Yesterday I made a category for these ruby profiler posts on my blog because I think there will be a lot of them. It’s at https://jvns.ca/categories/ruby-profiler.

Hello! Today I am excited about bindgen, an awesome Rust tool for generating bindings from C header files. It has a great user’s guide.

This post is about what bindgen is, why I think it’s cool, and experiments I have been doing with bindgen for my Ruby profiler.

bindgen: #include for Rust

To me the dream of Rust is “it gives you all the power of C, but with a more powerful compiler, better documentation, better tools ( cargo ), and a great community”. I think bindgen is a really important part of “great tools”!

Suppose you want to include a C library in your program. In C, this is easy: just include the header file.

#include <library_header_file.h> …. call functions from library here ...

So if Rust has “all the power of C” (and interoperates so well with C), you should be able to just #include a header file from a C library and have it just work, right?

Almost! You can run bindgen cool_header_file.h -o rust-bindings.rs and it’ll automatically generate Rust struct definitions or function declarations that will let you link in the C library. So simple!

Here’s the bindgen output for Python.h as an example. It’s 24,000 lines. Here are a couple of representative bits: the PyCodeObject struct & the declaration of the eval function.

// A struct! #[repr(C)] #[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone)] pub struct PyCodeObject { pub ob_refcnt: Py_ssize_t, pub ob_type: *mut _typeobject, pub co_argcount: ::std::os::raw::c_int, pub co_nlocals: ::std::os::raw::c_int, pub co_stacksize: ::std::os::raw::c_int, pub co_flags: ::std::os::raw::c_int, pub co_code: *mut PyObject, … and more ... } // A function declaration! extern "C" { # [ link_name = "\u{1}_Z15PyEval_EvalCode" ] pub fn PyEval_EvalCode( arg1: *mut PyCodeObject, arg2: *mut PyObject, arg3: *mut PyObject, ) -> *mut PyObject; }

Then you can include this file in your Rust project as a module, link with libpython, and start using libpython in your Rust program! Cool!

cool bindgen features

Bindgen can do some really cool things:

Whitelist types that you want to generate bindings for if you don’t want the whole header file

Generate #[derive(Debug)] annotations for C structs so you can easily print them out with println!(“{:?}”, my-struct) . This is SO USEFUL when debugging!!!!

. This is SO USEFUL when debugging!!!! It seems to handle #ifdefs and stuff okay – I threw a pretty complicated set of header files at it and it seems ok so far.

and stuff okay – I threw a pretty complicated set of header files at it and it seems ok so far. Pick which Rust compiler version you want to target

what I’m doing with bindgen

I wanted to do something weird: #include vm_core.h, which is an internal header file in Ruby. And I didn’t actually want to just include one vm_core_h , I wanted to generate bindings for 33 different Ruby versions (since vm_core.h is an internal header file, the structs I care about are constantly changing).

This appears to be something that bindgen can help with me with! Here are the generated bindings for 33 Ruby versions (2.1.1 to 2.5.0rc1): https://github.com/jvns/ruby-stacktrace/tree/77708ffb0db6682df546170bf09753a195afa7d5/src/bindings. Bindgen generated about 6MB of code. (the rest of the code on that branch is kind of a mess since I’m hacking around trying to see if this approach is workable).

Once I have all those bindings in my repository, I can use bindings::ruby_2_2_0::*; to get the right types for Ruby 2.2.0. Really simple!

Here’s the bindgen incantation I ran to get the bindings for Ruby 2.3.0. (I just put this in a script and ran a for loop to generate all 33 versions).

bindgen /tmp/headers/2_3_0/vm_core.h\ -o bindings.rs \ --impl-debug true \ --no-doc-comments \ --whitelist-type rb_iseq_constant_body \ --whitelist-type rb_iseq_location_struct \ --whitelist-type rb_thread_struct \ --whitelist-type rb_iseq_struct \ --whitelist-type rb_control_frame_struct \ --whitelist-type rb_thread_struct \ --whitelist-type RString \ --whitelist-type VALUE \ -- \ -I/tmp/headers/2_3_0/include \ -I/tmp/headers/2_3_0/ \ -I/usr/lib/llvm-3.8/lib/clang/3.8.0/include/ # my bindgen doesn’t find the clang headers properly for some reason

generating bindings at build time

You might have noticed that I committed the bindings I generated into my repository. This is not actually the recommended way to use bindgen – they recommend in general that you generate your bindings during your build.

How to do that is documented really nicely in the bindgen user’s guide.

Basically you create a build.rs file that runs during your build and uses the bindgen library to generate bindings. I think I like the approach of having a build.rs + Cargo.toml instead of a Makefile a lot – it seems easier to maintain. And you can declare separate build dependencies in Cargo.toml!

cbindgen: reverse bindgen

Someone on Twitter pointed me to cbindgen, a tool to go the other way and generate C bindings for your Rust code. Neat!

gonna continue experimenting

I’m still not sure if this approach of “let’s generate bindings for 33 different ruby versions and commit them into my repository” will work. But I figure the best way to find out it to keep trying it and see how it goes! If it doesn’t work then I’ll go back to using DWARF.