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6.13.11 Fluids and Dynamic States

A fluid is a variable whose value is associated with the dynamic extent of a function call. In the same way that an operating system runs a process with a given set of current input and output ports (or file descriptors), in Guile you can arrange to call a function while binding a fluid to a particular value. That association between fluid and value will exist during the dynamic extent of the function call.

Fluids are therefore a building block for implementing dynamically scoped variables. Dynamically scoped variables are useful when you want to set a variable to a value during some dynamic extent in the execution of your program and have them revert to their original value when the control flow is outside of this dynamic extent. See the description of with-fluids below for details. This association between fluids, values, and dynamic extents is robust to multiple entries (as when a captured continuation is invoked more than once) and early exits (for example, when throwing exceptions).

Guile uses fluids to implement parameters (see Parameters). Usually you just want to use parameters directly. However it can be useful to know what a fluid is and how it works, so that’s what this section is about.

The current set of fluid-value associations can be captured in a dynamic state object. A dynamic extent is simply that: a snapshot of the current fluid-value associations. Guile users can capture the current dynamic state with current-dynamic-state and restore it later via with-dynamic-state or similar procedures. This facility is especially useful when implementing lightweight thread-like abstractions.

New fluids are created with make-fluid and fluid? is used for testing whether an object is actually a fluid. The values stored in a fluid can be accessed with fluid-ref and fluid-set!.

See Thread Local Variables, for further notes on fluids, threads, parameters, and dynamic states.

Scheme Procedure: make-fluid [dflt]
C Function: scm_make_fluid ()
C Function: scm_make_fluid_with_default (dflt)

Return a newly created fluid, whose initial value is dflt, or #f if dflt is not given. Fluids are objects that can hold one value per dynamic state. That is, modifications to this value are only visible to code that executes with the same dynamic state as the modifying code. When a new dynamic state is constructed, it inherits the values from its parent. Because each thread normally executes with its own dynamic state, you can use fluids for thread local storage.

Scheme Procedure: make-unbound-fluid
C Function: scm_make_unbound_fluid ()

Return a new fluid that is initially unbound (instead of being implicitly bound to some definite value).

Scheme Procedure: fluid? obj
C Function: scm_fluid_p (obj)

Return #t if obj is a fluid; otherwise, return #f.

Scheme Procedure: fluid-ref fluid
C Function: scm_fluid_ref (fluid)

Return the value associated with fluid in the current dynamic root. If fluid has not been set, then return its default value. Calling fluid-ref on an unbound fluid produces a runtime error.

Scheme Procedure: fluid-set! fluid value
C Function: scm_fluid_set_x (fluid, value)

Set the value associated with fluid in the current dynamic root.

Scheme Procedure: fluid-ref* fluid depth
C Function: scm_fluid_ref_star (fluid, depth)

Return the depthth oldest value associated with fluid in the current thread. If depth equals or exceeds the number of values that have been assigned to fluid, return the default value of the fluid. (fluid-ref* f 0) is equivalent to (fluid-ref f).

fluid-ref* is useful when you want to maintain a stack-like structure in a fluid, such as the stack of current exception handlers. Using fluid-ref* instead of an explicit stack allows any partial continuation captured by call-with-prompt to only capture the bindings made within the limits of the prompt instead of the entire continuation. See Prompts, for more on delimited continuations.

Scheme Procedure: fluid-unset! fluid
C Function: scm_fluid_unset_x (fluid)

Disassociate the given fluid from any value, making it unbound.

Scheme Procedure: fluid-bound? fluid
C Function: scm_fluid_bound_p (fluid)

Returns #t if the given fluid is bound to a value, otherwise #f.

with-fluids* temporarily changes the values of one or more fluids, so that the given procedure and each procedure called by it access the given values. After the procedure returns, the old values are restored.

Scheme Procedure: with-fluid* fluid value thunk
C Function: scm_with_fluid (fluid, value, thunk)

Set fluid to value temporarily, and call thunk. thunk must be a procedure with no argument.

Scheme Procedure: with-fluids* fluids values thunk
C Function: scm_with_fluids (fluids, values, thunk)

Set fluids to values temporary, and call thunk. fluids must be a list of fluids and values must be the same number of their values to be applied. Each substitution is done in the order given. thunk must be a procedure with no argument. It is called inside a dynamic-wind and the fluids are set/restored when control enter or leaves the established dynamic extent.

Scheme Macro: with-fluids ((fluid value) …) body1 body2 …

Execute body body1 body2 … while each fluid is set to the corresponding value. Both fluid and value are evaluated and fluid must yield a fluid. The body is executed inside a dynamic-wind and the fluids are set/restored when control enter or leaves the established dynamic extent.

C Function: SCM scm_c_with_fluids (SCM fluids, SCM vals, SCM (*cproc)(void *), void *data)
C Function: SCM scm_c_with_fluid (SCM fluid, SCM val, SCM (*cproc)(void *), void *data)

The function scm_c_with_fluids is like scm_with_fluids except that it takes a C function to call instead of a Scheme thunk.

The function scm_c_with_fluid is similar but only allows one fluid to be set instead of a list.

C Function: void scm_dynwind_fluid (SCM fluid, SCM val)

This function must be used inside a pair of calls to scm_dynwind_begin and scm_dynwind_end (see Dynamic Wind). During the dynwind context, the fluid fluid is set to val.

More precisely, the value of the fluid is swapped with a ‘backup’ value whenever the dynwind context is entered or left. The backup value is initialized with the val argument.

Scheme Procedure: dynamic-state? obj
C Function: scm_dynamic_state_p (obj)

Return #t if obj is a dynamic state object; return #f otherwise.

C Procedure: int scm_is_dynamic_state (SCM obj)

Return non-zero if obj is a dynamic state object; return zero otherwise.

Scheme Procedure: current-dynamic-state
C Function: scm_current_dynamic_state ()

Return a snapshot of the current fluid-value associations as a fresh dynamic state object.

Scheme Procedure: set-current-dynamic-state state
C Function: scm_set_current_dynamic_state (state)

Restore the saved fluid-value associations from state, replacing the current fluid-value associations. Return the current fluid-value associatoins as a dynamic state object, as in current-dynamic-state.

Scheme Procedure: with-dynamic-state state proc
C Function: scm_with_dynamic_state (state, proc)

Call proc while the fluid bindings from state have been made current, saving the current fluid bindings. When control leaves the invocation of proc, restore the saved bindings, saving instead the fluid bindings from inside the call. If control later re-enters proc, restore those saved bindings, saving the current bindings, and so on.

C Procedure: void scm_dynwind_current_dynamic_state (SCM state)

Set the current dynamic state to state for the current dynwind context. Like with-dynamic-state, but in terms of Guile’s “dynwind” C API.

C Procedure: void * scm_c_with_dynamic_state (SCM state, void *(*func)(void *), void *data)

Like scm_with_dynamic_state, but call func with data.


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