[25] | 1 | '\" |
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| 2 | '\" Copyright (c) 2004 Donal K. Fellows |
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| 3 | '\" |
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| 4 | '\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution |
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| 5 | '\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. |
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| 6 | '\" |
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| 7 | '\" RCS: @(#) $Id: Limit.3,v 1.7 2004/11/12 09:01:25 das Exp $ |
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| 8 | '\" |
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| 9 | .so man.macros |
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| 10 | .TH Tcl_LimitCheck 3 8.5 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures" |
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| 11 | .BS |
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| 12 | .SH NAME |
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| 13 | Tcl_LimitAddHandler, Tcl_LimitCheck, Tcl_LimitExceeded, Tcl_LimitGetCommands, Tcl_LimitGetGranularity, Tcl_LimitGetTime, Tcl_LimitReady, Tcl_LimitRemoveHandler, Tcl_LimitSetCommands, Tcl_LimitSetGranularity, Tcl_LimitSetTime, Tcl_LimitTypeEnabled, Tcl_LimitTypeExceeded, Tcl_LimitTypeReset, Tcl_LimitTypeSet \- manage and check resource limits on interpreters |
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| 14 | .SH SYNOPSIS |
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| 15 | .nf |
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| 16 | \fB#include <tcl.h>\fR |
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| 17 | .sp |
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| 18 | int |
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| 19 | \fBTcl_LimitCheck\fR(\fIinterp\fR) |
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| 20 | .sp |
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| 21 | int |
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| 22 | \fBTcl_LimitReady\fR(\fIinterp\fR) |
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| 23 | .sp |
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| 24 | int |
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| 25 | \fBTcl_LimitExceeded\fR(\fIinterp\fR) |
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| 26 | .sp |
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| 27 | int |
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| 28 | \fBTcl_LimitTypeExceeded\fR(\fIinterp, type\fR) |
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| 29 | .sp |
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| 30 | int |
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| 31 | \fBTcl_LimitTypeEnabled\fR(\fIinterp, type\fR) |
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| 32 | .sp |
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| 33 | void |
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| 34 | \fBTcl_LimitTypeSet\fR(\fIinterp, type\fR) |
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| 35 | .sp |
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| 36 | void |
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| 37 | \fBTcl_LimitTypeReset\fR(\fIinterp, type\fR) |
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| 38 | .sp |
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| 39 | int |
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| 40 | \fBTcl_LimitGetCommands\fR(\fIinterp\fR) |
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| 41 | .sp |
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| 42 | void |
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| 43 | \fBTcl_LimitSetCommands\fR(\fIinterp, commandLimit\fR) |
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| 44 | .sp |
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| 45 | void |
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| 46 | \fBTcl_LimitGetTime\fR(\fIinterp, timeLimitPtr\fR) |
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| 47 | .sp |
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| 48 | void |
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| 49 | \fBTcl_LimitSetTime\fR(\fIinterp, timeLimitPtr\fR) |
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| 50 | .sp |
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| 51 | int |
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| 52 | \fBTcl_LimitGetGranularity\fR(\fIinterp, type\fR) |
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| 53 | .sp |
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| 54 | void |
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| 55 | \fBTcl_LimitSetGranularity\fR(\fIinterp, type, granularity\fR) |
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| 56 | .sp |
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| 57 | void |
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| 58 | \fBTcl_LimitAddHandler\fR(\fIinterp, type, handlerProc, clientData, deleteProc\fR) |
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| 59 | .sp |
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| 60 | void |
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| 61 | \fBTcl_LimitRemoveHandler\fR(\fIinterp, type, handlerProc, clientData\fR) |
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| 62 | .SH ARGUMENTS |
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| 63 | .AS Tcl_LimitHandlerDeleteProc commandLimit in/out |
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| 64 | .AP Tcl_Interp *interp in |
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| 65 | Interpreter that the limit being managed applies to or that will have |
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| 66 | its limits checked. |
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| 67 | .AP int type in |
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| 68 | The type of limit that the operation refers to. This must be either |
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| 69 | \fBTCL_LIMIT_COMMANDS\fR or \fBTCL_LIMIT_TIME\fR. |
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| 70 | .AP int commandLimit in |
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| 71 | The maximum number of commands (as reported by \fBinfo cmdcount\fR) |
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| 72 | that may be executed in the interpreter. |
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| 73 | .AP Tcl_Time *timeLimitPtr in/out |
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| 74 | A pointer to a structure that will either have the new time limit read |
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| 75 | from (\fBTcl_LimitSetTime\fR) or the current time limit written to |
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| 76 | (\fBTcl_LimitGetTime\fR). |
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| 77 | .AP int granularity in |
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| 78 | Divisor that indicates how often a particular limit should really be |
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| 79 | checked. Must be at least 1. |
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| 80 | .AP Tcl_LimitHandlerProc *handlerProc in |
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| 81 | Function to call when a particular limit is exceeded. If the |
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| 82 | \fIhandlerProc\fR removes or raises the limit during its processing, |
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| 83 | the limited interpreter will be permitted to continue to process after |
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| 84 | the handler returns. Many handlers may be attached to the same |
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| 85 | interpreter limit; their order of execution is not defined, and they |
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| 86 | must be identified by \fIhandlerProc\fR and \fIclientData\fR when they |
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| 87 | are deleted. |
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| 88 | .AP ClientData clientData in |
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| 89 | Arbitrary pointer-sized word used to pass some context to the |
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| 90 | \fIhandlerProc\fR function. |
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| 91 | .AP Tcl_LimitHandlerDeleteProc *deleteProc in |
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| 92 | Function to call whenever a handler is deleted. May be NULL if the |
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| 93 | \fIclientData\fR requires no deletion. |
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| 94 | .BE |
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| 95 | |
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| 96 | .SH DESCRIPTION |
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| 97 | .PP |
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| 98 | Tcl's interpreter resource limit subsystem allows for close control |
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| 99 | over how much computation time a script may use, and is useful for |
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| 100 | cases where a program is divided into multiple pieces where some parts |
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| 101 | are more trusted than others (e.g. web application servers). |
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| 102 | .PP |
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| 103 | Every interpreter may have a limit on the wall-time for execution, and |
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| 104 | a limit on the number of commands that the interpreter may execute. |
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| 105 | Since checking of these limits is potentially expensive (especially |
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| 106 | the time limit), each limit also has a checking granularity, which is |
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| 107 | a divisor for an internal count of the number of points in the core |
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| 108 | where a check may be performed (which is immediately before executing |
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| 109 | a command and at an unspecified frequency between running commands, |
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| 110 | which can happen in empty-bodied \fBwhile\fR loops). |
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| 111 | .PP |
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| 112 | The final component of the limit engine is a callback scheme which |
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| 113 | allows for notifications of when a limit has been exceeded. These |
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| 114 | callbacks can just provide logging, or may allocate more resources to |
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| 115 | the interpreter to permit it to continue processing longer. |
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| 116 | .PP |
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| 117 | When a limit is exceeded (and the callbacks have run; the order of |
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| 118 | execution of the callbacks is unspecified) execution in the limited |
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| 119 | interpreter is stopped by raising an error and setting a flag that |
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| 120 | prevents the \fBcatch\fR command in that interpreter from trapping |
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| 121 | that error. It is up to the context that started execution in that |
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| 122 | interpreter (typically a master interpreter) to handle the error. |
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| 123 | .SH "LIMIT CHECKING API" |
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| 124 | .PP |
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| 125 | To check the resource limits for an interpreter, call |
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| 126 | \fBTcl_LimitCheck\fR, which returns \fBTCL_OK\fR if the limit was not |
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| 127 | exceeded (after processing callbacks) and \fBTCL_ERROR\fR if the limit was |
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| 128 | exceeded (in which case an error message is also placed in the |
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| 129 | interpreter result). That function should only be called when |
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| 130 | \fBTcl_LimitReady\fR returns non-zero so that granularity policy is |
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| 131 | enforced. This API is designed to be similar in usage to |
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| 132 | \fBTcl_AsyncReady\fR and \fBTcl_AsyncInvoke\fR. |
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| 133 | .PP |
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| 134 | When writing code that may behave like \fBcatch\fR in respect of |
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| 135 | errors, you should only trap an error if \fBTcl_LimitExceeded\fR |
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| 136 | returns zero. If it returns non-zero, the interpreter is in a |
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| 137 | limit-exceeded state and errors should be allowed to propagate to the |
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| 138 | calling context. You can also check whether a particular type of |
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| 139 | limit has been exceeded using \fBTcl_LimitTypeExceeded\fR. |
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| 140 | .SH "LIMIT CONFIGURATION" |
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| 141 | .PP |
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| 142 | To check whether a limit has been set (but not whether it has actually |
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| 143 | been exceeded) on an interpreter, call \fBTcl_LimitTypeEnabled\fR with |
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| 144 | the type of limit you want to check. To enable a particular limit |
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| 145 | call \fBTcl_LimitTypeSet\fR, and to disable a limit call |
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| 146 | \fBTcl_LimitTypeReset\fR. |
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| 147 | .PP |
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| 148 | The level of a command limit may be set using |
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| 149 | \fBTcl_LimitSetCommands\fR, and retrieved using |
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| 150 | \fBTcl_LimitGetCommands\fR. Similarly for a time limit with |
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| 151 | \fBTcl_LimitSetTime\fR and \fBTcl_LimitGetTime\fR respectively, but |
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| 152 | with that API the time limit is copied from and to the Tcl_Time |
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| 153 | structure that the \fItimeLimitPtr\fR argument points to. |
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| 154 | .PP |
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| 155 | The checking granularity for a particular limit may be set using |
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| 156 | \fBTcl_LimitSetGranularity\fR and retrieved using |
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| 157 | \fBTcl_LimitGetGranularity\fR. Note that granularities must always be |
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| 158 | positive. |
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| 159 | .SS "LIMIT CALLBACKS" |
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| 160 | .PP |
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| 161 | To add a handler callback to be invoked when a limit is exceeded, call |
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| 162 | \fBTcl_LimitAddHandler\fR. The \fIhandlerProc\fR argument describes |
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| 163 | the function that will actually be called; it should have the |
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| 164 | following prototype: |
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| 165 | .PP |
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| 166 | .CS |
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| 167 | typedef void Tcl_LimitHandlerProc( |
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| 168 | ClientData \fIclientData\fR, |
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| 169 | Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR); |
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| 170 | .CE |
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| 171 | .PP |
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| 172 | The \fIclientData\fR argument to the handler will be whatever is |
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| 173 | passed to the \fIclientData\fR argment to \fBTcl_LimitAddHandler\fR, |
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| 174 | and the \fIinterp\fR is the interpreter that had its limit exceeded. |
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| 175 | .PP |
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| 176 | The \fIdeleteProc\fR argument to \fBTcl_LimitAddHandler\fR is a |
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| 177 | function to call to delete the \fIclientData\fR value. It may be |
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| 178 | \fBTCL_STATIC\fR or NULL if no deletion action is necessary, or |
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| 179 | \fBTCL_DYNAMIC\fR if all that is necessary is to free the structure with |
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| 180 | \fBTcl_Free\fR. Otherwise, it should refer to a function with the |
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| 181 | following prototype: |
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| 182 | .PP |
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| 183 | .CS |
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| 184 | typedef void Tcl_LimitHandlerDeleteProc( |
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| 185 | ClientData \fIclientData\fR); |
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| 186 | .CE |
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| 187 | .PP |
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| 188 | A limit handler may be deleted using \fBTcl_LimitRemoveHandler\fR; the |
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| 189 | handler removed will be the first one found (out of the handlers added |
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| 190 | with \fBTcl_LimitAddHandler\fR) with exactly matching \fItype\fR, |
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| 191 | \fIhandlerProc\fR and \fIclientData\fR arguments. This function |
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| 192 | always invokes the \fIdeleteProc\fR on the \fIclientData\fR (unless |
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| 193 | the \fIdeleteProc\fR was NULL or \fBTCL_STATIC\fR). |
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| 194 | |
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| 195 | .SH KEYWORDS |
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| 196 | interpreter, resource, limit, commands, time, callback |
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