Manpages - h2xs.1
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NAME
h2xs - convert .h C header files to Perl extensions
SYNOPSIS
h2xs [*OPTIONS* …] [headerfile … [extra_libraries]]
h2xs -h*|-?*|*–help*
DESCRIPTION
h2xs builds a Perl extension from C header files. The extension will include functions which can be used to retrieve the value of any #define statement which was in the C header files.
The module_name will be used for the name of the extension. If module_name is not supplied then the name of the first header file will be used, with the first character capitalized.
If the extension might need extra libraries, they should be included here. The extension Makefile.PL will take care of checking whether the libraries actually exist and how they should be loaded. The extra libraries should be specified in the form -lm -lposix, etc, just as on the cc command line. By default, the Makefile.PL will search through the library path determined by Configure. That path can be augmented by including arguments of the form -L/another/library/path in the extra-libraries argument.
In spite of its name, h2xs may also be used to create a skeleton pure Perl module. See the -X option.
OPTIONS
- -A, –omit-autoload
- Omit all autoload facilities. This is the same
as -c but also removes the
use AutoLoader
statement from the .pm file. - -B, –beta-version
- Use an alpha/beta style version number. Causes version number to be "0.00_01" unless -v is specified.
- -C, –omit-changes
- Omits creation of the Changes file, and adds a HISTORY section to the POD template.
- -F, –cpp-flags=addflags
- Additional flags to specify to C preprocessor when scanning header for function declarations. Writes these options in the generated Makefile.PL too.
- -M, –func-mask=regular expression
- selects functions/macros to process.
- -O, –overwrite-ok
- Allows a pre-existing extension directory to be overwritten.
- -P, –omit-pod
- Omit the autogenerated stub POD section.
- -X, –omit-XS
- Omit the XS portion. Used to generate a skeleton pure
Perl module.
-c
and-f
are implicitly enabled. - -a, –gen-accessors
- Generate an accessor method for each element of
structs and unions. The generated methods are named after the element
name; will return the current value of the element if called without
additional arguments; and will set the element to the supplied value
(and return the new value) if called with an additional argument.
Embedded structures and unions are returned as a pointer rather than
the complete structure, to facilitate chained calls. These methods all
apply to the Ptr type for the structure; additionally two methods are
constructed for the structure type itself,
_to_ptr
which returns a Ptr type pointing to the same structure, and anew
method to construct and return a new structure, initialised to zeroes. - -b, –compat-version=version
- Generates a .pm file which is backwards compatible with the specified perl version. For versions < 5.6.0, the changes are. - no use of 'our' (uses 'use vars' instead) - no 'use warnings' Specifying a compatibility version higher than the version of perl you are using to run h2xs will have no effect. If unspecified h2xs will default to compatibility with the version of perl you are using to run h2xs.
- -c, –omit-constant
- Omit
constant()
from the .xs file and corresponding specialisedAUTOLOAD
from the .pm file. - -d, –debugging
- Turn on debugging messages.
- -e, –omit-enums=[regular expression]
- If regular expression is not given, skip all constants that are defined in a C enumeration. Otherwise skip only those constants that are defined in an enum whose name matches regular expression. Since regular expression is optional, make sure that this switch is followed by at least one other switch if you omit regular expression and have some pending arguments such as header-file names. This is ok: h2xs -e -n Module::Foo foo.h This is not ok: h2xs -n Module::Foo -e foo.h In the latter, foo.h is taken as regular expression.
- -f, –force
- Allows an extension to be created for a header even if that header is not found in standard include directories.
- -g, –global
- Include code for safely storing static data in the .xs file. Extensions that do no make use of static data can ignore this option.
- -h, -?, –help
- Print the usage, help and version for this h2xs and exit.
- -k, –omit-const-func
- For function arguments declared as
const
, omit the const attribute in the generated XS code. - -m, –gen-tied-var
- Experimental: for each variable declared in the header file(s), declare a perl variable of the same name magically tied to the C variable.
- -n, –name=module_name
- Specifies a name to be used for the extension, e.g., -n RPC::DCE
- -o, –opaque-re=regular expression
- Use "opaque" data type for the C
types matched by the regular expression, even if these types are
typedef
-equivalent to types from typemaps. Should not be used without -x. This may be useful since, say, types which aretypedef
-equivalent to integers may represent OS-related handles, and one may want to work with these handles in OO-way, as in$handle->do_something()
. Use-o .
if you want to handle all the =typedef=ed types as opaque types. The type-to-match is whitewashed (except for commas, which have no whitespace before them, and multiple*
which have no whitespace between them). - -p, –remove-prefix=prefix
- Specify a prefix which should be removed
from the Perl function names, e.g., -p sec_rgy_ This sets up the XS
PREFIX keyword and removes the prefix from functions that are
autoloaded via the
constant()
mechanism. - -s, –const-subs=sub1,sub2
- Create a perl subroutine for the specified macros rather than autoload with the constant() subroutine. These macros are assumed to have a return type of char *, e.g., -s sec_rgy_wildcard_name,sec_rgy_wildcard_sid.
- -t, –default-type=type
- Specify the internal type that the
constant() mechanism uses for macros. The default is IV (signed
integer). Currently all macros found during the header scanning
process will be assumed to have this type. Future versions of
h2xs
may gain the ability to make educated guesses. - –use-new-tests
- When –compat-version (-b) is present the
generated tests will use
Test::More
rather thanTest
which is the default for versions before 5.6.2.Test::More
will be added to PREREQ_PM in the generatedMakefile.PL
. - –use-old-tests
- Will force the generation of test code that uses
the older
Test
module. - –skip-exporter
- Do not use
Exporter
and/or export any symbol. - –skip-ppport
- Do not use
Devel::PPPort
: no portability to older version. - –skip-autoloader
- Do not use the module
AutoLoader
; but keep the constant() function andsub AUTOLOAD
for constants. - –skip-strict
- Do not use the pragma
strict
. - –skip-warnings
- Do not use the pragma
warnings
. - -v, –version=version
- Specify a version number for this extension.
This version number is added to the templates. The default is 0.01, or
0.00_01 if
-B
is specified. The version specified should be numeric. - -x, –autogen-xsubs
- Automatically generate XSUBs basing on function
declarations in the header file. The package
C::Scan
should be installed. If this option is specified, the name of the header file may look likeNAME1,NAME2
. In this case NAME1 is used instead of the specified string, but XSUBs are emitted only for the declarations included from file NAME2. Note that some types of arguments/return-values for functions may result in XSUB-declarations/typemap-entries which need hand-editing. Such may be objects which cannot be converted from/to a pointer (likelong long
), pointers to functions, or arrays. See also the section on "LIMITATIONS of -x".
EXAMPLES
# Default behavior, extension is Rusers h2xs rpcsvc/rusers # Same, but extension is RUSERS h2xs -n RUSERS rpcsvc/rusers # Extension is rpcsvc::rusers. Still finds <rpcsvc/rusers.h> h2xs rpcsvc::rusers # Extension is ONC::RPC. Still finds <rpcsvc/rusers.h> h2xs -n ONC::RPC rpcsvc/rusers # Without constant() or AUTOLOAD h2xs -c rpcsvc/rusers # Creates templates for an extension named RPC h2xs -cfn RPC # Extension is ONC::RPC. h2xs -cfn ONC::RPC # Extension is a pure Perl module with no XS code. h2xs -X My::Module # Extension is Lib::Foo which works at least with Perl5.005_03. # Constants are created for all #defines and enums h2xs can find # in foo.h. h2xs -b 5.5.3 -n Lib::Foo foo.h # Extension is Lib::Foo which works at least with Perl5.005_03. # Constants are created for all #defines but only for enums # whose names do not start with bar_. h2xs -b 5.5.3 -e ^bar_ -n Lib::Foo foo.h # Makefile.PL will look for library -lrpc in # additional directory /opt/net/lib h2xs rpcsvc/rusers -L/opt/net/lib -lrpc # Extension is DCE::rgynbase # prefix "sec_rgy_" is dropped from perl function names h2xs -n DCE::rgynbase -p sec_rgy_ dce/rgynbase # Extension is DCE::rgynbase # prefix "sec_rgy_" is dropped from perl function names # subroutines are created for sec_rgy_wildcard_name and # sec_rgy_wildcard_sid h2xs -n DCE::rgynbase -p sec_rgy_ \ -s sec_rgy_wildcard_name,sec_rgy_wildcard_sid dce/rgynbase # Make XS without defines in perl.h, but with function declarations # visible from perl.h. Name of the extension is perl1. # When scanning perl.h, define -DEXT=extern -DdEXT= -DINIT(x)= # Extra backslashes below because the string is passed to shell. # Note that a directory with perl header files would # be added automatically to include path. h2xs -xAn perl1 -F "-DEXT=extern -DdEXT= -DINIT\(x\)=" perl.h # Same with function declaration in proto.h as visible from perl.h. h2xs -xAn perl2 perl.h,proto.h # Same but select only functions which match ^av_ h2xs -M ^av_ -xAn perl2 perl.h,proto.h # Same but treat SV* etc as "opaque" types h2xs -o ^[S]V \*$ -M ^av_ -xAn perl2 perl.h,proto.h
Extension based on .h and .c files
Suppose that you have some C files implementing some functionality, and
the corresponding header files. How to create an extension which makes
this functionality accessible in Perl? The example below assumes that
the header files are interface_simple.h and interface_hairy.h, and
you want the perl module be named as Ext::Ension
. If you need some
preprocessor directives and/or linking with external libraries, see the
flags -F
, -L
and -l
in "OPTIONS".
- Find the directory name
- Start with a dummy run of h2xs: h2xs -Afn Ext::Ension The only purpose of this step is to create the needed directories, and let you know the names of these directories. From the output you can see that the directory for the extension is Ext/Ension.
- Copy C files
- Copy your header files and C files to this directory Ext/Ension.
- Create the extension
- Run h2xs, overwriting older autogenerated files: h2xs -Oxan Ext::Ension interface_simple.h interface_hairy.h h2xs looks for header files after changing to the extension directory, so it will find your header files OK.
- Archive and test
- As usual, run cd Ext/Ension perl Makefile.PL make dist make make test
- Hints
- It is important to do
make dist
as early as possible. This way you can easily merge (1) your changes to autogenerated files if you decide to edit your.h
files and rerun h2xs. Do not forget to edit the documentation in the generated .pm file. Consider the autogenerated files as skeletons only, you may invent better interfaces than what h2xs could guess. Consider this section as a guideline only, some other options of h2xs may better suit your needs.
ENVIRONMENT
No environment variables are used.
AUTHOR
Larry Wall and others
SEE ALSO
perl, perlxstut, ExtUtils::MakeMaker, and AutoLoader.
DIAGNOSTICS
The usual warnings if it cannot read or write the files involved.
LIMITATIONS of -x
h2xs would not distinguish whether an argument to a C function which
is of the form, say, int *
, is an input, output, or input/output
parameter. In particular, argument declarations of the form
int foo(n) int *n
should be better rewritten as
int foo(n) int &n
if n
is an input parameter.
Additionally, h2xs has no facilities to intuit that a function
int foo(addr,l) char *addr int l
takes a pair of address and length of data at this address, so it is better to rewrite this function as
int foo(sv) SV *addr PREINIT: STRLEN len; char *s; CODE: s = SvPV(sv,len); RETVAL = foo(s, len); OUTPUT: RETVAL
or alternately
static int my_foo(SV *sv) { STRLEN len; char *s = SvPV(sv,len); return foo(s, len); } MODULE = foo PACKAGE = foo PREFIX = my_ int foo(sv) SV *sv
See perlxs and perlxstut for additional details.