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BIL type errors.
Not all syntactically correct expressions make sense. A well-formed expression that doesn't have defined semantics is called an ill-typed expression. We further distinguish between different ill-typed expression to help the error diagnosis.
A bad_mem ill-typed expression is an expression that during the evaluation may load or store from a bitvector.
A bad_imm ill-typed expression is an expression that during the evaluation may apply a integer operation on a storage value.
A bad_type ~exp:t ~got:u ill-typed expression may evaluate an expression of type u, where an expression of type t is expected. For example, when a load address is evaluated to a type that is different from a type of the memory index, or when an integer operation is applied to expressions of different types.
Finally, a bad_cast expression is an expression that may evaluate a bitvector of improper size or when a cast arguments of a cast expression doesn't make sense.
This function only needs implementation if t exposed to be a polymorphic variant. Despite what the type reads, this does *not* produce a function after reading; instead it takes the constructor tag (int) before reading and reads the rest of the variant t afterwards.
str () t is formatted output function that matches "%a" conversion format specifier in functions, that prints to string, e.g., sprintf, failwithf, errorf and, surprisingly all Lwt printing function, including Lwt_io.printf and logging (or any other function with type ('a,unit,string,...) formatN`. Example:
Or_error.errorf "type %a is not valid for %a"
Type.str ty Exp.str exp
ascending is identical to compare. descending x y = ascending y x. These are intended to be mnemonic when used like List.sort ~compare:ascending and List.sort
~cmp:descending, since they cause the list to be sorted in ascending or descending order, respectively.
type info = string * [ `Ver of string ] * string option
name,Ver v,desc information attached to a particular reader or writer.
val version : string
Data representation version. After any change in data representation the version should be increased.
Serializers that are derived from a data representation must have the same version as a version of the data structure, from which it is derived. This kind of serializers can only read and write data of the same version.
Other serializers can actually read and write data independent on its representation version. A serializer, that can't store data of current version simply shouldn't be added to a set of serializers.
It is assumed, that if a reader and a writer has the same name and version, then whatever was written by the writer should be readable by the reader. The round-trip equality is not required, thus it is acceptable if some information is lost.
It is also possible, that a reader and a writer that has the same name are compatible. In that case it is recommended to use semantic versioning.
val size_in_bytes : ?ver:string ->?fmt:string ->t-> int
size_in_bytes ?ver ?fmt datum returns the amount of bytes that is needed to represent datum in the given format and version
default_reader returns information about default reader
val set_default_reader : ?ver:string ->string -> unit
set_default_reader ?ver name sets new default reader. If version is not specified then the latest available version is used. Raises an exception if a reader with a given name doesn't exist.
val with_reader : ?ver:string ->string ->(unit ->'a)->'a
with_reader ?ver name operation temporary sets a default reader to a reader with a specified name and version. The default reader is restored after operation is finished.
default_writer returns information about the default writer
val set_default_writer : ?ver:string ->string -> unit
set_default_writer ?ver name sets new default writer. If version is not specified then the latest available version is used. Raises an exception if a writer with a given name doesn't exist.
val with_writer : ?ver:string ->string ->(unit ->'a)->'a
with_writer ?ver name operation temporary sets a default writer to a writer with a specified name and version. The default writer is restored after operation is finished.
default_writer optionally returns an information about default printer
val set_default_printer : ?ver:string ->string -> unit
set_default_printer ?ver name sets new default printer. If version is not specified then the latest available version is used. Raises an exception if a printer with a given name doesn't exist.
val with_printer : ?ver:string ->string ->(unit ->'a)->'a
with_printer ?ver name operation temporary sets a default printer to a printer with a specified name and version. The default printer is restored after operation is finished.