A two-way processor combines an input parser and an output wrapper for
two-way I/O with the ‘|&’ operator (see Redirecting Output of print
and printf
). It makes identical
use of the awk_input_parser_t
and awk_output_buf_t
structures
as described earlier.
A two-way processor is represented by the following structure:
typedef struct awk_two_way_processor { const char *name; /* name of the two-way processor */ awk_bool_t (*can_take_two_way)(const char *name); awk_bool_t (*take_control_of)(const char *name, awk_input_buf_t *inbuf, awk_output_buf_t *outbuf); awk_const struct awk_two_way_processor *awk_const next; /* for gawk */ } awk_two_way_processor_t;
The fields are as follows:
const char *name;
The name of the two-way processor.
awk_bool_t (*can_take_two_way)(const char *name);
The function pointed to by this field should return true if it wants to take over two-way I/O for this file name.
It should not change any state (variable
values, etc.) within gawk
.
awk_bool_t (*take_control_of)(const char *name,
awk_input_buf_t *inbuf,
awk_output_buf_t *outbuf);
The function pointed to by this field should fill in the awk_input_buf_t
and
awk_output_buf_t
structures pointed to by inbuf
and
outbuf
, respectively. These structures were described earlier.
awk_const struct two_way_processor *awk_const next;
This is for use by gawk
;
therefore it is marked awk_const
so that the extension cannot
modify it.
As with the input parser and output processor, you provide
“yes I can take this” and “take over for this” functions,
XXX_can_take_two_way()
and XXX_take_control_of()
.
You register your two-way processor with the following function:
void register_two_way_processor(awk_two_way_processor_t *two_way_processor);
Register the two-way processor pointed to by two_way_processor
with
gawk
.