loadTk(n)
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NAME
loadTk - Load Tk into a safe interpreter.
SYNOPSIS
::safe::loadTk slave ?-use windowId? ?-display displayName?
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Safe Tk is based on Safe Tcl, which provides a mechanism that allows
restricted and mediated access to auto-loading and packages for safe
interpreters. Safe Tk adds the ability to configure the interpreter
for safe Tk operations and load Tk into safe interpreters.
DESCRIPTION
The ::safe::loadTk command initializes the required data structures in
the named safe interpreter and then loads Tk into it. The interpreter
must have been created with ::safe::interpCreate or have been initial-
ized with ::safe::interpInit. The command returns the name of the safe
interpreter. If -use is specified, the window identified by the speci-
fied system dependent identifier windowId is used to contain the ``.''
window of the safe interpreter; it can be any valid id, eventually ref-
erencing a window belonging to another application. As a convenience,
if the window you plan to use is a Tk Window of the application you can
use the window name (e.g. .x.y) instead of its window Id ([winfo id
.x.y]). When -use is not specified, a new toplevel window is created
for the ``.'' window of the safe interpreter. On X11 if you want the
embedded window to use another display than the default one, specify it
with -display. See the SECURITY ISSUES section below for implementa-
tion details.
SECURITY ISSUES
Please read the safe manual page for Tcl to learn about the basic secu-
rity considerations for Safe Tcl.
::safe::loadTk adds the value of tk_library taken from the master
interpreter to the virtual access path of the safe interpreter so that
auto-loading will work in the safe interpreter.
Tk initialization is now safe with respect to not trusting the slave's
state for startup. ::safe::loadTk registers the slave's name so when
the Tk initialization (Tk_SafeInit) is called and in turn calls the
master's ::safe::InitTk it will return the desired argv equivalent
(-use windowId, correct -display, etc.)
When -use is not used, the new toplevel created is specially decorated
so the user is always aware that the user interface presented comes
from a potentially unsafe code and can easily delete the corresponding
interpreter.
On X11, conflicting -use and -display are likely to generate a fatal X
error.
SEE ALSO
safe(n), interp(n), library(n), load(n), package(n), source(n),
unknown(n)
KEYWORDS
alias, auto-loading, auto_mkindex, load, master interpreter, safe
interpreter, slave interpreter, source
Tk 8.0 Safe Tk(n)
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