Binary Data Conversion using C Types
Convert::Binary::C is a preprocessor and parser for C type definitions. It is highly configurable and should support arbitrarily complex data structures. Its object-oriented interface has pack and unpack methods that act as replacements for Perl's pack and unpack and allow to use the C types instead of a string representation of the data structure for conversion of binary data from and to Perl's complex data structures.
Actually, what Convert::Binary::C does is not very different from what a C compiler does, just that it doesn't compile the source code into an object file or executable, but only parses the code and allows Perl to use the enumerations, structs, unions and typedefs that have been defined within your C source for binary data conversion, similar to Perl's pack and unpack.
Beyond that, the module offers a lot of convenience methods to retrieve information about the C types that have been parsed.
Installation of the Convert::Binary::C module follows the standard Perl Way and should not be harder than:
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install
Note that you may need to become superuser to make install
.
If you're building the module under Windows, you may need to use a
different make program, such as nmake
, instead of make
.
When running 'make test' on on slower systems please be patient, since some of the tests are quite time consuming. The time required for running the whole test suite depends on your Perl version, the features you're building the module with, and of course your machine.
If you are upgrading from a previous release of Convert::Binary::C, please check the Changes file. In its current state, the module is still subject to changes that may affect compatibility with older releases.
To see the documentation, use the perldoc command:
perldoc Convert::Binary::C
perldoc Convert::Binary::C::Cached
You can also visit CPAN Search and see the documentation online as pretty nice HTML. This is also where you will find the most recent version of this module:
https://metacpan.org/release/Convert-Binary-C
Even though the documentation contains a large amount of tested example code, you might want some working example scripts. You can find them in the
examples
subdirectory after you've built the module. These scripts normally require Convert::Binary::C to be installed on your system. If you want to test the examples prior to installing Convert::Binary::C, you can start the examples like this after building the module:
perl -Mblib examples/script.pl
Otherwise just run the example scripts like any other Perl script.
Configuring a Convert::Binary::C object correctly can be quite painful if you don't know every little detail about your compiler.
However, if you're lucky, you can use the 'ccconfig' tool that comes with this package. It was written to automatically retrieve the complete compiler configuration. This may not work always, or retrieve the complete configuration, but it should at least give you some point to start from.
Just run
ccconfig -c compiler
with compiler
being the name of your compiler executable.
You can see the documentation for 'ccconfig' using the perldoc command:
perldoc ccconfig
As the tool is very experimental, any feedback on 'ccconfig' is really appreciated!
The module should build on most of the platforms that Perl runs on. I have tested it on:
- Various Linux systems
- Various BSD systems
- HP-UX
- Compaq/HP Tru64 Unix
- Mac-OS X
- Cygwin
- Windows 98/NT/2000/XP
Also, most architectures should be supported. Tests were done on:
- Various Intel Pentium and Itanium systems
- Various Alpha systems
- HP PA-RISC
- Power-PC
- StrongARM (the module worked fine on an IPAQ system)
The module should build with any perl from 5.005 up to the latest development version. It will also build with perl 5.004, but then the test suite cannot be run completely.
Multithreaded perl binaries are explicitly supported, as the module is intended to be thread-safe.
You can enable or disable certain features at compile time by adding
options to the Makefile.PL
call. However, you can safely leave them
at their default.
Available features are debug
to build the module with debugging
support and ieeefp
to explicitly enable or disable IEEE floating
point support.
The debug
feature depend on how your perl binary was built. If it
was built with the DEBUGGING
flag, the debug
feature is enabled,
otherwise it is disabled by default.
The ieeefp
feature depends on how your machine stores floating point
values. If they are stored in IEEE format, this feature will be enabled
automatically. You should really only change the default if you know
what you're doing.
You can enable or disable features explicitly by adding the arguments
enable-feature
disable-feature
to the Makefile.PL call. To explicitly build the module with debugging enabled, you would say:
perl Makefile.PL enable-debug
This will still allow you to pass other standard arguments to
Makefile.PL
, like
perl Makefile.PL enable-debug OPTIMIZE=-O3
Copyright (c) Marcus Holland-Moritz. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
The ucpp library is (c) 1998-2002 Thomas Pornin. For license and redistribution details refer to 'ctlib/ucpp/README'.
Portions copyright (c) 1989, 1990 James A. Roskind.