Oracle® Call Interface Programmer's Guide, 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E10646-03 |
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This chapter discusses the Object Type Translator (OTT), which is used to map database object types and named collection types to C structs for use in OCI applications.
This chapter contains these topics:
The OTT (Object Type Translator) assists in the development of C language applications that make use of user-defined types in an Oracle server.
Through the use of SQL CREATE TYPE
statements, you can create object types. The definitions of these types are stored in the database, and can be used in the creation of database tables. Once these tables are populated, an OCI programmer can access objects stored in the tables.
An application that accesses object data needs to be able to represent the data in a host language format. This is accomplished by representing object types as C structs. It would be possible for a programmer to code struct declarations by hand to represent database object types, but this can be very time-consuming and error-prone if many types are involved. The OTT simplifies this step by automatically generating appropriate struct declarations. In OCI, the application also needs to call an initialization function generated by OTT.
In addition to creating structs which represent stored datatypes, OTT also generates parallel indicator structs which indicate whether an object type or its fields are NULL
.
The Object Type Translator (OTT) converts database definitions of object types and named collection types into C struct declarations which can be included in an OCI application.
You must explicitly invoke OTT to translate database types to C representations.
On most operating systems, OTT is invoked on the command line. It takes as input an intype file, and it generates an outtype file and one or more C header files and an optional implementation file. The following is an example of a command which invokes the OTT:
ott userid=scott intype=demoin.typ outtype=demoout.typ code=c hfile=demo.h\ initfile=demov.c
This command causes OTT to connect to the database with user name 'scott'. You are prompted for the password.
The implementation file (demov.c
) contains the function to initialize the type version table with information about the user-defined types translated.
Each of these parameters is described in more detail in later sections of this chapter.
Sample demoin.typ
file:
CASE=LOWER TYPE emptype
Sample demoout.typ
file:
CASE = LOWER TYPE SCOTT.EMPTYPE AS emptype VERSION = "$8.0" HFILE = demo.h
In this example, the demoin.typ
file contains the type to be translated, preceded by TYPE
(for example, TYPE emptype
). The structure of the outtype
file is similar to the intype
file, with the addition of information obtained by the OTT.
Once the OTT has completed the translation, the header file contains a C struct representation of each type specified in the intype file, and a NULL
indicator struct corresponding to each type. For example, if the employee type listed in the intype file was defined as
CREATE TYPE emptype AS OBJECT ( name VARCHAR2(30), empno NUMBER, deptno NUMBER, hiredate DATE, salary NUMBER );
the header file generated by the OTT (demo.h
) includes, among other items, the following declarations:
struct emptype { OCIString * name; OCINumber empno; OCINumber deptno; OCIDate hiredate; OCINumber salary; }; typedef struct emptype emptype; struct emptype_ind { OCIInd _atomic; OCIInd name; OCIInd empno; OCIInd deptno; OCIInd hiredate; OCIInd salary; }; typedef struct employee_ind employee_ind;
A sample implementation file, demov.c
produced by this command contains:
#ifndef OCI_ORACLE #include <oci.h> #endif sword demov(OCIEnv *env, OCIError *err) { sword status = OCITypeVTInit(env, err); if (status == OCI_SUCCESS) status = OCITypeVTInsert(env, err, "HR", 2, "EMPTYPE", 7, "$8.0", 4); return status; }
Parameters in the intype file control the way generated structs are named. In this example, the struct name emptype
matches the database type name emptype
. The struct name is in lower case because of the line CASE=lower
in the intype file.
The datatypes which appear in the struct declarations (for example, OCIString
, OCIInd
) are special datatypes.
See Also:
For more information about these types, see the section "OTT Datatype Mappings"The following sections describe these aspects of using the OTT:
The remaining sections of the chapter discuss the use of the OTT with OCI, followed by a reference section which describes command line syntax, parameters, intype file structure, nested #include
file generation, schema names usage, default name mapping, and restrictions.
The first step in using OTT is to create object types or named collection types and store them in the database. This is accomplished through the use of the SQL CREATE TYPE
statement.
See Also:
For information about theCREATE
TYPE
statement, refer to the Oracle Database SQL Language Reference.The next step is to invoke OTT. OTT parameters can be specified on the command line, or in a file called a configuration file. Certain parameters can also be specified in the intype
file.
If a parameter is specified in more than one place, its value on the command line will take precedence over its value in the intype
file, which takes precedence over its value in a user-defined configuration file, which takes precedence over its value in the default configuration file.
For global options -- that is, options on the command line or options at the beginning of the intype
file before any TYPE
statements -- the value on the command line overrides the value in the intype
file. (The options that can be specified globally in the intype
file are CASE,
CODE,
INITFILE
, and INITFUNC
, but not HFILE
.) Anything in the intype
file in a TYPE
specification applies to a particular type only, and overrides anything on the command line that would otherwise apply to the type. So if you enter TYPE person HFILE=p.h
, it applies to person
only and overrides the HFILE
on the command line. The statement is not considered a command-line parameter.
Parameters (also called options) set on the command line override any set elsewhere.
See Also:
"The OTT Command Line"A configuration file is a text file that contains OTT parameters. Each non-blank line in the file contains one parameter, with its associated value or values. If more than one parameter is put on a line, only the first one will be used. No whitespace can occur on any non-blank line of a configuration file.
A configuration file can be named on the command line. In addition, a default configuration file is always read. This default configuration file must always exist, but can be empty. The name of the default configuration file is ottcfg.cfg
, and the location of the file is system-specific. For example, on Solaris, the file specification is $ORACLE_HOME/precomp/admin/ottcfg.cfg
. See your operating system-specific documentation for further information.
The intype
file gives a list of user defined types for OTT to translate.
The parameters CASE, HFILE, INITFUNC
, and INITFILE
can appear in the intype
file.
See Also:
"The Intype File"On most operating systems, OTT is invoked on the command line. You can specify the input and output files, and the database connection information, among other things. Consult your operating system-specific documentation to see how to invoke OTT.
The following is an example of an OTT invocation from the command line:
ott userid=bren intype=demoin.typ outtype=demoout.typ code=c \ hfile=demo.h initfile=demov.c
Note:
No spaces are permitted around the equals sign (=).The following sections describe the elements of the command line used in this example.
See Also:
For a detailed discussion of the various OTT command line options, see "OTT Reference"Specifies the database connection information which OTT will use.
In "OTT Command Line Invocation Example" , OTT will attempt to connect with user name 'bren
' and is then prompted for the password.
Specifies the name of the intype
file which will be used.
In "OTT Command Line Invocation Example" , the name of the intype file is specified as demoin.typ
.
Specifies the name of the outtype file. When OTT generates the C header file, it also writes information about the translated types into the outtype
file. This file contains an entry for each of the types which is translated, including its version string, and the header file to which its C representation was written.
In "OTT Command Line Invocation Example" , the name of the outtype
file is specified as demoout.typ
.
Note:
If the file specified by theouttype
keyword already exists, it is overwritten when OTT runs. If the name of the outtype
file is the same as the name of the intype
file, the outtype
information overwrites the intype
file.Specifies the target language for the translation. The following options are available:
C (equivalent to ANSI_C)
ANSI_C (for ANSI C)
KR_C (for Kernighan & Ritchie C)
There is currently no default option, so this parameter is required.
Struct declarations are identical in both C dialects. The style in which the initialization function defined in the INITFILE
file is defined depends on whether KR_C
is used. If the INITFILE
option is not used, all three options are equivalent.
Specifies the name of the C header file to which the generated structs should be written.
In "OTT Command Line Invocation Example" , the generated structs will be stored in a file called demo.h
.
Note:
If the file specified by thehfile
keyword already exists, it will be overwritten when OTT runs, with one exception: if the contents of the file as generated by OTT are identical to the previous contents of the file, OTT will not actually write to the file. This preserves the modification time of the file so that Linux and UNIX make
and similar facilities on other operating systems do not perform unnecessary recompilations.Specifies the name of the C source file into which the type initialization function is to be written.
Note:
If the file specified by theinitfile
keyword already exists, it will be overwritten when OTT runs, with one exception: if the contents of the file as generated by OTT are identical to the previous contents of the file, OTT will not actually write to the file. This preserves the modification time of the file so that Linux and UNIX make
and similar facilities on other operating systems do not perform unnecessary recompilations.When running OTT, the intype
file tells OTT which database types should be translated, and it can also control the naming of the generated structs. The intype
file can be a user-created file, or it can be the outtype
file of a previous invocation of OTT. If the intype
parameter is not used, all types in the schema to which OTT connects are translated.
The following is a simple example of a user-created intype
file:
CASE=LOWER TYPE employee TRANSLATE SALARY$ AS salary DEPTNO AS department TYPE ADDRESS TYPE item TYPE "Person" TYPE PURCHASE_ORDER AS p_o
The first line, with the CASE
keyword, indicates that generated C identifiers should be in lower case. However, this CASE
option is only applied to those identifiers that are not explicitly mentioned in the intype file. Thus, employee
and ADDRESS
would always result in C structures employee
and ADDRESS
, respectively. The members of these structures would be named in lower case.
See Also:
"CASE"The lines which begin with the TYPE
keyword specify which types in the database should be translated: in this case, the EMPLOYEE, ADDRESS, ITEM, PERSON
, and PURCHASE_ORDER
types.
The TRANSLATE...AS
keywords specify that the name of an object attribute should be changed when the type is translated into a C struct. In this case, the SALARY$
attribute of the employee type is translated to salary
.
The AS
keyword in the final line specifies that the name of an object type should be changed when it is translated into a struct. In this case, the purchase_order
database type is translated into a struct called p_o
.
If AS
is not used to translate a type or attribute name, the database name of the type or attribute will be used as the C identifier name, except that the CASE
option will be observed, and any characters that cannot be mapped to a legal C identifier character will be replaced by an underscore. Reasons for translating a type or attribute name include:
The name contains characters other than letters, digits, and underscores
The name conflicts with a C keyword
The type name conflicts with another identifier in the same scope. This can happen, for example, if the program uses two types with the same name from different schemas.
The programmer prefers a different name
The OTT may need to translate additional types which are not listed in the intype
file. This is because the OTT analyzes the types in the intype
file for type dependencies before performing the translation, and translates other types as necessary. For example, if the ADDRESS
type were not listed in the intype
file, but the "Person"
type had an attribute of type ADDRESS
, OTT would still translate ADDRESS
because it is required to define the "Person"
type.
If you specify FALSE
as the value of the TRANSITIVE
parameter, then OTT will not generate types that are not specified in the intype
file.
A normal case-insensitive SQL identifier can be spelled in any combination of upper and lower case in the intype
file, and is not quoted.
Use quotation marks, such as TYPE
"Person"
, to reference SQL identifiers that have been created in a case-sensitive manner, for example, CREATE TYPE "Person"
. A SQL identifier is case-sensitive if it was quoted when it was declared. Quotation marks can also be used to refer to a SQL identifier that is an OTT-reserved word, for example, TYPE "CASE"
. When a name is quoted for this reason, the quoted name must be in upper case if the SQL identifier was created in a case-insensitive manner, for example, CREATE TYPE Case
. If an OTT-reserved word is used to refer to the name of a SQL identifier but is not quoted, the OTT will report a syntax error in the intype
file.
See Also:
For a more detailed specification of the structure of theintype
file and the available options, refer to the section "Structure of the Intype File"When OTT generates a C struct from a database type, the struct contains one element corresponding to each attribute of the object type. The datatypes of the attributes are mapped to types which are used in Oracle's object datatypes. The datatypes found in Oracle include a set of predefined, primitive types, and provide for the creation of user-defined types, such as object types and collections.
Oracle also includes a set of predefined types which are used to represent object type attributes in C structs. As an example, consider the following object type definition, and its corresponding OTT-generated struct declarations:
CREATE TYPE employee AS OBJECT ( name VARCHAR2(30), empno NUMBER, deptno NUMBER, hiredate DATE, salary$ NUMBER);
The OTT output, assuming CASE=LOWER
and no explicit mappings of type or attribute names, is:
struct employee { OCIString * name; OCINumber empno; OCINumber department; OCIDate hiredate; OCINumber salary_; }; typedef struct emp_type emp_type; struct employee_ind { OCIInd _atomic; OCIInd name; OCIInd empno; OCIInd department; OCIInd hiredate; OCIInd salary_; } typedef struct employee_ind employee_ind;
See Also:
The indicator struct (struct employee_ind
) is explained in the section, "Null Indicator Structs"The datatypes in the struct declarations—OCIString
, OCINumber
, OCIDate
, OCIInd
—are used here to map the datatypes of the object type attributes. The NUMBER
datatype of the empno
attribute, maps to the OCINumber
datatype, for example. These datatypes can also be used as the types of bind and define variables.
This section describes the mappings of Oracle object attribute types to C types generated by OTT. The following section, "OTT Type Mapping Example" , includes examples of many of these different mappings. The following table lists the mappings from types which can be used as attributes to object datatypes which are generated by OTT.
Table 15-1 Object Datatype Mappings for Object Type Attributes
Object Attribute Types | C Mapping |
---|---|
|
OCIBFileLocator* |
BLOB |
OCILobLocator * or OCIBlobLocator * |
CHAR(N), CHARACTER(N), NCHAR(N) |
OCIString * |
CLOB, NCLOB |
OCILobLocator * or OCIClobLocator * |
DATE |
OCIDate |
ANSI DATE |
OCIDateTime * |
TIMESTAMP, TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE, TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE |
OCIDateTime * |
INTERVAL YEAR TO MONTH, INTERVAL DAY TO SECOND |
OCIInterval * |
DEC, DEC(N), DEC(N,N) |
OCINumber |
DECIMAL, DECIMAL(N), DECIMAL(N,N) |
OCINumber |
FLOAT, FLOAT(N), DOUBLE PRECISION |
OCINumber |
BINARY_FLOAT |
float |
BINARY_DOUBLE |
double |
INT, INTEGER, SMALLINT |
OCINumber |
Nested Object Type |
C name of the nested object type |
Nested Table |
OCITable * |
NUMBER, NUMBER(N), NUMBER(N,N) |
OCINumber |
NUMERIC, NUMERIC(N), NUMERIC(N,N) |
OCINumber |
RAW(N) |
OCIRaw * |
REAL |
OCINumber |
REF |
OCIRef * |
VARCHAR(N) |
OCIString * |
VARCHAR2(N), NVARCHAR2(N) |
OCIString * |
OCIArray * |
Note:
ForREF
, varray
, and nested table
types, OTT generates a typedef. The type declared in the typedef is then used as the type of the data member in the struct declaration. For examples, see the next section, "OTT Type Mapping Example".If an object type includes an attribute of a REF
or collection type, a typedef for the REF
or collection type is first generated. Then the struct declaration corresponding to the object type is generated. The struct includes an element whose type is a pointer to the REF
or collection type.
If an object type includes an attribute whose type is another object type, OTT first generates the nested type (if TRANSITIVE=TRUE
). It then maps the object type attribute to a nested struct of the type of the nested object type.
The Oracle C datatypes to which the OTT maps non-object database attribute types are structures, which, except for OCIDate
, are opaque.
The following example is presented to demonstrate the various type mappings created by OTT.
Given the following database types
CREATE TYPE my_varray AS VARRAY(5) of integer; CREATE TYPE object_type AS OBJECT (object_name VARCHAR2(20)); CREATE TYPE my_table AS TABLE OF object_type; CREATE TYPE other_type AS OBJECT (object_number NUMBER); CREATE TYPE many_types AS OBJECT ( the_varchar VARCHAR2(30), the_char CHAR(3), the_blob BLOB, the_clob CLOB, the_object object_type, another_ref REF other_type, the_ref REF many_types, the_varray my_varray, the_table my_table, the_date DATE, the_num NUMBER, the_raw RAW(255));
and an intype
file which includes
CASE = LOWER TYPE many_types
OTT would generate the following C structs:
Note:
Comments are provided here to help explain the structs. These comments are not part of actual OTT output.#ifndef MYFILENAME_ORACLE #define MYFILENAME_ORACLE #ifndef OCI_ORACLE #include <oci.h> #endif typedef OCIRef many_types_ref; typedef OCIRef object_type_ref; typedef OCIArray my_varray; /* used in many_types */ typedef OCITable my_table; /* used in many_types*/ typedef OCIRef other_type_ref; struct object_type /* used in many_types */ { OCIString * object_name; }; typedef struct object_type object_type; struct object_type_ind /*indicator struct for*/ { /*object_types*/ OCIInd _atomic; OCIInd object_name; }; typedef struct object_type_ind object_type_ind; struct many_types { OCIString * the_varchar; OCIString * the_char; OCIBlobLocator * the_blob; OCIClobLocator * the_clob; struct object_type the_object; other_type_ref * another_ref; many_types_ref * the_ref; my_varray * the_varray; my_table * the_table; OCIDate the_date; OCINumber the_num; OCIRaw * the_raw; }; typedef struct many_types many_types; struct many_types_ind /*indicator struct for*/ { /*many_types*/ OCIInd _atomic; OCIInd the_varchar; OCIInd the_char; OCIInd the_blob; OCIInd the_clob; struct object_type_ind the_object; /*nested*/ OCIInd another_ref; OCIInd the_ref; OCIInd the_varray; OCIInd the_table; OCIInd the_date; OCIInd the_num; OCIInd the_raw; }; typedef struct many_types_ind many_types_ind; #endif
Notice that even though only one item was listed for translation in the intype file, two object types and two named collection types were translated. This is because the OTT parameter TRANSITIVE, has the default value of TRUE
. As described in that section, when TRANSITIVE=TRUE
, OTT automatically translates any types which are used as attributes of a type being translated, in order to complete the translation of the listed type.
This is not the case for types which are only accessed by a pointer or ref in an object type attribute. For example, although the many_types
type contains the attribute another_ref REF other_type
, a declaration of struct other_type
was not generated.
This example also illustrates how typedefs are used to declare varray, nested table
, and REF
types.
The typedefs occur near the beginning:
typedef OCIRef many_types_ref; typedef OCIRef object_type_ref; typedef OCIArray my_varray; typedef OCITable my_table; typedef OCIRef other_type_ref;
In the struct many_types, the varray, nested table
, and REF
attributes are declared:
struct many_types { ... other_type_ref * another_ref; many_types_ref * the_ref; my_varray * the_varray; my_table * the_table; ... }
Each time OTT generates a C struct to represent a database object type, it also generates a corresponding NULL
indicator struct. When an object type is selected into a C struct, NULL
indicator information may be selected into a parallel struct.
For example, the following NULL
indicator struct was generated in the example in the previous section:
struct many_types_ind { OCIInd _atomic; OCIInd the_varchar; OCIInd the_char; OCIInd the_blob; OCIInd the_clob; struct object_type_ind the_object; OCIInd another_ref; OCIInd the_ref; OCIInd the_varray; OCIInd the_table; OCIInd the_date; OCIInd the_num; OCIInd the_raw; }; typedef struct many_types_ind many_types_ind;
The layout of the NULL
struct is important. The first element in the struct (_atomic
) is the atomic null indicator. This value indicates the NULL
status for the object type as a whole. The atomic null indicator is followed by an indicator element corresponding to each element in the OTT-generated struct representing the object type.
Notice that when an object type contains another object type as part of its definition (in the preceding example it is the object_type
attribute), the indicator entry for that attribute is the NULL
indicator struct (object_type_ind
) corresponding to the nested object type (if TRANSITIVE=TRUE
).
varrays
and nested tables
contain the NULL
information for their elements.
The datatype for all other elements of a NULL
indicator struct is OCIInd
.
See Also:
"NULL Indicator Structure" for more information about atomic nullity.To support type inheritance of objects, OTT generates a C struct to represent an object subtype by declaring the inherited attributes in an encapsulated struct with the special name '_super
', before declaring the new attributes. Thus, for an object subtype that inherits from a supertype, the first element in the struct is named '_super
', followed by elements corresponding to each attribute of the subtype. The type of the element named '_super
' is the name of the supertype.
For example, given the type Person_t
, with subtype Student_t
and subtype Employee_t,
which are created as follows:
CREATE TYPE Person_t AS OBJECT ( ssn NUMBER, name VARCHAR2(30), address VARCHAR2(100)) NOT FINAL; CREATE TYPE Student_t UNDER Person_t ( deptid NUMBER, major VARCHAR2(30)) NOT FINAL; CREATE TYPE Employee_t UNDER Person_t ( empid NUMBER, mgr VARCHAR2(30));
and, given an intype
file which includes:
CASE=SAME TYPE EMPLOYEE_T TYPE STUDENT_T TYPE PERSON_T
OTT generates the following C structs for Person_t, Student_t
, and Employee_t
and their NULL
indicator structs:
#ifndef MYFILENAME_ORACLE #define MYFILENAME_ORACLE #ifndef OCI_ORACLE #include <oci.h> #endif typedef OCIRef EMPLOYEE_T_ref; typedef OCIRef STUDENT_T_ref; typedef OCIRef PERSON_T_ref; struct PERSON_T { OCINumber SSN; OCIString * NAME; OCIString * ADDRESS; }; typedef struct PERSON_T PERSON_T; struct PERSON_T_ind { OCIInd _atomic; OCIInd SSN; OCIInd NAME; OCIInd ADDRESS; }; typedef struct PERSON_T_ind PERSON_T_ind; struct EMPLOYEE_T { PERSON_T_ind; OCINumber EMPID; OCIString * MGR; }; typedef struct EMPLOYEE_T EMPLOYEE_T; struct EMPLOYEE_T_ind { PERSON_T _super; OCIInd EMPID; OCIInd MGR; }; typedef struct EMPLOYEE_T_ind EMPLOYEE_T_ind; struct STUDENT_T { PERSON_T _super; OCINumber DEPTID; OCIString * MAJOR; }; typedef struct STUDENT_T STUDENT_T; struct STUDENT_T_ind { PERSON_T _super; OCIInd DEPTID; OCIInd MAJOR; }; typedef struct STUDENT_T_ind STUDENT_T_ind; #endif
The preceding C mapping convention allows simple up-casting from an instance of a subtype to an instance of a supertype in C to work properly. For example:
STUDENT_T *stu_ptr = some_ptr; /* some STUDENT_T instance */ PERSON_T *pers_ptr = (PERSON_T *)stu_ptr; /* up-casting */
The NULL
indicator structs are generated similarly. Note that for the supertype Person_t
NULL
indicator struct, the first element is '_atomic
', and that for the subtypes Employee_t
and Student_t
NULL
indicator structs, the first element is '_super
' (no atomic element is generated for subtypes).
For attributes of NOT FINAL
types (and therefore potentially substitutable), the embedded attribute is represented as a pointer.
Consider a type Book_t
created as:
CREATE TYPE Book_t AS OBJECT ( title VARCHAR2(30), author Person_t /* substitutable */);
The corresponding C struct generated by OTT contains a pointer to Person_t
:
struct Book_t { OCIString *title; Person_t *author; /* pointer to Person_t struct */ }
The NULL
indicator struct corresponding to the preceding type is:
struct Book_t_ind { OCIInd _atomic; OCIInd title; OCIInd author; }
Note that the NULL
indicator struct corresponding to the author
attribute can be obtained from the author
object itself. See OCIObjectGetInd().
If a type is defined to be FINAL
, it cannot have any subtypes. An attribute of a FINAL
type is therefore not substitutable. In such cases, the mapping is as before: the attribute struct is inline. Now, if the type is altered and defined to be NOT FINAL
, the mapping will have to change. The new mapping is generated by running OTT again.
The outtype
file is named on the OTT command line. When OTT generates the C header file, it also writes the results of the translation into the outtype
file. This file contains an entry for each of the types which is translated, including its version string, and the header file to which its C representation was written.
The outtype
file from one OTT run can be used as the intype
file for a subsequent OTT invocation.
For example, given the simple intype
file used earlier in this chapter:
CASE=LOWER TYPE employee TRANSLATE SALARY$ AS salary DEPTNO AS department TYPE ADDRESS TYPE item TYPE "Person" TYPE PURCHASE_ORDER AS p_o
the user has chosen to specify the case for the OTT-generated C identifiers, and has provided a list of types which should be translated. In two of these types, naming conventions are specified.
The following is an example of what the outtype
file might look like after running OTT:
CASE = LOWER TYPE EMPLOYEE AS employee VERSION = "$8.0" HFILE = demo.h TRANSLATE SALARY$ AS salary DEPTNO AS department TYPE ADDRESS AS ADDRESS VERSION = "$8.0" HFILE = demo.h TYPE ITEM AS item VERSION = "$8.0" HFILE = demo.h TYPE "Person" AS Person VERSION = "$8.0" HFILE = demo.h TYPE PURCHASE_ORDER AS p_o VERSION = "$8.0" HFILE = demo.h
When examining the contents of the outtype
file, you might discover types listed which were not included in the intype
specification. For example, if the intype
file only specified that the person
type was to be translated
CASE = LOWER TYPE PERSON
and the definition of the person
type includes an attribute of type address
, then the outtype
file will include entries for both PERSON
and ADDRESS
. The person
type cannot be translated completely without first translating address
.
When the parameter TRANSITIVE
has been set to TRUE
(it is the default), OTT analyzes the types in the intype file for type dependencies before performing the translation, and translates other types as necessary.
C header and implementation files that have been generated by OTT can be used by an OCI application that accesses objects in an Oracle server. The header file is incorporated into the OCI code with an #include
statement.
Once the header file has been included, the OCI application can access and manipulate object data in the host language format.
Figure 15-1, "Using OTT with OCI" shows the steps involved in using OTT with the OCI for the simplest applications:
SQL is used to create type definitions in the database.
OTT generates a header file containing C representations of object types and named collection types. It also generates an implementation file, as named with the INITFILE
option.
The application is written. User-written code in the OCI application declares and calls the INITFUNC
function.
The header file is included in an OCI source code file.
The OCI application, including the implementation file generated by OTT, is compiled and linked with the OCI libraries.
The OCI executable is run against the Oracle server.
Within the application, the OCI program can perform bind and define operations using program variables declared to be of types which appear in OTT-generated header file.
For example, an application might fetch a REF
to an object using a SQL SELECT
statement and then pin that object using the appropriate OCI function. Once the object has been pinned, its attribute data can be accessed and manipulated with other OCI functions.
OCI includes a set of datatype mapping and manipulation functions which are specifically designed to work on attributes of object types and named collection types.
The following are examples of the available functions:
OCIStringSize()
gets the size of an OCIString
string.
OCINumberAdd()
adds two OCINumber
numbers together.
OCILobIsEqual()
compares two LOB locators for equality.
OCIRawPtr()
gets a pointer to an OCIRaw
raw datatype.
OCICollAppend()
appends an element to a collection type (OCIArray
or OCITable
).
OCITableFirst()
returns the index for the first existing element of a nested table (OCITable
).
OCIRefIsNull()
tests if a REF
(OCIRef
) is NULL
These functions are described in detail in other chapters of this guide.
OTT generates a C initialization function if requested. The initialization function tells the environment, for each object type used in the program, which version of the type is used. You can specify a name for the initialization function when invoking OTT with the INITFUNC
option, or you can allow OTT to select a default name based on the name of the implementation file (INITFILE
) containing the function.
The initialization function takes two arguments, an environment handle pointer and an error handle pointer. There is typically a single initialization function, but this is not required. If a program has several separately compiled pieces requiring different types, you may want to execute OTT separately for each piece requiring, for each piece, one initialization file, containing an initialization function.
After an environment handle is created by an explicit OCI object call, for example, by calling OCIEnvCreate()
, you must also explicitly call the initialization functions. All the initialization functions must be called for each explicitly created environment handle. This gives each handle access to all the Oracle datatypes used in the entire program.
If an environment handle is implicitly created by embedded SQL statements, such as EXEC SQL CONTEXT USE
and EXEC SQL CONNECT
, the handle is initialized implicitly, and the initialization functions need not be called. This is only relevant when Pro*C/C++ is being combined with OCI applications.
The following example shows an initialization function.
Given an intype
file, ex2c.typ
, containing
TYPE BREN.PERSON TYPE BREN.ADDRESS
and the command line
ott userid=bren intype=ex2c outtype=ex2co hfile=ex2ch.h initfile=ex2cv.c
OTT generates the following file, ex2cv.c
:
#ifndef OCI_ORACLE #include <oci.h> #endif sword ex2cv(OCIEnv *env, OCIError *err) { sword status = OCITypeVTInit(env, err); if (status == OCI_SUCCESS) status = OCITypeVTInsert(env, err, "BREN", 5, "PERSON", 6, "$8.0", 4); if (status == OCI_SUCCESS) status = OCITypeVTInsert(env, err, "BREN", 5, "ADDRESS", 7, "$8.0", 4); return status; }
The function ex2cv()
creates the type version table and inserts the types BREN.PERSON
and BREN.ADDRESS
.
If a program explicitly creates an environment handle, all the initialization functions must be generated, compiled, and linked, because they must be called for each explicitly created handle. If a program does not explicitly create any environment handles, initialization functions are not required.
A program that uses an OTT-generated header file must also use the initialization function generated at the same time. When a header file is generated by OTT and an environment handle is explicitly created in the program, then the implementation file must also be compiled and linked into the executable.
The C initialization function supplies version information about the types processed by OTT. It adds to the type-version table the name and version identifier of every OTT-processed object datatype.
The type-version table is used by Oracle's type manager to determine which version of a type a particular program uses. Different initialization functions generated by OTT at different times can add some of the same types to the type version table. When a type is added more than once, Oracle ensures the same version of the type is registered each time.
It is the OCI programmer's responsibility to declare a function prototype for the initialization function, and to call the function.
Note:
In the current release of Oracle, each type has only one version. Initialization of the type version table is required only for compatibility with future releases of Oracle.The behavior of the OTT is controlled by parameters which can appear on the OTT command line or in a CONFIG
file. Certain parameters can also appear in the intype
file.
This section provides detailed information about the following topics:
The following conventions are used in this chapter to describe OTT syntax:
Italic strings are variables or parameters to be supplied by the user.
Strings in UPPERCASE are entered as shown, except that case is not significant.
OTT keywords are listed in a lower-case monospaced font in examples and headings, but are printed in upper-case in text to make them more distinctive.
Square brackets [...] enclose optional items.
An ellipsis (...) immediately following an item (or items enclosed in brackets) means that the item can be repeated any number of times.
Punctuation symbols other than those described earlier are entered as shown. These include '.', '@', and so on.
The OTT command-line interface is used when explicitly invoking OTT to translate database types into C structs. This is always required when developing OCI applications that use objects.
An OTT command line statement consists of the keyword OTT
, followed by a list of OTT parameters.
The parameters which can appear on an OTT command line statement are as follows:
[userid=username/password[@db_name]] [intype=in_filename] outtype=out_filename code=C|ANSI_C|KR_C [hfile=filename] [errtype=filename] [config=filename] [initfile=filename] [initfunc=filename] [case=SAME|LOWER|UPPER|OPPOSITE] [schema_name=ALWAYS|IF_NEEDED|FROM_INTYPE] [transitive=TRUE|FALSE] [URL=url]
Note:
Generally, the order of the parameters following theOTT
command does not matter, and only the OUTTYPE
and CODE
parameters are always required.The HFILE
parameter is almost always used. If omitted, HFILE
must be specified individually for each type in the intype
file. If OTT determines that a type not listed in the intype
file must be translated, an error will be reported. Therefore, it is safe to omit the HFILE
parameter only if the INTYPE
file was previously generated as an OTT OUTTYPE
file.
If the intype
file is omitted, the entire schema will be translated. See the parameter descriptions in the following section for more information.
The following is an example of an OTT command line statement (you will be prompted for the password):
OTT userid=marc intype=in.typ outtype=out.typ code=c hfile=demo.h\ errtype=demo.tls case=lower
Each of the OTT command line parameters is described in the following sections.
Enter parameters on the OTT command line using the following format:
parameter=value
where parameter
is the literal parameter string and value
is a valid parameter setting. The literal parameter string is not case sensitive.
Separate command-line parameters using either spaces or tabs.
Parameters can also appear within a configuration file, but, in that case, no whitespace is permitted within a line, and each parameter must appear on a separate line. Additionally, the parameters CASE,
HFILE,INITFUNC
, and INITFILE
can appear in the intype
file.
The USERID
parameter specifies the Oracle user name, password, and optional database name (Oracle Net Services database specification string). If the database name is omitted, the default database is assumed. The syntax of this parameter is:
userid=username/password[@db_name]
The USERID
parameter is optional. If omitted, OTT automatically attempts to connect to the default database as user OPS$username
, where username
is the user's operating system user name. If this is the first parameter, "USERID=
" and the password and the database name can be omitted, as shown here:
OTT username ...
For security purposes, when you only enter the user name you will be prompted for the rest of the entry.
The INTYPE
parameter specifies the name of the file from which to read the list of object type specifications. OTT translates each type in the list.
The syntax for this parameter is
intype=filename
"INTYPE=
" can be omitted if USERID
and INTYPE
are the first two parameters, in that order, and "USERID=
" is omitted. If INTYPE
is not specified, all types in the user's schema will be translated.
OTT username filename...
The intype
file can be thought of as a makefile for type declarations. It lists the types for which C struct declarations are needed.
If the file name on the command line or in the intype
file does not include an extension, a operating system-specific extension such as "TYP
" or ".typ
" will be added.
The name of a file into which OTT will write type information for all the object datatypes it processes. This includes all types explicitly named in the intype
file, and can include additional types that are translated because they are used in the declarations of other types that need to be translated (if TRANSITIVE=TRUE
). This file must be used as an intype
file in a future invocation of OTT.
outtype=filename
If the INTYPE
and OUTTYPE
parameters refer to the same file, the new INTYPE
information replaces the old information in the intype
file. This provides a convenient way for the same intype
file to be used repeatedly in the cycle of altering types, generating type declarations, editing source code, precompiling, compiling, and debugging.
OUTTYPE
must be specified.
If the file name on the command line or in the intype
file does not include an extension, a operating system-specific extension such as "TYP
" or ".typ
" will be added.
This is the desired host language for OTT output, which is specified as CODE=C, CODE=KR_C,
or CODE=ANSI_C
. "CODE=C
" is equivalent to "CODE=ANSI_C
".
CODE=C|KR_C|ANSI_C
There is no default value for this parameter; it must be supplied.
The INITFILE
parameter specifies the name of the file where the OTT-generated initialization file is to be written. The initialization function will not be generated if this parameter is omitted.
For Pro*C/C++ programs, the INITFILE
is not necessary, because the SQLLIB run-time library performs the necessary initializations. An OCI program user must compile and link the INITFILE
file(s), and must call the initialization function(s) when an environment handle is created.
If the file name of an INITFILE
on the command line or in the intype
file does not include an extension, a operating system-specific extension such as "C
" or ".c
" will be added.
initfile=filename
The INITFUNC
parameter is only used in OCI programs. It specifies the name of the initialization function generated by OTT. If this parameter is omitted, the name of the initialization function is derived from the name of the INITFILE
.
initfunc=filename
The name of the include (.h
) file to be generated by OTT for the declarations of types that are mentioned in the intype
file but whose include files are not specified there. This parameter is required unless the include file for each type is specified individually in the intype
file. This parameter is also required if a type not mentioned in the intype
file must be generated because other types require it, and these other types are declared in two or more different files, and TRANSITIVE=TRUE
.
If the file name of an HFILE
on the command line or in the intype
file does not include an extension, a operating system-specific extension such as "H
" or ".h
" will be added.
hfile=filename
The CONFIG
parameter specifies the name of the OTT configuration file, which lists commonly used parameter specifications. Parameter specifications are also read from a system configuration file in a operating system-dependent location. All remaining parameter specifications must appear on the command line, or in the intype
file.
config=filename
Note:
ACONFIG
parameter is not allowed in the CONFIG
file.If this parameter is supplied, a listing of the intype
file is written to the ERRTYPE
file, along with all informational and error messages. Informational and error messages are sent to the standard output whether or not ERRTYPE
is specified.
Essentially, the ERRTYPE
file is a copy of the intype
file with error messages added. In most cases, an error message will include a pointer to the text which caused the error.
If the file name of an ERRTYPE
on the command line or in the INTYPE
file does not include an extension, a operating system-specific extension such as "TLS
" or ".tls
" will be added.
errtype=filename
This parameter affects the case of certain C identifiers generated by OTT. The possible values of CASE
are SAME, LOWER, UPPER
, and OPPOSITE
. If CASE = SAME
, the case of letters is not changed when converting database type and attribute names to C identifiers. If CASE=LOWER
, all uppercase letters are converted to lowercase. If CASE=UPPER
, all lowercase letters are converted to uppercase. If CASE=OPPOSITE
, all uppercase letters are converted to lower-case, and vice-versa.
CASE=[SAME|LOWER|UPPER|OPPOSITE]
This option affects only those identifiers (attributes or types not explicitly listed) not mentioned in the intype
file. Case conversion takes place after a legal identifier has been generated.
Note that the case of the C struct identifier for a type specifically mentioned in the INTYPE
option is the same as its case in the intype
file. For example, if the intype
file includes the following line:
TYPE Worker
then the OTT generates
struct Worker {...};
On the other hand, if the intype
file were written as
TYPE wOrKeR
the OTT generates
struct wOrKeR {...};
following the case of the intype
file.
Case-insensitive SQL identifiers not mentioned in the intype
file will appear in upper case if CASE=SAME
, and in lower case if CASE=OPPOSITE
. A SQL identifier is case-insensitive if it was not quoted when it was declared.
This option offers control in qualifying the database name of a type from the default schema with a schema name in the outtype
file. The outtype
file generated by OTT contains information about the types processed by OTT, including the type names.
See Also:
See "SCHEMA_NAMES Usage"Takes the values TRUE
(the default) or FALSE
. Indicates whether type dependencies not explicitly listed in the intype
file are to be translated, or not.
If TRANSITIVE=TRUE
is specified, then types needed by other types but not mentioned in the intype
file are generated.
If TRANSITIVE=FALSE
is specified, then types not mentioned in the intype
file are not generated, even if they were used as attribute types of other generated types.
OTT uses JDBC (Java Database Connectivity), the Java interface for connecting to the database. The default value of parameter URL is:
URL=jdbc:oracle:oci8:@
The OCI8 driver is for client-side use with an Oracle installation. To specify the Thin driver (the Java driver for client-side use without an Oracle installation):
URL=jdbc:oracle:thin:@host:port:sid
where host
is the name of the host on which the database is running, port
is the port number, and sid
is the Oracle SID.
OTT parameters can appear on the command line, in a CONFIG
file named on the command line, or both. Some parameters are also allowed in the intype
file.
OTT is invoked as follows:
OTT username/password parameters
If one of the parameters on the command line is
config=filename
additional parameters are read from the configuration file filename
.
In addition, parameters are also read from a default configuration file in a operating system-dependent location. This file must exist, but can be empty. Parameters in a configuration file must appear one in each line, with no whitespace on the line.
If OTT is executed without any arguments, an on-line parameter reference is displayed.
The types for OTT to translate are named in the file specified by the INTYPE
parameter. The parameters CASE, INITFILE, INITFUNC
, and HFILE
can also appear in the intype
file. outtype
files generated by OTT include the CASE
parameter, and include the INITFILE
, and INITFUNC
parameters if an initialization file was generated. The outtype
file specifies the HFILE
individually for each type.
The case of the OTT command is operating system-dependent.
The intype and outtype files list the types translated by OTT, and provide all the information needed to determine how a type or attribute name is translated to a legal C identifier. These files contain one or more type specifications. These files also can contain specifications of the following options:
CASE
HFILE
INITFILE
INITFUNC
If the CASE, INITFILE
, or INITFUNC
options are present, they must precede any type specifications. If these options appear both on the command line and in the intype file, the value on the command line is used.
See Also:
For an example of a simple user-definedintype
file, and of the full outtype
file that the OTT generates from it, see "The Outtype File"A type specification in the INTYPE
names an object datatype that is to be translated. A type specification in the outtype
file names an object datatype that has been translated,
TYPE employee TRANSLATE SALARY$ AS salary DEPTNO AS department TYPE ADDRESS TYPE PURCHASE_ORDER AS p_o
The structure of a type specification is as follows, where [] indicates optional inputs inside:
TYPE type_name [AS type_identifier] [VERSION [=] version_string] [HFILE [=] hfile_name] [TRANSLATE{member_name [AS identifier]}...]
The syntax of type_name
is:
[schema_name.]type_name
where schema_name
is the name of the schema which owns the given object datatype, and type_name
is the name of the type. The default schema is that of the user running OTT. The default database is the local database.
The components of a type specification are described next.
type_name
is the name of an Oracle object datatype.
type_identifier
is the C identifier used to represent the type. If omitted, the default name mapping algorithm will be used.
version_string
is the version string of the type which was used when the code was generated by a previous invocation of OTT. The version string is generated by OTT and written to the outtype
file, which can later be used as the intype
file when OTT is later executed. The version string does not affect the operation of OTT, but will eventually be used to select which version of the object datatype should be used in the running program.
type_identifier
is the C identifier used to represent the type. If omitted, the default type mapping algorithm will be used.
See Also:
"Default Name Mapping"hfile_name
is the name of the header file in which the declarations of the corresponding struct or class appears or will appear. If hfile_name
is omitted, the file named by the command-line HFILE
parameter will be used if a declaration is generated.
member_name
is the name of an attribute (data member) which is to be translated to the following identifier
.
identifier
is the C identifier used to represent the attribute in the user program. Identifiers can be specified in this way for any number of attributes. The default name mapping algorithm will be used for the attributes that are not mentioned.
An object datatype may need to be translated for one of two reasons:
It appears in the intype
file.
It is required to declare another type that must be translated, and TRANSITIVE=TRUE
.
If a type that is not mentioned explicitly is required by types declared in exactly one file, the translation of the required type is written to the same file(s) as the explicitly declared types that require it.
If a type that is not mentioned explicitly is required by types declared in two or more different files, the translation of the required type is written to the global HFILE
file.
Every HFILE
generated by OTT #includes
other necessary files, and #defines
a symbol constructed from the name of the file, which can be used to determine if the HFILE
has already been included. Consider, for example, a database with the following types:
create type px1 AS OBJECT (col1 number, col2 integer); create type px2 AS OBJECT (col1 px1); create type px3 AS OBJECT (col1 px1);
where the intype
file contains:
CASE=lower type pxl hfile tott95a.h type px3 hfile tott95b.h
If we invoke OTT with
ott scott tott95i.typ outtype=tott95o.typ code=c
then it will generate the two following header files.
File tott95b.h
is:
#ifndef TOTT95B_ORACLE #define TOTT95B_ORACLE #ifndef OCI_ORACLE #include <oci.h> #endif #ifndef TOTT95A_ORACLE #include "tott95a.h" #endif typedef OCIRef px3_ref; struct px3 { struct px1 col1; }; typedef struct px3 px3; struct px3_ind { OCIInd _atomic; struct px1_ind col1 }; typedef struct px3_ind px3_ind; #endif
File tott95a.h is:
#ifndef TOTT95A_ORACLE #define TOTT95A_ORACLE #ifndef OCI_ORACLE #include <oci.h> #endif typedef OCIRef px1_ref; struct px1 { OCINumber col1; OCINumber col2; } typedef struct px1 px1; struct px1_ind { OCIInd _atomic; OCIInd col1; OCIInd col2; } typedef struct px1_ind px1_ind; #endif
In this file, the symbol TOTT95B_ORACLE
is defined first so that the programmer can conditionally include tott95b.h
without having to worry whether tott95b.h
depends on the include file using the following construct:
#ifndef TOTT95B_ORACLE #include "tott95b.h" #endif
Using this technique, the programmer can include tott95b.h
from some file, say foo.h
, without having to know whether some other file included by foo.h
also includes tott95b.h
.
After the definition of the symbol TOTT95B_ORACLE
, the file oci.h
is #included
. Every HFILE
generated by OTT includes oci.h
, which contains type and function declarations that the Pro*C/C++ or OCI programmer will find useful. This is the only case in which OTT uses angle brackets in a #include
.
Next, the file tott95a.h
is included. This file is included because it contains the declaration of "struct px1
", which tott95b.h
requires. When the user's intype
file requests that type declarations be written to more than one file, OTT determines which other files each HFILE
must include, and will generate the necessary #includes
.
Note that OTT uses quotes in this #include
. When a program including tott95b.h
is compiled, the search for tott95a.h
will begin where the source program was found, and will thereafter follow an implementation-defined search rule. If tott95a.h
cannot be found in this way, a complete file name (for example, aLinux or UNIX absolute path name beginning with /) should be used in the intype
file to specify the location of tott95a.h
.
This parameter affects whether the name of a type from the default schema to which OTT is connected is qualified with a schema name in the outtype
file.
The name of a type from a schema other that the default schema is always qualified with a schema name in the outtype
file.
The schema name, or its absence, determines in which schema the type is found during program execution.
There are three settings:
schema_names=ALWAYS
(default)
All type names in the outtype
file are qualified with a schema name.
schema_names=IF_NEEDED
The type names in the OUTTYPE
file that belong to the default schema are not qualified with a schema name. As always, type names belonging to other schemas are qualified with the schema name.
schema_names=FROM_INTYPE
A type mentioned in the intype
file is qualified with a schema name in the OUTTYPE
file if, and only if, it was qualified with a schema name in the intype
file. A type in the default schema that is not mentioned in the intype
file but that has to be generated because of type dependencies will be written with a schema name only if the first type encountered by OTT that depends on it was written with a schema name. However, a type that is not in the default schema to which OTT is connected will always be written with an explicit schema name.
The outtype
file generated by OTT is an input parameter to Pro*C/C++. From the point of view of Pro*C/C++, it is the Pro*C/C++ intype
file. This file matches database type names to C struct names. This information is used at run-time to make sure that the correct database type is selected into the struct. If a type appears with a schema name in the outtype
file (Pro*C/C++ intype
file), the type will be found in the named schema during program execution. If the type appears without a schema name, the type will be found in the default schema to which the program connects, which can be different from the default schema OTT used.
If SCHEMA_NAMES
is set to FROM_INTYPE
, and the intype
file reads:
TYPE Person TYPE david.Dept TYPE sam.Company
then the Pro*C/C++ application that uses the OTT-generated structs will use the types sam.Company
, david.Dept
, and Person
. Using Person
without a schema name refers to the Person
type in the schema to which the application is connected.
If OTT and the application both connect to schema david
, the application will use the same type (david.Person
) that OTT used. If OTT connected to schema david
but the application connects to schema jana
, the application will use the type jana.Person
. This behavior is appropriate only if the same "CREATE TYPE Person
" statement has been executed in schema david
and schema jana
.
On the other hand, the application will use type david.Dept
regardless of to which schema the application is connected. If this is the behavior you want, be sure to include schema names with your type names in the intype
file.
In some cases, OTT translates a type that the user did not explicitly name. For example, consider the following SQL declarations:
CREATE TYPE Address AS OBJECT ( street VARCHAR2(40), city VARCHAR(30), state CHAR(2), zip_code CHAR(10) ); CREATE TYPE Person AS OBJECT ( name CHAR(20), age NUMBER, addr ADDRESS );
Now suppose that OTT connects to schema david
, SCHEMA_NAMES=FROM_INTYPE
is specified, and the user's intype
files include either
TYPE Person or TYPE david.Person
but do not mention the type david.Address
, which is used as a nested object type in type david.Person
. If "TYPE david.Person
" appeared in the intype
file, "TYPE david.Person
" and "TYPE david.Address
" will appear in the outtype
file. If "Type Person
" appeared in the intype
file, "TYPE Person
" and "TYPE Address
" will appear in the outtype
file.
If the david.Address
type is embedded in several types translated by OTT, but is not explicitly mentioned in the intype
file, the decision of whether to use a schema name is made the first time OTT encounters the embedded david.Address
type. If, for some reason, the user wants type david.Address
to have a schema name but does not want type Person
to have one, the user should explicitly request
TYPE david.Address
in the intype
file.
The main point is that in the usual case in which each type is declared in a single schema, it is safest for the user to qualify all type names with schema names in the intype
file.
When OTT creates a C identifier name for an object type or attribute, it translates the name from the database character set to a legal C identifier. First, the name is translated from the database character set to the character set used by OTT. Next, if a translation of the resulting name is supplied in the intype
file, that translation is used. Otherwise, OTT translates the name character-by-character to the compiler character set, applying the CASE
option. The following describes this process in more detail.
When OTT reads the name of a database entity, the name is automatically translated from the database character set to the character set used by OTT. In order for OTT to read the name of the database entity successfully, all the characters of the name must be found in the OTT character set, although a character can have different encodings in the two character sets.
The easiest way to guarantee that the character set used by OTT contains all the necessary characters is to make it the same as the database character set. Note, however, that the OTT character set must be a superset of the compiler character set. That is, if the compiler character set is 7-bit ASCII, the OTT character set must include 7-bit ASCII as a subset, and if the compiler character set is 7-bit EBCDIC, the OTT character set must include 7-bit EBCDIC as a subset. The user specifies the character set that OTT uses by setting the NLS_LANG
environment variable, or by some other operating system-specific mechanism.
Once OTT has read the name of a database entity, it translates the name from the character set used by OTT to the compiler's character set. If a translation of the name appears in the INTYPE
file, OTT uses that translation.
Otherwise, OTT attempts to translate the name as follows:
First, if the OTT character set is a multibyte character set, all multibyte characters in the name that have single-byte equivalents are converted to those single-byte equivalents.
Next, the name is converted from the OTT character set to the compiler character set. The compiler character set is a single-byte character set such as US7ASCII.
Finally, the case of letters is set according to the CASE
option in effect, and any character that is not legal in a C identifier, or that has no translation in the compiler character set, is replaced by an underscore. If at least one character is replaced by an underscore, OTT gives a warning message. If all the characters in a name are replaced by underscores, OTT gives an error message.
Character-by-character name translation does not alter underscores, digits, or single-byte letters that appear in the compiler character set, so legal C identifiers are not altered.
Name translation can, for example, translate accented single-byte characters such as "o" with an umlaut or "a" with an accent grave to "o" or "a", and can translate a multibyte letter to its single-byte equivalent. Name translation will typically fail if the name contains multibyte characters that lack single-byte equivalents. In this case, the user must specify name translations in the intype
file.
OTT will not detect a naming clash caused by two or more database identifiers being mapped to the same C name, nor will it detect a naming problem where a database identifier is mapped to a C keyword.
Currently, the OTT determines if two files are the same by comparing the file names provided by the user on the command line or in the intype
file. But one potential problem can occur when the OTT needs to know if two file names refer to the same file. For example, if the OTT-generated file foo.h
requires a type declaration written to foo1.h
, and another type declaration written to /private/elias/foo1.h
, OTT should generate one #include
if the two files are the same, and two #includes
if the files are different. In practice, though, it would conclude that the two files are different, and would generate two #includes
, as follows:
#ifndef FOO1_ORACLE #include "foo1.h" #endif #ifndef FOO1_ORACLE #include "/private/elias/foo1.h" #endif
If foo1.h
and /private/elias/foo1.h
are different files, only the first one will be included. If foo1.h
and /private/elias/foo1.h
are the same file, a redundant #include
will be written.
Therefore, if a file is mentioned several times on the command line or in the intype
file, each mention of the file should use exactly the same file name.