/* Exporting symbols from Cygwin shared libraries. Copyright (C) 2006, 2011-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Written by Bruno Haible , 2006. This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: * the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. or * the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. or both in parallel, as here. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ /* There are four ways to build shared libraries on Cygwin: - Export only functions, no variables. This has the drawback of severely affecting the programming style in use. It does not let the programmer use full ANSI C. It lets one platform dictate the code style on all platforms. This is unacceptable. - Use the GNU ld --enable-auto-import option. It is the default on Cygwin since July 2005. But it has three fatal drawbacks: - It produces executables and shared libraries with relocations in the .text segment, defeating the principles of virtual memory. - For some constructs such as extern int var; int * const b = &var; it creates an executable that will give an error at runtime, rather than either a compile-time or link-time error or a working executable. (This is with both gcc and g++.) Whereas this code, not relying on auto-import: extern __declspec (dllimport) int var; int * const b = &var; gives a compile-time error with gcc and works with g++. - It doesn't work in some cases (references to a member field of an exported struct variable, or to a particular element of an exported array variable), requiring code modifications. Again one platform dictates code modifications on all platforms. This is unacceptable. Therefore we disable this option, through the woe32-dll.m4 autoconf macro. - Define a macro that expands to __declspec(dllexport) when building the library and to __declspec(dllimport) when building code outside the library, and use it in all header files of the library. This is acceptable if 1. the header files are unique to this library (not shared with other packages), and 2. the library sources are contained in one directory, making it easy to define a -DBUILDING_LIBXYZ flag for the library. Example: #ifdef BUILDING_LIBASPRINTF #define LIBASPRINTF_DLL_EXPORTED __declspec(dllexport) #else #define LIBASPRINTF_DLL_EXPORTED __declspec(dllimport) #endif We use this technique for the libintl and the libasprintf libraries. - Define a macro that expands to __declspec(dllimport) always, and use it in all header files of the library. Use an explicit export list for the library. This is acceptable if 1. the programming language is not C++ (because the name mangling of static struct/class fields and of variables in namespaces makes it hard to maintain an export list). The benefit of this approach is that the partitioning of the source files into libraries (which source file goes into which library) does not affect the source code; only the Makefiles reflect it. The performance loss due to the unnecessary indirection for references to variables from within the library defining the variable is acceptable. We use this technique for libgettextlib (because it contains many gnulib modules) and for libgettextsrc (because this makes it easy to move source code from an msg* program to libgettextsrc). The macro is called DLL_VARIABLE. This file allows building an explicit export list. You can either - specify the variables to be exported, and use the GNU ld option --export-all-symbols to export all function names, or - specify the variables and functions to be exported explicitly. Note: --export-all-symbols is the default when no other symbol is explicitly exported. This means, the use of an explicit export on the variables has the effect of no longer exporting the functions! - until the option --export-all-symbols is used. See for more details. */ #if defined __GNUC__ /* GCC compiler, GNU toolchain */ /* IMP(x) is a symbol that contains the address of x. */ # define IMP(x) _imp__##x /* Ensure that the variable x is exported from the library, and that a pseudo-variable IMP(x) is available. */ # define VARIABLE(x) \ /* Export x without redefining x. This code was found by compiling a \ snippet: \ extern __declspec(dllexport) int x; int x = 42; */ \ asm (".section .drectve\n"); \ asm (".ascii \" -export:" #x ",data\"\n"); \ asm (".data\n"); \ /* Allocate a pseudo-variable IMP(x). */ \ extern int x; \ void * IMP(x) = &x; #else /* non-GNU compiler, non-GNU toolchain */ # define VARIABLE(x) /* nothing */ #endif