inboot/init.pl
for details. PL_Q_EXT_STATUS
- Make PL_next_solution()
return extended status. Instead of only
TRUE
orFALSE
extended status as illustrated in the following table:Extended Normal PL_S_EXCEPTION FALSE Exception available through PL_exception() PL_S_FALSE FALSE Query failed PL_S_TRUE TRUE Query succeeded with choicepoint PL_S_LAST TRUE Query succeeded without choicepoint
PL_open_query() can return the query identifier `0' if there is not enough space on the environment stack. This function succeeds, even if the referenced predicate is not defined. In this case, running the query using PL_next_solution() will return an existence_error. See PL_exception().
The example below opens a query to the predicate
is_a/2
to find the ancestor of `me'. The reference to the predicate is valid for the duration of the process and may be cached by the client.char * ancestor(const char *me) { term_t a0 = PL_new_term_refs(2); static predicate_t p; if ( !p ) p = PL_predicate("is_a", 2, "database"); PL_put_atom_chars(a0, me); PL_open_query(NULL, PL_Q_NORMAL, p, a0); ... }
- int PL_next_solution(qid_t qid)
- Generate the first (next) solution for the given query. The return value
is
TRUE
if a solution was found, orFALSE
to indicate the query could not be proven. This function may be called repeatedly until it fails to generate all solutions to the query. - void PL_cut_query(qid_t qid)
- Discards the query, but does not delete any of the data created by the query. It just invalidates qid, allowing for a new call to PL_open_query() in this context.
- void PL_close_query(qid_t qid)
- As PL_cut_query(), but all data and bindings created by the query are destroyed.
- qid_t PL_current_query(void)
- Returns the query id of of the current query or
0
if the current thread is not executing any queries. - int PL_call_predicate(module_t m, int flags, predicate_t pred, term_t +t0)
- Shorthand for PL_open_query(), PL_next_solution(), PL_cut_query(), generating a single solution. The arguments are the same as for PL_open_query(), the return value is the same as PL_next_solution().
- int PL_call(term_t t, module_t m)
- Call term t just like the Prolog predicate once/1. t
is called in the module m, or in the context module if m
== NULL. Returns
TRUE
if the call succeeds,FALSE
otherwise. Figure 8 shows an example to obtain the number of defined atoms. All checks are omitted to improve readability.
11.4.10 Discarding Data
The Prolog data created and term references needed to set up the call and/or analyse the result can in most cases be discarded right after the call. PL_close_query() allows for destroying the data, while leaving the term references. The calls below may be used to destroy term references and data. See figure 8 for an example.
- fid_t PL_open_foreign_frame()
- Create a foreign frame, holding a mark that allows the system to undo bindings and destroy data created after it, as well as providing the environment for creating term references. This function is called by the kernel before calling a foreign predicate.
- void PL_close_foreign_frame(fid_t id)
- Discard all term references created after the frame was opened. All other Prolog data is retained. This function is called by the kernel whenever a foreign function returns control back to Prolog.
- void PL_discard_foreign_frame(fid_t id)
- Same as PL_close_foreign_frame(), but also undo all bindings made since the open and destroy all Prolog data.
- void PL_rewind_foreign_frame(fid_t id)
- Undo all bindings and discard all term references created since the frame was created, but do not pop the frame. That is, the same frame can be rewound multiple times, and must eventually be closed or discarded.
It is obligatory to call either of the two closing functions to discard a foreign frame. Foreign frames may be nested.
int count_atoms() { fid_t fid = PL_open_foreign_frame(); term_t goal = PL_new_term_ref(); term_t a1 = PL_new_term_ref(); term_t a2 = PL_new_term_ref(); functor_t s2 = PL_new_functor(PL_new_atom("statistics"), 2); int atoms; PL_put_atom_chars(a1, "atoms"); PL_cons_functor(goal, s2, a1, a2); PL_call(goal, NULL); /* call it in current module */ PL_get_integer(a2, &atoms); PL_discard_foreign_frame(fid); return atoms; }
11.4.11 Foreign Code and Modules
Modules are identified via a unique handle. The following functions are available to query and manipulate modules.
- module_t PL_context()
- Return the module identifier of the context module of the currently active foreign predicate.
- int PL_strip_module(term_t +raw, module_t *m, term_t -plain)
- Utility function. If raw is a term, possibly holding the
module construct <module>
:
<rest>, this function will make plain a reference to <rest> and fill module * with <module>. For further nested module constructs the innermost module is returned via module *. If raw is not a module construct, raw will simply be put in plain. The value pointed to by m must be initialized before calling PL_strip_module(), either to the default module or toNULL
. ANULL
value is replaced by the current context module if raw carries no module. The following example shows how to obtain the plain term and module if the default module is the user module:{ module m = PL_new_module(PL_new_atom("user")); term_t plain = PL_new_term_ref(); PL_strip_module(term, &m, plain); ... }
- atom_t PL_module_name(module_t module)
- Return the name of module as an atom.
- module_t PL_new_module(atom_t name)
- Find an existing module or create a new module with the name name.
11.4.12 Prolog exceptions in foreign code
This section discusses PL_exception(), PL_throw()
and
PL_raise_exception(),
the interface functions to detect and generate Prolog exceptions from C
code. PL_throw()
and PL_raise_exception()
from the C interface raise an exception from foreign code. PL_throw()
exploits the C function longjmp() to return immediately to the innermost
PL_next_solution(). PL_raise_exception()
registers the exception term and returns FALSE
. If a
foreign predicate returns FALSE
, while an exception term is
registered, a Prolog exception will be raised by the virtual machine.
Calling these functions outside the context of a function implementing a foreign predicate results in undefined behaviour.
PL_exception() may be used after a call to PL_next_solution() fails, and returns a term reference to an exception term if an exception was raised, and 0 otherwise.
If a C function implementing a predicate calls Prolog and detects an exception using PL_exception(), it can handle this exception or return with the exception. Some caution is required though. It is not allowed to call PL_close_query() or PL_discard_foreign_frame() afterwards, as this will invalidate the exception term. Below is the code that calls a Prolog-defined arithmetic function (see arithmetic_function/1).
If PL_next_solution() succeeds, the result is analysed and translated to a number, after which the query is closed and all Prolog data created after PL_open_foreign_frame() is destroyed. On the other hand, if PL_next_solution() fails and if an exception was raised, just pass it. Otherwise generate an exception (PL_error() is an internal call for building the standard error terms and calling PL_raise_exception()). After this, the Prolog environment should be discarded using PL_cut_query() and PL_close_foreign_frame() to avoid invalidating the exception term.
static int prologFunction(ArithFunction f, term_t av, Number r) { int arity = f->proc->definition->functor->arity; fid_t fid = PL_open_foreign_frame(); qid_t qid; int rval; qid = PL_open_query(NULL, PL_Q_NORMAL, f->proc, av); if ( PL_next_solution(qid) ) { rval = valueExpression(av+arity-1, r); PL_close_query(qid); PL_discard_foreign_frame(fid); } else { term_t except; if ( (except = PL_exception(qid)) ) { rval = PL_throw(except); /* pass exception */ } else { char *name = stringAtom(f->proc->definition->functor->name); /* generate exception */ rval = PL_error(name, arity-1, NULL, ERR_FAILED, f->proc); } PL_cut_query(qid); /* donot destroy data */ PL_close_foreign_frame(fid); /* same */ } return rval; }
- int PL_raise_exception(term_t exception)
- Generate an exception (as throw/1)
and return
FALSE
. Below is an example returning an exception from a foreign predicate:foreign_t pl_hello(term_t to) { char *s; if ( PL_get_atom_chars(to, &s) ) { Sprintf("Hello \"%s\"\n", s); PL_succeed; } else { term_t except = PL_new_term_ref(); PL_unify_term(except, PL_FUNCTOR_CHARS, "type_error", 2, PL_CHARS, "atom", PL_TERM, to); return PL_raise_exception(except); } }
- int PL_throw(term_t exception)
- Similar to PL_raise_exception(), but returns using the C longjmp() function to the innermost PL_next_solution().
- term_t PL_exception(qid_t qid)
- If PL_next_solution()
fails, this can be due to normal failure of the Prolog call, or because
an exception was raised using throw/1.
This function returns a handle to the exception term if an exception was
raised, or 0 if the Prolog goal simply failed. If there is an exception,
PL_exception()
allocates a term-handle using PL_new_term_ref()
that is used to return the exception term.
Additionally,
\cfuncref{PL_exception}{0}
returns the pending exception in the current query or 0 if no exception is pending. This can be used to check the error status after a failing call to, e.g., one of the unification functions. - void PL_clear_exception(void)
- Tells Prolog that the encountered exception must be ignored. This function must be called if control remains in C after a previous API call fails with an exception.173This feature is non-portable. Other Prolog systems (e.g., YAP) have no facilities to ignore raised exceptions, and the design of YAP's exception handling does not support such a facility.
11.4.13 Catching Signals (Software Interrupts)
SWI-Prolog offers both a C and Prolog interface to deal with software interrupts (signals). The Prolog mapping is defined in section 4.12. This subsection deals with handling signals from C.
If a signal is not used by Prolog and the handler does not call Prolog in any way, the native signal interface routines may be used.
Any handler that wishes to call one of the Prolog interface functions should call PL_sigaction() to install the handler. PL_signal() provides a deprecated interface that is notably not capable of properly restoring the old signal status if the signal was previously handled by Prolog.
- int PL_sigaction(int sig, pl_sigaction_t *act, pl_sigaction_t *oldact)
- Install or query the status for signal sig. The signal is an
integer between 1 and 64, where the where the signals up to 32 are
mapped to OS signals and signals above that are handled by Prolog's
synchronous signal handling. The
pl_sigaction_t
is a struct with the following definition:typedef struct pl_sigaction { void (*sa_cfunction)(int); /* traditional C function */ predicate_t sa_predicate; /* call a predicate */ int sa_flags; /* additional flags */ } pl_sigaction_t;
The
sa_flags
is a bitwise or ofPLSIG_THROW
,PLSIG_SYNC
andPLSIG_NOFRAME
. Signal handling is enabled ifPLSIG_THROW
is provided,sa_cfunction
orsa_predicate
is provided.sa_predicate
is a predicate handle for a predicate with arity 1. If no action is provided the signal handling for this signal is restored to the default before PL_initialise() was called.Finally, 0 (zero) may be passsed for sig. In that case the system allocates a free signal in the Prolog range (32 ... 64). Such signal handler are activated using PL_thread_raise().
- void (*)() PL_signal(sig, func)
- This function is equivalent to the BSD-Unix signal() function,
regardless of the platform used. The signal handler is blocked while the
signal routine is active, and automatically reactivated after the
handler returns.
After a signal handler is registered using this function, the native signal interface redirects the signal to a generic signal handler inside SWI-Prolog. This generic handler validates the environment, creates a suitable environment for calling the interface functions described in this chapter and finally calls the registered user-handler.
By default, signals are handled asynchronously (i.e., at the time they arrive). It is inherently dangerous to call extensive code fragments, and especially exception related code from asynchronous handlers. The interface allows for synchronous handling of signals. In this case the native OS handler just schedules the signal using PL_raise(), which is checked by PL_handle_signals() at the call- and redo-port. This behaviour is realised by or-ing sig with the constant
PL_SIGSYNC
.174A better default would be to use synchronous handling, but this interface preserves backward compatibility.Signal handling routines may raise exceptions using PL_raise_exception(). The use of PL_throw() is not safe. If a synchronous handler raises an exception, the exception is delayed to the next call to PL_handle_signals();
- int PL_raise(int sig)
- Register sig for synchronous handling by Prolog. Synchronous signals are handled at the call-port or if foreign code calls PL_handle_signals(). See also thread_signal/2.
- int PL_handle_signals(void)
- Handle any signals pending from PL_raise(). PL_handle_signals()
is called at each pass through the call- and redo-port at a safe point.
Exceptions raised by the handler using PL_raise_exception()
are properly passed to the environment.
The user may call this function inside long-running foreign functions to handle scheduled interrupts. This routine returns the number of signals handled. If a handler raises an exception, the return value is -1 and the calling routine should return with
FALSE
as soon as possible. - int PL_get_signum_ex(term_t t, int *sig)
- Extract a signal specification from a Prolog term and store as an
integer signal number in sig. The specification is an
integer, a lowercase signal name without
SIG
or the full signal name. These refer to the same:9
,kill
andSIGKILL
. Leaves a typed, domain or instantiation error if the conversion fails.
11.4.14 Miscellaneous
11.4.14.1 Term Comparison
- int PL_compare(term_t t1, term_t t2)
- Compares two terms using the standard order of terms and returns -1, 0 or 1. See also compare/3.
- int PL_same_compound(term_t t1, term_t t2)
- Yields
TRUE
if t1 and t2 refer to physically the same compound term andFALSE
otherwise.
11.4.14.2 Recorded database
In some applications it is useful to store and retrieve Prolog terms from C code. For example, the XPCE graphical environment does this for storing arbitrary Prolog data as slot-data of XPCE objects.
Please note that the returned handles have no meaning at the Prolog level and the recorded terms are not visible from Prolog. The functions PL_recorded() and PL_erase() are the only functions that can operate on the stored term.
Two groups of functions are provided. The first group (PL_record() and friends) store Prolog terms on the Prolog heap for retrieval during the same session. These functions are also used by recorda/3 and friends. The recorded database may be used to communicate Prolog terms between threads.
- record_t PL_record(term_t +t)
- Record the term t into the Prolog database as recorda/3 and return an opaque handle to the term. The returned handle remains valid until PL_erase() is called on it. PL_recorded() is used to copy recorded terms back to the Prolog stack.
- record_t PL_duplicate_record(record_t record)
- Return a duplicate of record. As records are read-only objects this function merely increments the records reference count.
- int PL_recorded(record_t record, term_t -t)
- Copy a recorded term back to the Prolog stack. The same record may be
used to copy multiple instances at any time to the Prolog stack. Returns
TRUE
on success, andFALSE
if there is not enough space on the stack to accommodate the term. See also PL_record() and PL_erase(). - void PL_erase(record_t record)
- Remove the recorded term from the Prolog database, reclaiming all associated memory resources.
The second group (headed by PL_record_external()) provides the same functionality, but the returned data has properties that enable storing the data on an external device. It has been designed to make it possible to store Prolog terms fast and compact in an external database. Here are the main features:
- Independent of session
Records can be communicated to another Prolog session and made visible using PL_recorded_external(). - Binary
The representation is binary for maximum performance. The returned data may contain zero bytes. - Byte-order independent
The representation can be transferred between machines with different byte order. - No alignment restrictions
There are no memory alignment restrictions and copies of the record can thus be moved freely. For example, it is possible to use this representation to exchange terms using shared memory between different Prolog processes. - Compact
It is assumed that a smaller memory footprint will eventually outperform slightly faster representations. - Stable
The format is designed for future enhancements without breaking compatibility with older records.
- char * PL_record_external(term_t +t, size_t *len)
- Record the term t into the Prolog database as recorda/3
and return an opaque handle to the term. The returned handle remains
valid until PL_erase_external()
is called on it.
It is allowed to copy the data and use PL_recorded_external() on the copy. The user is responsible for the memory management of the copy. After copying, the original may be discarded using PL_erase_external().
PL_recorded_external() is used to copy such recorded terms back to the Prolog stack.
- int PL_recorded_external(const char *record, term_t -t)
- Copy a recorded term back to the Prolog stack. The same record may be used to copy multiple instances at any time to the Prolog stack. See also PL_record_external() and PL_erase_external().
- int PL_erase_external(char *record)
- Remove the recorded term from the Prolog database, reclaiming all associated memory resources.
11.4.14.3 Getting file names
The function PL_get_file_name() provides access to Prolog filenames and its file-search mechanism described with absolute_file_name/3. Its existence is motivated to realise a uniform interface to deal with file properties, search, naming conventions, etc., from foreign code.
- int PL_get_file_name(term_t spec, char **name, int flags)
- Translate a Prolog term into a file name. The name is stored in the
static buffer ring described with th PL_get_chars()
option
BUF_RING
. Conversion from the internal UNICODE encoding is done using standard C library functions. flags is a bit-mask controlling the conversion process. Options are:PL_FILE_ABSOLUTE
- Return an absolute path to the requested file.
PL_FILE_OSPATH
- Return the name using the hosting OS conventions. On MS-Windows,
is used to separate directories rather than the canonical\
./
PL_FILE_SEARCH
- Invoke absolute_file_name/3. This implies rules from file_search_path/2 are used.
PL_FILE_EXIST
- Demand the path to refer to an existing entity.
PL_FILE_READ
- Demand read-access on the result.
PL_FILE_WRITE
- Demand write-access on the result.
PL_FILE_EXECUTE
- Demand execute-access on the result.
PL_FILE_NOERRORS
- Do not raise any exceptions.
- int PL_get_file_nameW(term_t spec, wchar_t **name, int flags)
- Same as PL_get_file_name(),
but returns the filename as a wide-character string. This is intended
for Windows to access the Unicode version of the Win32 API. Note that
the flag
PL_FILE_OSPATH
must be provided to fetch a filename in OS native (e.g.,C:\x\y
) notation.
11.4.14.4 Dealing with Prolog flags from C
Foreign code can set or create Prolog flags using PL_set_prolog_flag(). See set_prolog_flag/2 and create_prolog_flag/3.175The current C API does not provide for a dedicated mechanism for fetching the value of Prolog flags. Relatively slow access is provided by calling PL_call_predicate() using current_prolog_flag/2.
- int PL_set_prolog_flag(const char *name, int type, ...)
- Set/create a Prolog flag from C. name is the name of the
affected flag. type is one of the values below, which also
dictates the type of the final argument. The function returns
TRUE
on success andFALSE
on failure. This function can be called before PL_initialise(), making the flag available to the Prolog startup code.PL_BOOL
- Create a boolean (
true
orfalse
) flag. The argument must be anint
. PL_ATOM
- Create a flag with an atom as value. The argument must be of type
const char *
. PL_INTEGER
- Create a flag with an integer as value. The argument must be of type
intptr_t *
.
11.4.15 Errors and warnings
PL_warning()
prints a standard Prolog warning message to the standard error (user_error
)
stream. Please note that new code should consider using PL_raise_exception()
to raise a Prolog exception. See also section
4.11.
- int PL_warning(format, a1, ...)
- Print an error message starting with `
[WARNING:
', followed by the output from format, followed by a `]
' and a newline. Then start the tracer. format and the arguments are the same as for printf(2). Always returnsFALSE
.
11.4.16 Environment Control from Foreign Code
- int PL_action(int, ...)
- Perform some action on the Prolog system. int describes the
action. Remaining arguments depend on the requested action. The actions
are listed below:
- PL_ACTION_TRACE
- Start Prolog tracer (trace/0). Requires no arguments.
- PL_ACTION_DEBUG
- Switch on Prolog debug mode (debug/0). Requires no arguments.
- PL_ACTION_BACKTRACE
- Print backtrace on current output stream. The argument (an
int
) is the number of frames printed. - PL_ACTION_HALT
- Halt Prolog execution. This action should be called rather than Unix
exit() to give Prolog the opportunity to clean up. This call does not
return. The argument (an
int
) is the exit code. See halt/1. - PL_ACTION_ABORT
- Generate a Prolog abort (abort/0). This call does not return. Requires no arguments.
- PL_ACTION_BREAK
- Create a standard Prolog break environment (break/0). Returns after the user types the end-of-file character. Requires no arguments.
- PL_ACTION_GUIAPP
- Windows: Used to indicate to the kernel that the application is a GUI application if the argument is not 0, and a console application if the argument is 0. If a fatal error occurs, the system uses a windows messagebox to report this on a GUI application, and otherwise simply prints the error and exits.
- PL_ACTION_TRADITIONAL
- Same effect as using --traditional. Must be called before PL_initialise().
- PL_ACTION_WRITE
- Write the argument, a
char *
to the current output stream. - PL_ACTION_FLUSH
- Flush the current output stream. Requires no arguments.
- PL_ACTION_ATTACH_CONSOLE
- Attach a console to a thread if it does not have one. See attach_console/0.
- PL_GMP_SET_ALLOC_FUNCTIONS
- Takes an integer argument. If
TRUE
, the GMP allocations are immediately bound to the Prolog functions. IfFALSE
, SWI-Prolog will never rebind the GMP allocation functions. See mp_set_memory_functions() in the GMP documentation. The action returnsFALSE
if there is no GMP support or GMP is already initialised.
11.4.17 Querying Prolog
- long PL_query(int)
- Obtain status information on the Prolog system. The actual argument type
depends on the information required. int describes what
information is wanted.176Returning
pointers and integers as a long is bad style. The signature of this
function should be changed. The options are given in table
9.
PL_QUERY_ARGC
Return an integer holding the number of arguments given to Prolog from Unix. PL_QUERY_ARGV
Return a char **
holding the argument vector given to Prolog from Unix.PL_QUERY_SYMBOLFILE
Return a char *
holding the current symbol file of the running process.PL_MAX_INTEGER
Return a long, representing the maximal integer value represented by a Prolog integer. PL_MIN_INTEGER
Return a long, representing the minimal integer value. PL_QUERY_VERSION
Return a long, representing the version as 10,000 × M + 100 × m + p, where M is the major, m the minor version number and p the patch level. For example, 20717
means2.7.17
.PL_QUERY_ENCODING
Return the default stream encoding of Prolog (of type IOENC
).PL_QUERY_USER_CPU
Get amount of user CPU time of the process in milliseconds.
11.4.18 Registering Foreign Predicates
- int PL_register_foreign_in_module(char *mod, char *name, int arity, foreign_t (*f)(), int flags, ...)
- Register the C function f to implement a Prolog predicate.
After this call returns successfully a predicate with name name
(a
char *
) and arity arity (a Cint
) is created in module mod. If mod isNULL
, the predicate is created in the module of the calling context, or if no context is present in the moduleuser
.When called in Prolog, Prolog will call function. flags form a bitwise or'ed list of options for the installation. These are:
PL_FA_META
Provide meta-predicate info (see below) PL_FA_TRANSPARENT
Predicate is module transparent (deprecated) PL_FA_NONDETERMINISTIC
Predicate is non-deterministic. See also PL_retry(). PL_FA_NOTRACE
Predicate cannot be seen in the tracer PL_FA_VARARGS
Use alternative calling convention. If
PL_FA_META
is provided, PL_register_foreign_in_module() takes one extra argument. This argument is of typeconst char*
. This string must be exactly as long as the number of arguments of the predicate and filled with characters from the set0-9:^-+?
. See meta_predicate/1 for details.PL_FA_TRANSPARENT
is implied if at least one meta-argument is provided (0-9:^
). Note that meta-arguments are not always passed as <module>:<term>. Always use PL_strip_module() to extract the module and plain term from a meta-argument.177It is encouraged to pass an additionalNULL
pointer for non-meta-predicates.Predicates may be registered either before or after PL_initialise(). When registered before initialisation the registration is recorded and executed after installing the system predicates and before loading the saved state.
Default calling (i.e. without
PL_FA_VARARGS
) function is passed the same number ofterm_t
arguments as the arity of the predicate and, if the predicate is non-deterministic, an extra argument of typecontrol_t
(see section 11.4.1.1). IfPL_FA_VARARGS
is provided, function is called with three arguments. The first argument is aterm_t
handle to the first argument. Further arguments can be reached by adding the offset (see also PL_new_term_refs()). The second argument is the arity, which defines the number of valid term references in the argument vector. The last argument is used for non-deterministic calls. It is currently undocumented and should be defined of typevoid*
. Here is an example:static foreign_t atom_checksum(term_t a0, int arity, void* context) { char *s; if ( PL_get_atom_chars(a0, &s) ) { int sum; for(sum=0; *s; s++) sum += *s&0xff; return PL_unify_integer(a0+1, sum&0xff); } return FALSE; } install_t install() { PL_register_foreign("atom_checksum", 2, atom_checksum, PL_FA_VARARGS); }
- int PL_register_foreign(const char *name, int arity, foreign_t (*function)(), int flags, ...)
- Same as PL_register_foreign_in_module(),
passing
NULL
for the module. - void PL_register_extensions_in_module(const char *module, PL_extension *e)
- Register a series of predicates from an array of definitions of the type
PL_extension
in the given module. If module isNULL
, the predicate is created in the module of the calling context, or if no context is present in the moduleuser
. ThePL_extension
type is defined astypedef struct PL_extension { char *predicate_name; /* Name of the predicate */ short arity; /* Arity of the predicate */ pl_function_t function; /* Implementing functions */ short flags; /* Or of PL_FA_... */ } PL_extension;
For details, see PL_register_foreign_in_module(). Here is an example of its usage:
static PL_extension predicates[] = { { "foo", 1, pl_foo, 0 }, { "bar", 2, pl_bar, PL_FA_NONDETERMINISTIC }, { NULL, 0, NULL, 0 } }; main(int argc, char **argv) { PL_register_extensions_in_module("user", predicates); if ( !PL_initialise(argc, argv) ) PL_halt(1); ... }
- void PL_register_extensions( PL_extension *e)
- Same as PL_register_extensions_in_module()
using
NULL
for the module argument.
11.4.19 Foreign Code Hooks
For various specific applications some hooks are provided.
- PL_dispatch_hook_t PL_dispatch_hook(PL_dispatch_hook_t)
- If this hook is not NULL, this function is called when reading from the
terminal. It is supposed to dispatch events when SWI-Prolog is connected
to a window environment. It can return two values:
PL_DISPATCH_INPUT
indicates Prolog input is available on file descriptor 0 orPL_DISPATCH_TIMEOUT
to indicate a timeout. The old hook is returned. The typePL_dispatch_hook_t
is defined as:typedef int (*PL_dispatch_hook_t)(void);
- void PL_abort_hook(PL_abort_hook_t)
- Install a hook when abort/0
is executed. SWI-Prolog abort/0
is implemented using C setjmp()/longjmp() construct. The hooks are
executed in the reverse order of their registration after the longjmp()
took place and before the Prolog top level is reinvoked. The type
PL_abort_hook_t
is defined as:typedef void (*PL_abort_hook_t)(void);
- int PL_abort_unhook(PL_abort_hook_t)
- Remove a hook installed with PL_abort_hook().
Returns
FALSE
if no such hook is found,TRUE
otherwise. - void PL_on_halt(int (*f)(int, void *), void *closure)
- Register the function f to be called if SWI-Prolog is halted. The function is called with two arguments: the exit code of the process (0 if this cannot be determined) and the closure argument passed to the PL_on_halt() call. Handlers must return 0. Other return values are reserved for future use. See also at_halt/1.bugAlthough both PL_on_halt() and at_halt/1 are called in FIFO order, all at_halt/1 handlers are called before all PL_on_halt() handlers. These handlers are called before system cleanup and can therefore access all normal Prolog resources. See also PL_exit_hook().
- void PL_exit_hook(int (*f)(int, void *), void *closure)
- Similar to PL_on_halt(), but the hooks are executed by PL_halt() instead of PL_cleanup() just before calling exit().
- PL_agc_hook_t PL_agc_hook(PL_agc_hook_t new)
- Register a hook with the atom-garbage collector (see
garbage_collect_atoms/0)
that is called on any atom that is reclaimed. The old hook is returned.
If no hook is currently defined,
NULL
is returned. The argument of the called hook is the atom that is to be garbage collected. The return value is anint
. If the return value is zero, the atom is not reclaimed. The hook may invoke any Prolog predicate.The example below defines a foreign library for printing the garbage collected atoms for debugging purposes.
#include <SWI-Stream.h> #include <SWI-Prolog.h> static int atom_hook(atom_t a) { Sdprintf("AGC: deleting %s\n", PL_atom_chars(a)); return TRUE; } static PL_agc_hook_t old; install_t install() { old = PL_agc_hook(atom_hook); } install_t uninstall() { PL_agc_hook(old); }
11.4.20 Storing foreign data
When combining foreign code with Prolog, it can be necessary to make data represented in the foreign language available to Prolog. For example, to pass it to another foreign function. At the end of this section, there is a partial implementation of using foreign functions to manage bit-vectors. Another example is the SGML/XML library that manages a `parser' object, an object that represents the current state of the parser and that can be directed to perform actions such as parsing a document or make queries about the document content.
This section provides some hints for handling foreign data in Prolog. There are four options for storing such data:
- Natural Prolog data
Uses the representation one would choose if no foreign interface was required. For example, a bitvector representing a list of small integers can be represented as a Prolog list of integers. - Opaque packed data on the stacks
It is possible to represent the raw binary representation of the foreign object as a Prolog string (see section 5.2). Strings may be created from foreign data using PL_put_string_nchars() and retrieved using PL_get_string_chars(). It is good practice to wrap the string in a compound term with arity 1, so Prolog can identify the type. The hook portray/1 rules may be used to streamline printing such terms during development. - Opaque packed data in a blob
Similar to the above solution, binary data can be stored in an atom. The blob interface (section 11.4.7) provides additional facilities to assign a type and hook-functions that act on creation and destruction of the underlying atom. - Natural foreign data, passed as a pointer
An alternative is to pass a pointer to the foreign data. Again, the pointer is often wrapped in a compound term.
The choice may be guided using the following distinctions
- Is the data opaque to Prolog
With `opaque' data, we refer to data handled in foreign functions, passed around in Prolog, but where Prolog never examines the contents of the data itself. If the data is opaque to Prolog, the selection will be driven solely by simplicity of the interface and performance. - What is the lifetime of the data
With `lifetime' we refer to how it is decided that the object is (or can be) destroyed. We can distinguish three cases:- The object must be destroyed on backtracking and normal Prolog
garbage collection (i.e., it acts as a normal Prolog term). In this
case, representing the object as a Prolog string (second option above)
is the only feasible solution.
- The data must survive Prolog backtracking. This leaves two options.
One is to represent the object using a pointer and use explicit creation
and destruction, making the programmer responsible. The alternative is
to use the blob-interface, leaving destruction to the (atom) garbage
collector.
- The data lives as during the lifetime of a foreign function that implements a predicate. If the predicate is deterministic, foreign automatic variables are suitable. If the predicate is non-deterministic, the data may be allocated using malloc() and a pointer may be passed. See section 11.4.1.1.
- The object must be destroyed on backtracking and normal Prolog
garbage collection (i.e., it acts as a normal Prolog term). In this
case, representing the object as a Prolog string (second option above)
is the only feasible solution.
11.4.20.1 Examples for storing foreign data
In this section, we outline some examples, covering typical cases. In the first example, we will deal with extending Prolog's data representation with integer sets, represented as bit-vectors. Then, we discuss the outline of the DDE interface.
Integer sets with not-too-far-apart upper- and lower-bounds can be represented using bit-vectors. Common set operations, such as union, intersection, etc., are reduced to simple and'ing and or'ing the bit-vectors. This can be done using Prolog's unbounded integers.
For really demanding applications, foreign representation will
perform better, especially time-wise. Bit-vectors are naturally
expressed using string objects. If the string is wrapped in bitvector/1
,
the lower-bound of the vector is 0 and the upper-bound is not defined;
an implementation for getting and putting the sets as well as the union
predicate for it is below.
#include <SWI-Prolog.h> #define max(a, b) ((a) > (b) ? (a) : (b)) #define min(a, b) ((a) < (b) ? (a) : (b)) static functor_t FUNCTOR_bitvector1; static int get_bitvector(term_t in, int *len, unsigned char **data) { if ( PL_is_functor(in, FUNCTOR_bitvector1) ) { term_t a = PL_new_term_ref(); PL_get_arg(1, in, a); return PL_get_string(a, (char **)data, len); } PL_fail; } static int unify_bitvector(term_t out, int len, const unsigned char *data) { if ( PL_unify_functor(out, FUNCTOR_bitvector1) ) { term_t a = PL_new_term_ref(); PL_get_arg(1, out, a); return PL_unify_string_nchars(a, len, (const char *)data); } PL_fail; } static foreign_t pl_bitvector_union(term_t t1, term_t t2, term_t u) { unsigned char *s1, *s2; int l1, l2; if ( get_bitvector(t1, &l1, &s1) && get_bitvector(t2, &l2, &s2) ) { int l = max(l1, l2); unsigned char *s3 = alloca(l); if ( s3 ) { int n; int ml = min(l1, l2); for(n=0; n<ml; n++) s3[n] = s1[n] | s2[n]; for( ; n < l1; n++) s3[n] = s1[n]; for( ; n < l2; n++) s3[n] = s2[n]; return unify_bitvector(u, l, s3); } return PL_warning("Not enough memory"); } PL_fail; } install_t install() { PL_register_foreign("bitvector_union", 3, pl_bitvector_union, 0); FUNCTOR_bitvector1 = PL_new_functor(PL_new_atom("bitvector"), 1); }
The DDE interface (see section 4.43) represents another common usage of the foreign interface: providing communication to new operating system features. The DDE interface requires knowledge about active DDE server and client channels. These channels contains various foreign data types. Such an interface is normally achieved using an open/close protocol that creates and destroys a handle. The handle is a reference to a foreign data structure containing the relevant information.
There are a couple of possibilities for representing the handle. The
choice depends on responsibilities and debugging facilities. The
simplest approach is to use PL_unify_pointer()
and PL_get_pointer().
This approach is fast and easy, but has the drawbacks of (untyped)
pointers: there is no reliable way to detect the validity of the
pointer, nor to verify that it is pointing to a structure of the desired
type. The pointer may be wrapped into a compound term with arity 1
(i.e., dde_channel(<Pointer>)
), making the
type-problem less serious.
Alternatively (used in the DDE interface), the interface code can maintain a (preferably variable length) array of pointers and return the index in this array. This provides better protection. Especially for debugging purposes, wrapping the handle in a compound is a good suggestion.
11.4.21 Embedding SWI-Prolog in other applications
With embedded Prolog we refer to the situation where the `main' program is not the Prolog application. Prolog is sometimes embedded in C, C++, Java or other languages to provide logic based services in a larger application. Embedding loads the Prolog engine as a library to the external language. Prolog itself only provides for embedding in the C language (compatible with C++). Embedding in Java is achieved using JPL using a C-glue between the Java and Prolog C interfaces.
The most simple embedded program is below. The interface function PL_initialise() must be called before any of the other SWI-Prolog foreign language functions described in this chapter, except for PL_initialise_hook(), PL_new_atom(), PL_new_functor() and PL_register_foreign(). PL_initialise() interprets all the command line arguments, except for the -t toplevel flag that is interpreted by PL_toplevel().
int main(int argc, char **argv) { if ( !PL_initialise(argc, argv) ) PL_halt(1); PL_halt(PL_toplevel() ? 0 : 1); }
- int PL_initialise(int argc, char **argv)
- Initialises the SWI-Prolog heap and stacks, restores the Prolog state,
loads the system and personal initialisation files, runs the initialization/1
hooks and finally runs the
-g goal hook.
Special consideration is required for
argv[0]
. On Unix, this argument passes the part of the command line that is used to locate the executable. Prolog uses this to find the file holding the running executable. The Windows version uses this to find a module of the running executable. If the specified module cannot be found, it tries the modulelibpl.dll
, containing the Prolog runtime kernel. In all these cases, the resulting file is used for two purposes:- See whether a Prolog saved state is appended to the file. If this is
the case, this state will be loaded instead of the default
boot.prc
file from the SWI-Prolog home directory. See also qsave_program/[1,2] and section 11.5. - Find the Prolog home directory. This process is described in detail in section 11.6.
PL_initialise() returns 1 if all initialisation succeeded and 0 otherwise.bugVarious fatal errors may cause PL_initialise() to call PL_halt(1), preventing it from returning at all.
In most cases, argc and argv will be passed from the main program. It is allowed to create your own argument vector, provided
argv[0]
is constructed according to the rules above. For example:int main(int argc, char **argv) { char *av[10]; int ac = 0; av[ac++] = argv[0]; av[ac++] = "-x"; av[ac++] = "mystate"; av[ac] = NULL; if ( !PL_initialise(ac, av) ) PL_halt(1); ... }
Please note that the passed argument vector may be referred from Prolog at any time and should therefore be valid as long as the Prolog engine is used.
A good setup in Windows is to add SWI-Prolog's
bin
directory to yourPATH
and either pass a module holding a saved state, or"libpl.dll"
asargv[0]
. If the Prolog state is attached to a DLL (see the -dll option of swipl-ld), pass the name of this DLL. - See whether a Prolog saved state is appended to the file. If this is
the case, this state will be loaded instead of the default
- int PL_is_initialised(int *argc, char ***argv)
- Test whether the Prolog engine is already initialised. Returns
FALSE
if Prolog is not initialised andTRUE
otherwise. If the engine is initialised and argc is notNULL
, the argument count used with PL_initialise() is stored in argc. Same for the argument vector argv. - int PL_set_resource_db_mem(const unsigned char *data, size_t size)
- This function must be called at most once and before calling
PL_initialise().
The memory area designated by data and size must
contain the resource data and be in the format as produced by
qsave_program/2.
The memory area is accessed by PL_initialise()
as well as calls to open_resource/3.178This
implies that the data must remain accessible during the lifetime of the
process if open_resource/3
is used. Future versions may provide a function to detach the resource
database and cause open_resource/3
to raise an exception.
For example, we can include the bootstrap data into an embedded executable using the steps below. The advantage of this approach is that it is fully supported by any OS and you obtain a single file executable.
- Create a saved state using qsave_program/2
or
% swipl -o state -c file.pl ...
- Create a C source file from the state using e.g., the Unix utility xxd(1):
% xxd -i state > state.h
- Embed Prolog as in the example below. Instead of calling the
toplevel you probably want to call your application code.
#include <SWI-Prolog.h> #include "state.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { if ( !PL_set_resource_db_mem(state, state_len) || !PL_initialise(argc, argv) ) PL_halt(1); return PL_toplevel(); }
Alternative to xxd, it is possible to use inline assembler, e.g. the gcc
incbin
instruction. Code for gcc was provided by Roberto Bagnara on the SWI-Prolog mailinglist. Given the state in a filestate
, create the following assembler program:.globl _state .globl _state_end _state: .incbin "state" _state_end:
Now include this as follows:
#include <SWI-Prolog.h> #if __linux #define STATE _state #define STATE_END _state_end #else #define STATE state #define STATE_END state_end #endif extern unsigned char STATE[]; extern unsigned char STATE_END[]; int main(int argc, char **argv) { if ( !PL_set_resource_db_mem(STATE, STATE_END - STATE) || !PL_initialise(argc, argv) ) PL_halt(1); return PL_toplevel(); }
As Jose Morales pointed at https://github.com/graphitemaster/incbin, which contains a portability layer on top of the above idea.
- Create a saved state using qsave_program/2
or
- int PL_toplevel()
- Runs the goal of the -t toplevel switch (default prolog/0) and returns 1 if successful, 0 otherwise.
- int PL_cleanup(int status)
- This function performs the reverse of PL_initialise().
It runs the
PL_on_halt()
and at_halt/1
handlers, closes all streams (except for the `standard I/O' streams
which are flushed only), deallocates all memory if status
equals `0' and restores all signal handlers. The
status argument is passed to the various termination hooks
and indicates the exit-status.
The function returns
TRUE
if successful andFALSE
otherwise. Currently,FALSE
is returned when an attempt is made to call PL_cleanup() recursively or if one of the exit handlers cancels the termination using cancel_halt/1. Exit handlers may only cancel termination if status is 0.In theory, this function allows deleting and restarting the Prolog system in the same process. In practice, SWI-Prolog's cleanup process is far from complete, and trying to revive the system using PL_initialise() will leak memory in the best case. It can also crash the appliction.
In this state, there is little practical use for this function. If you want to use Prolog temporarily, consider running it in a separate process. If you want to be able to reset Prolog, your options are (again) a separate process, modules or threads.
- void PL_cleanup_fork()
- Stop intervaltimer that may be running on behalf of profile/1.
The call is intended to be used in combination with fork():
if ( (pid=fork()) == 0 ) { PL_cleanup_fork(); <some exec variation> }
The call behaves the same on Windows, though there is probably no meaningful application.
- int PL_halt(int status)
- Clean up the Prolog environment using PL_cleanup()
and if successful call exit() with the status argument. Returns
FALSE
if exit was cancelled by PL_cleanup().
11.4.21.1 Threading, Signals and embedded Prolog
This section applies to Unix-based environments that have signals or multithreading. The Windows version is compiled for multithreading, and Windows lacks proper signals.
We can distinguish two classes of embedded executables. There are small C/C++ programs that act as an interfacing layer around Prolog. Most of these programs can be replaced using the normal Prolog executable extended with a dynamically loaded foreign extension and in most cases this is the preferred route. In other cases, Prolog is embedded in a complex application that---like Prolog---wants to control the process environment. A good example is Java. Embedding Prolog is generally the only way to get these environments together in one process image. Java VMs, however, are by nature multithreaded and appear to do signal handling (software interrupts).
On Unix systems, SWI-Prolog installs handlers for the following signals:
- SIGUSR2
- has an empty signal handler. This signal is sent to a thread after
sending a thread-signal (see
thread_signal/2).
It causes blocking system calls to return with
EINTR
, which gives them the opportunity to react to thread-signals.In some cases the embedded system and SWI-Prolog may both use
SIGUSR2
without conflict. If the embedded system redefinesSIGUSR2
with a handler that runs quickly and no harm is done in the embedded system due to spurious wakeup when initiated from Prolog, there is no problem. If SWI-Prolog is initialised after the embedded system it will call the handler set by the embedded system and the same conditions as above apply. SWI-Prolog's handler is a simple function only chaining a possibly previously registered handler. SWI-Prolog can handle spuriousSIGUSR2
signals. - SIGINT
- is used by the top level to activate the tracer (typically bound to control-C). The first control-C posts a request for starting the tracer in a safe, synchronous fashion. If control-C is hit again before the safe route is executed, it prompts the user whether or not a forced interrupt is desired.
- SIGTERM, SIGABRT and SIGQUIT
- are caught to cleanup before killing the process again using the same signal.
- SIGSEGV, SIGILL, SIGBUS, SIGFPE and SIGSYS
- are caught by to print a backtrace before killing the process again using the same signal.
- SIGHUP
- is caught and causes the process to exit with status 2 after cleanup.
The --nosignals option can be used to inhibit all
signal processing except for SIGUSR2
. The handling of SIGUSR2
is vital for dealing with blocking system call in threads. The used
signal may be changed using the --sigalert=NUM option
or disabled using --sigalert=0
.