- NAME
- pkg_mkIndex — Build an index for automatic loading of
packages
- SYNOPSIS
- DESCRIPTION
- OPTIONS
- -direct
- -lazy
- -load pkgPat
- -verbose
- --
- PACKAGES
AND THE AUTO-LOADER
- HOW IT
WORKS
- DIRECT
LOADING
- COMPLEX
CASES
- SEE
ALSO
- KEYWORDS
pkg_mkIndex — Build an index for automatic loading of packages
pkg_mkIndex ?options...? dir ?pattern
pattern ...?
Pkg_mkIndex is a utility procedure that is part of the
standard Tcl library. It is used to create index files that allow
packages to be loaded automatically when package require commands are
executed. To use pkg_mkIndex, follow these steps:
- Create the package(s). Each package may consist of
one or more Tcl script files or binary files. Binary files must be
suitable for loading with the load command with a single argument;
for example, if the file is test.so it must be possible to
load this file with the command load test.so. Each script
file must contain a package
provide command to declare the package and version number,
and each binary file must contain a call to Tcl_PkgProvide.
- Create the index by invoking pkg_mkIndex. The
dir argument gives the name of a directory and each
pattern argument is a glob-style pattern that selects script
or binary files in dir. The default pattern is *.tcl
and *.[info sharedlibextension].
Pkg_mkIndex will create a file pkgIndex.tcl in
dir with package information about all the files given by
the pattern arguments. It does this by loading each file
into a child interpreter and seeing what packages and new commands
appear (this is why it is essential to have package provide commands or
Tcl_PkgProvide calls
in the files, as described above). If you have a package split
among scripts and binary files, or if you have dependencies among
files, you may have to use the -load option or adjust the
order in which pkg_mkIndex processes the files. See
COMPLEX CASES below.
- Install the package as a subdirectory of one of the
directories given by the tcl_pkgPath variable. If
$tcl_pkgPath contains more than one directory,
machine-dependent packages (e.g., those that contain binary shared
libraries) should normally be installed under the first directory
and machine-independent packages (e.g., those that contain only Tcl
scripts) should be installed under the second directory. The
subdirectory should include the package's script and/or binary
files as well as the pkgIndex.tcl file. As long as the
package is installed as a subdirectory of a directory in
$tcl_pkgPath it will automatically be found during
package require
commands.
If you install the package anywhere else, then you must ensure
that the directory containing the package is in the auto_path global variable or an
immediate subdirectory of one of the directories in auto_path. Auto_path contains a list of
directories that are searched by both the auto-loader and the
package loader; by default it includes $tcl_pkgPath. The
package loader also checks all of the subdirectories of the
directories in auto_path. You can add a directory
to auto_path explicitly
in your application, or you can add the directory to your
TCLLIBPATH environment variable: if this environment
variable is present, Tcl initializes auto_path from it during
application startup.
- Once the above steps have been taken, all you need to
do to use a package is to invoke package require. For example, if
versions 2.1, 2.3, and 3.1 of package Test have been indexed
by pkg_mkIndex, the command package require Test will
make version 3.1 available and the command package require
-exact Test 2.1 will make version 2.1 available. There may be
many versions of a package in the various index files in
auto_path, but only one
will actually be loaded in a given interpreter, based on the first
call to package require.
Different versions of a package may be loaded in different
interpreters.
The optional switches are:
- -direct
- The generated index will implement direct loading of the
package upon package
require. This is the default.
- -lazy
- The generated index will manage to delay loading the package
until the use of one of the commands provided by the package,
instead of loading it immediately upon package require. This is not
compatible with the use of auto_reset, and therefore its use
is discouraged.
- -load pkgPat
- The index process will pre-load any packages that exist in the
current interpreter and match pkgPat into the child
interpreter used to generate the index. The pattern match uses
string match rules, but without making case distinctions. See
COMPLEX CASES below.
- -verbose
- Generate output during the indexing process. Output is via the
tclLog procedure, which by default prints to stderr.
- --
- End of the flags, in case dir begins with a dash.
The package management facilities overlap somewhat with the
auto-loader, in that both arrange for files to be loaded on-demand.
However, package management is a higher-level mechanism that uses
the auto-loader for the last step in the loading process. It is
generally better to index a package with pkg_mkIndex rather
than auto_mkindex
because the package mechanism provides version control: several
versions of a package can be made available in the index files,
with different applications using different versions based on
package require
commands. In contrast, auto_mkindex does not understand
versions so it can only handle a single version of each package. It
is probably not a good idea to index a given package with both
pkg_mkIndex and auto_mkindex. If you use
pkg_mkIndex to index a package, its commands cannot be
invoked until package
require has been used to select a version; in contrast,
packages indexed with auto_mkindex can be used
immediately since there is no version control.
Pkg_mkIndex depends on the package unknown command, the
package ifneeded
command, and the auto-loader. The first time a package require command is invoked,
the package unknown
script is invoked. This is set by Tcl initialization to a script
that evaluates all of the pkgIndex.tcl files in the
auto_path. The
pkgIndex.tcl files contain package ifneeded commands for each
version of each available package; these commands invoke
package provide commands
to announce the availability of the package, and they setup
auto-loader information to load the files of the package. If the
-lazy flag was provided when the pkgIndex.tcl was
generated, a given file of a given version of a given package is
not actually loaded until the first time one of its commands is
invoked. Thus, after invoking package require you may not see the
package's commands in the interpreter, but you will be able to
invoke the commands and they will be auto-loaded.
Some packages, for instance packages which use namespaces and
export commands or those which require special initialization,
might select that their package files be loaded immediately upon
package require instead
of delaying the actual loading to the first use of one of the
package's command. This is the default mode when generating the
package index. It can be overridden by specifying the -lazy
argument.
Most complex cases of dependencies among scripts and binary files,
and packages being split among scripts and binary files are handled
OK. However, you may have to adjust the order in which files are
processed by pkg_mkIndex. These issues are described in
detail below.
If each script or file contains one package, and packages are
only contained in one file, then things are easy. You simply
specify all files to be indexed in any order with some glob
patterns.
In general, it is OK for scripts to have dependencies on other
packages. If scripts contain package require commands, these are
stubbed out in the interpreter used to process the scripts, so
these do not cause problems. If scripts call into other packages in
global code, these calls are handled by a stub unknown command. However, if
scripts make variable references to other package's variables in
global code, these will cause errors. That is also bad coding
style.
If binary files have dependencies on other packages, things can
become tricky because it is not possible to stub out C-level APIs
such as Tcl_PkgRequire API when loading
a binary file. For example, suppose the BLT package requires Tk,
and expresses this with a call to Tcl_PkgRequire in its
Blt_Init routine. To support this, you must run
pkg_mkIndex in an interpreter that has Tk loaded. You can
achieve this with the -load pkgPat option. If you
specify this option, pkg_mkIndex will load any packages
listed by info loaded and
that match pkgPat into the interpreter used to process
files. In most cases this will satisfy the Tcl_PkgRequire calls made by
binary files.
If you are indexing two binary files and one depends on the
other, you should specify the one that has dependencies last. This
way the one without dependencies will get loaded and indexed, and
then the package it provides will be available when the second file
is processed. You may also need to load the first package into the
temporary interpreter used to create the index by using the
-load flag; it will not hurt to specify package patterns
that are not yet loaded.
If you have a package that is split across scripts and a binary
file, then you should avoid the -load flag. The problem is
that if you load a package before computing the index it masks any
other files that provide part of the same package. If you must use
-load, then you must specify the scripts first; otherwise
the package loaded from the binary file may mask the package
defined by the scripts.
package
auto-load, index, package, version
Copyright © 1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.