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75c3679147
The current mixed Python/C implementation works well, but it has a couple of important limitations: - It's too slow for some common use cases, like iterating over large data structures. - It can't be reused in utilities written in other languages. This replaces the internals with a new library written in C, libdrgn. It includes Python bindings with mostly the same public interface as before, with some important improvements: - Types are now represented by a single Type class rather than the messy polymorphism in the Python implementation. - Qualifiers are a bitmask instead of a set of strings. - Bit fields are not considered a separate type. - The lvalue/rvalue terminology is replaced with reference/value. - Structure, union, and array values are better supported. - Function objects are supported. - Program distinguishes between lookups of variables, constants, and functions. The C rewrite is about 6x as fast as the original Python when using the Python bindings, and about 8x when using the C API directly. Currently, the exposed API in C is fairly conservative. In the future, the memory reader, type index, and object index APIs will probably be exposed for more flexibility.
4 lines
99 B
C
4 lines
99 B
C
#include <stdint.h>
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const uint8_t hash_table_empty_chunk_header[16] __attribute__((aligned(16)));
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