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<!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en"> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> <meta name="Author" content="David Turner"> <meta name="GENERATOR" content="Mozilla/4.5 [fr] (Win98; I) [Netscape]"> <title>FreeType 2 Internals - I/O Frames</title> </head> <body> <body text="#000000" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" link="#0000EF" vlink="#51188E" alink="#FF0000"> <center> <h1> FreeType 2.0 I/O Frames</h1></center> <center> <h3> © 2000 David Turner (<a href="fichier :///[email protected]">[email protected]</a>)<br> © 2000 The FreeType Development Team (<a href="fichier :///[email protected]">[email protected]</a>)</h3></center> <p><br> <hr WIDTH="100%"> <br> <h2>Introduction:</h2> <ul> This document explains the concept of i/o <b>frames</b> as used in the FreeType 2 source code. It also enumerates the various functions and macros that can be used to read them. <p> It is targetted to FreeType hackers, or more simply to developers who would like a better understanding of the library's source code. </ul> <p><hr><p> <h2>I. What frames are:</h2> <ul> Simply speaking, a frame is an array of bytes in a font file that is "preloaded" into memory in order to be rapidly parsed. Frames are useful to ensure that every "load" is checked against end-of-file overruns, and provides nice functions to extract data in a variety of distinct formats. <p> But an example is certainly more meaningful than anything else:<p> <ul> <ul> <tt>error = read_short(stream, &str.value1);<br> <tt>if (error) goto ...<br> <br> <tt>error = read_ulong(stream, &str.value2);<br> <tt>if (error) goto ...<br> <br> <tt>error = read_ulong(stream, &str.value3);<br> <tt>if (error) goto ...<br> </ul> <p> can easily be replaced with:<p> <ul> <tt>error = FT_Access_Frame(stream, 2+4+4);<br> <tt>if (error) goto ...<br> <br> <tt>str.value1 = FT_Get_Short(stream);<br> <tt>str.value2 = FT_Get_ULong(stream);<br> <tt>str.value3 = FT_Get_ULong(stream);<br> <br> <tt>FT_Forget_Frame(stream);<br> </ul> <p> </ul> Here, the call to <tt>FT_Access_Frame</tt> will:<p> <ul> <li>Ensure that there are at least 2+4+4=10 bytes left in the stream. <li>"Preload" (for disk-based streams) 10 bytes from the current stream position. <li>Set the frame "cursor" to the first byte in the frame; </ul> <p> Each <tt>FT_Get_Short</tt> or <tt>FT_Get_ULong</tt> call will read a big-endian integer from the stream (2 bytes for <tt>FT_Get_Short</tt>, 4 bytes for <tt>FT_Get_ULong</tt>) and advance the frame cursor accordingly. <p> <tt>FT_Forget_Frame</tt> "releases" the frame from memory <p> There are several advantages to using frames :<p> <ul> <li>single-check when loading tables <li><em>making code clearer</em> by providing simple parsing functions. </ul> <p> </ul> <p><hr><p> <h2>II. Accessing and reading a frame with macros:</h2> <ul> By convention in the FreeType source code, macros are able to use two implicit variables named "<tt>error</tt>" and "<tt>stream</tt>". This is useful because these two variables are extremely used in the library, and doing this only reduces our typing requirements and make the source code much clearer. <p> <tt>error</tt> must be a local variable of type <tt>FT_Error</tt>, while <tt>stream</tt> must be a local variable or argument of type <tt>FT_Stream</tt>; <p> The macro used to access a frame is <tt>ACCESS_Frame(_size_)</tt>, it will translate to:<p> <ul> <tt>(error=FT_Access_Frame(stream,_size_)) != FT_Err_Ok</tt>. </ul> <p> Similarly, the macro <tt>FORGET_Frame()</tt> translates to:<o> <ul> <tt>FT_Forget_Frame(stream)</tt> </ul> <p> Extracting integers can be performed with the <tt>GET_xxx</tt> macros, like:<p> <ul> <table> <tr><td><tt><b>GET_Byte()</b></tt> <td>FT_Get_Byte(stream) <tr><td><tt><b>GET_Char()</b></tt> <td>((FT_Char)FT_Get_Byte(stream)) <tr><td><tt><b>GET_Short()</b></tt> <td>FT_Get_Short(stream) <tr><td><tt><b>GET_UShort()</b></tt> <td>((FT_UShort)FT_Get_Short(stream)) <tr><td><tt><b>GET_Offset()</b></tt> <td>FT_Get_Offset(stream) <tr><td><tt><b>GET_UOffset()</b></tt> <td>((FT_ULong)FT_Get_Offset(stream)) <tr><td><tt><b>GET_Long()</b></tt> <td>FT_Get_Long(stream) <tr><td><tt><b>GET_ULong()</b></tt> <td>((FT_ULong)FT_Get_Long(stream)) </table> </ul> <p> (Note that an <b>Offset</b> is an integer stored with 3 bytes on the file). <p> All this means that the following code:<p> <ul> <tt>error = FT_Access_Frame(stream, 2+4+4);<br> <tt>if (error) goto ...<br> <br> <tt>str.value1 = FT_Get_Short(stream);<br> <tt>str.value2 = FT_Get_ULong(stream);<br> <tt>str.value3 = FT_Get_ULong(stream);<br> <br> <tt>FT_Forget_Frame(stream);<br> </ul> <p> Can be replaced with macros by:<p> <ul> <tt>if ( ACCESS_Frame( 2+4+4 ) ) goto ...<br> <br> <tt>str.value1 = GET_Short();<br> <tt>str.value2 = GET_ULong();<br> <tt>str.value3 = GET_ULong();<br> <br> <tt>FORGET_Frame();<br> </ul> <p> Which is clearer. Notice that <b>error</b> and <b>stream</b> must be defined locally though for this code to work.. !! </ul> <p><hr><p> <h2>III. Alternatives:</h2> <ul> It is sometimes useful to read small integers from a font file without using a frame. Some functions have been introduced in FreeType 2 to do just that, and they are of the form <tt>FT_Read_xxxx</tt>. <p> For example, <tt>FT_Read_Short( stream, &error )</tt> reads and returns a 2-byte big-endian short from a <tt>stream</tt>, and place an error code in the <tt>error</tt> variable. <p> Thus, reading a single big-endian integer is shorter than using a frame for it. <p> Note that there is also the macros <tt>READ_xxx()</tt> which translate to:<p> <ul> <tt>( FT_Read_xxx(stream,&error), error != FT_Err_Ok )</tt> </ul> <p> and can be used as in:<p> <ul> <tt>if ( READ_UShort(variable1) || READ_ULong (variable2) ) goto Fail;</tt><br> </ul> <p> when <b>error</b> and <b>stream</b> are already defined locally.. </ul>