Trampoline (computing)
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In computer programming, the word trampoline has a number of meanings, and is generally associated with jumps (i.e., moving to different code paths).
Low level programming
Trampolines (sometimes referred to as indirect jump vectors) are memory locations holding addresses pointing to interrupt service routines, I/O routines, etc. Execution jumps into the trampoline and then immediately jumps out, or bounces, hence the term trampoline. They have many uses:
CPUs
- Trampoline can be used to overcome the limitations imposed by a CPU architecture that expects to always find vectors in fixed locations.
- When an operating system is booted on an SMP machine, only one processor, the boot-strap processor, will be active. After the operating system has configured itself it will instruct the other processors to jump to a piece of trampoline code which will initialize the processors and wait for the operating system to start scheduling threads on them.
In C and C++
- When interfacing pieces of code with incompatible calling conventions, a trampoline is used to convert the caller's convention into the callee's convention.
- In embedded systems, trampolines are short snippets of code that start up other snippets of code. For example, rather than write interrupt handlers entirely in assembly language, another option is to write interrupt handlers mostly in C, and use a short trampoline to convert the assembly-language interrupt calling convention into the C calling convention.[1]
- When passing a callback to a system that expects to call a C function, but one wants it to execute the method of a particular instance of an class written in C++, one uses a short trampoline to convert the C function-calling convention to the C++ method-calling convention. One way of writing such a trampoline is to use a thunk.[2] Another method is to use a generic listener.[3]
- In Objective-C, a trampoline is an object returned by a method that captures and reifies all messages sent to it and then "bounces" those messages on to another object, for example in Higher Order Messaging.[4]
- In the GCC compiler, trampoline refers to a technique for implementing pointers to nested functions. The trampoline is a small piece of code which is constructed on the fly on the stack when the address of a nested function is taken. The trampoline sets up the static link pointer, which allows the nested function to access local variables of the enclosing function. The function pointer is then simply the address of the trampoline. This avoids having to use "fat" function pointers for nested functions which carry both the code address and the static link.[5][6][7] This however conflicts with the tendency to make the stack non-executable though for security reasons.
High level programming
- Used in some Lisp implementations, a trampoline is a loop that iteratively invokes thunk-returning functions (continuation-passing style). A single trampoline is sufficient to express all control transfers of a program; a program so expressed is trampolined, or in trampolined style; converting a program to trampolined style is trampolining. Trampolined functions can be used to implement tail-recursive function calls in stack-oriented programming languages.[8]
- In Java, trampoline refers to using reflection to avoid using inner classes, for example in event listeners. The time overhead of a reflection call is traded for the space overhead of an inner class. Trampolines in Java usually involve the creation of a GenericListener to pass events to an outer class.[3]
Other languages
- In the esoteric programming language Befunge, a trampoline is an instruction to skip the next cell in the control flow.
References
- ↑ "Trampolines for Embedded Systems: Minimizing interrupt handlers latency", Joseph M. Link.
- ↑ "Thunking in Win32 with C++", Einar Otto Stangvik
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Trampolines, Hans Muller
- ↑ "Higher Order Messaging", Marcel Weiher
- ↑ GCC internals: Trampolines for Nested Functions
- ↑ GCC nested function usage
- ↑ Thomas M. Breuel, Lexical Closures for C++
- ↑ Baker, Henry G. (September 1995). "CONS Should Not CONS Its Arguments, Part II: Cheney on the M.T.A.". ACM Sigplan Notices 30 (9): 17–20.
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