Added the first library snippet
This commit is contained in:
parent
3eb13620a8
commit
174ab66ddb
|
@ -0,0 +1,180 @@
|
|||
(
|
||||
|
||||
# Summary
|
||||
|
||||
Reads a file in chunks - perfect for when you have a small buffer or when you
|
||||
don't know the file size. Copes with files up to 4,294,967,295 bytes long.
|
||||
|
||||
# Code
|
||||
|
||||
)
|
||||
@file-read-chunks ( func* udata* buf* size* filename* -- func* udata'* buf* size* filename* )
|
||||
|
||||
#0000 DUP2 ( F* U* B* SZ* FN* OL* OH* / )
|
||||
&resume
|
||||
ROT2 STH2 ( F* U* B* SZ* OL* OH* / FN* )
|
||||
ROT2 ( F* U* B* OL* OH* SZ* / FN* )
|
||||
|
||||
&loop
|
||||
STH2kr .File/name DEO2 ( F* U* B* OL* OH* SZ* / FN* )
|
||||
STH2k .File/length DEO2 ( F* U* B* OL* OH* / FN* SZ* )
|
||||
STH2k .File/offset-hs DEO2 ( F* U* B* OL* / FN* SZ* OH* )
|
||||
STH2k .File/offset-ls DEO2 ( F* U* B* / FN* SZ* OH* OL* )
|
||||
SWP2 ( F* B* U* / FN* SZ* OH* OL* )
|
||||
ROT2k NIP2 ( F* B* U* B* F* / FN* SZ* OH* OL* )
|
||||
OVR2 .File/load DEO2 ( F* B* U* B* F* / FN* SZ* OH* OL* )
|
||||
.File/success DEI2 SWP2 ( F* B* U* B* length* F* / FN* SZ* OH* OL* )
|
||||
JSR2 ( F* B* U'* done-up-to* / FN* SZ* OH* OL* )
|
||||
ROT2 SWP2 ( F* U'* B* done-up-to* / FN* SZ* OH* OL* )
|
||||
SUB2k NIP2 ( F* U'* B* -done-length* / FN* SZ* OH* OL* )
|
||||
ORAk ,¬-end JCN ( F* U'* B* -done-length* / FN* SZ* OH* OL* )
|
||||
|
||||
POP2 POP2r POP2r ( F* U'* B* / FN* SZ* )
|
||||
STH2r STH2r ( F* U'* B* SZ* FN* / )
|
||||
JMP2r
|
||||
|
||||
¬-end
|
||||
STH2r SWP2 ( F* U'* B* OL* -done-length* / FN* SZ* OH* )
|
||||
LTH2k JMP INC2r ( F* U'* B* OL* -done-length* / FN* SZ* OH'* )
|
||||
SUB2 ( F* U'* B* OL'* / FN* SZ* OH'* )
|
||||
STH2r STH2r ( F* U'* B* OL'* OH'* SZ* / FN* )
|
||||
,&loop JMP
|
||||
|
||||
(
|
||||
|
||||
# Arguments
|
||||
|
||||
* func* - address of callback routine
|
||||
* udata* - userdata to pass to callback routine
|
||||
* buf* - address of first byte of buffer of file's contents
|
||||
* size* - size in bytes of buffer
|
||||
* filename* - address of filename string (zero-terminated)
|
||||
|
||||
All of the arguments are shorts (suffixed by asterisks *).
|
||||
|
||||
# Callback routine
|
||||
|
||||
If you make use of userdata, the signature of the callback routine is:
|
||||
)
|
||||
( udata* buf* length* -- udata'* done-up-to* )
|
||||
(
|
||||
|
||||
* udata* and buf* are as above.
|
||||
* length* is the length of the chunk being worked on, which could be less than
|
||||
size* when near the end of the file, and func* is called with zero length* to
|
||||
signify end of file.
|
||||
* udata'* is the (potentially) modified userdata, to be passed on to the next
|
||||
callback routine call and returned by file-read-chunks after the last chunk.
|
||||
* done-up-to* is the pointer to the first unprocessed byte in the buffer, or
|
||||
buf* + length* if the whole chunk was processed.
|
||||
|
||||
If you don't make use of any userdata, feel free to pretend the signature is:
|
||||
)
|
||||
( buf* length* -- done-up-to* )
|
||||
(
|
||||
|
||||
# Userdata
|
||||
|
||||
The udata* parameter is not processed by file-read-chunks, except to keep the
|
||||
one returned from one callback to the next. The meaning of its contents is up
|
||||
to you - it could simply be a short integer or a pointer to a region of memory.
|
||||
|
||||
# Operation
|
||||
|
||||
file-read-chunks reads a file into the buffer you provide and calls func* with
|
||||
JSR2 with each chunk of data, finishing with an empty chunk at end of file.
|
||||
|
||||
file-read-chunks loops until done-up-to* equals buf*, equivalent to when no
|
||||
data is processed by func*. This could be because processing cannot continue
|
||||
without a larger buffer, an error is detected in the data and further
|
||||
processing is pointless, or because the end-of-file empty chunk leaves the
|
||||
callback routine with no other choice.
|
||||
|
||||
# Return values
|
||||
|
||||
Since file-read-chunks's input parameters remain available throughout its
|
||||
operation, they are not automatically discarded in case they are useful to the
|
||||
caller.
|
||||
|
||||
# Discussion about done-up-to*
|
||||
|
||||
file-read-chunks is extra flexible because it doesn't just give you one chance
|
||||
to process each part of the file. Consider a func* routine that splits the
|
||||
chunk's contents into words separated by whitespace. If the buffer ends with a
|
||||
letter, you can't assume that letter is the end of that word - it's more likely
|
||||
to be the in the middle of a word that continues on. If func* returns the
|
||||
address of the first letter of the word so far, it will be called again with
|
||||
that first letter as the first character of the next chunk's buffer. There's no
|
||||
need to remember the earlier part of the word because you get presented with
|
||||
the whole lot again to give parsing another try.
|
||||
|
||||
That said, func* must make at least _some_ progress through the chunk: if it
|
||||
returns the address at the beginning of the buffer, buf*, file-read-chunks will
|
||||
terminate and return to its caller. With our word example, a buffer of ten
|
||||
bytes will be unable to make progress with words that are ten or more letters
|
||||
long. Depending on your application, either make the buffer big enough so that
|
||||
progress should always be possible, or find a way to discern this error
|
||||
condition from everything working fine.
|
||||
|
||||
# Discussion about recursion
|
||||
|
||||
Since all of file-read-chunks's data is on the working and return stacks, it
|
||||
can be called recursively by code running in the callback routine. For example,
|
||||
a code assembler can process the phrase "include library.tal" by calling
|
||||
file-read-chunks again with library.tal as the filename. There are a couple of
|
||||
caveats:
|
||||
|
||||
* the filename string must not reside inside file-read-chunk's working buffer,
|
||||
otherwise it gets overwritten by the file's contents and subsequent chunks
|
||||
will fail to be read properly; and
|
||||
|
||||
* if the buffer is shared with the parent file-read-chunk, the callback routine
|
||||
should stop further processing and return with done-up-to* straight away,
|
||||
since the buffer contents have already been replaced by the child
|
||||
file-read-chunk.
|
||||
|
||||
# Resuming / starting operation from an arbitrary offset
|
||||
|
||||
You can call file-read-chunks/resume instead of the main routine if you'd like
|
||||
to provide your own offset shorts rather than beginning at the start of the
|
||||
file. The effective signature for file-read-chunks/resume is:
|
||||
)
|
||||
( func* udata* buf* size* filename* offset-ls* offset-hs* -- func* udata'* buf* size* filename* )
|
||||
(
|
||||
|
||||
# Example callback routines
|
||||
|
||||
This minimal routine is a no-op that "processes" the entire buffer each time
|
||||
and returns a valid done-up-to*:
|
||||
|
||||
@quick-but-useless
|
||||
ADD2 JMP2r
|
||||
|
||||
This extremely inefficient callback routine simply prints a single character
|
||||
from the buffer and asks for the next one. It operates with a buffer that is
|
||||
just one byte long, but for extra inefficiency you can assign a much larger
|
||||
buffer and it will ignore everything after the first byte each time. If the
|
||||
buffer is zero length it returns done-up-to* == buf* so that file-read-chunks
|
||||
returns properly.
|
||||
|
||||
@one-at-a-time
|
||||
#0000 NEQ2 JMP JMP2r
|
||||
LDAk .Console/write DEO
|
||||
INC2 JMP2r
|
||||
|
||||
This more efficient example writes the entire chunk to the console before
|
||||
requesting the next one by returning. How short can you make a routine that
|
||||
does the same?
|
||||
|
||||
@chunk-at-a-time
|
||||
&loop
|
||||
ORAk ,¬-eof JCN
|
||||
POP2 JMP2r
|
||||
|
||||
¬-eof
|
||||
STH2
|
||||
LDAk .Console/write DEO
|
||||
INC2 STH2r #0001 SUB2
|
||||
,&loop JMP
|
||||
|
||||
)
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue