Compiler Configuration File

In addition to command line options, a configuration file can be used to specify compiler options. These options can be applied not only globally but also to specific modules and productions.

A simple form of XML is used to format items in the file. XML was chosen because it is fairly well known and provides a natural interface for representing hierarchical data such as the structure of ASN.1 modules and productions. The use of an external configuration file was chosen over embedding directives within the ASN.1 source itself due to the fact that ASN.1 source versions tend to change frequently. An external configuration file can be reused with a new version of an ASN.1 module, but internal directives would have to be reapplied to the new version of the ASN.1 code.

At the outer level of the markup is the <asn1config> </asn1config> tag pair. Within this tag pair, the specification of global items and modules can be made. Global items are applied to all items in all modules. An example would be the <storage> qualifier. A storage class such as dynamic can be specified and applied to all productions in all modules. This will cause dynamic storage (pointers) to be used for any embedded structures within all of the generated code to reduce memory consumption demands.

The specification of a module is done using the <module></module> tag pair. This tag pair can only be nested within the top-level <asn1config> section. The module is identified by using the required <name></name> tag pair or by specifying the name as an attribute (for example, <module name="MyModule">). Other attributes specified within the <module> section apply only to that module and not to other modules specified within the specification. A complete list of all module attributes is provided in the table at the end of this section.

The specification of an individual production is done using the <production></production> tag pair. This tag pair can only be nested within a <module> section. The production is identified by using the required <name></name> tag pair or by specifying the name as an attribute (for example, <production name="MyProd">). Other attributes within the production section apply only to the referenced production and nothing else. A complete list of attributes that can be applied to individual productions is provided in the table at the end of this section.

When an attribute is specified in more than one section, the most specific application is always used. For example, assume a <typePrefix> qualifier is used within a module specification to specify a prefix for all generated types in the module and another one is used to a specify a prefix for a single production. The production with the type prefix will be generated with the type prefix assigned to it and all other generated types will contain the type prefix assigned at the module level.

Values in the different sections can be specified in one of the following ways:

  1. Using the <name>value</name> form. This assigns the given value to the given name. For example, the following would be used to specify the name of the "H323-MESSAGES" module in a module section:

       <name>H323-MESSAGES</name>
  2. Flag variables that turn some attribute on or off would be specified using a single <name/> entry. For example, to specify a given production is a PDU, the following would be specified in a production section:

       <isPDU/>
  3. An attribute list can be associated with some items. This is normally used as a shorthand form for specifying lists of names. For example, to specify a list of type names to be included in the generated code for a particular module, the following would be used:

       <include types="TypeName1,TypeName2,TypeName3"/>
    

The following are some examples of configuration specifications:

   <asn1config><storage>dynamic</storage></asn1config>

This specification indicates dynamic storage should be used in all places where its use would result in significant memory usage savings within all modules in the specified source file.

   <asn1config>
      <module>
         <name>H323-MESSAGES</name>
         <sourceFile>h225.asn</sourceFile>
         <typePrefix>H225</typePrefix>
      </module>
      ...
   </asn1config>

This specification applies to module ‘H323-MESSAGES’ in the source file being processed. For IMPORT statements involving this module, it indicates that the source file ‘h225.asn’ should be searched for specifications. It also indicates that when C or C++ types are generated, they should be prefixed with ‘H225’. This can help prevent name clashes if one or more modules are involved and they contain productions with common names.

The following tables specify the list of attributes that can be applied at all of the different levels: global, module, and individual production:

Global Level

These attributes can be applied at the global level by including them within the <asn1config> section:

Name Values Description
<events></events> defaultValue keyword. This configuration item is for use with Event Handling as described in a later section in this document. It is used to include a special event that is fired when a PER message is being parsed. This event occurs at the location a value should be present in the message but is not and a default value has been specified in the ASN.1 file for the element. In this case, the normal event sequence (startElement, contents, endElement) is executed using the default value.
<rootdir></rootdir> <ASN1C root directory> This configuration item is used to specify the root directory of the ASN1C installation for makefile or Visual Studio project generation. It is only needed if generation of these items is done outside of the ASN1C installation.
<storage></storage> dynamic, static, list, array, or dynamicArray keyword. If dynamic , it indicates that dynamic storage (i.e., pointers) should be used everywhere within the generated types where use could result in lower memory consumption. These places include the array element for sized SEQUENCE OF/SET OF types and all alternative elements within CHOICE constructs. If static, it indicates static types should be used in these places. In general, static types are easier to work with. If list, a linked-list type will be used for SEQUENCE OF/SET OF constructs instead of an array type. If array, an array type will be used for SEQUENCE OF/SET OF constructs. The maxSize attribute can be used in this case to specify the size of the array variable (for example, <storage maxSize="12"> array </storage>). If dynamicArray, a dynamic array will be used for SEQUENCE OF/SET OF constructs. A dynamic array is an array that uses dynamic storage for the array elements.

Module Level

These attributes can be applied at the module level by including them within a <module> section:

Name Values Description

<name> </name>

module name This attribute identifies the module to which this section applies. Either this or the <oid> element/attribute is required.
<oid> module OID (object identifier) This attribute provides for an alternate form of module identification for the case when module name is not unique. For example, a given ASN.1 module may have multiple versions. A unique version of the module can be identified using the OID value.
<codename> </codename> C/C++, Java, or C# name This item specifies an alternate name for the module to be used in generated code. By default, the module name is used in the form it appears in the ASN.1 specification with hyphens converted to underscores.
<include types="names" values="names"/> ASN.1 type or value names are specified as an attribute list This item allows a list of ASN.1 types and/or values to be included in the generated code. By default, the compiler generates code for all types and values within a specification. This allows the user to reduce the size of the generated code base by selecting only a subset of the types/values in a specification for compilation. Note that if a type or value is included that has dependent types or values (for example, the element types in a SEQUENCE, SET, or CHOICE), all of the dependent types will be automatically included as well.
<include encoders="names"/> ASN.1 type names specified as an attribute list. This item allows a list of ASN.1 types to be included in the generated code for which only encode functions will be generated.
<include decoders="names"/> ASN.1 type names specified as an attribute list. This item allows a list of ASN.1 types to be included in the generated code for which only decode functions will be generated.
<include memfree="names"/> ASN.1 type names specified as an attribute list. This item allows a list of ASN.1 types to be included in the generated code for which only memory free functions will be generated.
<include importsFrom= "name"/> ASN.1 module name(s) specified as an attribute list. This form of the include directive tells the compiler to only include types and/or values in the generated code that are imported by the given module(s).
<exclude types="names" values="names"/> ASN.1 type or values names are specified as an attribute list This item allows a list of ASN.1 types and/or values to be excluded in the generated code. By default, the compiler generates code for all types and values within a specification. This is generally not as useful as in include directive because most types in a specification are referenced by other types. If an attempt is made to exclude a type or value referenced by another item, the directive will be ignored.

<storage> </storage> 

dynamic, static, list, array, or dynamicArray keyword. The definition is the same as for the global case except that the specified storage type will only be applied to generated C and C++ types from the given module.
<sourceFile> </sourceFile> source file name Indicates the given module is contained within the given ASN.1 source file. This is used on IMPORTs to instruct the compiler where to look for imported definitions.
<prefix> </prefix> prefix text This is used to specify a general prefix that will be applied to all generated C and C++ names (note: for C++ types, the prefix is applied after the standard ‘ASN1T_’ prefix). This can be used to prevent name clashes if multiple modules are involved in a compilation and they all contain common names.
<typePrefix> </typePrefix> prefix text This is used to specify a prefix that will be applied to all generated C and C++ typedef names (note: for C++, the prefix is applied after the standard ‘ASN1T_’ prefix). This can be used to prevent name clashes if multiple modules are involved in a compilation and they all contain common names.
<enumPrefix> </enumPrefix> prefix text This is used to specify a prefix that will be applied to all generated enumerated identifiers within a module. This can be used to prevent name clashes if multiple modules are involved in a compilation. (note: this attribute is normally not needed for C++ enumerated identifiers because they are already wrapped in a structure to allows the type name to be used as an additional identifier).
<valuePrefix> </valuePrefix> prefix text This is used to specify a prefix that will be applied to all generated value constants within a module. This can be used to prevent name clashes if multiple modules are involved that use a common name for two or more different value declarations.
<classPrefix> </classPrefix> prefix text This is used to specify a prefix that will be applied to all generated items in a module derived from an ASN.1 CLASS definition.
<objectPrefix> </objectPrefix> prefix text This is used to specify a prefix that will be applied to all generated items in a module derived from an ASN.1 Information Object definition.
<objectsetPrefix> </objectsetPrefix> prefix text This is used to specify a prefix that will be applied to all generated items in a module derived from an ASN.1 Information Object Set definition.
<noPDU/> n/a Indicates that this module contains no PDU definitions. This is normally true in modules that are imported to get common type definitions (for example, InformationFramework). This will prevent the C++ version of the compiler from generating any control class definitions for the types in the module.
<intCType> byte, int16, uint16, int32, uint32, int64, string This is used to specify a specific C integer type be used for all unconstrained integer types. By default, ASN1C will use the int32 (32-bit integer) type for all unconstrained integers.
<arcCType> int32, int64 The is used to specify a specific C integer type be used for the arc types in Object Identifier definitions. By default, int32 (32-bit integer arc values) are generated.
<namespace> </namespace> namespace URI This is used to specify the target namespace for the given module when generating XSD and/or XML code. By default, the compiler will not include a targetNamespace directive in the generated XSD code (i.e. all items will not be assigned to any namespace). This option only has meaning when used with the - xml / -xsd command line options.
<hFile> </hFile> C/C++ header filename This is used to specify the name of a C/C++ header file to be used to store generated definitions for the module. By default, the header file name is set to the ASN.1 name of the module with '.h' appended to the end.
<alias asn1name="name" codename="name"/> ASN.1 to computer language name mapping This item allows a name in the ASN.1 specification being compiled to be mapped to an alternate name in the generated computer language files. The primary use is to allow shorter names to be used in places where a combination of names may be very long. In this release, the only names that can be used in the alias statement are information object set names.

Production Level

These attributes can be applied at the production level by including them within a <production> section:

Name Values Description

<name> 
</name>

production name This attribute identifies the production (type) to which this section applies. It is required.
<ctype> byte, int16, uint16, int32, uint32, int64, string, chararray This is used to specify a specific C integer or character string type be used in place of the default definition generated by ASN1C. In the case of integers, ASN1C will normally try and use the smallest integer type available based on the value or value range constraint on the integer type. If the integer is not constrained, the int32 (32-bit integer) type will be used. For character string, ASN1C will use a character string pointer (char*) by default. The 'chararray' item can be used on strings with size constrains to specify a static character array variable be used.
<enumPrefix> </enumPrefix> prefix text This is used to specify a prefix that will be applied to all generated enumerated identifiers within a module. This can be used to prevent name clashes if multiple modules are involved in a compilation. (note: this attribute is normally not needed for C++ enumerated identifiers because they are already wrapped in a structure to allows the type name to be used as an additional identifier).
<format> </format> base64, hex, xmllist This is used to set format options specific to XER encoding. The base64 or hex alternative is used to set the output format that binary data in OCTET STRING variables is displayed in in XML markup. The xmllist alternative is used with SEQUENCE OF or SET OF types to denote that items should be displayed in XML space-separated list format as opposed to a using a separate element for each list item.
<isBigInteger/> n/a This is a flag variable (an ‘empty element’ in XML terminology) that specifies that this production will be used to store an integer larger than the C or C++ int type on the given system (normally 32 bits). A C string type (char*) will be used to hold a textual representation of the value. This qualifier can be applied to either an integer or constructed type. If constructed, all integer elements within the constructed type are flagged as big integers.
<isPDU/> n/a This is a flag variable that specifies that this production represents a Protocol Data Unit (PDU). This is defined as a production that will be encoded or decoded from within the application code. This attribute only makes a difference in the generation of C++ classes. Control classes that are only used in the application code are only generated for types with this attribute set.
<storage> </storage> dynamic, static, list, array, or dynamicArray keyword. The definition is the same as for the global case except that the specified storage type will only be applied to the generated C or C++ type for the given production.
<typePrefix> </typePrefix> prefix text This is used to specify a prefix that will be applied to all generated C and C++ typedef names (note: for C++, the prefix is applied after the standard ‘ASN1T_’ prefix). This can be used to prevent name clashes if multiple modules are involved in a compilation and they all contain common names.

Element Level

These attributes can be applied at the element level by including them within an <element> section:

Name Values Description

<name> 
</name>

element name This attribute identifies the element within a SEQUENCE, SET, or CHOICE construct to which this section applies. It is required.
<ctype> chararray This is used to specify a specific C type be used in place of the default definition generated by ASN1C. In the case of elements, the only supported customization is for character string types which would normally be represented by a character pointer type (char*) to be changed to use static character arrays. This can only be done if the string type contains a size constraint.
<isOpenType/> n/a This flag variable specifies that this element will be decoded as an open type (i.e. skipped). Refer to the section on deferred decoding for further information. Note that this variable can only be used with BER, CER, or DER encoding rules.
<notUsed/> n/a This flag variable specifies that this element will not be used at all in the generated code. It can only be applied to optional elements within a SEQUENCE or SET, or to elements within a CHOICE. Its purpose is for production of more compact code by allowing users to configure out items that are of no interest to them.
<perEncoding> </perEncoding> hex data This variable allows a user to substitute a known binary PER encoding for the given element. This encoding will be inserted into the encoded data stream on encoding and skipped over on decoding. Its purpose is the production of more compact and faster code for PER by bypassing run-time calculations needed to encode or decode variable data.
<storage> </storage> dynamic, static, list, array, or dynamicArray keyword. The definition is the same as for the global case except that the specified storage type will only be applied to the generated C or C++ type for this element.