// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. // You may obtain a copy of the License at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. // // Copyright 2005-2010 Google, Inc. // Author: jpr@google.com (Jake Ratkiewicz) // This file defines the registration mechanism for new operations. // These operations are designed to enable scripts to work with FST classes // at a high level. // If you have a new arc type and want these operations to work with FSTs // with that arc type, see below for the registration steps // you must take. // These methods are only recommended for use in high-level scripting // applications. Most users should use the lower-level templated versions // corresponding to these. // If you have a new arc type you'd like these operations to work with, // use the REGISTER_FST_OPERATIONS macro defined in fstcsript.h // If you have a custom operation you'd like to define, you need four // components. In the following, assume you want to create a new operation // with the signature // // void Foo(const FstClass &ifst, MutableFstClass *ofst); // // You need: // // 1) A way to bundle the args that your new Foo operation will take, as // a single struct. The template structs in arg-packs.h provide a handy // way to do this. In Foo's case, that might look like this: // // typedef args::Package FooArgs; // // Note: this package of args is going to be passed by non-const pointer. // // 2) A function template that is able to perform Foo, given the args and // arc type. Yours might look like this: // // template // void Foo(FooArgs *args) { // // Pull out the actual, arc-templated FSTs // const Fst &ifst = args->arg1.GetFst(); // MutableFst *ofst = args->arg2->GetMutableFst(); // // // actually perform foo on ifst and ofst... // } // // 3) a client-facing function for your operation. This would look like // the following: // // void Foo(const FstClass &ifst, MutableFstClass *ofst) { // // Check that the arc types of the FSTs match // if (!ArcTypesMatch(ifst, *ofst, "Foo")) return; // // package the args // FooArgs args(ifst, ofst); // // Finally, call the operation // Apply >("Foo", ifst->ArcType(), &args); // } // // The Apply<> function template takes care of the link between 2 and 3, // provided you also have: // // 4) A registration for your new operation, on the arc types you care about. // This can be provided easily by the REGISTER_FST_OPERATION macro in // operations.h: // // REGISTER_FST_OPERATION(Foo, StdArc, FooArgs); // REGISTER_FST_OPERATION(Foo, MyArc, FooArgs); // // .. etc // // // That's it! Now when you call Foo(const FstClass &, MutableFstClass *), // it dispatches (in #3) via the Apply<> function to the correct // instantiation of the template function in #2. // #ifndef FST_SCRIPT_SCRIPT_IMPL_H_ #define FST_SCRIPT_SCRIPT_IMPL_H_ // // This file contains general-purpose templates which are used in the // implementation of the operations. // #include using std::pair; using std::make_pair; #include #include #include #include #include namespace fst { namespace script { // // A generic register for operations with various kinds of signatures. // Needed since every function signature requires a new registration class. // The pair is understood to be the operation name and arc // type; subclasses (or typedefs) need only provide the operation signature. // template class GenericOperationRegister : public GenericRegister, OperationSignature, GenericOperationRegister > { public: void RegisterOperation(const string &operation_name, const string &arc_type, OperationSignature op) { this->SetEntry(make_pair(operation_name, arc_type), op); } OperationSignature GetOperation( const string &operation_name, const string &arc_type) { return this->GetEntry(make_pair(operation_name, arc_type)); } protected: virtual string ConvertKeyToSoFilename( const pair& key) const { // Just use the old-style FST for now. string legal_type(key.second); // the arc type ConvertToLegalCSymbol(&legal_type); return legal_type + "-arc.so"; } }; // Operation package - everything you need to register a new type of operation // The ArgPack should be the type that's passed into each wrapped function - // for instance, it might be a struct containing all the args. // It's always passed by pointer, so const members should be used to enforce // constness where it's needed. Return values should be implemented as a // member of ArgPack as well. template struct Operation { typedef ArgPack Args; typedef void (*OpType)(ArgPack *args); // The register (hash) type typedef GenericOperationRegister Register; // The register-er type typedef GenericRegisterer Registerer; }; // Macro for registering new types of operations. #define REGISTER_FST_OPERATION(Op, Arc, ArgPack) \ static fst::script::Operation::Registerer \ arc_dispatched_operation_ ## ArgPack ## Op ## Arc ## _registerer( \ make_pair(#Op, Arc::Type()), Op) // // Template function to apply an operation by name // template void Apply(const string &op_name, const string &arc_type, typename OpReg::Args *args) { typename OpReg::Register *reg = OpReg::Register::GetRegister(); typename OpReg::OpType op = reg->GetOperation(op_name, arc_type); if (op == 0) { FSTERROR() << "No operation found for \"" << op_name << "\" on " << "arc type " << arc_type; return; } op(args); } // Helper that logs to ERROR if the arc types of a and b don't match. // The op_name is also printed. bool ArcTypesMatch(const FstClass &a, const FstClass &b, const string &op_name); } // namespace script } // namespace fst #endif // FST_SCRIPT_SCRIPT_IMPL_H_