ei(3erl)


NAME

   ei - routines for handling the erlang binary term format

DESCRIPTION

   The  library  ei contains macros and functions to encode and decode the
   erlang binary term format.

   With ei, you can convert atoms, lists, numbers and binaries to and from
   the  binary  format.  This  is  useful  when  writing port programs and
   drivers. ei uses a given  buffer,  and  no  dynamic  memory  (with  the
   exception of ei_decode_fun()), and is often quite fast.

   It also handles C-nodes, C-programs that talks erlang distribution with
   erlang nodes (or other C-nodes) using the erlang  distribution  format.
   The  difference between ei and erl_interface is that ei uses the binary
   format directly when sending and receiving terms.  It  is  also  thread
   safe,  and  using threads, one process can handle multiple C-nodes. The
   erl_interface library is built on top of ei, but of legacy reasons,  it
   doesn't allow for multiple C-nodes. In general, ei is the preferred way
   of doing C-nodes.

   The decode and encode functions use a buffer an index into the  buffer,
   which  points  at  the  point  where to encode and decode. The index is
   updated to point right after the term encoded/decoded. No  checking  is
   done  whether  the  term  fits  in  the buffer or not. If encoding goes
   outside the buffer, the program may crash.

   All functions takes two parameter, buf is a pointer to the buffer where
   the  binary  data is / will be, index is a pointer to an index into the
   buffer. This parameter will be incremented with the size  of  the  term
   decoded  / encoded. The data is thus at buf[*index] when an ei function
   is called.

   The encode functions all assumes that  the  buf  and  index  parameters
   points  to  a  buffer  big  enough  for the data. To get the size of an
   encoded term, without encoding  it,  pass  NULL  instead  of  a  buffer
   pointer.  The  index parameter will be incremented, but nothing will be
   encoded. This is the way in ei to "preflight" term encoding.

   There are also encode-functions that uses a dynamic buffer. It is often
   more convenient to use these to encode data. All encode functions comes
   in two versions: those starting with ei_x, uses a dynamic buffer.

   All functions return 0 if successful, and -1 if not. (For instance,  if
   a  term  is  not  of  the expected type, or the data to decode is not a
   valid erlang term.)

   Some of the decode-functions needs a preallocated buffer.  This  buffer
   must   be  allocated  big  enough,  and  for  non  compound  types  the
   ei_get_type() function returns the size required (note that for strings
   an extra byte is needed for the 0 string terminator).

DATA TYPES

     erlang_char_encoding:

     typedef enum {
         ERLANG_ASCII = 1,
         ERLANG_LATIN1 = 2,
         ERLANG_UTF8 = 4
     }erlang_char_encoding;

       The  character  encodings  used  for atoms. ERLANG_ASCII represents
       7-bit ASCII. Latin1 and UTF8  are  different  extensions  of  7-bit
       ASCII.  All  7-bit  ASCII  characters  are  valid  Latin1  and UTF8
       characters. ASCII and Latin1 both represent each character  by  one
       byte.  A UTF8 character can consist of one to four bytes. Note that
       these constants are bit-flags and can be combined with bitwise-or.

EXPORTS

   void ei_set_compat_rel(release_number)

          Types:

             unsigned release_number;

          By default, the ei library is only guaranteed to  be  compatible
          with other Erlang/OTP components from the same release as the ei
          library itself. For example, ei from the OTP R10 release is  not
          compatible  with  an  Erlang emulator from the OTP R9 release by
          default.

          A call to ei_set_compat_rel(release_number) sets the ei  library
          in  compatibility mode of release release_number. Valid range of
          release_number is [7, current release]. This makes  it  possible
          to communicate with Erlang/OTP components from earlier releases.

      Note:
          If  this function is called, it may only be called once and must
          be called before any  other  functions  in  the  ei  library  is
          called.

      Warning:
          You  may  run  into  trouble if this feature is used carelessly.
          Always make sure that all communicating  components  are  either
          from  the same Erlang/OTP release, or from release X and release
          Y where all components from release Y are in compatibility  mode
          of release X.

   int ei_encode_version(char *buf, int *index)
   int ei_x_encode_version(ei_x_buff* x)

          Encodes  a  version  magic number for the binary format. Must be
          the first token in a binary term.

   int ei_encode_long(char *buf, int *index, long p)
   int ei_x_encode_long(ei_x_buff* x, long p)

          Encodes a long integer in the binary format. Note  that  if  the
          code  is  64  bits  the function ei_encode_long() is exactly the
          same as ei_encode_longlong().

   int ei_encode_ulong(char *buf, int *index, unsigned long p)
   int ei_x_encode_ulong(ei_x_buff* x, unsigned long p)

          Encodes an unsigned long integer in the binary format. Note that
          if the code is 64 bits the function ei_encode_ulong() is exactly
          the same as ei_encode_ulonglong().

   int ei_encode_longlong(char *buf, int *index, long long p)
   int ei_x_encode_longlong(ei_x_buff* x, long long p)

          Encodes a GCC long long or Visual C++ __int64 (64  bit)  integer
          in  the binary format. Note that this function is missing in the
          VxWorks port.

   int ei_encode_ulonglong(char *buf, int *index, unsigned long long p)
   int ei_x_encode_ulonglong(ei_x_buff* x, unsigned long long p)

          Encodes a GCC unsigned long long or Visual C++ unsigned  __int64
          (64  bit)  integer in the binary format. Note that this function
          is missing in the VxWorks port.

   int ei_encode_bignum(char *buf, int *index, mpz_t obj)
   int ei_x_encode_bignum(ei_x_buff *x, mpz_t obj)

          Encodes a GMP mpz_t  integer  to  binary  format.  To  use  this
          function  the  ei library needs to be configured and compiled to
          use the GMP library.

   int ei_encode_double(char *buf, int *index, double p)
   int ei_x_encode_double(ei_x_buff* x, double p)

          Encodes a double-precision (64 bit) floating point number in the
          binary format.

          The  function  returns  -1  if  the floating point number is not
          finite.

   int ei_encode_boolean(char *buf, int *index, int p)
   int ei_x_encode_boolean(ei_x_buff* x, int p)

          Encodes a boolean value, as the atom true if p is  not  zero  or
          false if p is zero.

   int ei_encode_char(char *buf, int *index, char p)
   int ei_x_encode_char(ei_x_buff* x, char p)

          Encodes a char (8-bit) as an integer between 0-255 in the binary
          format. Note that for historical reasons the integer argument is
          of  type char. Your C code should consider the given argument to
          be of type unsigned char even if the C compilers and system  may
          define char to be signed.

   int ei_encode_string(char *buf, int *index, const char *p)
   int ei_encode_string_len(char *buf, int *index, const char *p, int len)
   int ei_x_encode_string(ei_x_buff* x, const char *p)
   int ei_x_encode_string_len(ei_x_buff* x, const char* s, int len)

          Encodes  a string in the binary format. (A string in erlang is a
          list, but is encoded as a character array in the binary format.)
          The   string   should   be   zero-terminated,   except  for  the
          ei_x_encode_string_len() function.

   int ei_encode_atom(char *buf, int *index, const char *p)
   int ei_encode_atom_len(char *buf, int *index, const char *p, int len)
   int ei_x_encode_atom(ei_x_buff* x, const char *p)
   int ei_x_encode_atom_len(ei_x_buff* x, const char *p, int len)

          Encodes an atom in the binary format. The  p  parameter  is  the
          name  of  the  atom  in  latin1 encoding. Only upto MAXATOMLEN-1
          bytes are encoded. The name should  be  zero-terminated,  except
          for the ei_x_encode_atom_len() function.

   int   ei_encode_atom_as(char   *buf,   int   *index,   const  char  *p,
   erlang_char_encoding from_enc, erlang_char_encoding to_enc)
   int ei_encode_atom_len_as(char *buf, int *index,  const  char  *p,  int
   len, erlang_char_encoding from_enc, erlang_char_encoding to_enc)
   int     ei_x_encode_atom_as(ei_x_buff*     x,     const     char    *p,
   erlang_char_encoding from_enc, erlang_char_encoding to_enc)
   int ei_x_encode_atom_len_as(ei_x_buff*  x,  const  char  *p,  int  len,
   erlang_char_encoding from_enc, erlang_char_encoding to_enc)

          Encodes  an  atom  in  the binary format with character encoding
          to_enc (latin1 or utf8). The p parameter is the name of the atom
          with  character  encoding  from_enc (ascii, latin1 or utf8). The
          name must either be zero-terminated or a function variant with a
          len parameter must be used. If to_enc is set to the bitwise-or'd
          combination (ERLANG_LATIN1|ERLANG_UTF8), utf8 encoding  is  only
          used  if  the  atom  string  can  not  be  represented in latin1
          encoding.

          The encoding will fail if p is not a valid  string  in  encoding
          from_enc,  if  the  string  is  too  long  or  if  it can not be
          represented with character encoding to_enc.

          These functions were introduced in R16 release of Erlang/OTP  as
          part  of  a first step to support UTF8 atoms. Atoms encoded with
          ERLANG_UTF8 can not be decoded by earlier releases than R16.

   int ei_encode_binary(char *buf, int *index, const void *p, long len)
   int ei_x_encode_binary(ei_x_buff* x, const void *p, long len)

          Encodes a binary in the binary format. The data is at p, of  len
          bytes length.

   int ei_encode_pid(char *buf, int *index, const erlang_pid *p)
   int ei_x_encode_pid(ei_x_buff* x, const erlang_pid *p)

          Encodes an erlang process identifier, pid, in the binary format.
          The p parameter points to an erlang_pid structure (which  should
          have been obtained earlier with ei_decode_pid()).

   int ei_encode_fun(char *buf, int *index, const erlang_fun *p)
   int ei_x_encode_fun(ei_x_buff* x, const erlang_fun* fun)

          Encodes a fun in the binary format. The p parameter points to an
          erlang_fun structure. The erlang_fun is not freed automatically,
          the  free_fun  should  be  called if the fun is not needed after
          encoding.

   int ei_encode_port(char *buf, int *index, const erlang_port *p)
   int ei_x_encode_port(ei_x_buff* x, const erlang_port *p)

          Encodes an erlang port in the binary  format.  The  p  parameter
          points  to  a  erlang_port  structure  (which  should  have been
          obtained earlier with ei_decode_port().

   int ei_encode_ref(char *buf, int *index, const erlang_ref *p)
   int ei_x_encode_ref(ei_x_buff* x, const erlang_ref *p)

          Encodes  an  erlang  reference  in  the  binary  format.  The  p
          parameter  points  to  a erlang_ref structure (which should have
          been obtained earlier with ei_decode_ref().

   int ei_encode_term(char *buf, int *index, void *t)
   int ei_x_encode_term(ei_x_buff* x, void *t)

          This function encodes an ETERM, as obtained from  erl_interface.
          The  t  parameter  is  actually  an ETERM pointer. This function
          doesn't free the ETERM.

   int ei_encode_trace(char *buf, int *index, const erlang_trace *p)
   int ei_x_encode_trace(ei_x_buff* x, const erlang_trace *p)

          This function encodes  an  erlang  trace  token  in  the  binary
          format.  The  p  parameter  points  to  a erlang_trace structure
          (which should have been obtained earlier with ei_decode_trace().

   int ei_encode_tuple_header(char *buf, int *index, int arity)
   int ei_x_encode_tuple_header(ei_x_buff* x, int arity)

          This function encodes a tuple header, with  a  specified  arity.
          The  next arity terms encoded will be the elements of the tuple.
          Tuples and lists are encoded recursively, so that  a  tuple  may
          contain another tuple or list.

          E.g. to encode the tuple {a, {b, {}}}:

          ei_encode_tuple_header(buf, &i, 2);
          ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "a");
          ei_encode_tuple_header(buf, &i, 2);
          ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "b");
          ei_encode_tuple_header(buf, &i, 0);

   int ei_encode_list_header(char *buf, int *index, int arity)
   int ei_x_encode_list_header(ei_x_buff* x, int arity)

          This function encodes a list header, with a specified arity. The
          next arity+1 terms are the elements  (actually  its  arity  cons
          cells)  and  the  tail of the list. Lists and tuples are encoded
          recursively, so that a list may contain another list or tuple.

          E.g. to encode the list [c, d, [e | f]]:

          ei_encode_list_header(buf, &i, 3);
          ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "c");
          ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "d");
          ei_encode_list_header(buf, &i, 1);
          ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "e");
          ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "f");
          ei_encode_empty_list(buf, &i);

      Note:
          It may seem that there is  no  way  to  create  a  list  without
          knowing the number of elements in advance. But indeed there is a
          way. Note that the list [a, b, c] can be written as [a  |  [b  |
          [c]]]. Using this, a list can be written as conses.

          To encode a list, without knowing the arity in advance:

          while (something()) {
              ei_x_encode_list_header(&x, 1);
              ei_x_encode_ulong(&x, i); /* just an example */
          }
          ei_x_encode_empty_list(&x);

   int ei_encode_empty_list(char* buf, int* index)
   int ei_x_encode_empty_list(ei_x_buff* x)

          This function encodes an empty list. It's often used at the tail
          of a list.

   int ei_encode_map_header(char *buf, int *index, int arity)
   int ei_x_encode_map_header(ei_x_buff* x, int arity)

          This function encodes a map header, with a specified arity.  The
          next  arity*2  terms  encoded will be the keys and values of the
          map encoded in the following order: K1, V1, K2, V2, ..., Kn, Vn.

          E.g. to encode the map #{a => "Apple", b => "Banana"}:

          ei_x_encode_map_header(&x, 2);
          ei_x_encode_atom(&x, "a");
          ei_x_encode_string(&x, "Apple");
          ei_x_encode_atom(&x, "b");
          ei_x_encode_string(&x, "Banana");

          A correctly encoded map can not have duplicate keys.

   int ei_get_type(const char *buf,  const  int  *index,  int  *type,  int
   *size)

          This  function  returns the type in type and size in size of the
          encoded term. For strings and  atoms,  size  is  the  number  of
          characters  not  including the terminating 0. For binaries, size
          is the number of bytes. For lists and tuples, size is the  arity
          of  the  object. For other types, size is 0. In all cases, index
          is left unchanged.

   int ei_decode_version(const char *buf, int *index, int *version)

          This function decodes the version magic number  for  the  erlang
          binary term format. It must be the first token in a binary term.

   int ei_decode_long(const char *buf, int *index, long *p)

          This  function  decodes  a  long integer from the binary format.
          Note that if the code is 64 bits the  function  ei_decode_long()
          is exactly the same as ei_decode_longlong().

   int ei_decode_ulong(const char *buf, int *index, unsigned long *p)

          This  function  decodes an unsigned long integer from the binary
          format.  Note  that  if  the  code  is  64  bits  the   function
          ei_decode_ulong() is exactly the same as ei_decode_ulonglong().

   int ei_decode_longlong(const char *buf, int *index, long long *p)

          This  function decodes a GCC long long or Visual C++ __int64 (64
          bit) integer from the binary format. Note that this function  is
          missing in the VxWorks port.

   int ei_decode_ulonglong(const char *buf, int *index, unsigned long long
   *p)

          This function decodes a GCC unsigned long  long  or  Visual  C++
          unsigned  __int64  (64 bit) integer from the binary format. Note
          that this function is missing in the VxWorks port.

   int ei_decode_bignum(const char *buf, int *index, mpz_t obj)

          This function decodes an integer in the binary format to  a  GMP
          mpz_t  integer.  To use this function the ei library needs to be
          configured and compiled to use the GMP library.

   int ei_decode_double(const char *buf, int *index, double *p)

          This function decodes  an  double-precision  (64  bit)  floating
          point number from the binary format.

   int ei_decode_boolean(const char *buf, int *index, int *p)

          This  function decodes a boolean value from the binary format. A
          boolean is actually an atom, true decodes 1 and false decodes 0.

   int ei_decode_char(const char *buf, int *index, char *p)

          This function decodes a char (8-bit) integer between 0-255  from
          the binary format. Note that for historical reasons the returned
          integer is of  type  char.  Your  C  code  should  consider  the
          returned  value  to  be  of  type  unsigned  char  even if the C
          compilers and system may define char to be signed.

   int ei_decode_string(const char *buf, int *index, char *p)

          This function decodes a string from the binary format. A  string
          in  erlang  is  a  list of integers between 0 and 255. Note that
          since the string is just a list, sometimes lists are encoded  as
          strings by term_to_binary/1, even if it was not intended.

          The  string  is copied to p, and enough space must be allocated.
          The returned string is null terminated so you  need  to  add  an
          extra byte to the memory requirement.

   int ei_decode_atom(const char *buf, int *index, char *p)

          This  function  decodes an atom from the binary format. The null
          terminated name of the atom is placed at p. There can be at most
          MAXATOMLEN bytes placed in the buffer.

   int  ei_decode_atom_as(const  char *buf, int *index, char *p, int plen,
   erlang_char_encoding       want,       erlang_char_encoding*       was,
   erlang_char_encoding* result)

          This  function  decodes an atom from the binary format. The null
          terminated name of the atom is placed in buffer at p  of  length
          plen bytes.

          The  wanted  string  encoding is specified by want. The original
          encoding used in the binary  format  (latin1  or  utf8)  can  be
          obtained  from *was. The actual encoding of the resulting string
          (7-bit ascii, latin1 or utf8) can be obtained from *result. Both
          was and result can be NULL. *result may differ from want if want
          is a bitwise-or'd combination like ERLANG_LATIN1|ERLANG_UTF8  or
          if *result turn out to be pure 7-bit ascii (compatible with both
          latin1 and utf8).

          This function fails if the atom is too long for the buffer or if
          it can not be represented with encoding want.

          This  function  was  introduced  in R16 release of Erlang/OTP as
          part of a first step to support UTF8 atoms.

   int ei_decode_binary(const char *buf, int *index, void *p, long *len)

          This function decodes a binary from the binary format.  The  len
          parameter  is  set  to  the actual size of the binary. Note that
          ei_decode_binary() assumes that there are enough  room  for  the
          binary. The size required can be fetched by ei_get_type().

   int ei_decode_fun(const char *buf, int *index, erlang_fun *p)
   void free_fun(erlang_fun* f)

          This  function  decodes  a  fun  from  the  binary format. The p
          parameter should be NULL or point to  an  erlang_fun  structure.
          This is the only decode function that allocates memory; when the
          erlang_fun  is  no  longer  needed,  it  should  be  freed  with
          free_fun.  (This  has  to  do  with  the  arbitrary  size of the
          environment for a fun.)

   int ei_decode_pid(const char *buf, int *index, erlang_pid *p)

          Decodes a pid, process identifier, from the binary format.

   int ei_decode_port(const char *buf, int *index, erlang_port *p)

          This function decodes a port identifier from the binary format.

   int ei_decode_ref(const char *buf, int *index, erlang_ref *p)

          This function decodes a reference from the binary format.

   int ei_decode_trace(const char *buf, int *index, erlang_trace *p)

          Decodes an erlang trace token from the binary format.

   int ei_decode_tuple_header(const char *buf, int *index, int *arity)

          This function decodes a tuple header, the number of elements  is
          returned  in  arity.  The tuple elements follows in order in the
          buffer.

   int ei_decode_list_header(const char *buf, int *index, int *arity)

          This function decodes a list header from the binary format.  The
          number  of  elements  is returned in arity. The arity+1 elements
          follows (the last one is the tail of the list, normally an empty
          list.) If arity is 0, it's an empty list.

          Note that lists are encoded as strings, if they consist entirely
          of integers in the range 0..255. This function will  not  decode
          such strings, use ei_decode_string() instead.

   int ei_decode_map_header(const char *buf, int *index, int *arity)

          This  function  decodes a map header from the binary format. The
          number of key-value pairs is returned in *arity. Keys and values
          follow in the following order: K1, V1, K2, V2, ..., Kn, Vn. This
          makes a total of arity*2 terms. If arity is zero, it's an  empty
          map. A correctly encoded map does not have duplicate keys.

   int ei_decode_ei_term(const char* buf, int* index, ei_term* term)

          This  function  decodes  any  term, or at least tries to. If the
          term pointed at by *index in buf fits in the term union,  it  is
          decoded,  and  the  appropriate field in term->value is set, and
          *index is incremented by the term size.

          The function returns 1 on successful decoding, -1 on error,  and
          0  if  the  term  seems  alright,  but  does not fit in the term
          structure. If it returns 1, the index will be  incremented,  and
          the term contains the decoded term.

          The  term  structure will contain the arity for a tuple or list,
          size for a binary, string or atom. It will contains  a  term  if
          it's  any  of  the following: integer, float, atom, pid, port or
          ref.

   int ei_decode_term(const char *buf, int *index, void *t)

          This function decodes a term from the binary format. The term is
          return  in  t  as  a  ETERM*,  so  t is actually an ETERM** (see
          erl_interface(3erl). The term should later be deallocated.

          Note that this function is located in the erl_interface library.

   int ei_print_term(FILE* fp, const char* buf, int* index)
   int ei_s_print_term(char** s, const char* buf, int* index)

          This function prints a term, in clear text, to the file given by
          fp, or the buffer pointed to by s. It tries to resemble the term
          printing in the erlang shell.

          In  ei_s_print_term(),  the  parameter  s  should  point  to   a
          dynamically  (malloc) allocated string of BUFSIZ bytes or a NULL
          pointer. The string may be reallocated (and *s may  be  updated)
          by  this  function if the result is more than BUFSIZ characters.
          The string returned is zero-terminated.

          The return value is the number of characters written to the file
          or  string,  or  -1  if buf[index] doesn't contain a valid term.
          Unfortunately, I/O errors on fp is not checked.

          The argument index is updated, i.e. this function can be  viewed
          as  en decode function that decodes a term into a human readable
          format.

   int ei_x_format(ei_x_buff* x, const char* fmt, ...)
   int ei_x_format_wo_ver(ei_x_buff* x, const char *fmt, ... )

          Format a term, given as a string, to a  buffer.  This  functions
          works like a sprintf for erlang terms. The fmt contains a format
          string, with arguments like ~d, to insert terms from  variables.
          The following formats are supported (with the C types given):

          ~a - an atom, char*
          ~c - a character, char
          ~s - a string, char*
          ~i - an integer, int
          ~l - a long integer, long int
          ~u - a unsigned long integer, unsigned long int
          ~f - a float, float
          ~d - a double float, double float
          ~p - an Erlang PID, erlang_pid*

          For instance, to encode a tuple with some stuff:

          ei_x_format("{~a,~i,~d}", "numbers", 12, 3.14159)
          encodes the tuple {numbers,12,3.14159}

          The  ei_x_format_wo_ver()  formats  into  a  buffer, without the
          initial version byte.

   int ei_x_new(ei_x_buff* x)
   int ei_x_new_with_version(ei_x_buff* x)

          This function allocates a new ei_x_buff buffer.  The  fields  of
          the  structure  pointed  to  by  x parameter is filled in, and a
          default buffer is allocated.  The  ei_x_new_with_version()  also
          puts an initial version byte, that is used in the binary format.
          (So that ei_x_encode_version() won't be needed.)

   int ei_x_free(ei_x_buff* x)

          This function frees an ei_x_buff buffer. The memory used by  the
          buffer is returned to the OS.

   int ei_x_append(ei_x_buff* x, const ei_x_buff* x2)
   int ei_x_append_buf(ei_x_buff* x, const char* buf, int len)

          These functions appends data at the end of the buffer x.

   int ei_skip_term(const char* buf, int* index)

          This  function  skips a term in the given buffer, it recursively
          skips elements of lists and tuples,  so  that  a  full  term  is
          skipped. This is a way to get the size of an erlang term.

          buf is the buffer.

          index is updated to point right after the term in the buffer.

      Note:
          This  can  be useful when you want to hold arbitrary terms: just
          skip them and copy the binary term data to some buffer.

          The function returns 0 on success and -1 on failure.

DEBUG INFORMATION

   Some tips on what to check when the emulator doesn't  seem  to  receive
   the terms that you send.

     * be  careful  with  the  version header, use ei_x_new_with_version()
       when appropriate

     * turn on distribution tracing on the erlang node

     * check the result codes from ei_decode_-calls

SEE ALSO

   erl_interface(3erl)





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