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Lightweight function value

Overview

A lightweight function (or a "lightfunc") is a plain duk_tval value type which refers to a Duktape/C function without needing a representative ECMAScript Function object. The duk_tval tagged type encapsulates a reference to the native function, as well as a small set of control bits, without needing any heap allocations. This is useful in especially low memory environments, where the memory footprint of typical Duktape/C bindings can be reduced.

A lightfunc has a separate API type (DUK_TYPE_LIGHTFUNC) so it is a clearly distinguished type for C code. However, for ECMAScript code a lightfunc behaves as closely as possible like an ordinary Function instance. Various techniques (such as virtual properties) are used to achieve this goal as well as possible.

Memory representation

The 8-byte representation for a lightfunc is:

16 bits  16 bits      32 bits
+--------+--------+----------------+
| 0xfff5 | flags  | function ptr   |
+--------+--------+----------------+

The flags field is further split into:

8 bits       4 bits   4 bits
+----------------+--------+--------+
| magic          | length | nargs  |
+----------------+--------+--------+

magic: signed 8-bit value
length: 0 to 15
nargs: 0 to 14, 15 indicates DUK_VARARGS

Using lightfuncs

duk_push_c_lightfunc()

You can make your own function bindings lightfuncs by simply pushing lightfunction values with duk_push_c_lightfunc(). Lightfunc limits:

  • Number of stack arguments must be 0 to 14 or varargs.
  • Virtual "length" property can be given separately and must be between 0 and 15.
  • Magic must be between -128 to 127 (-0x80 to 0x7f).

DUK_USE_LIGHTFUNC_BUILTINS

The config option DUK_USE_LIGHTFUNC_BUILTINS converts most built-in functions forcibly into lightweight functions, reducing memory usage on low memory platforms by around 14 kB.

Behavior notes

Testcases

A lot of detailed behavior is described in testcases:

  • test-dev-lightfunc*.js
  • test-dev-lightfunc*.c

Virtual properties

A lightfunc has the following virtual properties:

  • name: fixed format of lightfunc_<ptr>_<flags> where <ptr> is a platform dependent rendering of a function pointer, and <flags> is a 16-bit internal flags field encoded as-is.
  • length: number between 0 and 15, encoded as 4 bits into the internal flags field.

Lightfunc cannot have a "prototype" property

A lightfunc can be used as a constructor function, and is in fact always constructable. However, lightfuncs cannot have a "prototype" property, so when called as a constructor, the automatically created default instance object inherits from Object.prototype.

You can still construct objects that inherit from a custom prototype, but you need to create and return that value explicitly in the constructor, so that it replaces the automatic default instance.

Lightfunc cannot be a setter/getter

A property value slot can either hold a duk_tval or two duk_hobject * pointers for the setter/getter of an accessor (in 32-bit environments both take 8 bytes). The setter/getter slot cannot hold two lightfunc references (which would take 16 bytes).

As a result, lightfuncs cannot be used as setter/getter values. If you give a lightfunc as a setter/getter reference, it will be silently coerced into a normal function object: the setter/getter will work, but a normal function object will be created (consuming memory).

Lightfunc cannot have a finalizer

Lightfuncs cannot have a finalizer because they are primitive values. As such they don't have a reference count field nor do they participate in garbage collection like actual objects.

Hypothetically, even if lightfuncs were garbage collected somehow, they don't have space for a virtual _Finalizer property. It would be possible to set a finalizer on Function.prototype though and let that finalize the lightfuncs. But because lightfuncs are not really objects, it's not clear when the finalizer should be called (e.g. every time a lightfunc duk_tval is DECREF'd?).

Implementation notes

Some changes needed

This list is not exhaustive:

  • Add a new tagged type, DUK_TAG_LIGHTFUNC, which points to a Duktape/C function.
    • A lightweight function can be a constructor, but will never have an automatic prototype object (a property slot would be needed to store it). A lightweight constructor function can create a replacement object from scratch and discard the automatically created instance object.
  • The representation depends on the duk_tval layout:
    • For 8-byte packed type: 32-bit function pointer (pointing to the Duktape/C function) and 16 bits for function metadata.
    • For unpacked type: function pointer and 16 bits options field.
  • The 16-bit metadata field is divided into the following sub-fields:
    • 8-bit magic value: important to be able to represent built-ins as lightfuncs (they use magic value extensively)
    • 4-bit nargs (with 15 indicating varargs)
    • 4-bit length property value
  • Regarding ECMAScript semantics, the lightweight function type should behave like a Function object as much as possible.
    • This means, for example, that operators and built-in functions which strictly require an object argument must handle lightweight function values specially.
    • Some property algorithms can be implemented by first checking for lightfunc virtual properties, and if no virtual property matches, replacing the original argument with Function.prototype. This doesn't always work, however. For instance, if getters/setters can be invoked, the this binding must bind to the original lightfunc, not Function prototype.
  • All call sites in code which expect an object need to be considered.
    • For example, if a call site uses duk_require_hobject() it needs to be changed to allow an object or a lightfunc. There's a specific helper to implement minimal lightfunc support to such call sites by coercing lightfuncs to full Function objects: duk_require_hobject_promote_lfunc().
  • Add support in call handling for calling a lightfunc:
    • Bound function handling
    • Magic and nargs
  • Add support in traceback handling:
    • Function name
  • Add virtual object properties so that lightweight functions will appear like ordinary Function objects to some extent
  • Add reasonable behavior for all coercion operations, e.g. ToObject() should probably coerce a lightfunc into a normal Function with the same internal parameters (such as nargs and magic).
  • Add an option to change built-in functions into lightweight functions instead of Function objects. This should not be active by default, because this change makes the built-ins strictly non-compliant. However, this is quite useful in RAM constrained environments.
  • Extend the public API to allow the user to push lightweight function pointers in addition to ordinary ones.
    • For now there is no module registration helper which supports lightweight functions.
  • Fix operators requiring a function value:
    • in
    • instanceof
  • JSON/JX/JC support for lightfuncs

Automatic conversion of built-ins to lightfuncs

Most built-ins can be converted into lightweight functions because they don't have a .prototype property which would prevent such a conversion. The built-ins do have a .length property which doesn't always match the actual argument count, but both nargs and length are stored in the lightfunc value to allow these functions to be represented as lightfuncs.

The top level constructors (like Number) cannot be converted to lightfuncs because they have property values (e.g. Number.POSITIVE_INFINITY) which require a property table.

Built-in methods use "magic" values extensively, and the 8-bit magic is sufficient for everything except the Date built-in. The Date built-in magic value was changed to be an index to a table of actual magic values to work around this limit.

As a result, almost all built-in methods (except eval, yield, resume, and require) are now converted to lightfuncs.

Future work

More call sites with direct support of lightfuncs

Add support for direct lightfunc support in places where object coercion (e.g. duk_require_hobject_promote_lfunc()) is used. Such coercion has a memory churn impact so it's preferable to avoid it when it matters. The best places to improve on are those seen in practical code.

For example, currently enumerating a lightfunc goes through coercion which is not ideal.

Improved JX/JC support

Should lightfuncs be visible in a special way in JX/JC encoding? For instance:

{_func:true}    ecma function
{_cfunc:true}   C function
{_lfunc:true}   lightweight C function

On the other hand C/ECMAScript functions are not distinguished in JX/JC now.

ToLightFunc()

There's currently no way to coerce an ordinary native Function into a lightfunc. Lightfuncs can only be created through the Duktape API. If such a coercion was added, it would need to check compatibility for the coercion, at least magic and nargs must match for even the basic calling convention guarantees to work.

Better virtual names for forced built-in lightfuncs

By matching Duktape/C function pointer and magic value, proper virtual names could be given to built-in lightfuncs. The function name table goes into code memory (e.g. flash) which is often less restricted than RAM.

A similar approach would be to allow user code to provide a hook which could try to provide a name for a lightfunc when given its function pointer and the 16-bit flags field. User code could then consult symbol tables or similar to provide better names.

Improve the Duktape C API

Right now there is just one call to push a lightfunc on the stack. The magic value of the lightfunc can be read. However, the magic value, nargs or length of a lightfunc cannot be modified. User can construct a new lightfunc from scratch, but won't be able to read e.g. the "nargs" value of a lightfunc on the stack.

API questions:

  • Add a push variant which has no 'length' or 'magic', so that it matches duk_push_c_function()?
  • Add necessary API calls to read and write 'length', 'magic', and 'nargs' of a lightfunc.

API additions are not necessarily preferable if there is not concrete need for them.

Symbol file for lightweight functions

  • Address/offset + 16-bit flags (or just magic), allows reconstruction of lightfunc name
  • Build could provide some symbol information that could be read into a debugger environment to improve traceback verbosity

Improve defineProperty() behavior

Object.defineProperty() could throw a TypeError ("not extensible") when a new property is created into a lightfunc. Currently this succeeds but of course new properties cannot actually be created into a lightfunc.

Improve ToObject() coercion

Current ToObject() coercion has two logical but confusing issues:

  • The result is extensible while the input lightfunc is not. This is useful because it's quite likely the user wants to extend the resulting function if the lightfunc is explicitly object coerced. It also matches the standard ECMAScript behavior for strings: new String('foo') returns an extensible String object.

    Another alternative would be to make the result non-extensible.

  • The 'name' property of the coercion result is the lightfunc name, which is a bit confusing because the object is no longer a lightfunc.

    Another alternative would be to make the 'name' differ from the lightfunc name. However, this would be confusing in a different way.