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man pages section 3: Extended Library Functions, Volume 1

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Updated: Wednesday, July 27, 2022
 
 

ei (3erl)

Name

ei - Routines for handling the Erlang binary term format.

Synopsis

Please see following description for synopsis

Description

ei(3)                         C Library Functions                        ei(3)



NAME
       ei - Routines for handling the Erlang binary term format.

DESCRIPTION
       The  library  ei contains macros and functions to encode and decode the
       Erlang binary term format.

       ei allows you to convert atoms, lists, numbers,  and  binaries  to  and
       from  the  binary format. This is useful when writing port programs and
       drivers.  ei  uses  a  given  buffer,   no   dynamic   memory   (except
       ei_decode_fun()) and is often quite fast.

       ei also handles C-nodes, C-programs that talks Erlang distribution with
       Erlang nodes (or other C-nodes)  using  the  Erlang  distribution  for-
       mat.The  ei  library is thread safe, and using threads, one process can
       handle multiple C-nodes.

       The decode and encode functions use a buffer and an index into the buf-
       fer, which points at the point where to encode and decode. The index is
       updated to point right after the term encoded/decoded. No  checking  is
       done  whether the term fits in the buffer or not. If encoding goes out-
       side the buffer, the program can crash.

       All functions take two parameters:

         * buf is a pointer to the buffer where the binary data is or will be.

         * index is a pointer to an index into the buffer. This  parameter  is
           incremented with the size of the term decoded/encoded.

       The data is thus at buf[*index] when an ei function is called.

       All  encode functions assume that the buf and index parameters point to
       a buffer large enough for the data. To get the size of an encoded term,
       without  encoding  it, pass NULL instead of a buffer pointer. Parameter
       index is incremented, but nothing will be encoded. This is the  way  in
       ei to "preflight" term encoding.

       There  are also encode functions that use a dynamic buffer. It is often
       more convenient to use these to encode data. All encode functions comes
       in two versions; those starting with ei_x_ use a dynamic buffer of type
       ei_x_buff.

       All functions return 0 if successful, otherwise -1 (for example,  if  a
       term  is  not of the expected type, or the data to decode is an invalid
       Erlang term).

       Some of the decode functions need a pre-allocated buffer.  This  buffer
       must  be  allocated  large  enough,  and  for  non-compound  types  the
       ei_get_type() function returns  the  size  required  (notice  that  for
       strings an extra byte is needed for the NULL-terminator).

DATA TYPES
         ei_term:


         typedef struct {
             char ei_type;
             int arity;
             int size;
             union {
              long i_val;
              double d_val;
              char atom_name[MAXATOMLEN_UTF8];
              erlang_pid pid;
              erlang_port port;
              erlang_ref ref;
             } value;
         } ei_term;

           Structure  written by ei_decode_ei_term(). The ei_type field is the
           type of the term which equals to what ei_get_type() sets *type to.

         ei_x_buff:
           A dynamically resized buffer. It is a struct  with  two  fields  of
           interest for the user:

           char *buff:
             Pointer to the dynamically allocated buffer.

           int index:
             Offset  to the next byte to write which also equals the amount of
             bytes currently written.

           An  ei_x_buff  is  initialized  by  calling  either  ei_x_new()  or
           ei_x_new_with_version().   The   memory   used  by  an  initialized
           ei_x_buff is released by calling ei_x_free().

         erlang_char_encoding:


         typedef enum {
             ERLANG_ASCII = 1,
             ERLANG_LATIN1 = 2,
             ERLANG_UTF8 = 4
         } erlang_char_encoding;

           The character encodings used  for  atoms.  ERLANG_ASCII  represents
           7-bit  ASCII.  Latin-1  and UTF-8 are different extensions of 7-bit
           ASCII. All 7-bit ASCII characters are valid Latin-1 and UTF-8 char-
           acters.  ASCII  and  Latin-1  both  represent each character by one
           byte. An UTF-8 character can consist  of  1-4  bytes.  Notice  that
           these constants are bit-flags and can be combined with bitwise OR.

         erlang_fun:
           Opaque data type representing an Erlang fun.

         erlang_pid:
           Opaque data type representing an Erlang process identifier.

         erlang_port:
           Opaque data type representing an Erlang port identifier.

         erlang_ref:
           Opaque data type representing an Erlang reference.

         erlang_trace:
           Opaque data type representing an Erlang sequential trace token.

EXPORTS
       int ei_cmp_pids(erlang_pid *a, erlang_pid *b)

              Types:

                 erlang_pid

              Compare two process identifiers. The comparison is done the same
              way as Erlang does.

              Returns 0 if a and b are equal. Returns a value less than 0 if a
              compares as less than b. Returns a value larger than 0 if a com-
              pares as larger than b.

       int ei_cmp_ports(erlang_port *a, erlang_port *b)

              Types:

                 erlang_port

              Compare two port identifiers. The comparison is  done  the  same
              way as Erlang does.

              Returns 0 if a and b are equal. Returns a value less than 0 if a
              compares as less than b. Returns a value larger than 0 if a com-
              pares as larger than b.

       int ei_cmp_refs(erlang_ref *a, erlang_ref *b)

              Types:

                 erlang_ref

              Compare  two  references. The comparison is done the same way as
              Erlang does.

              Returns 0 if a and b are equal. Returns a value less than 0 if a
              compares as less than b. Returns a value larger than 0 if a com-
              pares as larger than b.

       int ei_decode_atom(const char *buf, int *index, char *p)

              Decodes an atom from the binary format. The NULL-terminated name
              of  the  atom  is  placed  at p. At most MAXATOMLEN bytes can be
              placed in the buffer.

       int ei_decode_atom_as(const char *buf, int *index, char *p,  int  plen,
       erlang_char_encoding       want,       erlang_char_encoding*       was,
       erlang_char_encoding* result)

              Types:

                 erlang_char_encoding

              Decodes an atom from the binary format. The NULL-terminated name
              of the atom is placed in buffer at p of length plen bytes.

              The  wanted  string  encoding is specified by want. The original
              encoding used in the binary format (Latin-1  or  UTF-8)  can  be
              obtained  from *was. The encoding of the resulting string (7-bit
              ASCII, Latin-1, or UTF-8) can be obtained from *result. Both was
              and  result can be NULL. *result can differ from want if want is
              a bitwise OR'd combination like ERLANG_LATIN1|ERLANG_UTF8 or  if
              *result  turns  out to be pure 7-bit ASCII (compatible with both
              Latin-1 and UTF-8).

              This function fails if the atom is too long for the buffer or if
              it cannot be represented with encoding want.

              This  function  was  introduced  in  Erlang/OTP R16 as part of a
              first step to support UTF-8 atoms.

       int ei_decode_bignum(const char *buf, int *index, mpz_t obj)

              Decodes an integer in the binary format to a GMP mpz_t  integer.
              To use this function, the ei library must be configured and com-
              piled to use the GMP library.

       int ei_decode_binary(const char *buf, int *index, void *p, long *len)

              Decodes a binary from the binary format. Parameter len is set to
              the  actual  size  of the binary. Notice that ei_decode_binary()
              assumes that there is enough  room  for  the  binary.  The  size
              required can be fetched by ei_get_type().

       int  ei_decode_bitstring(const  char *buf, int *index, const char **pp,
       unsigned int *bitoffsp, size_t *nbitsp)

              Decodes a bit string from the binary format.

                pp:
                  Either NULL or *pp returns a pointer to the  first  byte  of
                  the  bit string. The returned bit string is readable as long
                  as the buffer pointed to by buf is readable and not  written
                  to.

                bitoffsp:
                  Either  NULL  or *bitoffsp returns the number of unused bits
                  in the first byte pointed to by *pp. The value of  *bitoffsp
                  is  between  0  and 7. Unused bits in the first byte are the
                  most significant bits.

                nbitsp:
                  Either NULL or *nbitsp returns the length of the bit  string
                  in bits.

              Returns 0 if it was a bit string term.

              The number of bytes pointed to by *pp, which are part of the bit
              string,  is  (*bitoffsp  +  *nbitsp  +  7)/8.  If  (*bitoffsp  +
              *bitsp)%8  > 0 then only (*bitoffsp + *bitsp)%8 bits of the last
              byte are used. Unused bits in the last byte are the  least  sig-
              nificant bits.

              The  values  of unused bits in the first and last byte are unde-
              fined and cannot be relied on.

              Number of bits may be divisible  by  8,  which  means  a  binary
              decodable    by    ei_decode_binary   is   also   decodable   by
              ei_decode_bitstring.

       int ei_decode_boolean(const char *buf, int *index, int *p)

              Decodes a boolean value from the binary  format.  A  boolean  is
              actually an atom, true decodes 1 and false decodes 0.

       int ei_decode_char(const char *buf, int *index, char *p)

              Decodes  a  char  (8-bit)  integer between 0-255 from the binary
              format. For historical reasons the returned integer is  of  type
              char.  Your  C  code  is to consider the returned value to be of
              type unsigned char even if the C compilers and system can define
              char to be signed.

       int ei_decode_double(const char *buf, int *index, double *p)

              Decodes  a  double-precision (64-bit) floating point number from
              the binary format.

       int ei_decode_ei_term(const char* buf, int* index, ei_term* term)

              Types:

                 ei_term

              Decodes any term, or at least tries to. If the term  pointed  at
              by  *index in buf fits in the term union, it is decoded, and the
              appropriate field in term->value is set, and  *index  is  incre-
              mented by the term size.

              The  function returns 1 on successful decoding, -1 on error, and
              0 if the term seems alright, but does not fit in the term struc-
              ture.  If 1 is returned, the index is incremented, and term con-
              tains the decoded term.

              The term structure contains the arity for a tuple or list,  size
              for  a  binary, string, or atom. It contains a term if it is any
              of the following: integer, float, atom, pid, port, or ref.

       int ei_decode_fun(const char *buf, int *index, erlang_fun *p)
       void free_fun(erlang_fun* f)

              Types:

                 erlang_fun

              Decodes a fun from the binary format. Parameter p is to be  NULL
              or  point  to  an  erlang_fun structure. This is the only decode
              function that allocates memory. When the erlang_fun is no longer
              needed,  it  is  to be freed with free_fun. (This has to do with
              the arbitrary size of the environment for a fun.)

       int ei_decode_iodata(const char *buf, int *index, int *size, char *out-
       buf)

              Decodes  a  term of the type iodata(). The iodata() term will be
              flattened an written into the buffer pointed to  by  the  outbuf
              argument.  The byte size of the iodata is written into the inte-
              ger variable pointed to by the size argument. Both size and out-
              buf  can  be  set  to  NULL. The integer pointed to by the index
              argument is updated to refer to the  term  following  after  the
              iodata()  term  regardless  of the the state of the size and the
              outbuf arguments.

              Note that the buffer pointed to by the outbuf argument  must  be
              large  enough if a non NULL value is passed as outbuf. You typi-
              cally want to call ei_decode_iodata() twice. First  with  a  non
              NULL size argument and a NULL outbuf argument in order to deter-
              mine the size of the buffer needed, and then once again in order
              to  do  the actual decoding. Note that the integer pointed to by
              index will be updated by the call determining the size as  well,
              so  you need to reset it before the second call doing the actual
              decoding.

              Returns 0 on success and -1 on failure. Failure might be  either
              due to invalid encoding of the term or due to the term not being
              of the type iodata(). On failure, the integer pointed to by  the
              index  argument  will  be updated to refer to the sub term where
              the failure was detected.

       int ei_decode_list_header(const char *buf, int *index, int *arity)

              Decodes a list header from the binary format. The number of ele-
              ments  is  returned  in  arity. The arity+1 elements follow (the
              last one is the tail of the list, normally an  empty  list).  If
              arity is 0, it is an empty list.

              Notice  that  lists  are  encoded  as  strings  if  they consist
              entirely of integers in the range 0..255. This function  do  not
              decode such strings, use ei_decode_string() instead.

       int ei_decode_long(const char *buf, int *index, long *p)

              Decodes a long integer from the binary format. If the code is 64
              bits,   the   function   ei_decode_long()   is   the   same   as
              ei_decode_longlong().

       int ei_decode_longlong(const char *buf, int *index, long long *p)

              Decodes  a  GCC long long or Visual C++ __int64 (64-bit) integer
              from the binary format.

       int ei_decode_map_header(const char *buf, int *index, int *arity)

              Decodes a map header from the binary format. The number of  key-
              value  pairs  is  returned  in *arity. Keys and values follow in
              this order: K1, V1, K2, V2, ..., Kn, Vn. This makes a  total  of
              arity*2 terms. If arity is zero, it is an empty map. A correctly
              encoded map does not have duplicate keys.

       int ei_decode_pid(const char *buf, int *index, erlang_pid *p)

              Types:

                 erlang_pid

              Decodes a process identifier (pid) from the binary format.

       int ei_decode_port(const char *buf, int *index, erlang_port *p)

              Types:

                 erlang_port

              Decodes a port identifier from the binary format.

       int ei_decode_ref(const char *buf, int *index, erlang_ref *p)

              Types:

                 erlang_ref

              Decodes a reference from the binary format.

       int ei_decode_string(const char *buf, int *index, char *p)

              Decodes a string from the binary format. A string in Erlang is a
              list of integers between 0 and 255. Notice that as the string is
              just  a  list,  sometimes  lists  are  encoded  as  strings   by
              term_to_binary/1, even if it was not intended.

              The  string  is copied to p, and enough space must be allocated.
              The returned string is NULL-terminated, so you must add an extra
              byte to the memory requirement.

       int ei_decode_trace(const char *buf, int *index, erlang_trace *p)

              Types:

                 erlang_trace

              Decodes an Erlang trace token from the binary format.

       int ei_decode_tuple_header(const char *buf, int *index, int *arity)

              Decodes  a  tuple  header, the number of elements is returned in
              arity. The tuple elements follow in order in the buffer.

       int ei_decode_ulong(const char *buf, int *index, unsigned long *p)

              Decodes an unsigned long integer from the binary format. If  the
              code  is  64 bits, the function ei_decode_ulong() is the same as
              ei_decode_ulonglong().

       int ei_decode_ulonglong(const char *buf, int *index, unsigned long long
       *p)

              Decodes  a GCC unsigned long long or Visual C++ unsigned __int64
              (64-bit) integer from the binary format.

       int ei_decode_version(const char *buf, int *index, int *version)

              Decodes the version magic number for the Erlang binary term for-
              mat. It must be the first token in a binary term.

       int ei_encode_atom(char *buf, int *index, const char *p)
       int ei_encode_atom_len(char *buf, int *index, const char *p, int len)
       int ei_x_encode_atom(ei_x_buff* x, const char *p)
       int ei_x_encode_atom_len(ei_x_buff* x, const char *p, int len)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes an atom in the binary format. Parameter p is the name of
              the atom in Latin-1 encoding. Only up to MAXATOMLEN-1 bytes  are
              encoded.  The  name  is  to  be  NULL-terminated, except for the
              ei_x_encode_atom_len() function.

       int  ei_encode_atom_as(char  *buf,   int   *index,   const   char   *p,
       erlang_char_encoding from_enc, erlang_char_encoding to_enc)
       int  ei_encode_atom_len_as(char  *buf,  int  *index, const char *p, int
       len, erlang_char_encoding from_enc, erlang_char_encoding to_enc)
       int ei_x_encode_atom_as(ei_x_buff* x, const char *p, erlang_char_encod-
       ing from_enc, erlang_char_encoding to_enc)
       int  ei_x_encode_atom_len_as(ei_x_buff*  x,  const  char  *p,  int len,
       erlang_char_encoding from_enc, erlang_char_encoding to_enc)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff
                 erlang_char_encoding

              Encodes an atom in the binary format. Parameter p is the name of
              the  atom  with  character encoding from_enc (ASCII, Latin-1, or
              UTF-8). The name must either be NULL-terminated  or  a  function
              variant with a len parameter must be used.

              The  encoding  fails  if  p  is  not  a valid string in encoding
              from_enc.

              Argument to_enc is ignored. As from Erlang/OTP 20  the  encoding
              is  always  done  in  UTF-8 which is readable by nodes as old as
              Erlang/OTP R16.

       int ei_encode_bignum(char *buf, int *index, mpz_t obj)
       int ei_x_encode_bignum(ei_x_buff *x, mpz_t obj)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes a GMP mpz_t integer to binary format. To use this  func-
              tion,  the ei library must be configured and compiled to use the
              GMP library.

       int ei_encode_binary(char *buf, int *index, const void *p, long len)
       int ei_x_encode_binary(ei_x_buff* x, const void *p, long len)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes a binary in the binary format. The data is at p, of  len
              bytes length.

       int  ei_encode_bitstring(char  *buf,  int *index, const char *p, size_t
       bitoffs, size_t nbits)
       int ei_x_encode_bitstring(ei_x_buff* x, const char *p, size_t  bitoffs,
       size_t nbits)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes a bit string in the binary format.

              The  data  is  at p. The length of the bit string is nbits bits.
              The first bitoffs bits of the data at p are  unused.  The  first
              byte  which  is  part  of  the  bit  string is p[bitoffs/8]. The
              bitoffs%8 most significant bits of the first  byte  p[bitoffs/8]
              are unused.

              The  number of bytes which is part of the bit string is (bitoffs
              + nbits + 7)/8. If (bitoffs + nbits)%8 > 0 then only (bitoffs  +
              nbits)%8 bits of the last byte are used. Unused bits in the last
              byte are the least significant bits.

              The values of unused bits are disregarded and does not  need  to
              be cleared.

       int ei_encode_boolean(char *buf, int *index, int p)
       int ei_x_encode_boolean(ei_x_buff* x, int p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes  a  boolean  value as the atom true if p is not zero, or
              false if p is zero.

       int ei_encode_char(char *buf, int *index, char p)
       int ei_x_encode_char(ei_x_buff* x, char p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes a char (8-bit) as an integer between 0-255 in the binary
              format.  For  historical reasons the integer argument is of type
              char. Your C code is to consider the specified argument to be of
              type unsigned char even if the C compilers and system may define
              char to be signed.

       int ei_encode_double(char *buf, int *index, double p)
       int ei_x_encode_double(ei_x_buff* x, double p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes a double-precision (64-bit) floating point number in the
              binary format.

              Returns -1 if the floating point number is not finite.

       int ei_encode_empty_list(char* buf, int* index)
       int ei_x_encode_empty_list(ei_x_buff* x)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes an empty list. It is often used at the tail of a list.

       int ei_encode_fun(char *buf, int *index, const erlang_fun *p)
       int ei_x_encode_fun(ei_x_buff* x, const erlang_fun* fun)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff
                 erlang_fun

              Encodes  a  fun  in  the binary format. Parameter p points to an
              erlang_fun structure. The erlang_fun is not freed automatically,
              the  free_fun  is  to  be  called if the fun is not needed after
              encoding.

       int ei_encode_list_header(char *buf, int *index, int arity)
       int ei_x_encode_list_header(ei_x_buff* x, int arity)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes a list header, with a specified arity. The next  arity+1
              terms  are  the elements (actually its arity cons cells) and the
              tail of the list. Lists and tuples are encoded  recursively,  so
              that a list can contain another list or tuple.

              For example, to encode the list [c, d, [e | f]]:

              ei_encode_list_header(buf, &i, 3);
              ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "c");
              ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "d");
              ei_encode_list_header(buf, &i, 1);
              ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "e");
              ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "f");
              ei_encode_empty_list(buf, &i);

          Note:
              It  may seem that there is no way to create a list without know-
              ing the number of elements in advance. But  indeed  there  is  a
              way.  Notice that the list [a, b, c] can be written as [a | [b |
              [c]]]. Using this, a list can be written as conses.


              To encode a list, without knowing the arity in advance:

              while (something()) {
                  ei_x_encode_list_header(&x, 1);
                  ei_x_encode_ulong(&x, i); /* just an example */
              }
              ei_x_encode_empty_list(&x);

       int ei_encode_long(char *buf, int *index, long p)
       int ei_x_encode_long(ei_x_buff* x, long p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes a long integer in the binary format. If the code  is  64
              bits,   the   function   ei_encode_long()   is   the   same   as
              ei_encode_longlong().

       int ei_encode_longlong(char *buf, int *index, long long p)
       int ei_x_encode_longlong(ei_x_buff* x, long long p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes a GCC long long or Visual C++ __int64  (64-bit)  integer
              in the binary format.

       int ei_encode_map_header(char *buf, int *index, int arity)
       int ei_x_encode_map_header(ei_x_buff* x, int arity)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes  a  map header, with a specified arity. The next arity*2
              terms encoded will be the keys and values of the map encoded  in
              the following order: K1, V1, K2, V2, ..., Kn, Vn.

              For example, to encode the map #{a => "Apple", b => "Banana"}:

              ei_x_encode_map_header(&x, 2);
              ei_x_encode_atom(&x, "a");
              ei_x_encode_string(&x, "Apple");
              ei_x_encode_atom(&x, "b");
              ei_x_encode_string(&x, "Banana");

              A correctly encoded map cannot have duplicate keys.

       int ei_encode_pid(char *buf, int *index, const erlang_pid *p)
       int ei_x_encode_pid(ei_x_buff* x, const erlang_pid *p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff
                 erlang_pid

              Encodes an Erlang process identifier (pid) in the binary format.
              Parameter p points  to  an  erlang_pid  structure  which  should
              either   have   been   obtained  earlier  with  ei_decode_pid(),
              ei_self() or created by ei_make_pid().

       int ei_encode_port(char *buf, int *index, const erlang_port *p)
       int ei_x_encode_port(ei_x_buff* x, const erlang_port *p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff
                 erlang_port

              Encodes an Erlang port in the binary format. Parameter p  points
              to an erlang_port structure which should have been obtained ear-
              lier with ei_decode_port(),

       int ei_encode_ref(char *buf, int *index, const erlang_ref *p)
       int ei_x_encode_ref(ei_x_buff* x, const erlang_ref *p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff
                 erlang_ref

              Encodes an Erlang reference in the binary  format.  Parameter  p
              points  to an erlang_ref structure which either should have been
              obtained   earlier   with   ei_decode_ref(),   or   created   by
              ei_make_ref().

       int ei_encode_string(char *buf, int *index, const char *p)
       int ei_encode_string_len(char *buf, int *index, const char *p, int len)
       int ei_x_encode_string(ei_x_buff* x, const char *p)
       int ei_x_encode_string_len(ei_x_buff* x, const char* s, int len)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes  a string in the binary format. (A string in Erlang is a
              list, but is encoded as a character array in the binary format.)
              The   string   is   to   be   NULL-terminated,  except  for  the
              ei_x_encode_string_len() function.

       int ei_encode_trace(char *buf, int *index, const erlang_trace *p)
       int ei_x_encode_trace(ei_x_buff* x, const erlang_trace *p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff
                 erlang_trace

              Encodes an Erlang trace token in the binary format. Parameter  p
              points  to  a  erlang_trace  structure  which  should  have been
              obtained earlier with ei_decode_trace().

       int ei_encode_tuple_header(char *buf, int *index, int arity)
       int ei_x_encode_tuple_header(ei_x_buff* x, int arity)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes a tuple header, with a specified arity. The  next  arity
              terms  encoded  will  be  the  elements of the tuple. Tuples and
              lists are encoded recursively,  so  that  a  tuple  can  contain
              another tuple or list.

              For example, to encode the tuple {a, {b, {}}}:

              ei_encode_tuple_header(buf, &i, 2);
              ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "a");
              ei_encode_tuple_header(buf, &i, 2);
              ei_encode_atom(buf, &i, "b");
              ei_encode_tuple_header(buf, &i, 0);

       int ei_encode_ulong(char *buf, int *index, unsigned long p)
       int ei_x_encode_ulong(ei_x_buff* x, unsigned long p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes  an  unsigned  long integer in the binary format. If the
              code is 64 bits, the function ei_encode_ulong() is the  same  as
              ei_encode_ulonglong().

       int ei_encode_ulonglong(char *buf, int *index, unsigned long long p)
       int ei_x_encode_ulonglong(ei_x_buff* x, unsigned long long p)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes  a GCC unsigned long long or Visual C++ unsigned __int64
              (64-bit) integer in the binary format.

       int ei_encode_version(char *buf, int *index)
       int ei_x_encode_version(ei_x_buff* x)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Encodes a version magic number for the binary  format.  Must  be
              the first token in a binary term.

       int  ei_get_type(const  char  *buf,  const  int  *index, int *type, int
       *size)

              Returns the type in *type and size in *size of the encoded term.
              For  strings  and  atoms,  size  is the number of characters not
              including the terminating NULL.  For  binaries  and  bitstrings,
              *size  is the number of bytes. For lists, tuples and maps, *size
              is the arity of the object. For bignum integers,  *size  is  the
              number  of bytes for the absolute value of the bignum. For other
              types, *size is 0. In all cases, index is left unchanged.

              Currently *type is one of:

                ERL_ATOM_EXT:
                  Decode using either  ei_decode_atom(),  ei_decode_atom_as(),
                  or ei_decode_boolean().

                ERL_BINARY_EXT:
                  Decode   using   either  ei_decode_binary(),  ei_decode_bit-
                  string(), or ei_decode_iodata().

                ERL_BIT_BINARY_EXT:
                  Decode using ei_decode_bitstring().

                ERL_FLOAT_EXT:
                  Decode using ei_decode_double().

                ERL_NEW_FUN_EXT
                  ERL_FUN_EXT
                  ERL_EXPORT_EXT: Decode using ei_decode_fun().

                ERL_SMALL_INTEGER_EXT
                  ERL_INTEGER_EXT
                  ERL_SMALL_BIG_EXT
                  ERL_LARGE_BIG_EXT:  Decode  using  either  ei_decode_char(),
                  ei_decode_long(),  ei_decode_longlong(),  ei_decode_ulong(),
                  ei_decode_ulonglong(), or ei_decode_bignum().

                ERL_LIST_EXT
                  ERL_NIL_EXT: Decode using either ei_decode_list_header(), or
                  ei_decode_iodata().

                ERL_STRING_EXT:
                  Decode      using      either     ei_decode_string(),     or
                  ei_decode_iodata().

                ERL_MAP_EXT:
                  Decode using ei_decode_map_header().

                ERL_PID_EXT:
                  Decode using ei_decode_pid().

                ERL_PORT_EXT:
                  Decode using ei_decode_port().

                ERL_NEW_REFERENCE_EXT:
                  Decode using ei_decode_ref().

                ERL_SMALL_TUPLE_EXT
                  ERL_LARGE_TUPLE_EXT: Decode using ei_decode_tuple_header().

              Instead of decoding a term you can also skipped past it  if  you
              are not interested in the data by usage of ei_skip_term().

       int ei_init(void)

              Initialize  the  ei library. This function should be called once
              (and only once) before calling any other functionality in the ei
              library.

              On  success  zero  is returned. On failure a posix error code is
              returned.

       int ei_print_term(FILE* fp, const char* buf, int* index)
       int ei_s_print_term(char** s, const char* buf, int* index)

              Prints a term, in clear text, to the file specified  by  fp,  or
              the buffer pointed to by s. It tries to resemble the term print-
              ing in the Erlang shell.

              In ei_s_print_term(), parameter s is to point to  a  dynamically
              (malloc) allocated string of BUFSIZ bytes or a NULL pointer. The
              string can be reallocated (and *s can be updated) by this  func-
              tion  if  the  result is more than BUFSIZ characters. The string
              returned is NULL-terminated.

              The return value is the number of characters written to the file
              or  string,  or  -1 if buf[index] does not contain a valid term.
              Unfortunately, I/O errors on fp is not checked.

              Argument index is updated, that is, this function can be  viewed
              as  a  decode function that decodes a term into a human-readable
              format.

       void ei_set_compat_rel(unsigned release_number)

              In general, the ei library is guaranteed to be  compatible  with
              other  Erlang/OTP  components that are 2 major releases older or
              newer than the ei library itself.

              Sometimes an exception to the above rule has to be made to  make
              new features (or even bug fixes) possible. A call to ei_set_com-
              pat_rel(release_number) sets the  ei  library  in  compatibility
              mode of OTP release release_number.

              The  only  useful value for release_number is currently 21. This
              will only be useful and have an effect if bit strings or  export
              funs  are  received  from  a  connected node. Before OTP 22, bit
              strings and export funs were not  supported  by  ei.  They  were
              instead encoded using an undocumented fallback tuple format when
              sent from the emulator to ei:

                Bit string:
                  The term <<42, 1:1>> was encoded as {<<42,  128>>,  1}.  The
                  first  element  of the tuple is a binary and the second ele-
                  ment denotes how many bits of the last bytes are part of the
                  bit string. In this example only the most significant bit of
                  the last byte (128) is part of the bit string.

                Export fun:
                  The term fun lists:map/2 was encoded as {lists,map}. A tuple
                  with the module, function and a missing arity.

              If ei_set_compat_rel(21) is not called then a connected emulator
              will send bit strings and export  funs  correctly  encoded.  The
              functions  ei_decode_bitstring  and ei_decode_fun has to be used
              to decode such terms. Calling ei_set_compat_rel(21) should  only
              be  done  as  a  workaround to keep an old implementation alive,
              which expects to receive the undocumented tuple formats for  bit
              strings and/or export funs.

          Note:
              If  this function is called, it can only be called once and must
              be called before any other  functions  in  the  ei  library  are
              called.


       int ei_skip_term(const char* buf, int* index)

              Skips a term in the specified buffer; recursively skips elements
              of lists and tuples, so that a full term is skipped. This  is  a
              way to get the size of an Erlang term.

              buf is the buffer.

              index is updated to point right after the term in the buffer.

          Note:
              This  can  be useful when you want to hold arbitrary terms: skip
              them and copy the binary term data to some buffer.


              Returns 0 on success, otherwise -1.

       int ei_x_append(ei_x_buff* x, const ei_x_buff* x2)
       int ei_x_append_buf(ei_x_buff* x, const char* buf, int len)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Appends data at the end of buffer x.

       int ei_x_format(ei_x_buff* x, const char* fmt, ...)
       int ei_x_format_wo_ver(ei_x_buff* x, const char *fmt, ... )

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff
                 erlang_pid

              Formats a term, given as a string, to a  buffer.  Works  like  a
              sprintf  for  Erlang  terms.  fmt contains a format string, with
              arguments like ~d, to insert terms from variables. The following
              formats are supported (with the C types given):

              ~a  An atom, char*
              ~c  A character, char
              ~s  A string, char*
              ~i  An integer, int
              ~l  A long integer, long int
              ~u  A unsigned long integer, unsigned long int
              ~f  A float, float
              ~d  A double float, double float
              ~p  An Erlang pid, erlang_pid*

              For example, to encode a tuple with some stuff:

              ei_x_format("{~a,~i,~d}", "numbers", 12, 3.14159)
              encodes the tuple {numbers,12,3.14159}

              ei_x_format_wo_ver()  formats into a buffer, without the initial
              version byte.

       int ei_x_free(ei_x_buff* x)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Deallocates the dynamically  allocated  content  of  the  buffer
              referred  by  x.  After  deallocation,  the buff field is set to
              NULL.

       int ei_x_new(ei_x_buff* x)
       int ei_x_new_with_version(ei_x_buff* x)

              Types:

                 ei_x_buff

              Initialize the dynamically realizable buffer referred to  by  x.
              The  fields of the structure pointed to by parameter x is filled
              in, and a default buffer is  allocated.  ei_x_new_with_version()
              also  puts  an initial version byte, which is used in the binary
              format (so that ei_x_encode_version() will not be needed.)

DEBUG INFORMATION
       Some tips on what to check when the emulator does not seem  to  receive
       the terms that you send:

         * Be  careful  with  the  version header, use ei_x_new_with_version()
           when appropriate.

         * Turn on distribution tracing on the Erlang node.

         * Check the result codes from ei_decode_-calls.

Ericsson AB                    erl_interface 5.1                         ei(3)