Crate foreign_types
source ·Expand description
A framework for Rust wrappers over C APIs.
Ownership is as important in C as it is in Rust, but the semantics are often implicit. In particular, pointer-to-value is commonly used to pass C values both when transferring ownership or a borrow.
This crate provides a framework to define a Rust wrapper over these kinds of raw C APIs in a way
that allows ownership semantics to be expressed in an ergonomic manner. The framework takes a
dual-type approach similar to APIs in the standard library such as PathBuf
/Path
or String
/
str
. One type represents an owned value and references to the other represent borrowed
values.
Examples
use foreign_types::{ForeignType, ForeignTypeRef, Opaque};
use std::ops::{Deref, DerefMut};
mod foo_sys {
pub enum FOO {}
extern {
pub fn FOO_free(foo: *mut FOO);
}
}
// The borrowed type is a newtype wrapper around an `Opaque` value.
//
// `FooRef` values never exist; we instead create references to `FooRef`s
// from raw C pointers.
pub struct FooRef(Opaque);
impl ForeignTypeRef for FooRef {
type CType = foo_sys::FOO;
}
// The owned type is simply a newtype wrapper around the raw C type.
//
// It dereferences to `FooRef`, so methods that do not require ownership
// should be defined there.
pub struct Foo(*mut foo_sys::FOO);
impl Drop for Foo {
fn drop(&mut self) {
unsafe { foo_sys::FOO_free(self.0) }
}
}
impl ForeignType for Foo {
type CType = foo_sys::FOO;
type Ref = FooRef;
unsafe fn from_ptr(ptr: *mut foo_sys::FOO) -> Foo {
Foo(ptr)
}
fn as_ptr(&self) -> *mut foo_sys::FOO {
self.0
}
}
impl Deref for Foo {
type Target = FooRef;
fn deref(&self) -> &FooRef {
unsafe { FooRef::from_ptr(self.0) }
}
}
impl DerefMut for Foo {
fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut FooRef {
unsafe { FooRef::from_ptr_mut(self.0) }
}
}
The foreign_type!
macro can generate this boilerplate for you:
#[macro_use]
extern crate foreign_types;
mod foo_sys {
pub enum FOO {}
extern {
pub fn FOO_free(foo: *mut FOO);
pub fn FOO_duplicate(foo: *mut FOO) -> *mut FOO; // Optional
}
}
foreign_type! {
type CType = foo_sys::FOO;
fn drop = foo_sys::FOO_free;
fn clone = foo_sys::FOO_duplicate; // Optional
/// A Foo.
pub struct Foo;
/// A borrowed Foo.
pub struct FooRef;
}
If fn clone
is specified, then it must take CType
as an argument and return a copy of it as CType
.
It will be used to implement ToOwned
and Clone
.
#[derive(…)] is permitted before the lines with
pub struct.
#[doc(hidden)]before the
type CTypeline will hide the
foreign_type!` implementations from documentation.
Say we then have a separate type in our C API that contains a FOO
:
mod foo_sys {
pub enum FOO {}
pub enum BAR {}
extern {
pub fn FOO_free(foo: *mut FOO);
pub fn BAR_free(bar: *mut BAR);
pub fn BAR_get_foo(bar: *mut BAR) -> *mut FOO;
}
}
The documentation for the C library states that BAR_get_foo
returns a reference into the BAR
passed to it, which translates into a reference in Rust. It also says that we’re allowed to
modify the FOO
, so we’ll define a pair of accessor methods, one immutable and one mutable:
#[macro_use]
extern crate foreign_types;
use foreign_types::ForeignTypeRef;
mod foo_sys {
pub enum FOO {}
pub enum BAR {}
extern {
pub fn FOO_free(foo: *mut FOO);
pub fn BAR_free(bar: *mut BAR);
pub fn BAR_get_foo(bar: *mut BAR) -> *mut FOO;
}
}
foreign_type! {
#[doc(hidden)]
type CType = foo_sys::FOO;
fn drop = foo_sys::FOO_free;
/// A Foo.
pub struct Foo;
/// A borrowed Foo.
pub struct FooRef;
}
foreign_type! {
type CType = foo_sys::BAR;
fn drop = foo_sys::BAR_free;
/// A Foo.
pub struct Bar;
/// A borrowed Bar.
pub struct BarRef;
}
impl BarRef {
fn foo(&self) -> &FooRef {
unsafe { FooRef::from_ptr(foo_sys::BAR_get_foo(self.as_ptr())) }
}
fn foo_mut(&mut self) -> &mut FooRef {
unsafe { FooRef::from_ptr_mut(foo_sys::BAR_get_foo(self.as_ptr())) }
}
}
Macros
- A macro to easily define wrappers for foreign types.
Structs
- An opaque type used to define
ForeignTypeRef
types.
Traits
- A type implemented by wrappers over foreign types.
- A trait implemented by types which reference borrowed foreign types.