[Rd] PROTECT and OCaml GC.

Simon Urbanek simon.urbanek at r-project.org
Sun Nov 29 18:45:44 CET 2009


On Nov 28, 2009, at 7:50 PM, Guillaume Yziquel wrote:

> Whit Armstrong a écrit :
>> I've had success w/ using a reference counting paradigm in which the outside
>> memory manager calls UNPROTECT_PTR(R_object_); in its destructor.
>> So, in my case (using c++ ) if objects are allocated on the heap, which
>> allocate R objects as their backend storage, I don't have to worry about out
>> of order UNPROTECT calls b/c UNPROTECT_PTR will just put the objects that
>> c++ destroys on the gc list.
>> If you are using c as the glue for all your ocaml bindings, they you may
>> want to have a look at this:
>> http://github.com/armstrtw/rabstraction
>> Or the in progress re-write here: http://github.com/armstrtw/RObjects
>> -Whit
> 
> Thanks a lot for these pointers.
> 
> UNPROTECT_PTR seems quite interesting. As I understand it, it avoids caring about protecting and unprotecting in the order the stacks would expect. This is quite interesting, since I'd like to keep OCaml's GC to do housekeeping, and not rely on referencing counting.
> 

FWIW what I think you should be really looking at is R_PreserveObject/R_ReleaseObject. I would suggest looking at the many other R embeddings in other languages that already exist since I don't think you approach is very viable (but I think I expressed that already before).

Cheers,
Simon


> I'm using C as the glue, but I want it to be as thin as possible. I will probably not do reference counting in C, for instance. Nevertheless, there's obviously good ideas in rabstraction/RObjects that I'll adapt.
> 
> Thanks a lot.
> 
> -- 
>     Guillaume Yziquel
> http://yziquel.homelinux.org/
> 
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