This library offers basic facilities to convert Lua values to and
from C structs.
Its main functions are
struct.pack,
which packs multiple Lua values into a struct-like string;
and struct.unpack,
which unpacks multiple Lua values from a given struct-like string.
The fist argument to both functions is a format string, which describes the layout of the structure. The format string has the following syntax:
"<" means little-endian;
">" means big-endian.
When no endian flag is given,
the functions use the machine's native endianness.
"!n",
where n is the maximum required alignment
(necessarily a power of 2).
An absent n means the machine's native alignment.
An absent alignment flag means no alignment at all
(which is the same as !1).
"x" a padding byte with no corresponding Lua value.
"b" a signed char.
"B" an unsigned char.
"h" a signed short (native size).
"H" an unsigned short (native size).
"l" a signed long (native size).
"L" an unsigned long (native size).
"in" a signed integer with n bytes
(where n must be a power of 2).
An absent n means the native size of an int.
"In" like "in" but unsigned.
"f" a float (native size).
"d" a double (native size).
"s" a zero-terminated string.
"cn" a sequence of exactly n chars
corresponding to a single Lua string.
An absent n means 1.
When packing, the given string must have at least n characters
(extra characters are discarded).
"c0" this is like "cn",
except that the n is given by other means.
When packing, n is the length of the given string.
When unpacking, n is the value of the previous unpacked value
(which must be a number).
In that case, this previous value is not returned.
struct.
struct.pack (fmt, d1, d2, ...)
Returns a string containing the values d1, d2, etc.
packed according to the format string fmt.
struct.c as a
dynamic library.
In Linux you can use the following command:
> gcc -Wall -O2 -shared -o struct.so struct.cIn Mac, you should define the environment variable
MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET
as 10.3 and then write
> gcc -bundle -undefined dynamic_lookup -Wall -O2 -o struct.so struct.c
In Windows, you must generate a DLL exporting the single
symbol luaopen_struct.
The code print(struct.size("i")) prints the
size of a machine's native int.
To pack and unpack the structure
struct Str {
char b;
int i[4];
};
in Linux/gcc/Pentium (little-endian, maximum alignment of 4),
you can use the string "<!4biiii".
If you need to code a structure with a large array,
you may use string.rep to automatically
generate part of the string format.
For instance, for the structure
struct Str {
double x;
int i[400];
};
you may build the format string with
the code "d"..string.rep("i", 400).
To pack a string with its length coded in its first byte, use the following code:
x = struct.pack("Bc0", string.len(s), s)
To unpack that string, do as follows:
s = struct.unpack("Bc0", x)
Notice that the length (read by the element "B")
is not returned.
Suppose we have to decode a string s
with an unknown number of doubles;
the end is marked by a zero value.
We can use the following code:
local a = {}
local i = 1 -- index where to read
while true do
local d
d, i = struct.unpack("d", s, i)
if d == 0 then break end
table.insert(a, d)
end
To pack a string in a fixed-width field with 10 characters padded with blanks, do as follows:
x = struct.pack("c10", s .. string.rep(" ", 10))