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Revision 1.22 by root, Wed May 2 05:53:26 2007 UTC vs.
Revision 1.58 by root, Sat Aug 27 12:54:52 2016 UTC

1/* 1/*
2 * Copyright (c) 2001-2006 Marc Alexander Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de> 2 * Copyright (c) 2001-2012,2015 Marc Alexander Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
3 * 3 *
4 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modifica- 4 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modifica-
5 * tion, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: 5 * tion, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
6 * 6 *
7 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, 7 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
8 * this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 8 * this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
9 * 9 *
10 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 10 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
11 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 11 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
12 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 12 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13 * 13 *
14 * 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
15 * derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
16 *
17 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED 14 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
18 * WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MER- 15 * WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MER-
19 * CHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO 16 * CHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO
20 * EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPE- 17 * EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPE-
21 * CIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, 18 * CIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
23 * OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, 20 * OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
24 * WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTH- 21 * WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTH-
25 * ERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED 22 * ERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED
26 * OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 23 * OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
27 * 24 *
25 * Alternatively, the contents of this file may be used under the terms of
26 * the GNU General Public License ("GPL") version 2 or any later version,
27 * in which case the provisions of the GPL are applicable instead of
28 * the above. If you wish to allow the use of your version of this file
29 * only under the terms of the GPL and not to allow others to use your
30 * version of this file under the BSD license, indicate your decision
31 * by deleting the provisions above and replace them with the notice
32 * and other provisions required by the GPL. If you do not delete the
33 * provisions above, a recipient may use your version of this file under
34 * either the BSD or the GPL.
35 *
28 * This library is modelled strictly after Ralf S. Engelschalls article at 36 * This library is modelled strictly after Ralf S. Engelschalls article at
29 * http://www.gnu.org/software/pth/rse-pmt.ps. So most of the credit must 37 * http://www.gnu.org/software/pth/rse-pmt.ps. So most of the credit must
30 * go to Ralf S. Engelschall <rse@engelschall.com>. 38 * go to Ralf S. Engelschall <rse@engelschall.com>.
31 * 39 *
32 * This coroutine library is very much stripped down. You should either 40 * This coroutine library is very much stripped down. You should either
33 * build your own process abstraction using it or - better - just use GNU 41 * build your own process abstraction using it or - better - just use GNU
34 * Portable Threads, http://www.gnu.org/software/pth/. 42 * Portable Threads, http://www.gnu.org/software/pth/.
41 * 2006-11-26 Use _setjmp instead of setjmp on GNU/Linux. 49 * 2006-11-26 Use _setjmp instead of setjmp on GNU/Linux.
42 * 2007-04-27 Set unwind frame info if gcc 3+ and ELF is detected. 50 * 2007-04-27 Set unwind frame info if gcc 3+ and ELF is detected.
43 * Use _setjmp instead of setjmp on _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 600. 51 * Use _setjmp instead of setjmp on _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 600.
44 * 2007-05-02 Add assembly versions for x86 and amd64 (to avoid reliance 52 * 2007-05-02 Add assembly versions for x86 and amd64 (to avoid reliance
45 * on SIGUSR2 and sigaltstack in Crossfire). 53 * on SIGUSR2 and sigaltstack in Crossfire).
54 * 2008-01-21 Disable CFI usage on anything but GNU/Linux.
55 * 2008-03-02 Switched to 2-clause BSD license with GPL exception.
56 * 2008-04-04 New (but highly unrecommended) pthreads backend.
57 * 2008-04-24 Reinstate CORO_LOSER (had wrong stack adjustments).
58 * 2008-10-30 Support assembly method on x86 with and without frame pointer.
59 * 2008-11-03 Use a global asm statement for CORO_ASM, idea by pippijn.
60 * 2008-11-05 Hopefully fix misaligned stacks with CORO_ASM/SETJMP.
61 * 2008-11-07 rbp wasn't saved in CORO_ASM on x86_64.
62 * introduce coro_destroy, which is a nop except for pthreads.
63 * speed up CORO_PTHREAD. Do no longer leak threads either.
64 * coro_create now allows one to create source coro_contexts.
65 * do not rely on makecontext passing a void * correctly.
66 * try harder to get _setjmp/_longjmp.
67 * major code cleanup/restructuring.
68 * 2008-11-10 the .cfi hacks are no longer needed.
69 * 2008-11-16 work around a freebsd pthread bug.
70 * 2008-11-19 define coro_*jmp symbols for easier porting.
71 * 2009-06-23 tentative win32-backend support for mingw32 (Yasuhiro Matsumoto).
72 * 2010-12-03 tentative support for uclibc (which lacks all sorts of things).
73 * 2011-05-30 set initial callee-saved-registers to zero with CORO_ASM.
74 * use .cfi_undefined rip on linux-amd64 for better backtraces.
75 * 2011-06-08 maybe properly implement weird windows amd64 calling conventions.
76 * 2011-07-03 rely on __GCC_HAVE_DWARF2_CFI_ASM for cfi detection.
77 * 2011-08-08 cygwin trashes stacks, use pthreads with double stack on cygwin.
78 * 2012-12-04 reduce misprediction penalty for x86/amd64 assembly switcher.
79 * 2012-12-05 experimental fiber backend (allocates stack twice).
80 * 2012-12-07 API version 3 - add coro_stack_alloc/coro_stack_free.
81 * 2012-12-21 valgrind stack registering was broken.
82 * 2015-12-05 experimental asm be for arm7, based on a patch by Nick Zavaritsky.
83 * use __name__ for predefined symbols, as in libecb.
84 * enable guard pages on arm, aarch64 and mips.
85 * 2016-08-27 try to disable _FORTIFY_SOURCE with CORO_SJLJ, as it
86 * breaks setjmp/longjmp. Also disable CORO_ASM for asm by default,
87 * as it was reported to crash.
46 */ 88 */
47 89
48#ifndef CORO_H 90#ifndef CORO_H
49#define CORO_H 91#define CORO_H
50 92
51#define CORO_VERSION 2 93#if __cplusplus
52 94extern "C" {
53/* 95#endif
54 * Changes since API version 1:
55 * replaced bogus -DCORO_LOOSE with gramatically more correct -DCORO_LOSER
56 */
57 96
58/* 97/*
59 * This library consists of only three files 98 * This library consists of only three files
60 * coro.h, coro.c and LICENSE (and optionally README) 99 * coro.h, coro.c and LICENSE (and optionally README)
61 * 100 *
62 * It implements what is known as coroutines, in a hopefully 101 * It implements what is known as coroutines, in a hopefully
63 * portable way. At the moment you have to define which kind 102 * portable way.
64 * of implementation flavour you want: 103 *
104 * All compiletime symbols must be defined both when including coro.h
105 * (using libcoro) as well as when compiling coro.c (the implementation).
106 *
107 * You can manually specify which flavour you want. If you don't define
108 * any of these, libcoro tries to choose a safe and fast default:
65 * 109 *
66 * -DCORO_UCONTEXT 110 * -DCORO_UCONTEXT
67 * 111 *
68 * This flavour uses SUSv2's get/set/swap/makecontext functions that 112 * This flavour uses SUSv2's get/set/swap/makecontext functions that
69 * unfortunately only newer unices support. 113 * unfortunately only some unices support, and is quite slow.
70 * Use this for GNU/Linux + glibc-2.2.3 and possibly higher.
71 * 114 *
72 * -DCORO_SJLJ 115 * -DCORO_SJLJ
73 * 116 *
74 * This flavour uses SUSv2's setjmp/longjmp and sigaltstack functions to 117 * This flavour uses SUSv2's setjmp/longjmp and sigaltstack functions to
75 * do it's job. Coroutine creation is much slower than UCONTEXT, but 118 * do it's job. Coroutine creation is much slower than UCONTEXT, but
76 * context switching is often a bit cheaper. It should work on almost 119 * context switching is a bit cheaper. It should work on almost all unices.
77 * all unices. Use this for GNU/Linux + glibc-2.2. glibc-2.1 and below
78 * do not work with any sane model (neither sigaltstack nor context
79 * functions are implemented)
80 * 120 *
81 * -DCORO_LINUX 121 * -DCORO_LINUX
82 * 122 *
123 * CORO_SJLJ variant.
83 * Old GNU/Linux systems (<= glibc-2.1) work with this implementation 124 * Old GNU/Linux systems (<= glibc-2.1) only work with this implementation
84 * (it is very fast and therefore recommended over other methods). 125 * (it is very fast and therefore recommended over other methods, but
126 * doesn't work with anything newer).
85 * 127 *
86 * -DCORO_LOSER 128 * -DCORO_LOSER
87 * 129 *
130 * CORO_SJLJ variant.
88 * Microsoft's highly proprietary platform doesn't support sigaltstack, and 131 * Microsoft's highly proprietary platform doesn't support sigaltstack, and
89 * this automatically selects a suitable workaround for this platform. 132 * this selects a suitable workaround for this platform. It might not work
90 * (untested) 133 * with your compiler though - it has only been tested with MSVC 6.
134 *
135 * -DCORO_FIBER
136 *
137 * Slower, but probably more portable variant for the Microsoft operating
138 * system, using fibers. Ignores the passed stack and allocates it internally.
139 * Also, due to bugs in cygwin, this does not work with cygwin.
91 * 140 *
92 * -DCORO_IRIX 141 * -DCORO_IRIX
93 * 142 *
143 * CORO_SJLJ variant.
94 * SGI's version of Microsoft's NT ;) 144 * For SGI's version of Microsoft's NT ;)
95 * 145 *
96 * -DCORO_ASM 146 * -DCORO_ASM
97 * 147 *
98 * Handcoded assembly, known to work only on a few architectures/ABI: 148 * Hand coded assembly, known to work only on a few architectures/ABI:
99 * ELF Linux x86 && amd64 when gcc is used and optimisation is turned on. 149 * GCC + arm7/x86/IA32/amd64/x86_64 + GNU/Linux and a few BSDs. Fastest
150 * choice, if it works.
151 *
152 * -DCORO_PTHREAD
153 *
154 * Use the pthread API. You have to provide <pthread.h> and -lpthread.
155 * This is likely the slowest backend, and it also does not support fork(),
156 * so avoid it at all costs.
100 * 157 *
101 * If you define neither of these symbols, coro.h will try to autodetect 158 * If you define neither of these symbols, coro.h will try to autodetect
102 * the model. This currently works for CORO_LOSER only. For the other 159 * the best/safest model. To help with the autodetection, you should check
103 * alternatives you should check (e.g. using autoconf) and define the 160 * (e.g. using autoconf) and define the following symbols: HAVE_UCONTEXT_H
104 * following symbols: HAVE_UCONTEXT_H / HAVE_SETJMP_H / HAVE_SIGALTSTACK. 161 * / HAVE_SETJMP_H / HAVE_SIGALTSTACK.
162 */
163
164/*
165 * Changes when the API changes incompatibly.
166 * This is ONLY the API version - there is no ABI compatibility between releases.
105 */ 167 *
168 * Changes in API version 2:
169 * replaced bogus -DCORO_LOOSE with grammatically more correct -DCORO_LOSER
170 * Changes in API version 3:
171 * introduced stack management (CORO_STACKALLOC)
172 */
173#define CORO_VERSION 3
174
175#include <stddef.h>
106 176
107/* 177/*
108 * This is the type for the initialization function of a new coroutine. 178 * This is the type for the initialization function of a new coroutine.
109 */ 179 */
110typedef void (*coro_func)(void *); 180typedef void (*coro_func)(void *);
119/* 189/*
120 * This function creates a new coroutine. Apart from a pointer to an 190 * This function creates a new coroutine. Apart from a pointer to an
121 * uninitialised coro_context, it expects a pointer to the entry function 191 * uninitialised coro_context, it expects a pointer to the entry function
122 * and the single pointer value that is given to it as argument. 192 * and the single pointer value that is given to it as argument.
123 * 193 *
124 * Allocating/deallocating the stack is your own responsibility, so there is 194 * Allocating/deallocating the stack is your own responsibility.
125 * no coro_destroy function. 195 *
196 * As a special case, if coro, arg, sptr and ssze are all zero,
197 * then an "empty" coro_context will be created that is suitable
198 * as an initial source for coro_transfer.
199 *
200 * This function is not reentrant, but putting a mutex around it
201 * will work.
126 */ 202 */
127void coro_create (coro_context *ctx, /* an uninitialised coro_context */ 203void coro_create (coro_context *ctx, /* an uninitialised coro_context */
128 coro_func coro, /* the coroutine code to be executed */ 204 coro_func coro, /* the coroutine code to be executed */
129 void *arg, /* a single pointer passed to the coro */ 205 void *arg, /* a single pointer passed to the coro */
130 void *sptr, /* start of stack area */ 206 void *sptr, /* start of stack area */
131 long ssize); /* size of stack area */ 207 size_t ssze); /* size of stack area in bytes */
132 208
133/* 209/*
134 * The following prototype defines the coroutine switching function. It is 210 * The following prototype defines the coroutine switching function. It is
135 * usually implemented as a macro, so watch out. 211 * sometimes implemented as a macro, so watch out.
212 *
213 * This function is thread-safe and reentrant.
136 * 214 */
215#if 0
137void coro_transfer(coro_context *prev, coro_context *next); 216void coro_transfer (coro_context *prev, coro_context *next);
217#endif
218
219/*
220 * The following prototype defines the coroutine destroy function. It
221 * is sometimes implemented as a macro, so watch out. It also serves no
222 * purpose unless you want to use the CORO_PTHREAD backend, where it is
223 * used to clean up the thread. You are responsible for freeing the stack
224 * and the context itself.
138 */ 225 *
139 226 * This function is thread-safe and reentrant.
140/*
141 * That was it. No other user-visible functions are implemented here.
142 */ 227 */
228#if 0
229void coro_destroy (coro_context *ctx);
230#endif
143 231
144/*****************************************************************************/ 232/*****************************************************************************/
233/* optional stack management */
234/*****************************************************************************/
235/*
236 * You can disable all of the stack management functions by
237 * defining CORO_STACKALLOC to 0. Otherwise, they are enabled by default.
238 *
239 * If stack management is enabled, you can influence the implementation via these
240 * symbols:
241 *
242 * -DCORO_USE_VALGRIND
243 *
244 * If defined, then libcoro will include valgrind/valgrind.h and register
245 * and unregister stacks with valgrind.
246 *
247 * -DCORO_GUARDPAGES=n
248 *
249 * libcoro will try to use the specified number of guard pages to protect against
250 * stack overflow. If n is 0, then the feature will be disabled. If it isn't
251 * defined, then libcoro will choose a suitable default. If guardpages are not
252 * supported on the platform, then the feature will be silently disabled.
253 */
254#ifndef CORO_STACKALLOC
255# define CORO_STACKALLOC 1
256#endif
145 257
258#if CORO_STACKALLOC
259
260/*
261 * The only allowed operations on these struct members is to read the
262 * "sptr" and "ssze" members to pass it to coro_create, to read the "sptr"
263 * member to see if it is false, in which case the stack isn't allocated,
264 * and to set the "sptr" member to 0, to indicate to coro_stack_free to
265 * not actually do anything.
266 */
267
268struct coro_stack
269{
270 void *sptr;
271 size_t ssze;
272#if CORO_USE_VALGRIND
273 int valgrind_id;
274#endif
275};
276
277/*
278 * Try to allocate a stack of at least the given size and return true if
279 * successful, or false otherwise.
280 *
281 * The size is *NOT* specified in bytes, but in units of sizeof (void *),
282 * i.e. the stack is typically 4(8) times larger on 32 bit(64 bit) platforms
283 * then the size passed in.
284 *
285 * If size is 0, then a "suitable" stack size is chosen (usually 1-2MB).
286 */
287int coro_stack_alloc (struct coro_stack *stack, unsigned int size);
288
289/*
290 * Free the stack allocated by coro_stack_alloc again. It is safe to
291 * call this function on the coro_stack structure even if coro_stack_alloc
292 * failed.
293 */
294void coro_stack_free (struct coro_stack *stack);
295
296#endif
297
298/*
299 * That was it. No other user-serviceable parts below here.
300 */
301
302/*****************************************************************************/
303
146#if !defined(CORO_LOSER) && !defined(CORO_UCONTEXT) \ 304#if !defined CORO_LOSER && !defined CORO_UCONTEXT \
147 && !defined(CORO_SJLJ) && !defined(CORO_LINUX) \ 305 && !defined CORO_SJLJ && !defined CORO_LINUX \
148 && !defined(CORO_IRIX) && !defined(CORO_ASM) 306 && !defined CORO_IRIX && !defined CORO_ASM \
149# if defined(WINDOWS) 307 && !defined CORO_PTHREAD && !defined CORO_FIBER
308# if defined WINDOWS && (defined __i386__ || (__x86_64__ || defined _M_IX86 || defined _M_AMD64)
309# define CORO_ASM 1
310# elif defined WINDOWS || defined _WIN32
150# define CORO_LOSER 1 /* you don't win with windoze */ 311# define CORO_LOSER 1 /* you don't win with windoze */
151# elif defined(__linux) && (defined(__x86) || defined (__amd64)) 312# elif __linux && (__i386__ || (__x86_64__ && !__ILP32__) /*|| (__arm__ && __ARM_ARCH == 7)), not working */
152# define CORO_ASM 1 313# define CORO_ASM 1
153# elif defined(HAVE_UCONTEXT_H) 314# elif defined HAVE_UCONTEXT_H
154# define CORO_UCONTEXT 1 315# define CORO_UCONTEXT 1
155# elif defined(HAVE_SETJMP_H) && defined(HAVE_SIGALTSTACK) 316# elif defined HAVE_SETJMP_H && defined HAVE_SIGALTSTACK
156# define CORO_SJLJ 1 317# define CORO_SJLJ 1
157# else 318# else
158error unknown or unsupported architecture 319error unknown or unsupported architecture
159# endif 320# endif
160#endif 321#endif
163 324
164#if CORO_UCONTEXT 325#if CORO_UCONTEXT
165 326
166# include <ucontext.h> 327# include <ucontext.h>
167 328
168struct coro_context { 329struct coro_context
330{
169 ucontext_t uc; 331 ucontext_t uc;
170}; 332};
171 333
172# define coro_transfer(p,n) swapcontext (&((p)->uc), &((n)->uc)) 334# define coro_transfer(p,n) swapcontext (&((p)->uc), &((n)->uc))
335# define coro_destroy(ctx) (void *)(ctx)
173 336
174#elif CORO_SJLJ || CORO_LOSER || CORO_LINUX || CORO_IRIX 337#elif CORO_SJLJ || CORO_LOSER || CORO_LINUX || CORO_IRIX
175 338
176# if defined(CORO_LINUX) && !defined(_GNU_SOURCE) 339# if defined(CORO_LINUX) && !defined(_GNU_SOURCE)
177# define _GNU_SOURCE /* for linux libc */ 340# define _GNU_SOURCE /* for glibc */
341# endif
342
343/* try to disable well-meant but buggy checks in some libcs */
344# ifdef _FORTIFY_SOURCE
345# undef _FORTIFY_SOURCE
346# undef __USE_FORTIFY_LEVEL /* helps some more when too much has been included already */
347# endif
348
349# if !CORO_LOSER
350# include <unistd.h>
351# endif
352
353/* solaris is hopelessly borked, it expands _XOPEN_UNIX to nothing */
354# if __sun
355# undef _XOPEN_UNIX
356# define _XOPEN_UNIX 1
178# endif 357# endif
179 358
180# include <setjmp.h> 359# include <setjmp.h>
181 360
182struct coro_context { 361# if _XOPEN_UNIX > 0 || defined (_setjmp)
183 jmp_buf env; 362# define coro_jmp_buf jmp_buf
184}; 363# define coro_setjmp(env) _setjmp (env)
185 364# define coro_longjmp(env) _longjmp ((env), 1)
186# if CORO_LINUX || (_XOPEN_SOURCE >= 600) 365# elif CORO_LOSER
187# define coro_transfer(p,n) do { if (!_setjmp ((p)->env)) _longjmp ((n)->env, 1); } while (0) 366# define coro_jmp_buf jmp_buf
367# define coro_setjmp(env) setjmp (env)
368# define coro_longjmp(env) longjmp ((env), 1)
188# else 369# else
370# define coro_jmp_buf sigjmp_buf
371# define coro_setjmp(env) sigsetjmp (env, 0)
372# define coro_longjmp(env) siglongjmp ((env), 1)
373# endif
374
375struct coro_context
376{
377 coro_jmp_buf env;
378};
379
189# define coro_transfer(p,n) do { if (!setjmp ((p)->env)) longjmp ((n)->env, 1); } while (0) 380# define coro_transfer(p,n) do { if (!coro_setjmp ((p)->env)) coro_longjmp ((n)->env); } while (0)
190# endif 381# define coro_destroy(ctx) (void *)(ctx)
191 382
192#elif CORO_ASM 383#elif CORO_ASM
193 384
194struct coro_context { 385struct coro_context
195 volatile void **sp; 386{
387 void **sp; /* must be at offset 0 */
196}; 388};
197 389
390#if __i386__ || __x86_64__
198void __attribute__ ((__noinline__, __fastcall__)) 391void __attribute__ ((__noinline__, __regparm__(2)))
392#else
393void __attribute__ ((__noinline__))
394#endif
199 coro_transfer(coro_context *prev, coro_context *next); 395coro_transfer (coro_context *prev, coro_context *next);
200 396
201#endif 397# define coro_destroy(ctx) (void *)(ctx)
202 398
203#endif 399#elif CORO_PTHREAD
204 400
401# include <pthread.h>
402
403extern pthread_mutex_t coro_mutex;
404
405struct coro_context
406{
407 pthread_cond_t cv;
408 pthread_t id;
409};
410
411void coro_transfer (coro_context *prev, coro_context *next);
412void coro_destroy (coro_context *ctx);
413
414#elif CORO_FIBER
415
416struct coro_context
417{
418 void *fiber;
419 /* only used for initialisation */
420 coro_func coro;
421 void *arg;
422};
423
424void coro_transfer (coro_context *prev, coro_context *next);
425void coro_destroy (coro_context *ctx);
426
427#endif
428
429#if __cplusplus
430}
431#endif
432
433#endif
434

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