TITLE

Perl's internal data types

VERSION

1.3

CURRENT

Maintainer: Dan Sugalski <dan@sidhe.org>
Class: Internals
PDD Number: 4
Version: 1.3
Status: Developing
Last Modified: 02 July 2001
PDD Format: 1
Language: English

HISTORY

Version 1.3, 2 July 2001
Version 1.2, 2 July 2001
Version 1.1, 2 March 2001
Version 1, 1 March 2001

CHANGES

Version 1.3

Fixed some silly typos and dropped phrases.

Took all the underscores out of the field names.

Version 1.2

The string header format has changed some to allow for type tagging. The flags information for strings has changed as well.

Version 1.1

INT and NUM are now concepts rather than data structures, as making them data structures was a Bad Idea.

Version 1

None. First version

ABSTRACT

This PDD describes perl's known internal data types.

DESCRIPTION

This PDD details the primitive datatypes that the perl core knows how to deal with. These types are lower-level than what's presented to the perl programmer.

IMPLEMENTATION

Integer data types

Integer data types are generically referred to as INTs. INTs are conceptual things, and there is no data structure that corresponds to them.

Platform-native integer

These are whatever size native integer was chosen at perl configuration time. The C-level typedef IV and UV get you a platform-native signed and unsigned integer respectively.

Arbitrary precision integers

Big integers, or bigints, are arbitrary-length integer numbers. The only limit to the number of digits in a bigint is the lesser of the amount of memory available or the maximum value that can be represented by a UV. This will generally allow at least 4 billion digits, which ought to be far more than enough for anyone.

The C structure that represents a bigint is:

struct bigint {
  void *buffer;
  UV length;
  IV exponent;
  UV flags;
}

The num_buffer pointer points to the buffer holding the actual number, length is the length of the buffer, exponent is the base 10 exponent for the number (so 2e4532 doesn't take up much space), and flags are some flags for the bigint.

Note:The flags and exponent fields may be generally unused, but are in to make the base structure identical in size and field types to other structures. They may be removed before the first release of perl 6.

Floating point data types

Floating point data types are generically referred to as NUMs. Like INTs, NUMs are a conceptual things, not a real data structure.

Platform native float

These are whatever size float was chosen when perl was configured. The C level typedef NV will get you one of these.

Arbitrary precision decimal numbers

Arbitrary precision decimal numbers, or bignums, can have any number of digits before and after the decimal point. They are represented by the structure:

struct bignum {
  void *buffer;
  UV length;
  IV exponent;
  UV flags;
}

and yes, this looks identical to the bigint structure. This isn't accidental. Upgrading a bigint to a bignum should be quick.

String data types

Perl has a single internal string form:

struct perl_string {
  void *buffer;
  UV allocated;
  UV bytes;
  UV flags;
  UV characters;
  UV encoding;
  UV type;
  UV unused;
}

The fields are:

buffer

Pointer to the start of the string's data.

allocated

How many bytes are allocated in the buffer.

bytes

How many bytes are used in the buffer.

flags

Flags indicating whatever. Bits 0-15 are reserved for perl, bits 16-23 for the encoding/decoding code, and the rest for the type code.

characters

How many characters are in the buffer. An optional cache field.

encoding

How the data is encoded, for example fixed 8-bit characters, UTF-8, or UTF-32. An index into the encoding/decoding function table. Note that this specifies encoding only--it's valid to encode EBCDIC characters with the UTF-8 algorithm. Silly, but valid.

type

What sort of string data is in the buffer, for example ASCII, EBCDIC, or Unicode. Used to index into the table of string functions.

unused

Filler. Here to make sure we're both exactly double the size of a bigint/bigfloat header and to make sure we don't cross cache lines on any modern processor.

ATTACHMENTS

None

REFERENCES

The perl modules Math::BigInt and Math::BigFloat. The Unicode standard at http://www.unicode.org.

GLOSSARY

Type

Type refers to a low-level perl data type, such as a string or integer.

Class

Class refers to a higher-level piece of perl data. Each class has its own vtable, which is a class' distinguishing mark. Classes live one step below the perl source level, and should not be confused with perl packages.

Package

A package is a perl source level construct.