LCAPI Overview

The Lasso C/C++ Application Programming Interface (LCAPI) lets you write C or C++ code to add new Lasso methods, types, or data source connectors to Lasso. Writing in LCAPI can offer speed and system performance advantages over LJAPI and custom Lasso libraries. However, modules must be compiled separately for Windows, OS X, and Linux.

This chapter provides a walkthrough for building and debugging an example LCAPI method. You can download the source code for this and other examples from this site.

Requirements

In order to compile LCAPI methods, types, or data source connectors you need the following:

OS X:
  • Lasso Server installed on a supported OS X version
  • Xcode
  • The 10.5 SDK, which does not come with the newest development tools. See this link for unsupported help with installing older SDKs.
Linux:
  • Lasso Server installed on a supported Linux distribution
  • The gcc C/C++ development libraries and executables
Windows:
  • Lasso Server installed on a supported Windows version
  • Microsoft Visual C++ .NET

Quick Start

This section provides a walkthrough for building sample LCAPI method modules.

Build a sample LCAPI module in Windows
  1. Download and expand the example code.
  2. In the “MathFuncsTags” folder, double-click the MathFuncsCAPI.sln project file (you need Microsoft Visual C++ .NET in order to open it).
  3. Choose Build ‣ Build Solution to compile and make the MathFuncsCAPI.DLL module.
  4. After building, a “Debug” folder will have been created inside your “MathFuncsCAPI” project folder. Open it and drag MathFuncsCAPI.DLL into “LassoModules” in a Lasso instance home directory.
  5. Restart the Lasso instance.
  6. New methods example_math_abs, example_math_sin, and example_math_sqrt are now part of your Lasso installation.
  7. Drag the sample Lasso page called MathFuncsCAPI.lasso into the web server root.
  8. View the MathFuncsCAPI.lasso page in a web browser to see the new Lasso methods in action.
Build a sample LCAPI module in OS X or Linux
  1. Download and expand the example code.
  2. Open a terminal window and change the working directory to the “MathFuncsTags” folder in the example code.
  3. Build the sample project using the provided makefile by running make.
  4. After building, a file named MathFuncsCAPI.dylib on OS X and MathFuncsCAPI.so on Linux will be in the current folder. Move that file into “LassoModules” in a Lasso instance home directory.
  5. Restart the Lasso instance.
  6. New methods example_math_abs, example_math_sin, and example_math_sqrt are now part of your Lasso installation.
  7. Drag the sample Lasso page called MathFuncsCAPI.lasso into the web server root.
  8. View the MathFuncsCAPI.lasso page in a web browser to see the new Lasso methods in action.

Debugging

You can set breakpoints in your LCAPI-compiled libraries and perform source-level debugging for your own code. In order to set this up, follow the example below. For this section, we will use the “MathFuncsCAPI” example.

Debug in Windows
  1. Select Debug ‣ Processes....
  2. In the “Processes” window, select each instance of “lassoserver.exe” and choose to Attach.
  3. Close the “Processes” window and set a breakpoint in the tagMathAbsFunc function.
  4. Use a web browser to access the sample MathFuncsCAPI.lasso file on the web server. Visual Studio will stop at the location that the breakpoint was placed.
Debug in OS X or Linux
  1. The provided makefile compiles with the DEBUG options by default, so there is no need to recompile.

  2. Find the process ID number of lassoserver so you can attach to it later with GNU Debugger:

    $> ps -ax | grep lassoserver
    2081 ?? 2:32.39 /usr/sbin/lassoserver -flisten lasso.fastcgi.sock
    
  3. Start the GNU Debugger as the root user:

    $> sudo gdb
    

    Tip

    For newer versions of OS X, use lldb instead of gdb.

  4. From within GNU Debugger’s command line, attach to the lassoserver process ID by entering the following (replacing <PROCESS ID> with the actual process ID):

    attach <PROCESS ID>
    
  5. Instruct GNU Debugger to break whenever the function tagMathAbsFunc is called by entering the following:

    break tagMathAbsFunc
    
  6. Use a web browser to access the sample MathFuncsCAPI.lasso file on the web server. GNU Debugger will break at the first line in tagMathAbsFunc when the example_math_abs method is called.

Tip

Type “help” in GNU Debugger for more information about using the GNU Debugger, or search for gdb tutorials on the web for more in-depth information.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I install my custom module?
Once you’ve compiled your module, move it to the “LassoModules” directory for the instance you want it to run in or the “LassoModules” directory in the master Lasso home directory. You’ll need to restart any running instances for them to pick up the new method/type/data source connector.
How do I return text from my custom module?
Use either lasso_returnTagValueString to return UTF-8 data, or lasso_returnTagValueStringW to return UTF-16 data. Character data in other encoding methods can be returned by first allocating a string type using lasso_typeAllocStringConv and then returning it using lasso_returnTagValue.
How do I return binary data from my custom method?
Use lasso_returnTagValueBytes to return binary data.
How do I prevent Lasso from automatically encoding text returned from my custom method?
Make sure that your method is registered with the flag_noDefaultEncoding flag. This flag is specified when you call lasso_registerTagModule at startup.
How do I debug my custom method?
You can set breakpoints in your code and attach your debugger to lassoserver. See the section Debugging above.
How do I get parameters that were passed into my method?
Most of the parameters passed into your custom method can be retrieved using the lasso_getTagParam and lasso_findTagParam parameter info functions. The lasso_getTagParam function retrieves parameters by index and lasso_findTagParam retrieves them by name. All parameters retrieved using these functions will be returned as strings. To access the parameters as Lasso type instances, use lasso_getTagParam2 and lasso_findTagParam2.
How do I get the value of unnamed parameters passed into my method?
While there is no direct way to get unnamed parameters (how do you know what name to ask for?), you can enumerate through all the parameters by index, and then pick out the ones that do not have names. If, after retrieving a parameter, you discover that its data member is an empty string, then that means it is an unnamed parameter, and you can get its value from the name member. An example of this is in the LCAPI method tutorial.
What’s an auto_lasso_value_t and how do I use it?
It’s a data structure that contains both a name and a value (a name/value pair). Many LCAPI APIs fill in this structure for you, and you can access the name and data members directly as null-terminated C strings.
What is a lasso_type_t and how do I use it?
A lasso_type_t represents an instance of a Lasso type. Any Lasso type can be represented by a lasso_type_t, including strings, integers, or custom types. LCAPI provides many functions for allocating or manipulating lasso_type_t objects. All lasso_type_t objects encountered inside an LCAPI method will be automatically garbage-collected after the function returns. Therefore, a lasso_type_t object should not be saved unless it is freed from the garbage collector using lasso_typeDetach.
How do I access variables from the Lasso page I’m in?
You may need to get or even create Lasso variables (the same variables that a Lasso programmer makes when using the var(dozen) = 12 variable syntax in a Lasso page) from within your LCAPI module. You can retrieve a thread variable, as long as it has already been assigned before your custom method is executed, by calling lasso_getVariable with the variable’s name. Using this method, one could directly set the “__html_reply__” variable.
How do I return fatal and non-fatal error codes?
It is very important that your method return an error code of osErrNoErr(0) if nothing fatal happened. An example of a fatal error would be a missing required parameter. If you encounter a fatal error, return a non-zero result code from your function; at that point Lasso will stop processing the page and display an error page.
How do I write code that will compile easily across multiple operating systems?
While we cannot provide a complete cross-platform programming tutorial here, we can at least provide some guidance. The simplest way to make sure code compiles across platforms is to make sure you use standard library functions (from stdio.h and stdlib.h) as much as possible: functions like strcpy(), malloc(), and strcmp() are always available on all platforms. Also note that *nix platforms are case-sensitive, so when you #include files, just make sure you keep the case the same as the file on disk. Finally, stay away from platform-specific functions, such as Windows APIs that are most often not available on *nix platforms. Take a look at the *nix makefiles that are provided with the sample projects: notice the same source code is used for Windows, and all source files are saved with DOS-style CR/LF line breaks so as not to confuse the Windows compilers. As a last resort, you can use #ifdef to show/hide platform-specific portions of source code.