nodemcu-firmware/lua_examples/lfs/dummy_strings.lua

40 lines
1.8 KiB
Lua

--
-- File: LFS_dummy_strings.lua
--[[
luac.cross -f generates a ROM string table which is part of the compiled LFS
image. This table includes all strings referenced in the loaded modules.
If you want to preload other string constants, then one way to achieve this is
to include a dummy module in the LFS that references the strings that you want
to load. You never need to call this module; it's inclusion in the LFS image is
enough to add the strings to the ROM table. Your application can use any strings
in the ROM table without incuring any RAM or Lua Garbage Collector (LGC)
overhead.
The local preload example is a useful starting point. However, if you call the
following code in your application during testing, then this will provide a
listing of the current RAM string table.
do
local a=debug.getstrings'RAM'
for i =1, #a do a[i] = ('%q'):format(a[i]) end
print ('local preload='..table.concat(a,','))
end
This will exclude any strings already in the ROM table, so the output is the list
of putative strings that you should consider adding to LFS ROM table.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
]]--
-- luacheck: ignore
local preload = "?.lc;?.lua", "/\n;\n?\n!\n-", "@init.lua", "_G", "_LOADED",
"_LOADLIB", "__add", "__call", "__concat", "__div", "__eq", "__gc", "__index",
"__le", "__len", "__lt", "__mod", "__mode", "__mul", "__newindex", "__pow",
"__sub", "__tostring", "__unm", "collectgarbage", "cpath", "debug", "file",
"file.obj", "file.vol", "flash", "getstrings", "index", "ipairs", "list", "loaded",
"loader", "loaders", "loadlib", "module", "net.tcpserver", "net.tcpsocket",
"net.udpsocket", "newproxy", "package", "pairs", "path", "preload", "reload",
"require", "seeall", "wdclr", "not enough memory", "sjson.decoder","sjson.encoder",
"tmr.timer"