This chapter describes SWIG's support of CHICKEN. CHICKEN is a Scheme-to-C compiler supporting most of the language features as defined in the Revised^5 Report on Scheme. Its main attributes are that it
When confronted with a large C library, CHICKEN users can use SWIG to generate CHICKEN wrappers for the C library. However, the real advantages of using SWIG with CHICKEN are its support for C++ -- object-oriented code is difficult to wrap by hand in CHICKEN -- and its typed pointer representation, essential for C and C++ libraries involving structures or classes.
CHICKEN support was introduced to SWIG in version 1.3.18. SWIG
relies on some recent additions to CHICKEN, which are only
present in releases of CHICKEN with version number
greater than or equal to 1.40.
CHICKEN can be downloaded from http://www.call-with-current-continuation.org/
You may want to look at any of the examples in Examples/chicken/
or Examples/GIFPlot/Chicken for the basic steps to run SWIG
CHICKEN.
We will generically refer to the wrapper as the
generated files.
To run SWIG CHICKEN in C mode, use the -chicken option.
% swig -chicken example.i
To allow the wrapper to take advantage of future CHICKEN code generation improvements, part of the wrapper is direct CHICKEN function calls (example_wrap.c) and part is CHICKEN Scheme (example.scm). The basic Scheme code must be compiled to C using your system's CHICKEN compiler.
% chicken example.scm -output-file oexample.c
So for the C mode of SWIG CHICKEN, example_wrap.c and oexample.c are the files that must be compiled to object files and linked into your project.
To run SWIG CHICKEN in C++ mode, use the -chicken -c++ option.
% swig -chicken -c++ example.i
This will generate example_wrap.cxx, example.scm, example-generic.scm and example-clos.scm. The basic Scheme code must be compiled to C using your system's CHICKEN compiler.
% chicken example.scm -output-file oexample.c
So for the C++ mode of SWIG CHICKEN, example_wrap.cxx and oexample.c are the files that must be compiled to object files and linked into your project.
Given a C variable, function or constant declaration named
Foo_Bar_to_Foo_Baz, the declaration will be available
in CHICKEN as an identifier ending with
Foo-Bar->Foo-Baz. That is, an underscore is converted
to a dash and '_to_' is converted to an arrow.
Additionally, there is a mixed mode that can be
specified with the -mixed option on the SWIG command
line. In this mode, the above rules apply with the addition
that changes in case are indications to SWIG CHICKEN to place a
dash in the CHICKEN identifier and the name is converted to lowercase.
For example, a C declartaion
named someDeclaration_xyz will be available as the
CHICKEN identifier ending with some-declaration-xyz.
You may control what the CHICKEN identifier will be by using the
%rename SWIG directive in the SWIG interface file.
SWIG CHICKEN does not use the standard CHICKEN module system (which has been deprecated); instead, it uses a prefix system. Specifying the module name as 'example' in SWIG CHICKEN can be done using either of:
CHICKEN will be able to access the module using the (declare
(uses modulename)) CHICKEN Scheme form.
Normally, for a C declaration Foo_Bar with a module
name of 'example', the corresponding CHICKEN identifier will be
example:Foo-Bar. The module name and a colon is
prefixed to the CHICKEN identifier (following normal
naming conventions).
You may explicitly override the prefix with the SWIG command
line option -prefix whateverprefix, or you may
remove the prefix with the option -noprefix.
Constants may be created using any of the four constructs in the interface file:
#define MYCONSTANT1 ...
%constant int MYCONSTANT2 = ...
const int MYCONSTANT3 = ...
enum { MYCONSTANT4 = ... };
In all cases, the constants may be accessed from with CHICKEN using the form (MYCONSTANT1); that is, the constants may be accessed using the read-only parameter form.
Variables are accessed using the full parameter form. For example, to set the C variable "int my_variable;", use the Scheme form (my-variable 2345). To get the C variable, use (my-variable).
C functions declared in the SWIG interface file will have
corresponding CHICKEN Scheme procedures. For example, the C
function "int sqrt(double x);" will be available using the
Scheme form (sqrt 2345.0). A void
return
value will give C_SCHEME_UNDEFINED as a result.
A function may return more than one value by using the
OUTPUT
specifier (see Lib/chicken/typemaps.i).
They will be returned as a Scheme list if there is more than one
result (that is, a non-void return value and at least one argout
parameter, or a void return value and at least two argout
parameters).
The author of TinyCLOS, Gregor Kiczales, describes TinyCLOS as:
Tiny CLOS is a Scheme implementation of a `kernelized' CLOS, with a metaobject protocol. The implementation is even simpler than the simple CLOS found in `The Art of the Metaobject Protocol,' weighing in at around 850 lines of code, including (some) comments and documentation.
Almost all good Scheme books describe how to use metaobjects and generic procedures to implement an object-oriented Scheme system. Please consult a Scheme book if you are unfamiliar with the concept.
CHICKEN has a modified version of TinyCLOS, which SWIG CHICKEN uses in C++ mode. SWIG CHICKEN generates a xxx-generic.scm and a xxx-clos.scm file, which contain TinyCLOS macros. When using these macros, you will need to (include "xxx-generic") all the generic macros your program needs, and then (include "xxx-clos") all the metaobject (class) macros your program needs.
SWIG CHICKEN will call the destructor for all TinyCLOS objects that are garbage-collected by CHICKEN. It also allows access to the underlying low-level Scheme procedures with (de)-marshaling of any TinyCLOS parameters. It is best to learn the TinyCLOS system by running the Examples/chicken/class/ example.
Please refer to CHICKEN - A practical and portable Scheme system - User's manual for detailed help on how to compile C code for use in a CHICKEN program. Briefly, to compile C code, be sure to add `chicken-config -cflags` or `chicken-config -shared -cflags` to your compiler options. Use the -shared option if you want to create a dynamically loadable module. You might also want to use the much simpler csc or csc.bat.
Please refer to CHICKEN - A practical and portable Scheme system - User's manual for detailed help on how to link object files to create a CHICKEN Scheme program. Briefly, to link object files, be sure to add `chicken-config -extra-libs -libs` or `chicken-config -shared -extra-libs -libs`to your linker options. Use the -shared option if you want to create a dynamically loadable module.
The easiest way to use SWIG and CHICKEN is to use the csc compiler wrapper provided by CHICKEN. Assume you have a SWIG interface file in example.i and the C functions being wrapped are in example_impl.c.
$ swig -chicken example.i $ csc -svk example.scm example_impl.c example_wrap.c $ csi example.so test_script.scm
You must be careful not to name the example_impl.c file example.c because when compiling example.scm, csc compiles that into example.c!
Again, we can easily use csc to build a binary.
$ swig -chicken example.i $ csc -vk example.scm example_impl.c example_wrap.c test_script.scm -o example $ ./example
The Chicken module handles all types via typemaps. This information is
read from Lib/chicken/typemaps.i
and
Lib/chicken/chicken.swg
.
Two Chicken-specific typemaps are supported:
clos_in
and clos_out
. They are for
converting TinyCLOS to and from low-level CHICKEN SWIG. Here is
a quick example:
The/* Let "Shape" objects be converted back and forth from TinyCLOS into low-level CHICKEN SWIG procedures */ %typemap(clos_in) Shape * = SIMPLE_CLOS_OBJECT *; %typemap(clos_out) Shape * = SIMPLE_CLOS_OBJECT *;
SIMPLE_CLOS_OBJECT
will generally be all that
is needed ... the definition of this is as follows:
Now, in the example using "Shape" objects, all objects instantiated from Shape or any of its subclasses fully known to SWIG will have correct TinyCLOS representations based on/* TinyCLOS <--> Low-level CHICKEN */ %typemap("clos_in") SIMPLE_CLOS_OBJECT * "(slot-ref $input (quote this))" %typemap("clos_out") SIMPLE_CLOS_OBJECT * "(make $class (quote this) $1)"
SIMPLE_CLOS_OBJECT
. SWIG "knows" the classes that
are exposed in the SWIG interface file; it "fully knows" only
those classes that are not forward declarations.
/* FILE: vtkObject.h */ class vtkObject { // ... };
/* FILE: vtkWindow.h */ #include "vtkObject.h" class vtkWindow : public vtkObject { // ... };
/* FILE: vtkViewport.h */ #include "vtkViewport.h" class vtkViewport : public vtkObject { // ... };
/* FILE: vtkRenderWindow.h */ #include "vtkWindow.h" class vtkRenderer; class vtkRenderWindow : public vtkWindow { // ... virtual void AddRenderer (vtkRenderer *rendererArg); // ... };
/* FILE: vtkRenderer.h */ #include "vtkViewport.h" class vtkRenderWindow; class vtkRenderer : public vtkViewport { // ... void SetRenderWindow(vtkRenderWindow *); // ... };
/* FILE: vtk.i; SWIG interface file */ %typemap(clos_in) vtkObject * = SIMPLE_CLOS_OBJECT *; %typemap(clos_out) vtkObject * = SIMPLE_CLOS_OBJECT *; %include "vtkObject.h" %include "vtkWindow.h" %include "vtkViewport.h" %include "vtkRenderWindow.h" %include "vtkRenderer.h"
After SWIG processes vtkObject.h
(from the
%include "vtkObject.h" line), SWIG will have the complete
definition of the vtkObject
class because
vtkObject
does not contain any references to any
other classes. As it reads vtkWindow.h
and
vtkViewport.h
, it will already have the definition of
vtkObject
, so it will not need a clos_in
or clos_out
typemap for the vtkWindow
or
vtkViewport
subclasses of vtkObject
.
However, by the time SWIG gets to %include
"vtkRenderWindow.h", it will not have the definition for the
vtkRenderer
class, even though it is used by
vtkRenderWindow
. We therefore must
put in clos_in/clos_out
typemaps for
vtkRenderer
.
For pointer types, SWIG uses CHICKEN tagged pointers. A tagged pointer is an ordinary CHICKEN pointer with an extra slot for a void *. With SWIG CHICKEN, this void * is a pointer to a type-info structure. So each pointer used as input or output from the SWIG-generated CHICKEN wrappers will have type information attached to it. This will let the wrappers correctly determine which method should be called according to the object type hierarchy exposed in the SWIG interface files.
To construct a Scheme object from a C pointer, the wrapper code
calls the function
SWIG_NewPointerObj(void *ptr, swig_type_info *type, int owner)
,
The function that calls SWIG_NewPointerObj
must have a variable declared
C_word *known_space = C_alloc(C_SIZEOF_SWIG_POINTER);
It is ok to call SWIG_NewPointerObj
more than once,
just make sure known_space has enough space for all the created pointers.
To get the pointer represented by a CHICKEN tagged pointer, the
wrapper code calls the function
SWIG_ConvertPtr(C_word s, void **result, swig_type_info *type, int flags)
,
passing a pointer to a struct representing the expected pointer
type.