summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorPhilipp Stephani <phst@google.com>2019-04-18 17:42:45 +0200
committerPhilipp Stephani <phst@google.com>2019-04-24 11:33:52 +0200
commitbffceab6339fb4042588b893ef754c6264379e75 (patch)
tree03747b5cb5275a24418aa9fb421977eb6c0ee063
parent5ae407aad4f2564fae7ddce077eb01aa8efa37fb (diff)
downloademacs-bffceab6339fb4042588b893ef754c6264379e75.tar.gz
Add conversions to and from struct timespec to module interface.
Time values are a fundamental data type, and such conversions are hard to implement within modules because of the various forms of time values in Emacs Lisp. Adding dedicated conversion functions can significantly simplify module code dealing with times. This approach uses nanosecond precision. While Emacs in theory has support for higher-precision time values, in practice most languages and standards, such as POSIX, C, Java, and Go, have settled on nanosecond-precision integers to represent time. * src/emacs-module.h.in: Add header for struct timespec. * src/module-env-27.h: Add module functions for time conversion. * src/emacs-module.c (module_extract_time, module_make_time): New functions. (initialize_environment): Use them. * test/data/emacs-module/mod-test.c (Fmod_test_add_nanosecond): New test function. (emacs_module_init): Define it. * test/src/emacs-module-tests.el (mod-test-add-nanosecond/valid) (mod-test-add-nanosecond/nil, mod-test-add-nanosecond/invalid): New unit tests. * doc/lispref/internals.texi (Module Values): Document time conversion functions.
-rw-r--r--doc/lispref/internals.texi44
-rw-r--r--etc/NEWS3
-rw-r--r--src/emacs-module.c17
-rw-r--r--src/emacs-module.h.in1
-rw-r--r--src/module-env-27.h6
-rw-r--r--test/data/emacs-module/mod-test.c13
-rw-r--r--test/src/emacs-module-tests.el28
7 files changed, 112 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/lispref/internals.texi b/doc/lispref/internals.texi
index 25892d4b57c..0e7a1339e76 100644
--- a/doc/lispref/internals.texi
+++ b/doc/lispref/internals.texi
@@ -1387,6 +1387,38 @@ This function returns the value of a Lisp float specified by
@var{arg}, as a C @code{double} value.
@end deftypefn
+@deftypefn Function struct timespec extract_time (emacs_env *@var{env}, emacs_value @var{time})
+This function, which is available since Emacs 27, interprets
+@var{time} as an Emacs Lisp time value and returns the corresponding
+@code{struct timespec}. @xref{Time of Day}. @code{struct timespec}
+represents a timestamp with nanosecond precision. It has the
+following members:
+
+@table @code
+@item time_t tv_sec
+Whole number of seconds.
+@item long tv_nsec
+Fractional seconds as number of nanoseconds, always less than one
+billion.
+@end table
+
+@noindent
+@xref{Elapsed Time,,,libc}.
+
+If @var{time} has higher precision than nanoseconds, then this
+function truncates it to nanosecond precision. This function signals
+an error if @var{time} (truncated to nanoseconds) cannot be
+represented by @code{struct timespec}. For example, if @code{time_t}
+is a 32-bit integral type, then a @var{time} value of ten billion
+seconds would signal an error, but a @var{time} value of 600
+picoseconds would get truncated to zero.
+
+If you need to deal with time values that are not representable by
+@code{struct timespec}, or if you want higher precision, call the Lisp
+function @code{encode-time} and work with its return value.
+@xref{Time Conversion}.
+@end deftypefn
+
@deftypefn Function bool copy_string_contents (emacs_env *@var{env}, emacs_value @var{arg}, char *@var{buf}, ptrdiff_t *@var{len})
This function stores the UTF-8 encoded text of a Lisp string specified
by @var{arg} in the array of @code{char} pointed by @var{buf}, which
@@ -1452,6 +1484,18 @@ This function takes a @code{double} argument @var{d} and returns the
corresponding Emacs floating-point value.
@end deftypefn
+@deftypefn Function emacs_value make_time (emacs_env *@var{env}, struct timespec @var{time})
+This function, which is available since Emacs 27, takes a @code{struct
+timespec} argument @var{time} and returns the corresponding Emacs
+timestamp as a pair @code{(@var{ticks} . @var{hz})}. @xref{Time of
+Day}. The return value represents exactly the same timestamp as
+@var{time}: all input values are representable, and there is never a
+loss of precision. @code{@var{time}.tv_sec} and
+@code{@var{time}.tv_nsec} can be arbitrary values. In particular,
+there's no requirement that @var{time} be normalized. This means that
+@code{@var{time}.tv_nsec} can be negative or larger than 999,999,999.
+@end deftypefn
+
@deftypefn Function emacs_value make_string (emacs_env *@var{env}, const char *@var{str}, ptrdiff_t @var{strlen})
This function creates an Emacs string from C text string pointed by
@var{str} whose length in bytes, not including the terminating null
diff --git a/etc/NEWS b/etc/NEWS
index b13ab47768b..fc9b828baa1 100644
--- a/etc/NEWS
+++ b/etc/NEWS
@@ -1910,6 +1910,9 @@ returns a regexp that never matches anything, which is an identity for
this operation. Previously, the empty string was returned in this
case.
+** New module environment functions 'make_time' and 'extract_time' to
+convert between timespec structures and Emacs Lisp time values.
+
* Changes in Emacs 27.1 on Non-Free Operating Systems
diff --git a/src/emacs-module.c b/src/emacs-module.c
index b812fdc2df4..e46af30ce84 100644
--- a/src/emacs-module.c
+++ b/src/emacs-module.c
@@ -77,6 +77,7 @@ To add a new module function, proceed as follows:
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
+#include <time.h>
#include "lisp.h"
#include "dynlib.h"
@@ -737,6 +738,20 @@ module_process_input (emacs_env *env)
return emacs_process_input_continue;
}
+static struct timespec
+module_extract_time (emacs_env *env, emacs_value value)
+{
+ MODULE_FUNCTION_BEGIN ((struct timespec) {0});
+ return lisp_time_argument (value_to_lisp (value));
+}
+
+static emacs_value
+module_make_time (emacs_env *env, struct timespec time)
+{
+ MODULE_FUNCTION_BEGIN (NULL);
+ return lisp_to_value (env, make_lisp_time (time));
+}
+
/* Subroutines. */
@@ -1140,6 +1155,8 @@ initialize_environment (emacs_env *env, struct emacs_env_private *priv)
env->vec_size = module_vec_size;
env->should_quit = module_should_quit;
env->process_input = module_process_input;
+ env->extract_time = module_extract_time;
+ env->make_time = module_make_time;
Vmodule_environments = Fcons (make_mint_ptr (env), Vmodule_environments);
return env;
}
diff --git a/src/emacs-module.h.in b/src/emacs-module.h.in
index 009d1583fef..bfbe226dd90 100644
--- a/src/emacs-module.h.in
+++ b/src/emacs-module.h.in
@@ -22,6 +22,7 @@ along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stddef.h>
+#include <time.h>
#ifndef __cplusplus
#include <stdbool.h>
diff --git a/src/module-env-27.h b/src/module-env-27.h
index b491b60fbbc..e63843f8d63 100644
--- a/src/module-env-27.h
+++ b/src/module-env-27.h
@@ -2,3 +2,9 @@
function should quit. */
enum emacs_process_input_result (*process_input) (emacs_env *env)
EMACS_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL (1);
+
+ struct timespec (*extract_time) (emacs_env *env, emacs_value value)
+ EMACS_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL (1);
+
+ emacs_value (*make_time) (emacs_env *env, struct timespec time)
+ EMACS_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL (1);
diff --git a/test/data/emacs-module/mod-test.c b/test/data/emacs-module/mod-test.c
index a39e41afee6..dbdbfecfe6a 100644
--- a/test/data/emacs-module/mod-test.c
+++ b/test/data/emacs-module/mod-test.c
@@ -366,6 +366,18 @@ Fmod_test_sleep_until (emacs_env *env, ptrdiff_t nargs, emacs_value *args,
return env->intern (env, "finished");
}
+static emacs_value
+Fmod_test_add_nanosecond (emacs_env *env, ptrdiff_t nargs, emacs_value *args,
+ void *data)
+{
+ assert (nargs == 1);
+ struct timespec time = env->extract_time (env, args[0]);
+ assert (time.tv_nsec >= 0);
+ assert (time.tv_nsec < 2000000000); /* possible leap second */
+ time.tv_nsec++;
+ return env->make_time (env, time);
+}
+
/* Lisp utilities for easier readability (simple wrappers). */
/* Provide FEATURE to Emacs. */
@@ -434,6 +446,7 @@ emacs_module_init (struct emacs_runtime *ert)
DEFUN ("mod-test-invalid-finalizer", Fmod_test_invalid_finalizer, 0, 0,
NULL, NULL);
DEFUN ("mod-test-sleep-until", Fmod_test_sleep_until, 2, 2, NULL, NULL);
+ DEFUN ("mod-test-add-nanosecond", Fmod_test_add_nanosecond, 1, 1, NULL, NULL);
#undef DEFUN
diff --git a/test/src/emacs-module-tests.el b/test/src/emacs-module-tests.el
index 35aaaa64b65..eea4c611655 100644
--- a/test/src/emacs-module-tests.el
+++ b/test/src/emacs-module-tests.el
@@ -310,4 +310,32 @@ Interactively, you can try hitting \\[keyboard-quit] to quit."
'finished))
(quit)))))
+(ert-deftest mod-test-add-nanosecond/valid ()
+ (dolist (input (list
+ ;; Some realistic examples.
+ (current-time) (time-to-seconds)
+ (encode-time 12 34 5 6 7 2019 t)
+ ;; Various legacy timestamp forms.
+ '(123 456) '(123 456 789) '(123 456 789 6000)
+ ;; Corner case: this will result in a nanosecond
+ ;; value of 1000000000 after addition. The module
+ ;; code should handle this correctly.
+ '(123 65535 999999 999000)
+ ;; Seconds since the epoch.
+ 123 123.45
+ ;; New (TICKS . HZ) format.
+ '(123456789 . 1000000000)))
+ (ert-info ((format "input: %s" input))
+ (should (time-equal-p (mod-test-add-nanosecond input)
+ (time-add input '(0 0 0 1000)))))))
+
+(ert-deftest mod-test-add-nanosecond/nil ()
+ (should (<= (float-time (mod-test-add-nanosecond nil))
+ (+ (float-time) 1e-9))))
+
+(ert-deftest mod-test-add-nanosecond/invalid ()
+ (dolist (input '(1.0e+INF 1.0e-INF 0.0e+NaN (123) (123.45 6 7) "foo" [1 2]))
+ (ert-info ((format "input: %s" input))
+ (should-error (mod-test-add-nanosecond input)))))
+
;;; emacs-module-tests.el ends here