/** * @file lua_function.cpp * @author Nat Goodspeed * @date 2024-02-05 * @brief Implementation for lua_function. * * $LicenseInfo:firstyear=2024&license=viewerlgpl$ * Copyright (c) 2024, Linden Research, Inc. * $/LicenseInfo$ */ // Precompiled header #include "linden_common.h" // associated header #include "lua_function.h" // STL headers // std headers #include #include #include // std::quoted #include #include // std::unique_ptr #include #include // external library headers // other Linden headers #include "commoncontrol.h" #include "fsyspath.h" #include "hexdump.h" #include "llcoros.h" #include "lleventcoro.h" #include "llsd.h" #include "llsdutil.h" #include "llstring.h" #include "lualistener.h" #include "stringize.h" using namespace std::literals; // e.g. std::string_view literals: "this"sv const S32 INTERRUPTS_MAX_LIMIT = 100000; const S32 INTERRUPTS_SUSPEND_LIMIT = 100; #define lua_register(L, n, f) (lua_pushcfunction(L, (f), n), lua_setglobal(L, (n))) #define lua_rawlen lua_objlen int DistinctInt::mValues{0}; /***************************************************************************** * lluau namespace *****************************************************************************/ namespace { // can't specify free function free() as a unique_ptr deleter struct freer { void operator()(void* ptr){ free(ptr); } }; } // anonymous namespace namespace lluau { int dostring(lua_State* L, const std::string& desc, const std::string& text, const std::vector& args) { // debug.traceback() + compiled chunk + args table + args... + slop lluau_checkstack(L, 1 + 1 + 1 + int(args.size()) + 2); auto r = loadstring(L, desc, text); if (r != LUA_OK) return r; // Push debug.traceback() onto the stack as lua_pcall()'s error // handler function. On error, lua_pcall() calls the specified error // handler function with the original error message; the message // returned by the error handler is then returned by lua_pcall(). // Luau's debug.traceback() is called with a message to prepend to the // returned traceback string. Almost as if they'd been designed to // work together... lua_getglobal(L, "debug"); lua_getfield(L, -1, "traceback"); // ditch "debug" lua_remove(L, -2); // stack: compiled chunk, debug.traceback() lua_insert(L, -2); // stack: debug.traceback(), compiled chunk // capture absolute index of debug.traceback() int traceback = lua_absindex(L, -2); // remove it from stack on exit LuaRemover cleanup(L, traceback); // Originally we just pushed 'args' to the Lua stack before entering the // chunk. But that's awkward for the chunk: it must reference those // arguments as '...', using any of a number of tactics to move them to // named variables. This doesn't work as a Lua chunk expecting arguments: // function(a, b, c) // -- ... // end // because that code only *defines* a function: the function's body isn't // entered by executing the chunk. // // Per https://www.lua.org/manual/5.1/manual.html#6 Lua Stand-alone, we // now also create a global table called 'arg' whose [0] is the script // name, ['n'] is the number of additional arguments and [1] through // [['n']] are the additional arguments. We diverge from that spec in not // creating any negative indices. // // Since the spec notes that the chunk can also reference args using // '...', we also leave them on the stack. // stack: debug.traceback(), compiled chunk // create arg table pre-sized to hold the args array, plus [0] and ['n'] lua_createtable(L, narrow(args.size()), 2); // stack: debug.traceback(), compiled chunk, arg table int argi = lua_absindex(L, -1); lua_Integer i = 0; // store desc (e.g. script name) as arg[0] lua_pushinteger(L, i); lua_pushstdstring(L, desc); lua_rawset(L, argi); // rawset() pops key and value // store args.size() as arg.n lua_pushinteger(L, narrow(args.size())); lua_setfield(L, argi, "n"); // setfield() pops value for (const auto& arg : args) { // push each arg in order lua_pushstdstring(L, arg); // push index lua_pushinteger(L, ++i); // duplicate arg[i] to store in arg table lua_pushvalue(L, -2); // stack: ..., arg[i], i, arg[i] lua_rawset(L, argi); // leave ..., arg[i] on stack } // stack: debug.traceback(), compiled chunk, arg, arg[1], arg[2], ... // duplicate the arg table to store it lua_pushvalue(L, argi); lua_setglobal(L, "arg"); lua_remove(L, argi); // stack: debug.traceback(), compiled chunk, arg[1], arg[2], ... // It's important to pass LUA_MULTRET as the expected number of return // values: if we pass any fixed number, we discard any returned values // beyond that number. return lua_pcall(L, int(args.size()), LUA_MULTRET, traceback); } int loadstring(lua_State *L, const std::string &desc, const std::string &text) { lluau_checkstack(L, 1); size_t bytecodeSize = 0; // The char* returned by luau_compile() must be freed by calling free(). // Use unique_ptr so the memory will be freed even if luau_load() throws. std::unique_ptr bytecode{ luau_compile(text.data(), text.length(), nullptr, &bytecodeSize)}; return luau_load(L, desc.data(), bytecode.get(), bytecodeSize, 0); } fsyspath source_path(lua_State* L) { //Luau lua_Debug and lua_getinfo() are different compared to default Lua: //see https://github.com/luau-lang/luau/blob/80928acb92d1e4b6db16bada6d21b1fb6fa66265/VM/include/lua.h // In particular: // passing level=1 gets you info about the deepest function call // passing level=lua_stackdepth() gets you info about the topmost script // Empirically, lua_getinfo(level > 1) behaves strangely (including // crashing the program) unless you iterate from 1 to desired level. lua_Debug ar{}; for (int i(0), depth(lua_stackdepth(L)); i <= depth; ++i) { lua_getinfo(L, i, "s", &ar); } return ar.source; } } // namespace lluau /***************************************************************************** * lua_destroyuserdata(), lua_destroybounduserdata() (see lua_emplace()) *****************************************************************************/ int lua_destroyuserdata(lua_State* L) { // stack: lua_emplace() userdata to be destroyed if (int tag; lua_isuserdata(L, -1) && (tag = lua_userdatatag(L, -1)) != 0) { auto dtor = lua_getuserdatadtor(L, tag); // detach this userdata from the destructor with tag 'tag' lua_setuserdatatag(L, -1, 0); // now run the real destructor dtor(L, lua_touserdata(L, -1)); } lua_settop(L, 0); return 0; } int lua_destroybounduserdata(lua_State *L) { // called with no arguments -- push bound upvalue lluau_checkstack(L, 1); lua_pushvalue(L, lua_upvalueindex(1)); return lua_destroyuserdata(L); } /***************************************************************************** * Lua <=> C++ conversions *****************************************************************************/ std::string lua_tostdstring(lua_State* L, int index) { lua_checkdelta(L); size_t len; const char* strval{ lua_tolstring(L, index, &len) }; return { strval, len }; } void lua_pushstdstring(lua_State* L, const std::string& str) { lua_checkdelta(L, 1); lluau_checkstack(L, 1); lua_pushlstring(L, str.c_str(), str.length()); } // By analogy with existing lua_tomumble() functions, return an LLSD object // corresponding to the Lua object at stack index 'index' in state L. // This function assumes that a Lua caller is fully aware that they're trying // to call a viewer function. In other words, the caller must specifically // construct Lua data convertible to LLSD. // // For proper error handling, we REQUIRE that the Lua runtime be compiled as // C++ so errors are raised as C++ exceptions rather than as longjmp() calls: // http://www.lua.org/manual/5.4/manual.html#4.4 // "Internally, Lua uses the C longjmp facility to handle errors. (Lua will // use exceptions if you compile it as C++; search for LUAI_THROW in the // source code for details.)" // Some blocks within this function construct temporary C++ objects in the // expectation that these objects will be properly destroyed even if code // reached by that block raises a Lua error. LLSD lua_tollsd(lua_State* L, int index) { lua_checkdelta(L); switch (lua_type(L, index)) { case LUA_TNONE: // Should LUA_TNONE be an error instead of returning isUndefined()? case LUA_TNIL: return {}; case LUA_TBOOLEAN: return bool(lua_toboolean(L, index)); case LUA_TNUMBER: { // Vanilla Lua supports lua_tointegerx(), which tells the caller // whether the number at the specified stack index is or is not an // integer. Apparently the function exists but does not work right in // Luau: it reports even non-integer numbers as integers. // Instead, check if integer truncation leaves the number intact. lua_Number numval{ lua_tonumber(L, index) }; lua_Integer intval{ narrow(numval) }; if (lua_Number(intval) == numval) { return LLSD::Integer(intval); } else { return numval; } } case LUA_TSTRING: return lua_tostdstring(L, index); case LUA_TUSERDATA: { LLSD::Binary binary(lua_rawlen(L, index)); std::memcpy(binary.data(), lua_touserdata(L, index), binary.size()); return binary; } case LUA_TTABLE: { // A Lua table correctly constructed to convert to LLSD will have // either consecutive integer keys starting at 1, which we represent // as an LLSD array (with Lua key 1 at C++ index 0), or will have // all string keys. // // In the belief that Lua table traversal skips "holes," that is, it // doesn't report any key/value pair whose value is nil, we allow a // table with integer keys >= 1 but with "holes." This produces an // LLSD array with isUndefined() entries at unspecified keys. There // would be no other way for a Lua caller to construct an // isUndefined() LLSD array entry. However, to guard against crazy int // keys, we forbid gaps larger than a certain size: crazy int keys // could result in a crazy large contiguous LLSD array. // // Possible looseness could include: // - A mix of integer and string keys could produce an LLSD map in // which the integer keys are converted to string. (Key conversion // must be performed in C++, not Lua, to avoid confusing // lua_next().) // - However, since in Lua t[0] and t["0"] are distinct table entries, // do not consider converting numeric string keys to int to return // an LLSD array. // But until we get more experience with actual Lua scripts in // practice, let's say that any deviation is a Lua coding error. // An important property of the strict definition above is that most // conforming data blobs can make a round trip across the language // boundary and still compare equal. A non-conforming data blob would // lose that property. // Known exceptions to round trip identity: // - Empty LLSD map and empty LLSD array convert to empty Lua table. // But empty Lua table converts to isUndefined() LLSD object. // - LLSD::Real with integer value returns as LLSD::Integer. // - LLSD::UUID, LLSD::Date and LLSD::URI all convert to Lua string, // and so return as LLSD::String. // - Lua does not store any table key whose value is nil. An LLSD // array with isUndefined() entries produces a Lua table with // "holes" in the int key sequence; this converts back to an LLSD // array containing corresponding isUndefined() entries -- except // when one or more of the final entries isUndefined(). These are // simply dropped, producing a shorter LLSD array than the original. // - For the same reason, any keys in an LLSD map whose value // isUndefined() are simply discarded in the converted Lua table. // This converts back to an LLSD map lacking those keys. // - If it's important to preserve the original length of an LLSD // array whose final entries are undefined, or the full set of keys // for an LLSD map some of whose values are undefined, store an // LLSD::emptyArray() or emptyMap() instead. These will be // represented in Lua as empty table, which should convert back to // undefined LLSD. Naturally, though, those won't survive a second // round trip. // This is the most important of the lluau_checkstack() calls because a // deeply nested Lua structure will enter this case at each level, and // we'll need another 2 stack slots to traverse each nested table. lluau_checkstack(L, 2); // BEFORE we push nil to initialize the lua_next() traversal, convert // 'index' to absolute! Our caller might have passed a relative index; // we do, below: lua_tollsd(L, -1). If 'index' is -1, then when we // push nil, what we find at index -1 is nil, not the table! index = lua_absindex(L, index); lua_pushnil(L); // first key if (! lua_next(L, index)) { // it's a table, but the table is empty -- no idea if it should be // modeled as empty array or empty map -- return isUndefined(), // which can be consumed as either return {}; } // key is at stack index -2, value at index -1 // from here until lua_next() returns 0, have to lua_pop(2) if we // return early LuaPopper popper(L, 2); // Remember the type of the first key auto firstkeytype{ lua_type(L, -2) }; switch (firstkeytype) { case LUA_TNUMBER: { // First Lua key is a number: try to convert table to LLSD array. // This is tricky because we don't know in advance the size of the // array. The Lua reference manual says that lua_rawlen() is the // same as the length operator '#'; but the length operator states // that it might stop at any "hole" in the subject table. // Moreover, the Lua next() function (and presumably lua_next()) // traverses a table in unspecified order, even for numeric keys // (emphasized in the doc). // Make a preliminary pass over the whole table to validate and to // collect keys. std::vector keys; // Try to determine the length of the table. If the length // operator is truthful, avoid allocations while we grow the keys // vector. Even if it's not, we can still grow the vector, albeit // a little less efficiently. keys.reserve(lua_objlen(L, index)); do { auto arraykeytype{ lua_type(L, -2) }; switch (arraykeytype) { case LUA_TNUMBER: { int isint; lua_Integer intkey{ lua_tointegerx(L, -2, &isint) }; if (! isint) { // key isn't an integer - this doesn't fit our LLSD // array constraints return lluau::error(L, "Expected integer array key, got %f instead", lua_tonumber(L, -2)); } if (intkey < 1) { return lluau::error(L, "array key %d out of bounds", int(intkey)); } keys.push_back(LLSD::Integer(intkey)); break; } case LUA_TSTRING: // break out strings specially to report the value return lluau::error(L, "Cannot convert string array key '%s' to LLSD", lua_tostring(L, -2)); default: return lluau::error(L, "Cannot convert %s array key to LLSD", lua_typename(L, arraykeytype)); } // remove value, keep key for next iteration lua_pop(L, 1); } while (lua_next(L, index) != 0); popper.disarm(); // Table keys are all integers: are they reasonable integers? // Arbitrary max: may bite us, but more likely to protect us const size_t array_max{ 10000 }; if (keys.size() > array_max) { return lluau::error(L, "Conversion from Lua to LLSD array limited to %d entries", int(array_max)); } // We know the smallest key is >= 1. Check the largest. We also // know the vector is NOT empty, else we wouldn't have gotten here. std::sort(keys.begin(), keys.end()); LLSD::Integer highkey = *keys.rbegin(); if ((highkey - LLSD::Integer(keys.size())) > 100) { // Looks like we've gone beyond intentional array gaps into // crazy key territory. return lluau::error(L, "Gaps in Lua table too large for conversion to LLSD array"); } // right away expand the result array to the size we'll need LLSD result{ LLSD::emptyArray() }; result[highkey - 1] = LLSD(); // Traverse the table again, and this time populate result array. lua_pushnil(L); // first key while (lua_next(L, index)) { // key at stack index -2, value at index -1 // We've already validated lua_tointegerx() for each key. auto key{ lua_tointeger(L, -2) }; // Don't forget to subtract 1 from Lua key for LLSD subscript! result[LLSD::Integer(key) - 1] = lua_tollsd(L, -1); // remove value, keep key for next iteration lua_pop(L, 1); } return result; } case LUA_TSTRING: { // First Lua key is a string: try to convert table to LLSD map LLSD result{ LLSD::emptyMap() }; do { auto mapkeytype{ lua_type(L, -2) }; if (mapkeytype != LUA_TSTRING) { return lluau::error(L, "Cannot convert %s map key to LLSD", lua_typename(L, mapkeytype)); } auto key{ lua_tostdstring(L, -2) }; result[key] = lua_tollsd(L, -1); // remove value, keep key for next iteration lua_pop(L, 1); } while (lua_next(L, index) != 0); popper.disarm(); return result; } default: // First Lua key isn't number or string: sorry return lluau::error(L, "Cannot convert %s table key to LLSD", lua_typename(L, firstkeytype)); } } default: // Other Lua entities (e.g. function, C function, light userdata, // thread, userdata) are not convertible to LLSD, indicating a coding // error in the caller. return lluau::error(L, "Cannot convert type %s to LLSD", luaL_typename(L, index)); } } // By analogy with existing lua_pushmumble() functions, push onto state L's // stack a Lua object corresponding to the passed LLSD object. void lua_pushllsd(lua_State* L, const LLSD& data) { lua_checkdelta(L, 1); // might need 2 slots for array or map lluau_checkstack(L, 2); switch (data.type()) { case LLSD::TypeUndefined: lua_pushnil(L); break; case LLSD::TypeBoolean: lua_pushboolean(L, data.asBoolean()); break; case LLSD::TypeInteger: lua_pushinteger(L, data.asInteger()); break; case LLSD::TypeReal: lua_pushnumber(L, data.asReal()); break; case LLSD::TypeBinary: { auto binary{ data.asBinary() }; std::memcpy(lua_newuserdata(L, binary.size()), binary.data(), binary.size()); break; } case LLSD::TypeMap: { // push a new table with space for our non-array keys lua_createtable(L, 0, narrow(data.size())); for (const auto& pair: llsd::inMap(data)) { // push value -- so now table is at -2, value at -1 lua_pushllsd(L, pair.second); // pop value, assign to table[key] lua_setfield(L, -2, pair.first.c_str()); } break; } case LLSD::TypeArray: { // push a new table with space for array entries lua_createtable(L, narrow(data.size()), 0); lua_Integer key{ 0 }; for (const auto& item: llsd::inArray(data)) { // push new array value: table at -2, value at -1 lua_pushllsd(L, item); // pop value, assign table[key] = value lua_rawseti(L, -2, ++key); } break; } case LLSD::TypeString: case LLSD::TypeUUID: case LLSD::TypeDate: case LLSD::TypeURI: default: { lua_pushstdstring(L, data.asString()); break; } } } /***************************************************************************** * LuaState class *****************************************************************************/ namespace { // If we find we're running Lua scripts from more than one thread, sLuaStateMap // should be thread_local. Until then, avoid the overhead. using LuaStateMap = std::unordered_map; static LuaStateMap sLuaStateMap; // replace table-at-index[name] with passed func, // binding the original table-at-index[name] as func's upvalue void replace_entry(lua_State* L, int index, const std::string& name, lua_CFunction func); // replacement next() function that understands setdtor() proxy args int lua_proxydrill(lua_State* L); // replacement pairs() function that supports __iter() metamethod int lua_metapairs(lua_State* L); // replacement ipairs() function that supports __index() metamethod int lua_metaipairs(lua_State* L); // helper for lua_metaipairs() (actual generator function) int lua_metaipair(lua_State* L); } // anonymous namespace LuaState::LuaState() { /*---------------------------- feature flag ----------------------------*/ try { mFeature = LL::CommonControl::get("Global", "LuaFeature").asBoolean(); } catch (const LL::CommonControl::NoListener&) { // If this program doesn't have an LLViewerControlListener, // it's probably a test program; go ahead. mFeature = true; } catch (const LL::CommonControl::ParamError&) { // We found LLViewerControlListener, but its settings do not include // "LuaFeature". Hmm, fishy: that feature flag was introduced at the // same time as this code. mFeature = false; } // None of the rest of this is necessary if we're not going to run anything. if (! mFeature) { mError = "Lua feature disabled"; return; } /*---------------------------- feature flag ----------------------------*/ mState = luaL_newstate(); // Ensure that we can always find this LuaState instance, given the // lua_State we just created or any of its coroutines. sLuaStateMap.emplace(mState, this); luaL_openlibs(mState); // publish to this new lua_State all the LL entry points we defined using // the lua_function() macro LuaFunction::init(mState); // Try to make print() write to our log. lua_register(mState, "print", LuaFunction::get("print_info")); // We don't want to have to prefix require(). lua_register(mState, "require", LuaFunction::get("require")); // Replace certain key global functions so they understand our // LL.setdtor() proxy objects. // (We could also do this for selected library functions as well, // e.g. the table, string, math libraries... let's see if needed.) replace_entry(mState, LUA_GLOBALSINDEX, "next", lua_proxydrill); // Replacing pairs() with lua_metapairs() makes global pairs() honor // objects with __iter() metamethods. replace_entry(mState, LUA_GLOBALSINDEX, "pairs", lua_metapairs); // Replacing ipairs() with lua_metaipairs() makes global ipairs() honor // objects with __index() metamethods -- as long as the object in question // has no array entries (int keys) of its own. (If it does, object[i] will // retrieve table[i] instead of calling __index(table, i).) replace_entry(mState, LUA_GLOBALSINDEX, "ipairs", lua_metaipairs); } namespace { void replace_entry(lua_State* L, int index, const std::string& name, lua_CFunction func) { index = lua_absindex(L, index); lua_checkdelta(L); // push the function's name string twice lua_pushlstring(L, name.data(), name.length()); lua_pushvalue(L, -1); // stack: name, name // look up the existing table entry lua_rawget(L, index); // stack: name, original function // bind original function as the upvalue for func() lua_pushcclosure(L, func, (name + "()").c_str(), 1); // stack: name, func-with-bound-original // table[name] = func-with-bound-original lua_rawset(L, index); } int lua_metapairs(lua_State* L) { // LuaLog debug(L, "lua_metapairs()"); // pairs(obj): object is at index 1 // How many args were we passed? int args = lua_gettop(L); // stack: obj, ... if (luaL_getmetafield(L, 1, "__iter")) { // stack: obj, ..., getmetatable(obj).__iter } else { // Push the original pairs() function, captured as our upvalue. lua_pushvalue(L, lua_upvalueindex(1)); // stack: obj, ..., original pairs() } lua_insert(L, 1); // stack: (__iter() or pairs()), obj, ... // call whichever function(obj, ...) (args args, up to 3 return values) lua_call(L, args, LUA_MULTRET); // return as many values as the selected function returned return lua_gettop(L); } int lua_metaipairs(lua_State* L) { // LuaLog debug(L, "lua_metaipairs()"); // ipairs(obj): object is at index 1 // How many args were we passed? int args = lua_gettop(L); // stack: obj, ... if (luaL_getmetafield(L, 1, "__index")) { // stack: obj, ..., getmetatable(obj).__index // discard __index and everything but obj: // we don't want to call __index(), just check its presence lua_settop(L, 1); // stack: obj lua_pushcfunction(L, lua_metaipair, "lua_metaipair"); // stack: obj, lua_metaipair lua_insert(L, 1); // stack: lua_metaipair, obj // push explicit 0 so lua_metaipair need not special-case nil lua_pushinteger(L, 0); // stack: lua_metaipair, obj, 0 return 3; } else // no __index() metamethod { // Although our lua_metaipair() function demonstrably works whether or // not our object has an __index() metamethod, the code below assumes // that the Lua engine may have a more efficient implementation for // built-in ipairs() than our lua_metaipair(). // Push the original ipairs() function, captured as our upvalue. lua_pushvalue(L, lua_upvalueindex(1)); // stack: obj, ..., original ipairs() // Shift the stack so the original function is first. lua_insert(L, 1); // stack: original ipairs(), obj, ... // Call original ipairs() with all original args, no error checking. // Don't truncate however many values that function returns. lua_call(L, args, LUA_MULTRET); // Return as many values as the original function returned. return lua_gettop(L); } } int lua_metaipair(lua_State* L) { // LuaLog debug(L, "lua_metaipair()"); // called with (obj, previous-index) // increment previous-index for this call lua_Integer i = luaL_optinteger(L, 2, 0) + 1; lua_pop(L, 1); // stack: obj lua_pushinteger(L, i); // stack: obj, i lua_pushvalue(L, -1); // stack: obj, i, i lua_insert(L, 1); // stack: i, obj, i lua_gettable(L, -2); // stack: i, obj, obj[i] (honoring __index()) lua_remove(L, -2); // stack: i, obj[i] if (! lua_isnil(L, -1)) { // great, obj[i] isn't nil: return (i, obj[i]) return 2; } // obj[i] is nil. ipairs() is documented to stop at the first hole, // regardless of #obj. Clear the stack, i.e. return nil. lua_settop(L, 0); return 0; } } // anonymous namespace LuaState::~LuaState() { // If we're unwinding the stack due to an exception, don't bother trying // to call any callbacks -- either Lua or C++. if (std::uncaught_exceptions() != 0) return; /*---------------------------- feature flag ----------------------------*/ if (! mFeature) return; /*---------------------------- feature flag ----------------------------*/ // We're just about to destroy this lua_State mState. Did this Lua chunk // register any atexit() functions? lluau_checkstack(mState, 3); // look up Registry.atexit lua_getfield(mState, LUA_REGISTRYINDEX, "atexit"); // stack contains Registry.atexit if (lua_istable(mState, -1)) { // We happen to know that Registry.atexit is built by appending array // entries using table.insert(). That's important because it means // there are no holes, and therefore lua_objlen() should be correct. // That's important because we walk the atexit table backwards, to // destroy last the things we created (passed to LL.atexit()) first. int len(lua_objlen(mState, -1)); LL_DEBUGS("Lua") << LLCoros::getName() << ": Registry.atexit is a table with " << len << " entries" << LL_ENDL; // Push debug.traceback() onto the stack as lua_pcall()'s error // handler function. On error, lua_pcall() calls the specified error // handler function with the original error message; the message // returned by the error handler is then returned by lua_pcall(). // Luau's debug.traceback() is called with a message to prepend to the // returned traceback string. Almost as if they'd been designed to // work together... lua_getglobal(mState, "debug"); lua_getfield(mState, -1, "traceback"); // ditch "debug" lua_remove(mState, -2); // stack now contains atexit, debug.traceback() for (int i(len); i >= 1; --i) { lua_pushinteger(mState, i); // stack contains Registry.atexit, debug.traceback(), i lua_gettable(mState, -3); // stack contains Registry.atexit, debug.traceback(), atexit[i] // Call atexit[i](), no args, no return values. // Use lua_pcall() because errors in any one atexit() function // shouldn't cancel the rest of them. Pass debug.traceback() as // the error handler function. LL_DEBUGS("Lua") << LLCoros::getName() << ": calling atexit(" << i << ")" << LL_ENDL; if (lua_pcall(mState, 0, 0, -2) != LUA_OK) { auto error{ lua_tostdstring(mState, -1) }; LL_WARNS("Lua") << LLCoros::getName() << ": atexit(" << i << ") error: " << error << LL_ENDL; // pop error message lua_pop(mState, 1); } LL_DEBUGS("Lua") << LLCoros::getName() << ": atexit(" << i << ") done" << LL_ENDL; // lua_pcall() has already popped atexit[i]: // stack contains atexit, debug.traceback() } // pop debug.traceback() lua_pop(mState, 1); } // pop Registry.atexit (either table or nil) lua_pop(mState, 1); // with the demise of this LuaState, remove sLuaStateMap entry sLuaStateMap.erase(mState); lua_close(mState); } bool LuaState::checkLua(const std::string& desc, int r) { if (r != LUA_OK) { mError = lua_tostring(mState, -1); lua_pop(mState, 1); LL_WARNS("Lua") << desc << ": " << mError << LL_ENDL; return false; } return true; } std::pair LuaState::expr(const std::string& desc, const std::string& text, const std::vector& args) { /*---------------------------- feature flag ----------------------------*/ if (! mFeature) { // fake an error return { -1, stringize("Not running ", desc) }; } /*---------------------------- feature flag ----------------------------*/ set_interrupts_counter(0); lua_callbacks(mState)->interrupt = [](lua_State *L, int gc) { // skip if we're interrupting only for garbage collection if (gc >= 0) return; LLCoros::checkStop(); LuaState::getParent(L).check_interrupts_counter(); }; LL_INFOS("Lua") << desc << " run" << LL_ENDL; if (! checkLua(desc, lluau::dostring(mState, desc, text, args))) { LL_WARNS("Lua") << desc << " error: " << mError << LL_ENDL; return { -1, mError }; } // here we believe there was no error -- did the Lua fragment leave // anything on the stack? std::pair result{ lua_gettop(mState), {} }; LL_INFOS("Lua") << desc << " done, " << result.first << " results." << LL_ENDL; if (result.first) { // aha, at least one entry on the stack! if (result.first == 1) { // Don't forget that lua_tollsd() can throw Lua errors. try { result.second = lua_tollsd(mState, 1); } catch (const std::exception& error) { LL_WARNS("Lua") << desc << " error converting result: " << error.what() << LL_ENDL; // lua_tollsd() is designed to be called from a lua_function(), // that is, from a C++ function called by Lua. In case of error, // it throws a Lua error to be caught by the Lua runtime. expr() // is a peculiar use case in which our C++ code is calling // lua_tollsd() after return from the Lua runtime. We must catch // the exception thrown for a Lua error, else it will propagate // out to the main coroutine and terminate the viewer -- but since // we instead of the Lua runtime catch it, our lua_State retains // its internal error status. Any subsequent lua_pcall() calls // with this lua_State will report error regardless of whether the // chunk runs successfully. return { -1, stringize(LLError::Log::classname(error), ": ", error.what()) }; } } else { // multiple entries on the stack int index; try { for (index = 1; index <= result.first; ++index) { result.second.append(lua_tollsd(mState, index)); } } catch (const std::exception& error) { LL_WARNS("Lua") << desc << " error converting result " << index << ": " << error.what() << LL_ENDL; // see above comments regarding lua_State's error status return { -1, stringize(LLError::Log::classname(error), ": ", error.what()) }; } } } // pop everything lua_settop(mState, 0); return result; } // We think we don't need mFeature tests in the rest of these LuaState methods // because, if expr() isn't running code, nobody should be calling any of them. LuaListener& LuaState::obtainListener(lua_State* L) { lluau_checkstack(L, 2); lua_getfield(L, LUA_REGISTRYINDEX, "LuaListener"); // compare lua_type() because lua_isuserdata() also accepts light userdata if (lua_type(L, -1) != LUA_TUSERDATA) { llassert(lua_type(L, -1) == LUA_TNIL); lua_pop(L, 1); // push a userdata containing new LuaListener, binding L lua_emplace(L, L); // duplicate the top stack entry so we can store one copy lua_pushvalue(L, -1); lua_setfield(L, LUA_REGISTRYINDEX, "LuaListener"); } // At this point, one way or the other, the stack top should be (a Lua // userdata containing) our LuaListener. LuaListener* listener{ lua_toclass(L, -1) }; // Since our LuaListener instance is stored in the Registry, it won't be // garbage collected: it will be destroyed only when lua_close() clears // out the Registry. That's why we dare pop the userdata value off the // stack while still depending on a pointer into its data. lua_pop(L, 1); return *listener; } LuaState& LuaState::getParent(lua_State* L) { // Look up the LuaState instance associated with the *script*, not the // specific Lua *coroutine*. In other words, first find this lua_State's // main thread. auto found{ sLuaStateMap.find(lua_mainthread(L)) }; // Our constructor creates the map entry, our destructor deletes it. As // long as the LuaState exists, we should be able to find it. And we // SHOULD only be talking to a lua_State managed by a LuaState instance. llassert(found != sLuaStateMap.end()); return *found->second; } void LuaState::set_interrupts_counter(S32 counter) { mInterrupts = counter; } void LuaState::check_interrupts_counter() { // The official way to manage data associated with a lua_State is to store // it *as* Lua data within the lua_State. But this method is called by the // Lua engine via lua_callbacks(L)->interrupt, and empirically we've hit // mysterious Lua data stack overflows trying to use stack-based Lua data // access functions in that situation. It seems the Lua engine is capable // of interrupting itself at a moment when re-entry is not valid. So only // touch data in this LuaState. ++mInterrupts; if (mInterrupts > INTERRUPTS_MAX_LIMIT) { lluau::error(mState, "Possible infinite loop, terminated."); } else if (mInterrupts % INTERRUPTS_SUSPEND_LIMIT == 0) { LL_DEBUGS("Lua.suspend") << LLCoros::getName() << " suspending at " << mInterrupts << " interrupts" << LL_ENDL; llcoro::suspend(); } } /***************************************************************************** * atexit() *****************************************************************************/ lua_function(atexit, "atexit(function): " "register Lua function to be called at script termination") { lua_checkdelta(L, -1); lluau_checkstack(L, 4); // look up the global name "table" lua_getglobal(L, "table"); // stack contains function, table // look up table.insert lua_getfield(L, -1, "insert"); // stack contains function, table, table.insert // ditch table lua_replace(L, -2); // stack contains function, table.insert // find or create the "atexit" table in the Registry luaL_newmetatable(L, "atexit"); // stack contains function, table.insert, Registry.atexit // we were called with a Lua function to append to that Registry.atexit // table -- push function lua_pushvalue(L, 1); // or -3 // stack contains function, table.insert, Registry.atexit, function // call table.insert(Registry.atexit, function) // don't use pcall(): if there's an error, let it propagate lua_call(L, 2, 0); // stack contains function -- pop everything lua_settop(L, 0); return 0; } /***************************************************************************** * LuaPopper class *****************************************************************************/ LuaPopper::~LuaPopper() { // If we're unwinding the C++ stack due to an exception, don't pop! if (std::uncaught_exceptions() == 0 && mCount) { lua_pop(mState, mCount); } } /***************************************************************************** * LuaFunction class *****************************************************************************/ LuaFunction::LuaFunction(std::string_view name, lua_CFunction function, std::string_view helptext) { const auto& [registry, lookup] = getState(); registry.emplace(name, Registry::mapped_type{ function, helptext }); lookup.emplace(function, name); } void LuaFunction::init(lua_State* L) { const auto& [registry, lookup] = getRState(); lluau_checkstack(L, 2); // create LL table -- // it happens that we know exactly how many non-array members we want lua_createtable(L, 0, int(narrow(lookup.size()))); int idx = lua_gettop(L); for (const auto& [name, pair]: registry) { const auto& [funcptr, helptext] = pair; // store funcptr in LL table with saved name lua_pushcfunction(L, funcptr, name.c_str()); lua_setfield(L, idx, name.c_str()); } // store LL in new lua_State's globals lua_setglobal(L, "LL"); } lua_CFunction LuaFunction::get(const std::string& key) { // use find() instead of subscripting to avoid creating an entry for // unknown key const auto& [registry, lookup] = getState(); auto found{ registry.find(key) }; return (found == registry.end())? nullptr : found->second.first; } std::pair LuaFunction::getState() { // use function-local statics to ensure they're initialized static Registry registry; static Lookup lookup; return { registry, lookup }; } /***************************************************************************** * source_path() *****************************************************************************/ lua_function(source_path, "source_path(): return the source path of the running Lua script") { lua_checkdelta(L, 1); lluau_checkstack(L, 1); lua_pushstdstring(L, lluau::source_path(L).u8string()); return 1; } /***************************************************************************** * source_dir() *****************************************************************************/ lua_function(source_dir, "source_dir(): return the source directory of the running Lua script") { lua_checkdelta(L, 1); lluau_checkstack(L, 1); lua_pushstdstring(L, lluau::source_path(L).parent_path().u8string()); return 1; } /***************************************************************************** * abspath() *****************************************************************************/ lua_function(abspath, "abspath(path): " "for given filesystem path relative to running script, return absolute path") { lua_checkdelta(L); auto path{ lua_tostdstring(L, 1) }; lua_pop(L, 1); lua_pushstdstring(L, (lluau::source_path(L).parent_path() / path).u8string()); return 1; } /***************************************************************************** * check_stop() *****************************************************************************/ lua_function(check_stop, "check_stop(): ensure that a Lua script responds to viewer shutdown") { lua_checkdelta(L); LLCoros::checkStop(); return 0; } /***************************************************************************** * help() *****************************************************************************/ lua_function(help, "help(): list viewer's Lua functions\n" "LL.help(function): show help string for specific function") { auto& luapump{ LLEventPumps::instance().obtain("lua output") }; const auto& [registry, lookup]{ LuaFunction::getRState() }; if (! lua_gettop(L)) { // no arguments passed: list all lua_functions for (const auto& [name, pair] : registry) { const auto& [fptr, helptext] = pair; luapump.post("LL." + helptext); } } else { // arguments passed: list each of the specified lua_functions for (int idx = 1, top = lua_gettop(L); idx <= top; ++idx) { std::string arg{ stringize("") }; if (lua_type(L, idx) == LUA_TSTRING) { arg = lua_tostdstring(L, idx); LLStringUtil::removePrefix(arg, "LL."); } else if (lua_type(L, idx) == LUA_TFUNCTION) { // Caller passed the actual function instead of its string // name. A Lua function is an anonymous callable object; it // has a name only by assigment. You can't ask Lua for a // function's name, which is why our constructor maintains a // reverse Lookup map. auto function{ lua_tocfunction(L, idx) }; if (auto found = lookup.find(function); found != lookup.end()) { // okay, pass found name to lookup below arg = found->second; } } if (auto found = registry.find(arg); found != registry.end()) { luapump.post("LL." + found->second.second); } else { luapump.post(arg + ": NOT FOUND"); } } // pop all arguments lua_settop(L, 0); } return 0; // void return } /***************************************************************************** * leaphelp() *****************************************************************************/ lua_function( leaphelp, "leaphelp(): list viewer's LEAP APIs\n" "LL.leaphelp(api): show help for specific api string name") { LLSD request; int top{ lua_gettop(L) }; if (top) { request = llsd::map("op", "getAPI", "api", lua_tostdstring(L, 1)); } else { request = llsd::map("op", "getAPIs"); } // pop all args lua_settop(L, 0); auto& outpump{ LLEventPumps::instance().obtain("lua output") }; auto& listener{ LuaState::obtainListener(L) }; LLEventStream replyPump("leaphelp", true); // ask the LuaListener's LeapListener and suspend calling coroutine until reply auto reply{ llcoro::postAndSuspend(request, listener.getCommandName(), replyPump, "reply") }; reply.erase("reqid"); if (auto error = reply["error"]; error.isString()) { outpump.post(error.asString()); return 0; } if (top) { // caller wants a specific API outpump.post(stringize(reply["name"].asString(), ":\n", reply["desc"].asString())); for (const auto& opmap : llsd::inArray(reply["ops"])) { std::ostringstream reqstr; auto req{ opmap["required"] }; if (req.isArray()) { const char* sep = " (requires "; for (const auto& [reqkey, reqval] : llsd::inMap(req)) { reqstr << sep << reqkey; sep = ", "; } reqstr << ")"; } outpump.post(stringize("---- ", reply["key"].asString(), " == '", opmap["name"].asString(), "'", reqstr.str(), ":\n", opmap["desc"].asString())); } } else { // caller wants a list of APIs for (const auto& [name, data] : llsd::inMap(reply)) { outpump.post(stringize("==== ", name, ":\n", data["desc"].asString())); } } return 0; // void return } /***************************************************************************** * setdtor *****************************************************************************/ namespace { // proxy userdata object returned by setdtor() struct setdtor_refs { lua_State* L; std::string desc; // You can't directly store a Lua object in a C++ object, but you can // create a Lua "reference" by storing the object in the Lua Registry and // capturing its Registry index. int objref; int dtorref; setdtor_refs(lua_State* L, const std::string& desc, int objref, int dtorref): L(L), desc(desc), objref(objref), dtorref(dtorref) {} setdtor_refs(const setdtor_refs&) = delete; setdtor_refs& operator=(const setdtor_refs&) = delete; ~setdtor_refs(); static void push_metatable(lua_State* L); static std::string binop(const std::string& name, const std::string& op); static int meta__index(lua_State* L); }; } // anonymous namespace lua_function( setdtor, "setdtor(desc, obj, dtorfunc) => proxy object referencing obj and dtorfunc.\n" "When the returned proxy object is garbage-collected, or when the script\n" "ends, call dtorfunc(obj). String desc is logged in the error message, if any.\n" "Use the returned proxy object (or proxy._target) like obj.\n" "obj won't be destroyed as long as the proxy exists; it's the proxy object's\n" "lifespan that determines when dtorfunc(obj) will be called.") { if (lua_gettop(L) != 3) { return lluau::error(L, "setdtor(desc, obj, dtor) requires exactly 3 arguments"); } // called with (desc, obj, dtor), returns proxy object lua_checkdelta(L, -2); // lluau_checkstack(L, 0); // might get up to 3 stack entries auto desc{ lua_tostdstring(L, 1) }; // Get Lua "references" for each of the object and the dtor function. int objref = lua_ref(L, 2); int dtorref = lua_ref(L, 3); // Having captured each of our parameters, discard them. lua_settop(L, 0); // Push our setdtor_refs userdata. Not only do we want to push it on L's // stack, but setdtor_refs's constructor itself requires L. lua_emplace(L, L, desc, objref, dtorref); // stack: proxy (i.e. setdtor_refs userdata) // have to set its metatable lua_getfield(L, LUA_REGISTRYINDEX, "setdtor_meta"); // stack: proxy, setdtor_meta (which might be nil) if (lua_isnil(L, -1)) { // discard nil lua_pop(L, 1); // compile and push our forwarding metatable setdtor_refs::push_metatable(L); // stack: proxy, metatable // duplicate metatable to save it lua_pushvalue(L, -1); // stack: proxy, metatable, metable // save metatable for future calls lua_setfield(L, LUA_REGISTRYINDEX, "setdtor_meta"); // stack: proxy, metatable } // stack: proxy, metatable lua_setmetatable(L, -2); // stack: proxy // Because ~setdtor_refs() necessarily uses the Lua stack, the Registry et // al., we can't let a setdtor_refs instance be destroyed by lua_close(): // the Lua environment will already be partially shut down. To destroy // this new setdtor_refs instance BEFORE lua_close(), bind it with // lua_destroybounduserdata() and register it with LL.atexit(). // push (the entry point for) LL.atexit() lua_pushcfunction(L, atexit_luasub::call, "LL.atexit()"); // stack: proxy, atexit() lua_pushvalue(L, -2); // stack: proxy, atexit(), proxy int tag = lua_userdatatag(L, -1); // We don't have a lookup table to get from an int Lua userdata tag to the // corresponding C++ typeinfo name string. We'll introduce one if we need // it for debugging. But for this particular call, we happen to know it's // always a setdtor_refs object. lua_pushcclosure(L, lua_destroybounduserdata, stringize("lua_destroybounduserdata<", tag, ">()").c_str(), 1); // stack: proxy, atexit(), lua_destroybounduserdata // call atexit(): one argument, no results, let error propagate lua_call(L, 1, 0); // stack: proxy return 1; } namespace { void setdtor_refs::push_metatable(lua_State* L) { lua_checkdelta(L, 1); lluau_checkstack(L, 1); // Ideally we want a metatable that forwards every operation on our // setdtor_refs userdata proxy object to the original object. But the // published C API doesn't include (e.g.) arithmetic operations on Lua // objects, so in fact it's easier to express the desired metatable in Lua // than in C++. We could make setdtor() depend on an external Lua module, // but it seems less fragile to embed the Lua source code right here. static const std::string setdtor_meta = stringize(R"-( -- This metatable literal doesn't define __index() because that's -- implemented in C++. We cannot, in Lua, peek into the setdtor_refs -- userdata object to obtain objref, nor can we fetch Registry[objref]. -- So our C++ __index() metamethod recognizes access to '_target' as a -- reference to Registry[objref]. -- The rest are defined per https://www.lua.org/manual/5.1/manual.html#2.8. -- Luau supports destructors instead of __gc metamethod -- we rely on that! -- We don't set __mode because our proxy is not a table. Real references -- are stored in the wrapped table, so ITS __mode is what counts. -- Initial definition of meta omits binary metamethods so they can bind the -- metatable itself, as explained for binop() below. local meta = { __unm = function(arg) return -arg._target end, __len = function(arg) return #arg._target end, -- Comparison metamethods __eq(), __lt() and __le() are only called -- when both operands have the same metamethod. For our purposes, that -- means both operands are setdtor_refs userdata objects. __eq = function(lhs, rhs) return (lhs._target == rhs._target) end, __lt = function(lhs, rhs) return (lhs._target < rhs._target) end, __le = function(lhs, rhs) return (lhs._target <= rhs._target) end, __newindex = function(t, key, value) assert(key ~= '_target', "Don't try to replace a setdtor() proxy's _target") t._target[key] = value end, __call = function(func, ...) return func._target(...) end, __tostring = function(arg) -- don't fret about arg._target's __tostring metamethod, -- if any, because built-in tostring() deals with that return tostring(arg._target) end, __iter = function(arg) local iter = (getmetatable(arg._target) or {}).__iter if iter then return iter(arg._target) else return next, arg._target end end } )-", binop("add", "+"), binop("sub", "-"), binop("mul", "*"), binop("div", "/"), binop("idiv", "//"), binop("mod", "%"), binop("pow", "^"), binop("concat", ".."), R"-( return meta )-"); // only needed for debugging binop() // LL_DEBUGS("Lua") << setdtor_meta << LL_ENDL; if (lluau::dostring(L, LL_PRETTY_FUNCTION, setdtor_meta) != LUA_OK) { // stack: error message string lua_error(L); } llassert(lua_gettop(L) > 0); llassert(lua_type(L, -1) == LUA_TTABLE); // stack: Lua metatable compiled from setdtor_meta source // Inject our C++ __index metamethod. lua_rawsetfield(L, -1, "__index"sv, &setdtor_refs::meta__index); } // In the definition of setdtor_meta above, binary arithmethic and // concatenation metamethods are a little funny in that we don't know a // priori which operand is the userdata with our metatable: the metamethod // can be invoked either way. So every such metamethod must check, which // leads to lots of redundancy. Hence this helper function. Call it a Lua // macro. std::string setdtor_refs::binop(const std::string& name, const std::string& op) { return stringize( " meta.__", name, " = function(lhs, rhs)\n" " if getmetatable(lhs) == meta then\n" " return lhs._target ", op, " rhs\n" " else\n" " return lhs ", op, " rhs._target\n" " end\n" " end\n"); } // setdtor_refs __index() metamethod int setdtor_refs::meta__index(lua_State* L) { // called with (setdtor_refs userdata, key), returns retrieved object lua_checkdelta(L, -1); lluau_checkstack(L, 2); // stack: proxy, key // get ptr to the C++ struct data auto ptr = lua_toclass(L, -2); // meta__index() should NEVER be called with anything but setdtor_refs! llassert(ptr); // push the wrapped object lua_getref(L, ptr->objref); // stack: proxy, key, _target // replace userdata with _target lua_replace(L, -3); // stack: _target, key // Duplicate key because lua_tostring() converts number to string: // if the key is (e.g.) 1, don't try to retrieve _target["1"]! lua_pushvalue(L, -1); // stack: _target, key, key // recognize the special _target field if (lua_tostdstring(L, -1) == "_target") { // okay, ditch both copies of "_target" string key lua_pop(L, 2); // stack: _target } else // any key but _target { // ditch stringized key lua_pop(L, 1); // stack: _target, key // replace key with _target[key], invoking metamethod if any lua_gettable(L, -2); // stack: _target, _target[key] // discard _target lua_remove(L, -2); // stack: _target[key] } return 1; } // replacement for global next(): // its lua_upvalueindex(1) is the original function it's replacing int lua_proxydrill(lua_State* L) { // Accept however many arguments the original function normally accepts. // If our first arg is a userdata, check if it's a setdtor_refs proxy. // Drill through as many levels of proxy wrapper as needed. while (const setdtor_refs* ptr = lua_toclass(L, 1)) { // push original object lua_getref(L, ptr->objref); // replace first argument with that lua_replace(L, 1); } // We've reached a first argument that's not a setdtor() proxy. // How many arguments were we passed, anyway? int args = lua_gettop(L); // Push the original function, captured as our upvalue. lua_pushvalue(L, lua_upvalueindex(1)); // Shift the stack so the original function is first. lua_insert(L, 1); // Call the original function with all original args, no error checking. // Don't truncate however many values that function returns. lua_call(L, args, LUA_MULTRET); // Return as many values as the original function returned. return lua_gettop(L); } // When Lua destroys a setdtor_refs userdata object, either from garbage // collection or from LL.atexit(lua_destroybounduserdata), it's time to keep // its promise to call the specified Lua destructor function with the // specified Lua object. Of course we must also delete the captured // "references" to both objects. setdtor_refs::~setdtor_refs() { lua_checkdelta(L); lluau_checkstack(L, 2); // push Registry[dtorref] lua_getref(L, dtorref); // push Registry[objref] lua_getref(L, objref); // free Registry[dtorref] lua_unref(L, dtorref); // free Registry[objref] lua_unref(L, objref); // call dtor(obj): one arg, no result, no error function int rc = lua_pcall(L, 1, 0, 0); if (rc != LUA_OK) { // TODO: we don't really want to propagate the error here. // If this setdtor_refs instance is being destroyed by // LL.atexit(), we want to continue cleanup. If it's being // garbage-collected, the call is completely unpredictable from // the consuming script's point of view. But what to do about this // error?? For now, just log it. LL_WARNS("Lua") << LLCoros::getName() << ": setdtor(" << std::quoted(desc) << ") error: " << lua_tostring(L, -1) << LL_ENDL; lua_pop(L, 1); } } } // anonymous namespace /***************************************************************************** * lua_what *****************************************************************************/ std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& out, const lua_what& self) { switch (lua_type(self.L, self.index)) { case LUA_TNONE: // distinguish acceptable but non-valid index out << "none"; break; case LUA_TNIL: out << "nil"; break; case LUA_TBOOLEAN: { auto oldflags { out.flags() }; out << std::boolalpha << lua_toboolean(self.L, self.index); out.flags(oldflags); break; } case LUA_TNUMBER: out << lua_tonumber(self.L, self.index); break; case LUA_TSTRING: out << std::quoted(lua_tostdstring(self.L, self.index)); break; case LUA_TUSERDATA: { const S32 maxlen = 20; S32 binlen{ lua_rawlen(self.L, self.index) }; LLSD::Binary binary(std::min(maxlen, binlen)); std::memcpy(binary.data(), lua_touserdata(self.L, self.index), binary.size()); out << LL::hexdump(binary); if (binlen > maxlen) { out << "...(" << (binlen - maxlen) << " more)"; } break; } case LUA_TLIGHTUSERDATA: out << lua_touserdata(self.L, self.index); break; case LUA_TFUNCTION: { // Try for the function's name, at the cost of a few more stack // entries. lua_checkdelta(self.L); lluau_checkstack(self.L, 3); lua_getglobal(self.L, "debug"); // stack: ..., debug lua_getfield(self.L, -1, "info"); // stack: ..., debug, debug.info lua_remove(self.L, -2); // stack: ..., debug.info lua_pushvalue(self.L, self.index); // stack: ..., debug.info, this function lua_pushstring(self.L, "n"); // stack: ..., debug.info, this function, "n" // 2 arguments, 1 return value (or error message), no error handler lua_pcall(self.L, 2, 1, 0); // stack: ..., function name (or error) from debug.info() out << "function " << lua_tostdstring(self.L, -1); lua_pop(self.L, 1); // stack: ... break; } default: // anything else, don't bother trying to report value, just type out << lua_typename(self.L, lua_type(self.L, self.index)); break; } return out; } /***************************************************************************** * lua_stack *****************************************************************************/ std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& out, const lua_stack& self) { out << "stack: ["; const char* sep = ""; for (int index = 1; index <= lua_gettop(self.L); ++index) { out << sep << lua_what(self.L, index); sep = ", "; } out << ']'; return out; } /***************************************************************************** * LuaStackDelta *****************************************************************************/ LuaStackDelta::LuaStackDelta(lua_State* L, const std::string& where, int delta): L(L), mWhere(where), mDepth(lua_gettop(L)), mDelta(delta) {} LuaStackDelta::~LuaStackDelta() { auto depth{ lua_gettop(L) }; // If we're unwinding the stack due to an exception, then of course we // can't expect the logic in the block containing this LuaStackDelta // instance to keep its contract wrt the Lua data stack. if (std::uncaught_exceptions() == 0 && mDepth + mDelta != depth) { LL_ERRS("Lua") << LLCoros::getName() << ": " << mWhere << ": Lua stack went from " << mDepth << " to " << depth; if (mDelta) { LL_CONT << ", rather than expected " << (mDepth + mDelta) << " (" << mDelta << ")"; } LL_ENDL; } }