comp.lang.idl-pvwave archive
Messages from Usenet group comp.lang.idl-pvwave, compiled by Paulo Penteado

Home » Public Forums » archive » Re: linking with call_external
Show: Today's Messages :: Show Polls :: Message Navigator
E-mail to friend 
Return to the default flat view Create a new topic Submit Reply
Re: linking with call_external [message #4480] Mon, 19 June 1995 00:00
Jon Twichell is currently offline  Jon Twichell
Messages: 1
Registered: June 1995
Junior Member
theil@bogart.Colorado.EDU ("Dynamo" Dave Theil) wrote:

> I am using call_external with c routines. There is one minor glitch
> that MUST be conquerable. If a change is made to the external routine
> and it is recompiled, but the image file has been called before in the
> current IDL session by call_external, the new file does not appear to
> be relinked into idl:
> deleted
> Any suggestions?

The call_external only loads the image on the initial call. Thereafter,
the image is locked into memory (for non-memory-mapped systems e.g., the
mac) and the name cached in a table. This reduces the amount of time
needed to invoke the routine from 10's of milliseconds (dominated by the
file lookup) to about one microsecond (on a Mac PowerPC). The fast
response is nessary for many applications.

My (unheaded) suggestion was to make call_external more like linkimage.
Have a load_external, and then just refer to the code by name instead of
the clumsy call_external(...). The easy interface and calling mechanism
could be retained.

Lacking that, your only option would seem to be to use linkimage (unless
you are running on a 68K Mac which does not support this option).
Generally linkimage provides a more powerful set of tools and
capabilities (variable creation, memory allocation and deallocation, and
access to internal routines). IMHO is the preferable interface to
external code.

Hope this helps!
[Message index]
 
Read Message
Previous Topic: [ANNOUNCE] UK FTP Server for IDL Version 4
Next Topic: CASE statments

-=] Back to Top [=-
[ Syndicate this forum (XML) ] [ RSS ] [ PDF ]

Current Time: Thu Oct 09 23:44:38 PDT 2025

Total time taken to generate the page: 1.36377 seconds