Ok, this is a very interesting question and there may not be any easy way to do this but figured I would throw this out there before deciding that modifying Perl is my underlying answer.
So I've got a C application that calls Perl scripts in an embedded fashion. This all works fine and dandy and it's pretty awesome that I can pass information in and get information back out. HOWEVER, now onto my next conquest; I need to allow my embedded script(s) to be able to call some functions within the C application that ORIGINALLY CALLED IT.
This is important because XSUB would require it to be an external library; but I don't want it to be an external library I want it to be a direct call to the C function(s). Now maybe this can be done via XSUB and I've just been reading and understanding it wrong.
Application -(run)-> Perl
Application <-(function_x())- Perl
Application -(returnfunction_x)-> Perl
The reason this cannot be an external library is because I am relying on data that is solely created/stored within the application.
XSUBs actually don't require there to be an external library. They merely provide the ability to call to a c function from perl space, and provide some convenience in mapping the calling conventions between C and Perl.
All you need to do is register XSUBs you compiled into the embedding application with the perl interpreter you're embedding.
#include "XSUB.h"
XS(XS_some_func);
XS(XS_some_func)
{
dXSARGS;
char *str_from_perl, *str_from_c;
/* get SV*s from the stack usign ST(x) and friends, do stuff to them */
str_from_perl = SvPV_nolen(ST(0));
/* do your c thing calling back to your application, or whatever */
str_from_c = some_c_func(str_from_perl);
/* pack up the c retval into an sv again and return it on the stack */
mXPUSHp(c_str);
XSRETURN(1);
}
/* register the above XSUB with the perl interpreter after creating it */
newXS("Some::Perl::function", XS_some_func, __FILE__);
When embedding perl, this sort of thing is usually done in the xs_init function you pass to parse_perl
.
EXTERN_C void boot_DynaLoader (pTHX_ CV* cv);
static void
xs_init (pTHX)
{
newXS("Some::Perl::function", XS_some_func, __FILE__);
/* possibly also boot DynaLoader and friends. perlembed has more
* details on this, and ExtUtils::Embed helps as well. */
newXS("DynaLoader::boot_DynaLoader", boot_DynaLoader, file);
}
perl_parse(my_perl, xs_init, argc, my_argv, NULL);
After that you'll be able to call to the XSUB as Some::Perl::function
from perl space, and that XSUB in turn is free to call back to your application in any way it wants to.