[][src]Crate c_closures

Purpose

This crate is for producing Rust closures that can cross an FFI boundary with no generic types. It provides support for any single argument signature, along with any return type, assuming both have valid representations in C/C++ and Rust.

Here's an example.

Safety concerns

Creating a Closure by itself can not cause undefined behavior, however the resulting structure is extremely dangerous. The C/C++ code may not validate arguments passed are of the correct type, which could lead to memory corruption and segfaulting. Closure should never be an argument to a safe function, nor should it be a public member of any structures passed into a safe function.

Usage in C/C++

To use this with a C/C++ library you'll need to include the header provided in the repo, rust_closures.h, then link to the assembly produced by rust_closures.c. If the C/C++ code is being linked into a Rust binary depending on this crate, then you don't need to worry about linking to rust_closures.c. Then you can accept the Closure type anywhere that you need to accept arbitrary Rust code.

Limitations

Closure can currently only accept a single argument, this can be worked around by making that argument a C/C++ class/struct containing multiple fields. Additionally it is strongly recommended that all types in the closure signature have a valid representation in C/C++ and Rust. Fat pointers are a common gotcha in this respect, remember slices and string slices are not a single pointer value.

This cannot be used to transfer ownership across FFI boundaries, as this crate cannot reasonably guarantee both sides are using the same memory allocator, or dispose of the types in the same way. If such transfer is required, you should copy the data into a new allocation, on the side of the FFI boundary it needs to live on. The major exception to this is types with the Copy marker trait, which are trivially cloned and require no disposal instructions.

In order to achieve this in such a general manner this crate leans heavily on heap allocations. Arguments, and return types are treated as data of arbitrary unknown length. If such heap allocations are unacceptable for your use case, consider authoring a similar structure with specific known types and involving no indirection.

Macros

rebind_closure

Rebinds a Closure from this crate to a Closure type defined externally. If you use bindgen to make bindings to C/C++ functions accepting this Closure type then the bindings won't be defined in terms of c_closures, instead your functions will want an instance of your own Closure definition. This macro provides a convenient way to rebind them.

Structs

Closure

A general purpose closure type defined in C code which can be created in Rust.

Traits

ClosureMarkerTrait

This trait identifies instances of the Closure type from rust_closures.h. In Rust land, there will be multiple instances of this type that we need to be able to cast from one to another. This trait helps us determine which of these casts are safe. To implement this use BindgenBuilderExt::c_closures_enhancements from c-closures-build on your bindgen::Builder.

FromClosureArgPointer

Provides a general purpose way to deref a structure from a C void pointer. Auto implemented for Copy types.

Functions

closure_call

Calls the inner code. The return value of this may have come from Rust, meaning you can not free it. However it must be freed. When you're done with the return value, pass it back to Rust with closure_release_return_value so that the memory isn't leaked. If you won't be using the return value, instead call closure_call_with_no_return.

closure_call_with_no_return

Calls the inner code and cleans up the returned value, if any.

closure_release

Release data associated with this closure, must be called when done with Closure to avoid memory leaking.

closure_release_return_value

Cleans up the value returned by calling this Closure. Do not attempt to free the returned pointer yourself.