42m module information
Describes how to handle module information in .42m p-code files.
Compiler and runtime compatibility
The runtime system (fglrun) used to execute programs must be compatible with the fglcomp compiler version used to build the .42m modules.
To control this compatibility, the compiler writes Genero and p-code version information in the generated 42m files, in the p-code header.
The compiler also writes additional information in the p-code header, such as the source file name used at compilation, a timestamp, or a user-defined string/tag.
The p-code header information of a 42m file can be read with the fglrun -b module.42m command. This is useful on production sites, to check the version of the compiler that was used to build the 42m nodules.
It is also possible to get additional information about the p-code module such as the size used in memory with fglrun --module-size.
Identifying the version of the compiler and runtime system
-V
option:$ fglcomp -V
fglrun 3.10.12 internal-build-number
Genero virtual machine
Target l64xl212
...
$ fglrun -V
fglrun 3.10.12 internal-build-number
Genero virtual machine
Target l64xl212
...
Extracting p-code header information
To extract build information from a .42m file, run fglrun
with the -b
option:
$ fglrun -b mymodule.42m
3.10.12 /home/devel/stores/mymodule.4gl 24
The p-code header contains the following fields:
- An optional timestamp, if the
--timestamp
option was used with fglcomp. - The Genero product version.
- The full path of the source file, or the module name, if the
--omit-source-name
option was used with fglcomp. - The internal identifier of the p-code version.
- An optional user-defined tag, if the
--tag=string
option was used with fglcomp.
Avoiding the full source file path in the p-code header
$ fglcomp mymodule.4gl
$ fglrun -b mymodule.42m
3.10.12 /home/devel/stores/mymodule.4gl 24
To avoid the source name in the .42m module, use the
--omit-source-name
option of fglcomp, to write only the module
name in the p-code header:
$ fglcomp --omit-source-name mymodule.4gl
$ fglrun -b mymodule.42m
3.10.12 mymodule 24
Writing a custom string to the p-code header
Use the --tag="custom-string"
option of fglcomp, to
add a user-defined string to the p-code header. When reading p-code header information with
fglrun -b, the user-defined string is printed as
tag="custom-string"
.
$ fglcomp --tag="OXOGEN 5.23" mymodule.4gl
$ fglrun -b mymodule.42m
3.10.12 /home/devel/stores/mymodule.4gl 24 tag="OXOGEN 5.23"
Writing a compilation timestamp to the p-code header
To write timestamp information in the p-code header, use the --timestamp
option
of fglcomp:
$ fglcomp --timestamp mymodule.4gl
$ fglrun -b mymodule.42m
2008-12-24 11:22:33 3.10.12 /home/devel/stores/mymodule.4gl 24
--timestamp
compiler option to write
build timestamp information in p-code modules, you will not be able to easily compare 42m files
(based on a checksum, for example). Without the timestamp, fglcomp generates
exactly the same p-code module as if the source file was not modified. Reading p-code header of older versions
fglrun -b can read the header of p-code modules compiled with older versions of fglcomp and display version information for such old modules.
If fglrun cannot recognize a p-code module, it returns an execution status that is different from zero.
Reading p-code header of 42x and 42r files
When reading build information of a 42x or 42r file, fglrun scans all modules used to build the library or program. You will see different versions in the first column if the modules were compiled with different versions of fglcomp. However, it's not recommended that you mix versions on a production site:
$ fglrun -b myprogram.42r
3.10.11 /home/devel/stores/mymodule1.4gl 24
3.10.02 /home/devel/stores/mymodule2.4gl 24
3.10.12 /home/devel/stores/mymodule3.4gl 24
Computing the p-code size of a module or program
The fglrun command provides the --module-size
option to
compute the p-code size of a module:
$ fglrun --module-size mymodule.42m
12.34K mymodule
The --program-size
option reports the total p-code size of all modules of a
program:
$ fglrun --module-size myprogram.42r
0.34K module1
2.59K module2
...
12.76K total