lib/sod.h: New macro `SOD_INSTBASE' to find the allocated base address.
[sod] / pre-reorg / class-defs.lisp
1 ;;; -*-lisp-*-
2 ;;;
3 ;;; Basic definitions for classes, methods and suchlike
4 ;;;
5 ;;; (c) 2009 Straylight/Edgeware
6 ;;;
7
8 ;;;----- Licensing notice ---------------------------------------------------
9 ;;;
10 ;;; This file is part of the Simple Object Definition system.
11 ;;;
12 ;;; SOD is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
13 ;;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
14 ;;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
15 ;;; (at your option) any later version.
16 ;;;
17 ;;; SOD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
18 ;;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
19 ;;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
20 ;;; GNU General Public License for more details.
21 ;;;
22 ;;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
23 ;;; along with SOD; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
24 ;;; Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
25
26 (cl:in-package #:sod)
27
28 ;;;--------------------------------------------------------------------------
29 ;;; Classes.
30
31 (defclass sod-class ()
32 ((name :initarg :name :type string :reader sod-class-name)
33 (location :initarg :location :initform (file-location nil)
34 :type file-location :reader file-location)
35 (nickname :initarg :nick :type string :reader sod-class-nickname)
36 (direct-superclasses :initarg :superclasses :type list
37 :reader sod-class-direct-superclasses)
38 (chain-link :initarg :link :type (or sod-class null)
39 :reader sod-class-chain-link)
40 (metaclass :initarg :metaclass :type sod-class
41 :reader sod-class-metaclass)
42 (slots :initarg :slots :initform nil
43 :type list :accessor sod-class-slots)
44 (instance-initializers :initarg :instance-initializers :initform nil
45 :type list
46 :accessor sod-class-instance-initializers)
47 (class-initializers :initarg :class-initializers :initform nil
48 :type list :accessor sod-class-class-initializers)
49 (messages :initarg :messages :initform nil
50 :type list :accessor sod-class-messages)
51 (methods :initarg :methods :initform nil
52 :type list :accessor sod-class-methods)
53
54 (class-precedence-list :type list :accessor sod-class-precedence-list)
55
56 (type :type c-class-type :accessor sod-class-type)
57
58 (chain-head :type sod-class :accessor sod-class-chain-head)
59 (chain :type list :accessor sod-class-chain)
60 (chains :type list :accessor sod-class-chains)
61
62 (ilayout :type ilayout :accessor sod-class-ilayout)
63 (effective-methods :type list :accessor sod-class-effective-methods)
64 (vtables :type list :accessor sod-class-vtables)
65
66 (state :initform nil :type (member nil :finalized broken)
67 :accessor sod-class-state))
68 (:documentation
69 "Classes describe the layout and behaviour of objects.
70
71 The NAME, LOCATION, NICKNAME, DIRECT-SUPERCLASSES, CHAIN-LINK and
72 METACLASS slots are intended to be initialized when the class object is
73 constructed:
74
75 * The NAME is the identifier associated with the class in the user's
76 source file. It is used verbatim in the generated C code as a type
77 name, and must be distinct from other file-scope names in any source
78 file which includes the class definition. Furthermore, other names
79 are derived from the class name (most notably the class object
80 NAME__class), which have external linkage and must therefore be
81 distinct from all other identifiers in the program. It is forbidden
82 for a class NAME to begin with an underscore or to contain two
83 consecutive underscores.
84
85 * The LOCATION identifies where in the source the class was defined. It
86 gets used in error messages.
87
88 * The NICKNAME is a shorter identifier used to name the class in some
89 circumstances. The uniqueness requirements on NICKNAME are less
90 strict, which allows them to be shorter: no class may have two classes
91 with the same nickname on its class precedence list. Nicknames are
92 used (user-visibly) to distinguish slots and messages defined by
93 different classes, and (invisibly) in the derived names of direct
94 methods. It is forbidden for a nickname to begin with an underscore,
95 or to contain two consecutive underscores.
96
97 * The DIRECT-SUPERCLASSES are a list of the class's direct superclasses,
98 in the order that they were declared in the source. The class
99 precedence list is computed from the DIRECT-SUPERCLASSES lists of all
100 of the superclasses involved.
101
102 * The CHAIN-LINK is either NIL or one of the DIRECT-SUPERCLASSES. Class
103 chains are a means for recovering most of the benefits of simple
104 hierarchy lost by the introduction of multiple inheritance. A class's
105 superclasses (including itself) are partitioned into chains,
106 consisting of a class, its CHAIN-LINK superclass, that class's
107 CHAIN-LINK, and so on. It is an error if two direct subclasses of any
108 class appear in the same chain (a global property which requires
109 global knowledge of an entire program's class hierarchy in order to
110 determine sensibly). Slots of superclasses in the same chain can be
111 accessed efficiently; there is an indirection needed to access slots
112 of superclasses in other chains. Furthermore, an indirection is
113 required to perform a cross-chain conversion (i.e., converting a
114 pointer to an instance of some class into a pointer to an instance of
115 one of its superclasses in a different chain), an operation which
116 occurs implicitly in effective methods in order to call direct methods
117 defined on cross-chain superclasses.
118
119 * The METACLASS is the class of the class object. Classes are objects
120 in their own right, and therefore must be instances of some class;
121 this class is the metaclass. Metaclasses can define additional slots
122 and methods to be provided by their instances; a class definition can
123 provide (C constant expression) initial values for the metaclass
124 instance.
125
126 The next few slots can't usually be set at object-construction time, since
127 the objects need to contain references to the class object itself.
128
129 * The SLOTS are a list of the slots defined by the class (instances of
130 SOD-SLOT). (The class will also define all of the slots defined by
131 its superclasses.)
132
133 * The INSTANCE-INITIALIZERS and CLASS-INITIALIZERS are lists of
134 initializers for slots (see SOD-INITIALIZER and subclasses), providing
135 initial values for instances of the class, and for the class's class
136 object itself, respectively.
137
138 * The MESSAGES are a list of the messages recognized by the class
139 (instances of SOD-MESSAGE and subclasses). (Note that the message
140 need not have any methods defined on it. The class will also
141 recognize all of the messages defined by its superclasses.)
142
143 * The METHODS are a list of (direct) methods defined on the class
144 (instances of SOD-METHOD and subclasses). Each method provides
145 behaviour to be invoked by a particular message recognized by the
146 class.
147
148 Other slots are computed from these in order to describe the class's
149 layout and effective methods; this is done by FINALIZE-SOD-CLASS.
150
151 * The CLASS-PRECEDENCE-LIST is a list of superclasses in a linear order.
152 It is computed by the generic function COMPUTE-CLASS-PRECEDENCE-LIST,
153 whose default implementation ensures that the order of superclasses is
154 such that (a) subclasses appear before their superclasses; (b) the
155 direct superclasses of a given class appear in the order in which they
156 were declared by the programmer; and (c) classes always appear in the
157 same relative order in all class precedence lists in the same
158 superclass graph.
159
160 * The CHAIN-HEAD is the least-specific class in the class's chain. If
161 there is no link class then the CHAIN-HEAD is the class itself. This
162 slot, like the next two, is computed by the generic function
163 COMPUTE-CHAINS.
164
165 * The CHAIN is the list of classes on the complete primary chain,
166 starting from this class and ending with the CHAIN-HEAD.
167
168 * The CHAINS are the complete collection of chains (most-to-least
169 specific) for the class and all of its superclasses.
170
171 * The ILAYOUT describes the layout for an instance of the class. It's
172 quite complicated; see the documentation of the ILAYOUT class for
173 detais.
174
175 * The EFFECTIVE-METHODS are a list of effective methods, specialized for
176 the class.
177
178 * The VTABLES are a list of descriptions of vtables for the class. The
179 individual elements are VTABLE objects, which are even more
180 complicated than ILAYOUT structures. See the class documentation for
181 details."))
182
183 (defmethod print-object ((class sod-class) stream)
184 (maybe-print-unreadable-object (class stream :type t)
185 (princ (sod-class-name class) stream)))
186
187 ;;;--------------------------------------------------------------------------
188 ;;; Slots and initializers.
189
190 (defclass sod-slot ()
191 ((name :initarg :name :type string :reader sod-slot-name)
192 (location :initarg :location :initform (file-location nil)
193 :type file-location :reader file-location)
194 (class :initarg :class :type sod-class :reader sod-slot-class)
195 (type :initarg :type :type c-type :reader sod-slot-type))
196 (:documentation
197 "Slots are units of information storage in instances.
198
199 Each class defines a number of slots, which function similarly to (data)
200 members in structures. An instance contains all of the slots defined in
201 its class and all of its superclasses.
202
203 A slot carries the following information.
204
205 * A NAME, which distinguishes it from other slots defined by the same
206 class. Unlike most (all?) other object systems, slots defined in
207 different classes are in distinct namespaces. There are no special
208 restrictions on slot names.
209
210 * A LOCATION, which states where in the user's source the slot was
211 defined. This gets used in error messages.
212
213 * A CLASS, which states which class defined the slot. The slot is
214 available in instances of this class and all of its descendents.
215
216 * A TYPE, which is the C type of the slot. This must be an object type
217 (certainly not a function type, and it must be a complete type by the
218 time that the user header code has been scanned)."))
219
220 (defmethod print-object ((slot sod-slot) stream)
221 (maybe-print-unreadable-object (slot stream :type t)
222 (pprint-c-type (sod-slot-type slot) stream
223 (format nil "~A.~A"
224 (sod-class-nickname (sod-slot-class slot))
225 (sod-slot-name slot)))))
226
227 (defclass sod-initializer ()
228 ((slot :initarg :slot :type sod-slot :reader sod-initializer-slot)
229 (location :initarg :location :initform (file-location nil)
230 :type file-location :reader file-location)
231 (class :initarg :class :type sod-class :reader sod-initializer-class)
232 (value-kind :initarg :value-kind :type keyword
233 :reader sod-initializer-value-kind)
234 (value-form :initarg :value-form :type c-fragment
235 :reader sod-initializer-value-form))
236 (:documentation
237 "Provides an initial value for a slot.
238
239 The slots of an initializer are as follows.
240
241 * The SLOT specifies which slot this initializer is meant to initialize.
242
243 * The LOCATION states the position in the user's source file where the
244 initializer was found. This gets used in error messages. (Depending
245 on the source layout style, this might differ from the location in the
246 VALUE-FORM C fragment.)
247
248 * The CLASS states which class defined this initializer. For instance
249 slot initializers (SOD-INSTANCE-INITIALIZER), this will be the same as
250 the SLOT's class, or be one of its descendants. For class slot
251 initializers (SOD-CLASS-INITIALIZER), this will be an instance of the
252 SLOT's class, or an instance of one of its descendants.
253
254 * The VALUE-KIND states what manner of initializer we have. It can be
255 either :SINGLE, indicating a standalone expression, or :COMPOUND,
256 indicating a compound initializer which must be surrounded by braces
257 on output.
258
259 * The VALUE-FORM gives the text of the initializer, as a C fragment.
260
261 Typically you'll see instances of subclasses of this class in the wild
262 rather than instances of this class directly. See SOD-CLASS-INITIALIZER
263 and SOD-INSTANCE-INITIALIZER."))
264
265 (defmethod print-object ((initializer sod-initializer) stream)
266 (if *print-escape*
267 (print-unreadable-object (initializer stream :type t)
268 (format stream "~A = ~A"
269 (sod-initializer-slot initializer)
270 initializer))
271 (format stream "~:[{~A}~;~A~]"
272 (eq (sod-initializer-value-kind initializer) :single)
273 (sod-initializer-value-form initializer))))
274
275 (defclass sod-class-initializer (sod-initializer)
276 ()
277 (:documentation
278 "Provides an initial value for a class slot.
279
280 A class slot initializer provides an initial value for a slot in the class
281 object (i.e., one of the slots defined by the class's metaclass). Its
282 VALUE-FORM must have the syntax of an initializer, and its consituent
283 expressions must be constant expressions.
284
285 See SOD-INITIALIZER for more details."))
286
287 (defclass sod-instance-initializer (sod-initializer)
288 ()
289 (:documentation
290 "Provides an initial value for a slot in all instances.
291
292 An instance slot initializer provides an initial value for a slot in
293 instances of the class. Its VALUE-FORM must have the syntax of an
294 initializer. Furthermore, if the slot has aggregate type, then you'd
295 better be sure that your compiler supports compound literals (6.5.2.5)
296 because that's what the initializer gets turned into.
297
298 See SOD-INITIALIZER for more details."))
299
300 ;;;--------------------------------------------------------------------------
301 ;;; Messages and methods.
302
303 (defclass sod-message ()
304 ((name :initarg :name :type string :reader sod-message-name)
305 (location :initarg :location :initform (file-location nil)
306 :type file-location :reader file-location)
307 (class :initarg :class :type sod-class :reader sod-message-class)
308 (type :initarg :type :type c-function-type :reader sod-message-type))
309 (:documentation
310 "Messages the means for stimulating an object to behave.
311
312 SOD is a single-dispatch object system, like Smalltalk, C++, Python and so
313 on, but unlike CLOS and Dylan. Behaviour is invoked by `sending messages'
314 to objects. A message carries a name (distinguishing it from other
315 messages recognized by the same class), and a number of arguments; the
316 object may return a value in response. Sending a message therefore looks
317 very much like calling a function; indeed, each message bears the static
318 TYPE signature of a function.
319
320 An object reacts to being sent a message by executing an `effective
321 method', constructed from the direct methods defined on the recpient's
322 (run-time, not necessarily statically-declared) class and its superclasses
323 according to the message's `method combination'.
324
325 Much interesting work is done by subclasses of SOD-MESSAGE, which (for
326 example) specify method combinations.
327
328 The slots are as follows.
329
330 * The NAME distinguishes the message from others defined by the same
331 class. Unlike most (all?) other object systems, messages defined in
332 different classes are in distinct namespaces. It is forbidden for a
333 message name to begin with an underscore, or to contain two
334 consecutive underscores. (Final underscores are fine.)
335
336 * The LOCATION states where in the user's source the slot was defined.
337 It gets used in error messages.
338
339 * The CLASS states which class defined the message.
340
341 * The TYPE is a function type describing the message's arguments and
342 return type.
343
344 Subclasses can (and probably will) define additional slots."))
345
346 (defmethod print-object ((message sod-message) stream)
347 (maybe-print-unreadable-object (message stream :type t)
348 (pprint-c-type (sod-message-type message) stream
349 (format nil "~A.~A"
350 (sod-class-nickname (sod-message-class message))
351 (sod-message-name message)))))
352
353 (defclass sod-method ()
354 ((message :initarg :message :type sod-message :reader sod-method-message)
355 (location :initarg :location :initform (file-location nil)
356 :type file-location :reader file-location)
357 (class :initarg :class :type sod-class :reader sod-method-class)
358 (type :initarg :type :type c-function-type :reader sod-method-type)
359 (body :initarg :body :type (or c-fragment null) :reader sod-method-body))
360 (:documentation
361 "(Direct) methods are units of behaviour.
362
363 Methods are the unit of behaviour in SOD. Classes define direct methods
364 for particular messages.
365
366 When a message is received by an instance, all of the methods defined for
367 that message on that instance's (run-time, not static) class and its
368 superclasses are `applicable'. The applicable methods are gathered
369 together and invoked in some way; the details of this are left to the
370 `method combination', determined by the subclass of SOD-MESSAGE.
371
372 The slots are as follows.
373
374 * The MESSAGE describes which meessage invokes the method's behaviour.
375 The method is combined with other methods on the same message
376 according to the message's method combination, to form an `effective
377 method'.
378
379 * The LOCATION states where, in the user's source, the method was
380 defined. This gets used in error messages. (Depending on the user's
381 coding style, this location might be subtly different from the BODY's
382 location.)
383
384 * The CLASS specifies which class defined the method. This will be
385 either the class of the message, or one of its descendents.
386
387 * The TYPE gives the type of the method, including its arguments. This
388 will, in general, differ from the type of the message for several
389 reasons.
390
391 -- Firstly, the method type must include names for all of the
392 method's parameters. The message definition can omit the
393 parameter names (in the same way as a function declaration can).
394 Formally, the message definition can contain abstract
395 declarators, whereas method definitions must not.
396
397 -- Method combinations may require different parameter or return
398 types. For example, `before' and `after' methods don't
399 contribute to the message's return value, so they must be defined
400 as returning `void'.
401
402 -- Method combinations may permit methods whose parameter and/or
403 return types don't exactly match the corresponding types of the
404 message. For example, one might have methods with covariant
405 return types and contravariant parameter types. (This sounds
406 nice, but it doesn't actually seem like such a clever idea when
407 you consider that the co-/contravariance must hold among all the
408 applicable methods ordered according to the class precedence
409 list. As a result, a user might have to work hard to build
410 subclasses whose CPLs match the restrictions implied by the
411 method types.)
412
413 Method objects are fairly passive in the SOD translator. However,
414 subclasses of SOD-MESSAGE may (and probably will) construct instances of
415 subclasses of SOD-METHOD in order to carry the additional metadata they
416 need to keep track of."))
417
418 (defmethod print-object ((method sod-method) stream)
419 (maybe-print-unreadable-object (method stream :type t)
420 (format stream "~A ~@_~A"
421 (sod-method-message method)
422 (sod-method-class method))))
423
424 ;;;--------------------------------------------------------------------------
425 ;;; Classes as C types.
426
427 (defclass c-class-type (simple-c-type)
428 ((class :initarg :class :type (or null sod-class) :accessor c-type-class))
429 (:documentation
430 "A SOD class, as a C type.
431
432 One usually handles classes as pointers, but the type refers to the actual
433 instance structure itself. Or, in fact, just the primary chain of the
434 instance (i.e., the one containing the class's own direct slots) -- which
435 is why dealing with the instance structure directly doesn't make much
436 sense.
437
438 The CLASS slot will be NIL if the class isn't defined yet, i.e., this
439 entry was constructed by a forward reference operation.
440
441 The NAME slot inherited from SIMPLE-C-TYPE is here so that we can print
442 the type even when it's a forward reference."))
443
444 (defmethod c-type-equal-p and ((type-a c-class-type)
445 (type-b c-class-type))
446 (eql (c-type-class type-a) (c-type-class type-b)))
447
448 (defmethod print-c-type (stream (type c-class-type) &optional colon atsign)
449 (declare (ignore colon atsign))
450 (format stream "~:@<CLASS ~@_~S~{ ~_~S~}~:>"
451 (c-type-name type)
452 (c-type-qualifiers type)))
453
454 (defun find-class-type (name &optional floc)
455 "Look up NAME and return the corresponding C-CLASS-TYPE.
456
457 Returns two values: TYPE and WINP.
458
459 * If the type was found, and was a class, returns TYPE.
460
461 * If no type was found at all, returns NIL.
462
463 * If a type was found, but it wasn't a class, signals an error at FLOC."
464
465 (with-default-error-location (floc)
466 (let ((type (gethash name *type-map*)))
467 (typecase type
468 (null nil)
469 (c-class-type type)
470 (t (error "Type `~A' (~A) is not a class" name type))))))
471
472 (defun make-class-type (name &optional floc)
473 "Return a class type for NAME, creating it if necessary.
474
475 FLOC is the location to use in error reports."
476 (let ((name (etypecase name
477 (sod-class (sod-class-name name))
478 (string name))))
479 (or (find-class-type name floc)
480 (setf (gethash name *type-map*)
481 (make-instance 'c-class-type :name name :class nil)))))
482
483 (defun find-sod-class (name &optional floc)
484 "Return the SOD-CLASS object with the given NAME.
485
486 FLOC is the location to use in error reports."
487 (with-default-error-location (floc)
488 (let ((type (find-class-type name floc)))
489 (cond ((not type) (error "Type `~A' not known" name))
490 (t (let ((class (c-type-class type)))
491 (unless class
492 (error "Class `~A' is incomplete" name))
493 class))))))
494
495 (defun record-sod-class (class &optional (floc class))
496 "Record CLASS as being a class definition.
497
498 FLOC is the location to use in error reports."
499 (with-default-error-location (floc)
500 (let* ((name (sod-class-name class))
501 (type (make-class-type name floc)))
502 (cond ((null type) nil)
503 ((c-type-class type)
504 (cerror* "Class `~A' already defined at ~A"
505 name (file-location (c-type-class type))))
506 (t
507 (setf (c-type-class type) class))))))
508
509 (define-c-type-syntax class (name &rest quals)
510 "Returns a type object for the named class."
511 (if quals
512 `(qualify-type (make-class-type ,name) (list ,@quals))
513 `(make-class-type ,name)))
514
515 ;;;----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------